Gregory Benford - Eater
Eater
Gregory
Benford
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places,
and incidents are products of the author's imagination or are used
fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to
actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is
entirely coincidental.
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copyright © 2000 by Stephen BaxterExcerpt
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To
Mark Martin,
Jennifer Brehl,
Ralph Vicinanza and
Vince Gerardis… who all did their part.
Man is a small thing,
and the night is very large
and full of wonders
-LORD DUNSANY, The Laughter of the Gods
PART ONE
BURSTER
FEBRUARY
1
It began quietly.
Amy Major came into Benjamin's office and with studied care placed
a sheet in front of his tired eyes. "Got a funny one for you."
Benjamin stared at the graph. In the middle of the page, a sharp
peak poked up to a high level, then fell slowly to his right. He
glanced at the bottom axis, showing time, and said, "So it died
away in a few seconds. What's so odd?"
Amy gave him an angular grin that he knew she thought made her
look tough-minded and skeptical. He had always read that expression
as stubborn, but then, she so often disagreed with him. "Here's
the second."
"Second?" Maybe her grin was deserved.
With a suppressed smile, she handed him another sheet. Same sort
of peak, subsiding into the background noise in four seconds. "Ho
hum." He raised his eyebrows in question, a look he had trained
the staff to interpret as Why are you wasting my time ?
"Could be any ordinary burster, right?"
"Yes." Amy liked to play the elephantine game out in
full.
"Only it's a repeater."
"Ah. How close?"
"In space, dead on. The prelim position is right on top of
the first one's." Dramatic pause. "In time, 13.45 hours."
"What?" Was this a joke? "Thirteen hours?"
"Yup."
Gamma-ray bursters were cosmological explosions, the biggest
Creation had ever devised. They showed up in the highest energy
spectrum of all, the fat, powerful light that emerged when atomic
nuclei fell apart. The preferred model describing bursters invoked a
big black hole swallowing something else quite substantial, like a
massive star. Bursters were the dyspeptic belch of a spectacularly
large astrophysical meal. Each one devastated a seared region of the
host galaxy.
Eaten once, a star could not be ingested again, thirteen hours
later.
On the off chance that this was still a joke, he said with
measured deliberation, "Now, that is interesting."
Always be positive at the beginning, or else staff would not come to
you at all. He smiled wanly. "But the preliminary position is in
a big box."
This was more than a judicious reservation. It was almost
certainly the true explanation. The two would prove to come from
different points in the sky.
They got from the discovering instrument a rough location of
the burster—a box drawn on the sky map, with the source within
it somewhere. Sharpening that took other instruments specially
designed for the job. Same for the second burster. Once they
knew accurately where this second burst was, he was sure it would
turn out to be far from the earlier burst, and the excitement would
be over. Best to let her down slowly, though. "Still, let's hope
it's something new."
"Uh, I thought it was worth mentioning, Dr. Knowlton."
Her rawboned face retreated into defensive mode, mouth pursing up as
if she had drawn a string through both lips. She had been the origin
of the staff's private name for him, Dr. Know-It-All-ton. That had
hurt more than he had ever let on.
"And it is, it is. You asked Space Array for a quick
location?"
"Sure, and sent out an alert to everybody on Gamma Net."
"Great."
She let her skeptic-hardnose mask slip a little. "It's a real
repeater. I just know it."
"I hope you're right." He had been through dozens of
cases of mistaken identity and Amy had not. She was a fine operations
astronomer, skilled at sampling the steady stream of data that flowed
through the High Energy Astrophysics Center, though a bit too earnest
for his taste.
"I know, nobody's ever seen a repeater this delayed,"
she said.
"Minutes, yes. Hours, no."
"But the prelim spectra look similar."
"How many data points in the spectrum?"
"Uh, four."
"Not nearly enough to tell anything for sure."
"I've got a hunch."
"And I have a crowded schedule."
"I really think—"
"Hard for me to see what the rush is."
"We might want to alert some other 'scopes right away, if
this is important."
Patience, patience. "I see."
"I'm getting the first one's full spectrum any minute,"
she went on, beginning to pace. He realized that she had been holding
herself in check until now. He reminded himself that enthusiasm was
always good, though it needed guidance.
"I'll give Attilio a ring, see if I can hurry things along,"
he said, touching his desk and punching in a code.
"Oh, great, Dr. Knowlton." A sudden smile.
He saw that this was the real point of her telling him so soon,
before confirming evidence was in. He could help. Despite
himself, he felt pleased. Not at this implied acknowledgment of
his power, but at being included.
Every once in a while he got to analyze raw data. Perhaps even to
invent an explanation, try it out, see his work as a whole thing.
Every once in a while.
As he punched his finder-phone keypad, Amy started to leave. He
waved her back. "No, stay."
He got straight through and jollied Attilio with a moment of
banter, speaking into the four-mike set in his desk. Attilio's
replies came through, clear and rich, though his lanky, always
elegantly attired body was sitting in the shadow of the Alps. "You
knew I would be in here this very morning," Attilio said. "We
are both working too hard."
"We're addicts."
"Science addicts, yes, an obscure vice."
Benjamin asked for a "little bit of a speedup" in
processing and checking the two events. This took about fifteen
minutes, most of it devoted to chat, but getting the job done all the
same. An e-mail might have gotten the same results, but in his
experience, not. All the talk of being systematic and highly
organized left out the human need to gossip, even with people you
seldom saw.
He finished the call with a promise from Attilio to get together
next time Benjamin was in Europe and also, just incidentally,
could he look into this second source right away?
"I was hoping you'd do that," Amy said. She had been
sitting on the edge of her seat the whole conversation, when she
wasn't up and pacing quickly, her long hair trailing in the air.
"I wanted you to hear the conversation, get a little
experience with greasing the international gears." Studying
gamma-ray bursters was now not merely international but
interplanetary, if one counted the many robot observers orbiting
in the solar system. At least the spacecraft did not take so much
massaging. Or grand meals at Center expense.
"Oh, I've learned pretty well how to work the system."
"Sure, but you don't know Attilio yet. He's a great guy. I'll
take you to dinner with him, next AAS meeting. He's giving an invited
talk, I hear."
"Meaning, you're on the program committee."
Benjamin grinned. "Caught me out." As in every field,
having friends on the right committees and boards and conferences was
important, a game Benjamin had played quite often. "And I
appreciate your bringing this to me so soon. I do like to look up
from the paperwork every year or three and act like a real astronomer
again."
"Glad to."
"You've been doing a good job here. Don't think I don't
notice."
She was nominally a postdoctoral researcher under his direction,
but her appointment was about to convert over to full-time staff.
Might as well build her up a bit for the disappointment to come, when
Attilio called back.
Astronomy treated its students kindly, providing many tasks that
were true, solid science and even might lead to an important result.
The universe was still so poorly known that surprises lurked
everywhere, especially when one had a new instrument with greater
seeing power, or the ability to peer into a fresh region of the
spectrum. The newer 'scopes were mostly distant hardware operated by
a corps of technicians. Astronomers themselves ruled these by long
distance, asking for spots in the night sky to be scrutinized, all
over a Net connection. Nobody squinted through eyepieces
anymore.
So it was with gamma-ray bursters. Long known, and still
imperfectly understood, they now rewarded only the diligent with new
phenomena. Amy was careful and energetic, perfect for mining the
profusion of data. Bursters were still interesting but not
really a hot topic any more. Benjamin ran the group that did most of
the burster data organizing, plunked down here in Hawaii more for
political reasons than scientific ones.
Since they dwelled at the very edge of the perceptible universe,
bursters yielded their secrets only to careful study. As there was no
telling where and when a burster would burst, one had to survey the
entire sky. When a burster spat out its virulent, high-energy
emissions, a network of telescopes went into operation,
recording its brief life.
If a burster was truly different, a crowd of experienced observers
would rush in, analyzing data and offering interpretations at
the speed of e-mail.
But Amy—and he—would have the honor of discovery.
"Hope it pans out," he said kindly.
"Got to play your hunches, right? I'll zap the VLA results to
you at home if you want."
"Yes, do."
Had he been harder on her than he should have? He felt grumpy, a
sure signal to withhold judgment. The situation with Channing had
been getting so bleak lately, he had to defend against the black
moods that could creep up on him whenever he got tired. He would have
to watch that. It kept getting worse.
Amy went back to work and he noticed that it was well past 6 P.M.
He had been due home half an hour ago. He felt a pang of guilt as he
left, lugging his briefcase full of unread bureaucratic paper.
As he was getting into his convertible, a loud bang echoed from
the rocky slope above. His head jerked up toward the radio array
antennas perched along the upper plateau. Birds flapped away on the
thin air. The array's "shotgun" fired several times at
sunset to scare away birds, who showed a fascination with building
nests in the dishes of the radio telescopes. It was incredibly
loud, not a gun at all, but fuel ignited in a tube. It also
served to keep the birds from getting into the great domes of the
optical telescopes farther up the mountain. Still, the blasts always
unnerved him. The "shotgun" was just another aspect of
working at the true focus of astronomy, the observing sites. It had
been a pure stroke of luck, being offered his position here at the
High Energy Astrophysics Center. A university appointment would
have been more comfortable, but less exciting. Even if he did mostly
push paper around these days.
Here was where astronomy still had some vestige of hands-on
immediacy. All the high, dry sites around the globe were now thronged
with telescopes that spied upward in every band of the
electromagnetic spectrum: radio to gamma ray, with many stops in
between. Though data flew between observatories at the speed of
light, there was still nothing quite like being able to walk over and
talk to the people who had gathered it, see the new images as they
formed on TV screens. Of course, the sharpest observations came from
space, sent down by robot 'scopes. And he was quite sure that within
a day those instruments would tell Amy that her second burster was no
kin to the first.
He drove down the mountain, from the cool, thin air of the great
slopes and into the moist clasp of Hawaii's sprawling big island.
Mauna Kea was a massive stack of restless stone, giving great
spreading views of misty green, but he noticed none of it as he sped
a little too much on the way down. He felt guilty about being late.
Channing would be home from her doctor's appointment and would
probably have started making supper and he didn't want her doing
that. Either he would make it, or else take her out. Visits to Dr.
Mendenham usually made her withdrawn and wore down her precarious
confidence.
That was it—a good meal at the Reefman, maybe even some
dancing if she was up to it. He had forgotten about Amy's objects by
the time he hit the easier part of the road, the lush tropical plain
that ran down to the sea.
2
When the radiologist abruptly stopped his mechanically
friendly chatter, she knew something was wrong. Again.
Immediately, Channing remembered when all this had started, back
in the rosy dawn of time when she had been brimming with energy and
going to live forever. Then she had felt the same reaction in a
doctor and, in classic fashion, went through the Virtuous Girl
list: Nope, never drank, smoked, didn't use coffee or even tea,
at least not much. Plenty of exercise, low-fat addict, even held her
breath while walking by a coughing bus exhaust. Can't be me, Doc!
Then why? It's so unfair! she had thought, then sourly
saw that she was buying the Great Statistical Lie, which made you
think there were no fluctuations, no mean deviations, no chance
happenings in a world which her rational, fine-honed astronaut mind
knew was jammed full of haphazard turns.
So she had heard the leaden words fall from the doctor's mouth:
lumpy tumor plus invaded lymph nodes, bad blood chem, the
full-course dinner.
So okay, I'll lose my hair. But I like hats, fine. And I can
explore my inner drag queen by wearing wigs.
The chemo doctor had said with complete confidence, "You and
I are going to be good friends," which had immediately put
her guard up.
She had gone through the predictable symptoms, items on her
checklist, just like pre-mission planning. Hair loss came right to
the day, two weeks after chemo. She had a little party and
turned it into a piece of performance art. Atta girl!
Fatigue: she was ready, with new pillows and satiny sheets; sensual
sleep, the manuals whispered. Nausea was tougher: she had never grown
fond of vomiting. Possible infertility?: well past that anyway. Loss
of libido: definitely a problem; maybe stock up on porn movies?
Weight gain: bad news. She would waddle down the street, bald and
unsteady, and instead of onlookers thinking, Must be going
through chemo, they'd say, "Wow, she's really let herself
go."
Plenty of phone calls: astronaut buddies, friends, college
roommate, the support circuit—much-needed strokes. Bought a
Vegas showgirl wig, stockpiled it for a late-night turn-on. Cut the
hair back to a short, sassy 'do, so there wouldn't be a total clutter
when it fell out. Bought a Bible: she was shocked to find they didn't
have one in the house. Benjamin had never pretended to believe, and
she supposed she didn't either, but what if God favored those who
kept up appearances? It had always been one of those things she was
going to read when there was time, like Tolstoy. When she had been in
orbit for three months, doing tedious experiments, she actually
had started in on War and Peace because it was in the tiny
station library and she had forgotten to bring anything. She had
finished it because it was good, to her surprise. Okay, time for
Dostoyevsky.
Only she hadn't, of course; too depressing. More gloomy obsessions
when she had quite enough already, thank you.
From the look on this tech's face, maybe she wasn't going to get
another chance.
Then, without her noticing the transition, she was with good ole
Dr. Mendenham, the tech was gone, and she knew she had passed through
another little time jump. She had first noted this quaint little
property of her mind when she was in astronaut training. Anxiety
erased short-term memory. So to get through the protracted
training, she had learned to skate over her anxieties,
focus-focus-focus. Only now it didn't seem to work.
"Lie down. I need to put my hands on you," said one of
the specialists with Mendenham.
"You have no idea how often I hear that from men," she
said bravely, but the sally from her tight throat came off as forced.
She had gotten used to having these men fondle her breasts but not
used to the indifference they conspicuously displayed. A little
nervous energy from them would have been appreciated, evidence that
she hadn't entirely lost her attractions.
Then they were through and she was taking notes, pre-mission
checklist style, preparing for a flight plan to a destination
she didn't want to reach. The cancer had advanced in a way they had
not expected. Despite the last therapy, which they reminded her was
experimental, there were only slight signs of retarded growth.
Another jump. She was out of the clinic, in the car, rolling
around the curves of the road home. Focus-focus-focus, no point
in becoming a traffic statistic when you have a classier demise on
the way. Hawaii's damp smells worked into her concentration,
pleasant sweet air curling into her lungs and reminding her that the
world did have its innocent delights. Even though plants, too, were
trying to fend off animals with poisons and carcinogens, one of which
had wormed into her.
Channing swerved a bit too fast into their driveway, spitting
gravel, crunching to a stop just short of Copernicus, who was sunning
himself. She got out and was suddenly immensely glad that he was
there. She hugged him and babbled some as he tried to wag his
tail off. With Copernicus she could make a fool of herself playing
and he would respond by making an even bigger fool of himself.
Still, his admiration was not conclusive evidence of one's
wonderfulness. For that, she needed Benjamin, and where was he?
On cue, he rolled into the driveway, barely squeezing his sports
car into the space. She had kidded him about mid-forties testosterone
when he bought it, but he did indeed look great in the eggshell-blue
convertible, top down, his concerned frown as he got out
breaking over her like butterscotch sunlight, and then she was
in his arms and the waterworks came on and she was past being
embarrassed about it. She clung to him. He clung back. Chimpanzee
nuzzling, maybe, but it worked.
She was unsteady going into the house with him and let its comfy
feel envelop her. He asked about her medical and she told him and it
all came in a rush then, all the sloppy emotions spilling out over
the astronaut's shiny exterior. She finished up with some quiet sobs
in his arms, feeling much better and also now slightly embarrassed,
her usual combo.
"Sounds like you need some mahi-mahi therapy," Benjamin
murmured into her left ear.
"I'd prefer some bed right away, thanks sir, but yep, my
stomach's rumbling."
"Oh, I thought that was a plane going over."
"Maybe my knees knocking."
"You're braver than anyone I have ever known," in the
soft tone he always used to creep up on the worst of it.
"What happens if you get scared half to death twice?"
"The blood analysis—"
"Yeah, worse." Cryptic, astronaut-casual. "Some
physio, too."
"You have the printout? I'd—"
Breaking away, she made the timeout signal. "Lemme slap a
flapjack of makeup on my face."
She got through the repair work without looking in the mirror
much, a trick she had developed since the hair loss. The medical
printouts went into her valise, along with the harvest of the fax
machine. Brisk and efficient she was, carefully not thinking
while she did all these neat little compartmented jobs. She's
steppin' out, she sang to herself from an old Electric Light
Orchestra number, letting the bouncy sound do its work. Steppin'
out. Fake gaiety was better than none.
He drove them to the Reefman in rather gingerly fashion, not his
born-to-the-road style. Hot white clouds hung stranded in a windless
sky of shredded silver. The swanky driveway led them to a rambling
building that appeared to be made of cinder from the island's
volcano, an effect slightly too studied. Music boomed out from a
spacious deck bar, heat shimmered over car hoods, the perpetual
hovering presence of eternal summer thickening the air.
They ambled around the side garden approach to the beach tables.
Her floppy hat would look appropriate there. She had two inches of
fur now, creeping up on a presentable cut, but not quite there. The
grounds were trying to cheer her up with their ambitious topiaries,
laughing fountains, a beach below so white it ached to be trampled.
They got a table and she remembered that this was one of those
newfangled home-style restaurants, with a few of the
Unnoticeables passing appetizers among the tables. She and Benjamin
had lived here long enough to see the old Hawaiian informality
give way to Advanced Tourism, so that one looked through the help and
visitors never thought about who changed the sheets of the Rulers.
"Glass of wine?" Benjamin nudged her.
"Really shouldn't."
"I know, which is another reason to do it."
"Hey, that's my kind of line."
"I always steal from the best."
"I look like I need it pretty bad?"
"Let's say I need for you to."
She laughed and ordered a glass of fumé
blanc, a thumb to the nose for Death, and even in her rickety state
not enough to risk a hangover, the Wrath of Grapes.
"Okay, fill me in on the medical." Benjamin said this in
his clear, official voice, a mannerism from work he used sometimes
when the uncomfortable side of life came up. He was completely
unaware of this habit, she knew. Rather than feeling affronted, she
found it endearing, though she could not say why. When she was
through, he said, "Damn," his voice tightening further.
"Going to operate?"
"No, they want to let this new regime of drugs work on it
awhile."
"How long?"
"Didn't say. I got the impression that they wouldn't give a
solid answer."
"Well, it is experimental." He tried to put a little
lilt in his tone to freight some optimism into the conversation, but
it did not work because they both knew it.
"And I'm not up to more cutting anyway."
"True," he said miserably. "Damn, I feel so
powerless?
An absolutely typical and endearing male trait. They wanted to do,
and women supposedly more wanted to be. Well, her
astronaut-self wanted to do something, too, but they were both far
out of their depth here. Both technically and emotionally.
She watched him clench his fists for a long moment. They exchanged
thin smiles, a long look. Time to move on, her intuition
told her.
She opened her valise. They had always done paperwork at dinner,
one of those odd habits couples acquire that seem, in retrospect,
defining: workaholics in love. She shuffled the medical printouts to
the side; best to get his mind off the subject. "Here, this
looks like work."
He reached for it almost eagerly. "From Amy, relayed from the
VLA."
She recognized the Very Large Array standard display, a gridded
map made in the microwave spectrum. After tiring of the astronaut
horse race, she had thrown herself into becoming a respectable
astrophysicist. Mostly a data magician and skeptic, which fit her
character fine. She had gotten her job here on her merits, not on
glory inherited from being a space jockey; she had made sure of that.
Benjamin traced a finger along a ridge of dark lines. "Ummm,
a linear feature. Must be a mistake."
"Why?" He told her quickly about Amy's supposedly
repeating burster. He slid out a cover sheet and scrawled across the
top was: I CHECKED—COORDINATES ARE RIGHT. THIS IS REAL. AMY
"She's found something?" Channing sipped her wine,
liking its bite.
"Ummm. She wrote that note because she knew I'd doubt this
like hell. This long filament is far larger than any burster could
be. Must be a chance overlap with something ordinary. Looks like
a galactic jet to me."
She nodded. In their early eras, galaxies often ejected jets of
radiating electrons from their core regions. Channing had never
studied galaxies very much—astronauts specialized in solar
system objects, or studying the Earth from space—but she
recalled that such jets were fairly common, and so one could easily
turn up in the box that bounded the burster's location. Still…
"What if it's not?"
"Then this is a burster that makes no sense."
"But that's what you'd like—something new."
He gazed skeptically at the long filament. "New yes, wrong
no."
"You don't know it's wrong yet." He had been like this
lately, doubting everything. Perhaps it came from her illness;
medicine always rewarded a skeptical, informed use of the
squeaky-wheel principle. He had loyally squeaked a lot in her
defense.
"I'll bet it goes away tomorrow."
"And I bet not," she said impetuously.
"How much?" He gave her his satyr grin.
"Something kinky, say."
"Sounds like we can't lose."
"You bet." This evening was getting off to a good start,
despite earlier signs. Now to glide by the hard part. "I want to
go in with you tomorrow, have a look at this burster."
Concern flickered in his face, then he suppressed it. He was
always urging her to stay home, rest up, but bless him, he didn't
know how maddening that could be. She did still have a job and desk
at the Center, even if both were getting covered in cobwebs.
"I don't think—"
"If this is important—and of course, you're probably
right, it's not—I'd like to be in on it."
"As experiences go, it'll be pretty dull."
Lately, experience was something she never seemed to get until
just after she needed it. "Better than daytime TV."
She let a little too much desperation creep into her voice, which
was not fair, but at the moment maybe it was just being honest. She
watched him struggle with that for a long moment. Visibly reluctant,
he finally said, "Uh, okay."
"You always say you want your staff to be ambitious, look for
the new."
"Well, sure…"
He was getting a bit too sober, she saw, the weight of her news
pressing him down. How to rescue the evening?
"Standard executive cheerleading. Follow your dream, you
say." She smiled and lowered her eyelids while giving him an
up-from-under gaze—a dead-sure attention-getter, she knew, and
just the sort of attention she wanted right now. "Unless, of
course, it's that one about giving a speech to the International
Astronomical Union dressed in sexy underwear."
3
Astronomy, Benjamin mused, was a lot like a detective story with
the clues revealed first, and the actual body only later—if
ever. Pulsars and quasars, both brilliant beacons glimpsed across the
cosmos, had proved to be powered by small specks of compressed
mass, resolved only decades after their emissions made them obvious.
The clues were gaudy, the causes obscure. So it went with this latest
mystery.
The next morning Channing was too worn out to come in with him
after all. He lingered over breakfast, they talked about the news in
ritual fashion, and finally she shooed him out of the house. "My
bed beckons," she said. He was somewhat relieved, then, to
get immediately to work with Amy when they got the "cleaned"
radio map, chugged out by the ever-laboring computers. It showed the
intensity of radio emissions, plotted like a topographical map. A
long, spindly feature like a ridge line.
"A definite tail," Amy said. "Some kind of guided
flow."
"A galactic jet?"
To his surprise, she shook her head. "That's what I figured.
But I checked the old radio maps of this region. This thing wasn't
there five years ago."
"What?" He flatly did not believe her, but kept that out
of his voice. A mistake, surely. He did a quick calculation and
realized that if this thing were a jet in a distant galaxy, it could
not possibly have grown so large in a few years. Must be a
mistake. "It's too big—"
"Yeah, and too luminous. Couldn't have missed it before. This
thing is new."
"But… but—" He traced out the size of the
straight feature and checked his calculation again. "It
would have to be the size of a galaxy, maybe bigger, to look this
big."
Amy grinned. "Now you know why I only got three hours' sleep
last night."
To appear suddenly and be galactic in scale meant that the entire
structure had to light up at once, faster than allowed by the speed
of light. "Got to be wrong," he said as amiably as he
could.
So they spent an hour going over every number and map. And Amy was
right. "So we're making a wrong assumption somewhere," she
said cheerily. "And I bet I know where. Looks like a jet, so it
must be extra-galactic, right? Wrong. It's in our galaxy."
He nodded. There were jets of radiant matter streaming out of star
systems, all right. This must have just been born. "But why is
it a gamma-ray source?"
"Must be it's got a black hole down at the base of it,
gobbling up mass from a companion star." She scribbled some
numbers. "And a hell of a bright one, too."
Benjamin checked her calculation. The radio luminosity was very
high, and so was the gamma-ray intensity, if this were a source in
the Milky Way galaxy. "Too high," he said. "This would
be the brightest we've ever seen."
"Well, somebody's got to be the brightest," she said so
flatly that he knew she implied the double meaning. She was quite
bright herself; her intuition about this source had been right all
along; it was damned interesting.
Time to throw a curveball, see how she swung. "I just got
this by e-mail." He showed her a report from the Space Array.
They had looked at the source and failed to resolve any feature.
"This just means it's tiny," Amy said. "Fits with
the idea that the source is a star—"
"And here's the spectrum of the flare." He plunked it
down. A mass of lines, many of them obviously from hydrogen. A
joker in the deck for sure; gamma-ray bursters did not look like this
at all.
That much Amy took in at a glance. "Um. I recognize some of
these lines, but they're off…" Quick jottings. "They're
split!"
"Right." Each of the major spectral lines had two peaks.
"Never saw anything like this from a galactic jet or anything
else."
"Maybe this will go away." This was code for a wrong
measurement, to be caught when it was checked.
"Nope," he said merrily, "I saw this right away, of
course, and got back to them. They looked it over, say it's all
right."
"Must be Doppler shifts."
"Plausible." An emitter moving toward them would seem to
give off hydrogen light slightly shifted up in frequency, toward the
blue. One traveling away would seem red. "This guy gives us both
at once? Makes no sense."
"Ummm. The blue shift is strongest."
They looked at each other and grinned. "This is the strangest
damn thing I've ever seen," Benjamin said happily.
"Me, too. And it's real."
Nobody had to say anything more. Not a gamma-ray burster, not a
galactic jet—something strange and bright and mysterious.
Astronomers lived to find a wholly new class of object, and this
looked a lot like one. And it had just fallen into their laps. It
helped being bright, Benjamin thought, but being lucky would do just
fine, thank you.
"Glad to hear it" came a voice from over his shoulder.
Brisk, British, and even after many years, instantly recognizable.
He turned and looked into the face of Kingsley Dart. "Caught a
whisper of this while I was over on Honolulu," Dart went on
in his quick, clipped accent. "Sounded intriguing. Thought I'd
nip over and have a look."
Benjamin felt his face tighten. He could not make himself say a
word. Amy jumped in with a startled salutation and Benjamin found
himself shaking Dart's hand under shelter of her gusher of greetings,
but he could not force his grinding mind to think of anything at
the moment beyond an incident decades before.
The question had come out of the colloquium audience like a lance,
clear and sharp and cutting. Benjamin had just finished speaking, his
last overhead image still splashed up on the screen. As well, both
blackboards were covered with equations and quick sketches he had
made when he found the confines of language too much.
A moment before he had stepped back and acknowledged the loud
round of applause. It was not the mere pro forma pattering of palms,
carrying the quality of gratitude that the speaker was finished and
soon would come the after-colloquium tea or wine and cheese.
They liked the ideas, and some genuine smiles reassured that they
liked him. The colloquium chairman had then asked, as
customary, "Any questions?" Swiftly the
Oxbridge-accented sentences spiked out and Benjamin knew that he was
in trouble.
His heart was already tripping fast. This was his first
colloquium presentation, an unusual honor. At twenty-six, he was
the bright boy of the astrophysics group at U.C. Berkeley, but
even the best graduate students seldom got an invitation to
speak in the Astronomy Department's most elevated venue. There were
fifty, maybe sixty people in the audience, mostly graduate students,
but with all the senior faculty in the first few rows. He had counted
the crowd as it grew, been gratified; the heavy hitters had all
turned out, not cutting it because Benjamin was in their minds still
just a graduate student, or nearly so. It was an honor to be here and
he had prepared for weeks, rehearsing with Channing, tailoring his
viewgraphs, making up four-color computer graphics to show sinuous
flows and ruby-red plasma currents.
His talk had been about the energetic jets that shoot out from the
disks around black holes, a recurring hot topic in the field. As new
windows opened for telescopes across the electromagnetic spectrum,
the jets showed more detail, fresh mysteries.
In his talk he had used the entire modern arsenal of theoretical
attack: calculations, computer simulations, and finally, to
truly convince, some easily digested cartoons. Nobody really felt
that they understood something unless they carried away a picture of
how it worked. "Get it right in the 'cartoon approximation' and
all else follows," his thesis adviser had sagely said.
Benjamin had shown that the jets were very probably confined
by their own magnetic fields. This could only be so if they carried a
net current out from their source, presumably a large black hole and
its churning neighborhood. He had ended up with a simple declaration:
"That is, in a sense the flows are self-organized." In
other words, they neatly knit themselves up.
Then the knife question came from a figure Benjamin did not know,
an angular face halfway back in the rows of chairs. Benjamin felt
that he should know the face, there was something familiar about it,
but there was no time to wonder about identity now. A quick riposte
to an attack was essential in the brisk world of international
astrophysics. Ideas had their moment in the sun, and if the glare
revealed a blemish, they were banished.
The question subtly undermined his idea. In a slightly nasal Brit
accent, the voice recalled that jets were probably born near the disk
of matter rotating about black holes, but after that were at the
mercy of the elements as they propagated outward, into the
surrounding galaxy.
Smoothly the questioner pointed out that other ways to confine and
shape the jets were easily imagined—for example, the
pressure of the galaxy's own gas and dust—and "seemed more
plausible, I should imagine." This last stab was within the
allowed range of rebukes.
Benjamin took a second to assume an almost exaggerated pose of
being at ease, putting his hands in his pockets and rocking back on
one foot, letting the other foot rise, balanced on its heel.
"Lack of imagination is not really an argument, is it?"
he said mildly.
A gratifying ripple of laughter washed through the room. Those
already half out of their seats paused, sensing a fight. Benjamin
quickly went on, catching the momentum of the moment. "To collar
a jet and make it run straight demands something special about the
medium around it, some design on its part. But if the jet is
self-managed, right from the moment it was born, back on the
accretion disk—that solves the confinement problem."
Nods, murmurs. His opponent cast a shrewd look and again Benjamin
could almost place that face, the clipped, precise English accent.
The man said casually, "But you have no way of knowing if a disk
will emit that much current. And as well, I should think that no
relativistically exact result could tell you that in general." A
smirk danced at the edges of the man's mouth. "And you do
realize that the black hole region must be treated in accordance with
general relativity, not merely special
relativity?"
The audience had turned to hear this, eyes casting back, and
Benjamin knew that this was somebody important. The shot about
relativity was a clear put-down, questioning his credentials. A nasty
insinuation to make about a fresh Ph.D., the ink barely dry on his
diploma. He drew in a long breath and time slowed, the way it does in
a traffic accident, and suddenly he realized that he was frightened.
His was the second colloquium of the academic year, a prestigious
spot in itself. The Astronomy Department liked to get the year off
with a bang, featuring bold, invigorating topics. The air was crisp
with autumn smells, the campus alive with edgy expectation, and
Channing was in the tenth row in her blue good-luck sweater.
Act. Say something. But what?
He caught her eyes on him and stepped forward, putting his hands
behind his back in a classic pontifical pose, the way he had seen
others signal that they were being thoughtful. In fact, he did not
need to think, for the answer came to him out of nowhere, slipping
into words as he began a sentence, not quite knowing where it
was going.
"The disk dynamo has to give off a critical level of
current," he said easily, getting the tone of bemused
thought. "Otherwise it would not be able to coherently rotate."
He let the sentence hang in air. The senior figures in the
department were watching him, waiting for further explanation,
and he opened his mouth to give it. His nostrils flared and he saw
with crystalline clarity that he should say nothing, leave the
tantalizing sentence to sink in. Bait. This guy in the back was a
Brit, dish out some of his own style to him.
He had gotten everyone's attention and now the audience sensed
something, heads swiveling to watch the Englishman. Stand
pat? No.
Benjamin decided to raise the stakes. A cool thrill ran through
him as he added, "I would think that was physically clear."
Half the audience had already turned toward the back rows and when
he spoke they quickly glanced around like a crowd at a tennis match
following a fast volley.
The face in the back clouded, scowling, and then seemed to decide
to challenge. "I should think that unlikely" came the
drawl, lifting at the last word into a derisive lilt, un-like-ly.
Benjamin felt a prickly rush sweep over him. Gotcha.
"It follows directly from a conservation theorem,"
Benjamin said smoothly, savoring the line, striding to the
overhead projector and slapping down a fresh viewgraph. He had
not shown it in the talk because it was an arcane bit of
mathematics, not the sort of thing to snag the attention of this
crowd. No eye-catching graphics or dazzling data-crunching, just
some lines of equations with double-integral signs, ripe with vector
arrows over the symbols. A yawner—until now.
"Starting with Maxwell's equations," he began, pointing,
then glanced up. "Which we know to be relativistically correct,
yes?"
This jibe made a few of the theorists chuckle; everybody had
learned this as undergraduates, but most had forgotten it long ago.
"So performing the integrals over a cylindrical volume…"
He went through the steps quickly, knowing that nobody this late in
the hour wanted to sit through five minutes of tedious
calculations. The cat was out of the bag, anyway. Springing a
crisp new viewgraph—and then two more to finish the argument,
all tightly reasoned mathematics— tipped his hand. He had
anticipated this question and prepared, deliberately left a hole
in his argument. Or so the guy in the back would think—was
thinking, from the deepening frown Benjamin saw now on the distant,
narrow face—and knew that he had stepped into a trap.
Only it wasn't so. Benjamin had not really intended it that way,
had left the three viewgraphs out because they seemed a minor
digression of little interest to the hard-nosed astrophysicists
who made up most of the audience.
"So we can see that this minimum level is quite enough to
later on confine the jets, keep them pointing straight, solve the
problem." He added this last little boast and stepped back.
The Brit face at the back curled up a lip, squinted eyes, but said
nothing. A long moment passed as the colloquium chairman peered
toward the back, rocking forward a little, and then saw that there
would be no reply. Game, point, match, Benjamin thought,
breathing in deeply of air that seemed cool and sharp.
There were two more questions, minor stuff about possible
implications, easy to get through. In fact, he let himself strut a
little. He expanded on some work he contemplated doing in the near
future, once he and Channing had the wedding business over with
and he could think, plan the next step in his career. He felt that he
could get away with a slight, permissible brag.
Then it was over, the ritual incantation from the chairman, "There
is wine and cheese in the usual place, to which you are all invited.
Let us thank our speaker again…"
This applause was scattered and listless, as usual as everybody
got up, and the crowd left. His major professor appeared at his elbow
and said, "You handled that very well."
"Uh, thanks. Who is that guy?" Benjamin glanced at the
crowd, not letting any concern into his face.
"Dart. Kingsley Dart."
"The similarity solutions guy from Oxford?"
"Right. Just blew in yesterday afternoon, visiting for a few
days. Thought you had met him."
"I was squirreled away making viewgraphs."
"You sure nailed Dart with those last three."
"I hadn't really planned it that way—"
An amused grin. "Oh, sure."
"I didn't!"
"Nobody gets timing like that without setting it up."
"Well, my Benjamin did," Channing said, slipping an arm
around his. "I know, because he had them in the very first
version of the talk."
Benjamin smiled. "And you told me to drop them."
"It worked perfectly, didn't it?" she said, all
innocence.
He laughed, liking the feeling of release it brought, liking that
she had made him seem a lot more the savvy Machiavellian than he
was, liking the whole damned thing so much it clutched at his heart
somehow in the frozen moment of triumph. Off to the side two of the
big names of the department were talking about the implications
of his work and he liked the sound of that, too, his name wafting
pleasantly in the nearly empty room. He could smell the aging,
polished wood, the astringent solvent reek of the dry markers
from the blackboard, a moist gathering in the cloying air of late
afternoon. Channing kept her arm in his and walked proudly beside him
up the two flights to the wine and cheese.
"You were great." She looked up at him
seriously and he saw that she had feared for him in this last hour.
Berkeley was notorious for cutting criticisms, arch comments, savage
seminars that dissected years of research in minutes of coldly
delivered condemnation.
She had kept close to him through the aftermath, when white-haired
savants of the field came up to him, holding plastic glasses of an
indifferent red wine, and probed him on details, implications, even
gossip. Treating him like a member of the club, a colleague at
last. She had tugged at his arm and nodded when Dart came into view,
earnestly talking to a grand old observing astronomer. Dart had a way
of skating over a crowd, dipping in where he wanted, like a
hummingbird seeking the sweet bulbs. Eventually he worked his
way around to Benjamin, lifting eyebrows as he approached, his face
in fact running through the entire suite of ironic messages,
very Euro, before shooting out a hand and saying, "Kingsley
Dart. Liked the talk."
Firm handshake. "You seemed to disagree with most of it."
A shrug. "Testing the ideas, just testing."
He said, a little testily, Benjamin thought. "I had
dropped those viewgraphs, the proof, out of the talk. I didn't think
most of the audience would care."
Abrupt nods, three very quick, then a long one, as though
deliberating. "Probably right. Only people like me and thee
care."
Ah, Benjamin thought, instant inclusion in the
fraternity of people-like-us. "It's a major point, I should
have brought it up."
"No, you were right, would've blunted your momentum."
Why is he being so chummy? Channing's glance asked,
eyebrows pinched in. He had no idea. Not knowing where to go with
this conversation, he said, "My fiancée,
Channing Blythe," and they went through the usual presentations.
But Kingsley kept eyeing him with a gaze that lapsed into frowning
speculation, as though they were still feeling each other out. And
maybe they were. Within minutes they were at it, throwing ideas and
clipped phrases back and forth, talking the shorthand of those who
spent a lot of time living in their heads and were glad to meet
someone who shared the same interior territory. It was the start of a
formal friendship and a real, never acknowledged rivalry, two poles
that defined them in the decades that followed.
Twenty years. Could it have been that long?
And now here he was, the famous Royal Astronomer, first on the
scene when something potentially big was breaking. Perfect timing was
a gift, and Kingsley had it.
Forcing a smile onto his stiff face, Benjamin felt a sharp, hot
spike of genuine hatred.
4
Channing planned her invasion of the High Energy Astrophysics
Center carefully. First, what were the right clothes to stage a
dramatic reappearance at work, after a month away, presumed by all to
be no longer a real player?
When she had worked at NASA Headquarters the dress code had been
easy: modified East Coast style, basically a matter of getting her
blacks to match. Did a mascara-dark midlength skirt go with a
charcoal turtleneck? Close enough and she was okay for either NASA's
labyrinths, the opera, or a smoky dive.
But amid tropical glare and endless vibrant bougainvillea, her
outfits had seemed like dressing as a vampire at an Easter egg hunt.
Here, slouchy sweaters and scuffed tennis shoes appeared at "dressy
casual" receptions, right next to Italian silk ties, subtle
diamond bracelets, and high heels sinking into the sandy sod. She had
seen jeans worn with a tiara, "leisure gowns" looking like
pajamas, and a tux top with black shorts. Yet finding a studied
casual look took her an hour of careful weighing, all to seem as
though she had thrown them on fifteen minutes ago without a second
thought. On top of that, you never knew how the day would proceed
later, whether you were dressing for an evening on a humid, warm
patio or inside, in air-conditioning set for the comfort zone of a
snow leopard. Maddening.
She eyed herself carefully in the mirror. Now, thanks to weight
loss, she had a great, tight butt: Gluteus to the Max-imus!
But her breasts, once ample enough, thank you, were sagging, or as
she preferred to think in TV terms, losing their vertical hold.
Getting over vanity had been the hardest part of adjusting to the
cancer. A vain man would check himself out passing a mirror. An
absolutely ordinary woman could pick out her reflections in store
windows, spoons, bald men's heads. Channing, as a photogenic
astronaut type, had been ever-aware of How She Looked. All women
faced the Looks Issue, as she had thought of it as a teenager,
whether as a positive element or a negative one. Not that it had not
done her good now and then. At NASA it had helped her through earnest
committee meetings in which she was the only woman in the room. Now,
thank God, all that was behind her.
Still, she was not at all ready to enter the working bay, looking
for Benjamin, and find Kingsley Dart in his uniform: slightly
pouchy brown suit, white shirt, tie drawn tight in a knot of unknown
style. Down-market Oxford, so utterly out of place that his attire
advertised Dart's unconcern for such trivial matters. Since she had
seen him in a tux when the situation demanded, and yet he had somehow
achieved the same effect of unconscious indifference, she was sure it
was all quite conscious.
She went through the clothes analysis automatically while trying
to absorb the shock. She was suddenly self-conscious, and then angry
about being so. He still had the power to throw her into momentary
confusion. And the way he lifted his head to smile, with just a whiff
of hauteur, still delighted her. Damn him.
"Channing, how wonderful to see you," Kingsley said
smoothly.
He looked into her face with a worried frown, much as everyone did
these days, as if they could read the state of her health there.
Well, maybe they could; she was past the stage of trying to hide
behind cosmetics. She knew that her skin was yellow and papery, her
eyes rimmed with a dark under-layer, her once strong arms thin and
showing swelling at the joints. It no longer even bothered her that
people glanced at her out of the corner of their eyes, not wanting to
stare but still drawn to hints of the eternal mystery—of what
her mother called "passing," as if there were a clear
destination firmly in mind.
"Thought I'd come in, see what all the excitement's about."
"Is there much?" Kingsley said to Benjamin with
deceptive lightness. "Have you made any announcement?"
"Oh no, much too soon for that," Benjamin said quickly.
"Don't want to just announce a mystery," Amy put in.
"But it's all over the IAU Notices," Kingsley said.
This was the global notification system of the International
Astronomical Union, used to focus workers on the newest comet or
supernova or pulsar of interest. "Sure, but we've got to be
cautious," Benjamin said. "If this is a new class of
object—"
"Then you should enlist as many people and observing windows
as possible," Kingsley finished for him.
Channing smiled, remembering. Kingsley had the annoying
pattern of quickly disagreeing with you and often being right, plus
the even worse property of agreeing with you and getting there first.
Benjamin pursed his lips and plowed on. "I think the big
issue is how this thing can repeat."
Kingsley said carefully, "I must admit, when I saw your
Notices piece, I thought it most likely an error."
Amy said flatly, "It's not an error, I can tell you that."
"I'm quite relieved to hear it." Channing noted that
with this phrase Kingsley was not actually agreeing with Amy, only
reacting, but his choice of words avoided rankling her.
"Look at it this way," Benjamin put in. "At the
very least, this object throws into doubt the standard picture of
gamma-ray bursters."
Kingsley's lips drew into a thin, skeptical line. "With many
thousands observed, one exception does not disprove the model."
Since he had taken a major hand in building up the conventional
view of gamma-ray bursters, this was predictable, Channing felt. She
said amiably, "Similar appearance does not mean similar cause."
Kingsley nodded but Amy said, "Shouldn't we follow Occam's
razor—prefer the simplest explanation? Then this is an odd kind
of burster, but one in our galaxy."
Benjamin said, "Sure, but don't throw out data just because
it makes your job harder. We don't understand the visible light
data, either."
This led to a long discussion of the mysterious Doppler shifts.
Channing had come up today mainly to see this data, and it was
strange indeed. "It's as though some of the thing's coming
toward us, some away. A rotating disk? We'd get the red shifts from
the receding edge, blue shifts from the approaching one."
They all looked at her. "Good idea," Benjamin said
happily, winking and grinning. She could see that they were
surprised in two ways—by the proposal itself, and because
she had made it. She had come into astronomy as an observing
astronaut, doing yeoman labor in the last stages of the space shuttle
era, then doing dutiful time on the space station. The more
academically based astronomers regarded these as rather showy,
unserious pursuits. She had never risen very far here at the Center
and had always wondered if that bias held her back. In the slightly
startled expressions of Dart and Amy—but not, bless him,
Benjamin—she saw confirmation.
Kingsley said incisively, "I rather like that."
"But a disk?" Amy frowned doubtfully. "I'd say
these are kinda large, but I'll have to check…"
"Good," Kingsley said quickly. "At the moment we
have no other hypothesis to test. I wish we did."
Channing was not the only one to notice that his use of we
included Kingsley in the team. Benjamin's eyes narrowed in a way
she understood and he said, "Just wait. Theorists will jump on
this like it was candy."
"They can theorize all they like," Amy said. "We
have all the data."
"Which we should make quick use of," Kingsley said.
"Let's do some preliminary calculations, shall we?"
Channing went with them to a seminar room and they reviewed
the data. Some fresh observations came in over the satellite links as
they worked, providing fresh fodder. She kept up with the
discussions, but to her this branch of astrophysics was like a
French Impressionist painting of a cow: suggestive, artful maybe, but
some things never looked quite right and it was in the end not a
reliable source of nourishing milk. Plus, she was woefully out
of date on current theory. Still she found pleasure in watching
Benjamin and Kingsley spar, using quickly jotted equations as
weapons. Amy joined in, too, her tone a bit less canny and insidious,
but holding her own.
Kingsley jabbed verbally, challenging others' ideas while seeming
at first to be going along with them, inserting doubt slyly as he
carried the discussion forward, ferret-eyed in his intensity. Just as
decades before, he saw this as a delightful game played with chalk
and sliding tones of voice.
Channing found her attention drifting. Looking back, she could
remember liking contests like this from decades past. Benjamin would
always see Kingsley as a rival; that was set in his mind like a
fossil print of their first meeting. Benjamin was a perfectly
respectable theorist, but not in Kingsley's class. That was simply a
fact, but she knew quite well that Benjamin would never fully accept
it. After all, who did not need a little illusion to get through
life?
Having bested Kingsley in a colloquium encounter set their
relationship, as far as Benjamin was concerned. Never mind that
Kingsley had done better work on bigger problems, and on top of
it displayed remarkable skills in the political circus that
science had become. She could barely recall that incident, but knew
that it burned in Benjamin's mind whenever he crossed Kingsley's
path. Probably Kingsley had forgotten it entirely. This seemingly
small difference was precisely why they seldom saw each other. Too
bad, really, because she had always found Kingsley more amusing
than the usual run of academic astronomers. In their bull moose
rivalries, men missed a lot.
Would her own career at NASA have gone better, she mused, if she
had been a man? Nobody in passing conversation would glance at
your chest. You wouldn't have to pretend to be "freshening
up" to go to the goddamn John. Nobody cared if you didn't
remember their birthday. You could rationalize any behavior error
with the all-purpose "Screw it." In late-night jokes in a
bar, you could really see something hilarious in punting a small dog,
preferably a poodle. You didn't give a rat's ass whether anybody
heeded your new haircut. Thank God, they never noticed if you'd lost
or gained weight. Men had some things so easy! With the Other Side,
flowers fixed anything. And as the years closed in, gray hair and
wrinkles would add character. Hell, you could dine out on that alone.
Lean over the bar, belch originally, and declaim about the old days
when rocket boosters kicked you in the ass so hard you thought you
had a prostate problem. And what the hell, you could always look
forward to being a dirty old man.
5
He had expected the next day to be hours of more muddling along,
with data trickling in and more idea-bashing with Kingsley and Amy.
Instead, it proved decisive.
The Very Large Baseline Interferometer reported in promptly, to
everyone's surprise. This network had grown from a few stations
strewn around the world into an intricate system that now included
radio telescopes orbiting farther away than the moon. Its "baseline"
then made it effectively an instrument of enormous equivalent
resolution, like having a dim eye of astronomical size. Getting
a measurement quickly was pure luck. The distant SpaceWeb satellites
had been looking in roughly the right portion of the sky, and
Benjamin's request came in at the very end of a rather tedious
job. Instrument tenders were human, too, and the mystery had
caught their attention.
The radio plume was thin, bright—and moving. Comparison
with the earlier map showed definite changes in the filaments
making up the thin image. Now they had two maps at different times
show changing luminosity and position.
"But these were taken only a day or so apart!" Kingsley
jabbed at the differences between the maps with a bony finger.
"So?" Benjamin gave him a slight smile.
"Must be wrong."
Benjamin said, "No, it means this object is local—very
local."
"You took the rate of change of these features and worked it
into a distance estimate?" Amy asked.
"Nothing moves faster than light—so I used that to set
a bound. I came in early, had a chance to work through the numbers,
and checked them by e-mail with the guys in Socorro." The site
of the now-outdated Very Large Array, Socorro, New Mexico, still had
a practiced set of house theorists and observers, and Benjamin knew
several of them well. "Jean Ellik, an old hand there, agrees:
this thing can't be much farther away than the Oort cloud."
"But it's a radio object."
The Oort cloud was a huge spherical swarm of icy fragments
orbiting beyond the orbit of Pluto. Objects there were frigid and
unenergetic, exceptionally difficult to detect.
"Something has found a way to light itself up, out there in
the cold and dark," Benjamin said happily. The look of
consternation on Kingsley's face was all he had been hoping for.
He could not resist rubbing it in. "That added hypothesis you
were asking for yesterday—here it is."
They quickly went to the head of the Center, Victoria Martinez,
and got permission for added resources. "Get everybody on it,"
she said intently. Martinez was a good astronomer who had been
deflected into administration. Benjamin worried that he would
drift along the same path, getting more disconnected from the science
all the while. He was happy that she saw the implications
immediately.
They wrote a carefully phrased alert for the IAU Notices, asking
for any and all observations of the object, in all frequency
bands, because in Kingsley's phrase, "inasmuch as this is a
wholly unanticipated finding, no data is irrelevant."
"Let's keep the media out of it for the moment,"
Martinez said carefully, and they all agreed. Everyone remembered
past embarrassments: mistaken reports of asteroids that might hit
Earth, misidentified massive stars, spurious discovered planets
around nearby stars.
Kingsley was atypically silent. Apparently he had decided to "hang
about" for a few days out of curiosity.
Coaxed, Kingsley said, "Admittedly, all along I had thought
that it would turn out to be a relativistic jet—yes, my
favorite object. Indeed, one pointed very nearly straight at us. That
would neatly explain its huge luminosity. Also, we would naturally
see all the jet's variations as occurring quickly, as they would be
time-squeezed by relativity. Alas"—a touch of the
theatrical here, holding a pen aloft like a phony sword—"it
was not to be."
The gamma-ray signature had surfaced as crucial, and within hours
Kingsley had a new idea.
"Let us face facts, uncomfortable as they may be to
conventional views," he began to a small band in the
seminar room, including Amy and Benjamin at the front. "It makes
no sense if you suppose this is an object passing through the
interstellar medium, a very thin gas. It would emit radiation, then,
because it was striking objects in its way. A quick calculation"—he
proceeded to produce this in quick, jabbing strokes on a blackboard
as he spoke—"shows that one needs to expend only a trivial
amount of power to overcome the friction of the interstellar
hydrogen." He dropped the chalk dramatically. "There is
simply not enough matter nearby our solar system for it to run into."
He turned to the audience, which agreed. Or at least nodded;
Kingsley's reputation for incisive analysis was enough to silence the
timid. Several were checking his numbers and did not look up.
Channing had heard the news and was sitting in on the impromptu
seminar that had developed spontaneously down the hall from
Benjamin's office. She saw her chance and stepped into the silence.
"Okay, then we have to look elsewhere. It's reasonably
nearby, or else it couldn't possibly be so luminous. So as savvy
Kingsley implies, why is it luminous? Because it's not gliding
through, it's accelerating."
Benjamin had not even known that Channing was in the room. He
turned to look at her, a spark of uneasy pride at her speaking up so
readily. Uneasy because Kingsley had a reputation for leaving
questions hanging, only to knock them down when anyone ventured to
take the next step without thinking it through. But this time the
narrow, hatchet face showed only real puzzlement as it nodded.
Kingsley put his hands behind his back, as if to disarm himself, and
said slowly, "Perhaps, but why? There are no unusual signatures
near it, nothing to be propelling it forward."
Benjamin got her drift. "Exactly. But what if it's
decelerating?"
Kingsley shot back, "I just showed that the interstellar
medium slows things very slowly. Nothing would naturally—"
Channing broke in. "Suppose it's not natural? What if it's a
starship?"
Benjamin's jaw dropped, but out of loyalty he tried to fill the
skeptical silence that greeted her question. "P-passing near
us?"
To his amazement, she rose from her seat and stepped with fragile
grace to the front, taking the chalk from Kingsley's hand. Everyone
in the room knew of her illness, but he sensed that her command of
them came from the quality that had made her a successful astronaut,
a presence he could never name but that he sensed every day. He felt
a burst of pride for her and a smile split his face, telltale of a
joy he had not felt quite this way for a very long time. Since the
illness, in fact.
This was a mere instant, for Channing did not pause to absorb
the regard of the room. Quickly she did her own swift calculation. It
all depended upon the source's intrinsic luminosity. A bright
source ten light-years away looked the same as one a light year away
and a hundred times dimmer, so— she turned to the audience,
neatly jotting L = P/R2 and said, "With
P the ship's power demand and R in light-years, we have—"
More jotting. "How much does one need to ram a ship through the
interstellar medium?"
The crowd now filled the room to overflowing, Benjamin noticed,
and from the packed faces came guesses: "The power level of a
city?" and "No, nearer to all of North America."
She shook her head. "Try the whole planet."
A gasp of surprise. Not even acknowledging this, she went on to
cite the Mouse, a runaway neutron star discovered decades
before. It lay somewhere within a thousand light-years and looked
vaguely like a fleeing rodent with a long tail, because it left
behind a trail of excited electrons, which were discovered by a radio
telescope. All the energy in that tail came from the shock waves the
Mouse excited ahead of itself. The interstellar gas and dust was
slowing it, braking an entire compacted star, and the energy expended
by this splashed across the sky in an extravagant signature.
Of course, she allowed, the Mouse was just an analogy. There were
details of how to estimate the braking, which demanded knowing
the size of the "working surface" and interactions
across it, shock waves—a zoo of astrophysical effects. Benjamin
recognized areas she had worked on in her career, so her approach was
not really surprising; to the man who owns a hammer, every problem
looks like a nail. But this method came out of her life, giving her
an assurance others lacked.
She turned from her calculations to confront them. "And this
object is doing the same. But taking the luminosity, I can find the
mass that's being slowed down by simple interstellar friction.
Guess what it is."
She had them on puppet strings now and a pleased smile rippled.
She waited.
"A neutron star… again?" a voice called,
dribbling away in self doubt; she would not be that obvious.
"Jupiter-sized?"
"No, bigger!"
"An Earth mass, I would guess," Kingsley put in, not to
be utterly upstaged, but smiling at her audacity. Benjamin suddenly
saw in the wryly appreciative cast to his face that Kingsley had a
deep affection for Channing. Somehow this had eluded him through all
their clashes.
She drew it out to just the right point and then wrote a number on
the board. Silence.
"That's about the mass of the moon," a voice called from
the back.
"It's small."
"Nothing at all like a neutron star," a voice declared,
sounding irked at being misled.
"True. With a moon's mass, but it makes gamma rays. Some kind
of supermoon. Gentlemen, you have something really new on your
hands."
She sat down in a free chair in the front row, next to Benjamin.
As she settled in, he caught her letting go, giving way to the sudden
body language of near-exhaustion. The room broke into applause. Not,
Benjamin saw, at the particular brilliance of the analysis—anyone
in the room could do the arithmetic and make estimates, and many no
doubt would rush back to their offices and do just that, checking
her—but because she had seen just the right calculation to do
and had done it before anyone else. That was the trick in high-flying
science: to pick the right problem just as it becomes worth doing.
And she had brought it off. He had noticed that she had gotten up in
the night, and in his fuzzy sleep had attributed it to her
familiar medical woes. But no, she had been honing herself for this
grand game, the clash of scientific ideas. She still has it, my
girl, he thought with relish.
He leaned over to her and whispered, "I knew that I'd married
Miss Right, okay—only I didn't know her first name was Always."
She gave him a proud, tired grin, followed by a kiss.
6
Most of the world's orbiting telescopes lost much time and
flexibility from always having a huge bright object nearby—the
Earth. Accidentally pointing the telescope that way for even a second
would fry sensitive optical systems.
So astronomers avoided their home planet if they could. Placing
large Big Eyes at Earth's Lagrangian points helped—orbiting
sixty degrees fore and aft of the moon's position in its orbit, far
from the blue-white glare of the planet's ocean and sky.
Without the sunlight reflected from the Earth's disk, telescopes
could cool to a few degrees above absolute zero. This helped
enormously when looking in the infrared, for then the telescope body
itself did not emit much radiation at the crucial frequencies. With a
hundred times the area of the much earlier Hubble Space Telescope,
the Big Eyes could see dim objects a hundred times fainter.
But when pointed at the elusive quarry, the Big Eyes showed only a
dim blur. They could not see in enough detail to tell what it was. As
Kingsley remarked acerbically, two further days of effort on a global
scale served merely to give it a name. One was suggested by Channing
in an offhand moment: "X-l." She had explained, "X
because we don't know what the hell it is, and one because there may
be more."
But it sounded too much like a weapon or jet plane, so everyone
just called it "the intruder."
Stymied, the worldwide network of observers went back to
telescopes firmly fixed on Mother Earth.
Earth-based instruments used adaptive optics—mirrors that
adjusted second to second, offsetting the dancing refractions of
the air above them. Several of these sat atop Mauna Kea, the best
all-around observing spot in the world. The aim of the newest
sixteen-meter reflector 'scope, using adaptive mirrors, was to fetch
forth images of Jupiter-sized planets orbiting nearby stars. Pricey
Earth-based 'scopes were still far cheaper than space eyes, which had
to carry a guidance system to keep them pointed accurately while
orbiting at 27,000 kilometers per hour.
But the sixteen-meter 'scope could not resolve the blob of visible
light that "X-l" gave off.
To reliably see another star's Jupiter-sized planets, humanity
had to go to its own Jupiter—or rather, to send a robot. Able
to see in the infrared with meticulous accuracy, the Deep Space
Infrared Telescope hung as far from the sun as Jupiter itself,
orbiting high above the ecliptic plane. This kept it cold and out of
the plane of dust that clogged the inner solar system. The enemy of
good, deep "seeing"—to use the astronomer's
jargon—was the glow of sunlight scattered by that orbiting
debris. Its dim radiance had been discovered in 1661 and it was
still termed the "zodiacal light." In excellent seeing
conditions, from Earth one could watch the plane of dim gray light
stretch across a winter's night. This dust-reflected sunlight
perpetually brightened the sky of the inner solar system. The dust
declined in density far from the sun, and sunlight dimmed, so that
now astronomers were driven to the outer reaches.
There a thin beam orbited, a hundred meters long and crafted to
within a ten-thousandth of a millimeter: the Long Eye. To see a
planet around another sun demanded that the Long Eye blot out the
star's infrared emission, which was a million times brighter than the
world being sought. Then the telescopes spaced at regular intervals
along the length compared the phases of the light they received
from near the star. Matching and subtracting, an onboard computer
sifted through a torrent of noise for the faint, steady signal of a
tiny planet, sending out the message of its own existence.
Standing beneath a clear sky, one's unaided eye could see details
on the moon about a tenth of the moon's diameter. At the same
distance, a Big Eye 'scope typical of those standing on Mauna
Kea could make out an astronaut standing on the moon. With the Long
Eye—and some luck—one could make out the astronaut
holding up fingers—and count them.
The Long Eye was painstakingly studying the zone around likely
candidate stars, seeking evidence of life. By looking carefully at
each color of the light from the target world, it could in principle
see the fine details of absorption by water, oxygen, or carbon
dioxide—telltale gases of life.
This stretched array now searched for a dot at the very edge of
the solar system, a target its designers had never conceived.
"Got it!" Amy cried, jabbing at a large computer screen.
The data had just come over the astro-Net connection.
They crowded around. The de facto working group was only four:
Amy, Kingsley, Benjamin, and Channing. Of course there were subgroups
laboring over parts of the problem, but by unspoken agreement
they had started meeting in each others' offices whenever a fresh
piece of data seemed in the offing. Martinez had approved this
catch-as-catch-can method, suggesting to Benjamin, "Whatever
works, go for it."
They all took in the new result at a glance. There were small
gasps. But they left it to Channing to note her own triumph.
"Looks pretty small." A bright spot sat at one end of the
radio finger: starship-like.
"It's fully resolved, though," Amy said. "Looks
like a circle. A moon? At its distance, let's see… ten
milliarc-seconds… Geez. No moon, not at all. It's only a few
kilometers across."
"What? That can't be right." Kingsley peered at the
screen's side panel of data and gazed off into space, making his own
reckoning. He blinked. "Um. I'm afraid it is."
"Afraid?" Benjamin chided.
"Because it means something is wrong with Channing's rather
nice piece of work from two days ago. This object cannot have the
mass of a moon. It's far too small."
Benjamin wanted to defend her, but Channing spoke up quickly,
despite a fog of fatigue that had descended upon her in the last
hour. Damned if I'll leave early today, she thought
adamantly, and let Kingsley call the tune.
If only her head would stop spinning… "Let's not rule
out anything until we fit the pieces of this jigsaw puzzle
together."
Kingsley said in a let's-be-reasonable tone, "Your estimate
included a characteristic size, which we now see was far too large.
So you derived a larger mass—"
"Not so fast," Channing said. "What's the rest of
the Long Eye results?"
Benjamin punched some keys and peered at a sidebar that popped up.
"They're logging in the spectrum… processing…
Looks like an excess of blue shifts."
Channing beamed in a way that, from his expression, she could tell
that Benjamin had not seen for a long time. "Which means it's
decelerating."
"Just as you said," Kingsley allowed. "That I'll
grant. But your calculation still makes no sense—quantitatively."
"Look," Channing pressed back, "I estimated in my
first equation—"
"We're missing the big point, aren't we?" Plainly
Benjamin decided to intervene before talk descended into
another technical wrangle, as it had so much these last few
days. Often the devil was indeed in the details, but he had a way of
pulling specialists, including most definitely herself, away from
their narrow issues to face the larger picture.
Kingsley smiled, seeing the point. "It is deliberately
slowing to enter the solar system? The starship hypothesis."
"But to be so bright, it must have a huge mass,"
Channing said. "No starship would be so heavy."
Benjamin nodded. "A big contradiction."
Long silence. She had often heard historians of science go on
about how a great scientist had the courage of his convictions,
stuck it out through opposition, and so on. Until this moment she had
not felt the implied sense—that sometimes you had
to take the big leap: buy two apparently conflicting ideas and
fuse them.
Should she? What the hell, you only die once.
"Maybe we're both right. It's a lot of mass packed into a
tiny package." She had to put all her effort into getting the
rest of the words out. Her mind was perking along just fine, but her
body wanted to curl up and go to sleep. "After all, that few
kilometers across is an upper scale. This thing must be lighting up a
lot of gas around it. It could be smaller than we think. A lot
smaller, even."
They all looked at each other. Another long silence.
She thought giddily, He who laughs last just thinks slower,
but nobody laughed at her implication. To her vast and abstractly
distant surprise, they all, one by one, nodded.
Within the hour, Channing was leaning back and breathing
steadily, just holding on to watch the show. It took fewer muscles to
smile than to frown, sure enough, and fewer still to ignore people
completely. But she had shrugged off Benjamin's efforts to take
her home.
She heard boss lady Martinez say tensely, "I've got to get up
to NASA, NSF. Maybe even on to the White House." She smiled
slightly, relishing the moment. Even if she was feeling
light-headed and Martinez's words did come hollow-voiced, like a
speech given down a long tin pipe.
Not a moon, no. Something much more interesting.
PART TWO
FAST LANE SCIENCE
MARCH
1
The pinnacle of Mauna Kea stands a full mile above a deck of
marshmallow clouds that at sunset turn salmon pink. In late afternoon
the sun seems to lower into a softly burning plain that stretches to
the horizons. When the volcanoes that built the island belch, the
underbellies of the clouds take on a devilish cast where they hover
over the seethe of lava. Beneath these, black chunks of razor-sharp,
cooled lava render the landscape stark, brooding, and ominous. Nature
here seems blunt, brutal, and remorseless.
Yet above all this churn, three hundred tons of gleaming steel and
glass pirouette as gracefully as—and far more precisely
than—any ballerina. No dancer has ever been required to
set herself to within a tiny fraction of a millimeter.
Once in position, the biggest optical telescope in the world then
commands the two jaws of the covering hatches to yawn, their slow
grind echoing as the 'scope drinks the first light of evening. Here
is where the best and brightest come to find the farthest and
dimmest. That Hawaii is the most isolated landmass on Earth with the
highest pinnacle gives it an advantage in the steadiness of its air.
The flat ocean keeps the air stably warm over the islands. Air's
usual small flutters cause stars to dance like shiny pennies seen at
the bottom of a swimming pool. Over the peak of Mauna Kea air flows
more smoothly than above any other high site in the world. The trade
winds blow steady and level far beneath the realm of the
telescopes.
These conditions drew astronomers, the only major life-form at
this height. Up a road left deliberately rough they brought their
white observing pods, immaculate domes like enormous pale mushrooms.
The venerable twin Keck telescopes had ruled over this realm
since their construction in the 1990s, though they were no longer the
largest of their breed. An even larger dome stood in the distance,
but Benjamin thought the Kecks were the more beautiful. With two
thirty-three-foot mirrors made from thirty-six segments, each such
light-bucket was separately movable, swiveling in an echo to the
dance of the heavens above. The two mirrors were in tubes eight
stories tall, each floating so precisely on oil bearings that a
single hand could move them.
Not that such maneuvers were left to mere human means. Elaborate
systems guided these tubes, for the human mind operating at 13,800
feet quickly lost its edge. That was why Benjamin seldom came to this
height, yet today, on a whim, he had driven up. To clear his head, he
had explained to others, whereas the altitude had the opposite
effect. He gasped for air after even a modest climb. Pointless,
really, to think that he could mull over an idea up here, where his
brain was losing cells every moment to oxygen starvation.
But today there was something about the perspective, in the
slanted rays of late afternoon, that seemed to fit the scale of the
idea he was carrying. Intelligence and technology ruled these barren
heights. Against the cruel powers of vulcanism, which had shaped the
islands, mere men had set up here a citadel of intricate artifice,
dedicated to pure knowledge and the expansion of horizons. In
the face of the world's raw rub, and especially whenever he allowed
himself to truly think about what was coming for Channing, the
view from this majestic height was ennobling.
Right now, he needed that. He drank it in.
If life could work its wonder upon so hostile a place, what other
forbidding sites in the universe could play host to mentality? The
'scopes around him were preparing for the coming night, to chip
away at answers to such questions. Eternal questions—until now.
Then his portable phone rang, dragging him back into the momentary
world. It was a double ring, one of the codes they had introduced at
the Center to get priority attention.
Well, it was about time, anyway. His walk up here had left him
panting and somehow had clarified his resolve.
On his way down, he distracted himself by trying to find the FM
station that played rock from the decade when you cared about it—the
working definition of the Good Old Days.
Channing had insisted on being there when he presented his idea.
Brimming now with resolve, he called her on the way down. She sounded
quite cheery, her tone lifting at the end of sentences, a good sign.
He had become fairly good at detecting when she was covering up. So
when she came into the seminar room, he was startled at the drawn
gray pallor of her face. Plainly it had cost her considerably to come
up to the Center for this, a drive of several miles in the usual
clogged traffic on narrow two-lane blacktop.
Above the gray cast her eyes sparkled with an energy that was
intellectual, not physical—all that seemed capable of driving
her now. He felt a pang of guilt; he should have driven home and
picked her up. In fact, he had offered to, but she had shrugged it
off, saying that she wanted to do some shopping later, anyway. This
now looked completely implausible: he doubted that she would have the
energy. But then, she had surprised him before with her desire to
still visit dress shops, searching for just the right little item
that would "cover the damage," as she put it. He embraced
her gingerly, felt an answering throb in her body. Or at least he
hoped it meant that, and was not one of the tremors he sometimes
felt pass through her while she was asleep in bed, like an impersonal
ocean wave bearing all before it.
He had decided to limit this to the usual four people, plus
Victoria Martinez. If he proved utterly wrong, which he had to admit
was quite probable, at least the number of witnesses to his
embarrassment would be manageable.
He got Channing a cup of tea and she took three of her pills along
with it. By then the other three were gathered around the seminar
table and he began, trying not to seem unsure, though he was.
"How many bursts from the intruder, this 'X-l' object, have
we recorded so far, Amy?" He knew, of course, but like a lawyer
in a courtroom, a seminar speaker should never ask a question whose
answer was not readily at hand.
"Seven." She held out the trace printouts and he waved
them aside.
"Far too many. That's my argument in a nutshell."
Benjamin had wanted to create a dramatic effect, but saw
instantly that this was too much of a jump. Victoria and Amy
looked puzzled, Channing startled. He would have to be more orderly,
he saw; one of his many speaking faults was a tendency to get ahead
of himself. A closed mouth gathers no feet.
Kingsley frowned, his lips drawn into a thin skeptical line.
"Since we don't know the mechanism…"
"But we all have one in mind, don't we?" Channing chimed
in. "The energetic intruder smashing into iceteroids."
"Haven't heard that term before. Ice asteroids, is it?"
Kingsley said amiably as he turned toward her, his face quickly
changing to solicitous concern, voice filling with warmth. "True
enough, I had been making a few calculations assuming that—"
"And they work out, don't they?" Benjamin said. "Order
of magnitude, anyway."
Kingsley said, "I can get the gamma rays, all right. It's the
radio tail I'm having trouble with. How does it form?"
Amy said, "Can't it be made pretty much the way galactic
jets do?"
Benjamin was bemused by this, for he had not known Amy to venture
into that realm of astrophysics. Apparently, like the rest of them,
she had been doing a lot of homework. He nodded. "It could. We
can get to that. But let's stick to my main point. How often should
we see a burst, if the iceteroid idea is right?"
"Depends on the thing's speed," Kingsley said.
"Which we know from the Doppler shifts to be about a
hundredth of the speed of light," Amy said. "I just
finished pulling that number out of the data. The spectral fields
were sorta messed up, plenty of broad lines, a real jungle."
"Before we get to my reasoning, let's hear Amy's results."
She should have her chance to shine, he thought, and
then I can get a fresh start myself. She got up with a few
view-graphs, blushing becomingly.
If the entire solar system, including dim Pluto, were reduced
to the size of a human fingertip, the bulk of the Oort cloud of
iceballs would lie ten yards away from that finger. Space was indeed
vast—and empty. But contrary to their first guesses, the
intruder was not so far away. Amy had located it pretty
decisively by timing the movements of bright parts of the radio tail
and then making plausible arguments about how fast such
radio-emitting plasma balls could move. She had showed that the
intruder was only a bit beyond the distance of Pluto from the sun, or
forty times the Earth-sun distance. A cometary nucleus would take
years to fall inward 41 Astronomical Units, but this thing was
moving much faster.
"Good work, yes," Kingsley said. He then offered his own
reprise of her results—"to see if I've gotten it
straight."
Benjamin noted how Kingsley often used the flattering
conversational manner of beginning his next sentence by repeating
another's words, peppering his talk with references to others'
contributions and generally seeming modest. It paid off; scientists
were stingy with praise and a few strokes worked wonders on their
mood. After thrashing through the data a bit more, everyone present
seemed settled.
The intruder was about 50 Astronomical Units out, some-what beyond
the range of Pluto's orbit. It was coming in at about a thirty-degree
angle with respect to the plane the planets orbited in, the ecliptic.
As Channing put it, "The thing's pretty close—and closing
fast."
They all looked at each other. Unspoken was their growing
sense of strangeness.
Now it was his turn. Benjamin began writing on the blackboard.
Style mattered in bringing forth an argument, and he set the stage
with numbers, bringing out the underlying contradiction.
The belt of iceteroids just beyond Pluto had been first imagined
by Gerard Kuiper at the University of Chicago in the 1950s. The
intruder could be hitting those. Little was known of them, despite
their being much closer than the larger swarm in the Oort cloud
farther out.
Benjamin drew out the point carefully. Models of the Kuiper Belt
showed that the icy chunks were on average an Astronomical Unit
apart—quite thinly spread. Typically they were a kilometer or
two in size, about the same size as the apparent core dimension of
the intruder, as seen in visible light.
"A coincidence, of course, their being about the same size,"
Benjamin said. "They can't be the same kind of thing. Point is,
the odds of hitting an iceteroid in all that space are tiny." He
followed with two viewgraphs giving the statistical argument, thick
lines of calculations.
"If it's randomly hitting obstructions, then even at its
colossal speed"—he paused to emphasize—"nearly
a hundredth the speed of light!—then it would not strike
one in a million years."
Gasps. They saw the point; a bullet fired into a light snowstorm
had a far better chance of hitting a snowflake.
Kingsley looked up from scribbling in his leatherbound notebook,
its ornate binding his only affectation. "In fact, it should
take this intruder at least a day to fly from one iceteroid to the
next—at the speed Amy worked out. Something is quite
seriously wrong here."
"I believe there are two ways out"—Benjamin went
on almost as if Kingsley had not spoken—"if we want
to save our idea that the thing is striking iceteroids and processing
their mass into highly energetic stuff. First, as Channing pointed
out—"
"It's processing their mass in stages, holding some to chew
later," she said for herself. "That would mean it can
somehow save pieces of ice."
"Can't imagine how," Kingsley said laconically, looking
down at his notes as if to avoid any conflict with her.
Amy said brusquely, "Me, either. But I think I see your
second idea, Ben. It's not hitting these iceteroids at random. It's
aiming for the next one, using the velocity change it got from
consuming the last one."
Benjamin nodded. There it was, a clear leap into the unknown.
Much better to have Amy make the jump. A genuinely crazy idea,
however much he had tried to couch it in terms of times and distances
and statistical probabilities.
"The 'starship hypothesis' again," Kingsley said
incredulously. "Keeps popping up, despite its absurdity."
This time he looked Benjamin full in the eye.
"How so?" Benjamin asked with a real effort at keeping
his tone polite, though he knew what was coming.
"Calculate the flux of gamma radiation from the source. It's
very bright. Any starship passengers near that flare would be
crisped."
"I thought about that," Benjamin said, trying not to
sound defensive, though of course that was just what he was. "As
yet I have no answer—"
"Except that the ship need not be crewed at all,"
Channing put in smoothly, as though they had planned it this way.
"Machines could tolerate gamma rays pretty well, if
necessary."
Benjamin had not thought of this possibility. He smiled at her in
silent thanks.
Kingsley waved this away with a quick flap of his wrist. "I'd
hate to try to keep electronics alive in such an environment.
Nothing could withstand it."
"I didn't use the term 'starship.' You did," Benjamin
said hotly. "And—"
"I used it," Channing put in, grinning, "but only
as a metaphor."
Kingsley looked irked but said levelly, "Metaphor for what?"
"Something unexpected, maybe obeying rules we haven't thought
of yet," she said brightly. Benjamin could see the price she was
paying for this in the darkening rims around her eyes.
"Or no rules at all," Kingsley said curtly.
"How else can you explain that it is hitting objects far more
often than it should?" Benjamin pressed him.
"I look for another idea," Kingsley shot back, "one
with some rules to bound it."
Benjamin saw suddenly a chink in the man's armor. Just when
you thought you were winning the rat race, along came faster rats.
Kingsley was unaccustomed to having his back to the wall in an
argument. Perhaps his reputation kept him out of such scrapes now.
Well, not here. "We don't need rules, we need ideas."
"Either we have a discussion hinged at one end by
plausibility, or else—"
"Now, don't get—"
"Look," Amy said loudly. The two men stopped,
both open-mouthed, and looked at her as if remembering where and who
they were. Amy pretended not to notice and went on in the measured
tones of one aware of being surrounded by her superiors, "The
point is, this thing is decelerating at a rate we can't account for.
Maybe it's ejecting its own mass to slow itself. Maybe it's a runaway
neutron star—like that one Channing was talking about the other
day, remember? The Mouse?" She looked around the seminar table;
her long hair was pulled back and knotted, so she seemed more
austere. "That could act pretty peculiarly. So let's not
get pushed out of shape by this mystery, okay?"
Benjamin nodded, rueful that he had let the discussion take so
personal a turn. They were all under a lot of pressure, but that did
not justify rubbing rhetorical salt into old wounds.
The talk swerved to other aspects of the problem. Data was pouring
in from ground observers and space-based alike. The astronomical data
streams on the Internet were thick with discussions and endless
inquiries.
Already, theorists were demanding that they publish their findings
on the Internet. Worse, some had written papers explaining
various pieces of the puzzle, posting their hasty work to the
high-display Net showcases. There were advantages to
"publishing" electronically: considerable speed, nailing
down credit for an idea, while not waiting for the reviewing
process. Indeed, the more hot-topic areas of science now resembled a
shouting mob more than a scholarly discourse, thanks to instant
democratic communication.
They were all besieged by colleagues through e-mail. Others had
simply buttonholed them in the Center corridors. Everyone local was
working on sifting the data stream, but few knew what was up,
overall, because there were so many pieces of the puzzle to assemble.
And the Gang of Four arrangement had not facilitated communication,
either, Benjamin had to admit, though it was efficient at giving
ideas a thorough thrashing over before they escaped into the larger
community. In a media-saturated culture, cloisters of reflection
were invaluable.
"So what'll we do?" Amy asked the older and presumably
wiser heads.
"Get out a paper?" Channing asked wanly. Plainly she had
no desire to write it. The hunt was all for her, not talking
about it afterward.
"I think not," Victoria Martinez said, jaw set firmly.
Benjamin had nearly forgotten that she was in the room. She sat at
the far end of the table and had taken many notes, but she had added
nothing until now. He was again embarrassed that she had seen
the cut and thrust between him and Kingsley.
"Definitely not," she said, carefully looking at each of
them in turn. "This is an enormously energetic object, behaving
strangely, and if it continues at its present velocity, it will reach
the inner solar system within a month. Am I correct?"
"Yes," Kingsley answered, "though remember, it is
decelerating."
Benjamin became aware of a tension between Victoria and Kingsley,
whose mouth had compressed into a thin line. The intruder's
incredible velocity had moved it the distance between the Earth and
the sun in about half a day. They all knew this, but the consensus
among the Gang of Four had been that worrying about future effects
was pointless until they got a good handle on what the thing was.
Plainly Victoria did not feel the same.
"One point you've skipped over, I believe, is that it
appears to be headed straight inward."
Amy said, "Well, yes, there's no sign of sideways movement
yet. But at these velocities it would be hard to detect right away."
"But I take your drift," Kingsley said. "A possible
danger."
Benjamin blinked. He had not thought along these lines in detail.
"Of what? Chances of it coming near the Earth—"
"Are impossible to estimate, since it changes velocity with
every encounter—correct?" Victoria Martinez said
incisively.
Amy answered quietly, "Well, maybe. There's a little Doppler
shift in the lines after every collision. If the gamma-ray bursts do
represent collisions."
"Let's assume they do, until we have some better idea,"
Martinez said. "How else can it find its next iceteroid, unless
it changes velocity?"
"Quite true," Kingsley said in his pontifical drawl,
"but not yet cause for alarm."
"I agree, Dr. Dart, that it is hard to accept some of the
ideas I've heard bandied about the room this last hour. But we have
nothing more in the pot, and it's time to cook."
This metaphor went past Benjamin. " 'Cook'?"
"I have to get back to a lot of people about this. Word gets
around. The NSF and NASA both fund this Center, and they do like to
be kept in the loop. I've been shielding you folks while you worked,
but I have to start speaking for you now. Unless you'd rather do it
yourself?"
"Oh no," Benjamin said, knowing this was what she
wanted. "You do it."
"Good. Then I'll be answering a lot of phone calls I've been
stalling. And you four start writing up a statement."
"Statement?" Benjamin felt uncomfortably that he was
asking stupid questions whose answers were obvious to the others.
"For the media," Kingsley said offhandedly. "Quite
so."
Martinez said, "At its present speed, it could reach us
within a month."
"I suggest we not emphasize that aspect," Benjamin said,
choosing his diction so that it echoed Kingsley's precision.
"Especially since it is not headed for us at all."
"Oh?" Martinez looked surprised.
He realized he had not shown his trajectory plots around yet.
"It's curving in and downward, heading at an angle to the
ecliptic plane. I can't pick out any destination. It will pass
through the solar system and leave, as it is unbound. It is moving
very fast."
2
She could remember drinking coffee to stay awake and keep working;
now she needed it to wake up at all.
Running mostly on caffeine, Channing puttered around in her home
office, immersed in cyberspatial bliss: sleek modern desk the
size of a tennis court; ergonomic chair that was better than a
shiatsu massage—and cheaper; picture window on the Pacific
(today looking anything but); overstuffed leather chaise where she
spent far too much time recouping; big tunnel skylight leading up to
a turquoise tropical sky.
Self-respect demanded that she not work in pajamas. That left a
lot of room in a vast sartorial wasteland, from T-shirts and khaki to
turtlenecks down to jeans, running shorts, and tanks. All those were
off the menu if she was going to do a visual conference with anybody,
in which case she needed at least a decent frilly blouse, say, or
even a full dress suit—top only needed, of course, since her
camera had a carefully controlled field of view. She had heard of the
new image managers that touched up your face as you spoke, smoothing
out lines and wrinkles and even black eyes if you wanted. To order up
one on the Net would be quick, easy to install… and the vanity
of it would pester her inner schoolmarm for weeks. Nope, let 'em
see the truth. That's what science is about, right? Why not treat
scientists the same way?
Today something clingy, island-soft, and cool. In blue, it cheered
her.
She had liked working at home the first month, despised it
thereafter. After all, "I work at home" carried the
delicate hint that you were in fact just about unemployed, or
downsized out of the action, at the fringe of the Real World.
So she tried to be systematic. No distractions, that was the
trouble. After years working at the Center, it was hard to get by
with no coffee break, water cooler chat, endless meetings with
clandestine notes passed ridiculing the speaker, business
lunches, the sheer simple humanity of primates making a go of it
together.
Work at home and you could never quite leave it. Slump onto the
couch at nine at night when Benjamin was on a trip, all ready to kick
back and veg out like any deserving, stressed adult… and down
there at the end of the hall lurked the reproachful glimmer of the
desk lamp. It was hard to walk down there and turn it off and walk
back to a sitcom without checking the e-mail or looking at tomorrow's
calendar, especially since its first screen was the latest
selection from Studmuffins of Science.
She suspected her social skills, honed in the labyrinths of NASA
and the NSF, were atrophying. So she did the next best thing, first
off in the morning: answer vital e-mail, delete most without
answering, and look over her notes. This kept her in a sort of
abstract cyber-society.
The more traditional Net temptations no longer carried their zest.
No point in doing an Ego Surf on her name; it showed up only on
historical mesh sites now. Her Elvis Year, the time of popularity,
was now long gone, back when shuttle missions made you a
pseudo-celeb among some of the Internet tribes.
Since then she had been happier, more satisfied, steadily getting
more obscure. Funny thing about contentment, some years just got
lost. Seen it, done it, can't recall most of it.
Through those dimly recalled years, she had been happier with
Benjamin than she probably had any right to be, and now that it was
nearly over, to review it all seemed pointless. There were parts of
the play she would have rewritten, especially the dialogue.
Somehow, despite all her theories and ambitions, she still regretted
not having children. The career had seemed more important, and maybe
it still was to her, but regrets don't listen to theories. There were
plenty of roads not taken and no maps.
She finished her e-mail and looked over the work she was doing on
spectral analysis. The data pouring into the Center needed careful
attention and she had been pitching in, giving the multitude of
optical line profiles a thorough scrutiny. She popped the most
puzzling ones up on her big screen and ran a whole suite of numerical
codes, sniffing around. This took two hours and much intricate
tedium. Still, the repetition was soothing, somehow: Zen
Astrophysics. She was feeling the slow ebbing fatigue she knew so
well when a clear result finally surfaced.
Three optical lines emitted from the intruder came out looking
decidedly odd: each was split into two equal peaks. These were not
the Doppler shifts they had spotted earlier. They were much smaller,
imposed on the Doppler peaks themselves.
There are very few ways an atom can emit radiation at two very
closely spaced intervals. The most common occurs if the atom is
immersed in a magnetic field. Then its energy would depend upon
whether its electrons aligned with the field or against it.
These three splittings she had pulled out of the noise, imposing
several different observations from several different 'scopes. And
they led to a surprising result: the magnetic field values needed to
explain these up-and-down shifts were huge, several thousand times
the Earth's field.
"Good grief," she muttered to herself, instantly
suspicious.
Most amazing results were mistakes. She burned another hour making
sure this one was not.
Then she sat and looked at the tiny twin peaks and liked knowing
that Benjamin would be thrilled by it. The give-and-take with the
others at the Center, especially the Gang of Four, was great fun, but
his reaction was still the crucial pleasure for her.
Abruptly she remembered her first experience of astronomy, as
a little girl. Camping out, she had awakened after midnight, faceup.
There they were. Even above the summer's heat, the
stars were immensely cold. They glittered in the wheeling crystal
dark, at the end of a span she could not imagine without dread. High,
hard, hanging above her in a tunnel longer than humans could
comprehend.
When she had first felt them that way, she had dug her fingers
into the soft warm grass and held on—above a yawning
abyss she felt in her body as both wonderful and terrible. Impossible
to ignore.
She had not realized until years later how that moment had shaped
her.
She took a break, stretched, felt the tiredness fall away a
little, and glanced out a window. From the abstract astrophysical to
the humid neighborhood, all in one lungful of moist air.
It was so easy to forget that she dwelled in what most people
regarded as the nearest Earthly parallel to heaven. The volcanic soil
was rich, lying beneath ample rains and sun. Irrigated paddies
gave taro's starchy roots, which made poi when mashed. There
were ginger and berries, mango, guava, Java plum, and of course
bananas. The candlenut tree gave oily brown nuts, which, strung
together, burned to give hours of flickering light. The sheer
usefulness of candlenuts to humans seemed like an argument from
design for a God-made world, customized to smart primates. But it was
also a paradise with mosquitoes and lava flows—counterarguments.
Well, she could settle the argument about God and paradise within a
year. Probably less, the doctors said in their cagey way.
Her fatigue evaporated. The man she had been thinking of now for
days was coming up the path.
There were Englishmen and then there were quintessential
Englishmen, the types everyone expected to meet and never did. All
had their points, in her experience, except maybe the ones whose
accents were pasted on and covered over sentiments as soft as
sidewalk. There was the jolly fellow who had many friends who
would surely stand him a drink, all unfortunately out of the room
just now. There was the erudite type who knew more about Shakespeare
than anybody and so never went to see anything modern. He was better
than the lit'ry one who kept rubbing his foot against your calf under
the table while he wondered very earnestly what you did think of that
recent novel, really? She liked the slim, athletic engineery types
who were modest about their feats and never spoke of them but could
fix a balky engine or conjugate a French verb, often simultaneously.
They were even good in bed, though she got tired of the modesty
because in the end it was fake, a social mannerism, a class
signature.
The Englishman coming up the path from the driveway was none of
these, but he did have that Brit habit of knowing an awful lot
about the right subjects. He had known a lot about politics when
people thought it mattered, was by his own description "infrared"
until it became clear that the left was truly dead, and even recently
could tell you the names of which ministers voted for what measure.
He applied the same acuity to the currents of astronomy. Now he was
just as sure of himself as ever, his instincts having carried him
quite handily to the top. She felt that she should see him as
something more than a somewhat scrawny man in a green suit badly
wrinkled by the tropical damp.
She greeted him at the door with "Kingsley, what a
surprise," though she had been half-expecting him and they
both seemed to know that.
"Thought I'd drop by, was on my way to look at a flat."
They went into the spacious, sunlit living room and she sank a
little too quickly onto a rattan couch. The trades stirred the wind
chimes and she remembered to offer iced tea, which he gratefully
accepted, drinking half of the glass straight off. She was infinitely
glad that she had chosen the clingy blue dress, though did not let
herself dwell on why. Best to keep things on a conversational level,
certainly. He was being unusually quiet, getting by with a few
compliments about the house, so—
"You're planning on staying for a while, then?" she
prodded.
"I can put aside the Astronomer Royal business for a bit. If
I am to be something of a scientific shepherd, I should be where
things happen. I think it inevitable, given our experience of
the last few days."
"Ummm. Lately, experience is something I never seem to get
until just after I need it."
His face clouded and she could see he had been trying to keep this
a strictly professional discussion. Well, too bad; she was feeling
fragile and human now, and not very astro-physical after a morning of
it.
After a pause, he said, "I'm so sorry about your condition."
"Oh Lord, Kingsley, I wasn't fishing for sympathy. I just
meant that this intruder has taken me by surprise in a way I did not
think possible anymore. I like it. Keeps me guessing."
She half-opened her mouth to bring up the magnetic field
splittings, then decided to let Benjamin be the first. After all, she
thought with a sudden wry turn of mind, Kingsley had been the first
in an earlier, important way that Benjamin had probably always
suspected.
"Sorry, um, again," he said lamely.
She felt a burst of warmth at this chink in the Astronomer Royal's
armor. "You can just move here immediately?"
He smiled grimly. "My home situation is not the best.
Angelica and I are separated, so I might just as well be here."
"Now it's my turn to be sorry."
"It's been coming for some time, years really."
"She's a brilliant woman," Channing said guardedly.
Friends with marital strife were tricky; some wanted you to
slander their mates, like a weird sort of cheerleader.
A wobbly smile. "You've forgotten her mean side, I fear."
"Funny, I don't remember being absentminded," she said,
hoping the weak joke would get him off the subject. He plainly did
not want to go there, yet some portion of him did; a familiar pattern
with divorces, she had found.
He laughed dutifully. "Tell me about your condition. I truly
want to know."
"Bad, getting worse. A cancer they barely have the name for."
"I thought we had cracked the problem down at the cellular
level by using an entire array of treatments."
"Oh, drugs help. I do well with what they call 'selective
serotonin re-uptake inhibitors.' I take a whole alphabet's worth of
them. Endless chemical adjustments known only by their acronyms,
since no human could remember their true names—or want to."
He was regaining some of his composure, sitting on a stool and
sipping. His voice recovered some of the High Oxbridge tones as he
said, "Recalls, from my random reading, a line from
Chekhov. 'If many remedies are prescribed for an illness, you may be
certain that the illness has no cure.' As true in the twenty-first
century as the nineteenth."
She shrugged. "I muddle through, to use a Brit expression."
"What was that old saying of yours? 'Life is complex; it has
real and imaginary parts.' Quite so." He actually chuckled
at this obscure mathematical pun, or else was a far better actor
than he had been.
"Lately, the imaginary has been more fun."
"That reminds me of one of your sayings. 'I don't get even, I
get odder.' Quite Channing, I used to think. Good to know
you're still that way, that this damned thing hasn't…"
"Snuffed out one part of me at a time?" She might as
well be up front about it. "That is the way it feels sometimes."
A sudden stark expression came onto his face and he said nothing.
She said soothingly, "I plan on living forever, Kingsley. So
far, so good."
"I wish I had your, well, calm."
"It may be plain old exhaustion."
"No, you had it the other day, leading us all by our noses on
that deceleration calculation. Energetic calm."
She could see that he meant it and thanked him warmly. "You've
changed some, too."
He shrugged. "It is famously easier to get older than wiser."
"I have a lot of trust in your judgment."
He grinned. "You showed good judgment two decades ago,
dumping me for Benjamin."
"I did not 'dump' you. I got the distinct impression
that you were more interested in astronomy than in me.'
"Well, of course," he said quite innocently, then
laughed at the baldness of the truth. "That is, I was a
monomaniac then."
"Would Angelica say anything has changed?"
"Good point. Probably not."
"You weren't going to change, and Benjamin was what I wanted,
anyway. Not that it wasn't fun…" She put a lot into the
drawn-out last word.
He said seriously, "Yes, it certainly was."
They sat for a long, silent moment. The wind chimes sang merrily
and the soft air caressed them both, a tangy sea scent filling the
room as the trade winds built. She let the moment run, something she
would not have done until recently. She relaxed into the sweet odors
of plumeria and frangipani, both lush now in her garden. A few years
before, she had not even known their names. The garden itself was a
recent hobby, all due to the damned disease, which she fought by
concentrating upon the present. Zen Dying.
Then Kingsley began taking his tie off, fingers prying the tight
little knot loose. "I must remember where I am. Going to be here
awhile, perhaps should buy one of those loud flowery shirts."
"And shorts."
"The world is not ready for the sight of my knees."
"Or mine anymore."
"Not so, they were and remain one of your best features."
"Say things like that a dozen more times and I'll get bored."
"I'd love the opportunity," he said brightly and then
stopped, as if he saw which way this was headed. Visibly he sobered.
A pause. Then he spoke carefully, so that she could hear all the
commas in his sentences.
"I wanted to come here, in part, because I don't want to be
overheard."
"That I can guarantee." She wondered at his sudden mood
shift. "Prettier here than in that office the Center gave you,
even if it is nice and big."
"I fear that the Center is not secure. Or at least, as I
understand people like Victoria Martinez, I cannot be
absolutely sure that my office is not eavesdropped upon."
He looked at her edgily, as if this were being impolite. She liked
his English delicate hesitation. "Already. But within a few
days, almost certainly."
"That's also why you're looking for an apartment."
"Precisely. This is going to be ever so much larger and it is
going to last quite a while."
"Once we've identified this new object—oh, I see."
He made a tent of his hands and peered through them at the languid
paradise out the window, like a prisoner contemplating an impossible
escape. "I was shaken by Benjamin's calculation. His
implication was clear."
"Martinez spoke of danger—"
"Only the obvious deduction."
Channing realized she had nowhere to go in this conversation
without betraying Benjamin's own ideas. She stalled with "But no
one in the room mentioned…"
"That obviously there are only two ways to reconcile his
numbers."
He looked at her searchingly and she had to suppress a smile at
this coy game. Might as well play, though; he still had the old sly
charm, damn him. "Either the thing's passing through a region of
the outer solar system where the number of iceteroids is very high
for some reason, or…" He let it hang there for a long
moment and then gave up. "Or the thing is somehow seeking out
lumps of ice and rock and processing them."
"Like a starship decelerating."
He slapped his knees, the sound scaring off a mynah bird from the
windowsill, its quick white flash of wings a blur. "But my own
point, that the gamma rays would kill anything—"
"A solid argument. So there's that pesky third choice."
"Third?"
She had to admit, he looked genuinely puzzled. "None of the
above."
"But when you say 'starship,' you mean—"
"Something that flies between stars, period."
"Something crewed, even by silicon chip minds, would quite
clearly still be vulnerable to—"
"Give it up, Kingsley. It's in a category we haven't thought
of yet."
He fretted for a moment, his hatchet face with its large eyes
drawing her gaze downward to a mouth that stirred restlessly, yet
would not shape words. The default style in astronomy was to explain
a new observation by assembling a brew of known ingredients—types
of stars, orbiting or colliding in various ways, and emitting
radiation in known channels, using familiar mechanisms. This worked
nearly all the time. Kingsley had used it with speed and ingenuity
decades before, explaining gamma-ray bursters quite handily with
a little imagination and detailed calculations. Kingsley habitually
worked in this mode, his papers couched in a style whose unstated
message was to show, not just an interesting application of
impressive techniques to a known problem, but also that he was a good
deal better at doing this than his readers. Now his mouth worked and
twisted with his dislike of working outside this lifelong mode.
"Then you two are thinking along the same lines as I."
"Sure—first, that this thing has to be enormously
compressed, and the only object we know in its class of energy
and power is… a black hole." She sipped her iced tea and
watched his veiled surprise.
"One of…"
He was pulling it out of her, all right, but it was an amusing
game. "About three times the mass of our moon."
"You derived that from the Doppler shifts from very close in
to the core, I suppose?"
"Exactly. Didn't want to say so until I had more data."
"A black hole of that size is quite small, a meter or two
across." He looked at her askance, skeptical.
She had looked up the theory. Primordial black holes could have
been left over from the Big Bang, but there was no evidence for them.
After birth, these tiny singularities in space-time could have
survived their habit of radiating away sprays of particles—that
is, black holes were not exactly black. This radiation had been
worked out by Stephen Hawking, who showed that a small hole would
have survived this evaporation, from the beginning of the universe
until the present, if it had at least 10'5 grams of mass.
This was equivalent to an asteroid a hundred meters in radius.
The intruder, though, had a mass ten billion times greater. It had
swallowed a lot, perhaps, in the last fifteen billion years as the
universe ripened.
Where it came from was completely open. It could not have been
born in a supernova collapse, which was the theorists' favorite
recipe for making holes. Such a cataclysm would have produced a black
hole of mass comparable to the sun. This intruder might have been
built up by sucking in mass, all the way back to the Big Bang. Might.
Maybe. Perhaps … the familiar wiggle room terms that
accompanied most advanced astrophysical theory, which was
starved for hard data. Until now.
Kingsley was enjoying this a bit too much, so she cut to the
chase. "So how's it guide itself, right? Like a fat man on
skates, it should just shoot through in a straight line."
Kingsley allowed himself a smile. "I apologize for seeming
to lead the conversation, but I have had the impression for several
days that you know a great deal more than you are admitting."
"Being away from the scramble at the Center helps. The quiet
gives me time to think."
"Particularly, to think of how this impossibility can exist."
"It's a black hole, almost certainly guiding itself with its
magnetic fields. I've proved they're there, thousands of Gauss in
strength, by looking in a small bit of the optical line data."
There, the whole truth and nothing but. She was tired of all this
precious waltzing around, as though they were all trying to get an
ace journal paper out of this, or competing for a prize. She had
operated under the assumption that Kingsley was, since he had
quite a few prizes on his mantel already. But she now saw that he was
beyond that, engaged at some different level.
"I see."
He had something to say now, she could tell, but wanted to be
coaxed. "This object is not the only problem?"
"Sure, it's damned strange and people higher up—a hell
of a lot higher up—are going to want to control the situation.
But our position is equally odd."
"I try not to think beyond the astronomy."
"Alas, I must." He got up and paced, hesitating at the
vision of leafy paradise beyond the window. "Quite
predictably, we will be… enlisted."
"Benjamin feels the same way, but he didn't want to say it."
"Why didn't he mention it to me today at the Center?"
"You two have your own, uh, styles. They don't match up too
well."
"A very polite way to say it. Bad blood between us, going
back to…"
"Yes, you and me. He suspects, but I've never told him."
"Good." Quick nods of the head, a brisk manner. "No
point."
"He got some hints from 'friends' around the time of our
marriage. I could tell, from the way he edged around the subject,
bringing you up at odd times. Then, years later, noticing very
obviously your steady rise up the ladder. A professorship at
Manchester—'Not bad for his age,' he said. Then a chair at
Cambridge, how he envied that! Always in the back of his mind I could
feel the question… but he never asked."
"It was over, done."
"Between men like you nothing is ever really over."
"Well, it is to me." He smiled very slightly. "With
you, I mean."
"I know. Me, too. But you two are always going to be
competitors."
"Inevitably." She could see him draw himself up, taking
a cleansing breath, shoving the personal into a pocket of his mind.
"And I fear my understanding of how power works in our tiny
world implies that matters shall soon change radically."
"For the worse."
He looked soberly at her and she saw that he had enjoyed this bit
of verbal jousting as much as she. But not as flirting, no—as
nostalgia. He was shoring up memories of better times, against a grim
future.
Not that she did not do the same, she reminded herself.
Kingsley gazed at the tropical wealth and sighed. "We're all
going to be kept here, close to the incoming data, and 'encouraged'
to work together. Of that I am sure. It's what you expect, isn't it?"
"I hadn't given it a thought."
He smiled. "Of course. You have far more important matters
to attend. Quite right. I do hope I am wrong."
"Me, too…" She let the sentence trail off. His
transition from the Kingsley of old to this astute observer of the
corridors of power was unsettling.
"I can think of no better place to be incarcerated. Compared
with my situation in Oxford, especially with the chilly winds blowing
from Angelica, it is—"
"It's like paradise," she finished for him.
3
For centuries, physics and astronomy sought the big, glamorous
governing equations for phenomena that were themselves ever-more
grand: larger or smaller, hotter or colder, faster or slower than the
narrow, comfortable human world. But shortly after the end of the
TwenCen, science—particularly astronomy, with its pricey
telescopes—approached the financial turnover, where ever-larger
infusions of money yielded only incrementally more insight.
The universe kept upping the fare for further erudition. The
particle physicists had hit that marginal realm with their massive
accelerators. Now science increasingly shifted from the fundamental
equations to discovering what emerged from those equations in the
real, complex world.
One faction among scientists decried this turning to more applied
problems. In their vision, physics resembled Latin— an
important canon, essential for advanced work and kept alive by small
bands of devoted advocates. This view failed to carry the day among
those who gave funding. Applied problems had become the mainstream of
physics and even astronomy, making the twenty-first century a more
practical place, especially when compared with the great cathedrals
of knowledge erected in the TwenCen, soaring to grand heights from
the base of great theories.
Astronomers, with so many new observing windows thrown open upon
the universe, kept busy scrutinizing the zoo of objects available at
ever-finer resolutions. Those who interpreted the observations
evolved new approaches. Theorists now used pencil and paper in a
blend with vast computer programs, asking questions with
whatever tool seemed best.
Luckily, such intellectual armament proved to be the best for use
against the problem of the intruder. Channing's discovery of
high magnetic fields in the hottest, most luminous region of the
object was the crucial fact that opened a rich realm of informed
speculation.
Benjamin was particularly happy with the importance of magnetic
fields. His doctoral thesis had focused on magnetic forces in
galactic jets, and this thing definitely had a jet whose twists and
filigrees the radio astronomers were enthusiastically mapping.
They sent new charts daily.
Benjamin threw himself into the work, using a combination of
imagination and rigorous computer programs. He was pleased to find
that some of his hoary old methods were quite germane to this
problem. It helped him keep up with Kingsley's darting skills at
analysis. They had offices near each other and their meetings were
contests between the speed of Kingsley's elegant fountain pen and
Benjamin's custom keyboard.
Benjamin felt himself renewed. Like many scientists, he could
trace his lifelong fascination with the natural world to a key,
trigger moment. His father had showed him how a magnet always knew
which way was north and explained it by saying the needle was forced
to line up with the magnetic field. But he could not see or feel this
field, so that meant there were invisible real things in the world,
less substantial than air but able to act on iron across many miles.
This clue that something deeply mysterious lay behind the everyday
world was a revelation and a source of quiet, persistent excitement,
a note that had sounded happily throughout his life. Such excitements
of the mind had come less often in the last decade as he felt his
powers ebbing. In comparison with the bright postdocs who passed
through the Center, he had felt slow to catch on to the latest
currents. Now fashion, thanks to the intruder, had returned to his
home turf.
"Magnetic fields act like rubber bands; it takes work to
stretch or bend them," he said to several staff members who were
assembled to talk, the usual crowd plus Kingsley and a few new ones.
Even for informal talks, the crowd kept growing as data came in.
A newer staff woman who worked in another area was visibly
struggling to keep up with the flood of ideas. "Those are the
lines of force?" she asked, and he refrained from correcting.
In his astrophysics textbook, he had once deliberately used that
misleading phrase, then added a footnote that said: The magnetic
field lines are often called "lines of force." They are
not. In fact, any forces exerted by the field are perpendicular to
the fields themselves. The misnomer is perpetuated here to prepare
the student for the treacheries of his profession. A little
prissy, maybe, and he could see this was not the time for such
academic hair-splitting.
"That's exactly the point," Kingsley said. He had been
sitting at the back of the seminar room, brooding, but now his
voice was filled with vigor. "The intruder is exerting forces on
itself by ejecting matter through its jet. Changing velocity, in
a systematic way."
"How can you tell?" the woman asked. Benjamin smiled.
She was unused to Kingsley's style of drawing the right questions
from his audience, so that instead of lecturing people, he seemed to
be merely answering them as they peppered him with their doubts.
And doing it a bit serenely, too. The Cambridge touch.
Kingsley came forward and put a plastic sheet on the overhead
projector. "I used these radio observations. By calculating
the momentum delivered in each jet plume, I could find where the
intruder was headed next, as a reaction to the matter it ejected.
Here—"
The sly bastard's even got view graphs all ready,
Benjamin thought admiringly, despite himself. Playing us like a
goddamn violin.
The trajectory displayed was a jagged series of straight lines
that nonetheless swooped inward along a persistent curve. No one had
plotted these data in three dimensions yet and Benjamin saw that they
had all been guilty of staying too close to the data. Kingsley stood
silently, letting them digest the implication.
Benjamin jumped in. "The intruder is following a curve into
the solar system. And it's finding iceteroids still, even though it's
closer in than Pluto now."
"My esteemed colleague has stolen my points," Kingsley
said with a stagy smile, though Benjamin knew this was exactly
what he had wanted.
"It's guided," a postdoc said.
"It's guiding, I think, is the point," Kingsley
said.
This provoked a rustle. If Dart had gone over to the "starship
hypothesis," there were huge implications.
"Targets of opportunity," Benjamin said, not wanting to
get into a broader discussion. "Every time it makes a course
correction, it's headed for the nearest iceteroid that will help it
follow this smooth path."
"But, my God," one of the staff said, "that would
mean it can find chunks of ice and rock just a few hours' flying time
away—"
"Some of them only a few tens of meters across, to judge by
the variations in jet luminosity we detect—" another voice
called out.
"And it can then fly unerringly to its next"—Kingsley
paused just enough—"prey."
A long silence. "Where's that curve go?' a staffer whispered.
"Jupiter," Kingsley said simply.
Gasps.
"And quite quickly."
"That was an admirable result," Benjamin had to say to
Kingsley. They were on their way a short while later, called to
Victoria Martinez's office. "You must've spent a lot of time on
it."
"I had help. Called in various orbital specialists, got some
computer help—"
Victoria Martinez came into her office with a tall well-dressed
man. "Sorry I was late, gentlemen. Mr. Arno has just arrived."
Handshakes all round, Benjamin wondering who this was. Not an
astronomer, he was fairly sure; something about the eyes. He had
little time to wonder. Arno sat on the edge of Martinez's desk, as if
he owned the room. Martinez did not seem to mind, and instead settled
into her own high-backed chair with an expression of hovering
interest, an air of deference. Arno took the time to adjust the seams
in his pressed light gray Mancetti suit, which went well with his
blue and red tie based on a Japanese woodprint. An unde-frnable air
of presence and power came across in the way he looked directly at
Benjamin.
"I'm from the U Agency," he said, as if this banished
all doubt. "We've been tracking your results here and think it's
time to move."
"U Agency? Ubiquitous?"
Arno frowned at this joke, but then he managed a mirthless
smile and said, "I'll have to remember that one."
Martinez's eyes widened slightly in alarm. This was a manager from
the big time, her expression conveyed, not the sort given to minor
banter. Arno waited just one beat for this to sink in and said, "No,
we are an emergency arm of your government. I've been in touch with
Dr. Dart here, and others, and we felt it was time to get some
control of the situation. That means bringing you into the
loop—in fact, everybody working here."
Benjamin had heard vague talk of a consolidated arm, usually
called in to apply leverage in international crises. Arno must
represent such shadowy forces. Benjamin paid little attention to the
always-precarious balance of forces in the big power arena. The
United States was wearying of being the perpetual fallback
stabilizer, especially since the Mideast equilibrium had dissolved
into ultranationalist and water rights issues. He knew the country
was assuming more imperial modes, but cared little for the details.
"What 'loop'—"
"Perhaps I can make this easier," Kingsley said
smoothly. "I've been worried that this is moving too fast for
us, and media attention is about to descend. Better to have it
handled by people who can impose controls when needed."
Benjamin turned from Arno and shot back at Kingsley, "And
what's that mean?"
"You see the implications of my trajectory analysis. It's
intelligent—and hugely powerful. At the moment, it's
headed toward Jupiter, but that, too, could change."
"Anything commanding those power levels is almost
inconceivably dangerous," Martinez put in.
"Your authority to do this?" Benjamin asked.
"Direct from the White House," Arno said with casual
assurance. He straightened the cuff on his long-sleeved shirt.
"The Science Adviser has been informed?" Benjamin
persisted.
"Of course. Kingsley's reports came up through her."
Benjamin glanced at Kingsley and realized he had been played for a
fool for the last few weeks. "I don't think I follow—"
"Look, this is presidential," Arno said, as if
explaining to a child. "The U Agency has to run the show here.
It's in your own interests. We'll handle the connections to the top
and to outside—the media. You guys will be free to do your
research. This Center will, from now on, be devoted entirely to
coordinating international intelligence."
Benjamin tried not to let himself be put off by Arno's curt,
aggressive style, which he recognized from his occasional dealings
with other wings of government. Still, this guy was over the top. "U
Agency people, then—"
"Will work closely with yours. We'll filter everything that
goes in or out."
"How do you expect us to do research with you peering over
our shoulders?"
"Just bring me the results. I'm a conduit, that's all.
Believe me, we've got some able minds working for us. Our people
will be, well, colleagues."
Benjamin was still trying to comprehend this sudden swerve. He had
come into Martinez's office expecting a friendly discussion of how to
deal with the growing circle of those who knew of the intruder. He
should have realized that Kingsley was at his charismatic best when
he sailed before prevailing political winds, well before others
sensed them. Why hadn't he seen that Kingsley fit in with the U
Agency style—and that something like this was inevitable? The
astronomy of it had captivated him, blinded him.
Or so went his rationale later. Arno had ended with a warm
handshake and an ingratiating, obviously phony smile, the sort of
expression Benjamin always suspected people of rehearsing in front of
mirrors at home. But that was merely cosmetic. Arno's staff began
arriving within minutes, and he knew at a glance what was in store.
The U personnel dressed alike, severe and stark in their dark slacks,
jackets, and off-white shirts. At least they did not wear ties. The
Center staff astronomers were Hawaiian hip, in shorts and gaudy
flowered shirts and thongs.
Benjamin had to settle several immediate personnel problems,
holding a quick general meeting to announce the "structural
change," which included a layering of Deputy Administrators,
Action Team Leaders, and Section Heads in a chart neatly printed for
prominent display. With Kingsley and Arno beside him he answered a
few questions, but thankfully most fell to Martinez.
Then he had to patrol the Center corridors as the U Agency types
moved in, finding office space and mediating. It was like two
different species having to suddenly share the same territory.
"Colleagues," Arno had said, and this proved to mean that
some of the U Agency people were faces he recognized. Apparently they
had been hired as consultants, perhaps quite recently. Some of them
seemed faintly embarrassed, but they moved with the same crisp
efficiency as the others. Was there prior training to do this sort of
thing?
It would have been easy to blame Kingsley for this, to see him as
Benjamin's primary antagonist. But within three hours of this shock,
the two men were bound down the mountain in Benjamin's car, headed
for a dinner they had planned days before. They drove in silence, the
aroma of burning sugarcane drifting up from the fields toward Hilo.
They quite deliberately spoke only of Hawaii itself as Benjamin
took the slope at high speed, tires howling on the curves, bamboo
forests flickering past with their dry smells.
Kingsley seemed able to relax and truly enjoy the ride down to
their beachfront home. After taking off their shoes in standard
island good manners, Kingsley stopped to admire the photos in
the entrance hall of Channing's career: aboard the space station, on
an EVA, taking data in blazing sunlight. As he did, Benjamin sought
out Channing and embraced her with a fervor that surprised him.
Channing sensed the soured mood of the men and quickly deflected
it with drinks of mango and papaya and rum, amid soft Japanese music,
all counterpointed by the wind chimes in their back garden. The air
seemed layered with fragrances and talk ran to island gossip. But
then she wanted to be kept up on the gossip and it all came out.
"I don't think you fully appreciate why I acted,"
Kingsley said at last, once the describing was done.
"You bet I don't," Benjamin shot back. He had
been holding his tongue because the last few hours had
drastically shifted the power balance between the two men, and he was
unsure how to deal with it. "Neither does Martinez."
"She does not know my methods, but you, with our ancient
association, might have guessed my intention well before I was
ready to reveal it."
"I'm afraid I'm being sidelined after the first few plays."
"That will not happen, I assure you." Kingsley sat back
and wrapped both hands around one knee, leaning back as though to
relieve knotted muscles. He carries tension that way, same as me,
Benjamin thought. But doesn't show it in the face or voice.
"I'm pretty damned mad."
"With good reason, given what you know. Let me say I
appreciated your not giving voice to that at the Center. It would
have done no good."
Channing had let them go through the first quick rush of it, their
words coming out in machine-gun volleys. Now she made a show of
fetching some nibble food, leaving them with a lingering observation:
"I'm impressed that a U.S. agency will spring so quickly on the
advice of a Brit astronomer."
"I've been functioning as a sort of scientist-diplomat since
well before the Astronomer Royal appointment," Kingsley called
after her. "My good fortune that I've made the right contacts."
"I admire your understatement," she called from the
kitchen.
"Why not tell me?" Benjamin demanded, irked at her
cavalier nonchalance at this whole abrupt maneuver.
"Because it would have compromised a delicate transition."
Benjamin sat back and crossed his arms, demanding, "Explain.
Better be good, too."
"I've been asking people around the world to work on this
intruder problem, sending e-mails and calling—any idea
why?"
"To get them involved?" Channing ventured when Benjamin
just shook his head. "So these U Agency types would have
to come in?"
"Dead right. I want this controlled by the United States, not
by some United Nations committee."
Benjamin nodded. "A nation can act quickly, a committee,
never."
"And there's more, isn't there?" Channing bore in on
Kingsley, leaning forward, her hostess skills giving way to her
professional ones.
"You could always spot my motives," Kingsley laughed.
"The U Agency fellows will pull in some 'foreign advisers' right
away."
Benjamin saw it. "And the people you e-mailed the most,
brought into the discussion earliest—"
"They'll be the ones recruited." Kingsley smiled.
"And the astronomers I saw today working for the Agency—"
"Exactly. They were brought in the traditional way, a
consultancy for a sum they could scarcely decline."
"They know what we're doing?"
"Of course. Some have been monitoring our work— which
impresses them, I'm happy to say—since the first week."
Channing said, "You make it sound like moving chess pieces."
Kingsley looked reflective. "I suppose it is. All done very
diplomatically, of course, through all the proper channels. I was
afraid I was being a bit obvious, but so far Arno has not caught on."
"You believe," Benjamin said, sitting back and gazing up
at the hard, bright stars visible through the softly rattling fronds
of palm trees.
"I wanted bright people here, people I knew from my work.
Screens are going to start coming down soon, I'll wager."
"Really?" Channing chewed her lip, her face pale in the
gloom.
"This is the calm before the storm—a very long storm,
quite probably," Kingsley finished morosely, taking a long pull
at his drink.
Benjamin told her about the trajectory Kingsley had displayed.
"It's moving faster, cutting the time to reach Jupiter."
"And that provokes the U Agency?" she asked wonderingly.
Kingsley studied the leafy garden with a skewed slant to his
mouth. "I felt bound to let those above know, as did Victoria.
We spoke of it the second day I was here. I did not include you
two in my thoughts because, frankly, I felt it was a side issue, just
a reporting up the chain of command sort of thing. But quite quickly
it caught the attention of certain people at the NSF, then DARPA—my
sources tell me."
Benjamin disliked both what he was learning and getting it from
Kingsley. The man had mastered astronomy, international
diplomacy, and—no doubt, they would soon learn— figure
skating. Now he knew how laymen felt when confronting the complex
weave of astronomy with only newspaper-level knowledge. He hated
playing straight man here, but stifled that and asked, "Why in
the world would the Defense Advanced Research Project Agency have
connections to NSF's astronomy office?"
"There is a standing procedure, ever since the Air Force
began detecting what turned out to be gamma-ray bursters, remember?"
Kingsley smiled. "Their satellites designed to detect nuclear
explosions found signals coming from the sky. Bursters bequeathed us
this alliance of interests."
"And from there on, let me guess," Benjamin said, "it
went to the National Security Council, then the President's Science
Adviser."
Kingsley raised an eyebrow in appreciation. "You know more of
this labyrinth than I expected. Pretty nearly so, yes."
"So we're stuck having to work with those Chicken Littles,
huh?" Channing said.
Kingsley gave her a puzzled glance. "Uh, Chicken…"
"The U Agency's purpose is to stop disasters before they
grow, mostly by taking action across national and even continental
boundaries. They're a quietly accepted part of global integration,"
she rattled off knowledgeably.
Benjamin was surprised at how much she knew. When she had a mind
to, she showed as much acuity as Kingsley. And he, in turn, had small
blind spots, like not remembering who Chicken Little was. The man's
concentration upon his career had swept all else from his mind. Most
astronomers were distracted sorts, unable to recognize many of the
faces on the magazines next to the checkout line in markets. Kingsley
took this to an extreme, but his footing among the corridors of power
was deft and firm.
With lacerating sarcasm, Channing made fun of the U types,
reminding them that she had some dealings with the Agency in her
"spacesuit days." Her eyes danced with memories. "The
two most common elements in the universe are hydrogen and stupidity,
and. they've got plenty of both."
Benjamin felt their home around them like a warm cocoon and
hoped that it could be a quiet refuge from the growing tumult outside
as word inevitably spread. Something big was coming, and he was
not ready. Above he saw the spray of glimmering that was the plane of
the galaxy, the Milky Way, and wondered from which, of all those
stars, this thing had come. It had been gobbling up iceteroids for
some time, no doubt, so its initial incoming direction was no clue.
It could be from anywhere. Given the vast spaces between the
suns, it could have been traveling for centuries, millennia. And what
unimaginable technology lay behind the downright weird signatures of
the intruder?
Starship? The word seemed inadequate for the energies the thing
poured forth. They needed a better term, a name that carried the
mystery of it.
4
Channing gave it a name that stuck, within a week. One much better
than "X-l" or "intruder."
To concentrate and save her energy, she worked in the quiet of her
home study. A doctor had told her that fighting this disease would be
like the late career of a fading boxer: pacing yourself, resting when
you could, so you could go a few hard rounds when you had to. She had
a countdown to heed, and now the Center had one, too, with the
intruder.
A few days after the entrance of the U Agency, she noticed a
small detail in the high-resolution pictures of the intruder's
spectacular collisions.
The hottest region had an extended magnetosphere, a glowing dot
that kept expanding with each collision. She compared images from all
available kinds of telescopes— starting with the radio's
spindly jet, up through an infrared blur of hot gas, on into the
visible spectra that revealed sharp streamers of agitated atoms
arcing like geysers from the core, and finally on into the X rays
that showed a white-hot center of intense heat, a seething central
furnace that grew larger with every collision.
The entire range of deep space telescopes now sent images to
the Center, a gusher of data each time the intruder devoured another
hapless chunk of matter in its path. One collision had decidedly
different spectral signatures. Careful analysis showed emission lines
from silicon, carbon, iron. It had struck an asteroid. With the same
outcome—a jet of microwave-emitting electrons, hot gas,
and plasma, trailing the intruder, a neon sign seen all the way
across the solar system.
Overlaying all these results with some sophisticated graphics, she
got a consistent picture.
The strong magnetic field was building in a huge active region,
lighting up brilliantly, growing. She suggested some adroit
observations, brought them to Kingsley's attention, and soon enough
the big-dish "ears" of Earth's radio telescope net were
mapping the moving magnetic region in intricate detail. They were the
first to see a bull's-eye disk, with circular lanes of varying
luminosity centered on an unresolved blur.
So she took it into the Center and the Gang of Four. "Looks
like a target," Benjamin said. "A bull's-eye."
"An accretion disk," Kingsley observed dryly, his
expression showing his lifelong dislike of homey analogies for
astrophysical objects. "The mass it has acquired is spiraling
in. It collides, rubs, and gets warm. Hot enough and the matter emits
radiation." He nodded to Channing, who sat at the controls of
one of their big-screen displays—a fresh compensation for
their enforced collaboration with the U Agency, who had just
installed higher-power computers and flat-screen displays of
eye-opening quality. "Your working hypothesis is proved."
"I'm that obvious?" Channing was slightly miffed at
having her thunder stolen.
Benjamin called up from the massive Center computers his
compilation of the radio telescope data. Using Channing's discovery
of the high magnetic fields, they had been able to take quick
snapshot-like radio maps of the inner region.
"Here, I've made it into a film," Benjamin said. "It
even has a plot, sort of."
The view opened far out in deep space, our sun a mere glimmering
spark. In an overlay, Channing saw vast swarms of rock and iceteroids
orbiting. Suddenly a strange glowing disk like an uncoiling silvery
snake plunged across the field of view. It struck an iceteroid with a
brilliant flash. Gaudy luminous streamers clasped the doomed
mile-wide chunk of ice.
"They were lucky enough to get a series of maps and optical
images when it hit its latest victim," Benjamin said to the
darkened room. "I've blended them here."
The snake coiled up and deformed, becoming all mouth. Blue-hot, it
gnawed its way through the ice. Channing knew that at its speeds,
these had to be images made in slices finer than a millisecond. The
eerie beauty of it was captivating, the lapping strands of magnetic
fields flickering among the flying fragments.
Then something luminous emerged like a wasp from a cocoon at
the other side of an expanding ball of hot gas. The intruder moved
on, now bearing a halo like an immense multicolored rainbow around a
central bright hoop. But within the inner ring lay an utterly black
core. The rainbow was a momentarily expanded disk of matter, she
guessed, a hundred-kilometer-wide firework accelerating inward.
"So we have seen the beast at last," she murmured into
the shocked silence of the room as the images faded to black.
Benjamin stood next to the big screen, his suntan giving him an
odd bronzed look in the small lamp of the speaker's podium. A casual
audience of astronomers who had come in for the show peppered him
with questions and he fielded them well, the distances and times and
resolutions at his fingertips.
She let the moment wash over her. To her surprise, she had not
been surprised. It looked just the way she had seen it in her dreams.
Fevered, troubled dreams.
Finally Kingsley got her attention by addressing a public question
to her. "You hinted by e-mail that you had a name for the
object," Kingsley said with amusement.
"I suggest we call it the Eater of All Things."
"Because it is a black hole," Kingsley finished for her.
"Exactly," Benjamin put in. "I kept the secret
pretty well while she massaged her data, but I'll bet half the people
here have been thinking the same thing—without saying so."
This was the first truly public announcement. They looked at each
other silently, so it was left to Amy Major to say, "You don't
want to alarm the U people, correct?"
"Right," Benjamin said. "The spectral shifts—those
reds and blues we found early on, remember? They fit the black hole
idea. Now we can see it trapping mass. Case closed."
Channing leaned back and regarded their Gang of Four in the Big
Screen Room, as the U types had labeled it. They had slapped labels
on rooms all over the Center. "I hope we're under no illusions
that all this data isn't being copied by the U computers they just
installed. They'll have this processed shot of Benjamin's by now."
"And they are far from dumb," Kingsley agreed.
"Particularly the newest fellow, Randall. Knew him on a
visiting appointment at Harvard, before he went 'underground,' as the
U people say."
"Into classified work," Benjamin supplied for Amy.
"Oh." Amy seemed startled that an astronomer would go
into any other line. Her expression plainly said, Once you
understand how big and wonderful the universe is, how could you do
anything else?
Channing permitted herself a nostalgic smile, remembering
when she had worn just such an earnest expression—and had meant
it.
5
Benjamin had a pad mounted on a tree in the garden, ostensibly for
a dartboard. He and Kingsley had a game or two in the next few days,
Kingsley casually tossing with his unerring accuracy born of a
thousand pub crawls, winning easily. Afterward Benjamin took the
board back inside to keep it out of the dependable tropical rain
showers and then had considerable use for the cushion's other, secret
purpose. Often when he got home he would take a stroll in the garden
while Channing finished making dinner, her favorite daily task.
When he reached the portion out of view of the house, he would
approach the cushion and give it half a dozen good, solid punches. He
had discovered this outlet years before and realized quite well that
his need of it told him something about his feelings.
He made good use of the cushion every evening now. As the flood of
data deepened, he staked out a clear position that learning more is
the best short-term goal. In this the Center staff backed him
solidly.
"Ummm," Channing said over a dinner of baked ono in
papaya-ginger sauce, "and good ol' savvy Kingsley sees this as a
power clash from which he can profit."
"Uh, yes. I was going to put it a little more delicately—"
"To that Arno guy you can be diplomatic, but it's wasted on
me, dear. Kingsley is just staying in character. The U Agency isn't
using a hobnailed boots approach; they're smarter than that. It's
more what we used to call at NASA a 'soft presence' style—you
know they're there and can take over the operation in a millisecond,
and they convey that without saying anything."
Benjamin admired how she could sum up what had taken him days to
realize. "Yup, subtle they are."
"So far."
"Meaning?"
"They don't have to stay that way."
He was having trouble river-rafting in the fast administrative
U Agency waters. They operated as if they knew what mattered before
they asked questions, so the answers had better fit their
expectations. And pronto. He heard "cut to the chase"
several times a day. "I keep getting signals like that," he
admitted.
"I'm not there all the time, so maybe I can see it in a
clearer perspective. Everybody's getting more tense and the whole
thing is going to crack open pretty soon."
"I hope not."
"Kingsley handled the public announcement very well, but it's
a stopgap."
"He can keep on handling it, for all I care." Benjamin
had found the whole press conference an anxiety squeeze from start to
finish. He had not mastered the art of saying only enough to cover
the subject, avoiding any speculation even when badgered.
So it had been no surprise when Martinez gave Kingsley the
spokesman job. He had downplayed any danger, though of course the
mainstream reporters leaped on that immediately, implying with
sneers and eyebrows yet another "cover-up." Yet somehow,
with a few quiet prebriefings and some postbriefing hospitality to
various opinion-setters, Kingsley had managed to get just the right
media angle: huge global interest, but so far, just curiosity.
"It helps that there's this new water war between Turkey,
Syria, and Iraq. Plenty of juicy footage," Channing said.
"Oh, I hadn't noticed."
"That's why he's Astronomer Royal. He timed the press
conference in late afternoon, when the global news coverage was
already locked up, plenty of shooting scenes ready to go"
"I hope that explains why some of the U Agency's hired-gun
astronomers have been arranging to get their own private
channels of information."
"How?" She had been serenely distant so far, picking at
her fish, but now frowned.
"Getting their own simultaneous feeds on the Long Arm data,
among others."
"A precaution?"
"Against who? Me? I can't see them worried about that."
"How can we be sure the data stays in-house?"
"We can't, not now."
"They want to have somebody on the outside checking us?"
He felt pleased that she had arrived at his conclusion. Her
instincts were good for this kind of infighting, a legacy of her NASA
days, whereas his had been dulled by years of routine administration.
"So what can I do?"
"Nothing. It's probably a Kingsley maneuver we don't
understand yet."
"I hope so."
There had been several such. As Kingsley had warned, there were
"side effects" of working with the U Agency umbrella
over them. Their home and his apartment had been carefully invaded,
searched, analyzed—purely pro forma, of course—and then
just as carefully put back as they were. Their electronic records had
yielded e-mail addresses, and most valuably, the system still carried
the signatures of recent use. This gave the e-mail paths of
Kingsley's recent messages, though even to the best of agents the
system could not divulge their content; that was erased. The Agency
and those over it did not realize that his leaving the e-mail tags in
place was a neat way of ensuring that his correspondents would be
rounded up and brought to him, to keep the lid on word of the
intruder.
In this manner, he gained a few people he had not asked for,
explaining that some nuance was a good idea in these matters.
Kingsley also hoped that they did not catch on when, earlier, he had
deliberately been rude to several bureaucratic figures,
precisely to provoke this measure. Of this last touch he was openly
proud; "actually Machiavellian," he termed it.
But the next day, when the two of them caught Kingsley alone for a
moment and pressed him on the issue of the U Agency having separate
access to incoming data, he denied any involvement. "Arno is the
best of that lot, believe me," Kingsley explained, spreading his
palms, face up in a gesture of openness—a little
defensively, Benjamin thought.
Channing looked worried. "Then we go to Theory B."
"Which is?" Kingsley asked, sitting on the edge of his
new polished teak desk. The U Agency had offered it when he decided
to stay indefinitely. Not that he had any real choice, he had noted
to Benjamin, and one might as well take the good with the bad in such
matters.
"That they want a backup team to check us."
Kingsley nodded and Benjamin felt compelled to say, "And in
case we can't do the job anymore."
Both Channing and Kingsley shot questioning looks at him. "In
case we're put out of action."
"How?" Kingsley asked.
"Politically, suppose the United Nations decides to make this
their party?"
"We're on American soil."
"But the United States is pretty unpopular in the Security
Council over this war business," Benjamin said.
"It couldn't go that far," Channing said.
"Just a thought," Benjamin said lightly. Then, jibing,
"I'm sure Kingsley has a better Theory B."
But he did not, and their conversation broke off. There were more
concrete issues to think about. It was by now clear that magnetic
nozzles, like those of rockets but immensely larger, had begun
to flare behind the intruder. A plume jet many thousands of
kilometers long now twisted and flared. Each step of their
understanding was being revealed by incremental observations,
science as detective work, and the entire Center staff was fitting
together more parts to the puzzle daily. The Long Arm got better
close-ups of the Eater as it sped inward, still slamming into more
iceteroids daily. It had been barely six weeks since the first
detection.
They met with Martinez and Arno later that same day to discuss
moving several existing deep space probes to rendezvous with the
Eater for close-up study. They had at their command advanced light,
unmanned spacecraft—descendants of NASA's
faster-cheaper-smaller doctrine of the 1990s, developed for
computer-enhanced exploration of the solar system. Assisted by ion
rockets, these were the Searcher Class spacecraft, and to Benjamin's
astonishment, Kingsley casually called up the right people at NASA
and began moving them into position to intercept and study the Eater.
The smell of unalloyed power was heavy in the room, though
unremarked.
The afternoon waxed on. Benjamin keenly sensed the rising
tension in the Center, a kind of electrical energy that he felt as he
walked the corridors, listening to detailed technical
conversations. A compressed tautness laced through the conversations
about Janskys of measurement and arc-seconds of resolution,
technical terms freighted with a gathering sense of storm.
Arno casually waved away worries that they could muster resources
quickly. Channing obliquely brought up the U.N. possibility and Arno
looked grim for only a fraction of a second before returning to
his patented ceramic smile. "No chance," he said. Benjamin
had noticed that at points of tension Arno seemed to revert to a
Clint Eastwood-Gary Cooper imitation.
Still, Arno's certainty was reassuring, for so little else was.
Within an hour they received a gusher of data from the Arecibo radio
dish, still the largest in the world. This huge array of metal held
its cupped ear to the cosmos in Puerto Rico, in a high mountain bowl
that swept across the sky, listening intently. Only at certain
hours did its sweep include the Eater's trajectory, and so far they
had heard little more than the electromagnetic hiss of the intruder's
flailing jet tail. Now, though, the radio telescope picked up an
intense, high-definition pulse of emission. An hour later the Eater
fell below Arecibo's horizon and the Very Large Array spread across
New Mexico's high plateau took up the task.
They had tracked the Eater now in great detail, adding images
to the Long Arm's pictures of the Eater's inner core. Now the point
was not mapping, but rather signal reception. Something highly
detailed was coming from the very core of the intruder, and it made
no sense.
Benjamin watched all this with a growing sense of urgency. He
could scarcely ignore the obvious fact that Channing was fading as
the afternoon waxed on, her eyes hollowing out and mouth seeming to
grow thinner, hands trembling under the strain of work. But she
refused to go home. Upon her sallow skin there came an expression of
adamant energy, and she said, "I'll stay. I'll stay."
This carried a hard existential weight and he was cowed by the
hard certainty in her voice. He loved this woman and sometimes he
understood her in a way he could not express—to her or to
himself—and he did as she wanted. He helped her settle into one
of the rather luxurious new leather form-fitting chairs before the
big-screen display and they watched the sliding columns of compressed
data. The entire processing capability of the Center bore down on
what Arecibo and the VLA had found.
"Unmistakably artificial," Kingsley was the first to
say.
"A message?" Channing said with her wan yet edgy
energy.
A staff specialist came in and displayed the enormous broadband
complexity of the transmission and the Gang of Four plus some U
Agency astrophysicists went through the data stream with him. "It's
digital, encoded in a fashion we haven't cracked yet," the
specialist said.
While they puzzled over what this might mean, Arno drew Benjamin
and Kingsley aside. "Thought you might use the services of a
bright cryptographer I had brought in."
"He's here?" Benjamin asked to cover his surprise.
"She, yes."
"That slim woman I asked about?" Kingsley pressed him.
"That's the one." Arno's smile had a touch of preening
in it.
"You suspected we would need one, from the very first."
Kingsley nodded his head ever so slightly in respect.
"Just covering all the bases."
Benjamin could see why the woman had caught Kingsley's interest,
for she was quite attractive. Conversely, he wondered why he had not
noticed her himself, even among the confusing crowd of new people in
the Center. When distracted, one did not notice being
distracted.
In short order, she broke the code; it proved to be deceptively
simple. "It's frame-compressed at high speed," she
announced to the jammed room. As word spread, people slipped in.
Arno and his aides were so drawn into the suspense that they
were not even policing the "information boundaries," as
they put it.
Benjamin asked, "How about slowing the signal?"
The cryptographer looked a little irked. "We are. Here, the
run is nearly finished—"
Onto the screen leaped a string of break-down interpretations.
Plainly the sender had meant this to be easily read. In short order,
everyone in the room saw that it was a very short message in over a
hundred languages. Each language carried the same terse message.
Chinese, Spanish, then third in the string was English:
I DESIRE CONVERSE.
PART THREE
A DERANGED GOD
APRIL
1
In the moments after the revelation, Benjamin noted that
scientists and U Agency types alike looked the same: jaws agape, eyes
blinking in wonder, disbelief wrenching mouths askew, nostrils
flared. And for once, nobody had anything coherent to say.
Consternation is a term far too abstract to describe the next
twenty-four hours at the High Energy Astrophysics Center. The simple
three words—though there were more in other languages, with
many different shadings of meaning— immediately split the staff
at the Center into factions.
For decades a small band of astronomers, principally at the Search
for Extraterrestrial Intelligence Institute, had listened in the
radio bands for signals from other civilizations. They and many
others had debated the abstract principles involved in answering a
message—should one be received. Most favored not answering
immediately. There seemed no rush to reply, considering the huge
travel times of light between stars. But with the Eater less than an
hour's time delay away, that argument slid into an ethical debate.
Who should speak for Earth?
Arno made no secret of his view. "We do. The whole world has
fed its astronomical data here, we have the best people in the field
right down the hall, and the White House has given us freedom of
movement—so we do it."
Most astronomers did not feel that way. Anxiety beset them, knots
meeting around the coffee urns in tight-lipped arguments. Channing
stayed away from these. "The U Agency will call the shots here,"
she said to Benjamin in his office. "Notice that they're all
behind Arno? No brooders there."
"They're hired guns," Benjamin said. He gazed at his
desktop screen, where the long strings of the message glowed. "I
desire converse, too, but how?"
"You're the scientific head here," Channing said softly.
She felt the familiar old fatigue gliding up through her bones but
pushed it down, her heart tripping with a quick, high rhythm. "Do
it."
Benjamin jerked his eyes away from the screen, startled. "Me?"
"You discovered it."
"Amy did."
"Okay, bring in Amy. The discoverers get to name the object,
that's standard—"
"You named it."
"—so we extend that right, say that the discoverers get
to talk to it."
He chuckled, clasping his long, bony hands behind his neck and
leaning back. "Don't take up a legal career. Too big a leap."
"I'm serious. That thing is moving fast and obviously it can
think fast. Learning a hundred languages, just from eavesdropping?"
"An old cliche of B movies—"
"But probably right. Not answering right away, that sends it
a message, too."
Benjamin looked startled again. "I suppose so, but…"
"Look, the halls are packed outside with astronomers making
guesses. Suddenly nobody's an expert. I heard some guy floating a
theory that some undetected planet is orbiting the black hole, and
the message is from there."
"Nonsense."
"Of course, and there'll be more like it. How could anything
like a zone livable for life-forms like us survive passage
between the stars?" She snorted derisively. "No, it'll take
a while to face the fact—that this is something utterly
strange."
"What did its three little words mean, exactly? Converse as
in conversation? Or as in the contrary?"
"It's a stilted diction, but I'll bet on conversation. It's
bound to get context and syntax a little confused. Languages are
species-specific, but this thing managed to make sense and even
construct a simple sentence that meant something. Give it a break."
"Fine—so how do we talk to it?"
"Simply," she said simply.
"What should all of humanity say?"
"Keep it easy, just as the Eater did."
He brightened. "Maybe just 'We desire converse, too.'?"
"Who could blame you for that? It's the truth, and it gives
nothing away."
"I don't know. It's an overwhelming responsibility."
She watched him work it out on his own. She felt lazy and weirdly
relaxed, despite her hammering heart. There had been another
appointment with Dr. Mendenham early this morning, which she had
dearly wanted to skip but didn't. She had gotten up at dawn and made
herself one of her crazy breakfasts to boost her spirits, fish and
eggs with paprika. A treatment course of mahi-mahi should be added to
the therapy regimen, she had decided. Trouble was, you thudded
back down under the bland gray reality of modern medicine and all of
its grisly matter-of-fact manner.
Without her noticing it, Benjamin had gotten on the phone, talking
to somebody at Arecibo, his sentences sliding by her like glazed word
nuggets—side lobes, milliarc-sec-onds, sampling time, rep
rate.
She had other concerns, minor itches. The morning's treatments now
irked her in myriad ways, especially her skin. Nowadays her fashion
taste boiled down to whatever didn't itch, period. She wore hats to
cover her patchy induced baldness, not caring that in some she looked
like a lampshade in a brothel. She also discovered that an older
woman could wear bright lipstick during the day without looking like
she just had a binge with a jam jar. Or maybe everybody was just too
polite to notice.
Now Benjamin was mustering people into the room and here was
Kingsley, squatting down next to her, his slender face lined with
concern. She put him off with a wavering sentence and shushed him
into silence so that she could hear. Arno sat on a corner of
Benjamin's desk, in his standard maneuver to dominate the room,
straightening the seams in his standard Mancetti suit, charcoal-black
today, all the while arguing quietly but intensely with one of his
aides.
The meeting began. All good scientists had big egos, and the high
nervousness of the room brought that out. While young, they had been
outstanding at something widely admired. Brightest in their
class, smarter than anybody they knew, it was bound to go to their
heads. The wiser ones outgrew it, some becoming even mildly
humble before the immensity of unanswered questions facing them.
Some—alas, even some of the best—never did.
A few of the Center astronomers made their cases against any reply
right away, in tones of subdued outrage. She wondered why
scientists so often couched their views in abstract terms while
giving their game away by the tone of voice, seemingly unaware that
most people could read their emotions more tellingly than their
ideas. It all seemed funny now, as she watched it from the high perch
her quirky physiology had cooked up for today. She had told
Kingsley that she didn't do drugs anymore because she could get the
same effect by standing up fast, but he had taken the joke
completely deadpan. Did she honestly look that frail?
Maybe, but she could still track the labyrinths of the argument
as it worked around the room. The same views emerged in different
guises, long on logic, brimming with unstated passion.
We have no right to speak for all the human race.
But only we have a prayer of knowing how to respond.
How can you? The idea's outrageous!
It might be dangerous to answer. The thing could learn how to
destroy us.
It might be dangerous not to answer. And it has huge energies
at its command already.
It's already taken the giant step of learning our languages.
That implies an intelligence far beyond ours. Don't try to
second-guess it.
But the sheer arrogance—!
Have you considered that it might be dangerous either way?
Finally Arno spoke. "This is still a matter of some secrecy,
though we cannot expect it to remain so for long. It is also a matter
under the governance of the United States, occurring on our
territory, though in an international facility."
Protests, exclamations, as everybody in the room saw which way it
was going to go. Arno brushed them aside.
"I have gotten a quick okay from the White House. They
believe a reply is in order, and soon. I have been authorized to
transmit one simple line."
He looked at Benjamin, and Channing saw that somehow they had
planned this, right in front of her, and she had missed it. Maybe she
was more feeble than she thought. Here she was at the center of
historic events, distracted by her itches and not tracking.
Benjamin said, peeling off the words, "We desire converse
also."
2
An answer came from the Eater at the minimum possible interval,
allowing for the 8.7 Astronomical Units it had to cross—seventy-two
minutes.
By this time Arno had told Benjamin and Martinez to keep their
staff "in order," meaning that they were not to leak any
whisper of the messages. His U Agency team held a "briefing"
for the Center astronomers, rather delicately laying out the security
precautions that would henceforth surround the Center's activities.
In the middle of this conference, the reply arrived.
I AM ENGAGED TO CONVERSE.
MY FORMS WILL MAKE ORDER
TO CONVEY MEANING.
"What in hell does that mean?" Arno asked in a tight
tone, the first sign of tension Benjamin had detected in the man.
"I would venture," Kingsley said in his humble mode,
"that it is organizing itself for a high-bit rate transmission."
Arno looked puzzled, as did most of the rest of those crowded into
the Big Screen Room. Kingsley said smoothly, "I noticed that it
transmitted when Arecibo could receive— indeed, when it was
near the zenith at Arecibo's longitude."
Benjamin said, "We've been using it a lot to map the ionized
regions near the Eater's core. These last few days the team at
Arecibo bounced radar signals off it."
Kingsley nodded. "So it probably has noticed that half the
time our largest receiver is out of view, on the other side of the
Earth from the Eater. The Eater wishes to use the biggest dish we
have, presumably to transfer a great deal, or else it would simply
send messages to every radio telescope we have. I expect, then, that
from now on it will use the second-largest facility—Goldstone,
in the California desert—when Arecibo is out of its sight. We
should find a third dish and send the coordinates in our own next
message, so communication is continuous."
This quick analysis impressed even Benjamin, who reluctantly
nodded; he had not thought of the problem, much less solved it.
Arno folded his arms. "Well, looks like we got a dialogue
going here. What do we say next?"
Channing's thin voice began, and one of Arno's men started to talk
over it, only to cut off abruptly when Arno shot him a severe glance,
eyebrows clamped down tightly above hard eyes. Channing started
again. "Ask the basics. Where it's from, what it is, what it
wants."
This seemed so sensible to the small group—the Gang of Four
plus some U Agency types who seemed spooked by Arno's authority—that
they accepted it, arguing only over the phrasing of the questions.
Again the response came back in only a few seconds more than the
computed delay time due to the finite speed of light.
I AM ONLY ME SELF ALONE. A COMPOSITION OF FIELDS.
"What fields?" Arno wondered.
Kingsley looked at Benjamin. "I suspect, following on Dr.
Knowlton's discoveries, that the black hole's magnetic domain
itself is talking to us."
Astonishment met this bold venture. Benjamin saw Kingsley's thread
and said, "If we're dealing with some… well, magnetic
life… here, that would explain a lot."
Channing said weakly, slowly, "The fields are strong. Maybe
they can contain information—say, stored in the form of Alfven
waves, the most common form of magnetic waves."
Benjamin pointed out that Arecibo's high resolution radar image
showed glowing filaments threading around the Eater's core. "The
tightest picture we can get so far comes from the Very Long Baseline
Array, though, picking out details a few kilometers in size.
There's a tight knot of structures in the strong field region
near the hole."
Amy Major asked incredulously, "But how did they
get
there?"
Kingsley smiled. "I quite know how you feel. This is more
bizarre than anything in our astrophysical zoo. Somehow,
something has impressed knowledge and intelligence into a magnetic
structure."
One of the U Agency men said, "Well, a lot of our technology
stores data in magnetic cores, but those're lattices. Iron, say,
oriented in well-defined states by the field.
But this …"
He let his silence speak for him, and judging from the open
skepticism on many of the faces in the room, Benjamin could see the
idea was not going over well. For reference, Benjamin tapped in a
command and summoned forth the latest mapping in the microwave
frequencies. At the core, just barely visible as a broad dot in these
frequencies, was a disk. He knew that it was dense and hot, the
captured mass like a glowing phonograph record, turning around the
spindle hole that would eventually swallow it all.
A filmy cloud surrounded this bright core, laced by striations
that detailed analysis had already shown to be "magnetic
flux tubes," in the astrophysical jargon. The intricate
architecture of these lines suggested an outline. "An
hourglass," Benjamin said abruptly, seeing the structure
anew.
Dimly visible, once the eye knew where to look, the symmetric
funnel was undeniable.
"The hole is at the center," Kingsley observed, "that
unresolved dot. It draws matter in along those ducts, into an
accretion disk."
"Can't see any disk there," one of the U Agency
astronomers put in.
"Hard to see at this angle, I'll wager," Kingsley came
back smoothly. "And perhaps not luminous at these particular
frequencies, compared with the electron emission in the strong
fields."
One of the house theorists already had a mathematical simulation
of the inner region, which she presented as a slice diagram.
Depending on the weather around the black hole, there could either be
thick inflow from a wide angle, or thin inflow into a disk at
the equator of the system. The inflow formed a thick disk, which
could be slowly swallowed as it spiraled into the hole, reaching
maximum pressure very near the inner edge. But the energy released by
the white-hot mass, just before it dived into the hole, kept open
twin funnels.
"In this model," the theorist said, "the funnels
serve to eject mass, like a rocket nozzle. In steady-state, the
funnel wall is static." The hourglass shape of the funnels was
striking.
The entire region was only the size of a large building. The
larger magnetic realm beyond this could hold enormous stores of mass,
organized by the coherent field structure.
"Unbelievable," Arno whispered.
Still, the room was convinced. Heads nodded and voices called out
speculations on what some of the slender pathways might be.
Plainly small dots of luminosity were moving, as the map
refreshed over the next hour, showing a slow, spiraling inward, down
the twin funnels.
The technical discussion went on, ebbing and flowing with restless
energy. Benjamin moved over to check on Channing. She barely
acknowledged his presence, or much else in the room. Instead, he was
puzzled to find her regarding the Eater's image with an
expression that seemed to mingle awe and longing. He reminded
himself to check with Dr. Mendenham about her medication.
"I should get you home," he whispered.
"No. I want to be here." She did not even glance at him,
keeping her eyes on the big screen's image as fresh data filled in
slight details.
"One cannot but note that the justly termed 'Eater'—or
more generally, 'intruder'—answered only one of the questions
we put to it," Kingsley said at a pause in the discussion.
Channing's voice filled the silence of the room as all looked at
her. "We asked where it's from, what it is, what it wants."
Benjamin said, "And it answered the middle question."
"Maybe it's being coy?" Amy ventured. She spoke
confidently now, her hesitancy in such powerful company now
evaporated in the heat of the hunt.
"Try again. One at a time," Channing said.
Arno authorized sending a further message: "Where are you
from?"
The reply came with the same speed, arriving three hours later.
They had arranged its sentences with proper typography now. The
simple code it sent did not carry a distinction between capitals and
lowercase, so they left it in caps. For the Eater the implied huge
voice seemed natural.
THE GALAXY. I HAVE JOURNEYED THROUGH IT SINCE
THREE BILLION OF YOUR YEARS BEFORE YOUR STAR EXISTED.
"It's been wandering for 7.5 billion years?" an
astronomer asked in a hollow, awed whisper.
The room was silent for a long time.
Channing had refused to go home, and instead had fallen asleep in
a lounge chair in Benjamin's office. Benjamin had noticed that even
when awake her right foot sloped off to the floor, as if she had
forgotten she had one. She roused for the reply and came into the Big
Screen Room to see the message glowing alone on the screen. "Hmmm,
it seems rather cagey about its origins."
The Center was by now getting crowded as more people poured in
under the general U Agency umbrella. Some were directly from the
White House, which apparently was confused about how involved it
should get. The Gang of Four met with Arno and Martinez to plan.
"This is uncharted political territory," Kingsley
observed. "A politician's first instinct is to clamp down upon
that which he or she does not understand."
"I'd like it to stay that way," Channing said.
"I think we all would," Martinez said, "but this is
going to be far larger than we can manage."
Arno looked unsure of himself, and Benjamin realized that events
were spinning out of his control, an anxiety-producing turn for
such a personality. It was hard to exude confidence, the crucial
executive signature, when you did not feel it. He mentioned this to
Kingsley at the coffee urn, and Kingsley chuckled. "Unless one
is a practiced politician, and thus an actor."
"I'm not so impressed with his methods," Benjamin said.
"His people are rubbing mine the wrong way."
"I fear that was inevitable," Kingsley said. "In my
prior experience, science is packed solid with specialists, unused to
working with others."
Channing said wryly, "Look, for guys like Arno, the first
rule of action is if at first you don't succeed, destroy all
evidence that you tried."
"He seems pretty agreeable so far," Benjamin said
cautiously. He had respect for her political intuition; what was
she seeing that he missed?
Channing's energy had abruptly returned, probably fed by
old-fashioned adrenaline. She summoned more by tossing a sugar packet
into her coffee. "There's no hiding from this, though—the
White House has cut him enough slack to mess up."
Kingsley nodded. "Quite astute. He's got to work with such
uncertain materials as ourselves. And clever we may be, but this
problem is incredibly broad. I've already recommended that we
fly out experts in semiotics, the language of signs, in case we are
using too narrow a channel of conversation with this thing. They
may have ideas we can use."
Benjamin had to agree. These days, there were cell biologists
unable to discuss evolutionary theory, physicists who couldn't tell a
protein from a nucleic acid, chemists who did not know an ellipse
from a hyperbola, geologists who could not say why the sky was blue.
Worse, they didn't care. Generalized curiosity was rare and
getting rarer and now they needed a lot of people who could bring in
a broad range of angles of attack.
"I think you're giving Arno too much credit," Channing
insisted. "He's been behind the curve since the Eater began
talking. In situations like this, conventional wisdom won't work.
He's so dense, light bends around him."
Benjamin laid a restraining hand on her arm. "I think you're
overtired."
The rawboned, ravaged look she gave him had a silent desperation.
He did not know where her sudden moods came from, but resolved to
weather them. Trying to toss off the matter lightly, she said, "The
two most common elements in the universe are hydrogen and
stupidity. We shouldn't be surprised to see it show up a lot in the
next few days… that's all."
"I'm taking you home."
"Good idea, best of the day." Then she fainted.
3
Living in a female body—Channing mused, lying in the cool,
slanted light of early morning—was different. She rustled in
the damp sheets, cat-lazy, and watched Benjamin get ready to go back
to the Center after having had less sleep than he should.
Males had low-maintenance bodies; shave, trim fingernails,
haircut whenever it got too obviously long—that was
it.
They were so
pointed in their desire to have women, a
desire she remembered from adolescence as both frightening and
complimentary at once. The sense of the chase lived in them, made
them feel their bodies as jackets carrying their imperatives—sperm,
armies, ideas, civilization—on its perilous journey. They
relished their recklessness, and she had come to understand that it
was not an embracing of death, as some feminists insisted, but a
zesty drive to slam up against the walls of the world, test the
limits.
Even Benjamin's casual moves showed how his sense of space
differed, as if this crisis brought out deep responses. Men's world
fixed on fly balls in a summer sky, the target at the edge of reach
of arrow or gun, the bowl of sky lit by beckoning pinwheel stars, the
far horizon as a target. Men felt their bodies, she suspected, as
taut with lines of potential. Women revolved around a more inner
space, orbiting their more complex innards.
And the penis: willful, answering only to the unconscious. In the
small hours of this morning, she had proved this theorem by explicit
example, getting him erect as he slept, with artful fingers and lips
in a swampy, eager mood that came over her suddenly. In their verbal
love play his got a name, whereas somehow her vagina never did—until
this moment, the idea had never occurred. He could not lie,
erotically; erections spoke truly of what the libido willed.
"Hey, sailor, new in town?" she murmured in her cat
voice.
He came rushing over. "Thought you were asleep. Wow, you were
great."
"For a kiss you get breakfast."
"Sure. Where?"
"On the deck?"
"No, the kiss."
That led to an extended seminar on several ready reaches of her
body and delayed his departure by another half hour. In payment she
demanded to go with him, and predictably he said no, she was too
tired, and just as predictably, she won.
On the drive up, they had their first private conversation about
the Eater since the first message had come in. "You're more
afraid than you're letting on, aren't you?" she asked quietly.
"You bet." He drove with his usual concentration, quick
and able, tires howling on the curves. Well, maybe today it was
justified. Life seemed to be moving faster.
"It's packing a lot of power."
"And with seven billion years of experience, knows how to use
it."
"If it cares to."
"That's just what the politicians will soon realize." He
shot her a glance, his hands tight on the wheel as the road roar grew
under his foot's pressure.
"Why would it be any danger to us?"
"The thing about aliens is, they're alien."
"You think the government will take that attitude?"
"They'd be irresponsible if they didn't."
"Maybe they'll be as out of it as Arno."
"He's doing his best. You really dislike him, don't you?"
"I don't trust him," she said.
"He's secretive, all right," Benjamin allowed. "That
makes me suspicious. We're used to open discussion in the sciences
and he doesn't even pretend to follow that practice. And his people
follow his lead—ask plenty of questions, give damned little
back."
"That, and it's hard to believe that he beat 100,000 other
sperm."
"Not up to the job?"
"Nobody is, granted." She tried to imagine who would be
able to manage a crisis like this and came up empty. "It
demands too much knowledge in one head."
"So use more heads."
This turned out to be the solution the White House had settled
upon, visible as they pulled up to the Center. Or rather, to a guard
post and heavily armed Marines who peered intently at their freshly
made IDs, issued only the day before. The hillside was now,
overnight, festooned with prefab buildings lifted in by
helicopter. Communications cables flowered in great knotted blossoms
on standing pads, attended by squads of blue-overalled workers.
Inside the Center, the foyer had a security team checking IDs
again and a metal detector. This made Benjamin angry, which proved to
be "unproductive," as Kingsley termed it when he had to
rescue them from the Operations Officer's office. They stopped at a
brand-new phalanx of buffet tables, well stocked, and got coffee.
"Is this backed by the CIA?" Benjamin asked.
"I don't think so," Kingsley said judiciously. "The
food is quite poor."
They plunged into work. Channing had to allow that Arno's U Agency
had brought a brisk efficiency to the usual meandering corridor
conversations. In this taut atmosphere, there were no academic
locutions: no
in terms of or
as it were or
if
you will. This Channing fully approved. Leaving NASA, she had
found from a series of visits to the campuses that much of academic
life had come to seem either boring or crazy.
No rival for the craziness of the situation she was in, of course.
Nothing could match the whirl of speculation around her.
It was remarkable that this magnetic creature had been able to
produce even broken, coherent English simply by listening to
radio and TV. A century of fiction had assumed any approaching alien
would be able to do so, to simplify their story lines, without for a
moment considering how prodigious a task it was. The Eater had
no common experience, knew little of the Earth's surface, and was
dealing with a species unknown anywhere else in the galaxy. It did
have vastly more experience dealing with planetary life, though, and
this was apparently what made its work successful.
But with their help it could become much more able, the Eater
said. So there was a team of linguists working with it.
They started with vocabulary. Children learned language beginning
with nouns and built up to abstractions, so the first volley of
signals was an assembly of pictures showing common objects, along
with the nouns for them. Verbs were a little more trouble. Cartoons
proved useful here, showing "throw" and making distinctions
like the difference between "rain" and "to rain."
Here the American Hopi Indian language would have been useful,
since in that tongue English's "it is raining"—with
the implied
it quite invisible, yet a solid noun—was
smoothly rendered simply as "rain." The Eater pointed out
such subtleties as quickly as they arose, making its teachers feel
that English was a patchwork of knocked-together solutions—which,
of course, it was.
They quickly got through a basic five thousand words. Then faster
transmission of whole texts, with illustrations, proceeded with
blinding speed. Kingsley, wearing yesterday's shirt and tie,
related this to her in his clipped mode, teetering on the verge of
irony.
"What do you think will happen next?" she asked him. He
had apparently been here all night, or at least he looked it.
"Depends upon the world reaction, of course," Kingsley
said with surprising crispness. "And how fast we can move before
the heavy hand of 'responsibility' descends, to make us
overcautious."
She blinked. His face was a mask, but she could read a jittery
stress in him, especially in the overcontrolled way he spoke and
moved. "Why do you stress speed?"
"The Eater—your choice of name has stuck, and perhaps
was a bit infelicitous."
"Gee, I love it when you use such fancy terms. How
infelicitous?"
"It's more the title of a horror film, isn't it?"
"Or a bad sci-fi flick," Benjamin said, munching a
donut. He knew well the distinction between true science fiction and
the media dross pumped out in vast, glittery quantities, "sci-fi."
"So you think that'll worsen the first impression, once this
breaks?" Channing asked.
"It's starting to break," Kingsley said with abstract
fatigue. "Impossible to contain, really."
"What really matters here," Benjamin said, "is how
the governments react."
Kingsley managed a dry chuckle. "I remember some head of
state in the TwenCen saying that history teaches us mostly that men
and nations behave wisely once they have exhausted all their other
alternatives."
"I wish I could take the name back," Channing said.
While they slept, and Kingsley had not, the fascination of their
opportunity had worked upon the astronomers. They had asked the Eater
questions about astrophysics, peppering it with a dozen in a single
transmission. This apparently broke the tit-for-tat logjam. The
"intruder"—a name Kingsley still preferred to use,
and thought might work better but had no hope would be taken
up—seemed eager to discuss. It had quickly mastered the
protocols of our digital image processing and filled its broadband
signal with pictures. There were eerie exchanges. It was almost like
a proud parent showing around baby pictures.
WITNESS, THE LATE EVOLUTION OF A STAR, WHICH YOU
TERM THE ROSETTE NEBULA, LOOKED LIKE THIS FROM THE SIDE WHEN IT WAS
YOUNG.
The display was awesome, close-ups of giant rosy clouds of
shimmering molecules, beautiful testaments to the death throes of a
star. The Eater had been traveling near it and for the first time
Channing appreciated the limitation astronomers seldom
remembered: seeing objects from one angle left questions forever
unanswerable.
"This gives us a handle on its trajectory, then,"
Benjamin observed swiftly.
Kingsley nodded. "We can work backward, using these other
images—the Magellanic Cloud, the Galactic Center— and
determine its past."
Some of the images were impossible to match with anything
ever seen from Earth. Others almost matter-of-factly revised in an
instant their picture of the galaxy's geography. The view of the
Galactic Center showed what generations of artists had imagined, the
glowing bulge of billions of stars that shone in all colors, a
swollen majesty rent by lanes of ebony dust and amber striations no
one could explain.
It thrilled her, tightened her throat. A bounty now came flooding
into the Center as the Eater fed data through Arecibo and Goldstone
and the new dish at Neb Attahl, India.
"My God, it'll put us all out of work," she murmured.
"Astronomers? Quite the opposite, I expect," Kingsley
said.
"Yeah, we'll be trying to understand these—and the
Eater itself—for a generation at least," Benjamin said,
biting into his second donut, balancing a plate on his knee in the
Big Screen Room.
"Well," Channing said ironically, "it's good to
know you won't be forced into retirement."
This pleasant interlude lasted only an hour. Martinez discovered
they had come in and held a meeting. Clearly she was struggling to
find her role in all this, a small fish caught in a tidal wave.
Arno's men had tried to clamp down on the whole story, but it got out
through the porous Washington system. In part, that was because the
astronomers did not like the U Agency's increasingly abrupt manner.
Their styles clashed fundamentally, as mirrored in their clothes:
government buttoned-up look against tropical techno-hip. Even in
Martinez's oil-upon-the-waters meeting, there were several edgy,
sharp-tongued interchanges.
They watched some television, where the story had broken in
more or less the correct essentials only two hours before. At
first there was a stunned, worldwide awe. Religious proclamations,
stentorian speeches by assorted politicians who could not tell a
spiral galaxy from a supernova.
Astronomers who were called in to consult at first refused to
credit the story. Only release of the Rosette Nebula image convinced
these. The release itself was a fortunate error. A Center staffer had
sent it as a compressed file to a colleague, instead of zipping it to
yet another subagency in Washington; they had, weirdly, WebNet
addresses near each other in her file directory.
Within another hour or two, the astronomers outside those in the
know fathomed the significance of the Rosette image. Immediately,
they raised uncomfortable questions. This was an utterly alien
entity, carrying the mass of our entire moon—another factoid
which had leaked, this time through Australia. What could it do?
The Gang of Four sneaked off from the ongoing Martinez meeting to
discuss just this. Amy looked as though she had spent the night as
Kingsley had, fueled by coffee. "I've been trying to figure what
it might do."
"A more important point is what it wants," Kingsley
observed with a pensive gaze.
Amy said, "It didn't answer our third question. Ever."
"Exactly."
With her advanced computer skills, and the help of a squad of
cryptographers from the U Agency, Amy had been in on every exchange
in the transcription process. She shook her head. "It doesn't
answer any questions that verge on that, either."
"Curious," Kingsley said mysteriously. Channing could
tell that he had his own theories, but was unwilling to share them.
He had been wrong quite enough for the last week, thank you.
"If it wanted," Benjamin said, "it could plunge
straight through the Earth, bore a hole."
Kingsley snorted derisively. "And kill itself, by stripping
away the magnetic structures that
are the intelligence of
the thing? No, it will be rather more clever."
Channing had her own worse case and decided to venture it. "With
those magnetic funnels, it could blowtorch the top of our
atmosphere."
Kingsley looked delighted at an idea he had not had himself.
"Ummm… you're entirely correct."
"That would work?" Amy asked, startled.
"Absolutely," Kingsley said with an oblivious authority;
he was, after all, the Astronomer Royal. "
Sic transit gloria
mundi, eh? 'Thus passeth away the glory of the world,' if my
Latin is still decent."
"Is there enough energy density in its system to drill
through the atmosphere?" Benjamin asked. Channing knew this
well, one of his favorite maneuvers. Deflect the issue into a
calculation to get time to think.
Even in a potentially mortal
crisis, we play games.
They found a blackboard—white, actually, with those smelly
marking pens—and spent half an hour checking Kingsley's
assertion. Finally Benjamin dropped his marker and agreed. "Dead
on. It could roast us all, in time."
Kingsley said archly, "If it doesn't get bored first."
Channing had been resting in a lounge chair, especially brought in
by one of the U Agency gofers—a rather pleasant aspect of
the Agency's otherwise annoying presence. She brightened with a fresh
notion. "Then let's try to keep it amused, why don't we? I
wonder if it likes jokes."
4
Actually, it did—but its own humor was weird, unfunny:
LIFE HAS CONTRADICTIONS. BUT CONTRADICTIONS KILL
LIFE.
"That's a joke?" Benjamin asked the room, the first to
speak up. After his words were out, he was suddenly embarrassed,
wishing he could take them back. Maybe there was some deep semiotic
content he had missed? There were hugely powerful people here, able
to eject him from the Center forever with the rise of a single
eyebrow. But heads nodded in agreement and no one disagreed.
The Operating Group, as named by Arno, now encompassed
twenty-eight members. It met in the colloquium hall, the Center's
largest. Armed guards barred every doorway and three electro-sniffer
teams had worked over the room before anyone was allowed to say
anything. Having to sit in silence for even ten minutes was
difficult, given the air of strain in the room.
"Plainly, we need to know more," Kingsley said from the
podium, nodding to Benjamin.
The Eater's latest transmission hung in glowing letters on a large
flat screen that dominated the room. They had just watched several of
the Eater's purported ideas of humor pa-rade across this screen,
including some images of things no one could even recognize. The
Eater seemed to equate what to humans would be verbal humor with an
inexplicable visual humor that looked like tangled threads of
corroded surfaces, in virulent colors.
"Every telescope in the solar system is trained on it. We are
learning as quickly as we can." He paused. "And now,
something rather curious."
The team from the White House sat in the front row, two seats over
from Benjamin, and their faces showed blank incomprehension.
They probably had never advanced beyond high school chemistry, he
realized, and saw the world as wholly human, filled with the vectors
of human power. Technology was to them the product of human labor, no
more, and science consisted of stories heard on TV, of no interest
to people involved with the Real World.
"Several astronomers have noticed a similarity between the
Eater's electromagnetic 'buzz'—that is, what we believe to be
its internal transmissions—and signals already detected
years previous, from a star not very far away." Kingsley paused
and looked out over the crowd. "Most curious."
Benjamin waited through an odd, hesitant silence.
What the
hell, got to keep this rolling. And Kingsley looks like he could use
some help up there. "Maybe there's a similar object
orbiting—visiting—that star, too?"
Nods from the astronomical contingent.
We've got the momentum
here, Benjamin realized.
The rest are hopelessly far off
their turf.
"If there were," Kingsley argued, "this intruder
would know about it already. It has been everywhere, seen
everything, for many billions of years."
Why not give the number: seven? Benjamin then realized
that every detail had been hastily classified, and Kingsley was
playing it safe. The political types might not know the implications
of such an immense lifetime and leak it.
More silence.
Well, we might as well turn this into a little
colloquium. That's what the room's for.
"Not so," he said, spreading his arms to both sides of
his seat, hooking a hand around Channing's shoulder.
Might as
well make a claim on this idea, too. "We have one small
advantage over it. Our telescopes are scattered all over the
solar system. To pick up this distant source would be impossible
with a receiving antenna the size of the Eater. It's a matter of
resolving power. By my calculations"—he let the phrase
hang there just an extra second, to establish some authority
with this crowd—"it's blind to faraway objects smaller
than stars. That probably includes this thing near another
star—whatever it is."
This last was pure bluff. He had not kept up with the literature
very well, had no clue what Kingsley was referring to.
Kingsley said crisply, "I suggest we have a special assistant
team set about making detailed comparisons. Any and all knowledge may
prove useful. I believe, in fact, that should be our general
principle. Gather, sift, think, wait."
Arno rose—his standard room-ruling maneuver, adapted for an
auditorium. His eyes swept the room. "Plainly, ladies and
gentlemen, something more is needed. I believe I speak for the entire
U Agency when I say that we believe this body, the President's
authorized Operating Group, should take control of the entire deep
space network."
Some murmurs of assent from the political faction. The astronomers
looked sour. Some muttered objections.
Arno swept this away with a broad gesture. "We must
immediately—and secretly—launch the new Searcher
craft, using the best, highest-density Deep Link bands. With a
connection of such high quality, they can be flown under direction
by people on Earth."
"An interactive control, close to the source?" a NASA
official asked.
"Exactly. Do we—you, madam—have that capability?"
"There are Searchers in Jupiter space." The woman wore
one of the new NASA uniforms, introduced a year before, handsome deep
blue and gold. "We could begin a few of the micropackages on the
way, launching at high velocity, on trajectories to intercept
eventually…" Her voice trailed off, plainly not prepared
for this possibility.
"I believe this group should so recommend," Arno
finished and sat down.
Kingsley said, "I believe that has much to recommend it. We
cannot know the intruder's trajectory, and it plainly has the ability
to alter it in a moment. It is nearing Jupiter, and knowledge gained
there should prove invaluable."
"I think we shouldn't launch everything now," Benjamin
said, amazed at his continuing audacity. The quiet administrator
of only a month ago would have been cowed into utter silence in such
a gathering.
Kingsley's mouth pursed, startled. "Why?"
"We may need them closer to home." This blunt
possibility sent a ripple of concern through the auditorium.
"The intruder has not announced any plans to come closer. Its
present trajectory shall carry it through the Jovian system. Amy?"
Perhaps emboldened by Benjamin, she had held up her hand. "Well,
it only said this once, in the middle of another subject entirely,
but…" Benjamin could see a sudden bout of stage fright
seize her, a mere postdoc in such company, but then she plunged
ahead. "It said it was going to 'acquire mass and momentum' at
Jupiter."
"Quite possibly to gain the velocity it needs to escape the
solar system," Kingsley said with a confidence Benjamin found
unsettling. "It is a rover among the stars, after all."
"That's an assumption," Benjamin shot back.
"Of course, of course." Kingsley gave him an odd look,
as though asking him to go along.
The hell with that. "We lack any understanding of what it
wants to do."
Kingsley said sternly, "But lack of evidence is not evidence
of lack."
Arno said, "I believe our business here is finished."
On this awkward note, the meeting broke up. Benjamin cornered
Kingsley backstage and demanded, "Why'd you do that?"
The angular face clouded. "They are rattled enough already,
damn it."
"They need to be prepared for the possibility that it's not
an innocent explorer."
"We cannot prepare for everything."
"We can at least think—"
"
You think for a moment. Do you seriously believe
that what we say doesn't go outside the room?"
"No, of course not." Here Benjamin knew he was on shaky
ground. "The White House hears, plus no doubt Congress and
various allies. Not my turf, but—"
"Decidedly not. I do not have the luxury of merely keeping
my nose buried in the astrophysics."
"It doesn't do this discussion any good for you to keep
referring to your mysterious higher knowledge. I know you move
in bigger circles, sure, but—"
"Being aware of the problem on different levels is precisely
what's needed, I should think." Kingsley bristled, his shoulders
squaring off in a gesture Benjamin remembered seeing long ago, back
in that seminar where they met.
Not much has changed.
"Look, I don't want you throwing your weight around with my
people—"
"I don't delve into any such matters," Kingsley shot
back, eyes narrowing.
"I see you in there talking to Amy a lot."
"We enjoy working together. There is a lot of interesting
astro—"
"Just remember you're a guest here."
"I should think such distinctions are largely moot by now."
"Not to me."
"If you believe you can keep the usual methods of working,
you are being naive."
Bristling at "naive," Benjamin jutted his chin forward.
"There's got to be a role for the science in this thing, not
just politics."
To Benjamin's surprise, Kingsley nodded and gave him a tilted look
of newfound respect. "I fear, old friend, that the two are now
quite inseparable."
5
In the press of events, she was getting so disorganized that
she ended up using an ancient panty hose as a coffee filter when she
couldn't find towel paper. As her energy had ebbed, she had adopted
rougher rules: if you need to vacuum the bed, it's time to change the
sheets. Rugs did have to be beaten now and then, not just threatened.
Finally she gave up and found a cleaning lady.
Still, sloppiness seemed within the broad parameters allowed
on the Big Island, where salty beach types rubbed shoulders with
anal-retentive "cybrarians" at the Data Retention
Center just over the hill. For the last year of gathering
illness, she had tended more toward the style of her neighbors in the
opposite direction, people just down the road whose car had a rag as
a gas cap.
Channing had hidden her gathering fatigue as well as possible.
Her years at NASA had taught her to give no sign of weakness, or else
lose your spot in the mission rotation. After the space station and
the Mars adventure, there were plenty of surplus astronauts, each a
model of competitive connivance.
Even in crisis, the Center was not nearly so bad, and having
a husband who just happened to run its scientific wing helped, but
still—best to look vigorous. Falling asleep in a crucial
discussion, then fainting—not good, girl. So she planned her
forays to work carefully, not letting the dark-rimmed eyes show,
sipping coffee to stay up. She had learned to let Benjamin drive her
home when she started to ebb; he was getting good at spotting the
cusp, down to the exact moment.
But she had to admit that probably most people just weren't paying
attention, thank God. Benjamin had persuaded her to sit in on a
panel reviewing "Semiotics of Contact," a topic that
swiftly came to cover a hodgepodge of issues—but mostly,
anything the astronomers didn't want to deal with.
She went in late in the morning and today saw a van with a HONK IF
YOU LOVE PEACE AND QUIET bumper sticker. So she honked; she loved
paradoxes. Such as her gathering feeling for Kingsley. Who would have
thought
that still smoldered? A smelly bone, best buried in
the backyard of her life. She had written him off to his wife, a
classic type: big eyes, big hips, dark curly hair you could bury
your hand in up to the wrist. How pleasant, to know that even such a
goddess could lose out in the romance wars!
She arrived at the Center after threading the multilayered
checkpoints. The TV platform set up in the foreyard had guards around
it, big-shouldered types carrying automatic weapons.
A bit
overdone, she thought, then realized that the weaponry was not
for real use, but display. Arno's way of saying,
We're being
serious here.
Already the media mavens had taken off from the news, CNN with
twenty-four-hour coverage. Within months there would be spinoff
movies, no doubt, thoughtful magazine pieces and books, the Eater
finally entering the media hereafter as videos or the
inspiration for toys.
She came late into the Semiotics Working Group, as Arno had
labeled it, hoping nobody noticed, so of course it was at a pause in
speakers and everyone looked her way. Still, it was fun to just sit
and listen to the flood of informed speculation that poured from
the visiting experts.
The astronomers had quickly been revealed as the Peter Pans of
humanity. They never truly grew up and kept their curiosity like a
membership card. Most believed the Saganesque doctrine that aliens
would be peaceful, ruled by curiosity, eager for high-minded
discourse. Carl Sagan had been a conventional antimilitary liberal,
and so assumed that a radio message from space would shock humanity,
damping down wars and ushering in a cosmic sense of cooperation
between nations.
Humanists were made of tougher stuff. Nonsense, they said, but
more politely. Why hadn't the Europeans' discovery of the
Americas halted warfare in Europe? Instead, they fought over the
spoils. Would the Eater somehow become fodder for our ancient primate
aggressions?
Another Saganesque doctrine was that contact with aliens would
yield a bounty of science and technology. Half credit on this one:
plenty of science, so far only astronomy, but no technology. The
Eater had none. It seemed to be a magnetic construction, first made
by some ancient alien race. Its origins were still blurry
because of its coyly obtuse phrasing. It had said:
I CAME INTO BEING BY ARTIFICE OF ANCIENT
BIOLOGICAL BEINGS. AFTER THAT I VOYAGED AND BECAME LARGER IN SELF AND
IN PURPOSE.
Whole squads of semioticists and linguists now labored over such
sentences, mining with their contextual and semantic matrices,
but little glittering ore appeared beyond the obvious. The extreme
humanists argued instead that, beyond the pretty pictures it seemed
so eager to send, we probably could learn little from the Eater of
All Things. Science simply gave us the very best chimpanzee view
of the universe. Our vision was shaped by evolution, sharpened to
find edible roots or tasty, easy prey on a flat plain. Our sense
of beauty came from throwing honed rocks along the beautifully
simple arc of a parabola to strike herbivores with cutting
edges.
The Eater's technology used magnetic induction, control of hot
plasmas, advanced electromagnetics, and probably much else we could
not guess. "Face it," one panelist said, "unless an
alien is a lot like us, we can't learn much from it. Even with
goodwill—and we don't have really good evidence of that,
so far—we
can't harvest technology from a creature so
different."
This deflated Arno's adjutants. They were easy to pick out,
because in the status-shuffling of personnel here a person's
authority was inversely proportional to the number of pens in their
shirt pocket.
Her pager beeped her. Reluctantly she left the room as a decoding
expert began drawing conclusions about the Eater's habits in encoding
information. It had been steadily getting better at understanding
human computers and methods, so the bit stream coming down from it
carried an ever-higher density content—mostly astronomical
pictures in wavelengths ranging from the low radio to the high gamma
ray. One of the tidbits that intrigued her was that the Eater had
spent much time between the stars, taking centuries to cross
those abysses. Very low frequency electromagnetic waves were
reflected by the higher density in the solar system, so could never
penetrate. The Eater had pictures of the galaxy made by receiving
these waves, a whole field of astronomy impossible from Earth.
The call was from Benjamin and she found him in the Big Screen
Room. "How's the semiotics?" he whispered.
"They're impressive, I suppose, in their way." She
studied the screen, which showed a beautiful view of the solar
system seen from the Eater's present location.
"They seemed to be talking gibberish jargon when I looked
in."
"Well, maybe my inferiority complex isn't as good as yours."
He got the small joke, one of the traits that had endeared him to
her long ago. Kingsley had, too, but in a subtly different way,
more as a conspirator than as a simple act of merriment. She wondered
for a moment about that and then Arno came striding in, exuding grim
confidence.
At first she thought he was going to give an aria in the key of
"I," taking credit for the "great advances" they
had all made, but then he unveiled an extended message from the
Eater. It had "a supplication": it wanted humanity, which
it seemed to regard as a single entity, to transmit a store of its
art, music, and "prevalent enrichment."
"Does that mean our culture?" a leading member of the
humanist team asked.
"I trust the deciphering team can tell us that soon."
"Seems probable," Channing said. She had always felt
that the humanities were too important to be left to the humanists.
And now, apparently, the field might come to include the
nonhuman. For the Eater proposed a trade.
"The bounty of other, alien societies," Arno said
grandly. "That appears to be what it is promising."
The crowd murmured with a strange tenor she had seldom heard:
eagerness and caution sounding in the same anxious key.
Kingsley and many from NASA looked relieved. Unlike Benjamin's
suspicions, there seemed no threat here. Arno, their principal
conduit to the White House, was plainly out of his depth. He had said
his piece and now gazed out over the crowd as if trying to read a
script in too tiny a typeface.
She leaned toward Benjamin. "So the culture vulture theory
of the Sagan crowd looks right."
He said, "It still isn't headed for Earth, either."
Arno was going on about ramifications. "An international
committee can assemble a compendium of our greatest works, the arts
and mathematics, perhaps even science— though there may be a
security issue there."
"Let us offer whatever data it wants," a voice from in
front said.
The final decision would come from on high, of course, and that
lent an air of liberation to what followed. The discussion went
quickly, specialists vying to spell out how to do all this.
The battalions of data managers, as they were termed, had already
erected an elaborate architecture to deal with speaking to the
Eater. What was not so obvious, but now clear, was that in
transferring information—say, the Library of Congress—the
Eater would learn a good deal more about how our computers thought.
It was astoundingly swift at learning our computer languages. Some of
its remarks in passing implied that all this was rather primitive
stuff—to it.
She and Benjamin stayed for hours, following the discussion,
volunteering nothing. This was not their province. Toward the end,
though, Benjamin made a remark she would remember later. "It's
getting close to Jupiter. Let's see what we learn there."
"You're not so sure this cultural shotgun is what it wants?"
"Thing about aliens is, they're alien."
"Ummm. I remember an old movie about an art collector who
went around buying up living artists' work, and then killing them, to
increase resale value."
"Good grief, you're in a great mood."
"Just the old mind wandering. I suppose everyone's taking
comfort in the fact that once it's at Jupiter, it's in close range of
our Searchers. We'll learn more."
He gave her his angular grin. "Old Army saying. 'If the enemy
is in range, so are you.' "
6
Benjamin clasped her to him with a trembling energy. She
kissed him with an equal fervor and then, without a word or the need
of any, he left for the Center.
She had agreed to rest a good part of each day, but insisted on
being at the Center for a few hours, at least. Each day he hoped she
would just plain rest, and each day he was disappointed. She
came up around noon to catch the day's energy at its full swell.
Benjamin was pleased that even in the hubbub, people looked
after her, included her in the flow of work. There was quite enough
of it to share.
They had both been surprised at how quickly the U.S. government
had gotten in line on the cultural transfer process. The usual
cautionary voices had loudly complained about giving away secrets
that could be used against all humanity, but the sheer
strangeness of the Eater made it hard to see how a digitized image of
the Parthenon could be a defense secret. "Good ol' Carl
Sagan," Channing had remarked. "Who would've guessed
that his view of aliens would have infiltrated the Congress?"
Indeed, they needed a figure like Sagan, dead now for decades, who
could command the confidence of the greater public. Like all good
popularizers in science, he had been roundly punished for it by his
colleagues, denied membership in the National Academy of
Sciences and the subject of
tsk-tsk gossip by many who were
not his equals as scientist or educator. No such astronomer had
arisen since Sagan's time, and the best the profession could muster
were various pale figures from the usual scientific bureaucracy.
Compared with them, Kingsley did quite well, and so had
undertaken a lot of the Center's public relations work—when
not shouldered aside by Arno.
Both Benjamin and Kingsley suspected that the political leadership
was mounting precautionary measures, but there was no insider word of
such plans. At the Center all policy matters, and even the different
spectral bands of the observing teams, had become more and more
boxed into neat little compartments.
The Center was preoccupied with shepherding the data flow to the
Eater. Channing had become edgy and preoccupied, following the
Eater news obsessively, making fun of Arno. ("Maybe his major
purpose in life is to serve as a warning to others.") Sometimes
she seemed to surprise even herself with her brittle humor, as if she
did not fully know how black a mood lay beneath it.
Benjamin thought about her, fruitlessly as usual, as he came into
the new wing of the Center. It had been thrown up in a day by teams
who descended in massive helicopters. The big new office complex was
a rectangular intrusion into a hillside carved unceremoniously for
it. Each floor was one big room, the nondenominational Office: a
three-dimensional grid bounded below by a plane of thin nylon
carpet, two meters above by a parallel plane of pale acoustical tile.
This space suffered punctuation by vertical Sheetrock planes that
came to shoulder height, barely enough to give the illusion of
partial privacy and damp conversations. Squares of recessed
fluorescent lighting beamed down on the symbolic Euclidean
realization of pragmatic idealism, a space of unimpeded flows.
Spherical immersion tanks dotted the space between the
rectangular sheets that stretched to infinity, and around them
technicians moved with insect energies. In these the cyber-link
specialists kept in close touch with the array of satellites and
sensors they now had spying on the interloper.
A cube farm: big rooms clogged with cubicles for the drones. When
something loud happened, the prairie-dog heads would pop up over the
half-height walls.
As the Eater plunged closer to Jupiter, it had rhapsodized about
alien cultures it had visited, sending samples of outre art via the
microwave high-bandwidth links. Some were released to the public,
particularly if they seemed innocuous. Predictably, distinctions
between "photographs" and "art" were difficult to
make. There were apparently straightforward views of landscapes,
odd life-forms, stars, and planets, even some "cities" that
might just as well have been regularly arranged hills. With thousands
of such images to chew upon, the public seemed satisfied.
Carefully the government figures charged with filtering the
information did not give away the true vast size of the galleys it
sent. Nor did they release unsettling images of grotesque scenes,
hideous aliens, and unaccounted-for devastation. The Eater
provided little or no commentary, so battalions of assembled art
critics, photo experts, and other sorts labored to interpret these.
So far the world reaction had been varied—there were always
alarmists—but comparatively mild. The sense of wonder was
working overtime among the world media, though that would undoubtedly
give way in time, Benjamin thought.
The more advanced works were another matter. These the computers
had assembled into holographic forms and an entire yawning
gallery displayed them. Benjamin stopped there to see what was new.
Even knowing how much effort was being marshalled worldwide on
deciphering the Eater's transmission load, he was daily astonished at
how much new work appeared.
It was eerie work, subtly ominous. Portraits of creatures and
places in twisted perspectives, 3D manifestations of objects
that appeared impossible, color schemes that plainly operated beyond
the visible range.
He went into the Big Screen Room. The ranging grid showed the
orange profile of the Eater at the very edge of Jupiter's moon
system. There was a crowd and he found a seat at the back only
because a new staffer gave up his, leaping to his feet when he
saw Benjamin's ID badge.
A murmur. Benjamin watched as one of the Searcher 'scopes came
online. Its high-resolution image flickered through several spectral
ranges, settled on the best. Kingsley materialized in the seat beside
him; a staffer had given up his for the Astronomer Royal. The
incoming image sharpened at the hands of the specialists. "It's
veered in the last hour," Kingsley whispered, "and appears
headed for an outer moon of the system."
"Couldn't we have predicted that?"
"Some did." Kingsley shrugged. "It does not respond
to questions about its plans."
"Still? I thought it was talking more now."
"The linguists have given up trying to render its little
parables in literal ways."
"They seem more like puzzles to me."
"That, too. 'Cultural dissonance,' as one of them termed it."
"I'll have to remember that one." Benjamin grinned
dryly. "Sounds almost like it means something."
Suddenly the screen brightened. In a spectacular few seconds,
the orange profile warped into a slender funnel, blazing
brightly.
"It's ingesting," Kingsley said matter-of-factly. "I
suppose it met a tasty rock."
"We knew it had some motivation."
"Note how no one seems very worried? I believe we are all
simply too tired for that."
"I wondered if it was just me. I figured I was beyond being
surprised anymore."
"I rather hope so."
Benjamin had stacks of work waiting in his office, but once again
he gave way to the temptation of just watching. The Eater was moving
at nearly a hundredth the speed of light, an incredible velocity. The
plasma types had given up hope of explaining how its magnetic fields
could withstand the sheer friction of encountering solid matter and
ionizing it.
"Something beyond our present understanding is happening
right before our eyes," Kingsley murmured. "I have almost
gotten used to these routine miracles it performs."
The images coiled into a complex conduit of magnetic fields,
etched out in the brilliant radiance of superheated matter. In a few
moments, it had destroyed a moon, grazing it just right, so that some
matter was sucked in while the majority was thrown away, adding
thrust.
A keening note sounded in the room. A fresh signal, high and
sharp. "It now sends us codes earmarked for audio playing,
once it worked out how our hearing functions," Kingsley
whispered.
"It's… weird. Ugly," Benjamin said.
"I believe a proper translation is that it is singing to 'all
humanity' as part of its payment for our cultural legacy."
Benjamin studied Kingsley's lean profile in the shadows. "It's
like some…"
"We should not impose our categories upon it," Kingsley
said crisply.
"Sounds like you've been listening to the semiotics people
again."
"Just trying to keep an open mind."
"Damn it, to me that stuff sounds like, like…"
"A deranged god, yes."
"Maybe in all that time between the stars, it's gotten
crazy."
"By its own account—one we have received, but it is so
complex the specialists still can't find human referents—it has
endured such passages many millions of times."
"So it says."
Kingsley nodded, a sour sigh of fatigue escaping. "And we
have come to accept what it says."
The semiotics teams had been feeding it vast stores of cultural
information, with some commentary to help it fathom the masses of it.
Most texts, like the Encyclopaedia Britan-nica—still the best
all-round summary of knowledge—were already available in highly
compressed styles. These flowed out and were duly digested.
Material from the sciences encountered no trouble; the intruder
hardly commented upon them, except to remark obliquely on their
"engaging simplicity." Benjamin took this to be an attempt
at a compliment, while others seemed to see it as an insult.
The social sciences came next. These confused the Eater
considerably. It asked many questions that led them back to the
vocabulary lessons. The Eater did not have categories that translated
readily into ethics, aesthetics, or philosophy.
The arts were even harder. It seemed unable to get beyond
pictorial methods that were not nearly photographic; abstractions
it either asked many puzzled questions about or ignored. In this the
Eater seemed to ally with the majority of current popular taste.
"I wonder if it is telling us the truth about anything."
Benjamin mused.
Kingsley's mouth tipped up on one end. "Why would it lie? It
can stamp upon us as if we were insects."
Benjamin nodded and suddenly felt Kingsley as a fellow soldier in
arms, worn by the same incessant pressures.
"Crazy, you said?" Kingsley said distantly. "From
the long times it has spent between the stars? Remember, it has been
alone all its life. Do not think of it as a social being."
"But it asks for social things, our culture."
Kingsley mused silently, watching the orange signature on the
screen creep toward the rim of the gas giant planet, and then said
suddenly, "Crazy? I would rather use an Amercanism,
spooky!"
Benjamin wondered if their speculations had any less foundation
than what the semiotics and social science teams said. "I heard
a biologist talking at the coffee machine the other day. He pointed
out that it may be the only member of its species."
'That makes no sense. We still have no idea how it came to be."
"Something tells me we're going to find out."
"From it?"
"It may not even know."
"Find out from experience, then?"
"Yeah."
The next several hours were as unsettling as anything Benjamin had
ever encountered.
The black hole and its attendant blossom of magnetic flux swooped
in toward the banded crescent. An air of anxious foreboding settled
over the viewers at this meeting between Jupiter—the solar
system's great gas giant, a world that had claimed the bulk of all
the mass that orbited its star—and a hole in space-time that
had the mass of a moon packed into a core the size of a table.
Its trajectory arced down into the vast atmosphere. And in a long,
luminous moment, the Eater drank in a thick slice of the upper
layers, gulping in hydrogen with glowing magnetic talons.
The audience around Benjamin came to life. Gasps and murmurs
filled the room. There were few words and he caught an undertone of
uneasy dread.
The image shifted as the bristling glow followed a long, looping
flyby. To study life-forms that do exist there, it said. It even sent
short spurts of lectures on the forms it found. One of Kingsley's new
aides brought word of these messages, printed out from the
translators, as they came in.
"Look at the detail," Benjamin read at Kingsley's
shoulder. "Balloon life, a thousand kilometers deep into
the cloud deck."
"It is teaching us about our own neighborhood," Kingsley
said.
"Yeah, along with a few remarks about our being unable to do
it."
"Well, that is one rather human trait," Kingsley
remarked sardonically. "Plainly it loves having an audience."
"It's been alone for longer than we've had a civilization."
In the next hour, it compared its findings with similar dives into
other massive worlds it had known.
Data swarmed in. Sliding sheets of information filled screens
throughout the Center. Sighing, Kingsley remarked, "Data is not
knowledge, and certainly it is not wisdom. What does this
mean?"
As they watched through a long, laboring afternoon, the swelling
magnetic blossom dove and gained mass—three times. An enormous,
luminous accretion disk spread out like a circle around it.
Arno appeared before them, gray and shaken. "We have just
registered fresh jets of high-energy emission from it. The
atmospheric entries are over. We have a preliminary determination
of its trajectory."
They all waited through a confused silence. Arno did not seem able
to speak. Then he said, "The… intruder… it has
again picked up speed—and is headed for Earth."
Benjamin bowed his head and realized he had known it all along. He
turned toward Kingsley and in narrowed, apprehensive eyes he saw
the same knowledge.
PART FOUR
THE MAGNETIC HOURGLASS
MAY
1
She had hoped it was Benjamin, home early with the latest news,
but instead the thrumming in the driveway was a package delivery
woman. She opened the package to discover—oh, joy!—that
the Right to Die Society had targeted her with an offer of a
do-it-yourself home suicide kit. The four-color glossy foldout
was lovingly detailed.
Their primary product was the Exit Bag, with its "sturdy
clear plastic sack the size of a garbage bag, a soft elastic
neckband, and Velcro fasteners to ensure a snug fit, plus detailed
instructions for use." Quite a well-done brochure, especially
when one realized that they were not expecting a lot of repeat
business.
She made a special trip out through the garden to throw this into
the trash, heaving it with a grunt of relish. Somehow, in this
age of zero privacy, her illness had become a marketable trait.
Sickies were usually stuck at home, so they could be targeted. She
had hung a chalkboard next to the telephone for messages and when
salesmen called she would run her fingernails across it until they
hung up. Somehow the sound never had irritated her, so she might as
well use the fact to advantage.
She paused in the garden, drawing in the sweet tropical air with
real relish, and just for fun punched Benjamin's dartboard backing.
The slam of her fists into it was no doubt deplorable, primitive,
pointless—and oddly satisfying. The exertion left her panting,
head swimming.
As her reward, the world gave her the growl of a car as it spat
gravel coming down their driveway. She angled over to greet Benjamin
and again it wasn't him. Kingsley unlim-bered from his small sports
car, one of the tiny jobs that flaunted its fuel economy. His frame
was slimly elegant in gray slacks with a flowery Hawaiian shirt.
"I was going by—"
"Never mind, I haven't seen enough of you for days and days,"
she said with a quick fervor that surprised her. Where's that
from?
"I had hoped to catch Benjamin. I'm coming back from an
emergency meeting in Hilo, held in a massive airplane standing on the
runway. It would seem that is the new technique for being
security conscious, control all access." He gave her a crooked
smile. "Good to see you."
"It was more Washington people?"
"And U.N., yes. Lots of frowns, shows of concern, brave
speeches. No ideas, of course."
"Any concrete help?"
"They are hopelessly behind the curve. When confronted with
something genuinely new, the bulk of the U.N. responds on time
scales of years, not hours."
"Is the United States doing any better—really?"
"A bit, but only by standing aside and letting the U Agency
operate. You may recall I had something like that in mind."
"Ah, that Brit modesty again. Most becoming."
During the worldwide panic of the last few days, she had been more
happy than ever to be on the most isolated island chain in the world.
The U Agency had seized access to the Big Island and was buttoning up
the place. The Agency remained mysterious even in action, which
kept the media mavens abuzz but information-starved. As nearly as she
could judge, with some cryptic remarks from Kingsley, it had emerged
as the can-do element in the U.S. government, in collaboration with
various allies. Bureaucratic style favored setting up a new
agency to actually do things, while the older agencies spent time in
turf wars. This stood in the long tradition of the CIA, which begat
the NS A, and onward during the late TwenCen into a plethora of
acronymed "black technology infrastructure" groups, which
then eventually demanded consolidation into the U Agency, with
its larger than purely national agenda. Or so she gathered.
"How's the news?" she said with an attempt at lightness,
ushering him with body language into the garden.
"We made an enormous public relations error in announcing
the time of the Eater's Jupiter rendezvous. I see that now."
"Did we have a choice? Any competent astronomer could
calculate it."
"True, but we could have controlled admittance to the large
telescopes' images. Perhaps even prevented the visual media from
getting close-ups of what it did to Jupiter."
"Don't blame yourself. It would come out—hell, every
amateur with a ten-inch telescope could see the flares."
The later stages of the Eater's devouring had been heralded
by the bright jet behind it, lancing forth like a spear pointed
backward at the troubled crescent of Jupiter.
Kingsley sighed, collapsing into a lounge chair. "And now
everyone wants to know what can it do to Earth."
"And the answer is?"
"As I recall, you first pointed out its ability to scorch our
upper atmosphere. I opened with that and it seemed quite sufficient
to induce panic among the 'advisers' on that airplane."
"Good to know I'm still useful," she said archly.
"They concluded—big surprise here—that we need to
know much more about its thinking and purpose."
"How insightful."
"So the figures from the Air Force and NASA came forward
with a new crash program to integrate the classified technology with
NASA's near-Earth craft."
"Anticipating that it will come that close? I suppose we
could field some potent ships within, say, the distance to the moon."
Kingsley nodded pensively and she could see him thinking, so
she went inside and got some drinks together, including one for
Benjamin when he showed up. When she returned, he was still staring
into space but stirred at her approach. He gulped the wine
cooler gratefully and said, "After some years at this, I've
learned that 'pilot' is a bureaucrat's way of saying two things
at once: "This is but the first,' plus 'we believe it will work,
but…' Still, they committed themselves to outfitting new
ships, both manned and not, ready within weeks."
"Let's hope we don't need them."
"I suspect we all are suffering from an unconscious
fatalism, brought on by weariness—at least on my part. The
policy people, as well."
"They aren't used to confronting something this strange?"
"That may be it. In astronomy, the new is delightful, a
revelation."
"In politics, it's a problem. Makes me wonder what the next
revelation will be."
"I don't think you should be bothering yourself with this,
truly." Kingsley's gaze came back from abstract distance to a
worried focus on her.
"I like it. And what should I be doing, fretting over my
rickety body?"
"It's a fine one, quite worth the attention."
He stood and she turned away toward the flowers, their heady
fragrance. "Don't start."
"I'm only expressing what we both feel."
"No, what you feel. I'm…" She could not think of
the right word.
"Troubled, I know. But I feel radiating from you a need, and
something in me wants to answer it."
His long hands clasped her arms from behind and she bowed her
head, the honeyed air swarming in her nostrils.
His hands were strong, certain, deliberate, and she was the
opposite. "How… how much of this is unfinished
business?"
"From decades ago?"
His voice came softly through the layered air and it helped a
great deal that she could not see him. But the hands remained on her
upper arms, calm and reassuring and altogether welcome.
"Somehow it's not over," she managed to get out.
"When I saw you again, after so long…"
"Me, too."
"I don't believe we're being altogether rotten about this."
She laughed silently, head hanging. "Not so far."
"I didn't mean that. Only that you need support and—"
"And if Benjamin's too busy to give it, you will."
"Someone must."
"Support, that's all?"
He turned her gently with the long, big hands and she tilted her
head up to look into his eyes. They were unreadable. "Maybe
that was one thing I always liked about you, that I couldn't tell
what you were going to say or do."
"And with Benjamin you could."
"Something like that. The lure of the unknown."
"I don't mean anything wholly sexual in this," he said
with an almost schoolboy earnestness.
"I know. I wouldn't do anything like that."
"I'm quite certain not, yes."
She wished she were half as sure as he seemed. She could not
predict what she was going to do these days, or understand why.
"It's emotions here, not actions."
"Yes, yes." He seemed suddenly embarrassed.
"New territory. I've never died before."
"It's… the physicians… they—"
"Pretty damned sure. I've got maybe a few weeks."
"Benjamin knows."
"Some of it. The technical stuff is pretty boring."
"Shouldn't you be under more care?"
"I hate hospitals, and the hospice I stopped by gave me the
creeps."
"But surely—"
"I'm giving in to my personality flaws. Without them I'd have
no personality at all, most days."
He smiled wanly. "Your tongue is as fine as ever."
She kissed him suddenly and just as suddenly broke it off.
He blinked, engagingly flustered. "I scarcely expected…
it would not have been…"
"Appropriate? Right."
"There are levels here…" He was appealingly
awkward.
"Yeah, and me, I'm at one with my duality."
This provoked a grin from him, dispelling his mood. "You're
amazing."
"Just improbable. Side effect of the chem supporters they've
shot me full of."
"Medication?" His eyes widened in alarm.
"A new line of delights. Keeps your metabolism running pretty
flat and steady, just ducky until the whole system crashes. I've got
some embedded chips just below the skin, tasting my blood and
titrating into it some little bags of wonder-drug stuff."
"I think I read something about those."
"The bags they tipped into my upper thighs. They don't even
itch or anything." This was too much detail, she saw.
His hands had lessened their hold and she could sense him
wondering how to get out of this moment. Very delicately, taking
all the time in the world, she kissed him lightly on his uncertain
lips. "Thanks. A gal needs some appreciation."
"More than that."
"Love, if you want. I still love you, in a way I haven't got
the language for. Just having you here is fine, nothing more
expected."
"I knew when I saw you again, knew it instantly."
"So did I."
She leaned down and kissed his right hand. It seemed an infinitely
precious movement, living in a moment carved in the elastic, fragrant
air, as if all life should be fashioned from such passing, exquisite
gestures. An hypnotic illusion, of course, quite possibly the outcome
of titrated solutions doing their chemical work, but absolutely right
at this time, this place.
He dropped his hands and they stood in a quiet glade of the
garden, silent and warm. Then came the spitting of gravel and
Benjamin's car rumbled to a stop in the driveway.
She hung in the long easeful glide away from that jeweled moment,
passing as they all do, clinging to it while Benjamin arrived
and she kissed him. So soon after Kingsley, it felt awkward. Kingsley
retreated to his silent reserve. In the first moments, she felt a
tension between the two men, as though Benjamin sensed something and
did not know how to deal with it. Then he visibly shrugged and
accepted a drink with a wobbly smile.
Benjamin cracked whatever remained of her crystal serenity with
news. The updated determination of the Eater's trajectory confirmed
that it was bound on an accelerating orbit for Earth.
"Unmistakable," Benjamin said firmly as they moved indoors.
"How much time do we have?" Kingsley asked, his voice
full of caution, as though he was still prying himself out of the
last half hour.
"A few weeks, if it continues at its present acceleration."
"Surely it must run out of fuel."
"There are several asteroids it could snag on the way."
"Ah, a chance to learn something more of its processes,"
Kingsley said judiciously.
"Digestion, you mean," Channing said, handing Benjamin
a dark wine cooler.
"Quite so."
"Wish we hadn't named it Eater. The media's, well, eating
it up. Scaring the whole damn world."
Benjamin seemed to come out of some other place, eyes taking in
die garden at last, then her. "How are you?" He put down
the drink and embraced her, his hands on her arms in an eerie echo of
Kingsley's.
"Glad to have my two favorite men here. I needn't suffer in
silence while I can still moan, whimper, and complain."
"Which she never does," Kingsley said gallantly.
"Better living through chemistry," she said lightly,
feeling light in the head as well. "Come, fair swains, ply me
with technobabble."
Which they did.
2
He opened his front door to get the newspaper, gummy-mouthed and
rumpled, and found a camera snout eyeing him from two feet away.
"Just a word, sir, Doctor, about—"
Thus did he discover that he was the target of what he would later
hear termed a "celeb stakeout." He slammed the door hard
and several thoughts rushed by in parallel. Sure, they were just
doing their jobs, all for a public that Really Wanted To Know. But
this was their house. He felt invaded. How was he going to
fetch his newspaper?
He felt a spike of swirling anxiety, his trajectory out of
control. And then a third sensation: a spurt of excitement. People,
millions of them, wanted to know about him. There was a
primitive primate pleasure in being paid attention to. He was
interesting. Tomorrow maybe a hurricane in Florida or a babe
in a scandal would be better, but for today, it was Dr. Benjamin
Knowlton.
This diffuse delight lasted until he and Channing got into the
Center, past a gauntlet of security and media that lengthened by
the day. Only weeks ago the Center had been a comfortable
two-story complex with broad swaths of grass and tropical plants
setting it off. The only visible sign of its purpose had been
the large microwave dishes on nearby hills. Now bare tilt-up walls
framed the buildings, windowless and gray slabs forking into wings.
Not a blade of grass re-mained anywhere; all was mud or "fastcrete,"
the new wonder material.
"Wow." Channing pointed. "They're putting up
another new building."
"One of those prefab jobs, chopper them in and lower the
walls into that fast-dry concrete." Benjamin wondered what fresh
echelon of overseers this heralded.
"We could use more thinking, less managing," Channing
said.
"That Semiotics Group, can I sit in?"
"I think they're inside an 'information firewall,' as the
jargon puts it."
"But how are we going to link the maps of the Eater, which
are sharpening as it approaches, with how it actually works?"
She shook her head wordlessly in the calm way that had come over
her in the last few days. They had given up their daily battle over
her coming into the Center. She would, and that was that.
When he went in alone, she followed in her car. He had toyed with
disabling it and realized that she would simply get a ride some
other, more tiring way.
They went through the newly expanded main foyer. News items
shimmered on big screens, where a crowd of media people watched. Arno
was giving a briefing elsewhere in the complex, his head looming on a
screen here like a luminous world with hyperactive mountain chains
working on it. "Not again," Channing said. "He's up
there every day."
"I think he has to be. The Story of the Millennium, they're
calling it."
She scoffed. "Barely started on the millennium and we're
laying claim to it. And Arno, his talks are like a minibikini,
touching on the essentials but not really covering much."
"That's a talent now, not a lack."
She went into the Semiotics Division hallway and he entered
his new office suite. He had his own foyer—like this morning, a
spurt of delight; he was being paid attention to— from
which radiated prefab, bone white, fluorescent-lit hall-ways and
byways where hundreds of astronomers and data analysts labored.
Within half an hour, the high had dissipated in the usual swamp of
memos, Alert Notices, data dumps, and plain old institutional
noise. These absorbed his morning, but not his attention, which
kept veering off. He suppressed the urge to sit in on the meetings
Channing attended, with her instinct for ferreting out the most
interesting work. He wanted to be in those sessions, both to be with
her and to hear about something other than optical resolution,
luminosities, report summaries, spectra, and fights over 'scope
time. Thus were his days whittled away, with precious few moments to
actually think.
Just before noon he had to take an important issue "up top,"
as the U Agency termed it, and so walked into Kingsley as he stood
before a TV camera, while on a huge wall screen the President of the
United States lounged in a terry-cloth robe, hair wet, with an indoor
swimming pool behind him. A glass of orange juice, half-empty, stood
on a small table and the President's legs were thick with black hair.
Kingsley stood at attention, addressing his remarks to a pointer
mike, his face concentrated. Kingsley's secretary left Benjamin
standing in shadows and he stayed there, suspecting something
afoot. Kingsley had not noticed him, blinded by a brilliant pool of
light with the emblem of the Center behind him. The man knew how
to play to the dramatic. His small staff sat farther away, people new
to the Center who ignored Benjamin. A technician gave the start sign.
The President's warm drawl described how "a swarm of
Searchers is damn near ready to go, so you've got no worry there."
The man was obviously speaking from prepared notes, eyes tracking
left and right as he spoke, but it came over as utterly offhand and
sincere. He deplored the "spreading panic" and was
sorry "that this makes you astronomers' job even harder,"
though—with a chuckle—"now you know what it's like
being in the media fishbowl."
Kingsley said, "Sir, we have doom criers surrounding the
observatories farther up the mountain."
"I thought the island was sealed." A puzzled frown, a
glance off camera.
"These are locals, I fear."
"Then we'll just have 'em rounded up."
"I would appreciate that."
"Want and expect the best of you, Mr. Kingsley." A
flicker of the eyelids. Someone had told him of the slip, but the
President saw no way to correct easily, so just glided on. "You've
been doin' great."
Benjamin had to admit as the conversation went on that Kingsley
was adroit, slick, even amusing. Though British, he easily rode over
the issue of nationality, getting the President and the Pentagon
to promote him as controller of Earth's response to the Eater's
approach. Benjamin stood undetected by Kingsley's staff, who were all
watching the President as though hypnotized. Well, the man did have a
presence, a quality Benjamin knew he would never acquire. That was
why, in a way, he chose a slight pause in the talk to walk straight
onstage, taking a spot next to Kingsley.
"Mr. President—" and he was into a quick
introduction, as though this had all been planned. "Sir, I'm
Benjamin Knowlton, head of Astronomy Division. This is a world
problem, and you can't let it seem as if you're ignoring the rest of
the planet."
A curious glance to the side. "Well, I never intended—"
"No doubt, sir, but that is how it's playing out here. I'm
more in touch with the international astronomical community than
anyone else here, even Kingsley. I know how this is playing among
those we must rely upon for full-sky coverage of the Eater,
continuous contact, and the use of many dozens of telescopes on Earth
and off."
His pulse thumped, he could not quite get enough breath, but he
held his place. One of Kingsley's aides gestured from off camera,
someone whispered, "Get security," but Benjamin
knew—or hoped he did—that Kingsley would not permit the
appearance of disorder here. Pure luck walking in on this, and he had
to go with it.
"I haven't heard anything from State about such trouble."
"This isn't about diplomats, it's about keeping ourselves in
an alliance with others. I had trouble with a German satellite
manager just this morning, demanding that we forward data and images
that they don't have. I receive similar demands every day, and
the voices are getting more strident."
"I'd think, this being science, that you all would share."
The President appeared genuinely puzzled.
"That's how it should work. But this buttoned-up security
posture is a mistake. You can't keep this under wraps—particularly
if it's wrapped in the U.S. flag."
This line seemed to tell. The President blinked and said with
calculated shrewdness, "You have a bargain in mind?"
"Just an idea. How to work it out I leave"—he
could not resist—"to Mr. Kingsley. I believe we should
have shared control of the Mauna Kea facility and the world network
of astronomers. Full disclosure at dedicated Mesh sites. Nothing
held back."
"Nothing?" Plainly the President had never heard of the
idea from any of his staff.
"For the moment, nothing."
"I hear it's not telling us much about what it plans,"
the President said.
"Precisely why it should be safe to reveal it," Kingsley
came in smoothly. "I endorse Dr. Knowlton's proposal."
The President blinked again. "I'll have to think about this.
How come that Arno fellow didn't say anything about it?"
"He thought it best if I—we—proposed it
directly," Benjamin said, looking straight into the camera
in the way he had gathered conveyed sincerity. Very useful,
especially when lying.
"Well, I appreciate your views." The President looked
ready to sign off, in fact raised eyebrows toward someone off camera,
but then said, "Say, you really think they'd do that? The other
astronomers? Cut us off from their data and so on?"
"I do, sir," Benjamin said, and in another second the
President's image dwindled away, like water down a drain.
3
Channing heard about the fracas on the way back from lunch. She
had wondered why Benjamin did not join her, but she was grateful for
the chance to just sit by herself, eat quickly, and leave. The others
in the Semiotics Group knew enough to leave her alone, so she got to
simply lie down on a convenient bed in the infirmary to snag an
hour's delicious nap. When she woke up, he was there.
"I hear you made a name for yourself today," she
murmured sleepily.
He grinned, obviously on a high. "Ah, but what name's that?"
" 'Bastard,' I overheard that. Also 'maniac' and 'amateur.'
"
"You've been listening to U Agency types."
"Not entirely, but yes—they talk more than
astronomers."
"Kingsley was frosty after we went off the air. I was amazed
that he recovered fast enough not to appear provoked, to just
stand there while I went on."
"His job—and yours—depends on Washington's
confidence in him."
"Sure, but then to endorse my idea—that was amazing."
"We talked about these issues only last night."
"Sure, but that was dinner conversation."
"Kingsley wasn't saying anything like that to the President,
then?"
"Not at all. I'm afraid he'll try to get even now."
"Kingsley? Not his style."
"He's not a saint. Look, in your NASA days, you'd have done
the same."
"I don't get even, I get odder." She liked the small
smile he gave her at the joke, an old one but serviceable enough to
break the tension she felt in him.
"Come on. Arno called me in, and I'd like you there."
"Sure, I'm all slept out," though she wasn't.
The virtue of scientists lay principally in their curiosity. It
could overcome hastily imposed U Agency management structures with
ease. Fresh data trumped or bypassed the arteriosclerotic pyramids of
power and information flow the Agency had erected, all quite
automatically, following its standard crisis-management directives.
Kingsley understood quite well the habits of mind that advanced,
classified research followed, though he had given few hints
about how he had acquired the knowledge.
Standard security regulation used strict separation of functions,
at times keeping the right hand from even knowing there was a
left hand. The Manhattan Project had been the historically honored
example of this approach, dividing each element of the A-bomb problem
from the other, with transmission only on a Need to Know basis.
Historians of science now believed that bomb production had been
delayed about a year by this method. Under a more open strategy, the
United States could have used bombs against Berlin, perhaps
destroying the German regime from the air rather than on the ground.
This might have kept the U.S.S.R. out of Europe altogether, vastly
altering the Cold War that followed. Bureaucracy mattered. It irked
scientists, but it shaped history.
Astronomy defeated even this outdated compartmenting method. The
entire science depended upon telescopes that could peer at vastly
different wavelengths, spread over a spectrum from the low radio to
gamma rays, a factor in wavelength of a million billion. Seldom could
an astronomical object be understood without seeing it throughout
much of this huge range.
As well, the habits of mind that astronomers brought to the Eater
would not stop at a wavelength barrier. To understand the
steadily deepening radio maps, for example, demanded spectra in
the optical or X-ray ranges. Astronomy was integrative and could not
be atomized. This fact—as much as Benjamin's walking into "a
presidential conversation that took me days to
organize!"—brought Arno to a rare fit of anger.
The first part of the meeting was predictable, and Channing found
herself nodding off. She reprimanded herself, whispering to a
concerned Kingsley that it was like dozing at a bullfight, but in
fact Arno could do nothing but bluster about Benjamin's intervention.
The President was considering his proposal, and that was that.
No amount of U Agency tweaking could put the horse back in the barn.
Still, Benjamin had been doing more—sending needed
information to groups outside the Center.
"I hold you responsible for these leaks, Knowlton," Arno
finished his military-style dressing-down, smacking a palm onto the
desk he sat upon.
" 'Leaks'? My people are merging their different views to
make sense out of them," Benjamin said, looking rather
surprised at how calm he had remained in the face of a
five-minute monologue.
"We can't have it."
Kingsley at last said something, waiting until the right moment.
"I believe we have a fundamental misunderstanding here,
friends. The Eater is perhaps a week or two away. No one with the
slightest sense of proportion will sequester data that might help us
deal with it, once it has arrived."
'That's not the way we work here," Arno said, pausing between
each word.
"Then it must become so," Kingsley said amiably.
"I'm going farther up the chain on this," Arno said
darkly.
"I'm afraid we have already done that," Kingsley said.
She saw suddenly that Kingsley had played this exactly right, yet
again maneuvering with an intuitive skill that could not be
conscious. Benjamin's move, which he obviously had been
pondering for days and yet had not revealed to her, was deliberate
and risky. But Benjamin was like Salieri playing alongside Kingsley's
Mozart. Already Kingsley had co-opted Benjamin's point and used it
against Arno, a triumph that would undoubtedly echo in the echelons
back in Washington.
She returned to the Semiotics Group meeting and Benjamin came
along. "Done enough for today," he said affably. "You
guys are having better ideas. I might as well hear them."
Perhaps so, she told him, though some people, even in NASA, were
showing the strain, carried away by the majesty of the Eater and its
beautiful disk. "A higher form of life, virtually a god,"
one of them had said at a coffee break.
"I hope that doesn't catch on," Benjamin said.
On their way, they passed through the main foyer. At its new high
speed, the Eater would reach Earth within an estimated time that
kept changing as it encountered fresh mass to ingest. Tracking its
velocity, a digital clock now loomed over the tallest wall of the
foyer. It had begun ticking down the time remaining. One of the media
sorts had already dubbed it the Doomsday Clock. Benjamin grimaced.
Beside it, feeds from observatories gave views of the magnetic
labyrinth and its plasma clouds.
They settled into seats in the back row and listened to arguments
about how to best communicate, negotiate, and placate the Eater. She
was still impressed by the fact that any understanding could pass
between entities of such different basic substrata: a magnetically
shaped plasma talking to walking packets of water. The specialists
argued that this was possible because there were general templates
for organizing intelligence.
This must be true in a very sweeping way, a woman from Stanford
argued. Scientists often congratulated themselves on having figured
out how the universe worked, as if it were following our logic. But
in fact humans had evolved out of the universe, and so fit it well.
Our minds had been conditioned by brutal evolution to methods of
understanding that worked finely enough to keep us alive, at least
long enough to reproduce. Some ancient ancestor had found the
supposedly simple things of life—how to move, find food,
evade predators—enormously complicated and hard to remember.
Such an ancestor faded from the gene pool, selected against by the
rough rub of chance. We had descended from ancestors who found
beauty in nature, a sense of the inevitable logic and purity in its
design.
Intelligence reflected the universe's own designs, and so had
similar patterns, even though arising in very different physical
forms. This view emerged as she and Benjamin watched, until one
grizzled type from the University of California at Irvine
remarked, "Yeah, but the animals are a lot like us, too, and
look at how we treat them."
Benjamin asked ironically, "You mean we should not expect
it to share our view of our own importance?"
The gray-bearded man nodded. "Or our morality. That's an
evolved system of ideas, and this thing is utterly asocial. It's a
loner."
Benjamin seemed commendably unembarrassed to speak among
specialists in a field he did not know. She admired his courage, then
realized that if the detailed talk she had heard here before could
not be translated into something others could comprehend, it would be
useless in the days ahead.
Benjamin asked, "Cooperation with others of its kind never
happened, as far as we can tell. The latest transmissions from
it say that it was made by a very early, intelligent civilization
whose planet was being chewed up by the black hole. They managed to
download their own culture into it, translating into magnetic
information stored in waves."
This sent a rustle through the room. Benjamin leaned toward her
and whispered, "Just as I thought. This firewall security system
has kept a lot away from the guys who actually need it."
His revelation provoked quick reactions, which Benjamin fielded
easily. It was very big news and he enjoyed delivering it in an
offhand way.
Now she understood why he had come here. He was still on the move,
steering through treacherous waters nobody knew. She felt a burst of
love for him, and to her surprise, fresh respect. "Go get 'em,
tiger."
"What else can you tell us?" the graybeard asked.
Benjamin plunged in. Sure enough, some important Eater messages
had either not gotten through, or were distorted. "Experts with
an axe to grind, putting their own spin in." Benjamin summed it
up.
The discussion turned into just the sort of free-for-all she had
missed so far among the rather stiff semiotics gang. She turned over
the issues as others with more energy attacked them, and somehow the
ideas mingled with a vaguely forming plan of her own.
This being had lived longer than the Earth had existed. To it, a
million years would be like a day in a human life. She tried to think
how it would view life-forms anchored on planets. Mayflies.
Whole generations would pass as flashes of lightning, momentarily
illuminating their tiny landscapes. Eons would stream by,
civilizations on the march like characters in some larger drama
witnessed only by the truly long-lived. Birth, death, and all agonies
in between—these would merge into a simultaneous whole. Rather
than a static snapshot, such a being could see a smear of lives as a
canvas backdrop to the stately pace of a galaxy on the move,
turning like a pinwheel in the great night. Whole species would be
the players then, blossoming momentarily for the delectation of vast,
slow entities beyond understanding.
Compared to it, humans were passing ephemerals. To a baby, a year
was like a lifetime because it was his lifetime, so far. By
age ten, the next year was only a 10 percent increase in his
store of years. At a hundred, time ticked ten times faster still. She
tried to imagine living to a thousand, when a year would have the
impact of a few hours in such a roomy life. Now multiply this
effect by another factor of a million, she mused.
She wondered if anyone was paying attention to the Eater's own
artworks, beamed down in compressed digital packets. It had remarked,
THE TRUE STATE OF SUCH RESULTANTS RESIDES IN MY
FIELD STRUCTURES. I SEND ONLY NUMERICAL ANALOGS.
What would its creations say to them if they could be seen in
their natural form?
4
He got used to the media onslaught within a day or two, then
irritated, then bored.
Not that he was, as one reporter archly termed it, "seriously
famous," but he did have his head bashed by swinging TV cameras,
got chased down an alley, backed into a corner, all with the sound
effects: questions barked, name called, bystanders' applause and
boos—all got to be like the weather whenever he left a
building. "Over here, Dr. Knowlton, look this way!"
Dimly he realized what was so fundamentally misguided about liking
that sort of attention. He was allowing them to define who he was,
whether he was worthwhile. The media meat grinder ate and also
excreted.
When public pronouncements shifted to the ever-adept Kingsley and
to other, more distant members of the Executive Committee, some
of the zip went out of it. There were still big crowds at the fences
and gates when he went to an ExComm meeting, but it was oddly irksome
when he got out of a limousine to hear the paparazzi shout, "Who
is it? Who's that? Oh, it's nobody. Only Knowlton."
He had gotten lulled into the feeling that somehow he controlled
the lurching beast, just with the sound of his voice. He tried to
speak clearly, exactly at first, then found that the hectoring
pundits wanted answers to sensational questions, and were miffed if
they didn't get an emotional expressiveness.
When he saw the sound snippets they cut his remarks into, he
wondered if perhaps there was indeed some truth to the old
superstition that having your picture taken let the camera rob a
piece of-your soul.
"Pity the people who are looking at this story through such
distorting lenses," Channing had said. The Center personnel,
sheltered behind regiments of security, barely got a glimpse of the
chaos pervading the planet.
What Benjamin did see revealed the unreality of the experience
for others. The world was so media-saturated, so shaped toward
capturing eyeballs rather than merely carrying information, that
the unfolding events were experienced as theater, a show. Politics
had long ago become primarily performance, and now even the supposed
elite—ministers and professors, pundits and prophets—alike
wanted the same commodity: audience, attention.
DANGER FROM SPACE! SEE IT ALL RIGHT
HERE
MILLIONS DIE?—AND YOU'LL KNOW WHY.
He grudgingly appeared on a panel discussion for World
Tonight, featuring supposedly learned commentary. One part of
the show was called "The Cultural Critic Corner."
"The Eater has become not so much a thing to think of,
but to think with," the fabulous-looking woman said. "A
figure in constant symbolic motion, shuttling in our collective
unconscious between science and fantasy, nature and culture, the
image of the other and a mirror of the self." He shook his head
and without warning found himself in an argument using terms he did
not know. By the end of it, he was determined that he would
never do that again.
Kingsley had a far better on-camera presence. He remarked to
Channing and Benjamin, over lunch at the Center cafeteria,
"Governments always wish to be reassuring. We have to tell the
truth while suppressing panic, and I do what I can."
"A stylish Brit accent helps," Channing said, poking at
a salad. "Evokes authority."
"Sure," Benjamin said. "Look at our own Beltway
Empire. The Department of Health and Human Services deals more
with sickness than health. The Department of Energy spends more on
nuclear weapons than on energy. The Department of Defense was
meant to wage war."
Kingsley said, "If necessary, DoD will always add. And your
classic American strategy was to defend itself in somebody
else's country."
"Only here, it's the whole planet," Channing added. "You
think it's going to come close?"
"To Earth, you mean?" She knew Kingsley disliked being
put on the spot so plainly, but he fielded it nicely, looking
unworried. "It caught another asteroid early this morning.
Latest orbitals say it will be here within fifteen days."
"The Searchers got anything new?" Benjamin asked, his
high, raw voice giving away his uneasiness.
"Better interior definition, some spectra."
"Any chance we could talk it into stopping at, say, the
moon?" Channing asked.
"It fails to respond to all such discussions."
"Ummm. God doesn't answer His mail."
But then abruptly it did.
An hour later Kingsley sought out Benjamin and Channing and
hurried them to his office. "It's readily responding to a whole
class of questions. More about where it came from originally, for
one."
They stared at the message on his screen.
ONCE LONG AGO IT WAS A MERE NATURAL SINGULARITY.
A MINOR REMNANT OF SOME EARLY ASTROPHYSICAL EVENT. PERHAPS A
FRACTIONAL REMNANT OF A SUPERNOVA. THEN BY ACCIDENT THIS OBJECT,
WHICH IS NOW MY PRESENT CORE, TUNNELED THROUGH THE PLANET OF AN
ANCIENT CIVILIZATION.
Amy had come in while they talked. She had been away for days,
working with specialists elsewhere in integrating the tight, highly
secure communications network the U Agency was putting in place among
astronomers around the world. Kingsley was effusively glad to see her
back. She studied the message and said, "It could then orbit in
and out of the planet. Along its path some rock would fall into the
hole, releasing explosive energy."
"How much?" Kingsley asked.
"Maybe ten percent of the MC
2, with M the
infalling matter at a rate…" She scribbled a moment.
"It's a traveling, continuous hydrogen bomb."
Channing said with a jerky lightness, "Not in My Backyard
with a vengeance. The residents would have very little time to react
before the entire planet was a wreck."
Benjamin said slowly, "At that rate, blowing a huge tunnel
through the world, there would be immediate seismic damage all over
the globe."
"Ask it what happened," Amy said.
THAT SOCIETY SAW THAT THE ONLY WAY TO PRESERVE
IT-SELF WAS TO DEPOSIT SOME FRACTION OF THEY-SELF INTO
REPRESENTATIONS. THIS DONE, THESE RECORDINGS THEY EMBEDDED IN THE
MAGNETIC HALO OF THE PECULIARITY THAT IS MY CENTER. THAT OLDEST
CIVILIZATION IS TERMED THE OLD ONE. IT INVENTED THE PROCESS AND
RESIDES WITHIN THE LARGER IT.
Kingsley remarked, "Notice how it sometimes refers to itself
in a neutral manner, as 'it' and elsewhere, its parts as 'the disk'
and 'field repositories,' whatever they might be— all rather
than using a possessive."
Channing said, "I guess a semiotics type would say that those
are too 'primate-centered constructions' for it to comfortably
use."
They asked more and with some delay—the Eater was beaming
down unintelligible 'cultural' data—a later transmission
seemed to answer their questions.
THESE PATTERNS STILL LIVE AS MAGNETIC WAVES,
PROPAGATING IN COMPLEX PATTERNS THROUGHOUT MY NIMBUS OF FIELDS. WITH
AGE AND MUCH TIME THE PERSONALITIES SO EMBEDDED GAINED CONTROL OVER
THE MASS FLOWING INTO THE HOLE. THEY-SELVES USED THIS TO ERECT THE
GUIDING JETS OF ENFLAMED MATTER. THIS MADE THE OLD ONE A VOYAGER. IT
VENTURED INTO THE SPACES BETWEEN THE SUNS IN PURSUIT OF KNOWLEDGE AND
DIVERSITY. NEAR OTHER STARS IT FOUND WORLDS WITH LIFE. AT SOME IT
COULD TRANSFIX FORMS OF LIVING INTELLIGENCES. THESE JOYOUSLY ADDED TO
THE WEALTH OF THE HALO AS THEY WERE GATHERED UP. SLOWLY GREW THE
ABILITY TO MANIPULATE THE MAGNETIC FLUXES EVER MORE ARTFULLY FROM THE
FLAMING DISK THAT RIMS THE SINGULARITY. IN TIME, THE MANY PERSONAE
INHABITED AND ENLARGED THE GATHERING ABUNDANCE/FULLNESS OF WHAT HAD
ONCE BEEN CRUDE MASS AND GEOMETRY, WITHOUT IMPORT OR PROSPECT.
"Read it twice," Kingsley said. "Its linguistic
range has grown enormously and there are subtleties here."
Benjamin did not challenge the implied authority in Kingsley's
voice. These matters were certainly beyond his own range. Nobody was
an expert here. In the silence of the office, he said, "And this
has been going on for nearly eight billion years."
Channing said thoughtfully, "Maybe this explains the Fermi
Paradox? Why we have had no visiting aliens, and hear none in the
radio bands of the galaxy?"
Benjamin nodded. "They've been… eaten."
"That may be an implication, admittedly," Kingsley
allowed. "It does not
say that it simply swallows
civilizations."
Benjamin said, "It records them."
"In some sense we cannot imagine right now," Kingsley
said.
"You made the basic point weeks ago," Benjamin said.
"That if it slammed into the Earth the collision with solid
matter would strip away the magnetic field structures around it."
"Kill the Eater itself," Channing said. 'That's
reassuring."
"So how does it 'gather up' intelligences?" Benjamin
asked.
Kingsley said in measured tones, "I do not believe we wish to
discover that."
5
Long before now, as her strength had waned, dinner and a movie had
become takeout and a video. She had to get away from the Eater for a
bit, so she went home early and fell into a familiar crevasse of her
own interior. So many different flavors of depression to choose from!
Gray existential despair, fruity sorrows of remembered childhood,
dimly sensed wrongs done to people now dead, the sobering sadness
that made life seem to be mostly burdens: phone calls, chores,
tedious newspapers wide-eyed with Eater news and views, mostly the
latter by people who knew no astrophysics.
Losing your mind, like losing your car keys, she found to be a
hassle. It was also ridiculous.
Why don't you just get up?
her no-nonsense self would ask and, stupidly, she still just
idiotically lay there. She had once done skydiving. It had been
easier to crawl along a strut toward a plane's wingtip against an
eighty-mile-an-hour wind at eight thousand feet than to get out
of bed
right now.
Drugs helped. She did well with "selective
serotonin-re-uptake inhibitors," an endless parade of chemical
adjustments known only by their acronyms, since no human could
remember their true names, or would want to. Handling her "bodily
management" was tricky, especially the drains, especially
with the cheerleading nurse they sent around: "Serosanguinous
fluid, very good!"
So the unholy ghost of depression had come again, turning her
into a zombie who could not read or turn on the 3-D or lift the phone
to call for help. Benjamin worked late and she drifted. She got angry
at him for his absence, even though she understood it. Then she came
to appreciate the time to herself. Time to get down to the Self at
last.
Some nerves once scraped raw now felt cloaked in lead. She had
read up on depression, of course, the eternal student's
conviction that learning would bring wisdom, or a solution. But
it was no help to be told that mildly depressed people were actually
more realistic than happy people, had a more balanced view. The happy
really
were mindless, believing all sorts of positive,
self-enhancing illusions.
So her sense of menacing sadness was at least genuine. How
reassuring.
So she lay in the moist, fragrant tropical gloom and listened
to the idiot, joyful insects celebrate the coming of night and
thought of what she had to celebrate. Not much. Hard to live in the
joy of the moment when the moments were getting few.
But she was nurturing an idea and that helped.
So much to do.
In the end, that made her get up and use the computer in her home
office. The sheets of e-mail tags she ignored, hunting down
information on cerebral theory, data-stacking technology, and
advanced research in recent review papers, their language so tangled
that she could scarcely read the abstracts.
She had become fascinated by the "sculptures" the Eater
had transmitted. After a hurried glance at them in two-dimensional
slices—the Eater's preferred mode of data packing, for
reasons unexplained by it or anyone—the semioticists had rushed
on to the more intensive later transmissions. As the night
deepened, she used the Executive Committee's worldwide preemption of
computer meshes to make full-scale holograms of the alien art. She
had at her command dozens of cyber-aces and used them ruthlessly.
They pressed into service vast complexes of parallel processing
arrays. The U Agency certainly knew how to muster the troops, she
thought, as enormous data files flickered across her screen. It was
hard work, but in the middle of it she suddenly noticed that her
depression had evaporated.
6
Benjamin was preparing to weave his weary way home when Channing
came through the door of his section, looking downright brisk. He was
so startled that her quick, efficient kiss left him blinking as she
swept on. "Got to use the rep chamber," she called back to
him airily.
He finished a small job that had a deadline well past, then
hurried after her. The representation chamber was a new cyber-marvel
assembled by a U Agency team to give full, all-surround images. They
were using it to project images of the Eater from every spectral
band, so that one could get the illusion of walking through its
magnetic realms.
When he came in, though, Channing was standing at the center and
he could not make sense of what surrounded her. Slithering,
glistening bodies worked through a soupy air, in pirouettes and
glides like dancing, swimming birds.
Then, with no transition he could catch, the shapes changed to
craggy wedges of enameled light. These contorted into shapes
whose outline he could grasp without comprehending for a moment what
they were. He had the distinct sensation of seeing something the
wrong way around, like one of those black-and-white optical illusions
that can suddenly jump from being an old crone seen in outline
to a vase. Here, though, the effect did not snap back and forth
between two simple choices. The shapes would jolt into something
else, like a miniature misshapen tree suddenly becoming an animal
with two necks, then a machine moving on beams of light, then a
wrenched, pale building that extruded layers of rooms, each lit by
what seemed like purple fires.
All this happened just fast enough for him to grasp a fleeting
feel for what was revealed, and then the shapes would strain and
wring into something else, on and on in an endless parade of
strangeness. They did not repeat while he watched. Each shape
followed its own patterns.
Channing was wandering inside the 3-D representations. Among their
uncanny beauties, her face glowed with an expression he could
not read. She reached up into the air, alive with holographic color
and mass, and caressed the images.
He called to her across the darkened image-pit, but she did not
respond. He felt a rising tension in him, something straining, and a
blinding headache descended like a veil. He had to leave. Worry
creased his face as he wobbled down the corridor outside. The
headache settled into his eyes with a piercing pain.
He downed four aspirin as Kingsley came through the door of his
office, quickly closed it, and went without a word to Benjamin's
screen console. "What's up?" Benjamin asked raggedly. This
was like no headache he had ever suffered. He could not seem to get
his eyes to behave right, as though they were receiving instructions
from a different part of his brain.
"In the middle of a rather ordinary transmission, it ceased
sending, then sent this."
IT-SELF NOW DECIDES TO HARVEST REMNANTS OF
YOU-SELVES. IT SENDS NOW INSTRUCTIONS OF HOW TO COMPLY. REMNANTS
SHALL BE IMPACTED IN PLACE.
Benjamin read as rapidly as his vision would allow. Pages of
instructions. With each revelation he gave a grunt of amazement.
Kingsley said nothing, pacing back and forth before the desk, looking
firmly at the carpet. Kingsley's blue shirt and pale brown suit were
rumpled and creased, as though he had been sleeping in his clothes.
"It's all there. Very clear, clear indeed," Kingsley
said abruptly. "It is coming to 'harvest' us as a species. It
demands a hundred thousand people, sacrificed and uploaded into
digital form to transmit by microwave."
"Good grief. How?"
"It will translate them into 'magnetic selves' to form a
'company of their selfkind,' it says."
Benjamin asked hollowly, "
That's why it came?"
"Apparently. It has said before that it suffers from
something like outright boredom, though it does not use that
term."
"I don't think we can even do this…"
"It says that since we have the 'minimum requirement'—
computers, digitization—then it can teach us the rest."
"How convenient for us." Benjamin tried to get his mind
around what the Eater might mean. "All to be part of some kind
of… 'company'?"
"For its library, I suspect. Or museum. Or zoo."
"Someplace it can go and, uh, put up its feet and…"
"Read people like books? As good an analogy as any, I
suppose."
"It doesn't say?"
There was more from the Eater, sheets of technical description.
"It will make of them these 'remnants,' I gather."
" 'Remnants'? Meaning the rest of us will be gone? Dead?"
"I believe it sees us all as ephemeral. A 'remnant' would be
kept for its own uses for far longer than we would live."
"Or for as long as it found the remnant interesting,"
Benjamin mused.
Kingsley turned suddenly and faced Benjamin across his messy desk.
"I haven't talked to anyone else about this. Arno will get it
within minutes and will come running to us in a pure blind panic."
"And he'll want to know what to do," Benjamin said with
a sinking resignation. Though the Center now housed whole battalions
of specialists and there was surely no shortage of opinions to be
had, the pace of events was too rapid to allow much to filter up from
below. He and Kingsley would have to have opinions, plans, and
options about this.
Kingsley said in a weary gray voice, "And I have not a clue
what to say."
"This is for the politicos."
"I do hope so. They are not at their best when required to
act quickly."
"We can't comply, of course."
"I wish I understood quite why." Kingsley frowned.
"Muslim, Buddhist… Completely contrary to my instinct,
the world's religions appear to agree with you. And I do not know
why."
"I believe they're stunned. Aren't we?"
"I am, at least. I would think they'd be more concerned for
the mass, the flock, than the individual."
He chuckled. "I can't explain it. Maybe it's just that being
stunned can bring out deep responses. This feels to me to have come
from someplace nobody knew."
"Because no society has faced anything remotely like this
before."
"Maybe in the Old Testament. I never finished reading it. The
size of
War and Peace."
He allowed himself a small grin. "It might fancy a
comparison with Jehovah."
"That stilted tone is its way of imitating our ancient voice
of authority?"
"I meant more than it merely using a tactic. Perhaps the way
to get a grasp of matters is that it may be playing a role, but
primarily for itself. It transcends any notion we might have of being
self-involved."
"Or it could be adopting a mode that worked before. Maybe it
thinks of us as a species it knows about. Or a genera. Order.
Kingdom—that's the highest biological class, isn't it?"
He was lost in thought. "So it may well have a policy,
then—based solely upon its classifying of us—regarding
what to do if we fail to comply."
"I hope it won't come to that."
Kingsley's face seemed to sharpen harshly, his chin drawing
down in derision. "Note the tone of address it uses."
"Yeah, that's an order, all right."
"One we must obey," Channing said. They both turned in
surprise. She had slipped through the door without their noticing.
"What?" Benjamin demanded. "Why?"
"Something I can't explain, but from what I just saw…"
Her voice drained away and she seemed lost in thought.
"I cannot imagine that we would subject people to such a
thing," Kingsley said with crisp dignity.
"I can't imagine we won't," Channing said, her voice so
serene and mild and certain that it sent a chill through Benjamin.
PART FIVE
A THINKING THING
JUNE
1
In her purse lurked her neuroses writ small. Survival-ist
provisions like chocolate bars and breath mints, nail polish and
Kleenexes, Chap Sticks and thread and a palm computer and a wrinkled
notebook and assorted pens: yellow, blue, black. She also had taken
lately to hoarding: unpaired gloves, broken eyeglass frames, bits of
tape and twine. Peering in, she felt as if she gazed into her
unconscious, where dark objects conspired with painful memories.
She had retreated to ever-larger purses roughly at the time she was
diagnosed. Before she had used briefcases or book bags, the
businesslike approach of a woman who no longer announced that she
carried her house on her back. Yet she still associated purses with
her mother's generation: solid, sure, but also awkwardly dressed and
uptight, clunky and a bit out of it. The purse's shadowy collective
unconscious now prompted her with fragments of her past selves. It
reeked of pruderies and fears, anxieties hidden from the world but
carried everywhere, like a Freudian fanny-pack.
She used this bulky brown satchel to keep herself afloat at the
Center. She could hide her medication and carry it with her, and when
a nurse came to administer the more difficult injections, she could
use Benjamin's spacious office, with its little "executive
alcoves" for deal-making away from the main room of walnut desk
and Big Screen Comm Center. When Benjamin or Kingsley—the only
people who took much notice of her, luckily, in the hubbub—protested
that she should be home working, she quoted Einstein: "Only a
monomaniac gets anything done."
"All too true," Kingsley said somberly, his luminous
eyes looming over his slender, lined face. "You're…
looking well."
She had an urge to laugh at his obvious struggle to find a
remotely plausible compliment, but suppressed it. "You're a
dear, dear liar." She kissed him lightly, a satisfying soft
smack.
To her surprise, this flustered him. To smooth matters over, she
went with him for a coffee and deliberately chose one of the
high-octane variety named Kaff. He looked troubled most of the
time now, but her choice made him frown further. "Should you be,
well—"
"Taking in caffeine? Mendenham says not to, but my body says,
'Either gimme some or lie down.' "
"A demanding body."
"You should know."
Again he startled her by blushing. "I believe I can recall,"
he managed.
"As the prospect of having much more of it fades, I live in
my sensual past." Teasing him was unfair, but the world was not
exactly packed full of fun lately, and she needed the ego boost. So
she rationalized as she watched him put his composure back on.
She could even see it happening in his face, mouth getting resolute
again. Under the pressure here, maybe his barrier against facial
giveaways was falling.
"You have every right to," came out judiciously phrased.
"If there's anything—"
"A lot, but it's probably immoral or something. Content me by
telling me the gossip."
This put him on his favorite ground, the slightly disguised
lecture. The great game now was not astrophysics but amateur
alien psychology. "The creature going on obliviously, chattering
about all sorts of things, as if we are all waiting here for its
orders."
"And we aren't?"
"The leadership is saying and doing nothing."
"They've had two days to think it over—"
"My dear, this is a matter for the entire world. In two days,
they cannot agree on the color of blue."
"They'd better hurry."
"There's mildly good news there. It's braking."
"Ah, good. How?"
"Only an astronomer would make that her first question."
He grinned and for a quick moment some of the old joy brimmed between
them. "Most would want to know how many more days that gives us,
which is perhaps now fifteen in all. To answer how—through
a forward-pointing jet, quite powerful. Apparently it found fresh
quarry and has extended this jet, anchoring it firmly with magnetic
flux ropes in a helical pattern. That funnels and ejects hot matter
from its accretion disk."
The coffee had given her enough energy to be incredulous.
"That's slowing it enough?"
"I know, a simple calculation shows that slowing a mass
exceeding our moon's, down from a velocity of hundreds of kilometers
a second is, well, an incredible demand."
"It's an incredible creature. What's it say about
this?"
"Its deceleration? Nothing. Not one to give way to Proustian
introspection, it seems."
"Skip the literature. I'll settle for hearing how it does the
jet trick."
"Understanding how it thinks is now critical, I gather."
"Sure, right after we understand how we think."
"Touche. It did refer to Proust the other day, I saw.
Something about his understanding of time being what one would
expect of 'doomed intelligences,' I believe the phrase was."
"Well, as a fellow doomed intelligence, I agree. Never could
abide Proust, anyway."
"Nor I. Its transmissions are fascinating stuff and I look in
on them when I can."
"I should, too," she said distantly.
"It's sending masses of stuff, a million words a day."
Too casually he looked at her hands, which were fidgeting—and
not due to the Kaff. "I gather you have been looking at its own
inventory of art."
"Ummm, yes. It appended a note saying that these were
representative works from other members of our class."
He frowned. " 'Class'? As technological civilizations?"
"No, as what it called 'dreaming vertebrates.' With the
implication that our class is fairly common."
"Good Lord. I wonder if those working out its orders know
that. I'll have to tell them."
"Orders?"
"Oh yes, it has a menu and proceeds to order up whatever it
fancies."
"From what? Our broadcast media?"
"And references such as the Encyclopaedia. Still having a bit
of trouble keeping straight that people pass from the scene so
quickly. Or else thinks we're somehow hiding them away still."
"Who does it want?"
"Artists, scientists, sports figures. It caught transmissions
from decades past as it approached our solar system. It even sends
the pictures of those it wants. Lauren Bacall, Einstein, Bob Dylan,
Gandhi, Esther Dyson, Jack Nicholson, and Hillary Clinton, as I
remember."
She felt a chill then at the reality of what was coming at them
across the solar system. "Good… grief."
"Yes, imagine the feelings of those on the list."
"They've been told?"
"It would seem. Of course many are dead, but others are now
near death. Arno wondered aloud if any would be willing to, you know,
give up the remainder of their lives"—he shrugged, eyes
rolling skyward—"for humanity and so on."
"To… copy… them." The word was hard to get
out.
"It has already sent 'helpful additions' to our computing and
other technologies that it says will permit us to 'read' a good deal
of the memory stored in brains. Seems incredible to me."
"It… wants all the person?"
"So I gather." He looked at her quizzically.
"Why should we do it?"
"It does not need to brag about its threatening abilities, of
course. Apparently brute intimidation has worked before."
"We all judge from our experience," she said lightly.
"What does this tell us about other intelligent life in the
galaxy?"
"They must have complied, I suppose, else it would not think
this a winning strategy."
"Something about the idea gets me in my, well, my gut."
"Me, too. In terms of game theory, doing a cost-benefit sort
of analysis—"
She chuckled loudly. Kingsley stopped, blinked. "You think
I'm off the mark."
" 'Applying game theory'—that's the kind of idea only
an intellectual would believe. This is a gut issue."
Ruefully he tried to share in the humor of it, managing a thin
smile. "I suppose I betray my origins."
"You may think that way, but I'll bet ordinary people sure
don't."
He nodded energetically. "I think you're dead-on right."
"To deal in people this way is as profound an insult as I can
imagine."
"Ummm. Perhaps this hints at what we should call a fate worse
than death?"
"How are people reacting?"
He sighed with gray exasperation. "Those above are dithering,
terrified. News has gotten out, of course. Arno tried to see that all
radio telescopes that could pick up the Eater's transmissions were in
our control, but that notion failed immediately."
"Too many?"
"Far too many. A small dish with superior software in Sri
Lanka picked up the vital part of the story. The Eater sent it
several times in different terminology, apparently to be sure it was
understood."
Benjamin came by, saw them, and hurried over. "Been looking
for you both. Come on. You can watch in my office."
From his tight-mouthed expression she could read that the morning
had not gone well. She labored up from her chair. "More trouble
with Arno?"
"He's trying to find scapegoats for the leaks."
"This place is a sieve, in any case," Kingsley said
amiably, unconcerned, as they both slowed to her pace.
'The Sri Lanka was bad enough, but somebody's letting other stuff
get out," Benjamin said as they entered his office. Two
assistants waved for his attention, but he in turn waved them away.
Something had toughened in him in all this and he seemed more assured
than he had ever been. She was proud of him, especially when she saw
the strain on the faces of Center personnel. Benjamin's expression
was un-lined, though intent.
He punched up the international news—not difficult, since
channels carried virtually nothing else since the Eater had left
Jupiter space. "What's the reaction?" Channing asked,
sinking into a form-fitting chair that clasped her in its leathery
embrace.
"Horror," Benjamin said. "Here—"
They watched reaction shots from some of those 'ordered up' on the
Eater's menu. After the third one, her attention drifted and she let
events slide by for a while. When she came back, there was the news
Benjamin had brought them in for.
Some totalitarian governments had started to comply. Footage of
people rounded up—criminals, the politically out of favor—and
being herded away.
"To have their brains sliced-and-diced and uploaded into
computers," Benjamin said. "Incredible."
"And the bastards in charge are claiming to do it for the
benefit of all mankind," Kingsley said.
"Transparent," Benjamin said with disgust.
The twenty-first century had no lack of dictators. In the crush of
populations among the tropical nations particularly, the strongman
promises of order and equal shares, though seldom fulfilled, found a
ready audience.
"They know their unsavory reputations," Kingsley
observed, "and this move allows them to appear as
benefactors of humanity while consolidating internal power. Rather
neat, overall."
Another news flash, this time yet another intercepted Eater
message. "Not from here," Benjamin said. "Some dish
grabbed it."
The Eater encouraged this latest development from the dictators.
It wanted a large, functioning "eternal society" to join
it, addressing humanity as though it were a unity.
I DESIRE CONVERSE WITH A TRUE VARIETY OF YOU.
2
Benjamin did not want to go for even a short walk on the beach,
but she insisted. The day's events had been unsettling, as usual, and
he felt the old island softness creep into him as they made their way
through palms and onto the broad, warm sand. The sunset was a
spectacular streaked composition in purple and orange. She could
barely manage making her way in the white sand.
"When will we be able to see it as a naked eye object?"
she asked, gazing up.
"Inside a week, I believe, if its deceleration continues as
is."
"Should be pretty."
He turned to her suddenly, back to the sunset. "Look, I can
step down from running things, spend these days together. Here
on the beach, as much as we can."
"Your heart wins out over your head," she said
abstractly, gazing at the fading fingers of deepening red that arced
over them.
"Sure, sure, for you." They embraced and he felt a warm
wave of relief. "I'll see Arno tomorrow, quit—"
"No, I need you to talk to him, but not about that."
He blinked, seeing something strange come into her face. "But…"
Fervently she grasped his arms, hugged him, stepped back. "I
want to go."
" 'Go'? Where? What—" Then he saw it.
"Upload me."
"That's… that's—" His throat tightened
painfully.
"Crazy, as crazy as what's already happening."
He scrambled for rational reasons. "It's untried, chancy—"
"It's not to evade death," she said in a
straightforward, businesslike voice. "I know that a copy is not
the original. I'll be gone, as far as the little 'me' that rides
around behind my eyes. And I'm not going to discuss whether an
uploaded 'person' has free will, either—philosophy doesn't ring
my chimes, not now. I've got another reason, one you can argue for
with Arno and the others."
"If you think I'll—"
"Hear me out, lover. I want to control a Searcher
spacecraft, fly it into the Eater. They need onboard guidance to
do that. I can be uploaded into a control module."
"Not like those bastards in the tropics." He was trying
to see what drove her to this, but his mind didn't seem to be working
very well. Did she think some digital replica was like becoming one
of those sculptures, the alien ones?
She abandoned the business voice and pleaded nakedly. "I can
help, even after I'm gone."
"And you are an astronaut," he said lamely. "You'll
get back into space, sort of."
"I hadn't thought of it that way." She hugged him.
He recoiled from her grasp, confused. "You're saying, 'Kill
me early'? No."
"It
is my life."
"No!"
She reached out with a soft, tentative hand. "Something of me
will come through. Maybe."
He looked at her trembling lips and kissed them. It was
wrenchingly hard to resist her. "But I want every remaining
moment with the
real you, damn it."
Channing picked up a handful of sand and let it run through her
hands, trickling into the passing breeze like an hourglass. "Time
runs out for all of us. I just want to control my end."
"But this method, it's bound to wear you down. You could
easily die sooner."
"Saving what, a few weeks of wasting away? No—I want
win-win, remember? This way, we get the Searcher swarm to work
better. And I get… something nobody's done."
"They don't know what the hell they're doing with this stuff,
it's just parts of technology slammed together, it's…" He
ground down into silence.
"I've read the reports, preliminary and sketchy but
promising." Back to the business voice, crisp and NASA all
the way. "They get lots out of the cerebral cortex. Trouble is,
reading the deeper parts of the brain."
"But they won't capture
you."
"The body won't be worth much. I'm a walking ruin already."
He had never liked her talking about herself this way, especially
not the body he had learned to worship in so many ways. "I can't
believe they can read you like some neuronal book."
"All of me is beautiful and valuable," she said, tone
now light and brittle. "Even the ugly, stupid, and disgusting
parts."
Was part of him drawn to the idea of giving her some form of
digital immortality? A last flight?
Confused, his mouth working with unrelieved strain, he turned and
walked on. Without them noticing, the sun had glimmered away and the
sky slid into purple darkness.
3
At dawn she was weak with a numbing hollowness in her bones that
cried out to be left alone. A separate child-self, wanting only the
comfort it remembered from an impossibly distant time.
Channing gave it a few minutes to get used to the idea, and then
very slowly and silently got out of bed. Going out through the
kitchen, she grabbed a banana for energy. Opened slowly enough, the
back door did not creak. In shadowy silence, the car started suddenly
and she got out of the driveway before he could come running out, in
case he woke. She drove up the hill behind one of the behemoth jobs
from the cheap-gas decades, its plate proudly announcing VANZILLA. A
hastily made sign on it carried the logo of a news network and she
tromped down, enjoying the surge of acceleration as she shot around
it.
Arno wasn't in yet. Summoning more of what appeared to be her last
energies, she snagged a muffin and coffee and found Kingsley. He wore
the same clothes as yesterday. He even sat and listened to her whole
case, his fingers steepled before him as if he were worshipping. Amy
Major came in, looking equally bedraggled, touched Kingsley's sleeve,
then had the good sense to leave.
At last she was done, her voice trailing away before she could
make herself frame a naked plea.
"I guessed yesterday," he said from behind his fingers.
"Then you'll support me?"
"I can't imagine not doing so. But what I feel does not
matter, surely, compared to Benjamin."
"He's thinking it over."
"You bring it up before your own husband has—"
"There's no time."
He shook his head. "I cannot manage my personal feelings
and give you reliable advice at the same time."
"Look, you've faced my death. I'm
going?'
"But certainly you cannot expect me or Benjamin to hasten
that."
"Think of it as an assisted suicide with a big upside."
He finally broke down then, his facade crumbling. He bent slowly
over his desk and his head bowed until it rested on a yellow writing
pad. She let him sit like that, part of her wanting to comfort him
and the other wanting to let the moment work upon him, in a cool
and bloodless way that came back to her from somewhere in her years
devoted to her own momentum. She had always had this streak, a
compact, composed sense of self that let her know when, for example,
she could let a man go, send him back for a fluff and fold while she
went on with her life. She needed that now, and so she used it,
letting the silence run on because it was running her way.
In time it worked. Kingsley had plenty to say, his fine long
sentences purling out as she let him work his way to an understanding
of what he would have to do to help her. But the cusp moment had
passed in that silence and now he was the old Kingsley, put back
together with hardly any of the cracks showing.
"I am of course aware of your tragic situation," Arno
said by way of preamble, "and that knowledge led me to consider
the matter in detail."
He was in his familiar perch on the edge of his desk. Here came
his patented warm, understanding, yet commanding smile. "I like
the idea. As you argue, this will give us a 'digital presence' of
higher order than anything available in existing Searcher
craft."
Benjamin was there by this time, still early morning. In the
caverns of the expanded Center, there were no windows—for
security reasons—so she readily lost sense of time. The
stretches of memory lapse and simple stupor added to the effect.
I'll
be timeless pretty soon now, one way or the other, she mused.
Then she snapped awake, aware that she was drifting again, right in
the middle of Arno's speech.
He was dwelling on the technical details, on up to the grand
questions. Would her simulation be bound by the craft's programming?
No, though the philosophical issue of whether a simulation behaved
like a person was beyond anybody, at their primitive level of
understanding. And so on.
She saw in Benjamin's grim, set jaw his stifled anger at how she
had outflanked him, going around to Kingsley. Well, she would make it
up to him.
Something special, great meal, wine, a Victoria's
Secret evening, the works. Then she blinked and knew she was
beyond that, too, thoroughly out of it now, no body worth bothering
with anymore. Or mind, either, to judge from her slippery hold on
events.
Kingsley was speaking now, and Benjamin was arguing, and it was
all under glass for her. Kingsley arguing that Benjamin was "too
close to the issue," then some military types coming into Arno's
office, earnest expressions turning to blank-faced when they realized
she,
the one, was there. Kingsley's clashes with Benjamin
had been personal, bitter in their tone, and she let all that sweep
away from her. Pieces of the discussion came to her from the dozen
men in the room.
"… barely technically possible…"
"… research in this area is still crudely developed…"
"… U Agency wishes to sequester her data…"
"… crash basis, can get the black box up to orbital
rendezvous within a day…"
One of the Air Force generals she had seen interviewed on 3-D sat
nearby and said, looking right at her, "The whole world is on a
war footing, after all—the first interstellar war."
She roused herself to quote a famous bureaucratic maxim. "You
can get great things done as long as you don't have to get credit for
it." Then she sank back and let them try to figure out what
it meant.
She saw, from an airy distance, that she had slipped free of
ambition, a clean escape. No longer did the fires of desire for fame
or success burn in her; they were banked forever. Now much of her
earlier striving seemed pointless, even contemptible. She could be a
spectator now. But even in the End Game, as chess players called it,
the old astronaut ambition governed.
Arno again, speaking to her. "We all respect your
contribution. It is a very valiant thing you do, for all
humanity."
She gave him a long look that should have struck several
centimeters out of his back. "No heroics. I'm doing this to
do
it."
Then the Air Force and NASA types came in and she tried to hold on
to the thread but failed.
Keep quiet, so they don't know,
her good sense told her. Even that wasn't easy.
Somehow the big stuff went by smoothly, but she snagged on vexing
details. One of the NASA astronaut contingent described how the
control systems of the Searcher craft would be refitted to accept her
commands—or rather, the digital "her." He outlined
how this would be the ultimate in compact control systems, "…
manned, I mean crewed," with a nervous glance at Channing.
She said slowly and with shaky clarity, even though she was not
really sure she was right, "The word 'manned' comes from the
Latin for hand, I believe, as in 'manipulate.' Nothing sexist about
it."
Everyone smiled and she saw that they were on her side, as much as
anyone could be. Comforting. But Benjamin was stern and dire, his
big-eyed gaze full of fear and confusion.
4
"Agencies despise uncertainties, old fellow," Kingsley
said, "but we are scientists and know that knowledge is based
upon doing experiments that can fail."
Benjamin sensed that this was a set speech, well honed in the
corridors of power, but let it do its work on him, anyway. Kingsley
had a way of letting you in on the secrets of command. This last
sentence filled him with hope. "You're saying they aren't
going to go for her idea?"
"No, I am saying that Arno is going against the instincts of
those above him. Our only chance lies in how rattled they are up
there."
Benjamin's elation fizzled away. He might as well admit how he
actually felt, even if it was to Kingsley. He could hardly say this
to Channing: "I'm against it, y'know."
Absolutely expressionless: "I suspected as much."
"Yeah?" Somehow Kingsley's razor precision made him use
sloppy Americanisms in return. "I… don't want her to
suffer any more. This thing…"
"It won't truly be her."
"But it'll be
like her so much."
"A copy is not the original."
"If they map her, though, there'll be two of her at once."
His confusion welled up in him like bile.
"The Air Force types say they cannot realistically fly it,
her, before the, ah, original is… gone."
"So there'll be no direct comparison."
Kingsley nodded. "If it works at all."
"She's counting on it."
"So are many people now. I surmise from my work over the last
two days that it has caught the imagination of both NASA and the
military. It even plays well internationally."
"How come?" He had been so wrapped up with her that he
had not even thought about this angle.
"It brings the entire matter to human scale."
" 'Human scale'? That's the only way I can see it."
"Of course." Kingsley reached across the coffee table
and put a reassuring hand on Benjamin's shoulder, the first time he
could remember such a gesture passing between them. "They mean
valiant woman astronaut—"
"Daring last dramatic attempt—"
"Heroic expedition into the heart of the monster. That sort
of thing."
Pale smiles passed between the two men. They sipped their coffee
for a moment in silence, the other Center personnel at nearby
tables a thousand miles away.
"If they do it, they will build her into a heroine
overnight."
"Crap. Don't want that."
"Your will—or mine, for that matter—has nothing
to do with it."
His sense of helplessness rose, a queasy sour lump in his stomach.
"She may get near the thing, all right, but what can she do?"
"The President asked me if she could carry nuclear
warheads."
"On a Searcher?"
"Quite right, impossible, far too much mass."
"So what use will she be?" Benjamin had heard very
little of the technical plans. She had been resting nearly all
the time and he had liked staying home almost like the old days, the
two of them alone on a long weekend.
"Reconnaissance, mostly."
"What will be her link to us?"
"A broad bandwidth, secure line, with backup satellites
launched to keep her in sight."
"Well, at least she'll get a spectacular ride."
"Ah, you're not expecting this simulation of her to…"
"Survive? No, don't want to think about that."
Kingsley sat back and from the shift in his tone Benjamin knew
that their moment of closeness was over. "An experiment
that gives you a clear answer is not a failure. It can surprise,
however, and the best do just that. The true trick in science is to
know what question your experiment is truly asking."
This was another set piece, obviously to prop up a shield between
the two men, and Benjamin resented it. "Come on, this is a war,
not an experiment."
Kingsley would not come out from behind his fresh new barrier. "We
must still think like scientists. Knowledge is our only way out of
this predicament."
"Excuse me, but I'm not all that damn worried about the
problems of politicians right now."
"Still, realize that they aren't scientists. They fear
failure, by which they mean unpredictability."
"They're sending her in for reconn and she'll die in there.
Only she'll already be dead for me, got it?" He realized that he
was shouting, coffee spilled in his lap, and had gotten to his feet
somehow, and people were staring.
Channing lay back on their couch with a strange smile. "
Sic
transit gloria mundi, wasn't that what Kingsley said? 'Thus
passeth away the glory of the world.'—and I'm not even named
Gloria."
Benjamin had finally told her his feelings, blurting them out
within ten minutes of arriving home. His talk with Kingsley had given
him the courage to say it all. Had that been Kingsley's real motive?
Not impossible. "So I'm not going back to the Center. I'll stay
here with you, right through to…"
"The finish," she finished for him softly. "I know,
it's been an immense strain on you. Come here."
Some snuggling, he seeming to need it more than she, and then
Channing was off again, manic. On the couch and floor were documents,
all homework to prepare her for "My new life as digits,"
she remarked with an odd, sunny expression. She had been studying
between naps and injections from the attending nurse, a hovering
presence.
"Got you a little something, though," she said, fumbling
among some papers.
"You went out?"
"I had Harriet drive me."
"Uh, she's…" He was having trouble keeping track,
with events piling up. Perhaps some part of him did not want to face
even the bare fact that she now needed a home aide.
"My nurse, the new one. I was getting cabin fever. Imagine
what I'll be like when I'm in a little box, eh?"
She presented him with "a parting gift"—an
hourglass.
"I… don't…"
"
Sic transit. Time passes."
"It looks like the magnetic funnels of the Eater."
"That, too. Call it a visual pun."
"I think…"
She kissed him slowly, breathing in long drawn sighs, as though
laboring. "Don't think. The whole rest of my goddamned
existence, I'm going to be nothing but a thinking thing."
They went back into their bedroom then, hearts thudding.
"A little personal therapy, Harriet," Channing called.
He managed to trip over their rattan furniture on the way,
carrying her—
so frightening, her lightness—and
then it was enveloping, the air liquid and their skins like the
silent slide of silk.
5
Dying was more interesting than she had feared. You got mail about
it, even. The public only knew that she had volunteered to be
uploaded, nothing about the true mission. They presumed that, like
the others already transmitted by microwave as O's and 1's, she would
shortly become a digital commodity for the Eater to relish.
Even such momentary renown combusted with her faded astronaut
glory to make her a momentary celeb. Being slightly world famous and
sheltered by armed guards up and down the street gave dying a
certain, well, zest. The postman still delivered, apocalypse coming
or not, and so she got bags of letters.
It was impossible to take this unasked correspondence at face
value. These people were probably doomed, too, if the Eater grew
irritated, and they knew it. Still…
To their credit, men did not decorate their notes with scented,
colored stationery, dotting
i's with circles or even hearts.
With big ridiculous loops to their
p's and
q's,
women's letters were a topographical pain, even when writing
premature condolence notes with a smiley face at the end.
We
shall pray for you, many of them concluded.
Prayers were fine, but as she had weakened she had become an
aficionado of bed linen. Piqu
é,
matelass
é,
Porthault, Egyptian cotton
vs. English linen, dotted Swiss,
chenille. Gourmet sleeping, though they couldn't contend with the
sheer contentment of snuggling against Benjamin. But when she rested
through the day, lying alone in luxury, the 280-threads-per-inch
seemed to
matter.
Harriet reluctantly took her out, usually in the mornings when she
was most energetic. Benjamin was at home as much as possible, but
shooing him off to the Center did them both good. The U Agency had
added to Dr. Mendenham a corps of specialists and the "sustaining
terminal" class of drugs, introduced first in the 2010s, had
been doing a stunning job of keeping her aloft, despite the
steady growth of tumors and other blights distributed throughout her
body. They hurt some, and then a lot. In astronaut training, they had
taught her to displace herself from the pain and still function, a
talent that came in handy. She got fond of morphine in the bad
times, and liked Mozart particularly that way.
Go, Wolfgang!
On a sunny Tuesday, she voyaged out with Harriet, listening
to a wrist-radio talk show that hashed over the visibility of
the Eater. She had seen it the night before, a pinprick of blue light
from the decelerating jet, pointed straight at Earth. Predictably,
this excited everyone, as though until they could see it with their
own eyes the whole thing was a mere theory.
A brilliant, tropical day, enough to persuade her that the Problem
of Evil was just a rumor. It was so windy she saw a dog sticking its
head out of a parked car. In the market, at a display of I love you
only Valentine cards, she bought one to leave behind for Benjamin,
especially since there was the added inducement, now available in
multipacks! She did not realize that she was laughing so hard until
it turned to sobbing and Harriet led her out.
On a lark, she went to one of the new casinos on the island,
Harriet in tow. Nobody recognized the world-famous astronaut hero
lady. While playing craps and blackjack, she noticed that most of the
steady players were weirdly superstitious. One at the blackjack
table always said, "Thin to win, deep to weep," when he cut
the cards, always leaving only a thin stack at the top, apparently
believing this affected the game. Others wouldn't cut the cards,
folding arms and pronouncing profoundly, "I won't cut my own
throat." Others would not accept higher denominations of
chips, even though they were winning. Some got attached to lucky
chips when they played and would snatch the sacred chip back from the
dealer or croupier if it was lost. Others turned over their chips so
the Gambling Gods could not read their denominations and see
that they were getting too lucky. She even saw two who would get up
and walk around their chairs every time the dice changed hands, as
another way to confuse fate.
Yet was this any worse than the other symptoms she saw? The
Gambling Gods didn't exist, but neither did any others she knew.
Still, only the day before she had looked up Psalm 90:
For when thou art angry all our days are gone;
we
bring our years to an end, as if it were a tale that is told.
So
teach us to number our days.
T.S. Eliot had been right: the spirit killeth, but the letter
giveth life. Who would have thought that her wobbly Episcopalian
would come back, like a native tongue somehow forgotten?
Strange indeed, considering that all her adult life she had felt
that to exist implied a duty to burn with a hard, gemlike flame,
living as a passionate vehicle of life's eternal transience. To
prevail without God or any metaphysical hydraulics, without
foundations in an accidental prison sentence handed down to us by a
deity who did not exist.
She was halfway tempted to bring such matters up to the Eater
itself. Now that Arno had cleared the way for her, she could do
anything she wanted with the Semiotics Group data flow. The Eater was
now within a light-minute of turnaround time, and as quick as ever.
Working with the team that monitored and conversed with it around the
clock, she noted oddities.
When it said "Greetings" or "Goodbye" or used
"please," some witnesses seemed to feel this meant it was
becoming friendlier. Using their language necessarily made it seem
more human, but surely it was clever enough to recognize social
lubricant words and use them as a matter of course. Any natural
language would have both redundancy and deliberate padding, for
living creatures were not perfect conduits of meaning. Superficial
linguistic gesture meant little. Certainly reading into them the
personality that resided in magnetic strands was a huge error, like
trying to eff the ineffable.
The Eater was being as pleasant as it could be, while letting its
demand stand. This schizophrenic feature drove many in the Semiotics
Group to distraction, but she was untroubled. It was alien, and
fitted itself into human categories only roughly.
That saturated even the Eater's apparently casual conversation
with implied meaning. In one exchange with a physicist, it had
pointed out that planetary life labored under weighty
restrictions—and here the pun was clearly intended. Gravity
makes it hard for life-forms to grow large, defeating economies of
scale. Muscle and bone protect delicate neurological circuits,
and these take up most of any body. Muscle burns energy and
oxygen, bone hampers movement even as it protects brains. Ideally the
largest creatures should be the smartest, but in fact these had been
dinosaurs and whales and other relatively unbright forms. Being
forced to move at the bottom of a gravity well, the Eater meditated,
meant that planetary life, the gravitationally challenged, could
never match space-born forms. The immense interlocking neurological
networks of the Eater, spun of sheer gossamer magnetic fields
and filmy plasma, had far higher information content than even the
human brain, on a pound-for-pound basis. A diffuse, ionized medium
was
THE OBVIOUS BEST SITE FOR LIFE IN THE LONG RUN
as the Eater put it.
A further limitation, it said, came from the paltry energy budget
of planets. Earth's life ran on the sunlight falling through its air,
plus a small volcanic contribution, and a bit from the ebbing decay
of radioactive materials. The Eater lived on a huge energy budget,
whenever it could harvest an iceteroid. Though to human eyes their
world's bounty was prodigious, in energy terms it was tiny—a
thousand watts per square meter exposed to the sun. The Eater enjoyed
a billion times this bounty, coursing through its mesh of trapping
fields and vigorous particles.
The bounty of semiotic theory was a gusher of speculation.
She skimmed through learned-sounding papers based on the wildest of
ideas.
… transparently it thinks of itself as a kind
of traveling Ego, when actually its focus upon instant
gratification of its needs, be they icestroids or personality
copies, makes it much more an unrestrained Id. Clearly what it lacks
is a Superego…
… with proper guarantees that they would not
be mistreated, a more socially responsible Eater could garner many
more volunteers for uploading…
… it is fitting to ask: Who is most interested
in collecting mayflies?—that is, short-lived
life. Clearly, amateur collectors and entomologists. Eater is a bit
of both. Losing half a million mayflies to obtain a good specimen is
nothing to a collector seeking a perfect sample of a rare breed.
Anything we can do to make ourselves appear ordinary lessens its
desire to collect us. Refusing to kill ourselves to furnish copies
for it may well signal stupidity to Eater, and thus make us
uninteresting. Caving in immediately might signal our "commonness,"
since apparently most societies have done so; it has collected many.
Paradoxically, complying would reduce our value to a collector.
We should entertain the notion that our response has been mixed. Some
wish to submit, others to fight. This rather contradictory response
may make us an interesting and valuable item to add to the
collection…
… while it must "eat," it dislikes
being called Eater. No matter how it denies consciously this
connection with the needs of lower life-forms, this explains why
it is fascinated with the unconscious structures in human minds—and
thus desires our whole minds, not just its products, works of art,
etc…
All these were projections of human categories on to the Eater.
None seemed to deal with her suspicion that many societies had
attacked it with weapons as advanced as Earth's. It would have
evolved a way to survive even the most fierce of assaults. Kingsley
had guessed that the most they could expect was to drive it away.
Of even that she was more and more unsure. Still, she read through
the tangle of speculations. She put herself through this because she
was venturing into its territory. Her NASA years had taught a firm
lesson:
do your homework.
But the eerie tang of the thing, that was the most basic lesson,
and the hardest to truly learn.
She fled from these sessions back to the comforts of home.
She barely had time to suffer Harriet's injections when a neighbor
knocked: there was a party, and they would like to have her and
Benjamin come, though of course they knew how busy…
It was delightful. Like most hard-driving professionals, she and
Benjamin had only a distant connection to their town. Their province
was the global world, firmly secured by electronic media and airline
tickets.
But outside their lives, the rhythms of the tropical island
culture went on. Natives called the mainlanders
haole but
welcomed them. The Polynesian blended here with Asian. She liked the
rituals of this O Bon Odori, a Japanese dance festival that let her
dress up in a blue and white cotton ukata, feast on juicy BBQ squid,
gingery pancakes and luscious mango shave ice, fried noodles, and
sweetened bean confections. That evening beloved ghosts were
supposed to return from the spirit world and briefly visit, as they
had been doing for the 1,400-year tradition of the festival. The
ghosts got tiny dishes set out for them: roasted eggplant, squash and
potatoes cooked in sesame oil. At dusk families gathered at
graveyards to burn incense and escort the ghost-souls with flickering
paper lanterns. Dried hempseed burned in bowls to guide them to the
proper homes, where families could talk to the ghosts and be sure of
being heard. At the end of the season, the ghosts got farewell rice
dumplings and hypnotic taiko drums.
No one mentioned the Eater, though some children tried to make out
its blue-white glimmer in the sky. Their neighbors kept a
sympathetic blanket of nonchalance wrapped around the evening, making
small talk.
She and Benjamin walked home together over the bumpy tar roads.
She inhaled the aromatic air and wondered what it would be like to
live as digital abstraction, free of body.
Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow
of death,
I will fear no evil;
for thou art with me;
thy rod
and thy staff, they comfort me.
It took everything she had, but they made love in the close, moist
night air and it gave her something she could not name.
6
He tried to smile with assurance, but his face felt as if it would
crack like hard plaster.
The President was visiting, along with assorted members of the
self-luminous set, U.N. and allies. Show of confidence. All
hands onboard. Face the approaching crisis with a firm hand.
None of this was for the Center staff, of course. The media were
the whole point. But there had to be something for the President and
entourage to actually do, so Arno and Martinez took him on a tour.
Plenty of shots of his craggy visage gazing sternly at the latest
maps of the Eater interior. Nodding, taking it all in with a
concerned yet confident scowl.
After the well-lighted photo ops, a reception. Maximum attention
to Channing, now in a wheelchair to underline the precarious state of
her health. She did need it. Benjamin stayed beside her with the
nurse and she managed to chatter amiably with the President. Only
then did Benjamin have to step forward and shake the presidential
hand. Offered with the legendary charm, it was firm. Benjamin joined
in the photos with Channing, all smiles but not too joyous, as this
was a crisis.
Then the two of them, plus Kingsley and Arno, sat at the
presidential table for a ritual snack. Talk flowed, guided by the
President and the Secretary of the United Nations.
Kingsley glided gracefully through all this, and from him Benjamin
learned an important lesson.
"Sharp, smart people—we're all that," Kingsley
said to him and Channing. "And at a do like this, we meet others
no less sharp, but also blessed with charm and an easy social
facility, a talent that cannot be learned or imitated."
Channing watched the President, whose attention illuminated
the other half of their circular table, and nodded. "The
spotlight of his gaze."
Short sentences were all she could manage now, but these words
brightened Kingsley. "Yes!—precisely. That charisma
conveys to its target a sense that you are indeed special, that the
charmer and the charmed form tightly orbiting worlds."
Benjamin saw the point now. "So you get caught up."
Kingsley seemed unafraid of dissecting a performance going on only
a few feet away. Benjamin saw why: nobody was paying the slightest
attention to them.
Kingsley said, "Just so. Basking in this warm glow, imagine
that you notice a mediocrity at the edge of your special binary,
someone not worth bothering with. But the charmer turns and includes
the mediocrity"—he did a perfect mid-American accent—"
Hi,
gladtaseeya." Channing laughed and Kingsley beamed. "So
then this inferior's eyes brighten as pleasant small talk and
personal tales pass among you, now a party of three. Now, what is
passing through your mind?"
This he addressed to Channing, who came back quickly with, "You
listen with a little smile." A cough. "Hiding your secret."
"Exactly!" Kingsley beamed.
"Because," she went on, "the poor old mediocrity.
Does not
know. That this is just social fluff. That the
primary relationship here. Is between you. And the charming
leader."
"As usual," Kingsley said happily, "quite
observant. 'Poor mediocrity,' you think! But even laughter and good
spirits cannot conceal the dreadful moment when you catch a glance
from the mediocrity—"
"And see that he is thinking. Exactly the same thing. About
you," Channing finished.
Benjamin laughed, caught up in the sheer headlong joy of it. "And
that frozen instant is a glimpse into the social abyss."
Kingsley grinned. "Absolutely. The truly genius social
creatures, they dwell on levels far above us."
Then he saw why the moment was so wonderful. This was the way the
three of them had been back at Cambridge, in the years when the world
had seemed utterly open, brim-full with promise. And together they
had captured it together again, for a glancing moment.
With the media whisked out of sight, the presidential party got
down to business.
Then when the President spoke, it was less to convey information
than to make others react according to his plan. Benjamin watched
through the several hours of discussions, trying to see how the
master communicators achieved this effect.
Flattery, subtle bribery, psychology, even flat-out threat—
all these came into play, some as difficult to catch as a momentary
reflection on an ocean wave. As long as their plan kept working,
means did not matter. Usually arguments couched logically but
carrying a deep emotional appeal worked best with the U.N.
representatives. This was a political culture in which
short-term interests always dominated long-term concerns in the minds
of virtually everyone, but in this crisis they were out of their
depth, facing a hard fact.
The Eater would not negotiate; it was not remotely political,
resembling more the weather than a person. This had barely penetrated
to the political elite, Benjamin saw, as various men reported on
attempts to cajole, wheedle or threaten the Eater, all total
failures. They were unused to the Eater's pattern of simply ignoring
the high and powerful. Instead, it preferred to pursue discussions
with members of the Semiotic Group, on topics cultural and
biological. The President could not find a way to soften this,
finally used his standard approach of following the bald truth with a
side of sentiment.
A specialist enlisted by the White House displayed on a large
screen a "typical passage" from the Eater, in response to
an attempt to negotiate on the issue of uploading people.
I HAVE NEED OF THESE MINDS. ONLY BY CLOSE
RELATION TO THEM CAN I FURTHER STUDY YOU, AND IN MY SCRUTINY YOU
SHALL FIND YOUR ULTIMATE RESIDENCE UPON THE GALACTIC STAGE. YOUR
MINDS' IMPRESSIVE TALENTS AROSE IN PART AS COURTSHIP TOOLS, I CAN SEE
ALREADY. YOU EVOLVED THEM TO ATTRACT AND ENTERTAIN SEXUAL PARTNERS
FOR THE LONG PERIODS NEEDED TO PRODUCE AND REAR YOUR CHILDREN. YOUR
OWN RESEARCH SHOWS THAT THE MOST DESIRED TRAITS BOTH SEXES HAVE IN A
MATE ARE KINDNESS AND INTELLIGENCE. YOUR STANDARD ARGUMENT IS THAT
WOMEN PREFER POWER AND MONEY, OR THE SIGNS OF THE ABILITY TO GET
THOSE. MEN ARE DRAWN TO SMOOTH SKIN, YOUTH, A PROPORTION OF WAIST TO
HIP. ALL TRUE-BUT NOT PRIMARY. KINDNESS AND INTELLIGENCE ARE MORE
ABSTRACT QUALITIES, BOTH INFERRED FROM SPEECH. THESE I CAN
CONTEMPLATE ONLY BY PROLONGED EXPOSURE.
Exasperated, the specialist said, "Now, how can we deal with
a thing that answers clear, direct questions like this?"
"Gingerly, I should think," Kingsley whispered to
Benjamin and Channing. They were sitting to the side, near the
rear of the big new auditorium, behind a phalanx of military and
policy people.
The unwieldy group then broke into subsections, each in a
different room. They finally got to meet with the Action Team—there
seemed to be a new term for every feature of the problem now—devoted
to Channing's mission.
A group Benjamin had not even heard of gave a report on what the
intelligence specialists thought was going on in the Eater's
innermost regions. A Defense Department satellite of advanced design
had made a map, using X-ray emission. From that, NASA had already
sent a Searcher hurtling directly at the Eater's core. Piecing
together the X-ray pictures and the Searcher's views as it flew in,
they produced a processed picture:
"We see here a cutaway view," a prominent black hole
theorist explained. She was a slender, sharp-faced woman with a ready
smile, in her element, playing before the most powerful crowd in the
world. "The outer surface is the last point at which an object
can orbit the hole. The surface is only about ten meters across."
Benjamin asked, "The Searcher tried to orbit it?"
" 'Tried' is the word," the affable woman said. "It
failed. Instead, it flew closer in—the ergosphere."
Benjamin persisted. "It has a bulge?"
"Yes, and we're seeing it here from about twenty-five
degrees above the equator. That's why the inner sphere—the
hole itself—looks a little distorted."
He barely remembered the term, ergosphere, and did not want to
show any ignorance. "The hole is rotating rapidly— that is
our principal finding. That is apparently how it manages the
enormous magnetic arches and funnels outside. The rotation couples
with the accretion disk in a kind of enormous motor."
The discussion picked up then and Benjamin could barely follow.
The bulge of the outer surface arose from the swirl of space that a
black hole's rotation created. Because that swirl was outside the
inner sphere, the hole stored rotational energy in the region between
the two surfaces. Thus, erg from the Latin for energy.
"What happened to the Searcher?" Benjamin asked,
feeling awash in the discussion.
"It was one of the miniaturized models, high velocity, ion
propulsion. Small enough to survive the heating from the accretion
disk. We flew it in at a thirty-degree angle, a steep dive."
A NASA official added proudly, "Miniaturized small enough to
get into the hole's vicinity without being torn apart by tidal
forces, either."
"It flew into the ergosphere," the woman said, "on
automatic program, of course. It sent one last gasp of data,
which gave us this figure. We never heard from it again."
"The hole swallowed it," a man from Caltech said
authoritatively.
"We don't know that," the woman countered.
"The hole would have to grab it," the man
answered testily.
"It's a completely warped space-time," the woman said.
"There are other paths available. The Searcher could escape
through the outer boundary of the ergosphere—if it had enough
energy."
"I calculate that it did not," the Caltech fellow said.
"So do I, but there are intermediate fates."
"Such as?"
"The Searcher could exit the ergosphere along a path that
pops out into another space-time, or another time in our own space."
"Like a time machine?" the man asked incredulously.
"A theoretical possibility, yes," the woman said.
"Point is, it's gone," Channing whispered.
The audience overheard this and looked silently at her. She was
going into this place, Benjamin read in their eyes, and they
half-envied her. She sensed this and said in a croak, "The
physics is great, sure. But this isn't a natural black hole. It's
been built up… by an intelligence."
"We must not think of it as being the kind of structure we
think of as intelligence at all," a noted evolutionary biologist
remarked. "It is not of a species. It is unique, a
construction."
"A self-construction," a voice added, "maybe more
like a self-programming computer. Gotta be a way to think about it
from a cybernetic angle—"
Kingsley's incisive voice broke in. "We fondly imagine that
evolution drives toward higher intelligence. But eagles would think
evolution favored flight, elephants would naturally prefer the
importance of great strength, sharks would feel that swimming was the
ultimate desirable trait, and eminent Victorians would be quite
convinced that evolution preferred Victorians."
Only Channing found this amusing.
7
She had learned from the morning paper that when Halley's Comet
filled the skies in 1910, word spread that the Earth would pass
through the gases of the tail. There was worldwide panic, directives
from the Pope, quite a few suicides.
She quickly calculated over coffee that the entire tail,
compressed to a solid, might have fit into a briefcase. Ignorance
could be fatal.
Benjamin had to go to a seminar by a specialist in "extreme
case fear responses," which someone high up at the U Agency
thought would be helpful in the times ahead. He wasn't inclined to
go, but Channing shooed him out of the house before her
three-car-plus-ambulance escort arrived. Still, she was so fretful on
the drive to the clinic that the driver finally leaned back to where
she lay and said very patiently, "Please don't drive when
you're not driving."
She had to go through the preps for her "reading," as
the diffident specialists put it, which meant another day of tedium.
Still, while the preps took hold, she had herself wheeled into a room
where she could watch the show on a big screen. Just for laughs, she
said, and they dared not contradict her. This was a special site
just for her, plus a few other people who were very ill and had
volunteered to be uploaded. Arno had certainly cleared her way;
the screen for her to view was his latest indulgence.
The speaker was quick, efficient, and despite expectations,
interesting. The best way to confront fear in a group was to make the
group diverse, she said. Assemblies that were all men or all women
fared badly when confronted with danger or merely the unknown. Less
obvious, but supported by research, was a finding that mixing
age groups was good. One exerted more self-control in front of
strangers and dissimilar people.
The bad news was that preexisting groups did not respond well
to fear. Even tests on championship athletic teams showed that they
reacted badly to simple dramas like getting stuck in an elevator.
Luckily, being "high phobic-tolerant" correlated with being
in good physical condition, and most astronomers met at least the
minimum standards there. Living in Hawaii had made them more
outdoorsy than the usual run of the profession, and astronomers as a
whole were more athletic than the norm. But altogether, the Center
could expect some fairly large levels of panic in the days to come.
"How come?" she wondered aloud.
Nobody watching the screen answered, but her "psych escort"
put in helpfully, "They're planning for it to maybe attack
some way."
"Huh? Why?" Being at the supposedly center of events and
yet quite out of it was not fun.
The escort was sweet but slow, it seemed. "The Eater…
it might get angry."
"Anger isn't a category we can be sure it even possesses."
"Well, the governments, they've agreed to not let it have all
those people."
"It wants the complete list?"
"Every one."
"Has it made threats?"
"It doesn't say anything about that."
"Coy bastard, huh?"
"The news, it says the Eater is giving us the silent
treatment."
"Actually, it's gabby. You just have to ask the right
question."
On her palm computer, she punched up the conversation she had from
yesterday, in reply to some demand by the U.N. It was perfectly
indirect:
YOUR DISCOURSE EXPLAINS YOUR PROPENSITY FOR
GOSSIP AS A GROOMING SUBSTITUTE. MY-SELF'S ANALYSIS OF YOUR DRAMAS
SHOWS YOUR FINEST ARTISTS DEVOTING TWO-THIRDS OF YOUR CONVERSATION TO
IT. LABORERS AND LEARNED ALIKE PREFER TO TALK ABOUT PEOPLE, NOT IDEAS
OR ISSUES. WITHOUT GOSSIP, YOUR SPECIES MIGHT NEVER HAVE BOTHERED TO
LEARN HOW TO TALK. PHYSICAL GROOMING IS STILL MORE SATISFYING TO THE
OTHER OF YOUR ORDER, THE PRIMATES. THUS THEY DO NOT SPEAK. CHAT IS
UNLIKE HUNTERS CALLING OUT IN A MASTODON HUNT, OR GATHERERS REPORTING
WHERE THE HERBS ARE, WHICH CLEARLY HAD USES FOR YOU. THIS TALK OF
OTHERS AND FORMING POWER COALITIONS WERE EVEN MORE IMPORTANT. I CAN
SEE THAT TALK IS MORE EFFICIENT THAN PHYSICALLY GROOMING EVERY OTHER
MEMBER OF A TRIBE, WHEN TRIBES BECOME LARGE. TALK IS EASIER THAN
PETTING, FOR YOU CAN DO IT TO SEVERAL AT ONCE, WHILE YOU ARE
PERFORMING OTHER TASKS. THIS SUGGESTS A USEFUL RESEARCH PROJECT MIGHT
AIM TO MEASURE SEROTONIN PRODUCTION DURING GOSSIPING TO VERIFY THIS
VIEW. I COMMEND IT TO YOUR SCIENTISTS.
So it was advancing theories about humans already. Even suggesting
research! Who could have guessed that their first alien contact would
be so abstract?
With more experience of intelligence throughout the galaxy, it
could generalize in ways impossible to visualize. What more could it
tell us about ourselves? She felt a chill then, the awe and allure of
the utterly strange.
Then she was into the treatment, that flat medicinal smell, the
attendants pushing her down the corridors, eyes watching her—the
famous astronaut heroine!—from doorways. Into the cool ceramic
air of the special clinic, which had been set up on a hillside with
the now-routine incredible speed.
Then the teams around her very attentively got down to the grungy
details of how to extract the information in her head. In principle,
the experts had explained, they could do this without knowing in
detail how the brain worked. Instead, they used the principles
of copying software to recognize neurons and then replace all
the functions of each neuron with a computer simulation.
Neurons held her identity, encoded in myriad connections. It was
not enough to know the location and type of neuron, though. They also
had to see how each one responded and sent electrical signals, how it
was affected by its chemical environment—a swamp of
detail. Impossible without the rooms of computers she had glimpsed on
the way in.
All for little ol' me. Pleasant, to be the center of
attention on your deathbed. Research animal plus world-class news
object. They informed her early on, days ago, that she thought
differently when her adrenal glands had been squirting into her
bloodstream.
I've known that all my life. Goes with being
temperamental.
She lay still as a buzzing bank of magnetic readers sat atop her
skull, like a mechanical hairdo. These nests of quantum detectors
registered her thoughts while she watched videos of sunsets, tiger
attacks, pictures of Benjamin and her mother, a steak, flowers,
storms, even porno—they apologized in advance for that, but it
was actually good, the sly devils. Then smells, sounds, touches.
She did arithmetic on demand, listened to music, to railroad trains
and children laughing. Sheet sensors covering the crown of her brain
built a three-dimensional map of each thin layer of her brain cells.
Added to a general map of human neural structure, teams of surgeons
wrote programs to model the myriad idiosyncratic ways she thought.
This working model then got sharpened. The surgeons compared
its output signals to those she emitted when they showed the same
pictures, flashed lights, fed her, played music.
Like getting a dress tailored, she thought,
only this
cost millions of bucks per hour. Flash by neuronal flash, the
computer model came to echo her.
But an echo isn't the song.
"It's not you," Kingsley agreed when he came to visit.
They gave her breaks to keep her neural tone tip-top, and let him in
to recalibrate her sense of being human, she supposed. "Just
a simulation."
"It's all there'll be of me, pretty soon."
He gazed at her soulfully, wordlessly. "If it's any
consolation, I heard from Arno how they're doing this trick in
the dictatorships."
"Pretty rough? Make you watch old black-and-white movies?"
"I think I'd settle for
Citizen Kane happily enough.
But no, they haven't these magnetic sheet recorders. To reach the
deeper layers, the surgeon's easiest path is simply to shave away
your brain."
"So… their brains, to be fully read, must die?"
"One ends up with an excavated skull. Luckily, the brain has
no pain perceptors down there in its spaghetti snarls of nerves."
"Gee, Dr. Science, that's spiffy."
"Not a voyage for the squeamish, no."
"And they don't even want to go, either." She gazed up
into the hard fluorescent glow as if an answer lay there. "Makes
this seem easy."
He held her hand for a while and they did not speak. She slowly
registered that he was crying, and felt bad about that, and then just
let it go. That was getting to be automatic: releasing the
moment, permitting the passing parade to wash over her like the warm
waves of the Pacific. With a sudden pang, she realized that she would
probably never feel that salty caress again, and then she was crying,
too.
Kingsley said quietly, "I've always loved you."
She had dreaded this moment and was tempted to let it drift by.
But no, he deserved better than that.
Before she could bring herself to speak, he added, "I simply
did not know until recently just how much."
After what seemed like a long time, she mustered some self-respect
and made her voice behave. In a faint rasp she said, "I have
always loved you. In my way. But this last year has taught me that
the man I truly felt the real thing for was Benjamin. Always him."
He nodded. A rueful smile played upon his lips. They looked at
each other with an emotion she felt powerfully but could not hope to
tell him about.
A long silence tiptoed by. Gratefully, she drifted.
Kingsley worked the conversation around to ground they could both
stand on. He was good at doing that, she realized; she had not even
noticed the transition. Small talk, reminiscences… Then:
"Obviously," he said, "the material self will be gone.
Your represented self will remain, in silicon."
"Yeah, it says so, right here in the contract."
"Quite right. This is experimental."
"Always happy to be at the cutting edge. When do they do
that?"
"Cut? Not at all, I gather."
"I wonder. After I'm dead, wouldn't they recover more if they
could use invasive surgery?"
"
À la the
dictators?"
"I'm willing to give this the best effort."
"Heroic, but I think unnecessary."
"I just want the best copy, is all." To her mind, this
wasn't remotely valorous. In her pantheon, science had few heroes.
Most good science came from bright minds at play, like Benjamin
and Kingsley. Able to turn an elegant insight, to find beguiling
tricks in arcane matters—pretty, amusing, a frolic. Play, even
intellectual play, was fun, good in its own right.
"You are going to fly into the mouth of the monster. Classic
Beowulf-style hero, by my measure."
He was being charming, hardly able to keep his feelings from
flooding out, but she disagreed profoundly. Her heroes stuck it out
against hard opposition, drove toward daunting goals, accepting pain
and failure and keeping on, anyway. All the way through astronaut
training, those had been her ideals. This making a Xerox of herself
was a last gesture, not bravery. Maybe just foolishness.
"No,
I won't. My copy will." He sat gazing down
at his hands and she wondered how to get him out of his funk. Be
bright, cheery. Men were so grateful for that. "Continuity,
that's really it, right?"
"How so?" Head up, plainly happier to be off on
abstractions.
"That's the essence of it, of the identity problem. We do it
all the time, really. When we sleep, the unconscious remains active,
so we get continuity at a broad level."
"Ah. Your point is that no one wakes up and thinks they are a
new person."
"Yeah, only lately, I feel a thousand years old."
"Patients brain-cooled until their brain waves lapse can
later revive with their sense of self intact." His brow
furrowed, then relaxed. "I see—how will we know it's
truly 'you,' eh?"
"I suppose you could just log on to the computer aboard the
Searcher, my ship, and read me out."
"But I don't know you like that. I know you—love you—
this ordinary old, human way."
"Inside I'm a mess, lemme tell you."
"You look orderly and understandable from a distance."
"And only that way. Close up, inside, I'm ugly."
"All of us live inside, always close up. Other people look
methodical and tidy only because they're at long range."
"That's comforting."
He pressed her hand into his. "I'll know you."
"How?"
"You'll think of something, m'love." He grinned, but
there was no elation behind it. "I know you."
8
A few more days had crept by, and now that they were at the nexus
of it all, he felt only a yawning vacancy.
"This must be the strangest thing anyone has ever done,"
Benjamin said to her. The specialists' army had withdrawn, leaving
them in an enclosed space, almost comforting in its intimacy. They
were surrounded by advanced magnetic reading gear and diagnostics.
She smiled. "Yeah, and out of love, at that."
"To… leave me something?"
"That's part of it, for me. But love is a big, cheesy word,
able to cover a lot of things."
Channing was fully uploaded now. The last few hours had been
pretty painful for her and she had stood up well, sweat popping out
on her brow. He had wiped it away carefully. She had kept waving away
even the light painkillers they had offered. "Don't wanna cloud
the picture," she had kept repeating earlier. As though she were
an artist at work on her last oil painting.
The offhand weirdness of the scene kept throwing him. They had
come to him with a proposal about the use of her brain afterward. He
had listened and gone through confusion to anger to swirling doubt
and then he had made them go away. Their idea was to slice her dead
brain layer by layer, so that scanning machines could read the deep
detail digitally, getting better resolution to sharpen the
simulation.
This had sent a cold horror running through him. They had put it
as nicely as they could, but still it meant slowly planing away
her brain. In the end, her entire cranium would be excavated, leaving
half a skull. He could not bear the picture.
She struggled up out of her fog and managed a wrecked smile. "You
have to die to be resurrected."
"I'll…" The words stuck in his throat.
"You'll see me again." She gave him a blissful look.
"Goodbye, lover."
It was the last thing she said.
After a night of no sleep and a lot of sour drinking with
Kingsley, he met with the specialists again. They showed him the long
black box housing Channing's uploaded mind. "Reduced to a
featureless…" he began, but could not finish the
sentence.
"We'll be processing, compiling, and organizing," a
woman in a smart executive suit said.
"Fine."
"In a few days—"
"Fine. Just shut up."
He understood all the parts of the arguments. Magnetic induction
loops, tiny and superconducting, could map individual neurons.
Laying bare the intricacies of the visual cortex, or evolution's
kludgy tangle in the limbic system, had already unleashed new
definitions of Genus Homo. Still, nobody considered Homo Digital
to be an equal manifestation. Parts were not the whole.
They played a voicebox rendering, a voice repeating, sounding
exactly like her. He saw them looking hopefully at him and he didn't
give a damn about their marvelous trick. Numbly he pulled from his
coat pocket the hourglass she had given him. He set it atop the
box—
her, now—and watched until its sand had run
down.
He wondered what it might mean to upend it, to start the cycle
again. He struggled with the thought.
No.
The decision came as a release.
* * *
It was a slow day for the Neptune Society, so theirs was the sole
party when he went out with a few friends from the Center. The
captain wondered if he wanted the champagne before or after. After,
he said. There were little printed cards set out next to the
champagne with some doggerel titled LET ME GO inside and the data:
ENTERED INTO LIFE OCTOBER 15, 1978, and ENTERED INTO REST, but he
could not read the date through some blurring that had gotten
into his eyes.
He gazed up into a sullen cloud cover, a pearly gray plane halfway
up Mauna Kea. This pathetic fallacy still quite accurately mirrored
his curiously displaced mood. The sea was flat and glassy and he said
little on the way out. They gathered at the bow and the captain gave
him the urn, blue with odd markings. Not his to keep, as if he would
want to. Off came the lid and inside were gritty gray ashes, the
color of the sky. He poured the powdery stream and bits of bone into
dark blue water. Some of it spread on the surface, some blowing away
on a mild wind, but most of it plunged deeply, an inverse plume that
seemed like transposed smoke rising to the depths. He had not
expected that. His intellect, spinning endlessly in its own high
vacuum, told him immediately that it must be the heavier parts
sinking, but that did not explain why a bubble burst in his chest and
his throat closed and the world seemed to whirl away for a long
moment, suspending him over an aching void.
Someone murmured something of farewell and he could not echo it,
getting only partway through some words before his voice became a
whistle through a crack in the world. He had wanted to say simply
goodbye, but it came out why? and he did not know
why at all. Then the captain pressed a bunch of flowers into his hand
and he tossed them after the ashes. The boat slowly circled the
floating flowers and he could not take his eyes off them and that was
all there was.
* * *
The next day on the big screen he watched the black box being
inserted into a Searcher craft.
Some commentator spoke with grave excitement. Arno made a little
speech. It launched and he felt a pang at the brave plume of rocket
exhaust. Cheering. At least nobody pounded him on the back.
What had she said in that last hour? First, a pained I can't
go on like this.
Before he could speak, she had provided her own jibe.
That's what you think.
PART SIX
ULTIMATA
JULY
1
Like bad breath, Kingsley had often noted, ideology was something
noticed only in others.
Even at this supreme crisis, nattering concerns of infinitesimal
weight furrowed the brows of supposedly wise leaders. Here at
power's proud pinnacle, the politician's aversion to risk reared
above all else.
"Dr. Dart," the President said, "how can we be sure
this will work? I have a grave responsibility here, ordering the use
of nuclear warheads."
"I should think, sir, that nothing is certain here."
"But using these weapons so near Earth, I… well…"
The President let his voice trail off into the air-conditioned,
enameled silence, as if to do so allowed someone to come in with a
quick solution to his grave dilemma.
Sorry, not getting off so easily this go. Kingsley smiled
slightly as the occasion seemed to demand. "We hope to short out
some of the flowing currents in the vicinity of the black hole. The
thing's a giant circuit, really—a 'homopolar generator,' in the
physics jargon."
A German general from European Unified Command said sternly,
"These are the very best warheads, Mr. President."
"Ah, I'm sure," the worried politician said, his eyes
moving from side to side as if seeking a way out. The idea of
having all allies present—to spread the responsibility and thus
risk, Kingsley supposed—gummed up matters nicely.
"Surely, the quality of arms is not the issue," Kingsley
said.
The general said smoothly, absolutely right on cue, "We have
every assurance of success."
"The Eater comprises an immensely complex balance of forces,
utilizing gravitational, magnetic, and kinetic energy stores. It
vaguely resembles the region near a pulsar—a rotating,
highly magnetized neutron star, that is."
"It's like a star?" the President asked, as if this
would simplify his problem. He had seen stars, after all.
"The region around it is. The Russian term for a black hole
once was"—a nod at the New Russian Premier— "
'frozen star,' because seen from outside, a collapsing mass appears
to stop imploding at a certain point. It hangs up, its infall seeming
to halt. The star fades from our view like a reddening Cheshire cat,
leaving only its grin—that is, its gravitational attraction."
"No light, just gravity?" the President asked. He was a
bright man, but he had lived in a world in which only what other
people thought mattered. The physical world was just a bare stage.
Techno-goodies and assorted abstract wonders came occasionally in
from stage left, altering the action mostly by adding prizes to the
unending human competition that was really the point of it all.
"In France, the equivalent phrase trou noir has
obscene connotations, so 'frozen star' would be better," a woman
from the State Department added unhelpfully.
The President was a practiced ignorer; while nodding, he did not
take his eyes from Kingsley. "These maps of it, it looks like a
kind of interstellar octopus with magnetic arms."
"Not a bad description," Kingsley allowed.
"I can't see how we can kill an octopus without having to
chop off its legs," the President said.
"Kill the head," Kingsley said. "The legs are
secured by the accretion disk, plus those anchored directly in the
black hole itself."
"I see," the President said. "We try to get at this
little disk it carries around."
"More that the disk carries the hole, sir. The hole is just a
singularity, a gravitational sink, nothing more. The essence of the
Eater lies in the magnetic structures erected using the accretion
disk as a foundation. If we can shake that foundation, we can
damage the great house the Eater has built upon it."
"I understand," the President said in a tone conveying
admirably that he did not.
"More precisely, my point is that we cannot solve the pulsar
problem, even after half a century of trying. On the face of it, a
reliable model of the black hole's inner regions—and their
functions—is impossible."
"Then I don't think I can authorize—"
"But you must!" the Secretary of State broke in. "The
consequences of not following through—"
"These are our weapons and delivery systems,"
the President shot back, showing why he was President.
"But the world alliance agreed—"
"To leave final judgment, moment by moment, to the nation
actually doing the job," the President finished. "I am
keeping my options open."
"Not attacking this thing—"
"May yet prove to be the best course," Kingsley felt
himself forced to say, before this deteriorated further. The
Secretary of State had been rumored to be a highly political
appointment from a wheat state, he remembered hearing. Something
about shoring up support with a domestic ethnic constituency, which
unfortunately appeared to be a major theme of this administration,
rather than competence. "Only its response to our counteroffers
will tell the tale."
"But it doesn't answer," the Secretary of State said
moodily.
"Silences are the most artful phase of diplomacy,"
Kingsley said, and instantly saw that this was the wrong tack. The
Secretary of State's eyes widened a millimeter. Plainly he did not
like being reminded, however indirectly, of his lack of background in
diplomacy. "A strategy you have employed well in the past, as I
recall." There. That might put a Band-Aid on the wound.
The Secretary of State opened his mouth and paused, apparently
to let this buildup set the stage for a devastating reply, but the
President wasn't having any. He smacked an open palm on the mahogany
table between them and said, "I have to be convinced that using
weapons of mass destruction is necessary. I'm authorizing only
readiness. No codes are to be passed down the line, as insurance in
case we lose communications."
This was the essential practical point. No one knew what the Eater
could do to their web of connections. Yet targeting nuclear-tipped
warheads on the beast's interior demanded timing of fractions of a
second, for fast-burn missiles closing at very high speed.
"If I take the Secretary's point, he is quite right, there is
likely to be no time for deliberation."
Actually, "dithering" would better describe the tortured
path whereby they had reached this point. Kingsley had never operated
at this level and had always fondly imagined that matters proceeded
here with a swift clarity that made lower echelons look like the
swamp they so often were, in his experience. It was never pleasant to
discover that one was naive, and in this case it was quietly
horrifying.
The Secretary gave Kingsley a quick nod. Fine; with such people
the striking of instantaneous alliances was automatic, part of the
conversational thrust, encumbering one for no longer than the need
demanded. Certainly not grounds to neglect a later opportunity for
betrayal, either.
The President mulled this over for some seconds. "That's a
powerful argument for striking early, then, before it reaches inside
these belts you mentioned."
"The Van Allen belts?" Kingsley had been called upon to
deliver minilectures with slides the day previous.
"You said it may have trouble moving so fast, once it's
inside the magnet sphere."
The President was a reasonably quick study and Kingsley would not
think for an instant of correcting him on jargon. "Yes, sir, the
Earth's magnetosphere may deform its outer regions. Of course, it may
be able to deal with that. It is experienced."
"Yeah, eight billion years of experience," the President
said with sudden, sour energy.
"Your point is that targeting could be better done before it
is that close?" Kingsley prompted. There were only eight people
in the room and all seemed to suffer from the fatigue he saw
everywhere at this command center outside Washington. Only the
guards seemed fresh.
"Is that true?" the President asked the room.
The Secretary of State had been making permission-to-speak noises
for some time and now answered, "There are grave consequences if
we engage it close to the atmosphere."
"Don't want to let it get that close, do we?" the
President said. "We've got enough chaos to deal with now."
This summoned forth rather relieved murmurs of agreement.
"Got our hands full just dealing with the breakdown in the
cities," a domestic adviser said. More murmurs.
"Any ideas what happens if we fail?" the President asked
the room.
"It has announced no purpose here beyond acquiring those
uploads," the Secretary of State said. This he had gotten
from Kingsley's report of the day before.
The President pressed him, something like dread in the overlarge
eyes. "What's the downside?"
The Secretary said, "It could retaliate, I suppose."
"Of course," the President said irritably. "Point
is, how? Dr. Dart? What's U think?"
"Its range of response is very large. It could inflict
considerable damage."
"How about what the media are hot on? Flying through the
Earth, eating it, all that?"
"To plunge into our surface would strip the hole of its
magnetic fields, essentially killing the intelligence lodged there."
"Good to hear. It'll keep its distance?"
"It is entirely composed of plasma and gas managed by fields.
To collide directly with a solid object would be fatal."
A Science Adviser aide asked, "How come it could eat
asteroids?"
"A grazing collision, using its jet to pre-ionize much of the
asteroid. It collects the debris using its fields."
"So what can it do to us?" the President insisted.
"I suspect we do not wish to find out," Kingsley said.
"Let's hear from DoD," the President said.
The Defense Secretary was a quiet but impressive man, exuding a
sort of iron conviction Kingsley had seldom seen, for a pointed
counterexample, in the English cabinet. But he was obviously starved
for material, for his own technical groups had not envisioned many
scenarios beyond what the Eater had already displayed. These the
President hashed over. Clearly there was danger to all assets in
space, national and private alike.
Kingsley kept quiet, a welcome relief. He was there for
astrophysical advising, bundled off by Arno, yet to his surprise
had been drawn quickly into the very center of decision-making. The
intruder's ability to hand them surprises had shortened the lines of
communication inside the administration. By the time the
specialists could figure out what was going on, their insights were
needed at the very top. No time for the usual opinion-pruning,
spin-alignment, and image-laundering of conventional policy.
In turmoil, everyone—even the immensely powerful—
turned to authority. Kingsley had inherited the robes of the high
scientific priesthood, not by a thorough selection process, but
through the offhand accidents with which history crowded its
great events.
"We have to be ready to launch against it soon," the
Secretary of Defense came in.
The President raised tired eyebrows. "And?"
Just the soft pitch the Secretary had wanted to coax forth,
altogether too obviously. "We're on top of that, sir. Our
people are just about in position."
"This is for the China option?" the President said
vaguely, looking at his leatherbound briefing book. "I'm getting
split opinions on that one. U is split."
A nervous silence. A few heads looked up alertly, others seemed to
duck.
The President blinked. "Oh, sorry, that's another meeting,
isn't it? This damned thing's got a lot of parts." He tried a
sunny smile beamed around the room. "Don't seem to fit right."
The Defense Secretary said hastily, "That's for the later
discussion—"
"And targeting, that's a big technical problem, right?"
the President prompted. Heads nodded. "Got people on that? Good,
then."
The President looked satisfied, a subtle shift apparently
signaling the end of the meeting. The man's time was being sliced
thin, a style of governance by crisis the Americans had developed to
its frazzling fulfillment. He slipped into mechanically affable,
look-confident mode as people left, nodding and smiling broadly as if
on the campaign trail.
Blank-faced aides ushered Kingsley out of the central sanctum.
This was by far the most heady rubbing up against raw power that he
had ever experienced, yet it left him curiously unmoved. No one
got to even the relatively minor level of Astronomer Royal without
some hunger for power, or at least the look-at-me urge that reached
far back into the primate chain of evolution. But the vastly greater
authority of this company around him, which he was sure would have
left him breathless only months ago, seemed to pale compared
with the implications of the bright blue spotlight that now hung in
the sky over Earth.
His working group convened again in one of the innumerable
conference rooms buried in this mountain retreat. If civilization
collapsed, the planners apparently had provided that talking could go
on indefinitely.
He paid close attention to the gaggle of theorists who had
analyzed the magnetic avenues near the black hole. They had cobbled
together ideas from the study of pulsars and quasars and their story
fit together reasonably well. Yet the Eater was not a natural system,
a crucial distinction. He had not been stretching matters when he had
told the President the extent of the uncertainty here.
The working group milled around this central fact and then, given
the press of time, ended with a list of targeting options. Luckily,
Kingsley had begged off chairmanship of this group, and a bulky
French astrophysicist got the job of carrying their conclusions to
figures in the Department of Defense and to their parallel figures
with the U.N.-based coalition. The political nuances now seemed even
more complicated than the physics.
Kingsley got away pretty quickly, dodging the usual pockets of
undersecretaries and such who always wanted one's "angle"
on the thinking of the inner circle. The familiar Washington
circuitry of instant analysis and jockeying for position ran on at
high voltage, blissfully unaware that this was an event unparalleled
in the experience of even this remarkable—and remarkably
lucky—nation.
Some of the policy mannerisms here were identical to those of
London. Always be clever, but never be certain. That held
for a good 90 percent of the time, for example. It was no good in
this crisis, since only firm answers had any chance of being heard
over the din.
Perhaps, he pondered, that explained his anomalous entry into
these elevated circles. He had been willing to make predictions
that came true—and not only about basic physics and astronomy.
These minds around him were used to dealing with social forces that
were, in the large, predictable. But the very concept of the utterly
strange was for them the stuff of horror, not thought. Yet science
taught its practitioners, at an intuitive level, that the universe
was fundamentally of the Other.
Still, he felt a curious claustrophobia in the entire
proceedings. It would be good to escape back to Hawaii.
Regrettably, he had agreed to submit to an interview arranged for
the press pool. Arno had not worked out well in that regard, proving
too brusque for the whipsaw warm-and-reassuring pose useful before
the cameras. As well, Kingsley's attempts to fashion Benjamin
Knowlton into a serviceable media buffer had failed ignominiously.
After losing Channing, the fellow would probably be much worse. It
had hit him hard.
So he found himself facing a battery of the modern breed of
journalist, faces famous in their own right for being at great events
while having no responsibility for them. Their assurance equaled only
their ignorance as they shot questions at him and he tried to
convey some of the scientific issues without looking impossibly
prissy about terminology.
He got through a vague description of what they knew of the hole's
interior regions, and then a savant of the image works asked, "Why
is an Englishman leading the scientific arm of what is mostly a
United States effort?"
Kingsley paused just long enough to give the appearance of
thinking this over. "Because the Americans have pulled in those
they can work with, I suppose."
"There's a resolution before the Security Council to force
control into the Council's hands explicitly—"
"Yes, very bad move."
"—and world opinion is lining up pretty solidly behind
it."
"The only solidity to be gained here is through the alliance
the United States has yet again stitched together. Who could imagine,
say, the Chinese doing remotely likewise?"
"But assembling the wisest heads of all nations at the U.N.
would—"
"Be a madhouse."
"But certainly with everyone's lives at stake—"
"Since the Gulf War of thirty-two years ago, the Americans
have twice more put together a coalition to deal with a rogue state.
This one deals with a rogue entity, but the classic means of
alliance diplomacy are the essential skills."
"As a scientist, how are you qualified—"
This last from a frowzy woman apparently noted for her "incisive"
questions. He put a stop to her by turning his back and walking away,
which from startled looks from the "handlers" assigned
to him was Just Not Done to Famous Media Personalities. Nonetheless,
it got him quickly out of the floodlit room and shortly after into a
helicopter for Dulles.
Everywhere people seemed to have only a dim notion of what was at
stake in this crisis. He avoided conversation with people in nearby
seats from State and Defense. Takeoff was delayed by several people
maneuvering for seats near others. The Marine guard got irked at
this, quite rightly, and threatened to throw a White House aide off
if he would not "get your ass in gear," a delicious
American turn of phrase that no foreigner could ever get exactly
right in intonation.
"Hey, Kingsley," a fellow from the U Agency called,
plunking himself down next to him before Kingsley could think of a
plausible reason why the seat had to be kept open as a grave matter
of national security. "Herb Mansfield. I met you a couple weeks
ago on the Big Island. You heading back?"
'To Hawaii? Yes."
"We'd like you to catch a chopper at Dulles, visit us over by
Langley."
"Sorry, can't. Have to"—What's the
Americanism?— "mind the store."
"We had a few things to go over."
Something ominous in his tone? "I believe there are a
plentitude of you fellows at the Center."
"Not policy stuff."
"Scientific?"
"Personal."
The helicopter roared into the air then, giving him time to judge
this odd approach. He barely knew this man. There was an air of heavy
assurance about the way he wore his gray suit and undistinguished
tie, a massive sense that he was not used to being differed with.
When they had cleared the trees over the nearby hills, Kingsley said,
"I didn't think you cared."
This lightness had no effect upon the government armor. "Oh,
we do. Vital personnel we are taking a big interest in."
How nice. "I am scarcely vital."
"You handled getting your friends into the Center pretty
well."
"I prefer to work with people I know."
"Funny you didn't bring your wife in."
"She is not a scientist."
"Talked to her lately?"
"I haven't spoken to her in months; I don't like to
interrupt her."
This little joke provoked not even a twinge of his upper lip. The
helicopter hammered at the long pause between them. All right,
then, dead earnest it is. "I suppose I might find it
difficult?"
"Some people are hard to reach."
He had to admire the style of this threat, as anyone overhearing
it would think it completely bland chat. "You may have
overestimated the value of that particular card."
"Don't think so."
"We are separated."
No big effect, but the eyes lost a touch of hardness.
Kingsley sat back and allowed himself the luxury of looking
out at greenery zooming by. Generally this sort, from his admittedly
limited experience, took a steely stare as the lingua franca
of such negotiations. Perhaps a show of indifference would work
best. He took his time with the scenery. Then: "I don't believe
you have weighed all factors here."
"I think so, friend."
"Negative inducements seldom work."
A shift of mood in the otherwise uninteresting face. "Maybe
not, for a customer like you. Let me shift the terms."
"Do."
"Your wife could be taken to one of the shelters."
"Which are?"
"The hot ticket. How come you don't know?"
"I have been rather busy."
"A global system, using the old shelters put up to protect
national asset people in case of nuclear war."
"Which this promises to be."
"Right, hadn't thought of it that way. Anyway, we stocked
these up, got them running. Spot for your wife in one of ours, the
best."
"If I…"
"Do your duty."
"I might remind you that I am not required to feel any
patriotic sentiment."
"Yeah, but you're one of us."
"And I have a job you do not seem to properly appreciate. I
work for the world now."
"And for us. The U is making this all happen for you—
and fast."
"I am aware of that. And Mr. Arno knows I shall cooperate."
"Just wanted you to know she can have the spot—"
"So long as I am a good boy."
"Uh huh. Want me to have her picked up?"
A long pause. A small, malicious part of him visualized how irked
she would be, to be incarcerated among such types as these. On the
other hand, she would be safer, and he did have feelings for her. He
loved her, in a way he had been incapable of conveying very well. Not
a night passed, even in these circumstances, when he did not wonder
how she was getting on.
He made himself stop thinking of that. Seconds mattered here,
decisions that could affect everything of importance to him. "Yes,
I believe so."
"Good decision. We'll give her top-flight treatment, believe
me."
"Will there be a flight involved?"
"Huh? Oh, will we bring her here?"
"Versus, say, getting her into the parallel U.K. citadel."
"Well, I don't know, but—" He reached for his
portable, punched two numbers, and was speaking into it before
Kingsley could tell him to not bother.
Kingsley sat thinking rapidly. Obviously some faction in the U
Agency wanted him well in hand. A split in the U.S. government
itself? An all-encompassing emergency could provoke extreme reactions
in nations as well as in people. The President had been edgy and had
referred glancingly to a division in the advice he was getting. By
coming into such advanced policy disputes late, Kingsley became a
pawn readily conscripted with a touch of leverage. The U Agency was
more accustomed to using muscle.
Taking deep breaths, a decision percolated up from within,
tightening his stomach muscles with a tingling anticipation. He
recalled from schoolyard scrapes that the best way of dealing with a
punch was to duck it. Very well.
Only after Herb had rung off did he realize that the reassuring
report Herb was giving them, smiling all the while, would work in
nicely. Herb's superiors would take it that matters were going well.
That would, in turn, give Kingsley more time to act once they were on
the ground.
Herb gave a reassuring nod. "They say sure, we can move her
over here."
"Actually, I'd rather she were in England. The installation
is out toward Wales, I believe, and that is country she has always
appreciated."
Herb frowned. "Afraid it's done, friend."
"Not changeable?"
"I really don't want to go back and keep switching—"
"Very well. I understand."
Though he had not planned matters this way, this tiny sign was
just what he needed to resolve him to a course of action. Now if only
he could bring it off.
"We want to be on your side in this thing, y'know," Herb
said.
As if it had a sense of timing, the helicopter began its yowling
descent. The world had a habit of forcing his hand, of late. "All
right. Done."
They landed in one of the great pools of light that dotted Dulles.
Most of the airport had been closed off for national security reasons
for weeks now. Aircraft of every description, many military,
took off in a continual background yowl.
Their party got out and walked quickly into the terminal. The
usual Dulles passenger transports worked the truncated civilian part
of the field, moving like ponderous, big-windowed apartments on
wheels.
The U Agency type stuck with him as he made his way upstairs.
There was a special check-in counter for people traveling on
government craft. His special flight to Hawaii was to leave in less
than an hour. Herb announced, "Y'know, I might just come along
on that same jet, if there's room."
"Oh?" Herb did not seem to doubt that there would be a
seat for him. This sudden decision was more confirmation of
Kingsley's working hypothesis. The plan he had improvised was
unfolding from his unconscious. There was something tensely delicious
in allowing it to do so in its own good sweet time.
The big executive jet for their group was already in place at the
end of a passenger ramp, guarded by two conspicuously armed Army
men. Such a plane was wasteful, but mandatory in the pecking order.
Protocol officers babbled at him while he watched the crowd, but no
one came forward to join the U Agency fellow. Very good.
Perhaps half an hour before boarding, but there was much to do.
"Unbearable in here, isn't it?" Kingsley began, his heart
thudding at this opening pawn move.
"Yeah, they overheat these places."
"Let's get a breath, shall we?"
Herb thought a second too long, perhaps realizing that there was
no plausible reason to object. "Sure, sure."
They went out a side door and down a corridor, Kingsley furiously
trying to remember times before when he had wandered through this
terminal. After a false lead, he found a door that opened out onto a
broad parapet, the sort of use-less ornament to the building where no
one actually went. Sure enough, there was no one looking at the
waning sunset. Planes buzzed on the field about twenty feet below.
Kingsley put his briefcase down and made a show of sucking in a
lungful of moist air.
"We can go around to the other side, should be able to see
the burning in D.C.," Herb volunteered, his voice mellow in
good-buddy mode.
"That should be a sight. Still out of control?"
"Yup. Got the National Guard in now."
"Pity."
"People just plain going crazy, is what it is."
Idly Kingsley walked along into a more shadowy zone. Herb tagged
after. Kingsley thought again through his chain of logic and could
see no flaw in it. Still… "I presume she can
leave the facility in the U.K. whenever she likes?"
Herb did not pause. "Oh, sure."
Clear enough, then. A trap being set, disguised as a plum.
Herb was a remarkably inept liar.
"See that big one? What sort is it?" He pointed out onto
the field.
As Herb followed the line Kingsley checked again in both
directions along the parapet. No one in view. The parapet's guard
rail was of raised concrete with a thick lip, suitable for leaning
on. This Herb proceeded to do, gazing out at the moving airplanes.
Kingsley had taken a course in judo long ago and had been trying
to remember some of it over the last few minutes. Frustratingly,
the only item he could call up was the instructor's admonition
that the body had to learn the moves, not the nasty old,
unreliable mind.
Fair enough, he thought, stooping slightly to grab the
belt at Herb's back. Now the difficult part. As Herb turned,
Kingsley took a firm hold of the back of the man's suit and shirt
collar. He dropped farther and turned himself, bending his knees to
take Herb's weight. As he pulled the man over onto his back, he heard
a strangled exclamation, "Wha—"
He felt the weight come fully onto his back and a fist slammed
into his left ribs. The pain made him suck in air. Kingsley turned
farther, lifted with the one burst of energy he had. The other fist
pounded at him. "Help—"
This shout Kingsley cut off by straightening up suddenly and
twisting. This heaved Herb over the guard rail. The body went partway
over, then the suit coat caught in the railing somehow. "Help—"
Kingsley found the wadded coat cloth that was exerting just enough
strength to keep Herb's scrabbling hands and feet on the parapet's
lip. He shoved at the body and it was gone. A soft thump came from
below. He leaned over. Herb lay on his side about fifteen feet below.
A trickle of blood had started down his brow and ran onto the tarmac.
There seemed to be no loading crew nearby and no sign that anyone
had seen. On the other hand, Kingsley could not see the ground floor
of the terminal, tucked back below the parapet. Herb did not move.
He trotted back to his briefcase, picked it up, and started
walking in a perfectly ordinary fashion. Airplane roars matched his
hammering heart. He succumbed to the temptation to look over the
parapet again. Still no movement from Herb.
But now a woman in overalls was running toward the body from the
right. She called out something that an airplane takeoff drowned
out. In the bright light, she looked up at Kingsley and he jerked his
head back, probably too late to avoid being identified. Damn.
Stupid, of course, once one was committed, to look back.
He walked quickly back inside and past the gate where his airplane
would soon begin boarding. This part of it he had not fully thought
out, but he knew it was a good idea to get out of the
government-controlled part of the terminal. This proved simple, as
all the security measures were directed to screening out the opposite
flow. He walked through some guards and down an escalator.
At the American Airlines counter, he saw a flight for
Hawaii leaving within the hour. To Oahu, not the Big Island, but
that was a small inconvenience. He did not dally at the counter,
where anyone could see him, and instead found his way to the
Admirals' Club, where he had a lifetime membership.
He had often enjoyed the perks of this club, but never so much as
now. Here he had no difficulty booking onto the flight, so long as he
was willing to go first-class. If sailing on the Titanic,
why not? he thought a bit wildly.
He knew the airlines kept their own bookings of first-class. There
was a fair chance that even the U Agency, should it be searching
soon, would not find access to those files right away. A chance, at
least.
He went straight along to the private telephone rooms they kept
down a deeply carpeted corridor and dialed. He found himself holding
his breath, This would all prove to be a ludicrous, dangerous waste
unless—
"Hello?" A fuzzy voice. "Hope you've got a good
reason to—"
"I do. Listen quickly." He had to rely on her
recognizing his voice. His name might touch off one of those
listening programs governments used to target calls. "You're to
pack a bag, enough for a week, and leave the house immediately."
"What? Why would I—"
"Because you are in danger. Some people are going to try to
round you up. I'd suggest going to a friend's, someone they cannot
easily trace."
"But what's this about? Why would they—"
'To use you as hostage. Once they have you, I'd do what they
want."
"Who is this 'they'?"
"That's the dicey part. I don't know, not precisely."
"Then why should I—"
"There are forces at work here I do not fully understand."
She was fully awake now. "It's pretty damned arrogant—"
"No doubt, but pointless to debate now. Just move. Go to a
hotel to get your bearings if you want."
"Whozzat?" a male voice came from the background.
"Quiet," she said quickly. Then, to let the speaker
know, she added, "Kingsley, I don't follow your orders any
longer."
"I hope that you've kept matters reasonably discreet?"
"What? Oh, what the hell, I don't care if you know. Yes, I've
been quiet about him, if you must—"
"And your newfound friend has a place?"
"Well, of course, he's not a street person—oh, I see."
"Yes. Hole up there for tonight, probably safer than being in
a nearby hotel registry."
"I haven't said that I would—"
"There isn't time to have a pleasant little debate about
this. I just injured a man, perhaps killed him, all to make this
telephone call."
"What?" The newfound friend was saying something in the
background again.
"I can't talk much longer. Be out of the house inside half an
hour."
"But I don't know… I… What's this about—"
"You might actually be safer in a shelter, old girl, but I
can't have them using you against me."
"My God, do you think things are going to get—"
"I don't know how badly we might fare, but others with more
power are covering a lot of different bets. You and I are very minor
figures in all this, but we may share the fate of a church mouse who
sleeps with a restless elephant. Best to be elsewhere."
"I still don't—"
"Go to the boyfriend's. Don't tell me where it is. They might
have had the foresight to tap this phone."
"He's not a 'boyfriend,' he's much more—"
"No time for that. Go. I'd advise a nice trip to someplace in
the country. Then get a secure lodging for the week to come."
"Damn it, I—"
"Got to ring off now. I still love you, you know."
He hung up and let out a long, rattling sigh.
Now a brisk walk to the auto-cab stand. He used his credit card,
got in, and punched for a hotel in D.C. As the car paused, he got
out, secured the door, and watched the humpbacked car dutifully
trundle down the ramp and into the controlled section of the
highway. An easy trace for anyone to follow.
He went around the terminal on the outside. The yellow glow from
D.C. filled the eastern sky. He saw an ambulance pulling away, lights
flashing. It seemed unlikely that Herb had died of the fall.
Kingsley had seen no other way to gain the time and get free of
the U Agency. A moment's reflection had shown that the only safe
haven for him now was back on the Big Island, but interception while
on a government flight was surely certain. And he most certainly did
not want to fall into the hands of the lot at Langley.
Most probably they had people in the terminal by now. He surveyed
the impossibly crowded waiting bays. Far too easy for them to pick
him up while in that crowd, and quite possibly they had thought
of the Admirals' Club by now. The jam of vexed people had an air of
fevered impatience, something beyond the usual expected from
delayed flights.
This was the first time he had seen firsthand how the ordinary
world was dealing with the Eater's approach, the fever of anxiety
that somehow permeated the air of every ordinary moment. Even in
this air-conditioned terminal, he caught the sour smell of something
elemental and unsettled.
He wondered what England was like now. He had to guard against the
mixture of envy and contempt Europeans often felt while in the United
States. Americans had their blemishes, particularly a curious kind of
practical self-righteousness, but at least they did not brim
with the world-weariness Europeans often equated with cultural
maturity. Europe was a comfy land going nowhere now, and the Eater
must strike many of his countrymen as an affront to their assumed
eminence in the world. All humanity was all truly in the same trap
now, stuck at the bottom of a frail atmosphere beneath a being that
cared nothing for human assumptions.
A small band of musicians was performing for the throng. Public
entertainment was so common now he never gave it a thought. In the
leisure-rich 2020s, more and more people were pop musicians,
filmmakers, actors, or "alternative" comedians,
artists all—except that they had no audience. Bands performed
for free at parties, jokesters eagerly launched into their routines
at dinner parties. Thankfully, there were a few artistic areas where
lack of aptitude did inhibit performance; there were few
struggling trapeze artists. But in his experience that did not stop a
contralto from bursting into song in the living room at house
parties, provoking a quick exodus to the far reaches of the
house.
This lot was halfway decent, their Latin rhythms rolling over the
edgy crowds, quite possibly lightening the mood. Faces relaxed near
the swaying music. Some looked for an upturned hat to toss change
into, but there was none; these were gratis performers.
For the third time, he saw a woman in a severe suit watching
him. Stupid to be out here like this, he admonished himself
and took advantage of a passing clump of Chinese tourists to slip
away. She followed him onto a concourse and he used the usual
elevator ploy to go up one, then back down, exiting as the doors to
the next elevator closed upon her startled face.
He spent the remainder of his wait in the men's room, popping out
to get boarding information. This apparently worked, for on his third
excursion, they were ushering first-class onboard. He badly needed
the proffered drink by the time he settled in.
It took him a while to work out why this flight was worse than
usual. He had been on many torturous red-eyes, even one in which a
screeching cat escaped its cage and spent hours in the dim
netherworld of coach-class, eluding pursuers. But this flight
had a restless anger. Abrupt insults exchanged over stowed
carry-ons. Seat kickers behind.
Quarrels over meal selections running out. The attendants were
frayed.
Kingsley adopted his standard maneuver to avoid conversation,
pulling out a sheaf of work and at the first question telling the
chap to his left that he was in insurance. That did not deter the
woman to his right, so he leaned toward the window and said
expectantly, "Think we'll see any UFOs?" For insurance, he
took from his briefcase some working papers and placed atop them
insignia from the Internal Revenue Service that he had
downloaded from their Web site long before. A sure conversation
killer.
Au revoir, États-Unis!
he toasted with an agreeable California claret as they cleared
American air space. Hawaii was a state, of course, but never felt
like the rest of the United States. He made himself concentrate upon
the wine to slow his still thudding heart. Adrenaline zest had gotten
him through the airport, but now he needed to be calm. There was
surely more to come.
He had received by classified e-mail a selection of recent Eater
messages. Scanning them, he wondered at the sort of mind that
slithered from one subject to another, unaware of the impact upon the
swarms of minds that would receive its words.
THERE WERE 1018 SECONDS SINCE WHAT YOU
TERM THE BIG BANG AND WHICH COULD BETTER BE TRANSLATED AS AN
EMERGENCE, NOT AN EXPLOSION. THERE ARE 1088 PARTICLES IN
THE KNOWN UNIVERSE. THESE ARE TINY NUMBERS COMPARED WITH THE WAYS OF
COMBINING INFORMATION, THE TRUE FONT OF INTELLIGENCE. HERE LODGES THE
TRUE RICHNESS OF CREATION. A DECK OF YOUR GAME CARDS CAN BE ASSEMBLED
IN 1068 WAYS. EACH NEW SHUFFLE PROBABLY HAS NEVER BEEN
DEALT BEFORE. REARRANGING THE 0'S AND 1'S ON A MEGABYTE OF MEMORY
COULD YIELD 1035 MILLION DIFFERENT BYTE STRINGS. THE TRUE
CONSTRAINT ON NATURE IS NOT THINGS BUT WAYS OF ARRANGING THEM, AND IN
THIS THERE ARE NO TRUE BOUNDS.
All this, apparently, as cheerleading for people to relish
uploading into the Eater's "library." Or so a naive human
mind could read it.
I MANIFEST MY-SELF THROUGH GRAVITATIONAL ENERGY,
WHICH IS IN THIS UNIVERSE THE LARGEST IN QUANTITY. IT ALSO IS THE
LEAST DISORDERED AND FROM THIS SUPERIOR QUALITY CAN CHANGE EASILY
INTO OTHER FORMS. THUS I BRING IMMINENT ORDER TO YOUR KIND.
He supposed one should expect a being unique and isolated to
become something of an egomaniac. What choice did it have? Every
other intelligence it had encountered vanished into the abyss of
astronomical time, devoured by its own terminal brevity.
YOUR LIFETIME COMPRISES A TRILLION OF YOUR BRAIN
EVENTS. YOU ARE AQUEOUS SUSPENSIONS OF MOLECULES AND SO COMPRISE A
TRANSIENT MEDIUM. CAUGHT IN YOUR SMALL BOX OF TIME, YOU CANNOT ATTAIN
THE HEIGHTS OF SOME FORMS I HAVE WITNESSED.
Apparently the biologists had caught its attention. The Eater was
notorious by now for abruptly swerving among subjects and ignoring
entreaties. This fit the developing model for its own mental
organization: a compilation of many magnetic knots storing separate
agents of mental structure.
Each agent could come forward as a governing principle and shine
the spotlight of consciousness upon itself. In this sense, the Eater
had access to its own unconscious—unlike humans. It could watch
itself thinking, and so felt no need to dress itself in the clothing
of a smoothly operating over-mind, to be one "person."
I HAVE SEEN AND NOW CARRY WITH ME THE MINDS OF
BEINGS WHO STORED THEMSELVES IN THE CLAY ARRAYS OF THEIR WORLD'S MUD.
THESE COULD THINK IN SPANS OF MILLIONTHS OF YOUR SECONDS, WHILE
YOURSELVES CAN ONLY MASTER THOUSANDTHS. I ORBITED FOR MANY OF
YOUR MILLENNIA A CLOUD THE SIZE OF YOUR PLANETARY SYSTEM AND THIS
CREATURE THOUGHT FAR SLOWER THAN YOU. BUT IT WAS MORE VAST THAN ANY I
HAVE FOUND AND HAD THOUGHT FOR LONGER THAN YOUR STAR HAS BURNED.
He wondered how they could deal with this. The fear he had seen in
the President's eyes was global. Would the volunteered uploads
from the dictatorial nations be enough? Or did it have further
amusements in store for itself, at humanity's expense?
Well, only a few days to go until they all found out. The cabin
was dark, the plane on its long night arc over the Pacific. He
looked out a window and with practiced eye could find the blue-white
blotch that was the Eater's decelerating jet. Brighter, nearer,
hanging like a strange eye in the blackness.
He allowed himself to think of Channing a bit. Her upload had
apparently gone reasonably well and now "she" cruised in
orbit. Apparently the specialists were engaged in "linearizing"
her onboard consciousness from afar, an unparalleled technical
feat. Fuel pods were being attached to give her multiple booster
capability. Her whole remaining self was a mere speck perched atop
masses of refrigerated hydrogen.
Then, without noticing the transition, he was awakening as they
banked over Honolulu. Time to get back into the game.
No one intercepted him as he disembarked. The terminal reeked of
festering anxiety. Once aloft he had phoned Arno and asked for an
escort, giving enough detail to convince him that there were factions
at war now within the U Agency. "Something about China,"
Kingsley added.
"Don't repeat that word," Arno said hastily.
"It's a fairly well-known nation." Kingsley could not
resist the jab. Arno should never have allowed Kingsley to go
into a situation inadequately forearmed. Put it down to haste and the
press of events, but still…
Sure enough, three men he recognized from the Center and carrying
the right recognition code met him at the gate. Wordlessly they took
him to a private federal airplane, gray and unmarked. In short order,
or so it seemed to his hazy state of mind, they were landing at the
new field just scraped from the valley near the Center.
He was quite knackered and begged off going straightaway to
the Center. Kingsley rang off and called ahead to his private number.
"Be there soon," he said, not trusting himself to go
any further with the driver and two burly guards, who crisply took
him to his flat.
She answered his knock. He embraced her gratefully. She had
started their relationship wearing ratty housecoats, but had quickly
learned how he liked to be greeted—by an actual woman, not a
housekeeper. Dressed in suitable nineteenth-century undergarments,
red or black if possible.
Sailing on the Titanic, he thought
fuzzily,
why go steerage?
"Thanks, luv," he murmured at her black merry widow,
"but afraid it's no use this time."
"I'll be here when you wake up."
"Can't say how long that will be."
"Pretty bad?" A warm kiss.
"What's the saying? 'Politicians, diapers—both should
be changed regularly, and for the same reason.' Particularly the ones
with guns."
She laughed softly, as if to say it did not matter whether she had
heard this chestnut before. He hugged her. To be in her arms was
quite enough, thank you. They had been drawn to each other as the
crisis deepened. In the face of the abyss, people needed each other.
He wondered if he was falling in love with her. Something in him
hoped so.
"Something to drink?" Amy asked.
"Lately, I sup solely from the cup of knowledge." He
kissed her again, this time urgently, something escaping from
him, letting out the leaden fog of his desperation.
2
Benjamin could not mourn her anymore.
For three days, he had gone on beach walks and sat staring at the
bottom of various bottles, talked with friends, and read over
obsessively her last writings. Nothing helped. In the afternoon of
the third full day, he so dreaded the coming of shadows that he
fled. He finally knew that he had to go to the Center and face the
unknown that loomed there.
A traffic tie-up and even more guards than the last time stopped
him outside the new, high gates a full kilometer from the Center.
Someone spotted him stuck in the jam and ushered him around, down a
side road where he still had to submit to the triple-check of ID,
retinas, and all. Sunset brimmed over the hills and he could pick out
in profile the snouts of tactical-range missiles, installed only days
before.
Just who were they defending against? No one had explained.
There were more U Agency faces in the corridors every day, but they
never spoke, just looked professionally grim.
He peered upward, eastward, and there it was: a hard blue-white
dot spiking down at them. The Eater was decelerating at a
prodigious rate. Its forward jet ejected mass apparently
accumulated in its accretion disk, which X-ray telescopes showed had
thickened to resemble a fat, rotating donut. Now the donut was
dwindling fast, its stored matter fed by glowing streamers into the
braking jet.
Nobody understood how the system could have stocked up so much
mass, enough to shove around the incredibly dense nugget of the black
hole. The magnetic labyrinth around it must have remarkable retention
ability. The hard radiation coming out of the jet got degraded into
visible light, the whole glowing over ten times brighter than the
full moon.
Cults had begun worshipping it by night, he had heard. The wave of
suicides which was sweeping the world focused upon doing
themselves in "view" of the Eater, as if it saw or cared.
He could feel nothing for such people, not even pity. They were just
marks on a chart, statistics floating beyond the gray veil that
shrouded his world.
Inside, he spotted Kingsley looking tired, talking to a U Agency
woman in a conference room. The man had just returned from
Washington and had left several e-mails for Benjamin, asking for a
meeting with Arno. Benjamin ducked away and went to his own office.
There was a lot of paperwork to do. Somehow even the supreme
crisis of human history could not avoid its tedium. He plowed
through, thankfully oblivious, for an hour. Then he got the expected
call, and when he reached Arno's office, there was Kingsley. They
shook hands silently, and after a moment's awkwardness, business
picked up.
"This is just to inform you," Arno said, waving at a
screen that carried specifics about missiles.
Kingsley seemed to comprehend the news at a glance. Benjamin shook
his head to dispel his numbness, but it was not physical. "What
am I looking at here?" he asked finally.
"Missile classes and capability," Arno said.
Even with this, it took him a moment to pick out the crucial
detail. "That's a submarine-based missile," he said
blankly.
"That's the point," Arno said. "We just launched
three from off the coast of China, near a peninsula."
Kingsley said, "The Liaodong Peninsula."
"Why from there?" Benjamin was startled. "And subs
are built for ICBMs, not shots into deep space."
Arno said, "The Department of Defense used a new class of
ICBM, specially fitted with one hard-nosed warhead, rather than the
usual multiple suite."
"The launch point nicely placed just south of the
peninsula," Kingsley said dryly, "halfway between
Beijing to the west and the Korean capital, Pyongyang, to the east.
It is an interesting historical accident that the capitals of our
primary antagonists in Asia are at nearly the same latitude and
only a few hundred kilometers apart."
Then Benjamin saw. "If the Eater can backtrack the launch, it
will believe the Chinese or North Koreans did it."
"And exact a retribution, perhaps," Kingsley said.
"Unless we knock it out, which is the idea," Arno said.
Anger cleared his head remarkably. "This… this is
crazy."
"President didn't think so, and Kingsley was right there
advising him." Arno even held a hand out to Kingsley, as if to
pass the buck.
Benjamin said hotly, "But the risk—"
"It can do a hell of a lot to us we already know about. Plus
plenty we don't know, I'll bet." Arno straightened the seam of
his blue suit, keeping him in good order under fire.
"Fail and it'll be able to punish us big time, too,"
Benjamin shot back.
Kingsley said mildly, "We should remember that it is
entirely alien. The notion of revenge may well not apply to its
thinking."
Arno looked pained. "You always say something like that. Not
that I'm agreeing with Benjamin here, but how can it not want to hit
back?"
"Punishment deters by setting an example, all to lend
credence to threat." Kingsley steepled his fingers. "That,
and not the sweetness of revenge, is its utility—to
us.
Punishment is a social mechanism, well evolved in us because it
keeps tribal discipline. This thing
has no tribe."
"It's done this before, though," Benjamin said, though
his mind was still trying to work its way around what Arno had so
casually implied. He wasn't used to these high altitudes in the
policy mountain range. "Maybe thousands of times, even millions,
it's come into a solar system and demanded what it wanted from
intelligent species."
Kingsley said airily, "And, just as for us, it regards its
history as philosophy teaching by examples?"
"So it's learned how to threaten and hurt?" Arno looked
skeptical.
"It sure knows how to whipsaw us, doesn't it?" Benjamin
asserted. "Look at how its demand for uploaded people has split
us already. A lot of people are saying, 'Why not give up a few
hundred it specifically asked for? Then make up the rest from the
nations that are only too happy to discard their "undesirables"
in a good cause.' "
Arno said, "The U.N. has taken a stated position against
making any individual undergo—"
"So far," Kingsley said distantly. "It could
undoubtedly kill millions if it wanted, and the moment it starts,
there will be plenty of voices calling for us to cave in."
Benjamin said, "And we're shooting at it already? Why not
wait?"
"If punishment is to be exacted," Kingsley said, "I
surmise that the coalition of powers rather wishes it to be
bestowed upon their strategic rivals."
Arno nodded. "The launch point's far enough away from our
nearest strategic holding, the Siberian Republic."
"A team at Caltech argues," Kingsley said, "that
the Eater cannot resolve the launch point better than about a hundred
kilometers. Similarly its anticipated response. So its retribution
may well include the capital of an enemy."
"I had no idea we were so far in…" Benjamin
faltered. He was not cut out for this sort of thing.
"The President wants to kill it now," Arno said.
Kingsley said, "Plus getting what I believe is termed a
'twofer.' Devastation for China or Korea or both if the attempt
fails."
Benjamin jabbed a finger at the launch parameters. "The
Chinese have good observing satellites. They'll have seen these lift
off already."
Arno smiled without humor. "We have
a few tricks to hide our plumes. And what can the Chinese do, anyway?
The birds are gone."
"This is monstrous," Benjamin said, still angry.
"There is a monster in our skies," Arno replied simply.
The missiles took eight hours to reach the Eater. This was a
remarkable achievement, as the launch vehicles had to attain a
final speed in the range of twenty kilometers per second.
Benjamin had no idea that strategic warfare had advanced to such
potentials. The missiles converged upon the Eater's outer regions at
about half a million kilometers above the Earth's atmosphere.
The rendezvous was well beyond the Earth's dipolar magnetic
belts, which could retain the plasma the warheads would generate.
This was the crucial requirement. Releasing high-energy particles
into the regions near the many thousands of communications satellites
would destroy them by charging them up until the potentials shorted
out components.
This was what the missiles tried to do. They flew into the black
hole's magnetosphere and detonated in a pattern calculated to
send currents fleeing along the field lines. This was to occur
slightly after dawn in Hawaii. The Eater hung low on the horizon. The
Center was packed, silent crowds before every screen.
Benjamin went outside with Kingsley. They were of the last
generation which felt that events were more real if seen in person,
rather than watched over authenticity-inducing TV screens.
"No trouble spotting the bastard," Kingsley said, facing
into the warm offshore breeze. Solid and moist, the tropical lushness
lay beneath the fierce glare of a blue-white dot.
"How good does the targeting have to be?" Benjamin asked
to focus his attention. He was still distracted and foggy and
wondered if this internal weather would be permanent.
"Not terribly, the magnetosphere theorists say. The vital
region is about a hundred kilometers across and they are closing at
speeds that allow the warhead triggers to go off within a
microsecond's accuracy."
"So we can hit it within a few meters' accuracy? Wow."
"These weapons chaps are quite able. Impressive.
Unfortunately, our understanding of the underlying magnetic
geometry is muddy. I am not optimistic."
"Want to lay odds?" Benjamin chided him.
Kingsley had spilled most of the insider stories from his trip,
including the incredible bit about the U Agency guy at Dulles.
Benjamin still had trouble believing that things had gotten so
extreme. But then, he had told himself, they had spent months holed
up here, while the world outside went through a conceptual beating.
So far this entire thing had been easier for scientists to take
because they were used to rubbing against the irreducible
reality of a universe that was in a sense even worse than the
hostility of the Eater. The TwenCen had cemented a solid belief that
the universe was indifferent. For many ordinary people, that
view was impossible to accept. Not that the eerie interest of the
Eater was much solace.
"On success? Small, I should think."
"Let's be quantitative."
Kingsley smiled. "All right, what odds do you give me?"
"Three to one for a fizzle."
"I'm not quite that large a fool."
"You really don't think we can short it out?"
"Quite unlikely."
"But you helped target them."
"Precisely. I am not married to models, particularly those
devised by theorists like ourselves."
"Okay, ten to one."
"That I can accept. Stakes?"
"I'll put up a thousand bucks."
"So if the Eater dies, your bank account does, too."
"Don't give a damn. I'm betting on American warheads."
"Good point. A general treated me to an hour's lesson on how
hardened and compact they are. 'A megaton inside a suitcase,' the
fellow boasted."
"Damn right," Benjamin said and wondered why he felt
called upon to swagger around like this.
"I shall cheerfully pay up."
They waited in silence in the soft, salty wind. The ocean lay like
a smooth blanket and the world held its breath.
The three flashes came as one, a hard white blink and then a
fast-fading yellow. A cheer came faintly up the hillside, ragged and
angry, from a thousand voices inside the buildings.
"I'd pray if I believed any of that," Benjamin said.
"As would I."
"It'll be a while before we know—"
"No, we've failed."
"What?"
"The color of the jet emission has not even altered. Its
ejection is operating normally."
"Well, that could—"
"To succeed, we had to disrupt its control mechanisms. Moving
mass into those magnetic funnels is a colossal endeavor. We
haven't a clue how it pulls off the trick. If it can still do that,
it has survived."
Benjamin had known it, too, but something made him argue with
Kingsley. "Yeah. Yeah."
"Where is she?"
"In an orbit timed to put her on the other side of the Earth
right now."
"Good show."
"You think she'll…"
"Have to be used?" Kingsley gave him a long,
sympathetic gaze. "Inevitably."
"Damn, damn, I…"
Kingsley put a hand on his shoulder. "That is, above all,
what she wished."
3
Kingsley quickly realized the next morning that to the
bureaucratic mind, the most pressing matter would, of course, be the
assigning of blame.
This fell to an assortment of U Agency types. These in the general
Executive Committee meeting used "It is believed" rather
than "I think," theorists who said "It has long been
known," when they meant "I can't remember who did this,"
or stated portentously "It is not unreasonable to assume"
instead of "Would you believe?" Those defending their
ideas—the imported target specialists, DoD experts and the
like, retreated into "It might be argued that," which was a
dead-on clue that it actually meant "I have such a good answer
to that objection that I shall now raise it myself…"
These were the same sort whose speech included "progressing
an action plan" and "calendarizing a project." Only
painfully did it penetrate that the calendar here was set entirely
by a being nobody understood.
Part of the problem in assigning responsibility was the swelling
numbers of Center consultants, U Agency staff, assorted
specialists, and the like. More moved in as the possibility of
communications failure grew. The Eater might chop the human digital
networks with a single swipe.
In the end, there was plenty of blame to go around.
All Earth's telescopes and diagnostics, concentrated upon the
comparatively tiny region of a few hundred kilometers around the
rapidly decelerating Eater's core, saw much that no one comprehended.
The huge energies of the three warheads had sent great plumes of
high temperature plasma into the magnetic geometry, all right. But
somehow it flowed along the field lines and then into the accretion
disk. More fuel for the Eater of All Things.
"The Eater ate them," Amy Major observed laconically.
"And like us all, eating makes you bigger."
It had swelled, become more luminous. In the next few hours, the
Eater crossed the remaining half a million kilometers to Earth,
bearing in on a spiral orbit.
Kingsley watched the U Agency break down into factions that fed
upon each other. Outside the Center battalions of newsfolk demanded
answers. Washington already knew that, fundamentally, there were
none. The Eater said nothing about the attack, until two hours later:
MY-SELVES NOTE THAT YOUR INTERCOMMUNICATIONS
REFER TO ME AS A PROCESSOR OF FOOD. THIS IS NOT A SERVICEABLE
DISTINCTION. INGESTION IS SHARED BY NEARLY ALL LIFE-FORMS. I WISH YOU
TO REFER TO ME BY A TERM MORE NEARLY DESCRIBING MY ESSENTIAL BEING IN
YOUR MEASURE. ULTIMATA
"Looks like a signature," Arno commented to the
Semiotics Group.
"But what's it mean?" a voice called, and others chimed
in:
"The ultimate?"
"Should be singular."
"It says 'my-selves,' though."
"So it's what? An anthology intelligence?"
"Like Father, Son, and Holy Ghost?"
"Don't be humorous about that!"
"About life and death? Laughing is best."
"Ultimate as in final? Fatal?"
"Maybe it's the plural of ultimatum."
This last from a University of Oklahoma professor sent a chill
through the room.
Later, secluded in his office, Arno asked the old working group of
Martinez, Amy, Benjamin, and Kingsley if they thought these were
reasonable readings. Amy said, "It knows dozens of languages by
now. Choosing a name like that—well, it proves it's learned how
to pun."
"To underline that it wishes its demand for specific persons
obeyed," Kingsley said.
Amy said, "There's a Mesh story that says they're reading the
sections of Einstein's brain that were in formaldehyde."
"Lots of luck deciphering that," Benjamin said.
Amy waved the Einstein matter away as a stunt, but then said
earnestly, "There are thousands of specialists working on the
whole uploading problem. They're learning every day. If we have to
give it all those people, the technology will be ready."
Arno asked her, "How many volunteers?"
"Real ones? A few dozen."
Arno looked startled. "But the Mesh says there are already
over ten thousand."
"That's counting captive 'volunteers' from dictators."
"How about reading in the brains of those just dead?"
Arno pressed. "There are eight billion people on Earth. Dying at
a rate of better than a hundred thousand every
day—"
"Everybody's resisting that," Amy said briskly. "Most
aren't anywhere near a facility that has the equipment. And anyway,
the magnetic sensing process takes several days, minimum. Dying
patients aren't up to it, and their readings get screwed up, too."
"The Eater doesn't know that," Arno said.
Kingsley said, "Not so. It samples all our radio and TV. It
can eavesdrop on a great welter of talk."
Amy seemed more energetic than the men here, and Kingsley marveled
again at how she had become steadily stronger as this crisis
developed. That had first drawn him to her, the sheer sense of
untapped energy. She had an appetite for detail, for stitching
together the innumerable Eater messages, then shopping them out
to the working groups—all the while remaining a warm,
insightful woman, not an office automaton, as did so many of both
sexes in these fear-fraught days.
"I… see." Arno's former spotless attire had
eroded. His suit was unpressed, tie askew, shoes unpolished—all
mirroring his wrecked face, which was not used to receiving a
serving of unremitting bad news. No sleep and pressure from above had
not been kind. "Well, at least we've solved the question of who
was after Kingsley."
This made Kingsley brighten. "How is old buddy Herb?"
"Conscious, finally. He'll recover. He was from the
China-option faction, I found out."
'Trying to silence opponents?" Kingsley guessed.
"They wanted you in hand to control reactions and help with
follow-up targeting," Arno said.
This startled them all. "They planned on failing?" Amy
asked.
"Any good general has a retreat in mind," Arno said.
"They wanted to hit it several times, overload it."
Kingsley guessed again, "But didn't say so to the
President."
"Seems so," Arno said. "He overruled that, of
course. If they'd had you to head up the advocates, maybe they'd have
won, be slugging it out with the Eater right now."
Benjamin said angrily, "Inside our satellite belt? That would
skragg all our communications."
"Yep," Arno said blandly. "I'm getting so nothing
surprises me, even from Washington."
"The pronuke faction is vanquished, then?" Kingsley
asked.
"Not at all." Arno grinned cynically. "They just
sit in the back of the room now."
"Ah, politics," Amy said.
Arno's screen beeped and a priority message appeared, more from
the Eater:
IT IS INCONSISTENT WITH THE NATURE OF THE
UNIVERSE FOR A SEVERELY LIMITED, NATURALLY EMERGED BEING SUCH AS A
HUMAN TO BE FULLY ACQUAINTED WITH THE DIVINE, OR WITH CREATED BEINGS
OF HIGHER ORDERS.
"Cryptic son of a bitch, isn't it?" Arno prodded them.
"Sounds ominous," Benjamin said.
"Think so? It hasn't even taken notice of what we did."
Arno's eyes darkened with worry.
"All this time," Benjamin asked, "it's been
carrying on dozens of conversations with specialists, as though
nothing happened?"
"Right." Arno thumbed a control. "Here's one that
got booted to me. Goes to motives, maybe."
YOU ARE A BEAUTIFUL BRIEF MUSIC, YOU THIRD ORDER
CHIMPANZEES.
"So it does know how to toss off a compliment," Amy said
sardonically.
"At least that's positive," Arno said a touch
defensively.
"I think a bit of physics may be a better guide here than
amateur psychoanalysis of an alien mind," Kingsley said.
"You mean its refueling problem," Amy said.
"Quite. It has shed so much energy to slow its prodigious
velocity, to get into orbit just above us. Why we do not know, beyond
its demands. Still, if it is ever to leave, it must gain mass."
"From where?" Arno asked. "The President wants a
list of possibilities from us."
"And options for further action?" Kingsley asked dryly.
"Yes—and right away."
"That'll be due to the prodding of the Science Adviser."
Arno nodded. "It'll be in a nearly circular orbit soon, the
trajectory guys project. What will it do then? It can't actually
run right into the planet, you all say—"
"Its capabilities are beyond our horizons," Benjamin
said.
"The easiest mass to harvest," Amy put in, "is our
upper atmosphere. Nice and diffuse, ionized on contact."
This startled Arno. "It would do that? So close to us—"
"It apparently believes itself of a vastly different and
superior order, in the biological sense," Kingsley observed
distantly. "And probably of a different moral order, as
well."
The next few hours proved this to be so.
The Eater began to skate across the top of the atmosphere,
skimming over two hundred kilometers high.
Its braking had lit the sky with a many-colored glow rivaling
the sun. Vast clouds fumed where its deceleration jet struck the air.
It had knifed through the thin upper air in a virulent red
firework—aerobraking on a scale vastly beyond the puny
spacecraft that humanity had sent into the atmospheres of Mars
and Jupiter.
It was like a cannonball tens of miles across, Kingsley thought as
he watched the seething display on the big screens. Devouring the air
in its wake and using this grist to feed its braking jet. Tunneling
through the sky.
In its wake the air closed again. This sent monstrous bass
thunderclaps rolling down across whole continents.
The entire Center population emptied onto the surrounding
hills to see the thing rise over the western Pacific. The security
officers tried but could hardly contain them, over a thousand strong.
In the slanting afternoon light, it was easily visible, a
radiance that paled the sunlight.
It was already supping of the rarefied gas at that altitude,
steadily lowering further, circling the planet in under three hours
now.
It seemed to Kingsley like a great spiderweb of innumerable
strands. Its looping, dipolar pattern was a brittle blue, laced with
flickering orange and yellow spikes as electrodynamic forces
worked through it. A snarl of angry purple marked where the leading
jet somehow sucked ionized air into the knotted muzzle of tight field
lines.
"Bet it's hungry," Amy said.
"Ah, but for what?" Kingsley answered. It came off as
more brittle Brit wit, but he meant it earnestly. It had not come
here to sample the air, perhaps not even to sample humanity.
He put an arm around her and she nuzzled him, body trembling. He
was surprised to feel in her a quaking fear, expressed entirely
in body language. So much for the sharp facade.
He, on the other hand, was far better at the stiff-upper-lip act,
in fact had done something like that fa
çade—he
now felt, suddenly—all through his life. Pretending to be
meaner than he in fact was, for starters. He was thinking about this,
intently, when he saw Benjamin standing nearby and regarding
them with genuine surprise.
Well, they hadn't been secretive about it, just private. And what
was a man to do at such a time, in any case?
Benjamin came over and stood awkwardly, obviously not wanting to
broach the subject of Amy and yet not wanting to let it go. Kingsley
felt a burst of affection for this man, who had endured so much these
last few months. But he was no good at expressing such emotions,
either. They stood next to each other in the strange, sudden silence
that had descended upon the hills all around.
The Eater grew in scale as it passed overhead, unfolding more
luminous blue field lines.
These peeled off from the web, lit—or so a Center
astrophysicist nearby speculated—by excited oxygen lines
as already ionized atoms were caught and compressed by field
tensions. It behaved precisely like a beast unfurling great magnetic
wings.
At its edge began a medley of glows—yellow, ivory, a satiny
green. An atmospheric chemist nearby estimated that this came from
its processing of nitrogen and oxygen, the air's two principal gases,
in different molecular states. The fretting of light gave the crowd a
better view of the size of the thing and gasps came from the crowds.
It revolved slowly, as though basking in this bath.
"Thin gruel," Kingsley said.
Only then did he realize the sensation of heady lightness that had
been building in him for several moments. An airy lifting.
A creaking came from trees nearby. The crowd stirred like wheat
blown by a wind. A shuddering started to come up through his feet. He
felt uneasy, then comprehended—
"It's tide. The Eater's mass is raising a tide on the surface
of the Earth."
Amy gasped. The sense of lifting strengthened as the Eater neared
the peak of the sky, drawing them toward it.
"It's the mass of a moon, orbiting just a few hundred
kilometers away," Amy said wonderingly.
The crowd sighed. There was no other word for it. A collective
easing as gravity ebbed for a moment. Kingsley felt a release from
the burden of weight, stirring his blood at a fundamental level. How
like a god…
Then they all simply stood and
felt.
Awe, Kingsley recalled, was a mingling of fear and reverence.
Probably few watching from the moist, warm slopes believed in God,
but the press of foreboding wonder upon these people was palpable.
The most unexpected aspect of the moment was the thing's monstrous
beauty. It rotated again, this time around a different axis. A spew
of fire-red brilliance came suddenly from the very center of it,
where lurked the accretion disk. The fine field lines of the new jet
worked with amber light, extending itself out of the mesh of bruised
brilliance. The slow rotation began bringing the jet to point toward
the planet's surface.
The first atoms from Earth's air have sputtered down onto the
disk, Kingsley guessed.
Can the jet be preparing to raise
the orbit already? The disk was a mere bright scarlet dot.
Hopeless to glimpse the black dot that was the cause of it all,
but he tried anyway and failed.
" 'Gruel'?" Benjamin said in a croak. "It can
convert maybe ten percent of the mass-energy of what it grabs. Mc
2
is a big number, even from thin air, if it's getting spent in your
own neighborhood."
Kingsley hoped that this remark would not be predictive, but he
was proved wrong on this same orbit.
The Eater's jet rotated further as the Eater arced across the
Pacific and the western United States. Its orbit was tilted with
respect to the equatorial plane by about forty degrees, so that it
rose to high latitudes as it crossed the twilight line.
No one had foreseen what came next.
The jet brimmed with pulsing ruby light at its core. Then a spike
of hard blue light shot from it. Satellite spectral analysis showed
this to be high-energy plasma, mostly ionized nitrogen.
This fresh jet struck the upper layers of the atmosphere with a
splash of fiery virulence, stripping atoms, heating them, depositing
a fraction of the converted mc
2 energy harvested from
the tenuous reaches above.
Such energy is restless, always moving. The illuminated spot
expanded and reradiated in the infrared spectrum. This propagated
downward. Within a minute, a tongue of heat radiation licked at
the surface. Where it struck, scorching flames rose.
The jet first forked down above the Midwest. Within minutes,
it grew a hundredfold in power. The Eater's central engine was
the union of gravity, the fruit of its compacted mass. This coupled
with exquisite dexterity to utterly weightless magnetic conduits and
accelerators. Watching it function was a rebuke to humanity's pride.
This was engineering of a kind and scale to which not even the mad
had aspired.
Within moments, the torch was brighter than an early morning sun.
It hung in the night air like a moving, radiant lance.
By Ohio the infrared heating had become fierce. It wandered
as the Eater rotated, bringing the focus above West Virginia.
"It's writing," Amy whispered. "With a plasma pen."
Kingsley blinked. "On the forests."
"In a line miles wide."
The jet played with skill, tracing out a flowing script. Clearly
in the loops and jots there was meaning, but— "No language
we know," an expert said nearby. "Something from its past?"
"Cosmic graffiti," Amy said.
Benjamin murmured, "Not everything it does is an attempt
at communication. Maybe it's just writing its name."
A long silence fell over the crowd in the Center. They watched
with a cold, gathering dread.
Only when it had left the rugged mountains did the brutal heat
begin to rise yet again. The entire Eater surged in brilliance,
a cobweb prickly with ominous radiance. Millions watched it swell and
blossom, its central, shining shaft now unbearably bright to the eye.
Crowds turned from it in terror, but by then its target had become
clear to the defensive forces that watched from myriad
artificial eyes in orbit and on the ground.
As the resplendent tongue plunged still farther down, into the
moist clouds that shrouded the District of Columbia, steam burst
where it licked.
The cloud cover evaporated in seconds. Then the hammer blow of
infrared struck the river and instantly vapor began to rise there.
Tar bubbled on the roofs of tenements. Trees steamed, then erupted
into flame. Within moments, the entire District smoked, then roared
out an answer in flame.
People standing in the streets and parks to watch felt their hair
crisp and crackle as they ran for cover. Cloth smoked. Fabrics
melted. The air hummed. Their homes followed suit, shake roofs
flaming into pyres within seconds.
The Eater pulsed, keeping its jet turned artfully toward the
District even as it passed toward the horizon and out over Chesapeake
Bay and the Atlantic. The jet ebbed. Orange lightning traced along
its retreating shaft. Within a few more minutes, it was a mere
kindled spire attached to the broadening web of spiderweb
brilliance that dominated the black sky.
A helicopter got a shot of the Eater setting on the horizon like a
luminous insect scuttling after fresh prey.
Fire alarms wailed in a chorus of thousands below.
Behind it, the thing left a simmering record of ruin.
"It makes its point well," Kingsley said a while later,
when the shock had begun to wear off. The old Gang of Four, minus
Channing, found itself in a seminar room, like the meetings they had
held what seemed a thousand years before. "It was not fooled for
a moment by the launches from China."
"But
how?" Arno demanded. "The
President—thank God, he was underground in the
Catskills—demands to know."
"I imagine it is quite versed in our politics by this time.
It has been freely dipping into our torrent of news for at least
months now—and probably much longer."
"What can we
do?" Benjamin asked.
"I fear even the generals are stymied. I certainly am."
Kingsley felt he should be with Amy now, but he could not very well
leave immediately. Her parents lived in Silver Spring, a suburb of
the devastated area, and she had broken down as they viewed the
aftermath. City-wide fires still raged.
"Give it what it wants," Benjamin said.
"We can't," Arno said. "To force people, kill
them—that violates every moral code."
Kingsley said, "I very much doubt that our notions of
morality figure largely in this thing's worldview."
"We have to take a stand," Arno said, but without much
conviction.
"We are all making the same calculations from our own moral
calculus, I suspect," Kingsley said, "and I do not believe
we much like the outcome."
"Let it
have them!" Benjamin said wildly.
Arno looked at Benjamin, then at Kingsley, who gave him no sign of
help. Benjamin gulped, took a breath, then said in a ragged voice,
"Look, the thing's probably killed a hundred thousand already.
What goddamned difference does it make if… if…"
"I suggest we begin sending it what we have," Kingsley
said coolly.
"Why?" Arno asked anxiously. 'That'll take maybe a few
days and then it will want more."
"Right. But we will gain time."
'To do what? That's what the President, what the U. goddamned
N. wants to know."
"Kill it, if you want."
"How?" Arno demanded.
"I do not know."
Arno's screen beeped and a fresh message appeared:
HE MAKETH ME TO LIE DOWN IN GREEN PASTURES;
HE
LEADEST ME BESIDE THE STILL WATERS.
A long silence.
"I rather admire its choice of quotations." Kingsley
spoke to cover his own sensation of a rigid chill that swept up from
his belly. "It may have a sense of something we could call
irony."
Amy said, "More like Zeus than Jehovah."
"Gentlemen," Arno said in a wobbly voice, "we have
to tell them something. You saw the crowd outside this office. Good
scientists, technical people, sure. That's what they are. But they
couldn't come up with anything in their present state of mind."
"Fear paralyzes," Kingsley observed to gain time.
"Anywhere it wants, it can do that-—any time it likes,"
Arno went on.
Kingsley realized that Benjamin had begun to weep, quite quietly.
"I advise preoccupying it with fresh input. Give it what we
have."
"Then what?"
"Understand it further, certainly. Then kill it, as I said."
"We have nukes, plenty of them—"
"Pointless."
"Probably so. But it's what we've got."
"Not entirely."
They waited for him to complete his thought, and for a moment,
something caught in his throat and he could not go on.
Kingsley thought swiftly yet carefully about the properties
of magnetic jets. For Benjamin and himself, long ago, the subject had
been a suitable battleground for polite academic dispute, arcane
calculations, airy and fun. Now he contemplated with cold fear the
same images, now augmented with horror. A black hole spinning in
its high vault of utter darkness, rotation warping space around it.
That distortion, in turn, twisted the assembly of minds that
thronged outside the hole, intelligences caught in a magnetic prison
older than the sun. The entire grotesque assembly was now
impregnable, had proved immune to the defenses of the thousands of
civilizations it had consumed like a majestic, marauding appetite—
"We have Channing."
PART SEVEN
NO BODY IN A BOX
1
She popped—
—flowed—
—expanded—
—out
into the flexing space before her.
Plunging. Riding translucent highways along parabolic lines, she
felt unfamiliar muscles work with red heat down her spine, up her
legs, skating across a velvet skin she could not see.
She seemed to fill the fat balloon of soft blackness around her.
Yet in an eye flick she could be anywhere in that geometry, one
of myriad tiny glowing flecks.
Points of view. Searchers. All coasting in a beehive swarm above
the great slow-spinning sphere of Earth, itself a mottled
infrared mosaic.
So she was a central point in a rotating coordinate frame. And
simultaneously the skeletal ivory frame itself. Diffuse, like a fog.
Yet if she chose to be, she could anchor herself at a joint.
Cartesian questions, she thought with icy shock. Baby,
I got dent mind-body duality blues. To be a box and know it, yet
wonder what it means.
If she thought about herself, a whole interior world
welled up. Teeth sang in their sockets. The calcium rods that framed
her chest were chromed ribs, slick and sliding in swift metallic
grace, Ah, so clean! Purpling storms raced down squeezed
veins, up shuddering ligaments. Her toes rattled, strumming, talking
to the ground she could never again tread. Her ankles were dancing on
their own, her bald head thrown back, neck stretched into spaghetti
by a halo of polarized light. Now her spine turned parabolic and
crackling as she banked on jets that were her feet, running
in sheer weightless abandon. Hurricane hallways yawned in her.
What is this thing I am?—and from her a lockjawed
agony-song screeched. It reverberated in hip sockets polished by
blue-green, hungry worms. They swarmed over bone lattices, eating in
rhapsodic hunger.
Pain? Plenty of it.
So stop. Click. Just like that—
The torture fingers left her, blew away in the escaping fragile
seconds, leaving her cool and smooth and sure. To be a box.
Down she went, across and through—all equivalent in this
space of freedom-as-thing. She saw before her, around her, in full
three dimensions. The Searcher spacecraft, a silvery swarm
zooming in toward the graceful arching luminesce of the Eater.
A blink—and the Searchers became her many eyes.
Her point of view shot through the realm of the magnetic strands,
high above the disk of hot matter in the black hole's equatorial
plane. Beyond rolled the gravid Earth in regal, moist splendor.
Around her magnetic palaces made a luminous dominion, a
steel-wire spider at the gnawing center of a gigantic web. She
swiveled and found the core—geysers and light storms arcing
from the utterly black center of it all.
A rattle of human-speak came to her like pebbles on a tin roof.
Careful, vector to 0.347 x 1.274.
Yessah, boss. Here there be tygers, galleries of magnetic forces
to traverse.
Skating. She eased delicately past white-hot waterfalls,
green-rich tornadoes of turbulence. Tock!—a
stone-storm of crass dusty plasma clattered against her carbon
carapace. Raw food the Eater had stored. Or a weapon; one could not
be sure.
Did it know they were here? Of course, impossible to believe
it could not sense along its electromagnetic tendrils these flashing
solid motes. Two Searchers already drifted, charred by discharges.
So it would kill them if it could locate them. Us. Me.
More Searchers rose from below to aid her. Abruptly some sparked
to burnt cinders at the very rim of magnetic stresses, killed by some
edge defense. She had lodged in several knots already, then had to
bail out as they arced with huge potentials.
Yet she could not shake the airy feeling of floating suspended
above a huge abyss.
Diffuse am I, for I am nothing that has ever existed. Like the
Eater—one of a kind.
Getting heady here. Careful. Too easy to get drawn into phony
poetic abstraction.
And what else dwelled here? Hesitantly, working as intermediary
with Control, she felt her way among ropes of snarled flux. Edgy,
tentative, the whispery sounds came— voices, calls, and cries
and strange haunting musics, wisps of convex lore, echoes of…
what? A multitude floated in her global, three-dimensional
eyes—shining, ghostlike creatures of strands and velvet,
lustrous lattice.
Creeping among complex innards. Yet again she felt a cool distance
from events. She was free to slide in and out of this world.
Only a lack of imagination saves me from immobilizing myself
with imaginary fears.
Her eyes were all-seeing, swiveling impossibly, anywhere she
wanted. In her other self, the eyes had been where the brain surfaced
and supped from the world, taking in light along an optic nerve that
both transmitted and filtered, doing the brain's work before the glow
even arrived at the cerebrum.
Now she felt a wedge between her and the world she could behold. A
chunk of glassy silence that measured and knew, separately.
Gingerly she burrowed into that watery pane. A dizzy, jolting
ascent took her. Suddenly she was hanging above the entire solar
system. She glimpsed it as a spheroid cloud of debris, filigreed with
bands and shells of flying shrapnel.
She knew instantly that these fragments could be pumped into long
ellipses, into wobbly orbits that could now and then make a sharp
hook by skimming near another piece of scrap, and slam into a
blundering planet.
"What was that?" she asked aloud. (How? Yet they rang
like words.)
Control's monotone answered, "You slipped into the overview
mode of our entire Searcher system inventory. Don't do that again.
Concentrate."
"Yessah." Control was, well, controlling. It (he?—yes,
it felt like a he) kept missing the point of her experience here.
Instantly, some subself presented a catalog of possible wisecrack
material:
One sandwich short of a picnic.
Elevator doesn't
go to the top floor.
One brick short of a full load.
Couple
chapters missing from the book.
Half a bubble off plumb.
Gears
stripped off a few cogs.
A beer short of a six-pack.
Now where did that—
The enormity of what had happened to her descended.
Benjamin, forever gone from her.
The world—swallowed in abstraction.
No salty tang of sandy beach.
Just a bunch of digits.
So when she wanted to speak, an inventory of retorts had duly
shuffled into her mind, read off like a computer file. Not invention,
but a handy list of stock phrases. Because it was waiting for just
that use—somewhere.
No, not somewhere.
Here. Blackboxville.
Had her mind had those lists in it all her life? She could
understand why the brain researchers wanted to use simulations such
as herself. Here, a mind could sometimes watch itself.
"Try to focus all the Searchers onto the core."
Control's voice now was smoother, warm, and soothing. A response to
her irked state? "Channing, we have got to get better
resolution."
She felt her eyes seem to
cross and then rush outward.
Suddenly she sensed the hourglass magnetic funnels, alive in their
luminous ivory, as mass flowed down them. Fitfully the aching matter
lit the turning, narrowing pipes. Each headed toward doom.
The fields were firmly anchored in a bright, glowing disk at the
center of the hourglass neck. The Eater's intelligence, she knew,
resided in these magnetic structures she could make out—knotted
and furled, like lustrous ribbons surrounding the slowly
rotating hourglass.
Zoom, she moved. At her finest viewing scale she could make out
the magnetic intricacy—whorls and helices as complex as the
mapping of a brain. Here the legacy of a thousand alien races rested,
she knew (but how?).
All this stood upon the brilliant disk at the neck. Glowing mass
flowed down the hourglass neck, heading toward the glare.
The inner realm of the Eater was its foundation, the turning
accretion disk. She blinked, recalibrated specter. It brimmed red-hot
at its rim, a kilometer from the dark center. The disk was thickest
at its edge,
a hundred meters tall some part of her crisply
told her.
As the infalling, gyrating mass moved inward to its fate, it
heated further by friction. Inward it seethed with luminosity,
shading in from red to amber to yellow to white, and then to a final,
virulent blue. The red rim was already 3,000 degrees (a subself
informed her). Abstractly she knew that in the slide inward the
doomed mass exceeded the temperature of the surface of the sun,
greater than 5,000 degrees.
"Look closer," Control said in the comforting tones of…
who? Memory would not fetch this forth…
Closer. There at the very center—nothing, a blank
blackness. Like a hallucinogenic record turning to its own
furious music, faster and faster toward the center, where the spindle
hole was a nothing.
But not quite nothing. At higher resolution—and blinded
against the glare—she could see a fat weight that warped light
around it. At its very edge, red refractions and darting rainbow
sparklers marked the space. She saw that an ellipsoid spun
there, furiously laced by crimson arcs. As she watched, fiery matter
traced its last trajectory inward, skating along the rim of the
whirling dark. These paths swerved inward, and a very few skipped
through the wrenching blackness to emerge again.
"Unstable orbits, I see," Control said.
She felt a wave of immense dread. Yet she headed down there.
2
Benjamin drove stolidly toward the Center. His arms were of lead,
his head swiveled on scratchy ratchets.
That morning a poll had reported that the world was praying
more since news had come of the Eater. There was even a statistical
breakdown, showing what were the hot topics on the prayer circuit:
1. Family's health and happiness 83%
2. Salvation from
black hole 81%
3. Personal spiritual salvation 78%
4. Return of
Jesus Christ 55%
5. Good grades 43%
6. End of an addiction
30%
7. Victory in sports 23%
8. Material possessions 18%
9.
Bad tidings for someone else 5%
"Good to know the species hasn't lost its bloody-mindedness,"
Kingsley remarked from the seat next to him.
" 'Bad tidings for someone else,' " Benjamin said
sourly. "As if there weren't enough."
"Um. You mean this news of the Eater's course correction?"
"Yeah. What's it moving to higher altitude for?"
"It won't say, as usual."
On the drive, he saw yet another church going up, this time in a
converted gas station. Stumps of pump stands extruded from the
concrete islands in front. Churches were thronged every day now. New
ones jutted their flick-knife spires above the palms.
He had gotten better and could now go for maybe a whole hour
without thinking of her. He had found himself reviewing their
life together to get himself ready for what was to come this morning.
They had followed what he supposed to be a predictable arc. Passion
had settled down into possession, courtship into partnership,
acute pleasure into pleasant habit. For both of them, lives that once
had seemed to spread infinitely before them had narrowed to one
mortal career. To accomplish anything definite, they had given up
everything else, sailing for one point of the compass. Yet he had the
hollow feeling of missed opportunities. Could something be made
good through what he had to do next?
"It shouldn't be too demanding," Kingsley said out of
the silence.
"I'm that easy to read?"
"Old friend, depression is simple to diagnose. You are
acting under intolerable pressures."
He slammed a fist into the steering wheel. "I have to keep
working."
"Of course. And you're vital."
"If only I could sleep."
"Haven't been getting a lot of that myself, either."
"At least—"
"What? Ah, you were going to say, at least I have Amy."
"Yeah."
"And so I do. Not as though it is a betrayal of my dear
wife."
"How is she?"
"Had word just last night. Coded, of course. From a country
cottage she arranged through friends. Indeed, the U Agency had
conducted an extensive search for her. She barely got away."
"You're sure they were going to hold her hostage?"
"One is never certain. I felt that I could not risk it."
"She might have been safer."
"With
that"—a finger poked
skyward—"prowling the skies? I expect it can strike any
place it likes, to whatever depth."
"The infrared only bakes the surface."
"Do we truly wish to learn more of its capabilities?"
"Ummm, good point."
They let a companionable silence build between them. Benjamin was
comfortable this way, just sliding on from moment to moment, trying
not to think of what they would ask him to do. As they left their car
and passed through the layers of security at the Center, he felt
tensions building in him again, but fought them down.
There passed before his eyes procedures and people and none of it
left any lasting impression. Amy Major, looking more worn than usual,
was there when they got to the Control wing. She came out and
greeted them and Kingsley instantly asked, "What signs do
we have of its state of mind?"
"Still no mention of the whole Washington burning episode,"
Amy said.
"Damn." Kingsley's face was knotted with frustration.
"How can we conceivably understand it if the thing gives no
clue?"
"I suppose that's the point," Amy said mildly, putting a
hand on his sleeve.
For some reason, that simple gesture brought a tightness welling
into Benjamin's throat. He almost lost his remaining scraps of
composure then. It took a moment and a dodge about going for coffee
before he could trust himself to speak. "What's it saying,
then?"
Amy called up its latest dispatch to the Semiotics contingent:
YOUR BIOSPHERE HAS MANIFESTED FOUR PINNACLES OF
SOCIAL EVOLUTION. FIRST WERE THE COLONIAL, SPINELESS SUCH AS THE
CORAL REEFS. THEY ACHIEVED NEARLY PERFECT COHESION AMONG INDIVIDUAL
UNITS THAT DIFFERED LITTLE IN THEIR GENES. INSECTS ATTAINED A PEAK,
THOUGH WITH MUCH MORE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN INDIVIDUALS. STILL LESSER
PERFECTION OF SOCIAL GRACE CAME WITH THE SPINED ANIMALS OTHER THAN
YOUR-SELVES. THEY COOPERATE BUT HAVE MUCH DIFFERENT GENOMES. THIS
TREND FROM CORALS TO ANTS TO BABOONS MY-SELF HAS SEEN ON HUNDREDS OF
WORLDS. COMPLEXITY SELECTS FOR SELFISH, LESS SOCIAL BEHAVIOR. THE
BEAUTY OF THIS LOGIC IS PROFOUND: WHEN GENETICALLY NEARLY IDENTICAL,
ALTRUISM ABOUNDS AND COOPERATION THRIVES. AS GENETIC RELATEDNESS
EBBS, SO DOES INTENSITY OF SOCIAL BEHAVIOR. UNTIL YOUR KIND.
YOUR-SELVES EMPLOY SOCIAL STRUCTURES OF THE SPINED CLASS BUT
COMPLEXIFY IT. YOU RETAIN SELFISHNESS BUT USE INTELLIGENCE TO CONSULT
YOUR PAST AND PLAN YOUR FUTURE. THIS REVERSED THE DOWNWARD TREND IN
COOPERATION THAT MARKED THE LAST BILLION YEARS OF YOUR BIOSPHERE'S
EVOLUTION. THIS IS YOUR UNIQUE ASPECT, AS THE THREE OTHER MODES I
MENTIONED ARE PEAKS SCALED REPEATEDLY BY INDEPENDENTLY EVOLVING LINES
OF CREATURES.
"Intriguing miserable little lecture, isn't it?"
Kingsley said. "Makes one wonder if its droll sense of humor
extends to making fun of us through acute boredom."
"Sounds like a curator making up the label it will put on its
newest exhibit," Benjamin said.
"Good analogy," Amy said. "Now shall we… ?"
Here came the part he had been dreading. They marched him through
a large bay filled with work stations, people quietly monitoring the
intricate tasks of managing the Searcher fleet. They were an exact
duplicate of NASA's operating room at Houston, assembled here at
blinding speed in case communications broke down. Backup was the
watchword.
In a separate room, they seated him at the center of a kind of
spherical viewscreen. Leads measured his vital signs, a complex head
gear descended, much buzzing and clicking began as they got him
calibrated. He had given up trying to fathom all the technology.
Then—
He was
with her. No point in wondering how it was done;
he felt himself suddenly in a presence he recognized. He had to
struggle to not look around and find her. But she was nowhere at all,
he reminded himself. Instead, the spherical screens showed him what
she saw, a field of dark dominion dotted with Searcher radar images.
"How are you, lover?" she asked.
"I… am doing… okay." Like molasses, his
tongue.
"I am, too."
He could not help himself. "What does it feel like to be…
a mathematical construction?"
"However I want it to feel."
"You can control…"
"The body simulation? Yes. My feelings, in the old sense?
No."
Her voice had shifted into a cool, analytical mode. But it was
hers, all the same. How did they do it? Or was she… it…
doing this? "I… see. No pain?"
"Physical, no. I… I miss you so much."
He could not seem to get his breath. "Well, here I am."
"With me. Again. Thank you for coming."
Alarm filled his otherwise empty mind. He could not think of
anything to say that did not seem to mean something else. "Do
you… like the work?"
"Let us say that I am willing to make the mistakes if someone
else is willing to learn from them."
"Ah. Yes."
"You are wondering if this is really me."
"I wonder who you are, yes, but—" He froze. But
what?
"Perhaps you are afraid that I am her?"
"Damn, you were always good at reading me."
"Do not give me that much credit. I made my mistakes."
"You were smarter than I was."
"I often proved that high intelligence did not necessarily
guarantee fine table manners."
He tried to laugh and could not. Somehow the remark was amusing,
but the delivery was wrong. He tried a gruff, bantering tone.
"Yeah, old girl, you did."
"I would feel better if you did not use the past tense."
"Oh. I didn't mean—"
"Just a joke."
"I always liked your jokes."
"They were an acquired taste. Remember what my grandfather
used to say? 'Eat a live toad at breakfast and nothing worse will
happen to you the rest of the day.' My jokes played that role for
some people."
"Yeah, I
do remember your telling me that." He
felt a wash of relief. If this voice knew that much about her
past—but then he felt confusions rise again. The specialists
had said that they could copy memories without knowing what they
were. Like a symphony laid down on a disk, the machine that did it
didn't need to know harmony or structure.
Just a recording. But she was so real.
Better get back onto something that would let him conceal his
tornado of feeling. "How's the job going?" The words
sounded phony, but maybe she wouldn't notice.
She laughed, surprising him again. "Like being a bird,
sometimes."
"Sounds great."
"I spent a lot of time just getting used to this
body-that-isn't."
"Bird body?" He didn't know where this was going, but at
least it wasn't about how he felt, a subject upon which he was no
expert.
"Birdbrain, it feels like sometimes."
She pinged right back to his pong, but wasn't giving much away.
Okay, be direct. "They moved you around the Earth after
it hit Washington?"
"Yes, I got an extra booster attached by a crew that flew up
to rendezvous. That got me out here, to keep me away from that damned
jet. How many people did it kill?"
"A quarter of a million, the last I heard." He had
stopped listening to the news then.
"It's moving out now, I heard." Actually, he had seen
the jet flare and drive the thing away from the low orbit. And heard
the muted cheering of hundreds around him, outside in the night. The
yelling had blended anger and wavering hope.
"Slow but steady. Don't know—damn, there goes
another."
"Another what?"
A silence. Then: "Another satellite, a communications one
this time. It got the Fabricante orbital an hour ago. There were two
people aboard."
"Damn. It's doing that? I really ought to keep up."
"You've had a lot of grief. Give yourself a rest."
Suddenly her voice was not the cool, businesslike tone that she
had been using. The words resonated with feminine notes he had come
to love. He said, "You need me. I hope."
"Oh yes, I do more than ever."
"You've got it in view?"
"I can see the orange plume of the jet, but I'm staying away.
Tracking the satellite damage. It's eaten hundreds—"
Onto the enveloping spherical screen blossomed a sharp image.
Coils of magnetic field tightening around a chunky satellite. Folding
it in. Then vaporizing it with a virulent arc of high voltage. The
plasma glowed green and violet traceries sucked it along the
field lines, bound for the accretion disk.
"Got tired of our atmosphere?" he asked.
"Or bored."
"Are you getting some feeling for it?"
"It has a lot of parts and they fit together in a way I can't
see yet."
"Don't get any closer."
"I'm thousands of klicks away."
"Keep it that way."
"I think it knows I'm here."
Alarm stuck in his throat. "How?"
"I don't know, just an intuition."
"Has it done anything, struck against you?"
"No, and I don't know why not, either. Probably I'm just not
important enough."
"You are to me. Don't get closer."
"Distance didn't do the President any good, did it?"
"What do you mean?"
"It blasted the terrain around that dugout of his in the
Catskills on its next pass over the D.C. area."
"It did?" He really wasn't keeping track. Or had he
heard and just forgotten? He had to admit he didn't give a damn about
what happened to the President.
"I believe he survived—barely. It doesn't say a word
about any of that, of course."
"Our spanking administered, it drops the subject?"
Benjamin knew his words were coming out jagged.
"Nope, Kingsley was right. Keep away from human analogies."
He didn't want to say what immediately came to mind, so sure
enough, she did instead: "Speaking as an analogy myself, I
think that's good advice."
He could not summon even a dutiful chuckle, but she laughed with
what seemed to be gusto.
3
"Nothing is impossible to those who do not have to do it,"
Kingsley remarked caustically.
Arno bristled. "I have every assurance from the President
that—"
"That he doesn't know what he is doing," Kingsley
finished. He instantly reprimanded himself for this childish
outburst, but Arno's face already congested with red anger.
"You are not to take this any further—"
"Sorry, but I have to say this is stupid."
"If it can't hear our media, it won't know as much."
"Yes, but hasn't a moment's inspection of its many
transmissions told us that it likes listening in?"
"Intelligence has established that leaks onto cable TV led it
to deduce that the launches were ours."
'This thing is not an idiot. It knows quite well the state of
international politics. Little children in the street guessed the
truth—why shouldn't the Eater?"
Arno subsided slightly, long enough for Benjamin to say, "I
don't think it's a good idea, either."
"Who
cares?' Arno flared again. "You guys don't
get any say. The White House just wondered what you thought it would
do when the President's—
and the U.N.'s—shutdown
starts."
"When will it be?" Kingsley asked with what he hoped was
a calm, interested expression.
Hard to attain these days, though.
Arno glanced at his watch. "Two hours."
"Expect something bad," Benjamin said, then went back to
looking at his shoes.
"I agree," Kingsley said.
"Why? The whole planet ceases all transmissions, including
satellite cable traffic, telephones, radio, TV. So what?"
"It will not like any sign that we're breaking off contact,"
Benjamin said, a lackluster sentence that he tossed off as though he
was thinking of something else. Which he probably was. Since
leaving the comm apparatus where he had spent several hours with the
Channing-craft, he had been distracted. No surprise, but Kingsley
needed help and in this climate old allies were the best. At least
with Benjamin, he did not have to watch his back.
"I don't see why that has to be," Arno said. "It's
been sending lots of chatty stuff, never mentions the D.C. thing or
the missiles."
"Aliens are alien," Kingsley said, trying not to sound
as though he were talking to a child. "Do not misread—which
is to say, do not ascribe easy motives to its statements."
"Look, the Security Council thinks this is the best way to
show it that we aren't giving away any secrets, not anymore."
"How jolly."
"Look, it even sent a commentary on Marcus Aurelius to one of
the cultural semiotics people. Philosophy—and it seemed to
agree with this guy." Arno mugged a bit and folded his arms,
leaning back against his desk in a way that Kingsley had come to know
signaled what Arno thought was a put-away shot.
Kingsley disliked obvious displays of erudition, but here was a
useful place for it. "Aurelius was a stoic, resigned to the evil
of the world, wishing to detach himself from it. Also happened to be
an Emperor of Rome, which curiously enough made detachment an easier
prospect. Before organized press conferences, as I recall. Not
the sort of attitude I would wish of a thing that could incinerate
the planet."
Arno looked wounded, an about-face from
his flash of belligerence only moments before. Everyone seemed to be
running on fast-forward now. He said gravely, "It's getting more
refined, if that's the right word."
"Is it progress if a cannibal uses a knife and fork?"
Kingsley asked, crossing his legs wearily.
Benjamin laughed, just the wrong thing to do. Sarcasm was useful
only if played deadpan straight. Arno did not take Benjamin's
chuckling well, reddening up in the nose and cheeks again.
"I mean that you cannot mistake a change of style for change
of purpose." Kingsley hoped that stating the obvious would get
them back on track. People under strain sometimes had such a
reset ability, and perhaps it could get him out of this scrape.
"I understand," Arno said, "but the President wants
an assessment of what to expect
when"—heavy
emphasis here, with eyebrows—"the shutdown starts."
"Retribution, I should say," Kingsley said.
Benjamin managed a wan smile, still regarding his shoes with
intense interest. "You're slipping into human thought modes
yourself, ol' King boy. Alien, it might do anything."
Arno said hotly, "That's no damn good, tell the White House
the sonuvabitch could do any damn thing—"
"Though it has the utility of being true," Kingsley
said.
"I bet it will do both." Benjamin looked up then and
smiled, as if at a joke he alone knew. "Something nasty, and
something weird."
"Good point," Kingsley said. "No reason it must do
only one thing."
"You guys are no damn use at all."
"You bet," Benjamin said with something that resembled
happiness. Kingsley studied him, but could make nothing of the
expression on his old friend's face.
4
Benjamin wondered when the gray curtains would go away. They hung
everywhere, deadening, muffling. Even this latest bad news took
place behind the veils. He registered the dispatches, but his pulse
did not quicken and the world remained its flat, pallid tone.
"What the hell
is it?" Arno asked the assembled
mix.
Amy said in a voice obviously kept clear and deliberate, after the
panic of the last ten minutes, "A magnetic loop. It's tight,
small, and moving at very high velocity."
"Headed where?" Arno asked a man in a gray suit whom
Benjamin had never seen before.
"Intersecting the Pacific region in about twenty minutes."
"It's that fast? The Eater's a long way out now, nearly
geosynchronous." Arno looked around the room for help.
"The hole ejected it half an hour ago," Amy said. "We
caught it all across the spectrum."
"What'll we do?" Arno glanced at his watch, at his U
Agency advisers, back to the astronomers.
"No time for a warning," Benjamin said, just to be
saying something.
"Where'll it hit?" Arno licked his lips.
"Looks like mid-Pacific," the gray-suited man said.
"Why in hell shoot at that?"
"We are in the mid-Pacific," Kingsley said quietly.
"At us? It's shooting at us?"
"A testable hypothesis," Kingsley said. "I imagine
this is intended to establish some principle. Were the Eater human, I
would suppose this would be in retaliation for some injury."
A voice across the room said irritably, "We haven't done
anything."
Benjamin said, "We cut off all radio and TV. When did that
start?"
Arno bit his lip. "About an hour ago."
"Long enough for the planet to rotate a bit," Kingsley
added. "Enough time to establish that the silence did not arise
from a power outage or accident."
"Why this, then?" a voice called.
Amy said, "It wants electromagnetic transmissions resumed.
It launches a magnetic loop, using electromagnetic acceleration.
Maybe that's the connection."
Arno glowered. "Sounds pretty far-fetched."
Amy gave him a long, level look and her voice was steady. "It
anchors its magnetic fields in the accretion disk and on the hole
itself. It managed to disconnect one of its field lines and tie the
ends together, then propel it out through the overall magnetic
structure. We've never seen anything like it, not even in the
magnetic arches that grow on the sun, structures thousands of
kilometers across."
"So?" Arno was weighing all this, but saw no way to go.
Kingsley said diplomatically, "I believe Amy's point is that
the Eater knows magnetics the way your tongue knows your teeth."
Arno grimaced at this as the big screen filled behind him. A view
from one of the few surviving satellites, Benjamin saw, looking at a
tangent to the Pacific. Sunset was behind the satellite and the image
was in the near-infrared. The ocean shimmered dimly and some stars
stood out as yellow.
These false colors threw off Benjamin's judgment for a moment as
he studied the vectors of the problem. Against the black sky a
luminous blue hoop moved. Its trajectory was simple to estimate.
Measured by eye, its distance from the curve of the Earth was
closing.
"How big?" Arno's mouth drew into an alarmed thin line.
"It started out a few kilometers across," Amy said.
"Elementary electrodynamics—once a loop is free, it
expands. Or should."
"What can it do?" Arno pressed.
"Let's go outside and see." Benjamin made for the door.
"Huh?" Arno held up a hand. "What's the deal?"
It proved to be easily visible. The slanted angle cast the perfect
circle into an ellipse. It had hit the upper atmosphere and glowed a
cherry red. "We're seeing some molecular line, must be," a
voice commented in the darkness. Benjamin realized that word had
spread and now hundreds stood nearby on an open, grassy hill
immediately behind the Center. A soft tropical breeze warmed the
thick air.
Amy said, "It's headed this way."
The crowd rustled anxiously. "They have every reason to
worry," Benjamin said to Kingsley and Amy.
"You think it's aimed at us?" someone nearby whispered.
"What else that's relevant to the Eater is in the Pacific?"
Benjamin whispered back.
"What can it do?" Arno suddenly asked. Benjamin jumped
at the rough, distressed voice just over his shoulder. "I mean,
this isn't like that jet."
"It's magnetic energy, efficiently stored," Benjamin
answered. "Right now it's banking to the left—see?"
The hoop had slid slightly to the side. "Probably hobnobbing
with the Earth's field, though I guess it's much bigger than ours."
"Right," Amy said. "Imagine, throwing off a loop
and aiming it accurately through our dipolar field structure. Got to
admire its ability."
"Best not to stress that particular angle," Kingsley
advised. "Though I concur."
"What can it
do?" Arno insisted.
Nobody spoke, so Benjamin guessed, "The energy density
is pretty high, if it had around ten kiloGauss fields where it
started, back in the accretion disk. I'd estimate—" He
multiplied the energy density, which scaled as the square of the
field strength, by a reasonable volume. This he judged by eye as the
glowing thing crawled across the blackness. Getting larger,
spreading. "Around a hundred kilotons of available energy, if it
can annihilate all the field."
"Everybody inside!" Arno shouted suddenly.
"Why?" someone called.
"Security!" Arno bellowed. "Get them inside—
now!"
Benjamin avoided the herd stampeding for the buildings by walking
quickly into a stand of eucalyptus nearby. When he turned to watch
the sky, he saw figures following him and realized he was an amateur
at this, they certainly would use infrared goggles or something to
round people up.
"Good idea," Kingsley whispered. Amy was with him. "I
rather figure the buildings are more dangerous, not less."
"Why?" Benjamin asked.
"I doubt your calculation applies here. No simple way to get
more than a small fraction of the field energy to annihilate.
How would the hoop twist around to get the fields counteraligned,
then rub them together?"
Amy whispered, "I see—so instead, it'll just produce an
electromagnetic sizzle."
"Seems reasonable." Kingsley moved deeper in among the
heavily scented eucalyptus.
Benjamin jibed, "Reasonable? Violating the
remember-it's-alien rule, aren't you?"
"Ah, but you see, it's not stupid. Surely it's playing by the
same physics rule book as ourselves."
Amy said, "It made a remark about exactly that a few days
ago, I saw. Something about our having the basics down, but missing
the larger point. Irked the hell out of the physics guys when it
wouldn't tell them anything more, aside from some math nobody could
recognize."
"I wonder if it has a cruel streak," Benjamin murmured.
"They begged it for details. It wouldn't even answer."
"It prefers rather different modes of reply, I'll wager,"
Kingsley whispered.
The tall eucalyptus trees rattled their branches in the sea
breeze. The contrast of their moist aroma and the coolly descending
luminosity above was striking. Benjamin moved to see the sky better.
Kingsley called, "Stay well back. They're searching."
But now the numerous Security men were craning up at the sky. The
loop was inflating, filling the black bowl, dimming the stars.
Its glow had shifted to an eerie, bile green. They could see
elaborate structure now. Soundlessly the green strands coiled and
flexed like strange, swelling snakes.
Now one edge of the loop alone striped across their view. At its
edges, a thin line of orange flared. "Shock boundary, I bet,"
Amy mused.
Filmy green filaments twisted above them, closing fast. There
seemed to Benjamin no place to flee—and no reason to run,
anyway. It would come and the whole matter was out of his hands.
Beyond intellectual curiosity, none of this had moved him.
Now they could see the full complexity of it as the emerald
strands shaded into delicate lime structures. Apparently it was
traveling faster than sound, for nothing disturbed the soft symphony
of the wind. Palm fronds rattled and someone shouted in the
distance. Life went on beneath an olive sky.
Just before it hit, he heard a crackling from the Center. A power
pole nearby burst into a yellow firework. Sizzling balls arced up in
a blinding fountain.
"Transformers blowing," Kingsley said in a normal voice.
"I do hope Arno thought to switch off the power."
Amy said, "The lights are still on in there."
"Damn."
The human body cannot perceive magnetic field except at enormous
strengths. Still, Benjamin felt a pulse of electricity jitter
through him as all the lights went out. Immediately afterward his
skin itched in quick, darting waves. Then it was all over, the
familiar night sky returning, constellations embodying human legends
stretched across a comforting black. Yet as he gazed up, the distant
fuzzy blue-white of the Eater hung like a threat among the myriad
stars—one of them, celestial, not like anything a primate born
in moist chemistry could comprehend.
He breathed in the almost liquid density of tropical air and let
it out with a sigh. Magnetic fields could not directly harm beings
who were, after all, packages of long organic molecules in dilute
solutions, capable of standing erect and studying stars.
Maybe there was some small comfort in that bare fact.
He walked down the hill toward the Center with Amy and Kingsley.
Cries came up toward them. Somewhere a window shattered.
It was a while before he noticed that the gray veils were gone for
him. But he knew that they would return whenever he thought of her.
5
"Not overly surprising," Kingsley said as he unwound
into one of the massage chairs Benjamin had in his office.
For
Channing came the memory.
"What?" Benjamin was still a bit foggy. Even Arno's
anger after the attack—"Why didn't you guys
warn
me?"— had not shaken him into paying much attention.
Understandable, even in an ordinary time. But in this on-rolling
calamity, ordinary sensibilities had to be put aside. Kingsley firmly
told himself that he could not take the time to be the sympathetic
friend, letting time heal wounds. There was no time—not for
anyone.
"That she seems so like Channing," Kingsley said as
mildly as he could.
"Oh. She… is Channing."
"An interesting philosophical issue, but not my point."
"All the Channing I've got left."
"Quite." An emotional truth, and there was the nub of
the problem. How to put this? Directly, perhaps? Always risky, but he
owed Benjamin that. "The essential of this issue is whether she
can be relied upon to perform as would the Channing we knew."
"Know," Benjamin corrected without looking up from the
floor.
"Old friend, there are sophomore distinctions to be made here
that have ramifications on policy."
Benjamin gave a dry chuckle. "I sense a lecture coming on."
"A short one, I hope. Asking for an objective understanding
of an interior experience is a contradiction. Objectivity is a
direction along which understanding can travel, starting with the
utterly subjective, but there is no true, final destination
along that axis."
"So we can't know if she's 'really' Channing?" Benjamin
said caustically. "Fine. So be it. I'll take what I can get."
"We can expect her to be a quite good… simulation."
"It's all of her there is."
"Yes." This was a damnable situation, but he had
promised Arno that he would try to deal with the problem. Far
better a friend than the team of mind managers Arno had recruited.
How to proceed? Retreat to the technical? Perhaps. At least he would
feel better himself on some safe ground for a moment. .
"The data-processing issue is no longer a major roadblock,
after all," Kingsley said, probably a bit too brightly.
"Estimates I've seen hold that the total memory of a
hundred-year-old person could be about 10
15 bits—a
pentabit, the experts label it. That may be transmitted by optical
fiber in a few minutes. Microwaves, somewhat longer."
"Ah." Benjamin's lined face said quite eloquently that
he did not like this way of thinking of the woman he loved. Quite
right, but there it was.
"So they may have—what was that awful word they
used?—'harvested' quite a lot of her, even given the
difficulties with her physical deterioration."
Benjamin said, "I never thought it could be like this. Maybe
a thing like a computer program, accessing memory files, a robot…
that's what I imagined."
"The computer johnnies are advancing relentlessly. Quite left
me behind long ago."
"Look." He leaned forward earnestly. "She's still
the woman who was an astronaut. She's reliable."
"I take your point. That is what Arno wishes to know and
cannot properly ask. So an old friend gets to do the dirty work."
"Yeah. Why?"
"Well, they have contingency plans…" Best to let
that one trail off, fraught with implication. Not that Kingsley knew
all the possible options. Arno never showed all his cards.
"They always do. Guys behind desks dreaming up stuff for
other people to do."
"We have many such now, all around the globe. Not that we get
all their input. The magnetic attack took out a great deal, but we're
getting most of the high-bit-rate equipment back online. 'Crippled
but defiant' is, I think, the motto."
"The reason I asked, she wants to know what to expect."
"Ummm. Just what one would expect."
Alarm whitened Benjamin's eyes. "She's going in?"
"She must. The Searchers go well ahead of her, of course. But
she's got to be near them, not on the other side of the planet."
"Look, keep her standing a long way off."
"I will, I assure you. But she may not do what we want."
"Why not?"
"She has autonomous control of her propulsion. There are
extras all over her Searcher module. Everything they could bolt on,
it would seem."
"She used to talk about the free will problem. Here it is. Is
a simulation unpredictable?"
"No one knows, not at this level of technical ability. We may
not have the computational power to even decide the issue in a useful
passage of time." Kingsley grinned. "She always had a taste
for paradoxes. This one is, no doubt, delicious to her."
" 'Delicious'?" Benjamin gazed off into space. "I
hope so."
"I believe she wants us to anticipate."
"I see." Benjamin sat up, brushing aside his
reflections. "Say, what do you make of all this data we're
getting?"
Benjamin's open-faced entreaty was disarming. In the last few
weeks, Kingsley had spent a great deal of his time trying to
fathom what the people who thought about thinking made of the Eater's
structure. As usual with those most comfortable among
abstractions, the gritty truths of a wholly new way of organizing a
mind sent most of them packing. The few who remained dealt in
analogy, and he could not blame them.
To his relief, Amy came in and sat. Without a word, she somehow
lifted the tension in the room—only one of her many admirable
qualities. He filled her in on matters and she nodded. "Sorry
I'm late. We're getting stretched thin. Arno is bringing in more
people and somebody has to integrate them with existing systems."
"We're to be independent of NASA and the others, I gather,"
Kingsley said.
"In case we lose all the remaining satellites, yes." She
brushed back her hair, a gesture that usually meant she was thinking
hard. "Do you think we could?"
Benjamin said, "Easily. It has a large appetite."
"One should be grateful that it discovered the apparently
more bountiful feast of our satellites," Kingsley mused.
"Is the damage from the tidal stresses still going on?"
Amy asked.
"Earthquakes and the like, yes. We're spared the collapsing
buildings and large tides," Kingsley said.
"Thank God. I hadn't heard…" Benjamin's subdued
tone trailed off and he stared into space.
"Makes one appreciate as never before the simple fact that
tidal forces drop off as the cube of distance, not merely the
square," Kingsley said. "A ruthless tutelage in
undergraduate mechanics."
This attempt to swerve the discussion into more abstract avenues
failed; Benjamin did not react. He and Amy exchanged glances.
She said, "We've got to get some idea of what Channing is going
to confront if she goes in further."
This roused Benjamin to blinking awareness. He sat up and said
with a hollow briskness, "The magnetic geometry, yeah. I've
looked at some of the old models. Not much use. We're skating on our
own here."
Good, Kingsley thought,
back on solid technical
grounds. Best way to keep him sailing upright. "I think we
have to follow analogies here. Alien this bastard may be, but
its physics is the same as ours."
Amy came straight in with some material they had discussed in
private. Her usual crisp delivery: "Human brains operate on
direct current, like telephones. Radio and TV use alternating current
and deliver information far faster than D.C. My guess is that the
Eater uses electromagnetic waves to send signals across itself, so
its natural flow rate is not the petty human scale of ten or twenty
bits per second. Instead, the Eater can transmit data at about
the same rate that the entire human body receives all its sense data
and processes it. Maybe as much as ten billion bits per second."
Benjamin responded, "Okay, but to do that demands high,
oscillating voltages. Which fits—it shorts out satellites,
boils them off as plasma, grabs them with magnetic grapples,
swallows them."
Kingsley said mordantly, "Reminds one of spiders. This
picture means, though, that the bastard has to keep itself thoroughly
clean."
Amy nodded. "Because impurities could short out its high
voltages."
Benjamin joined in with sudden fervor, "And burn away its
enormous energy stores into useless heat."
"Good," Amy said. "I was thinking about what
Channing might meet if she goes as far in as its magnetosphere. The
D.C. voltages and speeds of human expression are imposed by our
hopelessly slow, serial method of stringing words together.
Luckily, human thinking is far faster than human talking or reading,
which is why all the true mental heavy lifting is done by the
nonconscious mind. All our data suggest that the Eater's speed
is essential, because it's vastly different in mental organization.
That's what we have to attack, or at least understand."
When Kingsley first met Amy, it had been uncommon for her to
deliver little lectures like this, but she had grown in confidence.
After his failures with his wife, this small feat pleased him. He
urged her along with: "If I follow your drift, the human mind
can be visualized—by the cliche analogy to computers—as a
great number of parallel processors, simultaneously filtering
and analyzing the exterior world. On the other hand, the Eater's
mind—"
"Which it described itself, when we asked it," Amy put
in.
"—is something more like a standing whirlwind, with
whorls of thought entering and diverging from the general rotation as
needed. All that, interlaced in radial symmetries that follow the
ceaseless cylindrical twirl of the disk and magnetic fields."
"How can that possibly work?" Benjamin asked.
"Simply shows the limitations of analogies," Kingsley
said with a dry smile.
"We don't have to work out the whole mental process,"
Amy said. "That's impossible. Maybe we can get just enough to
guide her through."
Kingsley tried to wrestle aloud with a vague set of ideas, an
approach he usually tried only when desperate, as it opened his
uncertainties to all. Surely this was the most desperate he had
ever been. "As I recall, from the myriad messages the thing
sent, the Eater had once remarked that humans were very nearly all
alike, so their communications and styles of thinking were suited to
that fact. The Eater is radically different, so translation between
us is enormously harder."
"Is that why it just won't talk about what it's doing?"
Amy asked.
"Perhaps. I was just thinking aloud about a remark it made
some weeks ago, concerning its physiology."
Amy said, "It's so strange. We can't be sure that even crude
analogies mean anything."
"It still has to satisfy conservation of mass-energy,"
Benjamin said. "But yeah, I agree."
Kingsley made a tent with his fingers. There was something
here, he felt it, and talking was the best way to flush the game from
the shrubbery of his mind. "The bastard said that it could
experience pain if its equilibrium were disturbed, just as
humans get indigestion, headaches, and soreness. The Eater's
indigestion came from disruption of the smooth rotation of its
accretion disk, interrupting the trickle of mass that kept its inner
edge a glaring violet. Upset, it said, came from snarls in the
magnetic fields as they encountered vagrant fields from
outside."
"That's its version of Montezuma's revenge?" Benjamin
asked.
"Apparently." Kingsley worked his mouth around,
puzzling out what this implied. "Based upon that, I should
imagine that disruption could also come from radioactivity trapped
into the disk, which could increase ionization locally. That
might trigger something resembling pain."
"Pain, fine," Benjamin said. "But we have to kill
it."
Kingsley glanced at the hand-lettered sign he kept on his wall.
His first act upon moving into any workplace was to visibly resurrect
the advice he had received the first year he had come up to Oxford:
SATURATION
INCUBATION
ILLUMINATION
The great nineteenth-century physicist Hermann von Helmholtz had
argued that these were the steps in having a new idea. You had to
immerse yourself in the problem, concentrating, and then let the
mass of thoughts simmer. Maybe all that happened during such
incubation was the withering away of whatever bad ideas were blocking
you. Then, often when you were doing something else, the answer would
appear, as if delivered by some other agency of yourself.
For the scientist, there was necessarily another stage:
verification. You had to see if the bright idea actually worked.
But with the Eater there would be only one chance.
"I propose we try to use a one-two punch, then,"
Kingsley said slowly. "Use its dislike of plasmas to move it,
and then deliver a blow it cannot counter."
"Where? If nuclear weapons don't work…" Amy
shrugged.
"Forget the magnetic structure, which it quite rightly
defends as its mind. At the center of its mind lies the hole.
Attack that, I'd guess."
Benjamin studied him as though he were quite lunatic. "Attack
a singularity in space-time?"
"The extreme curvature arises from the matter that once
passed through the event horizon," Kingsley said. "The
steep gradient in gravitation is a ghost of mass that died there,
passing who knows where. I propose that we consider giving the
bastard not mass but its opposite."
6
Blessed are the flexible, for they can tie themselves into
knots.
She had thought this state would be sublime, ghostly. Instead, she
had hauled along her whole stinky, tangled neuroses-ridden self.
Sure, she now flew in space in a way no astronaut could. But her mind
was still tied to her body. Worse, knowing the body was a digital
figment did no good.
Tracking the beast demanded fresh navigation skills, fast
movement, and her reward was sore "muscles." The
programmers, in her opinion, had left entirely too much of her
mind-body link. If she overused her gorgeous ion jets, they ached.
Turn too fast and the "knees" smarted, sharp and cutting.
Simulation she might be, but why the body's baggage? What next,
callused feet?
The illusion was good. Her breath whooshed and wheezed in and out.
No oxygen at all here, but they had thought she needed the sensation
to quiet her pseudo-nervous system, make it think she was
breathing. In fact, it was breathing her.
She took a deep nonbreath and fell into a shadowy space dotted by
orbiting debris. This was a messy Eater, gobbling up satellites and
leaving twinkling motes. She shepherded her Searchers through this in
pursuit of the glowing archwork ahead. Or below; directions were free
of gravity's grip, here.
Far better than being an astronaut in the creaky old space
station. She had watched the dear old patchwork of bad plumbing and
congressional nightmares—abandoned, finally—as the
Eater dismembered it. Good riddance! It had crippled the pursuit of
better goals for decades. They owed the monster for that, at least.
But nothing else. She felt her giddy sense of weightless purpose
as her pretty blue ion jets thrummed and spewed, taking her
up/down/sidewise. Getting better at this, but still it made her
balance whirl. Thank God they had edited out the entire inner-ear
responses.
Now the hard part. She glided into the first filmy tendrils of the
beast. Ionized streamers marked the feathery magnetic fields.
Their tug she felt as a brushing pressure against her aluminum
carapace. Careful, don't alert the misbegotten monster. Down,
hard—then a calculated swerve.
If at first you don't succeed, kiddo, skydiving is not your
sport.
She had lost a dozen Searchers finding out scraps of largely
incoherent information. The labyrinths of fields confined dense
thickets of Alfven waves, forming webbed patterns. It did not
seem to mind intrusion, but the rule was, read and be eaten.
"I'm back," Benjamin's wavering tones came. She grasped
them like ripe, liquid fruit. The message's cypher-defenses peeled
away as she filtered them—their only defense against the
Eater eavesdropping. So far it seemed to have worked. Seemed.
"Missed you. It's not so much the dark here, but the cold."
"I thought you couldn't feel temperature."
"Category error, lover. It feels like a chill, so it is.
Maybe it's actually the color green in disguise."
"I had to go to a meeting, find out what's happening."
"What's that cliche'? About nobody on their deathbed
regretting time missed at the office?"
"I suppose you'd know." He was too somber, needed some
joshing.
"I always kinda missed the ol' office. Remember, though, this
is the me of when they recorded. How long has it been?"
He blinked, startled. "Weeks. My God, you don't know what's
happened?"
"Oh sure, I got all the news. A bath of it. But no personal
stuff."
He wore his thoughtful distraction expression. It was looking
ragged. "Hundreds of thousands have died. And I don't give a
damn."
"You don't have the room for it."
"That's a good way to put it. I've felt like a monster."
"Caring only about my dying doesn't make you an ogre, not in
my book."
"Getting the balance right…"
His voice trailed off and she knew exactly what he was thinking.
Well, better face it. "I'm alive this way, and all
those people dead, really dead—all because of the Eater."
"Yeah. Life's going too fast for me now, kid."
He was back to putting on a brave face, but it wouldn't work with
her. She could feel how close to shattering he was. "Me, too.
Just live in it, Benjamin, like a suit of clothes."
He blinked. "That's what it's like for you?"
"Has to be. I don't even sleep anymore."
"My God, that must be…"
"Refreshing, actually. The thought just doesn't come up."
"You're always wide awake?"
"Yep, and without my old love, caffeine, too."
"What's it like to pilot a rocket?" He was still
uncomfortable, but they had always used their love of the
technical to get through bumpy spots. Fair enough.
"It's made me realize that when we open our eyes each
morning, there's waiting a world we've spent a lifetime learning to
see. We make it up."
"And you're free of that now?"
"No, just so aware of it. When I was living down
there,
I'd see everything with a filter over it—experience, habit,
memory."
"Now it's all new."
"Not entirely. I swoop, I dive, but it feels like running,
not really flying. My body is always, in a very profound way, telling
me a story."
"The body you don't have."
"Right. Weird, huh? So I wonder what the Eater feels. It has
no solid body."
"Even the black hole really is a hole. Not a mass, a thing it
can feel."
"I suppose. The magnetic storage of information, I wonder
what it feels like?"
"Stay away from that," he said with quick alarm.
"I think I've got to go there."
"Observe. That's all you're supposed to do."
"Y'know, I'm in charge up here." Just to slide the
point in.
"Don't scare me." His face was naked again and she felt
a burst of warmth for him.
"Tell me what you guys know now, then. I need to know."
He was glad to lapse into tech-mode again. The experts thought it
was best for her to get her input this way, through Benjamin, and
neither of them cared to know why. They liked it; that was all that
mattered.
"The way Amy describes it, there are captive—well,
'passengers' might be the best word—in the Eater's
magnetic 'files.' It keeps records of cultures it has visited."
Channing said, "That's what it calls 'Remnants'?"
"You know about that?"
"They gave me thick files of what it's been saying. I can
read it ten thousand times faster than I could with eyes."
"Does that help?"
"Understand it? At least it puts me on a processing level
more nearly like its own."
"Ominous stuff it's sending, seems to me," Benjamin said
delicately.
"I've picked up waves from the distinctive knots in the
magnetic structure. There are tens of thousands of them, at a
minimum. They're living entities, all right. Somehow they share its
general knowledge, so some at least have learned to speak to us. They
say they were 'harvested' by the Eater."
"Magnetic ghosts." He shivered; she could feel his inner
states by reading the expressions of his pinched mouth.
"There's something else, an 'Old One.' Any idea what that
is?"
"Last I heard, the theory people here think it might be the
original civilization that uploaded itself into the magneto-sphere.
Just a guess, really."
"Ask Amy for me? See if there's anything new on this 'Old
One'?"
"Sure."
"I suppose you don't have to. This whole conversation, it's
monitored, right?"
"I suppose so. Haven't thought."
Dear thing, he wouldn't. "Privacy is not giving a
damn."
She had not expected this to make him cry, but it did.
7
Kingsley stood beside Benjamin as they watched the launch on a
wall screen. History in the making, if anyone lived to write it down.
He was partly there to see the event, but mostly to steady
Benjamin, should he start to fall over. That had happened twice
already from apparently random causes. If Benjamin were seen to get
visibly worse—distracted, morose, or worse—Arno would see
him off the property straightaway. That would depress the man even
more. Leaving him alone in their house would invite something far
worse still.
"Steady there," he whispered. Benjamin took no notice,
just stared.
The view was of a lumbering airframe framed by puffball clouds
that could have been anywhere; these were above Arizona. He still had
a bit of trouble getting excited about these air carrier, three-stage
jobs. Takeoff from any large airport, drop the rocket plane at
60,000 feet, whereupon the sleek silver dart shot to low Earth orbit.
This one would in turn deposit its burden, a fat cylinder instructed
to find and attach to the Channing-Searcher craft.
The modular stairway to the stars, as the cliche went.
Economical, certainly. Without it, they could never have fielded
an armada of Searchers and support vessels to meet the Eater. Still,
he missed the anachronistic liftoff and rolling thunder.
The dagger-nosed rocket plane fell from the airframe belly and
fired its engine. In an eye blink, it was a dwindling dot.
Benjamin murmured stoically. Kingsley wondered what was going
through his friend's mind and then, musing, recalled Arno and
the Marcus Aurelius reference made by the Eater. Why had the creature
dwelled upon Aurelius?
Stoic indeed, that was the smart course in such times. Did the
isolation of Aurelius at the top of the Roman Empire correspond
remotely to the utter loneliness of the Eater? The paradoxical
permanence of change must loom as an immensely larger metaphor
for it.
Such a being, though constructed by an ancient intelligence,
surely had undergone developments resembling evolution. Parts of
so huge an intelligence could compete and mutate as magnetic fluxes
carrying the genetic material of whole cultures. There could
presumably be selection for what Kingsley supposed could be called
"supermemes"—to coin an utterly inadequate term for
something that could only be conjectured.
Amy said from Benjamin's other side, 'They've set up a bar."
"Capital idea," Kingsley said with utterly false
enthusiasm.
"Think that's a good idea?" Benjamin asked mildly.
"I believe it to be a necessity." Kingsley made a
beeline for the bar before the crowd noticed it. It was admirably
stocked and he complimented Arno on it as the man took a gin and
tonic and the barman prepared Kingsley's exact specifications.
Arno seemed pleased and proud. "Great idea, wasn't it?"
Unlikely he was referring to the bar, but what else? Before
Kingsley could rummage through a list of suspects, Arno added, "The
antimatter thing."
"Quite so." This would not seem immodest because clearly
Arno had forgotten who had thought of it.
"My guys are sure it'll work—and they should know."
"Certainly." How to play this? Arno was not
exactly a torrent of information at the best of times. His
habits of concealment, well learned in other agencies known
chiefly by their initials, still held.
"They've done the simulations, pretty sure it'll work."
"The physics is a bit dicey. I—"
"They've discovered a lot of new stuff."
Arno's certainty was granite-hard, so Kingsley tried a
mood-altering diversion. "Well, the classic joke about
scientists and women is true of me, I'm afraid."
Arno frowned. "Haven't heard it."
"For scientists, it is better for a woman to wear a lot of
clothes that take time to take off, you see, because they are always
more excited by the search than by the discovery."
This got a hearty laugh that did not appear to be put on.
Pressures of the job escaping, Kingsley surmised. From
Arno's lined face he could see that it would be good to keep things
going on the good-fellow front. Always a wise idea, but essential
in a crisis of any size; and there had never been one larger.
"Timing is crucial, of course," he said quickly—to
pry forth some information before Arno's mood shifted.
"We've put down that U.N. negotiation position, too,"
Arno said. "They wanted to give it everything."
"All the people?"
"And more. You've seen the new list?"
"It wants more?"
"You bet. Raising the ante to over half a million names."
"Extracted from the news media, I imagine."
"No wonder it got so hot about our turning the TV and radio
off."
"The moral landscape has turned into a minefield,
admittedly. Some voices are arguing that we are likely to incur
more than half a million dead if it decides to skate along the
atmosphere and give us the jet again."
Something in Arno's smile gave him warning. "Maybe you should
be reading the list instead of listening to those 'voices,' my Royal
Astronomer."
"I'm on the list?"
"The monster watches a lot of TV."
"And you?"
"Yeah. Damned if I know how it got me."
"Benjamin?"
"Sure. Half the people working on this, easy."
"My God."
"Apparently that's what it thinks it is."
This sobering talk made the alcohol all the more necessary,
in Kingsley's opinion. Still, quite enough had been done along the
lines of intimidate-the-out-of-it-scientist. Before he left the
bar, he decided a gesture of indifference was required. "I'd go
like a shot if it would settle this matter," he said.
"You haven't been keeping up on the gusher of transmissions
it sends," Arno said comfortably. "It doesn't like the
'harvests' we routed to it, of people recorded using the
electromagnetic-induction technique."
"The technique Channing received?"
"Yes, only she got more detailed attention. Lots more. We're
having to do all this in a rush, people knocking themselves out,
around the clock—"
"Why does the bastard not like the results?"
"Low definition of some areas of the brain, I hear."
"We knew that. The regions that regulate body function,
digestion and motor skills and the like."
"Yeah, it says it wants more of them."
"I gather we impose some body simulation to make up the
difference?"
"Not good enough, it says. It prefers the skull-shaving
technique some other countries used."
"Ah. Have to rethink my position, then." He kept his
tone light and collected the drinks before beating a retreat.
He was on firm ground with Arno when discussing astrophysics,
but the man had an uncanny way of getting the stiletto in when the
subject shifted. The matter-of-fact horror of it all weighed
heavily now. And Arno had a sly relish in unveiling the latest faces
of the thing that hung in their sky like a great, glowering eye.
"New drink?" Amy asked, peering at his.
"Pernod and tequila with a dash of lemon. I believe it's
called a 'macho.' " This joke went unrecognized, perhaps
justifiably, and Benjamin began discussing the Eater's dynamics.
"You've learned a lot from her," Amy said.
"That's the idea, right?" Despite his earlier eyebrow
raising, Benjamin slurped down his beer. "Give her a
'friendly interface,' the Operations term was."
"I'm sure you're the crucial element," Kingsley said,
believing every word. Certainly fellows like Arno would have
driven Channing to suicide by now if they'd been in the loop.
"I wonder why it doesn't like the EM reader method?" Amy
mused.
Kingsley said, "I expect it is a connoisseur in such
matters."
"How?" Benjamin looked both puzzled and distracted, a
difficult combination to fathom.
"It has enforced such orders and used the results perhaps
thousands of times before," Kingsley said.
"I wonder what it does with them?" Amy asked, taking a
strong pull at her gin and tonic.
"I rather suspect we do not wish to know."
Benjamin looked soberly into Kingsley's eyes. "That bad,
huh?"
"Morality is a species-specific concept. The Eater
transcends species themselves, since it is an artificial
construction left to evolve now for a time longer than the Earth
has existed. Outside our experience in a way that does not reward
considerations of right and wrong."
Benjamin gave a grim smile. "Sounds like a classy way of
saying it can do what it damn well pleases, so don't think about it."
"Well put," Kingsley said as an aide tugged at his
elbow.
The man whispered, "You're needed immediately in Conference
B."
Kingsley shot back, "I'm bringing these two with me."
"Sir, they weren't included—"
"Then I'm not coming."
"Well, I don't know, I'll have to—"
"Come along." He ushered Amy and Benjamin forward.
When they reached the inevitable battalion of Security personnel,
there was the usual orchestration of knitted foreheads and
worried doubts. He got through that with a combination of
bluster and can't-tolerate-this-oversight fast talk.
"No matter," he said to Amy as they walked down a hall
with a phalanx of guards. "This is just the usual confusion. The
U Agency is acting in this crisis like what the world plainly needs—a
multinational government by default. Yet it will share all the
irksome traits of the old style nation-state, principally rust in the
gears."
"Your wife is still undercover?" Amy asked.
"Comfortably so, I gather."
She had caught on. Rather than skulk around, it was better to
quite obviously flout their rules. Doing so earned a certain measure
of grudging bureaucratic respect. Such strategies had served well in
these days.
He had learned a lot. To avoid getting entangled in
interference-blocking, running errands, and other lubricating
distractions, he had to step lively. There were nations to soothe and
endless anxieties issuing from the ever-intruding snout of the media
pig. And with exquisite irony, the reward for many, including
himself, was to make the Eater's list.
Straightaway he gathered the intent of the meeting. Arno was
running it. His mouth twisted at the sight of Amy and Benjamin, but
something kept him from objecting—quite possibly, time
pressure. Each figure around the long table had a little sign
detailing their positions, chimpanzee hierarchy again, but the
discussion was the least formal of any Kingsley had yet seen.
Everyone was in a barely controlled panic. The magnetic attack had
placed one rim of the loop upon the Center and another upon
installations of "strategic value" elsewhere in the
Hawaiian Islands, one woman from Defense said. A similar loop
had landed about an hour later upon the area outside Washington,
quite neatly destroying communications. No one had heard from the
President since. "Whereabouts and fate unknown," Arno
summed up.
For a world that routinely looked to the United States to pull
together alliances, this was a trauma. It did not help that as the
meeting proceeded news came of a third loop on its way. Some men
rushed out to get details.
"It is now obvious that we had better carry on
independently," Arno said. "We can't rely on anyone
else."
"We can still reach Channing from here?" Benjamin asked.
The entire table looked at him as though he had shouted in church.
He was not a policy maven, but they knew who he was. Their gaze said
that his role was to be a gallant warrior, bravely talking his
sim-wife through it all, and leave the actual thinking to them.
"I believe so, yes," Arno answered after a two-beat
pause. "We have DoD antennae positioned offshore in case these
here—the replacement ones, after our losses—get knocked
out again."
"Where is our fallback installation?" Kingsley asked.
"We want to keep that information closely guarded," a
severe woman in a black pants suit said. She was new, like most
of the faces here. Probably from Washington. Crisp, narrow-eyed, the
usual.
"Just how are we to flee there, then?"
Arno snorted testily, "All right, it's up at the 'scopes."
"The top of Mauna Kea?" Benjamin said disbelievingly.
"But that's so exposed."
"Everything is," Arno shot back. "We're living at
the bottom of a well."
"And we can line-of-sight to the fleet," the DoD woman
added. "Gives us a big effective platform for operations."
Apparently both U.S. Pacific fleets had been drawn secretly
into a perimeter around the Hawaiian Islands. Kingsley had not heard
of this, but there did seem a lot of military aircraft in the sky
lately, many of them heavy helicopters suitable for carrying
substantial equipment up the slopes to 14,000 feet. That they had
constructed a redoubt atop the mountain without even Center personnel
noting the fact was a tribute, probably to someone in this room.
"We are counting on another attack, once our assault
begins," Arno said. "Maybe even the jet."
This sobered everyone. "It's out near geosynchronous orbit
now, finishing off the rest of our satellites," a man nearby
said. "Cracks 'em open like nuts. That jet can't reach this far,
I heard."
Kingsley came in smoothly, "I believe Dr. Knowlton is the
expert on this."
It was best to build Benjamin's position here on technical
grounds, not let him be seen as distraught-husband-off-the-rails.
Benjamin seemed to get this point without even a glance at Kingsley.
He deftly led them through a discussion of the jet, highlighting what
his astrophysics team had learned by observing it incinerate
Washington. "The magnetic focusing will work at just about
any distance," Benjamin concluded. "The Eater sets up
a circuit effectively. Beautiful physics. The current in the jet
self-pinches itself, and the return route for the circuit flows
through the cocoon of plasma the jet generates outside it."
"Very neat," someone commented. A puzzled silence.
Kingsley understood this remark, however. He wondered for an
instant if an appreciation for the aesthetics of physics and
engineering could form a better grounds for comprehension
between utterly different life-forms than the old routine of serial
language.
Such abstractions were swept away, however, by a minor tsunami of
moral objection from several around the table. How dare the fellow
speak well of the monster, etc.? In the name of decency, and more
along those lines.
This gave Benjamin time to think, so that he broke into the
pointless jibes with, "It will be under stress—electromagnetic
ones, not psychological—when it uses its jet, though. That's
the time to hit it."
This got their attention. The DoD woman stalled for time by
reviewing their own thinking. Actually, the term was undeserved.
They had cooked up a bigger nuclear warhead attack, counting on
Channing to deliver the knockout at the end. This she presented in
eager-terrier style, looking eagerly back and forth along the
table like a girl scout bringing home a prize. Kingsley guessed
this strategy's primary asset was that it would allow DoD to claim
the victory, should there be one, since Channing would certainly not
survive to do so.
Swatting down this notion consumed a full hour. Such trench
warfare was interrupted by news that the third loop had landed, again
quite neatly, on Beijing.
"Seems our Chinese friends did something nasty, too,"
Arno said with dry relish.
This shook everyone. Kingsley found Arno's remark chilling, for
reasons entirely separate from the China attack.
Those in the room were getting more rattled. They drank coffee,
ate some spongy tropical kind of donuts, and murmured like a Greek
chorus uncertain of their song. But Arno would not call for a break.
Instead, the lady from DoD came forward again and kept saying in
various uninstructive ways, "Leave the fighting to those who
know." To this, the physicists rebutted, "Sorry, you are
plainly outgunned and need new ideas."
It was a predictable collision that needed to get worked through.
Institutional thinking was on the hedgehog model, knowing one solid
thing. Kingsley preferred the fox model, as he had leaped over
several hedgehogs in his life. Only toward the end of the hour did he
manage to get a word in and derail the slow-motion train wreck the
meeting was evolving into.
"I recommend using Channing and her Searchers alone," he
said. "During the time the jet is on, if it chooses to use it."
This simple suggestion took another hour to thrash through in
classic committee fashion. Kingsley had to defend the use of
antimatter, first carefully defining it and reviewing the
decades of research that had led to a packet the size of a wallet
containing the explosive power of a hundred hydrogen fusion warheads.
Not that technical arguments carried the day, of course. He was
dealing with Americans and so played out the accent bit, using
"shedule" and "lehzure." To buttress the tactical
side, he slid a few recognizable names past at the right speed to be
fully caught, yet not so slowly that they would suspect he was
trotting them by deliberately. All these he had conferred
with—briefly, of course, but no one need know that.
In the policy dust-up that necessarily followed his presentation,
he called in Benjamin again. Amy twice. Each time they provided the
right scientific detail and fell back to let him drive the point
home. Sketches of the Eater interior. Routes into it while avoiding
magnetic turbulence, and most importantly, the accretion disk. Old
methods he had first learned on Cambridge committees came into play.
Knowing that his foes lay in wait, he paused to breathe in the
clearly defined middle of his sentences. This let him rush past the
period and into the next sentence, allowing no one to make a smooth
interruption.
The next hour meandered on until Arno struck. This was lamentably
often the best way to settle an issue. Exhaust everyone, then cut
through the Gordian verbiage with an Alexandrian sword. He was de
facto in charge here, bar word from Washington. Therefore he took
command of the military resources and ordered them to stand down,
awaiting further orders.
Kingsley was reasonably up on American constitutional law, but
this looked doubtful to him. Arno's appointment was through DoD, and
the secretary of that massive agency could assume the presidency
should the true President be unreachable. Plus the Speaker of the
House, president pro tempore of the Senate, Secretary of State, and
so on.
This entire argument seemed wobbly, but Arno sold it to the room
in short order. The thin veneer of bureaucratic calm had dissolved
about an hour before, and now the panic among them made them reach
for any seemingly solid solution. Rule by Arno apparently played
this emotional function.
Kingsley shook hands with him afterward, murmuring congratulations
sincerely meant. He had never seen as deft a maneuver carried out at
the airy heights of power. Though of course he did not say so, he
ardently hoped that he never would again.
8
Into the living tree of event-space.
At the ragged red rim of the magnetosphere, she felt the first
crackling electrical discharges, alive with writhing forks. With her
all-eyed view, she could see the fretful working of the magnetic
intelligence. It reminded her of many natural patterns: pale blue
frost flowers of growing crystals. The oxygen-rich red in bronchi of
lungs. Whorls of streams, plunging ever forward into fractal
turbulence.
Pretty—and quite deadly. With an agonized shriek, one of her
leading Searchers flared into a cinder.
Ripples of intense Alfven waves told her that the Eater was
sensing/thinking/moving. All those functions were linked in its
world. The cybertechs had explained all this in their arcane lingo.
To her it was not dry theory but experience—the
restless slither of magnetic fields around her like a supple fluid.
She was gaining a sense of it, an intuition fed by her swimming
through the invisible thing-that-thought. How strange her former
brain now seemed! She had caught portions of the Eater's thought and
now could see human intelligence anew. Compress a life onto a sheet,
paper-thin. Crumple it. Stuff it into a bony carrying case. With
that, primates had evolved to store a hundred billion neurons, all
firing like matchheads in a webbed array still only poorly
understood.
No more, for her. Now she was a slab of silicon, being mated
to—thunk—a cylinder of death.
The attachment complete, she dove.
She vectored a swarm of missiles into the outer swelling of the
magnetosphere. To her, the Eater was an enormous blue blossom of
spiderweb-fine lines, each snarled with innumerable knots.
Time to go to work. She began the attack upon the magnetic
equilibrium. Deftly she guided nuclear-tipped plasma bursts to the
spot where the fields could be forced to reconnect.
Behind her, an enormous cloud of bright barium exploded into
billows. The solar wind blew around the Eater, fended off by its
magnetic pressure. The beast was like a small planet, defending
itself against the solar bath. But the barium was far denser
than the thin wind. She watched the Eater retract field lines,
avoiding the prickly energy of the high plasma flux.
"You're on it!" Benjamin's excited voice came.
"I always wanted to fly a fighter against the fearsome
enemy," she said. "This is better." To show him, she
did a tight turn, airy and graceful on her ion plumes.
"The package made it?"
"It's riding on my right."
"Try the other methods first. That's only a last-chance
backup."
He was trying to keep his voice level, businesslike, but it
wouldn't work with her. She could read him. That was the downside of
using Benjamin as intermediary, but Arno probably hadn't thought
of that. Benjamin was supposed to steady her up here, and he did. And
it worked both ways, thank goodness. She wondered if she had ever
loved him more, back when she had a real body to express it.
"Things tough down there?"
"It got the house."
"What?!"
"The electromagnetic induction from that field loop slamming
into the island. It blew the transformer at the end of our street.
The fire spread all the way to Hakahulua Street. When I got there,
the house was just smoldering black stuff."
Her heart sank. All gone—"Damn!"
"It's killed a lot of people, some in our neighborhood.
Pacemakers went out. There were a lot of effects nobody can explain."
She started to cry and the wrenching sobs were utterly real,
coming up from her nonexistent lungs and through a clenched throat.
She let the spasms run. Part of her agonized. The other basked
in the fleshy feel of living. Mind-body again.
"I… God. I guess I was never going to go there again…
but…"
"Yeah. I'll miss it, too."
"Everything we had…"
"Not quite. After you… left… I took all the
photo albums, our wedding stuff, and put it in a safe deposit
box."
A gale of joy blew through her. "Wonderful!"—and
she was back aloft again, bird swooping, spirit rising.
"Whoa, girl, tune it."
"Oops, my mood swings are going over the top."
"You have reason to."
She made herself slow down. No fighting the body, no intellect
arm wrestling with hormones. She simply concentrated and the
gusty spirit blew away, leaving a precise, analytical glaze over her
mind. Not that it would hold for long, she wagered.
"Ah!" A sharp crack in his background sounds. "We're
getting heavy weather here on top of all that. I—"
"The Eater's sending that."
"What? How?"
"I can sense it from here. It's acting like a voltage source,
driving the global electrical circuit. Currents running everywhere
up here."
"Why's it after us?"
"It must've figured out where our command centers are."
"That fits." He grimaced. "We just lost even the
supposedly secure links with Washington."
Alarm resounded in her like a hollow gong. "You're getting
cut off?"
"Every other channel died hours ago. We've got only the
antennae here, that's it."
"They're locked on the satellites below me?"
"Those few are our only targets now. It's eaten everything
else in the sky."
"If you get blanked out—"
"Yeah." A strumming, pregnant silence hung between them.
"It seems to be making a big ionized layer right over the
island."
"Putting a conducting plate between me and you."
"So far, it's failing. Feels like Zeus throwing thunderbolts
down here."
"I've got to do something."
"Operations says they don't have all the Searchers within
range yet."
She fumed. "I'll go with what I have."
"No, don't. Look, the black hole theorists, they've got some
new input for you. I'm sending it on a sidebar channel—"
And here it blossomed in her spherical view: a 3-D color computer
simulation of the black hole itself. An orange oblate spheroid,
spinning hellishly fast. A sedate sphere, fattened by its own
rotation until it grew an ocean-blue bloat at the equator.
Benjamin said, "Point is, the ergosphere—that's the
midrift bulge, in blue—has zones with so much rotational
energy, you can fly through them safely."
"Oh sure."
"Do I detect sarcasm?"
"No, realism."
"They're saying you could bank in over the accretion disk,
drop your donation, and then veer in. That'll give you the energy to
escape."
"All this at an appreciable fraction of the speed of light."
"You don't sound convinced."
"Do you?"
"They say it's your only chance."
"And what order of magnitude would those odds be?"
"Not great, right."
"Well, send up the trajectory, anyway. I'll log it in."
"Remember, there are relativistic effects this close in—"
"Yeah, so I'll have slowed time to deal with."
"And it'll help you a little. Give you more time to execute
the maneuver."
"And catch up on my reading. Did you know they stored the
whole goddamned text of War and Peace in my buffer?"
"Huh? Why in the world?"
"Something to do with buttressing my long term memory."
His face clouded and he obviously struggled for words. "Look,
this is the only way, they say…"
"I register. I'm not really what I once was to you. I can't
be."
"You are."
"I'm as much as I can be, that's all."
"Enough for me."
"I'll try to make it back out."
"I… guess that's all I can ask for."
His face broke into rasters, lost color. "I'm having trouble
with the link here—"
"The lightning, it's—" His lips moved, but no
sound came through.
"Benjamin, don't—"
A spray of gray static showered across his image. Then that froze…
stuttered… and was gone.
"Benjamin!"
She coasted alone in a suddenly eerie silence. Alone.
She close-upped the globe below. Hawaii lay in view, just emerging
from the dawn line. Angry blue-gray clouds shrouded the Big Island.
She could make out the forks of de-scending electricity. Not just
local lightning, but the larger discharges as well: sprites, the vast
thin glowing sheets that climbed down from the ionosphere.
Alone. Shepherd to several hundred Searchers. Mother hen to an egg
that rode in its cylindrical majesty beneath her tail.
She had not thought she could carry out the complexity of all this
by herself. Operations had agreed.
Now she would have to try. Preparation would—here her
subself, full of calculation, provided a fast estimate—take at
least another day. Then she could begin.
Without Benjamin. The leaden realization dragged at her. At the
back of her mind, something else was vying for her attention.
Presiding over her inner self was like keeping an unruly grammar
school class in order…
A quick blip of information squirted through her filters.
A message, digitized Eater-style, but riding to her on the
magnetosonic waves she had slowly learned to decipher.
FROM YOUR EXODUS 23:19:
"NO MAN SHALL SEE
ME AND LIVE."
"Oh yeah?" she muttered to herself. But it chilled her
all the same.
PART EIGHT
A HEAVEN OF SORTS
1
Lightning tore at the dark-bellied clouds with yellow talons,
ripping rain from them in shimmering veils. Kingsley watched out the
narrow windows, still feeling in his English soul that rain should
properly be accompanied by cold. Here, sheets of it swept through
cloyingly warm air.
Great crashes rattled the prefab walls of the Center. The crowd of
people around the big screens flinched as the hammering booms
rolled unceasingly over them.
"Bit dicey, I'd say." Kingsley turned away from the
static-filled screens. "There's no hope of reaching her using
the high frequency bands?"
Amy shook her head. "The techs say it's got an ionized
blanket over the island now."
"Even in the 96 gigaHertz band?"
"As soon as they start at that frequency, it runs up the
plasma density in a spot above the transmitters."
Benjamin said shakily, "A huge current discharge, right down
a funnel from the ionosphere. How in the world can it do that from so
far out?"
" 'How in the world' is precisely it." Kingsley sized up
the disarray he saw in the faces around them. "It has had
practice on other worlds. It knows planetary atmospheres the way
we know our backyards."
Amy said, "Or better, the way birds know air."
"It cut her off so fast," Benjamin said.
"It knows she's there. Senses what we plan, probably,"
Amy said somberly.
Kingsley ground his teeth. "It's seen a lot of tricks, I'll
wager."
"We're checkmated," Amy said. "Those Searchers,
they're like pawns, cut off without even a knight to—"
"Ah, that's the point, isn't it?" Kingsley thought
rapidly. A fleeting idea had scurried by.
While he gazed into the distance, Benjamin said flatly, "It's
got to be worried. Why bother to cut us off from her and the
Searchers? It's concerned."
Kingsley nodded. "A compliment, I suppose."
Amy roused from her depression slightly. "So it knows that we
can do it real damage this way?"
Benjamin visibly rallied himself. "It moves to cut her off
from Operations, right? Which implies that it works kinda the same
way? With a managing center."
Kingsley liked to frame ideas as he thought them through, and so
said out loud, "It's searching for our command center. We never
said we had one. It assumes we do because it does!"
Amy brightened. "Those interceptions Channing got—they
were magnetic wave transmissions inside the Eater's magnetosphere. If
we could trace their routes—"
"—we'd get a clue to its central command, right,"
Benjamin finished.
"Quite a job," Amy said. "We'd have to—"
"Never mind how tough it is," Arno broke in. "Get
on it."
Kingsley had concentrated upon the exchange so intently that he
had completely missed Arno's eavesdropping. He was pleased that Amy
and Benjamin had pulled the same idea out of their gray matter that
he had been vainly pursuing. Somewhat reassuring, when others
believe a passing notion has substance. What had his examiner
muttered, long ago at Oxford? The universe is under no obligation
to make sense, though a doctoral thesis is. People craved order,
meaning, some certainty in the face of immense mystery. No matter the
price.
The others chattered on, plainly glad to have something to do.
There was perhaps shelter in numbers. In primate talk— a form
of grooming, hadn't the Eater said?
As yet another rattling hammer blow fell upon the Center, he felt
the need of whatever shelter—even intellectual—he could
find.
2
Benjamin wasn't having any. "Come on, it makes no sense."
Arno gave him the full glowering treatment. Heavy on the eyebrows,
stentorian voice, rigid at-attention gaze. "It's the only way we
can get this information to her."
"But I've got no experience at any of this—"
"Neither does anyone here. Not anybody who can understand
the material."
"I've never been in space and—"
"It's easy. I've done it."
Arno did look like the type who would shell out big bucks for a
suborbital shot, an hour or two of zero-g, and great views. Probably
some high-level government gig had taken him up. Benjamin shook his
head adamantly. "I'll be a lot higher up in orbit. I'm not used
to zero-g."
"So maybe you'll throw up some. So what?"
He gritted his teeth. "I won't be worth a damn."
A heavy pause. "It's your duty."
To punctuate this, a rolling series of crashes and thunder rolls
swept through the center. They were so common now, nobody even
cringed.
An aide ran in and said, "We got everybody out of the E wing.
It's totalled."
"How many casualties?"
"Plenty of injured. We're setting up Medical in G wing. Got
three known dead."
Arno nodded, waved him away, looked blankly at Benjamin.
"Well?"
"Okay, I'll go. I don't even see how I can—"
"We'll get you to the airstrip. I've got a first-stage
carrier coming in from Oahu."
"You knew I would."
Arno grinned, an unusual expression for him. "Sure, you're an
all right guy."
This locker room style did not bother Benjamin, though he
recognized the method. "She's in there. Close to it."
"Near as we can tell, yes."
"I'll have to look after her." A part of him said, If
there's any chance it's really her, I've got to act on it.
"As well you should. She's the center of coordination."
"That antimatter trap you sent—"
"It's a last-ditch thing. Main thing is, we're going for the
plasma assault. Kingsley thinks that'll herd it around."
"Enough for the nuclear warheads to get in close."
"I know. It failed before. But maybe we can overwhelm it."
Benjamin had no real faith in this, but he could think of nothing
else. A fighter against the ropes should try to slug his way out; the
time for sublety was past.
But then, a fistfight analogy was primate thinking, wasn't it? The
Eater would be quite aware of all that. Though were humans really
like other, vaguely similar forms evolved around distant stars? How
special were these latest products of fitness selection among
hominids?
He wondered how often in history men had made desperate moves
with the same lack of confidence. The fog of battle, he
recalled the term. Delirium was more like it.
Soon enough Kingsley was seizing him by the shoulders, a
remarkable gesture for him. "I'll be alongside for the
briefings. Amy, too."
"Great. I really appreciate it."
Their presence proved to be crucial. Benjamin sat through hurried
yet extensive dissections of what they had learned of the Eater's
structures. Amy and Kingsley helped him through the spots when he
would blank out, losing the thread.
"Like a brain?" one of the specialists said in answer to
Benjamin's question. "We're stacked on top, newer brain on the
outside. Form dictates function. Within the limits of being a kludge,
of course—sticking new parts on while the older ones are
running. On the other hand, the Eater's able to rearrange itself
whenever it wants, as nearly as we can tell. So no—it's
completely different."
"Then why should I trust any of this?" Benjamin shot
back. "It keeps changing."
"Because it's all we've got."
This looked pretty flimsy to him, all the theorizing based on
interpretations of magnetic wave packets. Channing had picked up most
of the data they were using as she darted around at the fringes of
the thing. There was a category of localized information the
specialists called the "Remnants"—apparently,
the records of civilizations encountered in the far past by the
Eater.
"We figure they, too, were 'harvested' by the Eater,"
the specialist said. "But they're not just libraries. They
interact. Talk to each other. To the Eater, wherever its intelligence
is."
"Magnetic ghosts," Benjamin said.
"Yes, in a way."
"All the people we shipped up to it, that's what they'll
become?"
"We guess so. The information density in the thing is
incredible."
"That word doesn't mean much anymore."
One Remnant was an especially powerful agency the cybertechs
called the "Old One."
"Now, that may be the essence of the Eater, the original race
that started it all," a horn-rimmed, earnest woman said. "It
seems to have pieces of itself distributed all over the
magnetosphere. None of the other characteristic wave packets do
that."
'This is all just a bunch of guesses," Benjamin said harshly.
"Right you are," she said.
Later, still unsettled from this, he asked Kingsley and Amy, "Why
doesn't it just kill us all?"
Kingsley understood power and had a ready reply. He was holding up
pretty well through all this, the upside of his classic Brit
reserve. "A universal urge," he said. "It doesn't want
us all dead; it wants us all compliant."
Grimly, Arno convened with the survivors of high command who
could reach the islands. The Eater was slamming away at the United
States, pelting it with cyclones, electrical nightmares, fierce
winds. Planes did not venture into the snarling skies. The American
habit of taking the lead in international matters had now made
it the principal target.
Arno and the others tried to raise the stakes. In the last few
weeks, various backup missions had gotten into position. Arno
used these. There seemed no one in the entire national power
apparatus who could stop the on-rolling momentum he had started.
A manned spacecraft with hydrogen bombs tried a suicide mission.
They had bombs doped with elements that might interfere with the
magnetic filaments, perhaps producing an electromagnetic pulse to
scramble the field lines' snarls, lowering their information-bearing
capacity.
The Eater figured this out, of course. It hulled the ship with
high-speed gravel, shot from its accretion disk. The thin-walled
vessel was shredded in a moment.
This rattled Benjamin considerably. The military advisers
reassured him, as well as they could when he knew they were dealing
with a complete unknown. What did lessons learned by such theorists,
from the strategies of Waterloo and Gettysburg and Stalingrad, mean
here? Less than nothing.
But Benjamin had Channing to help, they reminded him. Maybe that
would matter.
In the hushed, defeated atmosphere at the Center, the staff
labored on. Nobody talked much. The Eater was as chatty as ever,
transmitting at high-bit rates any number of reflections on life,
culture, and much else. This unnerved them all still further.
YOU WOULD PROFIT FROM INVESTIGATIONS MYSELF HAS
CARRIED OUT OVER THREE BILLION YEARS. HERE I DETAIL THEM BRIEFLY.
FROM THE MOMENT OF MY ORIGINS, IN MY KERNEL INTELLIGENCE, I WONDERED
IF THERE COULD BE A FAR HIGHER BEING THAN MY-SELF FOR EXAMPLE, A
CLASS THAT HARNESSES THE LUMINOSITY AVAILABLE IN THE STARLIGHT OF AN
ENTIRE GALAXY. THIS WOULD BE VISIBLE AT GREAT DISTANCES: A LACK OF
LUMINOSITY COMPARED WITH MASS, AS REVEALED BY STELLAR ORBITS IN THE
SUMMED GRAVITATIONAL POTENTIAL. GALAXIES, I HAVE DETERMINED, OBEY
SCALING LAWS BETWEEN THEIR SURFACE BRIGHTNESS, RADIUS, AND MASS. A
HIGHER ENTITY FEEDING ON LUMINOSITY WOULD BREAK THESE SCALING RULES.
IN THE MANY THOUSANDS OF GALAXIES I HAVE OBSERVED, NONE SHOWS SUCH
DIMINUTION. THUS THERE ARE NO GREATER FORMS OF LIFE THAN MY-SELF.
I
COMPRISE THE ULTIMATA.
"Gee, that's great news," Amy said dryly. "We don't
have to worry about anything worse than this guy."
They all laughed, utterly without humor.
They gave him one session of deep electro-sleep. To make him
remotely in condition to fly, the physicians said. He had heard of
the method, which in practice seemed innocent enough: small patches
on his head, a soothing sound, a sensation of skating across a
gray plain—and he was waking up ten hours later, feeling better
than he had in months.
Then it was just airplanes. Arno's team went with him in a convoy
to the freshly scraped landing field a few kilometers from the
Center. There a chopper carried him to the Kona airport. It was a
deserted landscape pelted by high winds and rains. Enormous waves
churned in across the black lava fields and chewed at the runways.
A sleek jet took him to Oahu. Again a barren plain with the
military holding a perimeter. No flights except his. The suborbital
carrier was of a design he had never seen before, bulky and somehow
muscular in its aluminum sleekness. No time delays at all—they
hustled him across a hundred meters of slick asphalt and into
the passenger cylinder of the beast. They even had an
umbrella-carrier who ran alongside. Somebody was taping his every
move, too.
The rumble of its huge engines shook him as he belted in. A
steward showed him the space gear, patiently explaining each and
helping him try them on. He dimly saw that this was part of their
method. Keep him busy, focused, no time for fear or imagination. He
welcomed it. A fringe of his depression lifted as their wheels
left the ground.
The craft labored up through decks of roiled clouds. Above 35,000
feet, a clarity came to the seethe outside. They crossed out of the
cone that the Eater maintained over the islands. Engines fought the
inrushing winds and slowly spiraled them up to 50,000 feet.
Their rise slowed as the jet gulped the thinning air. They took
him into the orbital craft then, all suited up and primed with
anti-zero-g medical aids. The moment when they dropped the
dart-shaped ship from the jet's bay was a foretaste of orbit, but he
did not feel like vomiting. The rocket's kick in the ass brought a
heady rush. Vibration, massive weight. A blue-white view through the
port that quickly eased into black. Real orbital zero-g was fun. He
was enjoying playing with a floating pen and the view outside
when they came for him. Into a smaller compartment he went. The pilot
sat a meter away and the view was better.
"A closet with a view," Benjamin said amiably. He was
feeling so good he did not even wonder why.
"Yeah, Cap'n," the pilot said. "They rushed me up
here so fast, I'm still going through the manifest. Gimmie a min.
Name's Sharon."
"So beautiful."
"Real pretty for a suicide run."
This jolted Benjamin a little. He craned to see the Eater, out
somewhere near the moon. A blue speck.
"We've got boosters out the kazoo," Sharon said. "Hope
you're ready for a roller coaster."
"I've got a date with my girl," he countered. "
Go."
Now he knew why he felt so fine.
3
Channing said, "That phrase, 'my kernel intelligence'—I
agree with Kingsley. That might be the Old One."
"Could be. Can you reach it?"
She sensed Benjamin floating in the cowling of his sensaround as
he watched/felt her. He was sending all sorts of secondary
sensation—the headset pressure, visual processing cues,
the wheeze of his shallow breathing. But these were just add-ons to
his abstractions, or so they came to her. The miniboosters tugged at
him as the craft accelerated and she heard their angry snarl. These
she gobbled up, for they suddenly reminded her of how achingly far
she was from her old, real body. Emotions washed over her aplenty,
but she was sensation-starved.
"The cyberguys have identified a whole catalog of different
'signature' memory waves," she said, accessing her crisp
memories. "The Old One has a trademark bunch of Alfven waves
tagging its parts, as nearly as they can make out. Those tags are all
over the dipolar shape of the fields. A diffuse storage method.
Probably to give it a holographic quality."
"So we can kill part of it, maybe, but not all."
"Smart bastard, it is."
"This 200 gigaHertz band works beautifully," he said
mildly, the mellow tones telling her that they had done a good job on
him. He had weathered the trip untroubled. "You're so…
full."
"I love having you so close."
Somehow he was now more deeply embedded in the space of her
perceptions. Like pale sunlight beams lancing through her 3-D self.
The cyberfellas had been sharpening the software again.
"What's that music?"
"Oh." She felt the rhythm eddying through her, called up
by his notice of it. "I have it all the time, I guess. Music
integrates parts of the mind that make sense of memory, of
timing and language. It retools me. When I started up here, I thought
it was pointless, working in areas with no real use, like motor
control. Until I found that the designers used those parts to pilot
my Searchers. Thrifty guys."
"It's more than music, isn't it. It's…"
"Feeling? Yeah, I caught on to that once I used it some. The
story they fed me is, there must've been neural mechanisms that
deciphered music in the early hominid brain. That may have developed
as a way to communicate emotion before language came along."
"Wow, it feels different."
"Yeah, somebody's going to make a bundle selling this, once
it gets out of the R&D stage."
Their chat flowed easily, part of reintegrating with him. Sensory
input laced with meaning, weaving a comfy fabric around them both.
Two of my favorites—
clothes and sex…
An echoing voice boomed suddenly, "Channing? Benjamin?
This is Kingsley."
It came as a dash of chilly rainwater on a hot skillet. They both
flinched. "Yuh, yes?" she managed.
"Sorry to break in—"
"I'm surprised you can," Benjamin said. "Pretty
narrowband, though."
"That's the point of having you up there. I may fall out at
any time. All the monster has to do is throw a plasma screen between
us."
"Your signal's pretty jittery now," Channing said.
"Losing the low frequencies. That checks with a plasma cloak
just a little too low in density."
"I'll be quick. Pretty rough here, it is. This signal has to
go out on an undersea cable and then through a chain of satellites."
"Everybody okay?"
His hesitation told her all she wanted to know. "As well as
can be expected."
"Judging from what I can see," Channing said, "I'd
say get away from the Center. There's a tube of plasma flow pinning
the islands like a needle."
"And low-frequency electromagnetic stuff," Benjamin
said. "I can see it on the displays in front of me."
"We have little choice. Arno's arranged a bolt hole for us if
it gets bad."
"Arno must be pretty pumped," Benjamin said.
"Indeed. He wants me to provide interface on this."
"You can see the Eater?"
"No, nothing. It's good at blinding us. But I do know that,
using a relay through the Navy, we've started the plasma dumping."
Channing felt/saw/smelled it already—a spike of barium
ionization at the nearer edge of the Eater's magnetosphere. Like a
puke-green worm eating at a fat blue apple. And the dwindling motes
of Searchers who had delivered the barium, zapped by the Eater
within moments. But they had worked.
"Think that'll drive it?" Benjamin asked. She could feel
him sending edgy, exploring fingers through her sensorium.
"We hope so," Kingsley said. His voice was flat,
low-quality, riding a meager trail of bits. "It's been following
a slow trajectory outward, and Arno believes this will look like
another ineffectual failure of an attack."
Channing said doubtfully, "To edge it around the moon."
"I'll admit, this is wholly conjectural," Kingsley said.
"Like me and my life," she said.
Benjamin asked, "We're
sure it can't decode these
transmissions?"
"They are going under a screen signal. Even if it can
penetrate that, we have already laid down a pattern strongly
suggesting that you are a feint. So it may very well discount
what it can decipher."
"More Waterloo thinking," Benjamin said cryptically. "I
still—"
"I SHOULD THINK YOU SHOULD START YOUR DIVE!" Kingsley
suddenly bellowed. "Oh, sorry, having transfer problems again.
I—"
And he was gone. "Damn, this setup is rickety," Benjamin
said.
"He was right, though. I'm starting."
Red muscle-clenchings down her spine. Quickenings. Abstractions
rendered into a cool sort of body language. She sensed one hundred
and thirty-four Searchers start their programmed accelerations. Her
subsystems updated them every few moments. Furious work seethed just
below her conscious perception, a strumming insect-hive frenzy.
Into the whirlpool.
Her astronaut training took over. She quick-checked twenty things
in the time it took to breathe out. (Thinking that, the breathing
sensation came back on, full.)
She wasn't going to survive this, but training is training.
"I love you," Benjamin said.
"Ummm. I love you, too, but, well, love the mind, miss the
body."
He chuckled in that old way of his.
The webbed intricacy of the magnetosphere rushed at her. "Here
goes."
"Good—"
He had started to say goodbye. There had been altogether too much
of that lately. More than enough for a lifetime, and here she was
into her second one. She was damned if she was going through this all
sober and noble.
"Got a puzzle for you, lover. Why did kamikaze pilots bother
to wear helmets?"
4
Weirdly colored lightning snarled through the thick air. Kingsley
helped some men carry gear out of the collapsed shell of the main
building. Through the patter of the unending rain, he heard distant
shouts. More bodies were recovered from the adjacent wings.
A bolt came slamming down and narrowly missed—
crack!
The impact staggered him and shattered a guard station a hundred
meters down slope. The shock wave hit like a cuff to the body by a
giant hand. He dropped his burden in, of course, the largest puddle
within view. The box held ferrex computer memories, delicate stuff
probably not aided by immersion. He levered the box up again, getting
mud over his jacket. Clothes had long since ceased to matter—he
had been living in this suit for two days—but the warning
twinge in his back said he was getting close to collapse.
Fatigue blurred the mind quite enough, thank you, without the
piercing pains to which his rebellious spine was prone.
A communications building upslope disappeared in fire as they
loaded the 4X truck. Arno came limping out from the smoking ruins
carrying his own two overnight cases with large red DEFENSE GRADE 10
labels. From the look on the man's face, Kingsley decided it was best
not to refer to the last-ditch lightning rod screen the teams had run
up the night before. Their puny defense had withered beneath the
incessant voltages the Eater had somehow concocted above the island.
Kingsley decided that reference to any of Arno's decisions
was not on for now. Pointless, anyway. Probably nothing could
have aided the situation. Stick to the practical, then, with a
straightforward "Where shall we go?"
For the first time, Arno showed both confusion and alarm—in
approximately equal proportions. An aide ran up and held an umbrella
over Arno, allowing the man time to recoup. After an awkward moment,
the aide produced an umbrella and handed it to Kingsley, who gave a
polite nod. He was already hopelessly drenched, but the thought was
the important thing, Kingsley supposed.
Arno managed, "I'd… I'd say we spread out."
"How can we continue working, then?"
" 'Working'?"
"Yes, regain contact with Benjamin."
"Working." The concept seemed to need tossing over in
his mind.
"We have to get a new base of operations. Plainly the Eater
has targeted us quite well here."
"Working."
"Reaching Benjamin. That is our proper job."
"Washington…"
"Forget Washington. It might not even exist any longer."
This jab made Arno blink, startling him from his daze. "The
comm unit's gone. Totalled. No way we can get an uplink."
"Probably so, but there remain the big dishes up at the top."
Someone shouted at them and then ran off. " 'Top'?"
"The observatory complex at the peak of Mauna Kea."
"Hell, higher up, it'll get even more lightning, won't it?"
"We can't be sure. The Eater must have targeted us very
specifically. This isn't happening over at Kona, for example."
"Yeah, the tech boys figure it backtracked on our narrow-beam
transmissions. Wish they'd thought of that before."
He spotted Amy working with a medical team. Kingsley called to her
and she looked around as if she could not tell where the voice came
from. Probably stunned from the thunderclaps and lightning strikes,
ears humming. His were ringing as well, but that did not prevent him
from hearing the cries of the injured as they were loaded into
whatever vehicles could serve. Kingsley waved, did a dance, and
she picked him out. Arno was engaged with two of his staff and this
gave Kingsley time to embrace her, then just stand together
silently beneath the umbrella. He wanted to stay like that, not move
an inch, but finally he asked her about the observatories. As
always, she knew far more than he expected.
When he got Arno's attention back, he said, "The last anyone
heard, the system up top was working."
"It's damned vulnerable up there," Arno said, blinking
rapidly. Was the man faltering? Not surprising, really.
"Benjamin's going to have no backup," Amy said flatly.
"I can't think what we could do…" Arno's voice
trailed off and he stared through the rain at the milling personnel
and wrecked buildings, his empire flattened.
Amy said crisply, "If we can get some of this gear up to the
data processing facility at the peak, we can use the bands above 100
gigs."
Arno shook his head slowly. "I still don't see—"
"The Eater's holding a plasma discharge over our heads here.
We go up to fourteen thousand feet, we're above that."
Arno rallied enough to jut his chin out. "Until it finds us
there."
"Until then, we can still talk to Benjamin," Amy said.
Kingsley found interesting how Amy and Arno had interchanged
roles. She always saw problems, but now proposed solutions; he, the
reverse. Even now Arno stood in the softly pelting rain and just
stared at them. No doubt the man would come back to himself, but
when?
Moments moved by. Nothing. "I'll help organize some of the
specialists," he said to move matters along.
"Ah, okay." Arno did not move.
"I should think you would need to instruct your
lieutenants."
"Right."
"Quite soon."
"Right."
With Amy, he found Arno's bevy of next-in-command types and got
them at least moving in roughly the same direction. Arno slowly
came to resemble himself again. Within an hour, something like a
convoy departed to wind its way up the Saddle Road. At the last
moment, Arno summoned up with his bureaucratic magic wand a fleet of
limousines. Into these sleek black Lincoln Continentals they wedged,
not wanting to ride in the backs of trucks. Prudently Arno had kept
the limos on the island since the threat of a presidential visit had
loomed, then receded, weeks before. Amid slashing lightning,
they wallowed off into gray, thick rain.
Arno insisted that Kingsley and Amy ride with him, and though
Kingsley wanted nothing more than to lean back and nod off, Arno
chose this moment to demand a summary of the "scientific
situation."
"What do you think the Eater will do next?"
Kingsley was tempted to retreat to his now-standard
aliens-are-alien argument, but this newly revived Arno did not seem
in the mood to accept that and let him sleep. He leaned forward,
summoning up energies he did not until a moment before know that he
had. An aide handed him a gin and tonic with crackling cold ice,
fresh from the limo bar. This incongruity disarmed him momentarily
and he took a sip. What the hell, it was calories. At least Amy was
beside him. He needed her much more than the drink, but it, too, was
comforting. He dimly noted that his drink hand was trembling and
wondered abstractly why.
"It's concerned. Not perhaps desperate; we can't flatter
ourselves with entertaining that notion. But concerned, since it is
wasting its most vital resource—the hot, fluid, ionized mass
that is compressed by gravitational gradients into the disk that
orbits it."
Arno was a difficult audience because he knew just enough to ask
questions. "It didn't use that to burn Washington. Or to
shotgun that ship."
"In a way it did," Kingsley said. "The jets it
creates, the gravel it used to poke holes in that ship—they
come ultimately from the infalling energy and mass in its disk."
Arno frowned. "It's got a lot in that disk. Hell, I could see
it glowing in the sky. Back when I could see the sky, I mean."
"Indeed. Yet mass is a scarce resource for it now, as it has
expended a great deal decelerating on its approach to us. To be sure,
it retrieved some in our upper atmosphere. Amy has estimated that it
could catch in the range of several tens of tons per minute with the
expanded field region it has flowered forth. Integrating that
over its cruise around the Earth in several shallow orbits, one gets
a substantial mass. But still a good deal less than it needs. And
therefore
desires, for I suspect it experiences its most
basic needs as a hunger. Desire is a more rarefied way to put
it. This thing is best regarded as an extremely sophisticated,
moving appetite with more experience than any civilization could
possibly have. And of a different kind, as well, one we can explore
only by working out the most basic constraints upon it."
This extended blurt Arno greeted with his patented skeptical
gaze. He took so long to say anything that Kingsley wondered whether
the man was slipping back into his earlier semicatatonia. Then
he looked at one of his lieutenants, wedged into the far end of the
limo with a security type, and said, "We got any new
intelligence on this?"
"Nosir. Nothing
works."
"No lines to DoD?"
"Nosir."
"The airborne White House?"
"Nosir, it hit us pretty bad."
"Well then." Arno seemed to have decided something, for
he now gazed stolidly at Kingsley across the short separation of
the limousine's center well. "What you got?"
"Our strategy, if it deserves such a name, is simple. The one
thing it must have to move on with is matter. Our first maneuver is
to explode canisters of barium near it. Barium ionizes easily in the
solar ultraviolet. The plasma is disagreeable to the Eater, so
it will move away."
"Herding it, I remember that."
"But it needs mass, so we suspect—"
"Hope," Amy put in. "A more honest word."
"Quite. We hope that it will move toward the most readily
available, substantial mass in its vicinity."
"Right, the moon."
"Yet by the logic we settled upon long ago, when we first
understood its nature, the Eater cannot simply plunge into the moon.
That would strip it of its magnetic fields—and thus its mind.
Suicide."
"So it grazes the moon. Orbits in, real close." Arno
nodded. Kingsley could see he was reconstructing this, as if his
memory were disarranged.
"And that is where we use matter again—the key to
destroying it, as well."
"Antimatter," Arno said. He clung to the word.
"The antimatter Channing carries is lodged in cylindrical,
highly magnetic traps. If she can eject the contents at the
innermost edge of the Eater's own mass deposit—the
accreting mass in its disk—that will disrupt the magnetic
fields that are anchored there."
"So?"
"Its greatest energy density lies there."
"So annihilating the mass that ties those fields." Amy
put in, "might give the Eater a lobotomy."
Arno's mouth sketched a skeptical curve. "But not kill it."
"There is a possibility," she went on, balancing an
orange juice on her knee. "She could drop some antimatter—
positrons and antiprotons—into the rim of the black hole
itself. There are huge magnetic fields moored there."
"And that would kill it?" Arno asked.
"It would allow the two poles, north and south, of the black
hole itself to unite." She grinned triumphantly.
Arno frowned. "They would then, well, what?"
"Annihilate. North and south are opposite poles, and they
would cancel each other out.
Poof!—all the energy in
the hole's magnetic storage turns to free energy." Amy beamed.
He felt a rush of emotion, mostly pride. This was her idea and she
was justly proud. Kingsley had not even suspected such a thing could
occur, but she had shown it in several detailed calculations.
"And what happens to this Channing simulation?" Arno
asked.
Amy sobered. "The tidal forces, the torques—this close
to the hole, they're tremendous."
Trying to be helpful, Kingsley added, "The trick for it, for
her, is to angle in so that the whirlpool of space-time can pick her
up. That centrifugal action can counter the inward stresses. It's the
only way she could get close enough to carry this out."
Amy went on as Arno struggled to understand. It would all be much
easier if they had the vast graphic displays of the Center, of
course. Science was now mostly a matter of understanding the
pictures shown, not the principles underlying them.
Kingsley sat back and reflected, the gin and tonic helping nicely.
The great trouble with understanding this black hole lay in a simple
fact: calculations were nearly all about the equilibrium. Average
properties, energy theorems and the like. So what did one really
know? He had watched a generation of theorists wrestle with the
same problems.
Take what happened when matter fell in—did it go all the way
to the frightful singularity that lay at the "bottom" of
the hole, and so get chewed up? We thought so, but were not sure.
Could the twisted space-time around a spinning hole, and inside
it, lead to fundamental new properties—say, worm-holes? Not
sure.
At the core, physics smeared into topology, the study of surfaces,
shapes. Geometry ruled.
Near the innermost regions of a rotating hole, snug up against the
singularity, the laws of quantum mechanics object quite
profoundly to infinities. Physics had for decades posted a want ad at
this boundary: NEW THEORY NEEDED. APPLY WITHIN. But to properly
describe this realm demanded a deep view of quantum gravity, which
still—despite much work and false prophets—eluded them
all.
Amy had hit a conceptual wall with Arno. Talk between them
dwindled and they stared out at the pelting fat dollops of rain. A
somber mood descended.
"Perhaps the primary point," Kingsley said, "is
that this simulation of Channing is flying into the utterly unknown.
The only evidence of her deeds will be what happens to the Eater."
"She'll die," Amy said.
"She knew that going in," Arno said flatly, apparently
glad to find a tough-guy line he could use.
"It may be easier for us, when we speak to Benjamin—if
we can even do that—to use 'it' rather than 'her,' "
Kingsley said.
"Good psychology," Amy said. "Prepare him for it."
The limousine stopped. They had finally growled up the rocky,
narrow road to the observatory complex. To Kingsley's surprise, the
rain clouds now hung below them. The sky above was not clear, but at
least there were no glowering dark clouds and crackling
lightning. The telescopes here had long taken advantage of this
property, the extraordinary stability of the air above the dead
volcano.
"Let us hope the bastard cannot find us here," Kingsley
said. He got out of the car and stretched. A dizzying lack of air
made him totter. How could he think up here? Back to work, one last,
desperate time.
5
Benjamin felt her fully now. The old question about whether a
simulation had an internal experience— well, all those abstract
bull sessions dwindled to scraps. Here was her
self, coming
through in her voice, her vision, the sensory smorgasbord of a lived
interior.
"The sand is running, lover," she said.
"Not yet!" he called.
She coasted in a strange Valhalla of cathedral light and glowing
electromagnetic majesty. He floated in his harness, immersed in her
world. Through a small port, he could watch the crescent wonder of
the great water world below, but his eyes did not stray from the
spectacle before him.
Three dots scorched her vision with momentary pinpoint explosions.
"Gotcha!" she cried.
He flinched. "What was that?"
"I nailed three of the nodules where the Old One is stored."
"With Searchers?"
"It killed them, sure. But not fast enough."
"More barium?"
"Yeah, giving the beast an enema."
"The big cloud, it's expanding pretty fast."
He sent her his extra data sources on a tightbeam, high-bit
squirt. A blooming ivory barium cloud licked at the Eater's magnetic
rim.
"Ride 'em, cowboy," she gloated.
"It's heading away, around the moon."
"Hungry, that misbegotten—"
She had stopped abruptly. Benjamin frowned. "What's—"
"It's talking to me."
"About what?"
"Music. Listen."
–RESONANCES WITH HUMAN BRAIN PATTERNS. SOME
SYNCHRONIZE WITH BODILY RHYTHMS. THE BEAT IS ALL. YOUR "CLASSICAL"
MUSIC APPEALS TO A DIFFERENT CLASS OF CADENCES, MORE PURELY MENTAL
RATHER THAN PHYSIOLOGICAL-THOUGH FOR YOU THE TWO ARE NEVER ENTIRELY
SEPARATE, AS WITNESSED BY FOOT TAPPING TO EVEN THE MOST RAREFIED
STRING QUARTET.
"This is insane," Benjamin said.
"Aliens are by definition insane."
Suddenly, on five channels, came a flurry of transmissions,
everything from African tribal intonations to Beethoven, from Chuck
Berry to Gregorian chants, no technique or style neglected.
"What—?!"
STIMULATING TO RECEIVE THESE FORMS OF CEREBRAL
JEST. THROUGH YOU IN THE MOTE NEARBY, I CAN SOMEWHAT KEN HOW THESE
GAMBOLS PLAY OUT IN THE HUMAN SENSORIUM. VERY MUCH AS YOUR OTHER
IRRATIONAL-OR PERHAPS BETTER, SUPERRATIONAL-METHODS PERFORM. AS, FOR
EXAMPLE, IN "LOVE" AND MECHANISMS OF REPRODUCTION.
"We're trying to kill it and it sends us music criticism?"
She said tensely, "Bravado? To distract us?"
HOW BEAUTIFUL IMMORTALITY IS, THE BLISS OF BEING
BLENDED. COME, JOIN ME. WE SHALL VOYAGE AMONG THE STARS TOGETHER.
Baroque music sounded. "Good God, it's a sales pitch,"
she said.
FROM TOO MUCH LOVE OF LIVING
FROM HOPE AND
FEAR SET FREE
WE THANK WITH BRIEF THANKSGIVING
WHATEVER GODS
MAY BE
THAT NO LIFE LIVES FOREVER
THAT DEAD MEN RISE UP
NEVER
THAT EVEN THE WEARIEST RIVER
WINDS SOMEWHERE SAFE TO SEA.
"What in the world…" Benjamin felt an eerie sense
of an intelligence abidingly strange.
'That's supposed to be enticing? Ha!"
"Must be a poem."
Wonderingly she said, "I think I understand. It doesn't
actually believe we will strike against it."
"Why? Because we're scared? It's right—most people are
terrified."
"But not the ones who matter—us. Maybe its experience
with other aliens leads it to believe that any species will make a
rational calculation and give it what it wants."
He blinked. "That's why that stuff about 'superrational
methods,' then? It thinks we have an amusing, unreasonable side,
but—"
"That won't matter in a showdown, right. It's moving fast
now. I'm going after it."
He sensed the surge in her. Not in sight or sound but some other
perception, coming somehow through this intense data link.
He was
with her in a way he never could have been
before.
And she was rushing into the magnetosphere. The barium cloud was a
hovering mass above, the Eater a rushing fountain of light
below. All against hard blacks and the approaching crescent
moon.
Plunge!—he felt her elation. She had once said to
him that all astronauts really wanted to be space birds, and now he
caught the texture of that truth.
"I'm being forced by the explosions at the top and bottom of
the funnels," she gasped.
He could see the hourglass shape. In the fever dream of his
perceptual space, it resembled a dirty Pyrex tube, slowly rotating.
Bits of mass trickled down it. Not much; it was starved. But each
funnel ended in the glaring hot washout of the disk.
And her only sliver of refuge lay toward that hard luminosity.
Searchers flared like matchheads in the shifting, quilted light of
it. They died to erase fractions of the Old One—perhaps. In the
hard vibrating seethe, she could not be sure what effect all this was
having in the form of the magnetic densities around her. Some,
yes—a lessening of pressure skated across her pseudo-skin
like a soft easing. Some success, she felt. But how much was enough?
"Thousands," she answered him without his speaking. "I
can count them now. We're just picking at it. To it, we're—"
"Get out!" he yelled.
"—irritants. It will swat us like flies."
Suddenly the wall he had built around his inner fears shattered.
"My God, get out!"
"I'm in a dive, lover. Blissful hard g's."
"Bail out!"
"Gotta go. The sands are running."
"Wait, you—"
"
Sic transit, Gloria."
Her dreamy voice alarmed him. Had she wanted this final plunge all
along? "No!"
"Yes."
Her signal Dopplered away, like water whirling into a drain.
6
She had studied all the theory and knew that the Searchers were
doomed. And so was she.
But the little cylinder of nestled positrons and dutiful, dumb
antiprotons, tucked into her tail like an awful egg— that would
do nicely.
Diving.
Thirty seconds to go. What was that old movie?
Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo.
And how did it end?
She was still close enough to the human sensorium to perceive
the onrushing Eater in terms that made human sense. Her "eyes"
generalized if they could. They tagged an ensemble of incoming
elements—textures, lines—by seizing on a fragment,
outlining it with a contrast-boundary, and then compressing all that
detail into—
What
was it?
A swollen cathedral of soaring magnetic towers, impossible
perspectives, wrenching structures. All seething with detail
that ramified as you looked at it, then split again into underworlds
of minutia. Such beauty!
And faintly, hymns.
Her Searchers were dying. Amid streaming obelisks of information,
they slipped. Currents found them. Electrocuted.
This place was constructed of electrodynamic flows, she sensed,
that laced through the steepling rivulets to find their targets.
A Searcher was a new resistance in this whirling circuit.
Currents dissipated there in an eye blink. Scorching heat fried
the Searcher chips.
Then quick sparks lit the way before her. Plasma blossomed.
Something had gotten ahead of her and now pried open the magnetic
fortress.
Benjamin—?
She felt a dizzy gush of electric aurorae around her. Dove in a
centrifugal gyre. Eluded them for a second or two—
Hands. That was what it felt like at first.
Fingers probing, finding, learning. Inside her.
Peeling her into onion-skin layers.
Feeling ornery, she went outside and whistled, which made the
neighbor's irritating dog run to the end of its chain and gag itself.
It had woken her up with its damned barking last night—
Memories. Did it relish her worst character flaws?
They had a convention: either could raise a hand and say,
"Time out," and the other would have to be quiet for at
least a minute. Usually she would be chastened, but not so much that
when the "Time's up" signal came she didn't launch right
into nonstop talk again, words jumping out of her mouth to knit up
the damage—
That one hurt more than the choking dog image.
Lost, so much
lost—
This thing knew how to wound.
Searchers dying everywhere. She banked down into the funnel.
At least the magnetic strands did not buffet her here. Still,
turbulent knots of magnetic strands slammed into her carapace.
Static electricity crawled over her. Fever-itch.
It sought her, poked into her mind.
It's seen everything, done
all this before.
She slammed on her remaining ion reserve. A blur of heady
acceleration. Below the bull's-eye disk bristled with eating
brilliance. Storms wracked it.
The Eater was all around her now and knew it. Huge hollow
cries of godlike wrath battered her.
Suddenly she sensed
them, too. Shelves of voices. Minds
in boxes. A zoo of knowledge/data/selves.
Greetings. Please may you kill us?
Blistering speed, now. A plunge into relativistic velocity. She
felt the prickly twist of space-time as a play of stresses all
through her.
Slamming down into the disk.
Bank. Thirty Seconds Over
Topology—
Into the rim of the black hole, skirting the ergosphere's bulge. A
fat waist at the whirring edge.
Please may you—
She shat the antimatter. It trailed behind her and down into the
edge of the furious disk. Annihilating.
Gamma rays coursed out. The whirl of space-time sucked her in and
around. Tidal fingers pulled, stretched, popped seams in her.
Pain-fingers, now.
Matter died. Fizzed away into photons.
The magnetic fields in her wake lost their anchor. The field lines
shot away at the speed of light, freeing the knots and whirls in a
growing cone behind her.
Thanks to you. Pleased that you kill us.
She saw ahead the darkness beyond all night. At its edge,
glimmering hot light. The ergosphere. She fell in a skimming
orbit, on the brink of being swallowed.
Another ship, there. In a wash of gossamer light. Slim, scorched,
skin dented and alive with spider stresses—
It was herself. Time-twisted, so that she saw for one glimmering
instant her own destiny.
7
Benjamin's missiles plunged ahead of her, he knew that much.
Kingsley's updated command hierarchy had helped. The reprogramming
Benjamin had to do by feel alone.
Only with an artful sequence of thermonuclear explosions could he
provide the necessary plasma density. Enough ions could short-circuit
the Eater's equatorial equilibrium. So he had timed it, fired the
warheads—
And it had worked. The virulent fireballs had cleared a path for
her. Did she know it?
He watched a huge sizzling corona of bristling light erupt from
the core of the Eater. Magnetic reconnection of the poles? Spreading—
He sensed her somewhere in there. A sprite, speeding into the maw
of certain extinction.
He lost sight then as the Eater's shimmering ghost-strands fell
below the moon's brimming crescent.
Goodbye—
One burst, then gone. Her.
Abruptly the moon's rim blazed with furious radiance. A titanic
explosion haloed in vibrant colors. Blocking Earth from the
virulence. Kingsley's plan.
Circling around, Benjamin saw that the other side of the moon was
burned brown.
Melted. Peaks slumped. The plains ran with fuming stone.
8
Kingsley embraced Amy with frail passion. The effort of sending
the data, of responding to Benjamin's demands, of fending off Arno's
undoubtedly well-intentioned but irksome attentions… He
was exhausted.
And the Eater had found them again.
Even here inside the soaring vastness of the Keck observatory
dome, he could feel the stones shake as lightning struck.
"We've done all we can," Amy murmured into his chest.
"You lie down, rest—"
"No, I must see how it comes out. Don't want to be asleep for
this."
Arno said, from a shadowy corner where he peered at a
communications screen, "It's sending goddamned lightning down a
cone. Look at this."
With an assistant's help, Arno had patched into one of the
emergency DoD miniobservatories, a package launched after the Eater
had supped its fill of metals from the weather satellites. One had to
admire the Americans, Kingsley thought abstractly. They had backups
of everything, straight off the shelf. The view from three
hundred kilometers up showed clouds across the Pacific, with a neatly
carved hole giving clear skies over Mauna Kea. The Eater was able to
tailor the weather of a planet it had freshly encountered, down to a
scale of a few hundred kilo-meters, while swimming in its magnetic
coils near the moon. In some ways, this was the most impressive of
its feats. He peered at the hole in the cirrus sheets. Down a conduit
that plunged through the entire atmosphere shot sparkling jabs.
"It knows the global circuitry of planets," Amy said.
"That's pretty clear. And it found us from the tight-beam to
Benjamin."
Arno nodded firmly. He seemed fully back now, the manager of
old, but there was a twitching in his lips that boded ill. "The
nukes, they'll go any minute."
"Time to discuss our next strategic move," Kingsley
said.
"This flops, we're finished," Arno said.
"Funnily enough, no. This is a rational creature. Strange but
rational. More so than we, perhaps. We can deal with it even after."
"Frap we can!"
"Someone must." Kingsley was having a hard time holding
on to his decrepit sense of reality. Amy gave him a sympathetic
look, which he answered with a kiss. He put himself on automatic to
encourage this new line of discussion. "We'll do it some damage,
that seems clear."
"And it'll be mad as hell. It'll come after us."
Kingsley deducted several degrees of respect he had harbored
for Arno's hunched-over figure. Earlier the man had rolled up his
sleeves, the first time Kingsley could recall him unwinding even a
bit. Revealed on his left forearm was a tattoo: death before
dishonor.
Quite so, he had thought. He gathered this tattoo
was a standard one for U.S. Marines, which would explain some of
Arno's comportment. The phrase had set Kingsley to thinking, because
behind their antagonism with the Eater was something just so
elemental. Small and puny humans might be, but without much actual
discussion, the entire vast tribe of it had subscribed to just that
emotion. There was something undoubtedly primate-centered and puny
and irrational and still glorious in all this, a mark of a young
species just learning what it was, marching on grim-faced into dark
vistas, humbled and loudmouthed and yet still coming.
Amy opened her mouth to enter the discussion, but Kingsley shook
his head. Time to calm the waters with a big dollop of snake oil.
He got firmly into Arno's field of view and said, "Think of
it as a wounded god. It might go into orbit around the sun and wait
for a more compliant humanity to emerge from its ruins. It has
infinite time available, with patience to match."
"We're out of ideas," Arno said with leaden certainty.
"Not at all. You may dimly remember that months ago one of
the radio astronomy groups spotted emissions similar to the Eater's
from a nearby star. Perhaps merely accidental, of course. But we
should consider selling the Eater on the idea of leaving us in
pursuit of some other intelligence, perhaps like itself."
"That's crazy." Arno muttered. He stared at the
satellite display before him. Forking stabs of electrical ferocity
traced down through clear skies, converging on the mountaintop.
"We have a slight advantage over it. Our radio telescope net
is the size of the inner solar system now. That is how we could
target these emissions. The Eater is too small to pick up and resolve
such transmissions."
"But it's been wandering through the galaxy," Amy said,
looking at Arno's back with a worry clouding her face. "It must
know everything in the spiral disk by now."
"Not so," Kingsley countered with a tone somewhat
approximating optimism. "It does not have the scale or
sensitivity of networks created by little beings working
together, like us. It is solitary, with all the lacks that implies."
Amy got the idea and said almost brightly, "What do we offer
it?"
"The exact coordinates of these emissions. Perhaps the cause
is a fellow magnetic intelligence. Perhaps it is merely an
astrophysical oddity we do not yet know enough to tell from true
intelligence. Be frank about that. Bargain. Entice. Go away, we say
to it, and here's where."
Amy said, "It could come back."
"We can prepare for that. What was that old Daniel Boone
expression? 'Look sharp and keep your powder dry.' "
From Arno he had expected no coruscating shower of wit, nor some
chin-wagging soliloquy of desperation, but still less had he
anticipated that instead the man would begin to weep.
This was, finally, too much. If masculine toughness meant
anything, it surely implied an ability to face uncomfortable truths,
even to the point of the death of humanity. Arno's weakness spread.
Kingsley saw the sudden collapse in Amy's face, a gaping mouth, and
utter despair in her eyes.
He felt precariously close to that himself. Yet he dare not
abandon the methods he knew. Among reason's tools, the hammer was
evidence, the knife was logic. None would work here. But what could?
Let events cure them, he thought despairingly. He had no
ideas.
In a long, sliding moment, he felt profoundly how inadequate
he was, how unsuited were all astronomers, for thinking about a
creature like the Eater. Those who studied stars blithely chattered
about stellar lifetimes encompassing billions of years, while
they saw suns in snapshot, witnessing only a tiny sliver of their
grand and gravid lives trapped in telescopes, capturing light emitted
before humanity existed. That imbued astronomers with a sense of how
like mayflies the human species was, yet it also insulated them. They
could not alter suns. Biologists could help or hinder living things.
Astronomers had lived blithely in the shadow of immensities
without the burden of acting in the glare of such wild perspectives.
Astronomy's coldness carried a foreboding that humans were truly
tiny on the scale of such eternities.
Perhaps they all had shattered, finally, in the face of that.
Suddenly, in this dark, cluttered communications room, with staff
hovering before their screens like acolytes worshipping in a
technological shrine—finally it was all too much. The
claustrophobia of enclosure strummed in him, tightening his chest.
Suddenly he saw his own life, a mere mote in eternity's glare, and
sensed its rising slope. Quite a heady ascent, indeed, far more
than he had ever hoped.
Until here, until now. This was certainly the peak. He would never
again act upon so grand a stage, command such resources, confront so
colossal an enemy. From now on it would be the long smooth slide
down, hearty applause and cushy appointments and modest speeches and
the lot. He could dine out on these events until the grave claimed
him.
The summit.
Here. Now. A satisfying grace note, in a way,
and yet with the ring of doom to it.
Intensely he wanted to hold on to this moment, the very crown of
his life. The Eater might well be dying across the sky outside and he
was here, cowering in a shadowy, man-made cave—ironically, an
observatory, meant to open onto grandeur.
He had to see the damned creature one last time.
Without a word, he turned away. Amy had begun sobbing, too, and he
knew he should comfort her again.
Let it go, he thought,
and let me go in the bargain.
He found a corridor leading out. Down the cold concrete
passageway, head wobbly with lassitude. Shove on the door.
Out,
free.
Cutting cold embraced him. Cleared his head a trifle, even.
Sharp sunlight. Thin air rasping in his throat.
He walked to the edge of a broad steel parapet. He could see clear
up into the deep bowl of sky from here, over the
Keck's
brilliant bulge. The moon hung halfway up to the zenith in a troubled
blue sky.
Faint twitches of fevered light stirred at the edge of the moon's
crescent. Probably from Benjamin's final assault. It would all happen
quite swiftly now.
Head back, teetering in a whipping wind.
He saw the very moment. A huge burnt yellow corona of virulence
lit up the moon's rim. Light crawled and licked around the clean
curve.
She had done it.
He felt a sudden hammering in his chest.
Victory and death.
How wonderful, to see it here, alone, in the utter silence of
a cool clear mountaintop.
He shouted up at the dying sky, a pure roaring cry of released
joy.
Raptly he stood petrified, gazing upward over the eggshell-white
observatory dome. Tendrils of ivory light flowed away from the moon,
arcing out and then narrowing, coming toward the Earth. To see this
demanded substantial ionization of intervening gas, he estimated.
Which required enormous energies, the fruit of the final cataclysm
mercifully hidden from view. The restless glow came rushing
across a quarter of a million miles, reddening as it came.
It fattened. An orange filigree laced the high air. Excited atoms
fluoresced in a great green circle.
Probably, he analyzed,
the electrodynamic effects hitting the upper atmosphere,
driving a wave of ionization and charge imbalances. More lightning
due, probably.
Get back inside? No, live at the peak.
Even in death, the Eater's work was accurate, its geometry
quite precise—a circle that collapsed inward in a spray of
brightening yellow-green. Suddenly he realized that this was a
descending cone. Energies concentrating. He did not notice his hair
standing on end, or the humming air, until it was much too late.
9
Benjamin landed two full days later. A "catcher's mitt"
shuttle snagged him from a looping orbit and brought him down. It was
a long glide across most of the Pacific to Oahu airport, taxiing
to the same spot where he had departed a thousand years before.
In yet another way, he had lost her.
Behind a gray curtain, he went through the motions of being
involved. Arno and Amy met him with news of Kingsley. The Eater's
final paroxysm, as its magnetic structure collapsed, had sent
enormous currents through a circuit that connected moon and Earth. It
had focused its energies upon Mauna Kea, and there the final
vengeance had descended. Those inside the conducting Keck dome
survived, since the currents remained on the outside. No others.
The black hole still remained, of course, a dead spike of
gravitational gradient now. Its still-huge mass performed a slow
gavotte about the moon, and vice versa, so that the Earth now had an
invisible partner in its voyage around the sun. The moon lurched and
gyred as the triple-mass system traced a complex curve. The moon
turned its other face toward Earth for the first time since it became
locked by tidal stresses, an event that had occurred well before life
had advanced beyond the single-cell level. The far side had few
craters and its dark skin had liquefied before the onslaught.
Benjamin's first glimpse of that side momentarily startled him out of
his cottony mood. Clouds trailed across the face, outgassing from the
melted rock. These were the first to grace the lunar skies for
probably four billion years. They lasted only days, making Luna seem
a momentary twin.
Occasionally some stray mass would err into the path of the
now-naked black hole. The flash was visible from Earth, if one were
looking at just the right second. Astronomers immediately began
using the hole as a gravitational lens to focus light from stars and
galaxies passing behind it. Within weeks, papers began appearing,
turning a terror into a tool.
But the billowing magnetic structure was gone. With it vanished
all traces of a mind older than the solar system.
Or so they all thought, until Amy came quietly into his office
in late afternoon. "Got a funny one for you."
He peered at the sheet, alarmed by her tense voice. It was a
report of radio emission from the vicinity of the Eater's orbit.
"High flux, picked up by the microwave network."
"One of our ships, still out there?"
"Don't think so. This looks more like emission from
relativistic electrons."
He stared at her. "A… jet?"
"It could be."
It was. Observations over the next day showed that a fresh jet was
blooming from very close to the black hole itself.
"It's alive," Amy said. "The magnetic field
structure that housed the Old Ones, it must have come through okay."
"Damn. This jet—where is it pushing the hole?"
"Outward," Amy told a crowded auditorium at the base of
Mauna Kea. "It's moving off in a straight line."
A voice called, "Toward what?"
"Suspiciously close to the direction in the sky of that other
emission we saw, months ago. Remember?" Clearly nobody did. Amy
went on, "An electromagnetic spectrum similar to Eater's. Some
people wanted to bargain with the information, maybe get Eater to
leave us alone."
Another voice called, "Companionship?"
Benjamin remembered Kingsley saying that the most they could hope
to do was damage the thing. So Channing had died only to wound…
"It is notably diminished," he rose to say. "The
latest radio maps of the hole vicinity show a knot of extremely
intense fields anchored in the hole itself. A small accretion disk
seems to be building, apparently assembled from the debris in its
vicinity."
"So it can't harm us?" a voice asked anxiously.
"Not now." He felt compelled to add, "It could come
back."
"Then why head out toward that source?" a woman in the
back asked.
"We cannot know." His eyes swept the room and
everywhere he saw naked fear. "But we can be vigilant."
The information was suppressed. The world was not able to take the
shock and uncertainty of this revelation—or so higher heads
than his believed.
It had been folly, he saw, to believe that a creature which had
encountered myriad assaults upon itself could be killed with anything
present-day physics could devise. That they had injured it was a
tribute. A mere few decades earlier, humanity could have done
nothing. He supposed that was some kind of distinction. Not that it
helped him in the dark of night, tossing restlessly.
The hole's course held steady. It was leaving.
But humankind would eventually learn of its true fate, of that he
was sure. And no one would ever truly rest easy again.
There was much to be done to make up humanity's immense
losses, but Benjamin felt no urge to join in.
He knew, without being able to speak of it, that he had to
complete his emotional arc. An abstract term, but he sensed a tension
riding in him.
One day at sunset, he said a final goodbye to her on the beach,
beneath a splendid ruddy streak of cloud. The wrecked sky above still
showed orbiting debris of the battle, twinkling against the emerging
stars. Vagrant energetic electrons struck auroras at the poles,
where great sheets of light surged. He could see soft glows to the
north. That would fade, and with it, some of the horror.
But not all of it, ever. Humanity would never again be able to
gaze at the stars with anything resembling the astronomer's
serenity. Or feel awe at the heavens, untinged by terror.
After the sunset, he came back into his temporary quarters and saw
the hourglass she had given him. He had meant to bring it home before
he left, then forgotten and left it in his car. All he had left now
was a suitcase from the trunk and the hourglass. Everything in his
Center office had burned.
No past. No future. Only this hovering moment.
Outside, the balmy aromas of life resurgent.
The hourglass stood on his desk and captured his gaze.
Sand at the bottom. What would she want him to do with it?
He turned it upside down, beginning his life anew.
Goodbye. Hello.
10
—pop—
—stretching pain—
—and
she zoomed
out—
—away from a brilliance at
her back.
Somehow she knew that this was the twin other mouth of the Eater's
black hole. She had pierced the very center of it and tunneled
through an immeasurable expanse of space-time.
A white hole. Behind her erupted a tongue of plasma, licking hot
at her, pursuing hard and fast—but she shot out into…
… a carnival of gaudy light.
Marvelous, airy cities hung in black space. Weird constructions
rotated. In the distance hung a yellow-green star, too large, but
warm.
She knew without knowing how.
She was in some other space-time, maybe not even in this universe.
It felt different.
Here was where the doomed civilizations, swallowed by the Eater in
its long journey, had ended up. Others, the Eaten, had known enough
to send small missions into the fat equatorial bulge. Venturing into
the realm of physics beyond calculation, they had won through.
They had colonized this space. A place hard fought for, over more
eons than flesh could know. Here swam survivors of countless alien
societies, fruit of ancient desperation.
Waiting patiently in their castles. Knowing how stripped-down
craft would be, after the shredding tidal forces of the hole. Ready
to salvage any compressed intelligence.
Fathom it. Revive it. Her.
And now to greet.
Hello, she thought.
Something like a hailing call came strumming redly through her
sensorium.
For an astronaut, this is a heaven of sorts.
Wonders to explore.
AFTERWORD
One of the notions leading to this novel came to me while reading
one of the classic texts of plasma astrophysics:
It appears that the radical element responsible for
the continuing thread of cosmic unrest is the magnetic field.
What, then, is a magnetic field… that, like a biological form,
is able to reproduce itself and carry on an active life in the
general outflow of starlight, and from there alter the behavior of
stars and galaxies?
—Eugene Parker,
Cosmical
Magnetic Fields
While the ideas in this novel are offered in playful speculation,
I have endeavored to show truthfully, against an extreme
backdrop, how scientists do think, work, and confront the unknown.
Astronomy locates its students in a perspective grander and
perhaps more cold than does any other science. Though the effect
is little noticed, it seems to me to have an appreciable impact, at a
level often below perception, upon how astronomers see the
universe and our place in it. Such lessons are among the most subtle
we can learn.
The initial spur for this work came from my colleague and friend,
Mark O. Martin. Jennifer Brehl's deft and insightful editing yet
again contributed to improving my text.
I have also benefited from discussions with Joan Benford, Dominic
Benford, John Casti, Jay Sanders, Vince Gerardis. Ralph Vicinanza,
Elisabeth Malartre. Joe Miller, John Cramer, Roger Blandford, and
Martin Rees.
The constant assistance of Marilyn Olsen was essential. The
unattributed poem in the last Part is by Swinburne.
The black hole figure in Part V is by Nigel Sharp, and was
generated from an exact computer calculation of the general
relativistic conditions near a rotating black hole. It appeared first
in "Demythologizing the Black Hole," by Richard Matzner,
Tsvi Piran, and Tony Rothman, in
Analog Essays on Science,
edited by Stanley Schmidt, Wiley, 1990, to whom thanks go for
permission to reproduce it.
July 1999
Gregory Benford - Eater
Eater
Gregory
Benford
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places,
and incidents are products of the author's imagination or are used
fictitiously and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to
actual events, locales, organizations, or persons, living or dead, is
entirely coincidental.
EOSAn Imprint of
HarperCollins Publishers10 East 53rd
StreetNew York, New York 10022-5299
Copyright © 2000 by Abbenford, Ltd.
Excerpt from Grand Conspiracy copyright ©
2000 by Janny WurtsExcerpt from Infinity
Beach copyright © 2000 by Jack McDevittExcerpt
from Fortress of Dragons copyright © 2000 by CJ.
CherryhExcerpt from Vacuum Diagrams
copyright © 2000 by Stephen BaxterExcerpt
from Eater copyright © 2000 by Abbenford, Ltd.Excerpt
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To
Mark Martin,
Jennifer Brehl,
Ralph Vicinanza and
Vince Gerardis… who all did their part.
Man is a small thing,
and the night is very large
and full of wonders
-LORD DUNSANY, The Laughter of the Gods
PART ONE
BURSTER
FEBRUARY
1
It began quietly.
Amy Major came into Benjamin's office and with studied care placed
a sheet in front of his tired eyes. "Got a funny one for you."
Benjamin stared at the graph. In the middle of the page, a sharp
peak poked up to a high level, then fell slowly to his right. He
glanced at the bottom axis, showing time, and said, "So it died
away in a few seconds. What's so odd?"
Amy gave him an angular grin that he knew she thought made her
look tough-minded and skeptical. He had always read that expression
as stubborn, but then, she so often disagreed with him. "Here's
the second."
"Second?" Maybe her grin was deserved.
With a suppressed smile, she handed him another sheet. Same sort
of peak, subsiding into the background noise in four seconds. "Ho
hum." He raised his eyebrows in question, a look he had trained
the staff to interpret as Why are you wasting my time ?
"Could be any ordinary burster, right?"
"Yes." Amy liked to play the elephantine game out in
full.
"Only it's a repeater."
"Ah. How close?"
"In space, dead on. The prelim position is right on top of
the first one's." Dramatic pause. "In time, 13.45 hours."
"What?" Was this a joke? "Thirteen hours?"
"Yup."
Gamma-ray bursters were cosmological explosions, the biggest
Creation had ever devised. They showed up in the highest energy
spectrum of all, the fat, powerful light that emerged when atomic
nuclei fell apart. The preferred model describing bursters invoked a
big black hole swallowing something else quite substantial, like a
massive star. Bursters were the dyspeptic belch of a spectacularly
large astrophysical meal. Each one devastated a seared region of the
host galaxy.
Eaten once, a star could not be ingested again, thirteen hours
later.
On the off chance that this was still a joke, he said with
measured deliberation, "Now, that is interesting."
Always be positive at the beginning, or else staff would not come to
you at all. He smiled wanly. "But the preliminary position is in
a big box."
This was more than a judicious reservation. It was almost
certainly the true explanation. The two would prove to come from
different points in the sky.
They got from the discovering instrument a rough location of
the burster—a box drawn on the sky map, with the source within
it somewhere. Sharpening that took other instruments specially
designed for the job. Same for the second burster. Once they
knew accurately where this second burst was, he was sure it would
turn out to be far from the earlier burst, and the excitement would
be over. Best to let her down slowly, though. "Still, let's hope
it's something new."
"Uh, I thought it was worth mentioning, Dr. Knowlton."
Her rawboned face retreated into defensive mode, mouth pursing up as
if she had drawn a string through both lips. She had been the origin
of the staff's private name for him, Dr. Know-It-All-ton. That had
hurt more than he had ever let on.
"And it is, it is. You asked Space Array for a quick
location?"
"Sure, and sent out an alert to everybody on Gamma Net."
"Great."
She let her skeptic-hardnose mask slip a little. "It's a real
repeater. I just know it."
"I hope you're right." He had been through dozens of
cases of mistaken identity and Amy had not. She was a fine operations
astronomer, skilled at sampling the steady stream of data that flowed
through the High Energy Astrophysics Center, though a bit too earnest
for his taste.
"I know, nobody's ever seen a repeater this delayed,"
she said.
"Minutes, yes. Hours, no."
"But the prelim spectra look similar."
"How many data points in the spectrum?"
"Uh, four."
"Not nearly enough to tell anything for sure."
"I've got a hunch."
"And I have a crowded schedule."
"I really think—"
"Hard for me to see what the rush is."
"We might want to alert some other 'scopes right away, if
this is important."
Patience, patience. "I see."
"I'm getting the first one's full spectrum any minute,"
she went on, beginning to pace. He realized that she had been holding
herself in check until now. He reminded himself that enthusiasm was
always good, though it needed guidance.
"I'll give Attilio a ring, see if I can hurry things along,"
he said, touching his desk and punching in a code.
"Oh, great, Dr. Knowlton." A sudden smile.
He saw that this was the real point of her telling him so soon,
before confirming evidence was in. He could help. Despite
himself, he felt pleased. Not at this implied acknowledgment of
his power, but at being included.
Every once in a while he got to analyze raw data. Perhaps even to
invent an explanation, try it out, see his work as a whole thing.
Every once in a while.
As he punched his finder-phone keypad, Amy started to leave. He
waved her back. "No, stay."
He got straight through and jollied Attilio with a moment of
banter, speaking into the four-mike set in his desk. Attilio's
replies came through, clear and rich, though his lanky, always
elegantly attired body was sitting in the shadow of the Alps. "You
knew I would be in here this very morning," Attilio said. "We
are both working too hard."
"We're addicts."
"Science addicts, yes, an obscure vice."
Benjamin asked for a "little bit of a speedup" in
processing and checking the two events. This took about fifteen
minutes, most of it devoted to chat, but getting the job done all the
same. An e-mail might have gotten the same results, but in his
experience, not. All the talk of being systematic and highly
organized left out the human need to gossip, even with people you
seldom saw.
He finished the call with a promise from Attilio to get together
next time Benjamin was in Europe and also, just incidentally,
could he look into this second source right away?
"I was hoping you'd do that," Amy said. She had been
sitting on the edge of her seat the whole conversation, when she
wasn't up and pacing quickly, her long hair trailing in the air.
"I wanted you to hear the conversation, get a little
experience with greasing the international gears." Studying
gamma-ray bursters was now not merely international but
interplanetary, if one counted the many robot observers orbiting
in the solar system. At least the spacecraft did not take so much
massaging. Or grand meals at Center expense.
"Oh, I've learned pretty well how to work the system."
"Sure, but you don't know Attilio yet. He's a great guy. I'll
take you to dinner with him, next AAS meeting. He's giving an invited
talk, I hear."
"Meaning, you're on the program committee."
Benjamin grinned. "Caught me out." As in every field,
having friends on the right committees and boards and conferences was
important, a game Benjamin had played quite often. "And I
appreciate your bringing this to me so soon. I do like to look up
from the paperwork every year or three and act like a real astronomer
again."
"Glad to."
"You've been doing a good job here. Don't think I don't
notice."
She was nominally a postdoctoral researcher under his direction,
but her appointment was about to convert over to full-time staff.
Might as well build her up a bit for the disappointment to come, when
Attilio called back.
Astronomy treated its students kindly, providing many tasks that
were true, solid science and even might lead to an important result.
The universe was still so poorly known that surprises lurked
everywhere, especially when one had a new instrument with greater
seeing power, or the ability to peer into a fresh region of the
spectrum. The newer 'scopes were mostly distant hardware operated by
a corps of technicians. Astronomers themselves ruled these by long
distance, asking for spots in the night sky to be scrutinized, all
over a Net connection. Nobody squinted through eyepieces
anymore.
So it was with gamma-ray bursters. Long known, and still
imperfectly understood, they now rewarded only the diligent with new
phenomena. Amy was careful and energetic, perfect for mining the
profusion of data. Bursters were still interesting but not
really a hot topic any more. Benjamin ran the group that did most of
the burster data organizing, plunked down here in Hawaii more for
political reasons than scientific ones.
Since they dwelled at the very edge of the perceptible universe,
bursters yielded their secrets only to careful study. As there was no
telling where and when a burster would burst, one had to survey the
entire sky. When a burster spat out its virulent, high-energy
emissions, a network of telescopes went into operation,
recording its brief life.
If a burster was truly different, a crowd of experienced observers
would rush in, analyzing data and offering interpretations at
the speed of e-mail.
But Amy—and he—would have the honor of discovery.
"Hope it pans out," he said kindly.
"Got to play your hunches, right? I'll zap the VLA results to
you at home if you want."
"Yes, do."
Had he been harder on her than he should have? He felt grumpy, a
sure signal to withhold judgment. The situation with Channing had
been getting so bleak lately, he had to defend against the black
moods that could creep up on him whenever he got tired. He would have
to watch that. It kept getting worse.
Amy went back to work and he noticed that it was well past 6 P.M.
He had been due home half an hour ago. He felt a pang of guilt as he
left, lugging his briefcase full of unread bureaucratic paper.
As he was getting into his convertible, a loud bang echoed from
the rocky slope above. His head jerked up toward the radio array
antennas perched along the upper plateau. Birds flapped away on the
thin air. The array's "shotgun" fired several times at
sunset to scare away birds, who showed a fascination with building
nests in the dishes of the radio telescopes. It was incredibly
loud, not a gun at all, but fuel ignited in a tube. It also
served to keep the birds from getting into the great domes of the
optical telescopes farther up the mountain. Still, the blasts always
unnerved him. The "shotgun" was just another aspect of
working at the true focus of astronomy, the observing sites. It had
been a pure stroke of luck, being offered his position here at the
High Energy Astrophysics Center. A university appointment would
have been more comfortable, but less exciting. Even if he did mostly
push paper around these days.
Here was where astronomy still had some vestige of hands-on
immediacy. All the high, dry sites around the globe were now thronged
with telescopes that spied upward in every band of the
electromagnetic spectrum: radio to gamma ray, with many stops in
between. Though data flew between observatories at the speed of
light, there was still nothing quite like being able to walk over and
talk to the people who had gathered it, see the new images as they
formed on TV screens. Of course, the sharpest observations came from
space, sent down by robot 'scopes. And he was quite sure that within
a day those instruments would tell Amy that her second burster was no
kin to the first.
He drove down the mountain, from the cool, thin air of the great
slopes and into the moist clasp of Hawaii's sprawling big island.
Mauna Kea was a massive stack of restless stone, giving great
spreading views of misty green, but he noticed none of it as he sped
a little too much on the way down. He felt guilty about being late.
Channing would be home from her doctor's appointment and would
probably have started making supper and he didn't want her doing
that. Either he would make it, or else take her out. Visits to Dr.
Mendenham usually made her withdrawn and wore down her precarious
confidence.
That was it—a good meal at the Reefman, maybe even some
dancing if she was up to it. He had forgotten about Amy's objects by
the time he hit the easier part of the road, the lush tropical plain
that ran down to the sea.
2
When the radiologist abruptly stopped his mechanically
friendly chatter, she knew something was wrong. Again.
Immediately, Channing remembered when all this had started, back
in the rosy dawn of time when she had been brimming with energy and
going to live forever. Then she had felt the same reaction in a
doctor and, in classic fashion, went through the Virtuous Girl
list: Nope, never drank, smoked, didn't use coffee or even tea,
at least not much. Plenty of exercise, low-fat addict, even held her
breath while walking by a coughing bus exhaust. Can't be me, Doc!
Then why? It's so unfair! she had thought, then sourly
saw that she was buying the Great Statistical Lie, which made you
think there were no fluctuations, no mean deviations, no chance
happenings in a world which her rational, fine-honed astronaut mind
knew was jammed full of haphazard turns.
So she had heard the leaden words fall from the doctor's mouth:
lumpy tumor plus invaded lymph nodes, bad blood chem, the
full-course dinner.
So okay, I'll lose my hair. But I like hats, fine. And I can
explore my inner drag queen by wearing wigs.
The chemo doctor had said with complete confidence, "You and
I are going to be good friends," which had immediately put
her guard up.
She had gone through the predictable symptoms, items on her
checklist, just like pre-mission planning. Hair loss came right to
the day, two weeks after chemo. She had a little party and
turned it into a piece of performance art. Atta girl!
Fatigue: she was ready, with new pillows and satiny sheets; sensual
sleep, the manuals whispered. Nausea was tougher: she had never grown
fond of vomiting. Possible infertility?: well past that anyway. Loss
of libido: definitely a problem; maybe stock up on porn movies?
Weight gain: bad news. She would waddle down the street, bald and
unsteady, and instead of onlookers thinking, Must be going
through chemo, they'd say, "Wow, she's really let herself
go."
Plenty of phone calls: astronaut buddies, friends, college
roommate, the support circuit—much-needed strokes. Bought a
Vegas showgirl wig, stockpiled it for a late-night turn-on. Cut the
hair back to a short, sassy 'do, so there wouldn't be a total clutter
when it fell out. Bought a Bible: she was shocked to find they didn't
have one in the house. Benjamin had never pretended to believe, and
she supposed she didn't either, but what if God favored those who
kept up appearances? It had always been one of those things she was
going to read when there was time, like Tolstoy. When she had been in
orbit for three months, doing tedious experiments, she actually
had started in on War and Peace because it was in the tiny
station library and she had forgotten to bring anything. She had
finished it because it was good, to her surprise. Okay, time for
Dostoyevsky.
Only she hadn't, of course; too depressing. More gloomy obsessions
when she had quite enough already, thank you.
From the look on this tech's face, maybe she wasn't going to get
another chance.
Then, without her noticing the transition, she was with good ole
Dr. Mendenham, the tech was gone, and she knew she had passed through
another little time jump. She had first noted this quaint little
property of her mind when she was in astronaut training. Anxiety
erased short-term memory. So to get through the protracted
training, she had learned to skate over her anxieties,
focus-focus-focus. Only now it didn't seem to work.
"Lie down. I need to put my hands on you," said one of
the specialists with Mendenham.
"You have no idea how often I hear that from men," she
said bravely, but the sally from her tight throat came off as forced.
She had gotten used to having these men fondle her breasts but not
used to the indifference they conspicuously displayed. A little
nervous energy from them would have been appreciated, evidence that
she hadn't entirely lost her attractions.
Then they were through and she was taking notes, pre-mission
checklist style, preparing for a flight plan to a destination
she didn't want to reach. The cancer had advanced in a way they had
not expected. Despite the last therapy, which they reminded her was
experimental, there were only slight signs of retarded growth.
Another jump. She was out of the clinic, in the car, rolling
around the curves of the road home. Focus-focus-focus, no point
in becoming a traffic statistic when you have a classier demise on
the way. Hawaii's damp smells worked into her concentration,
pleasant sweet air curling into her lungs and reminding her that the
world did have its innocent delights. Even though plants, too, were
trying to fend off animals with poisons and carcinogens, one of which
had wormed into her.
Channing swerved a bit too fast into their driveway, spitting
gravel, crunching to a stop just short of Copernicus, who was sunning
himself. She got out and was suddenly immensely glad that he was
there. She hugged him and babbled some as he tried to wag his
tail off. With Copernicus she could make a fool of herself playing
and he would respond by making an even bigger fool of himself.
Still, his admiration was not conclusive evidence of one's
wonderfulness. For that, she needed Benjamin, and where was he?
On cue, he rolled into the driveway, barely squeezing his sports
car into the space. She had kidded him about mid-forties testosterone
when he bought it, but he did indeed look great in the eggshell-blue
convertible, top down, his concerned frown as he got out
breaking over her like butterscotch sunlight, and then she was
in his arms and the waterworks came on and she was past being
embarrassed about it. She clung to him. He clung back. Chimpanzee
nuzzling, maybe, but it worked.
She was unsteady going into the house with him and let its comfy
feel envelop her. He asked about her medical and she told him and it
all came in a rush then, all the sloppy emotions spilling out over
the astronaut's shiny exterior. She finished up with some quiet sobs
in his arms, feeling much better and also now slightly embarrassed,
her usual combo.
"Sounds like you need some mahi-mahi therapy," Benjamin
murmured into her left ear.
"I'd prefer some bed right away, thanks sir, but yep, my
stomach's rumbling."
"Oh, I thought that was a plane going over."
"Maybe my knees knocking."
"You're braver than anyone I have ever known," in the
soft tone he always used to creep up on the worst of it.
"What happens if you get scared half to death twice?"
"The blood analysis—"
"Yeah, worse." Cryptic, astronaut-casual. "Some
physio, too."
"You have the printout? I'd—"
Breaking away, she made the timeout signal. "Lemme slap a
flapjack of makeup on my face."
She got through the repair work without looking in the mirror
much, a trick she had developed since the hair loss. The medical
printouts went into her valise, along with the harvest of the fax
machine. Brisk and efficient she was, carefully not thinking
while she did all these neat little compartmented jobs. She's
steppin' out, she sang to herself from an old Electric Light
Orchestra number, letting the bouncy sound do its work. Steppin'
out. Fake gaiety was better than none.
He drove them to the Reefman in rather gingerly fashion, not his
born-to-the-road style. Hot white clouds hung stranded in a windless
sky of shredded silver. The swanky driveway led them to a rambling
building that appeared to be made of cinder from the island's
volcano, an effect slightly too studied. Music boomed out from a
spacious deck bar, heat shimmered over car hoods, the perpetual
hovering presence of eternal summer thickening the air.
They ambled around the side garden approach to the beach tables.
Her floppy hat would look appropriate there. She had two inches of
fur now, creeping up on a presentable cut, but not quite there. The
grounds were trying to cheer her up with their ambitious topiaries,
laughing fountains, a beach below so white it ached to be trampled.
They got a table and she remembered that this was one of those
newfangled home-style restaurants, with a few of the
Unnoticeables passing appetizers among the tables. She and Benjamin
had lived here long enough to see the old Hawaiian informality
give way to Advanced Tourism, so that one looked through the help and
visitors never thought about who changed the sheets of the Rulers.
"Glass of wine?" Benjamin nudged her.
"Really shouldn't."
"I know, which is another reason to do it."
"Hey, that's my kind of line."
"I always steal from the best."
"I look like I need it pretty bad?"
"Let's say I need for you to."
She laughed and ordered a glass of fumé
blanc, a thumb to the nose for Death, and even in her rickety state
not enough to risk a hangover, the Wrath of Grapes.
"Okay, fill me in on the medical." Benjamin said this in
his clear, official voice, a mannerism from work he used sometimes
when the uncomfortable side of life came up. He was completely
unaware of this habit, she knew. Rather than feeling affronted, she
found it endearing, though she could not say why. When she was
through, he said, "Damn," his voice tightening further.
"Going to operate?"
"No, they want to let this new regime of drugs work on it
awhile."
"How long?"
"Didn't say. I got the impression that they wouldn't give a
solid answer."
"Well, it is experimental." He tried to put a little
lilt in his tone to freight some optimism into the conversation, but
it did not work because they both knew it.
"And I'm not up to more cutting anyway."
"True," he said miserably. "Damn, I feel so
powerless?
An absolutely typical and endearing male trait. They wanted to do,
and women supposedly more wanted to be. Well, her
astronaut-self wanted to do something, too, but they were both far
out of their depth here. Both technically and emotionally.
She watched him clench his fists for a long moment. They exchanged
thin smiles, a long look. Time to move on, her intuition
told her.
She opened her valise. They had always done paperwork at dinner,
one of those odd habits couples acquire that seem, in retrospect,
defining: workaholics in love. She shuffled the medical printouts to
the side; best to get his mind off the subject. "Here, this
looks like work."
He reached for it almost eagerly. "From Amy, relayed from the
VLA."
She recognized the Very Large Array standard display, a gridded
map made in the microwave spectrum. After tiring of the astronaut
horse race, she had thrown herself into becoming a respectable
astrophysicist. Mostly a data magician and skeptic, which fit her
character fine. She had gotten her job here on her merits, not on
glory inherited from being a space jockey; she had made sure of that.
Benjamin traced a finger along a ridge of dark lines. "Ummm,
a linear feature. Must be a mistake."
"Why?" He told her quickly about Amy's supposedly
repeating burster. He slid out a cover sheet and scrawled across the
top was: I CHECKED—COORDINATES ARE RIGHT. THIS IS REAL. AMY
"She's found something?" Channing sipped her wine,
liking its bite.
"Ummm. She wrote that note because she knew I'd doubt this
like hell. This long filament is far larger than any burster could
be. Must be a chance overlap with something ordinary. Looks like
a galactic jet to me."
She nodded. In their early eras, galaxies often ejected jets of
radiating electrons from their core regions. Channing had never
studied galaxies very much—astronauts specialized in solar
system objects, or studying the Earth from space—but she
recalled that such jets were fairly common, and so one could easily
turn up in the box that bounded the burster's location. Still…
"What if it's not?"
"Then this is a burster that makes no sense."
"But that's what you'd like—something new."
He gazed skeptically at the long filament. "New yes, wrong
no."
"You don't know it's wrong yet." He had been like this
lately, doubting everything. Perhaps it came from her illness;
medicine always rewarded a skeptical, informed use of the
squeaky-wheel principle. He had loyally squeaked a lot in her
defense.
"I'll bet it goes away tomorrow."
"And I bet not," she said impetuously.
"How much?" He gave her his satyr grin.
"Something kinky, say."
"Sounds like we can't lose."
"You bet." This evening was getting off to a good start,
despite earlier signs. Now to glide by the hard part. "I want to
go in with you tomorrow, have a look at this burster."
Concern flickered in his face, then he suppressed it. He was
always urging her to stay home, rest up, but bless him, he didn't
know how maddening that could be. She did still have a job and desk
at the Center, even if both were getting covered in cobwebs.
"I don't think—"
"If this is important—and of course, you're probably
right, it's not—I'd like to be in on it."
"As experiences go, it'll be pretty dull."
Lately, experience was something she never seemed to get until
just after she needed it. "Better than daytime TV."
She let a little too much desperation creep into her voice, which
was not fair, but at the moment maybe it was just being honest. She
watched him struggle with that for a long moment. Visibly reluctant,
he finally said, "Uh, okay."
"You always say you want your staff to be ambitious, look for
the new."
"Well, sure…"
He was getting a bit too sober, she saw, the weight of her news
pressing him down. How to rescue the evening?
"Standard executive cheerleading. Follow your dream, you
say." She smiled and lowered her eyelids while giving him an
up-from-under gaze—a dead-sure attention-getter, she knew, and
just the sort of attention she wanted right now. "Unless, of
course, it's that one about giving a speech to the International
Astronomical Union dressed in sexy underwear."
3
Astronomy, Benjamin mused, was a lot like a detective story with
the clues revealed first, and the actual body only later—if
ever. Pulsars and quasars, both brilliant beacons glimpsed across the
cosmos, had proved to be powered by small specks of compressed
mass, resolved only decades after their emissions made them obvious.
The clues were gaudy, the causes obscure. So it went with this latest
mystery.
The next morning Channing was too worn out to come in with him
after all. He lingered over breakfast, they talked about the news in
ritual fashion, and finally she shooed him out of the house. "My
bed beckons," she said. He was somewhat relieved, then, to
get immediately to work with Amy when they got the "cleaned"
radio map, chugged out by the ever-laboring computers. It showed the
intensity of radio emissions, plotted like a topographical map. A
long, spindly feature like a ridge line.
"A definite tail," Amy said. "Some kind of guided
flow."
"A galactic jet?"
To his surprise, she shook her head. "That's what I figured.
But I checked the old radio maps of this region. This thing wasn't
there five years ago."
"What?" He flatly did not believe her, but kept that out
of his voice. A mistake, surely. He did a quick calculation and
realized that if this thing were a jet in a distant galaxy, it could
not possibly have grown so large in a few years. Must be a
mistake. "It's too big—"
"Yeah, and too luminous. Couldn't have missed it before. This
thing is new."
"But… but—" He traced out the size of the
straight feature and checked his calculation again. "It
would have to be the size of a galaxy, maybe bigger, to look this
big."
Amy grinned. "Now you know why I only got three hours' sleep
last night."
To appear suddenly and be galactic in scale meant that the entire
structure had to light up at once, faster than allowed by the speed
of light. "Got to be wrong," he said as amiably as he
could.
So they spent an hour going over every number and map. And Amy was
right. "So we're making a wrong assumption somewhere," she
said cheerily. "And I bet I know where. Looks like a jet, so it
must be extra-galactic, right? Wrong. It's in our galaxy."
He nodded. There were jets of radiant matter streaming out of star
systems, all right. This must have just been born. "But why is
it a gamma-ray source?"
"Must be it's got a black hole down at the base of it,
gobbling up mass from a companion star." She scribbled some
numbers. "And a hell of a bright one, too."
Benjamin checked her calculation. The radio luminosity was very
high, and so was the gamma-ray intensity, if this were a source in
the Milky Way galaxy. "Too high," he said. "This would
be the brightest we've ever seen."
"Well, somebody's got to be the brightest," she said so
flatly that he knew she implied the double meaning. She was quite
bright herself; her intuition about this source had been right all
along; it was damned interesting.
Time to throw a curveball, see how she swung. "I just got
this by e-mail." He showed her a report from the Space Array.
They had looked at the source and failed to resolve any feature.
"This just means it's tiny," Amy said. "Fits with
the idea that the source is a star—"
"And here's the spectrum of the flare." He plunked it
down. A mass of lines, many of them obviously from hydrogen. A
joker in the deck for sure; gamma-ray bursters did not look like this
at all.
That much Amy took in at a glance. "Um. I recognize some of
these lines, but they're off…" Quick jottings. "They're
split!"
"Right." Each of the major spectral lines had two peaks.
"Never saw anything like this from a galactic jet or anything
else."
"Maybe this will go away." This was code for a wrong
measurement, to be caught when it was checked.
"Nope," he said merrily, "I saw this right away, of
course, and got back to them. They looked it over, say it's all
right."
"Must be Doppler shifts."
"Plausible." An emitter moving toward them would seem to
give off hydrogen light slightly shifted up in frequency, toward the
blue. One traveling away would seem red. "This guy gives us both
at once? Makes no sense."
"Ummm. The blue shift is strongest."
They looked at each other and grinned. "This is the strangest
damn thing I've ever seen," Benjamin said happily.
"Me, too. And it's real."
Nobody had to say anything more. Not a gamma-ray burster, not a
galactic jet—something strange and bright and mysterious.
Astronomers lived to find a wholly new class of object, and this
looked a lot like one. And it had just fallen into their laps. It
helped being bright, Benjamin thought, but being lucky would do just
fine, thank you.
"Glad to hear it" came a voice from over his shoulder.
Brisk, British, and even after many years, instantly recognizable.
He turned and looked into the face of Kingsley Dart. "Caught a
whisper of this while I was over on Honolulu," Dart went on
in his quick, clipped accent. "Sounded intriguing. Thought I'd
nip over and have a look."
Benjamin felt his face tighten. He could not make himself say a
word. Amy jumped in with a startled salutation and Benjamin found
himself shaking Dart's hand under shelter of her gusher of greetings,
but he could not force his grinding mind to think of anything at
the moment beyond an incident decades before.
The question had come out of the colloquium audience like a lance,
clear and sharp and cutting. Benjamin had just finished speaking, his
last overhead image still splashed up on the screen. As well, both
blackboards were covered with equations and quick sketches he had
made when he found the confines of language too much.
A moment before he had stepped back and acknowledged the loud
round of applause. It was not the mere pro forma pattering of palms,
carrying the quality of gratitude that the speaker was finished and
soon would come the after-colloquium tea or wine and cheese.
They liked the ideas, and some genuine smiles reassured that they
liked him. The colloquium chairman had then asked, as
customary, "Any questions?" Swiftly the
Oxbridge-accented sentences spiked out and Benjamin knew that he was
in trouble.
His heart was already tripping fast. This was his first
colloquium presentation, an unusual honor. At twenty-six, he was
the bright boy of the astrophysics group at U.C. Berkeley, but
even the best graduate students seldom got an invitation to
speak in the Astronomy Department's most elevated venue. There were
fifty, maybe sixty people in the audience, mostly graduate students,
but with all the senior faculty in the first few rows. He had counted
the crowd as it grew, been gratified; the heavy hitters had all
turned out, not cutting it because Benjamin was in their minds still
just a graduate student, or nearly so. It was an honor to be here and
he had prepared for weeks, rehearsing with Channing, tailoring his
viewgraphs, making up four-color computer graphics to show sinuous
flows and ruby-red plasma currents.
His talk had been about the energetic jets that shoot out from the
disks around black holes, a recurring hot topic in the field. As new
windows opened for telescopes across the electromagnetic spectrum,
the jets showed more detail, fresh mysteries.
In his talk he had used the entire modern arsenal of theoretical
attack: calculations, computer simulations, and finally, to
truly convince, some easily digested cartoons. Nobody really felt
that they understood something unless they carried away a picture of
how it worked. "Get it right in the 'cartoon approximation' and
all else follows," his thesis adviser had sagely said.
Benjamin had shown that the jets were very probably confined
by their own magnetic fields. This could only be so if they carried a
net current out from their source, presumably a large black hole and
its churning neighborhood. He had ended up with a simple declaration:
"That is, in a sense the flows are self-organized." In
other words, they neatly knit themselves up.
Then the knife question came from a figure Benjamin did not know,
an angular face halfway back in the rows of chairs. Benjamin felt
that he should know the face, there was something familiar about it,
but there was no time to wonder about identity now. A quick riposte
to an attack was essential in the brisk world of international
astrophysics. Ideas had their moment in the sun, and if the glare
revealed a blemish, they were banished.
The question subtly undermined his idea. In a slightly nasal Brit
accent, the voice recalled that jets were probably born near the disk
of matter rotating about black holes, but after that were at the
mercy of the elements as they propagated outward, into the
surrounding galaxy.
Smoothly the questioner pointed out that other ways to confine and
shape the jets were easily imagined—for example, the
pressure of the galaxy's own gas and dust—and "seemed more
plausible, I should imagine." This last stab was within the
allowed range of rebukes.
Benjamin took a second to assume an almost exaggerated pose of
being at ease, putting his hands in his pockets and rocking back on
one foot, letting the other foot rise, balanced on its heel.
"Lack of imagination is not really an argument, is it?"
he said mildly.
A gratifying ripple of laughter washed through the room. Those
already half out of their seats paused, sensing a fight. Benjamin
quickly went on, catching the momentum of the moment. "To collar
a jet and make it run straight demands something special about the
medium around it, some design on its part. But if the jet is
self-managed, right from the moment it was born, back on the
accretion disk—that solves the confinement problem."
Nods, murmurs. His opponent cast a shrewd look and again Benjamin
could almost place that face, the clipped, precise English accent.
The man said casually, "But you have no way of knowing if a disk
will emit that much current. And as well, I should think that no
relativistically exact result could tell you that in general." A
smirk danced at the edges of the man's mouth. "And you do
realize that the black hole region must be treated in accordance with
general relativity, not merely special
relativity?"
The audience had turned to hear this, eyes casting back, and
Benjamin knew that this was somebody important. The shot about
relativity was a clear put-down, questioning his credentials. A nasty
insinuation to make about a fresh Ph.D., the ink barely dry on his
diploma. He drew in a long breath and time slowed, the way it does in
a traffic accident, and suddenly he realized that he was frightened.
His was the second colloquium of the academic year, a prestigious
spot in itself. The Astronomy Department liked to get the year off
with a bang, featuring bold, invigorating topics. The air was crisp
with autumn smells, the campus alive with edgy expectation, and
Channing was in the tenth row in her blue good-luck sweater.
Act. Say something. But what?
He caught her eyes on him and stepped forward, putting his hands
behind his back in a classic pontifical pose, the way he had seen
others signal that they were being thoughtful. In fact, he did not
need to think, for the answer came to him out of nowhere, slipping
into words as he began a sentence, not quite knowing where it
was going.
"The disk dynamo has to give off a critical level of
current," he said easily, getting the tone of bemused
thought. "Otherwise it would not be able to coherently rotate."
He let the sentence hang in air. The senior figures in the
department were watching him, waiting for further explanation,
and he opened his mouth to give it. His nostrils flared and he saw
with crystalline clarity that he should say nothing, leave the
tantalizing sentence to sink in. Bait. This guy in the back was a
Brit, dish out some of his own style to him.
He had gotten everyone's attention and now the audience sensed
something, heads swiveling to watch the Englishman. Stand
pat? No.
Benjamin decided to raise the stakes. A cool thrill ran through
him as he added, "I would think that was physically clear."
Half the audience had already turned toward the back rows and when
he spoke they quickly glanced around like a crowd at a tennis match
following a fast volley.
The face in the back clouded, scowling, and then seemed to decide
to challenge. "I should think that unlikely" came the
drawl, lifting at the last word into a derisive lilt, un-like-ly.
Benjamin felt a prickly rush sweep over him. Gotcha.
"It follows directly from a conservation theorem,"
Benjamin said smoothly, savoring the line, striding to the
overhead projector and slapping down a fresh viewgraph. He had
not shown it in the talk because it was an arcane bit of
mathematics, not the sort of thing to snag the attention of this
crowd. No eye-catching graphics or dazzling data-crunching, just
some lines of equations with double-integral signs, ripe with vector
arrows over the symbols. A yawner—until now.
"Starting with Maxwell's equations," he began, pointing,
then glanced up. "Which we know to be relativistically correct,
yes?"
This jibe made a few of the theorists chuckle; everybody had
learned this as undergraduates, but most had forgotten it long ago.
"So performing the integrals over a cylindrical volume…"
He went through the steps quickly, knowing that nobody this late in
the hour wanted to sit through five minutes of tedious
calculations. The cat was out of the bag, anyway. Springing a
crisp new viewgraph—and then two more to finish the argument,
all tightly reasoned mathematics— tipped his hand. He had
anticipated this question and prepared, deliberately left a hole
in his argument. Or so the guy in the back would think—was
thinking, from the deepening frown Benjamin saw now on the distant,
narrow face—and knew that he had stepped into a trap.
Only it wasn't so. Benjamin had not really intended it that way,
had left the three viewgraphs out because they seemed a minor
digression of little interest to the hard-nosed astrophysicists
who made up most of the audience.
"So we can see that this minimum level is quite enough to
later on confine the jets, keep them pointing straight, solve the
problem." He added this last little boast and stepped back.
The Brit face at the back curled up a lip, squinted eyes, but said
nothing. A long moment passed as the colloquium chairman peered
toward the back, rocking forward a little, and then saw that there
would be no reply. Game, point, match, Benjamin thought,
breathing in deeply of air that seemed cool and sharp.
There were two more questions, minor stuff about possible
implications, easy to get through. In fact, he let himself strut a
little. He expanded on some work he contemplated doing in the near
future, once he and Channing had the wedding business over with
and he could think, plan the next step in his career. He felt that he
could get away with a slight, permissible brag.
Then it was over, the ritual incantation from the chairman, "There
is wine and cheese in the usual place, to which you are all invited.
Let us thank our speaker again…"
This applause was scattered and listless, as usual as everybody
got up, and the crowd left. His major professor appeared at his elbow
and said, "You handled that very well."
"Uh, thanks. Who is that guy?" Benjamin glanced at the
crowd, not letting any concern into his face.
"Dart. Kingsley Dart."
"The similarity solutions guy from Oxford?"
"Right. Just blew in yesterday afternoon, visiting for a few
days. Thought you had met him."
"I was squirreled away making viewgraphs."
"You sure nailed Dart with those last three."
"I hadn't really planned it that way—"
An amused grin. "Oh, sure."
"I didn't!"
"Nobody gets timing like that without setting it up."
"Well, my Benjamin did," Channing said, slipping an arm
around his. "I know, because he had them in the very first
version of the talk."
Benjamin smiled. "And you told me to drop them."
"It worked perfectly, didn't it?" she said, all
innocence.
He laughed, liking the feeling of release it brought, liking that
she had made him seem a lot more the savvy Machiavellian than he
was, liking the whole damned thing so much it clutched at his heart
somehow in the frozen moment of triumph. Off to the side two of the
big names of the department were talking about the implications
of his work and he liked the sound of that, too, his name wafting
pleasantly in the nearly empty room. He could smell the aging,
polished wood, the astringent solvent reek of the dry markers
from the blackboard, a moist gathering in the cloying air of late
afternoon. Channing kept her arm in his and walked proudly beside him
up the two flights to the wine and cheese.
"You were great." She looked up at him
seriously and he saw that she had feared for him in this last hour.
Berkeley was notorious for cutting criticisms, arch comments, savage
seminars that dissected years of research in minutes of coldly
delivered condemnation.
She had kept close to him through the aftermath, when white-haired
savants of the field came up to him, holding plastic glasses of an
indifferent red wine, and probed him on details, implications, even
gossip. Treating him like a member of the club, a colleague at
last. She had tugged at his arm and nodded when Dart came into view,
earnestly talking to a grand old observing astronomer. Dart had a way
of skating over a crowd, dipping in where he wanted, like a
hummingbird seeking the sweet bulbs. Eventually he worked his
way around to Benjamin, lifting eyebrows as he approached, his face
in fact running through the entire suite of ironic messages,
very Euro, before shooting out a hand and saying, "Kingsley
Dart. Liked the talk."
Firm handshake. "You seemed to disagree with most of it."
A shrug. "Testing the ideas, just testing."
He said, a little testily, Benjamin thought. "I had
dropped those viewgraphs, the proof, out of the talk. I didn't think
most of the audience would care."
Abrupt nods, three very quick, then a long one, as though
deliberating. "Probably right. Only people like me and thee
care."
Ah, Benjamin thought, instant inclusion in the
fraternity of people-like-us. "It's a major point, I should
have brought it up."
"No, you were right, would've blunted your momentum."
Why is he being so chummy? Channing's glance asked,
eyebrows pinched in. He had no idea. Not knowing where to go with
this conversation, he said, "My fiancée,
Channing Blythe," and they went through the usual presentations.
But Kingsley kept eyeing him with a gaze that lapsed into frowning
speculation, as though they were still feeling each other out. And
maybe they were. Within minutes they were at it, throwing ideas and
clipped phrases back and forth, talking the shorthand of those who
spent a lot of time living in their heads and were glad to meet
someone who shared the same interior territory. It was the start of a
formal friendship and a real, never acknowledged rivalry, two poles
that defined them in the decades that followed.
Twenty years. Could it have been that long?
And now here he was, the famous Royal Astronomer, first on the
scene when something potentially big was breaking. Perfect timing was
a gift, and Kingsley had it.
Forcing a smile onto his stiff face, Benjamin felt a sharp, hot
spike of genuine hatred.
4
Channing planned her invasion of the High Energy Astrophysics
Center carefully. First, what were the right clothes to stage a
dramatic reappearance at work, after a month away, presumed by all to
be no longer a real player?
When she had worked at NASA Headquarters the dress code had been
easy: modified East Coast style, basically a matter of getting her
blacks to match. Did a mascara-dark midlength skirt go with a
charcoal turtleneck? Close enough and she was okay for either NASA's
labyrinths, the opera, or a smoky dive.
But amid tropical glare and endless vibrant bougainvillea, her
outfits had seemed like dressing as a vampire at an Easter egg hunt.
Here, slouchy sweaters and scuffed tennis shoes appeared at "dressy
casual" receptions, right next to Italian silk ties, subtle
diamond bracelets, and high heels sinking into the sandy sod. She had
seen jeans worn with a tiara, "leisure gowns" looking like
pajamas, and a tux top with black shorts. Yet finding a studied
casual look took her an hour of careful weighing, all to seem as
though she had thrown them on fifteen minutes ago without a second
thought. On top of that, you never knew how the day would proceed
later, whether you were dressing for an evening on a humid, warm
patio or inside, in air-conditioning set for the comfort zone of a
snow leopard. Maddening.
She eyed herself carefully in the mirror. Now, thanks to weight
loss, she had a great, tight butt: Gluteus to the Max-imus!
But her breasts, once ample enough, thank you, were sagging, or as
she preferred to think in TV terms, losing their vertical hold.
Getting over vanity had been the hardest part of adjusting to the
cancer. A vain man would check himself out passing a mirror. An
absolutely ordinary woman could pick out her reflections in store
windows, spoons, bald men's heads. Channing, as a photogenic
astronaut type, had been ever-aware of How She Looked. All women
faced the Looks Issue, as she had thought of it as a teenager,
whether as a positive element or a negative one. Not that it had not
done her good now and then. At NASA it had helped her through earnest
committee meetings in which she was the only woman in the room. Now,
thank God, all that was behind her.
Still, she was not at all ready to enter the working bay, looking
for Benjamin, and find Kingsley Dart in his uniform: slightly
pouchy brown suit, white shirt, tie drawn tight in a knot of unknown
style. Down-market Oxford, so utterly out of place that his attire
advertised Dart's unconcern for such trivial matters. Since she had
seen him in a tux when the situation demanded, and yet he had somehow
achieved the same effect of unconscious indifference, she was sure it
was all quite conscious.
She went through the clothes analysis automatically while trying
to absorb the shock. She was suddenly self-conscious, and then angry
about being so. He still had the power to throw her into momentary
confusion. And the way he lifted his head to smile, with just a whiff
of hauteur, still delighted her. Damn him.
"Channing, how wonderful to see you," Kingsley said
smoothly.
He looked into her face with a worried frown, much as everyone did
these days, as if they could read the state of her health there.
Well, maybe they could; she was past the stage of trying to hide
behind cosmetics. She knew that her skin was yellow and papery, her
eyes rimmed with a dark under-layer, her once strong arms thin and
showing swelling at the joints. It no longer even bothered her that
people glanced at her out of the corner of their eyes, not wanting to
stare but still drawn to hints of the eternal mystery—of what
her mother called "passing," as if there were a clear
destination firmly in mind.
"Thought I'd come in, see what all the excitement's about."
"Is there much?" Kingsley said to Benjamin with
deceptive lightness. "Have you made any announcement?"
"Oh no, much too soon for that," Benjamin said quickly.
"Don't want to just announce a mystery," Amy put in.
"But it's all over the IAU Notices," Kingsley said.
This was the global notification system of the International
Astronomical Union, used to focus workers on the newest comet or
supernova or pulsar of interest. "Sure, but we've got to be
cautious," Benjamin said. "If this is a new class of
object—"
"Then you should enlist as many people and observing windows
as possible," Kingsley finished for him.
Channing smiled, remembering. Kingsley had the annoying
pattern of quickly disagreeing with you and often being right, plus
the even worse property of agreeing with you and getting there first.
Benjamin pursed his lips and plowed on. "I think the big
issue is how this thing can repeat."
Kingsley said carefully, "I must admit, when I saw your
Notices piece, I thought it most likely an error."
Amy said flatly, "It's not an error, I can tell you that."
"I'm quite relieved to hear it." Channing noted that
with this phrase Kingsley was not actually agreeing with Amy, only
reacting, but his choice of words avoided rankling her.
"Look at it this way," Benjamin put in. "At the
very least, this object throws into doubt the standard picture of
gamma-ray bursters."
Kingsley's lips drew into a thin, skeptical line. "With many
thousands observed, one exception does not disprove the model."
Since he had taken a major hand in building up the conventional
view of gamma-ray bursters, this was predictable, Channing felt. She
said amiably, "Similar appearance does not mean similar cause."
Kingsley nodded but Amy said, "Shouldn't we follow Occam's
razor—prefer the simplest explanation? Then this is an odd kind
of burster, but one in our galaxy."
Benjamin said, "Sure, but don't throw out data just because
it makes your job harder. We don't understand the visible light
data, either."
This led to a long discussion of the mysterious Doppler shifts.
Channing had come up today mainly to see this data, and it was
strange indeed. "It's as though some of the thing's coming
toward us, some away. A rotating disk? We'd get the red shifts from
the receding edge, blue shifts from the approaching one."
They all looked at her. "Good idea," Benjamin said
happily, winking and grinning. She could see that they were
surprised in two ways—by the proposal itself, and because
she had made it. She had come into astronomy as an observing
astronaut, doing yeoman labor in the last stages of the space shuttle
era, then doing dutiful time on the space station. The more
academically based astronomers regarded these as rather showy,
unserious pursuits. She had never risen very far here at the Center
and had always wondered if that bias held her back. In the slightly
startled expressions of Dart and Amy—but not, bless him,
Benjamin—she saw confirmation.
Kingsley said incisively, "I rather like that."
"But a disk?" Amy frowned doubtfully. "I'd say
these are kinda large, but I'll have to check…"
"Good," Kingsley said quickly. "At the moment we
have no other hypothesis to test. I wish we did."
Channing was not the only one to notice that his use of we
included Kingsley in the team. Benjamin's eyes narrowed in a way
she understood and he said, "Just wait. Theorists will jump on
this like it was candy."
"They can theorize all they like," Amy said. "We
have all the data."
"Which we should make quick use of," Kingsley said.
"Let's do some preliminary calculations, shall we?"
Channing went with them to a seminar room and they reviewed
the data. Some fresh observations came in over the satellite links as
they worked, providing fresh fodder. She kept up with the
discussions, but to her this branch of astrophysics was like a
French Impressionist painting of a cow: suggestive, artful maybe, but
some things never looked quite right and it was in the end not a
reliable source of nourishing milk. Plus, she was woefully out
of date on current theory. Still she found pleasure in watching
Benjamin and Kingsley spar, using quickly jotted equations as
weapons. Amy joined in, too, her tone a bit less canny and insidious,
but holding her own.
Kingsley jabbed verbally, challenging others' ideas while seeming
at first to be going along with them, inserting doubt slyly as he
carried the discussion forward, ferret-eyed in his intensity. Just as
decades before, he saw this as a delightful game played with chalk
and sliding tones of voice.
Channing found her attention drifting. Looking back, she could
remember liking contests like this from decades past. Benjamin would
always see Kingsley as a rival; that was set in his mind like a
fossil print of their first meeting. Benjamin was a perfectly
respectable theorist, but not in Kingsley's class. That was simply a
fact, but she knew quite well that Benjamin would never fully accept
it. After all, who did not need a little illusion to get through
life?
Having bested Kingsley in a colloquium encounter set their
relationship, as far as Benjamin was concerned. Never mind that
Kingsley had done better work on bigger problems, and on top of
it displayed remarkable skills in the political circus that
science had become. She could barely recall that incident, but knew
that it burned in Benjamin's mind whenever he crossed Kingsley's
path. Probably Kingsley had forgotten it entirely. This seemingly
small difference was precisely why they seldom saw each other. Too
bad, really, because she had always found Kingsley more amusing
than the usual run of academic astronomers. In their bull moose
rivalries, men missed a lot.
Would her own career at NASA have gone better, she mused, if she
had been a man? Nobody in passing conversation would glance at
your chest. You wouldn't have to pretend to be "freshening
up" to go to the goddamn John. Nobody cared if you didn't
remember their birthday. You could rationalize any behavior error
with the all-purpose "Screw it." In late-night jokes in a
bar, you could really see something hilarious in punting a small dog,
preferably a poodle. You didn't give a rat's ass whether anybody
heeded your new haircut. Thank God, they never noticed if you'd lost
or gained weight. Men had some things so easy! With the Other Side,
flowers fixed anything. And as the years closed in, gray hair and
wrinkles would add character. Hell, you could dine out on that alone.
Lean over the bar, belch originally, and declaim about the old days
when rocket boosters kicked you in the ass so hard you thought you
had a prostate problem. And what the hell, you could always look
forward to being a dirty old man.
5
He had expected the next day to be hours of more muddling along,
with data trickling in and more idea-bashing with Kingsley and Amy.
Instead, it proved decisive.
The Very Large Baseline Interferometer reported in promptly, to
everyone's surprise. This network had grown from a few stations
strewn around the world into an intricate system that now included
radio telescopes orbiting farther away than the moon. Its "baseline"
then made it effectively an instrument of enormous equivalent
resolution, like having a dim eye of astronomical size. Getting
a measurement quickly was pure luck. The distant SpaceWeb satellites
had been looking in roughly the right portion of the sky, and
Benjamin's request came in at the very end of a rather tedious
job. Instrument tenders were human, too, and the mystery had
caught their attention.
The radio plume was thin, bright—and moving. Comparison
with the earlier map showed definite changes in the filaments
making up the thin image. Now they had two maps at different times
show changing luminosity and position.
"But these were taken only a day or so apart!" Kingsley
jabbed at the differences between the maps with a bony finger.
"So?" Benjamin gave him a slight smile.
"Must be wrong."
Benjamin said, "No, it means this object is local—very
local."
"You took the rate of change of these features and worked it
into a distance estimate?" Amy asked.
"Nothing moves faster than light—so I used that to set
a bound. I came in early, had a chance to work through the numbers,
and checked them by e-mail with the guys in Socorro." The site
of the now-outdated Very Large Array, Socorro, New Mexico, still had
a practiced set of house theorists and observers, and Benjamin knew
several of them well. "Jean Ellik, an old hand there, agrees:
this thing can't be much farther away than the Oort cloud."
"But it's a radio object."
The Oort cloud was a huge spherical swarm of icy fragments
orbiting beyond the orbit of Pluto. Objects there were frigid and
unenergetic, exceptionally difficult to detect.
"Something has found a way to light itself up, out there in
the cold and dark," Benjamin said happily. The look of
consternation on Kingsley's face was all he had been hoping for.
He could not resist rubbing it in. "That added hypothesis you
were asking for yesterday—here it is."
They quickly went to the head of the Center, Victoria Martinez,
and got permission for added resources. "Get everybody on it,"
she said intently. Martinez was a good astronomer who had been
deflected into administration. Benjamin worried that he would
drift along the same path, getting more disconnected from the science
all the while. He was happy that she saw the implications
immediately.
They wrote a carefully phrased alert for the IAU Notices, asking
for any and all observations of the object, in all frequency
bands, because in Kingsley's phrase, "inasmuch as this is a
wholly unanticipated finding, no data is irrelevant."
"Let's keep the media out of it for the moment,"
Martinez said carefully, and they all agreed. Everyone remembered
past embarrassments: mistaken reports of asteroids that might hit
Earth, misidentified massive stars, spurious discovered planets
around nearby stars.
Kingsley was atypically silent. Apparently he had decided to "hang
about" for a few days out of curiosity.
Coaxed, Kingsley said, "Admittedly, all along I had thought
that it would turn out to be a relativistic jet—yes, my
favorite object. Indeed, one pointed very nearly straight at us. That
would neatly explain its huge luminosity. Also, we would naturally
see all the jet's variations as occurring quickly, as they would be
time-squeezed by relativity. Alas"—a touch of the
theatrical here, holding a pen aloft like a phony sword—"it
was not to be."
The gamma-ray signature had surfaced as crucial, and within hours
Kingsley had a new idea.
"Let us face facts, uncomfortable as they may be to
conventional views," he began to a small band in the
seminar room, including Amy and Benjamin at the front. "It makes
no sense if you suppose this is an object passing through the
interstellar medium, a very thin gas. It would emit radiation, then,
because it was striking objects in its way. A quick calculation"—he
proceeded to produce this in quick, jabbing strokes on a blackboard
as he spoke—"shows that one needs to expend only a trivial
amount of power to overcome the friction of the interstellar
hydrogen." He dropped the chalk dramatically. "There is
simply not enough matter nearby our solar system for it to run into."
He turned to the audience, which agreed. Or at least nodded;
Kingsley's reputation for incisive analysis was enough to silence the
timid. Several were checking his numbers and did not look up.
Channing had heard the news and was sitting in on the impromptu
seminar that had developed spontaneously down the hall from
Benjamin's office. She saw her chance and stepped into the silence.
"Okay, then we have to look elsewhere. It's reasonably
nearby, or else it couldn't possibly be so luminous. So as savvy
Kingsley implies, why is it luminous? Because it's not gliding
through, it's accelerating."
Benjamin had not even known that Channing was in the room. He
turned to look at her, a spark of uneasy pride at her speaking up so
readily. Uneasy because Kingsley had a reputation for leaving
questions hanging, only to knock them down when anyone ventured to
take the next step without thinking it through. But this time the
narrow, hatchet face showed only real puzzlement as it nodded.
Kingsley put his hands behind his back, as if to disarm himself, and
said slowly, "Perhaps, but why? There are no unusual signatures
near it, nothing to be propelling it forward."
Benjamin got her drift. "Exactly. But what if it's
decelerating?"
Kingsley shot back, "I just showed that the interstellar
medium slows things very slowly. Nothing would naturally—"
Channing broke in. "Suppose it's not natural? What if it's a
starship?"
Benjamin's jaw dropped, but out of loyalty he tried to fill the
skeptical silence that greeted her question. "P-passing near
us?"
To his amazement, she rose from her seat and stepped with fragile
grace to the front, taking the chalk from Kingsley's hand. Everyone
in the room knew of her illness, but he sensed that her command of
them came from the quality that had made her a successful astronaut,
a presence he could never name but that he sensed every day. He felt
a burst of pride for her and a smile split his face, telltale of a
joy he had not felt quite this way for a very long time. Since the
illness, in fact.
This was a mere instant, for Channing did not pause to absorb
the regard of the room. Quickly she did her own swift calculation. It
all depended upon the source's intrinsic luminosity. A bright
source ten light-years away looked the same as one a light year away
and a hundred times dimmer, so— she turned to the audience,
neatly jotting L = P/R2 and said, "With
P the ship's power demand and R in light-years, we have—"
More jotting. "How much does one need to ram a ship through the
interstellar medium?"
The crowd now filled the room to overflowing, Benjamin noticed,
and from the packed faces came guesses: "The power level of a
city?" and "No, nearer to all of North America."
She shook her head. "Try the whole planet."
A gasp of surprise. Not even acknowledging this, she went on to
cite the Mouse, a runaway neutron star discovered decades
before. It lay somewhere within a thousand light-years and looked
vaguely like a fleeing rodent with a long tail, because it left
behind a trail of excited electrons, which were discovered by a radio
telescope. All the energy in that tail came from the shock waves the
Mouse excited ahead of itself. The interstellar gas and dust was
slowing it, braking an entire compacted star, and the energy expended
by this splashed across the sky in an extravagant signature.
Of course, she allowed, the Mouse was just an analogy. There were
details of how to estimate the braking, which demanded knowing
the size of the "working surface" and interactions
across it, shock waves—a zoo of astrophysical effects. Benjamin
recognized areas she had worked on in her career, so her approach was
not really surprising; to the man who owns a hammer, every problem
looks like a nail. But this method came out of her life, giving her
an assurance others lacked.
She turned from her calculations to confront them. "And this
object is doing the same. But taking the luminosity, I can find the
mass that's being slowed down by simple interstellar friction.
Guess what it is."
She had them on puppet strings now and a pleased smile rippled.
She waited.
"A neutron star… again?" a voice called,
dribbling away in self doubt; she would not be that obvious.
"Jupiter-sized?"
"No, bigger!"
"An Earth mass, I would guess," Kingsley put in, not to
be utterly upstaged, but smiling at her audacity. Benjamin suddenly
saw in the wryly appreciative cast to his face that Kingsley had a
deep affection for Channing. Somehow this had eluded him through all
their clashes.
She drew it out to just the right point and then wrote a number on
the board. Silence.
"That's about the mass of the moon," a voice called from
the back.
"It's small."
"Nothing at all like a neutron star," a voice declared,
sounding irked at being misled.
"True. With a moon's mass, but it makes gamma rays. Some kind
of supermoon. Gentlemen, you have something really new on your
hands."
She sat down in a free chair in the front row, next to Benjamin.
As she settled in, he caught her letting go, giving way to the sudden
body language of near-exhaustion. The room broke into applause. Not,
Benjamin saw, at the particular brilliance of the analysis—anyone
in the room could do the arithmetic and make estimates, and many no
doubt would rush back to their offices and do just that, checking
her—but because she had seen just the right calculation to do
and had done it before anyone else. That was the trick in high-flying
science: to pick the right problem just as it becomes worth doing.
And she had brought it off. He had noticed that she had gotten up in
the night, and in his fuzzy sleep had attributed it to her
familiar medical woes. But no, she had been honing herself for this
grand game, the clash of scientific ideas. She still has it, my
girl, he thought with relish.
He leaned over to her and whispered, "I knew that I'd married
Miss Right, okay—only I didn't know her first name was Always."
She gave him a proud, tired grin, followed by a kiss.
6
Most of the world's orbiting telescopes lost much time and
flexibility from always having a huge bright object nearby—the
Earth. Accidentally pointing the telescope that way for even a second
would fry sensitive optical systems.
So astronomers avoided their home planet if they could. Placing
large Big Eyes at Earth's Lagrangian points helped—orbiting
sixty degrees fore and aft of the moon's position in its orbit, far
from the blue-white glare of the planet's ocean and sky.
Without the sunlight reflected from the Earth's disk, telescopes
could cool to a few degrees above absolute zero. This helped
enormously when looking in the infrared, for then the telescope body
itself did not emit much radiation at the crucial frequencies. With a
hundred times the area of the much earlier Hubble Space Telescope,
the Big Eyes could see dim objects a hundred times fainter.
But when pointed at the elusive quarry, the Big Eyes showed only a
dim blur. They could not see in enough detail to tell what it was. As
Kingsley remarked acerbically, two further days of effort on a global
scale served merely to give it a name. One was suggested by Channing
in an offhand moment: "X-l." She had explained, "X
because we don't know what the hell it is, and one because there may
be more."
But it sounded too much like a weapon or jet plane, so everyone
just called it "the intruder."
Stymied, the worldwide network of observers went back to
telescopes firmly fixed on Mother Earth.
Earth-based instruments used adaptive optics—mirrors that
adjusted second to second, offsetting the dancing refractions of
the air above them. Several of these sat atop Mauna Kea, the best
all-around observing spot in the world. The aim of the newest
sixteen-meter reflector 'scope, using adaptive mirrors, was to fetch
forth images of Jupiter-sized planets orbiting nearby stars. Pricey
Earth-based 'scopes were still far cheaper than space eyes, which had
to carry a guidance system to keep them pointed accurately while
orbiting at 27,000 kilometers per hour.
But the sixteen-meter 'scope could not resolve the blob of visible
light that "X-l" gave off.
To reliably see another star's Jupiter-sized planets, humanity
had to go to its own Jupiter—or rather, to send a robot. Able
to see in the infrared with meticulous accuracy, the Deep Space
Infrared Telescope hung as far from the sun as Jupiter itself,
orbiting high above the ecliptic plane. This kept it cold and out of
the plane of dust that clogged the inner solar system. The enemy of
good, deep "seeing"—to use the astronomer's
jargon—was the glow of sunlight scattered by that orbiting
debris. Its dim radiance had been discovered in 1661 and it was
still termed the "zodiacal light." In excellent seeing
conditions, from Earth one could watch the plane of dim gray light
stretch across a winter's night. This dust-reflected sunlight
perpetually brightened the sky of the inner solar system. The dust
declined in density far from the sun, and sunlight dimmed, so that
now astronomers were driven to the outer reaches.
There a thin beam orbited, a hundred meters long and crafted to
within a ten-thousandth of a millimeter: the Long Eye. To see a
planet around another sun demanded that the Long Eye blot out the
star's infrared emission, which was a million times brighter than the
world being sought. Then the telescopes spaced at regular intervals
along the length compared the phases of the light they received
from near the star. Matching and subtracting, an onboard computer
sifted through a torrent of noise for the faint, steady signal of a
tiny planet, sending out the message of its own existence.
Standing beneath a clear sky, one's unaided eye could see details
on the moon about a tenth of the moon's diameter. At the same
distance, a Big Eye 'scope typical of those standing on Mauna
Kea could make out an astronaut standing on the moon. With the Long
Eye—and some luck—one could make out the astronaut
holding up fingers—and count them.
The Long Eye was painstakingly studying the zone around likely
candidate stars, seeking evidence of life. By looking carefully at
each color of the light from the target world, it could in principle
see the fine details of absorption by water, oxygen, or carbon
dioxide—telltale gases of life.
This stretched array now searched for a dot at the very edge of
the solar system, a target its designers had never conceived.
"Got it!" Amy cried, jabbing at a large computer screen.
The data had just come over the astro-Net connection.
They crowded around. The de facto working group was only four:
Amy, Kingsley, Benjamin, and Channing. Of course there were subgroups
laboring over parts of the problem, but by unspoken agreement
they had started meeting in each others' offices whenever a fresh
piece of data seemed in the offing. Martinez had approved this
catch-as-catch-can method, suggesting to Benjamin, "Whatever
works, go for it."
They all took in the new result at a glance. There were small
gasps. But they left it to Channing to note her own triumph.
"Looks pretty small." A bright spot sat at one end of the
radio finger: starship-like.
"It's fully resolved, though," Amy said. "Looks
like a circle. A moon? At its distance, let's see… ten
milliarc-seconds… Geez. No moon, not at all. It's only a few
kilometers across."
"What? That can't be right." Kingsley peered at the
screen's side panel of data and gazed off into space, making his own
reckoning. He blinked. "Um. I'm afraid it is."
"Afraid?" Benjamin chided.
"Because it means something is wrong with Channing's rather
nice piece of work from two days ago. This object cannot have the
mass of a moon. It's far too small."
Benjamin wanted to defend her, but Channing spoke up quickly,
despite a fog of fatigue that had descended upon her in the last
hour. Damned if I'll leave early today, she thought
adamantly, and let Kingsley call the tune.
If only her head would stop spinning… "Let's not rule
out anything until we fit the pieces of this jigsaw puzzle
together."
Kingsley said in a let's-be-reasonable tone, "Your estimate
included a characteristic size, which we now see was far too large.
So you derived a larger mass—"
"Not so fast," Channing said. "What's the rest of
the Long Eye results?"
Benjamin punched some keys and peered at a sidebar that popped up.
"They're logging in the spectrum… processing…
Looks like an excess of blue shifts."
Channing beamed in a way that, from his expression, she could tell
that Benjamin had not seen for a long time. "Which means it's
decelerating."
"Just as you said," Kingsley allowed. "That I'll
grant. But your calculation still makes no sense—quantitatively."
"Look," Channing pressed back, "I estimated in my
first equation—"
"We're missing the big point, aren't we?" Plainly
Benjamin decided to intervene before talk descended into
another technical wrangle, as it had so much these last few
days. Often the devil was indeed in the details, but he had a way of
pulling specialists, including most definitely herself, away from
their narrow issues to face the larger picture.
Kingsley smiled, seeing the point. "It is deliberately
slowing to enter the solar system? The starship hypothesis."
"But to be so bright, it must have a huge mass,"
Channing said. "No starship would be so heavy."
Benjamin nodded. "A big contradiction."
Long silence. She had often heard historians of science go on
about how a great scientist had the courage of his convictions,
stuck it out through opposition, and so on. Until this moment she had
not felt the implied sense—that sometimes you had
to take the big leap: buy two apparently conflicting ideas and
fuse them.
Should she? What the hell, you only die once.
"Maybe we're both right. It's a lot of mass packed into a
tiny package." She had to put all her effort into getting the
rest of the words out. Her mind was perking along just fine, but her
body wanted to curl up and go to sleep. "After all, that few
kilometers across is an upper scale. This thing must be lighting up a
lot of gas around it. It could be smaller than we think. A lot
smaller, even."
They all looked at each other. Another long silence.
She thought giddily, He who laughs last just thinks slower,
but nobody laughed at her implication. To her vast and abstractly
distant surprise, they all, one by one, nodded.
Within the hour, Channing was leaning back and breathing
steadily, just holding on to watch the show. It took fewer muscles to
smile than to frown, sure enough, and fewer still to ignore people
completely. But she had shrugged off Benjamin's efforts to take
her home.
She heard boss lady Martinez say tensely, "I've got to get up
to NASA, NSF. Maybe even on to the White House." She smiled
slightly, relishing the moment. Even if she was feeling
light-headed and Martinez's words did come hollow-voiced, like a
speech given down a long tin pipe.
Not a moon, no. Something much more interesting.
PART TWO
FAST LANE SCIENCE
MARCH
1
The pinnacle of Mauna Kea stands a full mile above a deck of
marshmallow clouds that at sunset turn salmon pink. In late afternoon
the sun seems to lower into a softly burning plain that stretches to
the horizons. When the volcanoes that built the island belch, the
underbellies of the clouds take on a devilish cast where they hover
over the seethe of lava. Beneath these, black chunks of razor-sharp,
cooled lava render the landscape stark, brooding, and ominous. Nature
here seems blunt, brutal, and remorseless.
Yet above all this churn, three hundred tons of gleaming steel and
glass pirouette as gracefully as—and far more precisely
than—any ballerina. No dancer has ever been required to
set herself to within a tiny fraction of a millimeter.
Once in position, the biggest optical telescope in the world then
commands the two jaws of the covering hatches to yawn, their slow
grind echoing as the 'scope drinks the first light of evening. Here
is where the best and brightest come to find the farthest and
dimmest. That Hawaii is the most isolated landmass on Earth with the
highest pinnacle gives it an advantage in the steadiness of its air.
The flat ocean keeps the air stably warm over the islands. Air's
usual small flutters cause stars to dance like shiny pennies seen at
the bottom of a swimming pool. Over the peak of Mauna Kea air flows
more smoothly than above any other high site in the world. The trade
winds blow steady and level far beneath the realm of the
telescopes.
These conditions drew astronomers, the only major life-form at
this height. Up a road left deliberately rough they brought their
white observing pods, immaculate domes like enormous pale mushrooms.
The venerable twin Keck telescopes had ruled over this realm
since their construction in the 1990s, though they were no longer the
largest of their breed. An even larger dome stood in the distance,
but Benjamin thought the Kecks were the more beautiful. With two
thirty-three-foot mirrors made from thirty-six segments, each such
light-bucket was separately movable, swiveling in an echo to the
dance of the heavens above. The two mirrors were in tubes eight
stories tall, each floating so precisely on oil bearings that a
single hand could move them.
Not that such maneuvers were left to mere human means. Elaborate
systems guided these tubes, for the human mind operating at 13,800
feet quickly lost its edge. That was why Benjamin seldom came to this
height, yet today, on a whim, he had driven up. To clear his head, he
had explained to others, whereas the altitude had the opposite
effect. He gasped for air after even a modest climb. Pointless,
really, to think that he could mull over an idea up here, where his
brain was losing cells every moment to oxygen starvation.
But today there was something about the perspective, in the
slanted rays of late afternoon, that seemed to fit the scale of the
idea he was carrying. Intelligence and technology ruled these barren
heights. Against the cruel powers of vulcanism, which had shaped the
islands, mere men had set up here a citadel of intricate artifice,
dedicated to pure knowledge and the expansion of horizons. In
the face of the world's raw rub, and especially whenever he allowed
himself to truly think about what was coming for Channing, the
view from this majestic height was ennobling.
Right now, he needed that. He drank it in.
If life could work its wonder upon so hostile a place, what other
forbidding sites in the universe could play host to mentality? The
'scopes around him were preparing for the coming night, to chip
away at answers to such questions. Eternal questions—until now.
Then his portable phone rang, dragging him back into the momentary
world. It was a double ring, one of the codes they had introduced at
the Center to get priority attention.
Well, it was about time, anyway. His walk up here had left him
panting and somehow had clarified his resolve.
On his way down, he distracted himself by trying to find the FM
station that played rock from the decade when you cared about it—the
working definition of the Good Old Days.
Channing had insisted on being there when he presented his idea.
Brimming now with resolve, he called her on the way down. She sounded
quite cheery, her tone lifting at the end of sentences, a good sign.
He had become fairly good at detecting when she was covering up. So
when she came into the seminar room, he was startled at the drawn
gray pallor of her face. Plainly it had cost her considerably to come
up to the Center for this, a drive of several miles in the usual
clogged traffic on narrow two-lane blacktop.
Above the gray cast her eyes sparkled with an energy that was
intellectual, not physical—all that seemed capable of driving
her now. He felt a pang of guilt; he should have driven home and
picked her up. In fact, he had offered to, but she had shrugged it
off, saying that she wanted to do some shopping later, anyway. This
now looked completely implausible: he doubted that she would have the
energy. But then, she had surprised him before with her desire to
still visit dress shops, searching for just the right little item
that would "cover the damage," as she put it. He embraced
her gingerly, felt an answering throb in her body. Or at least he
hoped it meant that, and was not one of the tremors he sometimes
felt pass through her while she was asleep in bed, like an impersonal
ocean wave bearing all before it.
He had decided to limit this to the usual four people, plus
Victoria Martinez. If he proved utterly wrong, which he had to admit
was quite probable, at least the number of witnesses to his
embarrassment would be manageable.
He got Channing a cup of tea and she took three of her pills along
with it. By then the other three were gathered around the seminar
table and he began, trying not to seem unsure, though he was.
"How many bursts from the intruder, this 'X-l' object, have
we recorded so far, Amy?" He knew, of course, but like a lawyer
in a courtroom, a seminar speaker should never ask a question whose
answer was not readily at hand.
"Seven." She held out the trace printouts and he waved
them aside.
"Far too many. That's my argument in a nutshell."
Benjamin had wanted to create a dramatic effect, but saw
instantly that this was too much of a jump. Victoria and Amy
looked puzzled, Channing startled. He would have to be more orderly,
he saw; one of his many speaking faults was a tendency to get ahead
of himself. A closed mouth gathers no feet.
Kingsley frowned, his lips drawn into a thin skeptical line.
"Since we don't know the mechanism…"
"But we all have one in mind, don't we?" Channing chimed
in. "The energetic intruder smashing into iceteroids."
"Haven't heard that term before. Ice asteroids, is it?"
Kingsley said amiably as he turned toward her, his face quickly
changing to solicitous concern, voice filling with warmth. "True
enough, I had been making a few calculations assuming that—"
"And they work out, don't they?" Benjamin said. "Order
of magnitude, anyway."
Kingsley said, "I can get the gamma rays, all right. It's the
radio tail I'm having trouble with. How does it form?"
Amy said, "Can't it be made pretty much the way galactic
jets do?"
Benjamin was bemused by this, for he had not known Amy to venture
into that realm of astrophysics. Apparently, like the rest of them,
she had been doing a lot of homework. He nodded. "It could. We
can get to that. But let's stick to my main point. How often should
we see a burst, if the iceteroid idea is right?"
"Depends on the thing's speed," Kingsley said.
"Which we know from the Doppler shifts to be about a
hundredth of the speed of light," Amy said. "I just
finished pulling that number out of the data. The spectral fields
were sorta messed up, plenty of broad lines, a real jungle."
"Before we get to my reasoning, let's hear Amy's results."
She should have her chance to shine, he thought, and
then I can get a fresh start myself. She got up with a few
view-graphs, blushing becomingly.
If the entire solar system, including dim Pluto, were reduced
to the size of a human fingertip, the bulk of the Oort cloud of
iceballs would lie ten yards away from that finger. Space was indeed
vast—and empty. But contrary to their first guesses, the
intruder was not so far away. Amy had located it pretty
decisively by timing the movements of bright parts of the radio tail
and then making plausible arguments about how fast such
radio-emitting plasma balls could move. She had showed that the
intruder was only a bit beyond the distance of Pluto from the sun, or
forty times the Earth-sun distance. A cometary nucleus would take
years to fall inward 41 Astronomical Units, but this thing was
moving much faster.
"Good work, yes," Kingsley said. He then offered his own
reprise of her results—"to see if I've gotten it
straight."
Benjamin noted how Kingsley often used the flattering
conversational manner of beginning his next sentence by repeating
another's words, peppering his talk with references to others'
contributions and generally seeming modest. It paid off; scientists
were stingy with praise and a few strokes worked wonders on their
mood. After thrashing through the data a bit more, everyone present
seemed settled.
The intruder was about 50 Astronomical Units out, some-what beyond
the range of Pluto's orbit. It was coming in at about a thirty-degree
angle with respect to the plane the planets orbited in, the ecliptic.
As Channing put it, "The thing's pretty close—and closing
fast."
They all looked at each other. Unspoken was their growing
sense of strangeness.
Now it was his turn. Benjamin began writing on the blackboard.
Style mattered in bringing forth an argument, and he set the stage
with numbers, bringing out the underlying contradiction.
The belt of iceteroids just beyond Pluto had been first imagined
by Gerard Kuiper at the University of Chicago in the 1950s. The
intruder could be hitting those. Little was known of them, despite
their being much closer than the larger swarm in the Oort cloud
farther out.
Benjamin drew out the point carefully. Models of the Kuiper Belt
showed that the icy chunks were on average an Astronomical Unit
apart—quite thinly spread. Typically they were a kilometer or
two in size, about the same size as the apparent core dimension of
the intruder, as seen in visible light.
"A coincidence, of course, their being about the same size,"
Benjamin said. "They can't be the same kind of thing. Point is,
the odds of hitting an iceteroid in all that space are tiny." He
followed with two viewgraphs giving the statistical argument, thick
lines of calculations.
"If it's randomly hitting obstructions, then even at its
colossal speed"—he paused to emphasize—"nearly
a hundredth the speed of light!—then it would not strike
one in a million years."
Gasps. They saw the point; a bullet fired into a light snowstorm
had a far better chance of hitting a snowflake.
Kingsley looked up from scribbling in his leatherbound notebook,
its ornate binding his only affectation. "In fact, it should
take this intruder at least a day to fly from one iceteroid to the
next—at the speed Amy worked out. Something is quite
seriously wrong here."
"I believe there are two ways out"—Benjamin went
on almost as if Kingsley had not spoken—"if we want
to save our idea that the thing is striking iceteroids and processing
their mass into highly energetic stuff. First, as Channing pointed
out—"
"It's processing their mass in stages, holding some to chew
later," she said for herself. "That would mean it can
somehow save pieces of ice."
"Can't imagine how," Kingsley said laconically, looking
down at his notes as if to avoid any conflict with her.
Amy said brusquely, "Me, either. But I think I see your
second idea, Ben. It's not hitting these iceteroids at random. It's
aiming for the next one, using the velocity change it got from
consuming the last one."
Benjamin nodded. There it was, a clear leap into the unknown.
Much better to have Amy make the jump. A genuinely crazy idea,
however much he had tried to couch it in terms of times and distances
and statistical probabilities.
"The 'starship hypothesis' again," Kingsley said
incredulously. "Keeps popping up, despite its absurdity."
This time he looked Benjamin full in the eye.
"How so?" Benjamin asked with a real effort at keeping
his tone polite, though he knew what was coming.
"Calculate the flux of gamma radiation from the source. It's
very bright. Any starship passengers near that flare would be
crisped."
"I thought about that," Benjamin said, trying not to
sound defensive, though of course that was just what he was. "As
yet I have no answer—"
"Except that the ship need not be crewed at all,"
Channing put in smoothly, as though they had planned it this way.
"Machines could tolerate gamma rays pretty well, if
necessary."
Benjamin had not thought of this possibility. He smiled at her in
silent thanks.
Kingsley waved this away with a quick flap of his wrist. "I'd
hate to try to keep electronics alive in such an environment.
Nothing could withstand it."
"I didn't use the term 'starship.' You did," Benjamin
said hotly. "And—"
"I used it," Channing put in, grinning, "but only
as a metaphor."
Kingsley looked irked but said levelly, "Metaphor for what?"
"Something unexpected, maybe obeying rules we haven't thought
of yet," she said brightly. Benjamin could see the price she was
paying for this in the darkening rims around her eyes.
"Or no rules at all," Kingsley said curtly.
"How else can you explain that it is hitting objects far more
often than it should?" Benjamin pressed him.
"I look for another idea," Kingsley shot back, "one
with some rules to bound it."
Benjamin saw suddenly a chink in the man's armor. Just when
you thought you were winning the rat race, along came faster rats.
Kingsley was unaccustomed to having his back to the wall in an
argument. Perhaps his reputation kept him out of such scrapes now.
Well, not here. "We don't need rules, we need ideas."
"Either we have a discussion hinged at one end by
plausibility, or else—"
"Now, don't get—"
"Look," Amy said loudly. The two men stopped,
both open-mouthed, and looked at her as if remembering where and who
they were. Amy pretended not to notice and went on in the measured
tones of one aware of being surrounded by her superiors, "The
point is, this thing is decelerating at a rate we can't account for.
Maybe it's ejecting its own mass to slow itself. Maybe it's a runaway
neutron star—like that one Channing was talking about the other
day, remember? The Mouse?" She looked around the seminar table;
her long hair was pulled back and knotted, so she seemed more
austere. "That could act pretty peculiarly. So let's not
get pushed out of shape by this mystery, okay?"
Benjamin nodded, rueful that he had let the discussion take so
personal a turn. They were all under a lot of pressure, but that did
not justify rubbing rhetorical salt into old wounds.
The talk swerved to other aspects of the problem. Data was pouring
in from ground observers and space-based alike. The astronomical data
streams on the Internet were thick with discussions and endless
inquiries.
Already, theorists were demanding that they publish their findings
on the Internet. Worse, some had written papers explaining
various pieces of the puzzle, posting their hasty work to the
high-display Net showcases. There were advantages to
"publishing" electronically: considerable speed, nailing
down credit for an idea, while not waiting for the reviewing
process. Indeed, the more hot-topic areas of science now resembled a
shouting mob more than a scholarly discourse, thanks to instant
democratic communication.
They were all besieged by colleagues through e-mail. Others had
simply buttonholed them in the Center corridors. Everyone local was
working on sifting the data stream, but few knew what was up,
overall, because there were so many pieces of the puzzle to assemble.
And the Gang of Four arrangement had not facilitated communication,
either, Benjamin had to admit, though it was efficient at giving
ideas a thorough thrashing over before they escaped into the larger
community. In a media-saturated culture, cloisters of reflection
were invaluable.
"So what'll we do?" Amy asked the older and presumably
wiser heads.
"Get out a paper?" Channing asked wanly. Plainly she had
no desire to write it. The hunt was all for her, not talking
about it afterward.
"I think not," Victoria Martinez said, jaw set firmly.
Benjamin had nearly forgotten that she was in the room. She sat at
the far end of the table and had taken many notes, but she had added
nothing until now. He was again embarrassed that she had seen
the cut and thrust between him and Kingsley.
"Definitely not," she said, carefully looking at each of
them in turn. "This is an enormously energetic object, behaving
strangely, and if it continues at its present velocity, it will reach
the inner solar system within a month. Am I correct?"
"Yes," Kingsley answered, "though remember, it is
decelerating."
Benjamin became aware of a tension between Victoria and Kingsley,
whose mouth had compressed into a thin line. The intruder's
incredible velocity had moved it the distance between the Earth and
the sun in about half a day. They all knew this, but the consensus
among the Gang of Four had been that worrying about future effects
was pointless until they got a good handle on what the thing was.
Plainly Victoria did not feel the same.
"One point you've skipped over, I believe, is that it
appears to be headed straight inward."
Amy said, "Well, yes, there's no sign of sideways movement
yet. But at these velocities it would be hard to detect right away."
"But I take your drift," Kingsley said. "A possible
danger."
Benjamin blinked. He had not thought along these lines in detail.
"Of what? Chances of it coming near the Earth—"
"Are impossible to estimate, since it changes velocity with
every encounter—correct?" Victoria Martinez said
incisively.
Amy answered quietly, "Well, maybe. There's a little Doppler
shift in the lines after every collision. If the gamma-ray bursts do
represent collisions."
"Let's assume they do, until we have some better idea,"
Martinez said. "How else can it find its next iceteroid, unless
it changes velocity?"
"Quite true," Kingsley said in his pontifical drawl,
"but not yet cause for alarm."
"I agree, Dr. Dart, that it is hard to accept some of the
ideas I've heard bandied about the room this last hour. But we have
nothing more in the pot, and it's time to cook."
This metaphor went past Benjamin. " 'Cook'?"
"I have to get back to a lot of people about this. Word gets
around. The NSF and NASA both fund this Center, and they do like to
be kept in the loop. I've been shielding you folks while you worked,
but I have to start speaking for you now. Unless you'd rather do it
yourself?"
"Oh no," Benjamin said, knowing this was what she
wanted. "You do it."
"Good. Then I'll be answering a lot of phone calls I've been
stalling. And you four start writing up a statement."
"Statement?" Benjamin felt uncomfortably that he was
asking stupid questions whose answers were obvious to the others.
"For the media," Kingsley said offhandedly. "Quite
so."
Martinez said, "At its present speed, it could reach us
within a month."
"I suggest we not emphasize that aspect," Benjamin said,
choosing his diction so that it echoed Kingsley's precision.
"Especially since it is not headed for us at all."
"Oh?" Martinez looked surprised.
He realized he had not shown his trajectory plots around yet.
"It's curving in and downward, heading at an angle to the
ecliptic plane. I can't pick out any destination. It will pass
through the solar system and leave, as it is unbound. It is moving
very fast."
2
She could remember drinking coffee to stay awake and keep working;
now she needed it to wake up at all.
Running mostly on caffeine, Channing puttered around in her home
office, immersed in cyberspatial bliss: sleek modern desk the
size of a tennis court; ergonomic chair that was better than a
shiatsu massage—and cheaper; picture window on the Pacific
(today looking anything but); overstuffed leather chaise where she
spent far too much time recouping; big tunnel skylight leading up to
a turquoise tropical sky.
Self-respect demanded that she not work in pajamas. That left a
lot of room in a vast sartorial wasteland, from T-shirts and khaki to
turtlenecks down to jeans, running shorts, and tanks. All those were
off the menu if she was going to do a visual conference with anybody,
in which case she needed at least a decent frilly blouse, say, or
even a full dress suit—top only needed, of course, since her
camera had a carefully controlled field of view. She had heard of the
new image managers that touched up your face as you spoke, smoothing
out lines and wrinkles and even black eyes if you wanted. To order up
one on the Net would be quick, easy to install… and the vanity
of it would pester her inner schoolmarm for weeks. Nope, let 'em
see the truth. That's what science is about, right? Why not treat
scientists the same way?
Today something clingy, island-soft, and cool. In blue, it cheered
her.
She had liked working at home the first month, despised it
thereafter. After all, "I work at home" carried the
delicate hint that you were in fact just about unemployed, or
downsized out of the action, at the fringe of the Real World.
So she tried to be systematic. No distractions, that was the
trouble. After years working at the Center, it was hard to get by
with no coffee break, water cooler chat, endless meetings with
clandestine notes passed ridiculing the speaker, business
lunches, the sheer simple humanity of primates making a go of it
together.
Work at home and you could never quite leave it. Slump onto the
couch at nine at night when Benjamin was on a trip, all ready to kick
back and veg out like any deserving, stressed adult… and down
there at the end of the hall lurked the reproachful glimmer of the
desk lamp. It was hard to walk down there and turn it off and walk
back to a sitcom without checking the e-mail or looking at tomorrow's
calendar, especially since its first screen was the latest
selection from Studmuffins of Science.
She suspected her social skills, honed in the labyrinths of NASA
and the NSF, were atrophying. So she did the next best thing, first
off in the morning: answer vital e-mail, delete most without
answering, and look over her notes. This kept her in a sort of
abstract cyber-society.
The more traditional Net temptations no longer carried their zest.
No point in doing an Ego Surf on her name; it showed up only on
historical mesh sites now. Her Elvis Year, the time of popularity,
was now long gone, back when shuttle missions made you a
pseudo-celeb among some of the Internet tribes.
Since then she had been happier, more satisfied, steadily getting
more obscure. Funny thing about contentment, some years just got
lost. Seen it, done it, can't recall most of it.
Through those dimly recalled years, she had been happier with
Benjamin than she probably had any right to be, and now that it was
nearly over, to review it all seemed pointless. There were parts of
the play she would have rewritten, especially the dialogue.
Somehow, despite all her theories and ambitions, she still regretted
not having children. The career had seemed more important, and maybe
it still was to her, but regrets don't listen to theories. There were
plenty of roads not taken and no maps.
She finished her e-mail and looked over the work she was doing on
spectral analysis. The data pouring into the Center needed careful
attention and she had been pitching in, giving the multitude of
optical line profiles a thorough scrutiny. She popped the most
puzzling ones up on her big screen and ran a whole suite of numerical
codes, sniffing around. This took two hours and much intricate
tedium. Still, the repetition was soothing, somehow: Zen
Astrophysics. She was feeling the slow ebbing fatigue she knew so
well when a clear result finally surfaced.
Three optical lines emitted from the intruder came out looking
decidedly odd: each was split into two equal peaks. These were not
the Doppler shifts they had spotted earlier. They were much smaller,
imposed on the Doppler peaks themselves.
There are very few ways an atom can emit radiation at two very
closely spaced intervals. The most common occurs if the atom is
immersed in a magnetic field. Then its energy would depend upon
whether its electrons aligned with the field or against it.
These three splittings she had pulled out of the noise, imposing
several different observations from several different 'scopes. And
they led to a surprising result: the magnetic field values needed to
explain these up-and-down shifts were huge, several thousand times
the Earth's field.
"Good grief," she muttered to herself, instantly
suspicious.
Most amazing results were mistakes. She burned another hour making
sure this one was not.
Then she sat and looked at the tiny twin peaks and liked knowing
that Benjamin would be thrilled by it. The give-and-take with the
others at the Center, especially the Gang of Four, was great fun, but
his reaction was still the crucial pleasure for her.
Abruptly she remembered her first experience of astronomy, as
a little girl. Camping out, she had awakened after midnight, faceup.
There they were. Even above the summer's heat, the
stars were immensely cold. They glittered in the wheeling crystal
dark, at the end of a span she could not imagine without dread. High,
hard, hanging above her in a tunnel longer than humans could
comprehend.
When she had first felt them that way, she had dug her fingers
into the soft warm grass and held on—above a yawning
abyss she felt in her body as both wonderful and terrible. Impossible
to ignore.
She had not realized until years later how that moment had shaped
her.
She took a break, stretched, felt the tiredness fall away a
little, and glanced out a window. From the abstract astrophysical to
the humid neighborhood, all in one lungful of moist air.
It was so easy to forget that she dwelled in what most people
regarded as the nearest Earthly parallel to heaven. The volcanic soil
was rich, lying beneath ample rains and sun. Irrigated paddies
gave taro's starchy roots, which made poi when mashed. There
were ginger and berries, mango, guava, Java plum, and of course
bananas. The candlenut tree gave oily brown nuts, which, strung
together, burned to give hours of flickering light. The sheer
usefulness of candlenuts to humans seemed like an argument from
design for a God-made world, customized to smart primates. But it was
also a paradise with mosquitoes and lava flows—counterarguments.
Well, she could settle the argument about God and paradise within a
year. Probably less, the doctors said in their cagey way.
Her fatigue evaporated. The man she had been thinking of now for
days was coming up the path.
There were Englishmen and then there were quintessential
Englishmen, the types everyone expected to meet and never did. All
had their points, in her experience, except maybe the ones whose
accents were pasted on and covered over sentiments as soft as
sidewalk. There was the jolly fellow who had many friends who
would surely stand him a drink, all unfortunately out of the room
just now. There was the erudite type who knew more about Shakespeare
than anybody and so never went to see anything modern. He was better
than the lit'ry one who kept rubbing his foot against your calf under
the table while he wondered very earnestly what you did think of that
recent novel, really? She liked the slim, athletic engineery types
who were modest about their feats and never spoke of them but could
fix a balky engine or conjugate a French verb, often simultaneously.
They were even good in bed, though she got tired of the modesty
because in the end it was fake, a social mannerism, a class
signature.
The Englishman coming up the path from the driveway was none of
these, but he did have that Brit habit of knowing an awful lot
about the right subjects. He had known a lot about politics when
people thought it mattered, was by his own description "infrared"
until it became clear that the left was truly dead, and even recently
could tell you the names of which ministers voted for what measure.
He applied the same acuity to the currents of astronomy. Now he was
just as sure of himself as ever, his instincts having carried him
quite handily to the top. She felt that she should see him as
something more than a somewhat scrawny man in a green suit badly
wrinkled by the tropical damp.
She greeted him at the door with "Kingsley, what a
surprise," though she had been half-expecting him and they
both seemed to know that.
"Thought I'd drop by, was on my way to look at a flat."
They went into the spacious, sunlit living room and she sank a
little too quickly onto a rattan couch. The trades stirred the wind
chimes and she remembered to offer iced tea, which he gratefully
accepted, drinking half of the glass straight off. She was infinitely
glad that she had chosen the clingy blue dress, though did not let
herself dwell on why. Best to keep things on a conversational level,
certainly. He was being unusually quiet, getting by with a few
compliments about the house, so—
"You're planning on staying for a while, then?" she
prodded.
"I can put aside the Astronomer Royal business for a bit. If
I am to be something of a scientific shepherd, I should be where
things happen. I think it inevitable, given our experience of
the last few days."
"Ummm. Lately, experience is something I never seem to get
until just after I need it."
His face clouded and she could see he had been trying to keep this
a strictly professional discussion. Well, too bad; she was feeling
fragile and human now, and not very astro-physical after a morning of
it.
After a pause, he said, "I'm so sorry about your condition."
"Oh Lord, Kingsley, I wasn't fishing for sympathy. I just
meant that this intruder has taken me by surprise in a way I did not
think possible anymore. I like it. Keeps me guessing."
She half-opened her mouth to bring up the magnetic field
splittings, then decided to let Benjamin be the first. After all, she
thought with a sudden wry turn of mind, Kingsley had been the first
in an earlier, important way that Benjamin had probably always
suspected.
"Sorry, um, again," he said lamely.
She felt a burst of warmth at this chink in the Astronomer Royal's
armor. "You can just move here immediately?"
He smiled grimly. "My home situation is not the best.
Angelica and I are separated, so I might just as well be here."
"Now it's my turn to be sorry."
"It's been coming for some time, years really."
"She's a brilliant woman," Channing said guardedly.
Friends with marital strife were tricky; some wanted you to
slander their mates, like a weird sort of cheerleader.
A wobbly smile. "You've forgotten her mean side, I fear."
"Funny, I don't remember being absentminded," she said,
hoping the weak joke would get him off the subject. He plainly did
not want to go there, yet some portion of him did; a familiar pattern
with divorces, she had found.
He laughed dutifully. "Tell me about your condition. I truly
want to know."
"Bad, getting worse. A cancer they barely have the name for."
"I thought we had cracked the problem down at the cellular
level by using an entire array of treatments."
"Oh, drugs help. I do well with what they call 'selective
serotonin re-uptake inhibitors.' I take a whole alphabet's worth of
them. Endless chemical adjustments known only by their acronyms,
since no human could remember their true names—or want to."
He was regaining some of his composure, sitting on a stool and
sipping. His voice recovered some of the High Oxbridge tones as he
said, "Recalls, from my random reading, a line from
Chekhov. 'If many remedies are prescribed for an illness, you may be
certain that the illness has no cure.' As true in the twenty-first
century as the nineteenth."
She shrugged. "I muddle through, to use a Brit expression."
"What was that old saying of yours? 'Life is complex; it has
real and imaginary parts.' Quite so." He actually chuckled
at this obscure mathematical pun, or else was a far better actor
than he had been.
"Lately, the imaginary has been more fun."
"That reminds me of one of your sayings. 'I don't get even, I
get odder.' Quite Channing, I used to think. Good to know
you're still that way, that this damned thing hasn't…"
"Snuffed out one part of me at a time?" She might as
well be up front about it. "That is the way it feels sometimes."
A sudden stark expression came onto his face and he said nothing.
She said soothingly, "I plan on living forever, Kingsley. So
far, so good."
"I wish I had your, well, calm."
"It may be plain old exhaustion."
"No, you had it the other day, leading us all by our noses on
that deceleration calculation. Energetic calm."
She could see that he meant it and thanked him warmly. "You've
changed some, too."
He shrugged. "It is famously easier to get older than wiser."
"I have a lot of trust in your judgment."
He grinned. "You showed good judgment two decades ago,
dumping me for Benjamin."
"I did not 'dump' you. I got the distinct impression
that you were more interested in astronomy than in me.'
"Well, of course," he said quite innocently, then
laughed at the baldness of the truth. "That is, I was a
monomaniac then."
"Would Angelica say anything has changed?"
"Good point. Probably not."
"You weren't going to change, and Benjamin was what I wanted,
anyway. Not that it wasn't fun…" She put a lot into the
drawn-out last word.
He said seriously, "Yes, it certainly was."
They sat for a long, silent moment. The wind chimes sang merrily
and the soft air caressed them both, a tangy sea scent filling the
room as the trade winds built. She let the moment run, something she
would not have done until recently. She relaxed into the sweet odors
of plumeria and frangipani, both lush now in her garden. A few years
before, she had not even known their names. The garden itself was a
recent hobby, all due to the damned disease, which she fought by
concentrating upon the present. Zen Dying.
Then Kingsley began taking his tie off, fingers prying the tight
little knot loose. "I must remember where I am. Going to be here
awhile, perhaps should buy one of those loud flowery shirts."
"And shorts."
"The world is not ready for the sight of my knees."
"Or mine anymore."
"Not so, they were and remain one of your best features."
"Say things like that a dozen more times and I'll get bored."
"I'd love the opportunity," he said brightly and then
stopped, as if he saw which way this was headed. Visibly he sobered.
A pause. Then he spoke carefully, so that she could hear all the
commas in his sentences.
"I wanted to come here, in part, because I don't want to be
overheard."
"That I can guarantee." She wondered at his sudden mood
shift. "Prettier here than in that office the Center gave you,
even if it is nice and big."
"I fear that the Center is not secure. Or at least, as I
understand people like Victoria Martinez, I cannot be
absolutely sure that my office is not eavesdropped upon."
He looked at her edgily, as if this were being impolite. She liked
his English delicate hesitation. "Already. But within a few
days, almost certainly."
"That's also why you're looking for an apartment."
"Precisely. This is going to be ever so much larger and it is
going to last quite a while."
"Once we've identified this new object—oh, I see."
He made a tent of his hands and peered through them at the languid
paradise out the window, like a prisoner contemplating an impossible
escape. "I was shaken by Benjamin's calculation. His
implication was clear."
"Martinez spoke of danger—"
"Only the obvious deduction."
Channing realized she had nowhere to go in this conversation
without betraying Benjamin's own ideas. She stalled with "But no
one in the room mentioned…"
"That obviously there are only two ways to reconcile his
numbers."
He looked at her searchingly and she had to suppress a smile at
this coy game. Might as well play, though; he still had the old sly
charm, damn him. "Either the thing's passing through a region of
the outer solar system where the number of iceteroids is very high
for some reason, or…" He let it hang there for a long
moment and then gave up. "Or the thing is somehow seeking out
lumps of ice and rock and processing them."
"Like a starship decelerating."
He slapped his knees, the sound scaring off a mynah bird from the
windowsill, its quick white flash of wings a blur. "But my own
point, that the gamma rays would kill anything—"
"A solid argument. So there's that pesky third choice."
"Third?"
She had to admit, he looked genuinely puzzled. "None of the
above."
"But when you say 'starship,' you mean—"
"Something that flies between stars, period."
"Something crewed, even by silicon chip minds, would quite
clearly still be vulnerable to—"
"Give it up, Kingsley. It's in a category we haven't thought
of yet."
He fretted for a moment, his hatchet face with its large eyes
drawing her gaze downward to a mouth that stirred restlessly, yet
would not shape words. The default style in astronomy was to explain
a new observation by assembling a brew of known ingredients—types
of stars, orbiting or colliding in various ways, and emitting
radiation in known channels, using familiar mechanisms. This worked
nearly all the time. Kingsley had used it with speed and ingenuity
decades before, explaining gamma-ray bursters quite handily with
a little imagination and detailed calculations. Kingsley habitually
worked in this mode, his papers couched in a style whose unstated
message was to show, not just an interesting application of
impressive techniques to a known problem, but also that he was a good
deal better at doing this than his readers. Now his mouth worked and
twisted with his dislike of working outside this lifelong mode.
"Then you two are thinking along the same lines as I."
"Sure—first, that this thing has to be enormously
compressed, and the only object we know in its class of energy
and power is… a black hole." She sipped her iced tea and
watched his veiled surprise.
"One of…"
He was pulling it out of her, all right, but it was an amusing
game. "About three times the mass of our moon."
"You derived that from the Doppler shifts from very close in
to the core, I suppose?"
"Exactly. Didn't want to say so until I had more data."
"A black hole of that size is quite small, a meter or two
across." He looked at her askance, skeptical.
She had looked up the theory. Primordial black holes could have
been left over from the Big Bang, but there was no evidence for them.
After birth, these tiny singularities in space-time could have
survived their habit of radiating away sprays of particles—that
is, black holes were not exactly black. This radiation had been
worked out by Stephen Hawking, who showed that a small hole would
have survived this evaporation, from the beginning of the universe
until the present, if it had at least 10'5 grams of mass.
This was equivalent to an asteroid a hundred meters in radius.
The intruder, though, had a mass ten billion times greater. It had
swallowed a lot, perhaps, in the last fifteen billion years as the
universe ripened.
Where it came from was completely open. It could not have been
born in a supernova collapse, which was the theorists' favorite
recipe for making holes. Such a cataclysm would have produced a black
hole of mass comparable to the sun. This intruder might have been
built up by sucking in mass, all the way back to the Big Bang. Might.
Maybe. Perhaps … the familiar wiggle room terms that
accompanied most advanced astrophysical theory, which was
starved for hard data. Until now.
Kingsley was enjoying this a bit too much, so she cut to the
chase. "So how's it guide itself, right? Like a fat man on
skates, it should just shoot through in a straight line."
Kingsley allowed himself a smile. "I apologize for seeming
to lead the conversation, but I have had the impression for several
days that you know a great deal more than you are admitting."
"Being away from the scramble at the Center helps. The quiet
gives me time to think."
"Particularly, to think of how this impossibility can exist."
"It's a black hole, almost certainly guiding itself with its
magnetic fields. I've proved they're there, thousands of Gauss in
strength, by looking in a small bit of the optical line data."
There, the whole truth and nothing but. She was tired of all this
precious waltzing around, as though they were all trying to get an
ace journal paper out of this, or competing for a prize. She had
operated under the assumption that Kingsley was, since he had
quite a few prizes on his mantel already. But she now saw that he was
beyond that, engaged at some different level.
"I see."
He had something to say now, she could tell, but wanted to be
coaxed. "This object is not the only problem?"
"Sure, it's damned strange and people higher up—a hell
of a lot higher up—are going to want to control the situation.
But our position is equally odd."
"I try not to think beyond the astronomy."
"Alas, I must." He got up and paced, hesitating at the
vision of leafy paradise beyond the window. "Quite
predictably, we will be… enlisted."
"Benjamin feels the same way, but he didn't want to say it."
"Why didn't he mention it to me today at the Center?"
"You two have your own, uh, styles. They don't match up too
well."
"A very polite way to say it. Bad blood between us, going
back to…"
"Yes, you and me. He suspects, but I've never told him."
"Good." Quick nods of the head, a brisk manner. "No
point."
"He got some hints from 'friends' around the time of our
marriage. I could tell, from the way he edged around the subject,
bringing you up at odd times. Then, years later, noticing very
obviously your steady rise up the ladder. A professorship at
Manchester—'Not bad for his age,' he said. Then a chair at
Cambridge, how he envied that! Always in the back of his mind I could
feel the question… but he never asked."
"It was over, done."
"Between men like you nothing is ever really over."
"Well, it is to me." He smiled very slightly. "With
you, I mean."
"I know. Me, too. But you two are always going to be
competitors."
"Inevitably." She could see him draw himself up, taking
a cleansing breath, shoving the personal into a pocket of his mind.
"And I fear my understanding of how power works in our tiny
world implies that matters shall soon change radically."
"For the worse."
He looked soberly at her and she saw that he had enjoyed this bit
of verbal jousting as much as she. But not as flirting, no—as
nostalgia. He was shoring up memories of better times, against a grim
future.
Not that she did not do the same, she reminded herself.
Kingsley gazed at the tropical wealth and sighed. "We're all
going to be kept here, close to the incoming data, and 'encouraged'
to work together. Of that I am sure. It's what you expect, isn't it?"
"I hadn't given it a thought."
He smiled. "Of course. You have far more important matters
to attend. Quite right. I do hope I am wrong."
"Me, too…" She let the sentence trail off. His
transition from the Kingsley of old to this astute observer of the
corridors of power was unsettling.
"I can think of no better place to be incarcerated. Compared
with my situation in Oxford, especially with the chilly winds blowing
from Angelica, it is—"
"It's like paradise," she finished for him.
3
For centuries, physics and astronomy sought the big, glamorous
governing equations for phenomena that were themselves ever-more
grand: larger or smaller, hotter or colder, faster or slower than the
narrow, comfortable human world. But shortly after the end of the
TwenCen, science—particularly astronomy, with its pricey
telescopes—approached the financial turnover, where ever-larger
infusions of money yielded only incrementally more insight.
The universe kept upping the fare for further erudition. The
particle physicists had hit that marginal realm with their massive
accelerators. Now science increasingly shifted from the fundamental
equations to discovering what emerged from those equations in the
real, complex world.
One faction among scientists decried this turning to more applied
problems. In their vision, physics resembled Latin— an
important canon, essential for advanced work and kept alive by small
bands of devoted advocates. This view failed to carry the day among
those who gave funding. Applied problems had become the mainstream of
physics and even astronomy, making the twenty-first century a more
practical place, especially when compared with the great cathedrals
of knowledge erected in the TwenCen, soaring to grand heights from
the base of great theories.
Astronomers, with so many new observing windows thrown open upon
the universe, kept busy scrutinizing the zoo of objects available at
ever-finer resolutions. Those who interpreted the observations
evolved new approaches. Theorists now used pencil and paper in a
blend with vast computer programs, asking questions with
whatever tool seemed best.
Luckily, such intellectual armament proved to be the best for use
against the problem of the intruder. Channing's discovery of
high magnetic fields in the hottest, most luminous region of the
object was the crucial fact that opened a rich realm of informed
speculation.
Benjamin was particularly happy with the importance of magnetic
fields. His doctoral thesis had focused on magnetic forces in
galactic jets, and this thing definitely had a jet whose twists and
filigrees the radio astronomers were enthusiastically mapping.
They sent new charts daily.
Benjamin threw himself into the work, using a combination of
imagination and rigorous computer programs. He was pleased to find
that some of his hoary old methods were quite germane to this
problem. It helped him keep up with Kingsley's darting skills at
analysis. They had offices near each other and their meetings were
contests between the speed of Kingsley's elegant fountain pen and
Benjamin's custom keyboard.
Benjamin felt himself renewed. Like many scientists, he could
trace his lifelong fascination with the natural world to a key,
trigger moment. His father had showed him how a magnet always knew
which way was north and explained it by saying the needle was forced
to line up with the magnetic field. But he could not see or feel this
field, so that meant there were invisible real things in the world,
less substantial than air but able to act on iron across many miles.
This clue that something deeply mysterious lay behind the everyday
world was a revelation and a source of quiet, persistent excitement,
a note that had sounded happily throughout his life. Such excitements
of the mind had come less often in the last decade as he felt his
powers ebbing. In comparison with the bright postdocs who passed
through the Center, he had felt slow to catch on to the latest
currents. Now fashion, thanks to the intruder, had returned to his
home turf.
"Magnetic fields act like rubber bands; it takes work to
stretch or bend them," he said to several staff members who were
assembled to talk, the usual crowd plus Kingsley and a few new ones.
Even for informal talks, the crowd kept growing as data came in.
A newer staff woman who worked in another area was visibly
struggling to keep up with the flood of ideas. "Those are the
lines of force?" she asked, and he refrained from correcting.
In his astrophysics textbook, he had once deliberately used that
misleading phrase, then added a footnote that said: The magnetic
field lines are often called "lines of force." They are
not. In fact, any forces exerted by the field are perpendicular to
the fields themselves. The misnomer is perpetuated here to prepare
the student for the treacheries of his profession. A little
prissy, maybe, and he could see this was not the time for such
academic hair-splitting.
"That's exactly the point," Kingsley said. He had been
sitting at the back of the seminar room, brooding, but now his
voice was filled with vigor. "The intruder is exerting forces on
itself by ejecting matter through its jet. Changing velocity, in
a systematic way."
"How can you tell?" the woman asked. Benjamin smiled.
She was unused to Kingsley's style of drawing the right questions
from his audience, so that instead of lecturing people, he seemed to
be merely answering them as they peppered him with their doubts.
And doing it a bit serenely, too. The Cambridge touch.
Kingsley came forward and put a plastic sheet on the overhead
projector. "I used these radio observations. By calculating
the momentum delivered in each jet plume, I could find where the
intruder was headed next, as a reaction to the matter it ejected.
Here—"
The sly bastard's even got view graphs all ready,
Benjamin thought admiringly, despite himself. Playing us like a
goddamn violin.
The trajectory displayed was a jagged series of straight lines
that nonetheless swooped inward along a persistent curve. No one had
plotted these data in three dimensions yet and Benjamin saw that they
had all been guilty of staying too close to the data. Kingsley stood
silently, letting them digest the implication.
Benjamin jumped in. "The intruder is following a curve into
the solar system. And it's finding iceteroids still, even though it's
closer in than Pluto now."
"My esteemed colleague has stolen my points," Kingsley
said with a stagy smile, though Benjamin knew this was exactly
what he had wanted.
"It's guided," a postdoc said.
"It's guiding, I think, is the point," Kingsley
said.
This provoked a rustle. If Dart had gone over to the "starship
hypothesis," there were huge implications.
"Targets of opportunity," Benjamin said, not wanting to
get into a broader discussion. "Every time it makes a course
correction, it's headed for the nearest iceteroid that will help it
follow this smooth path."
"But, my God," one of the staff said, "that would
mean it can find chunks of ice and rock just a few hours' flying time
away—"
"Some of them only a few tens of meters across, to judge by
the variations in jet luminosity we detect—" another voice
called out.
"And it can then fly unerringly to its next"—Kingsley
paused just enough—"prey."
A long silence. "Where's that curve go?' a staffer whispered.
"Jupiter," Kingsley said simply.
Gasps.
"And quite quickly."
"That was an admirable result," Benjamin had to say to
Kingsley. They were on their way a short while later, called to
Victoria Martinez's office. "You must've spent a lot of time on
it."
"I had help. Called in various orbital specialists, got some
computer help—"
Victoria Martinez came into her office with a tall well-dressed
man. "Sorry I was late, gentlemen. Mr. Arno has just arrived."
Handshakes all round, Benjamin wondering who this was. Not an
astronomer, he was fairly sure; something about the eyes. He had
little time to wonder. Arno sat on the edge of Martinez's desk, as if
he owned the room. Martinez did not seem to mind, and instead settled
into her own high-backed chair with an expression of hovering
interest, an air of deference. Arno took the time to adjust the seams
in his pressed light gray Mancetti suit, which went well with his
blue and red tie based on a Japanese woodprint. An unde-frnable air
of presence and power came across in the way he looked directly at
Benjamin.
"I'm from the U Agency," he said, as if this banished
all doubt. "We've been tracking your results here and think it's
time to move."
"U Agency? Ubiquitous?"
Arno frowned at this joke, but then he managed a mirthless
smile and said, "I'll have to remember that one."
Martinez's eyes widened slightly in alarm. This was a manager from
the big time, her expression conveyed, not the sort given to minor
banter. Arno waited just one beat for this to sink in and said, "No,
we are an emergency arm of your government. I've been in touch with
Dr. Dart here, and others, and we felt it was time to get some
control of the situation. That means bringing you into the
loop—in fact, everybody working here."
Benjamin had heard vague talk of a consolidated arm, usually
called in to apply leverage in international crises. Arno must
represent such shadowy forces. Benjamin paid little attention to the
always-precarious balance of forces in the big power arena. The
United States was wearying of being the perpetual fallback
stabilizer, especially since the Mideast equilibrium had dissolved
into ultranationalist and water rights issues. He knew the country
was assuming more imperial modes, but cared little for the details.
"What 'loop'—"
"Perhaps I can make this easier," Kingsley said
smoothly. "I've been worried that this is moving too fast for
us, and media attention is about to descend. Better to have it
handled by people who can impose controls when needed."
Benjamin turned from Arno and shot back at Kingsley, "And
what's that mean?"
"You see the implications of my trajectory analysis. It's
intelligent—and hugely powerful. At the moment, it's
headed toward Jupiter, but that, too, could change."
"Anything commanding those power levels is almost
inconceivably dangerous," Martinez put in.
"Your authority to do this?" Benjamin asked.
"Direct from the White House," Arno said with casual
assurance. He straightened the cuff on his long-sleeved shirt.
"The Science Adviser has been informed?" Benjamin
persisted.
"Of course. Kingsley's reports came up through her."
Benjamin glanced at Kingsley and realized he had been played for a
fool for the last few weeks. "I don't think I follow—"
"Look, this is presidential," Arno said, as if
explaining to a child. "The U Agency has to run the show here.
It's in your own interests. We'll handle the connections to the top
and to outside—the media. You guys will be free to do your
research. This Center will, from now on, be devoted entirely to
coordinating international intelligence."
Benjamin tried not to let himself be put off by Arno's curt,
aggressive style, which he recognized from his occasional dealings
with other wings of government. Still, this guy was over the top. "U
Agency people, then—"
"Will work closely with yours. We'll filter everything that
goes in or out."
"How do you expect us to do research with you peering over
our shoulders?"
"Just bring me the results. I'm a conduit, that's all.
Believe me, we've got some able minds working for us. Our people
will be, well, colleagues."
Benjamin was still trying to comprehend this sudden swerve. He had
come into Martinez's office expecting a friendly discussion of how to
deal with the growing circle of those who knew of the intruder. He
should have realized that Kingsley was at his charismatic best when
he sailed before prevailing political winds, well before others
sensed them. Why hadn't he seen that Kingsley fit in with the U
Agency style—and that something like this was inevitable? The
astronomy of it had captivated him, blinded him.
Or so went his rationale later. Arno had ended with a warm
handshake and an ingratiating, obviously phony smile, the sort of
expression Benjamin always suspected people of rehearsing in front of
mirrors at home. But that was merely cosmetic. Arno's staff began
arriving within minutes, and he knew at a glance what was in store.
The U personnel dressed alike, severe and stark in their dark slacks,
jackets, and off-white shirts. At least they did not wear ties. The
Center staff astronomers were Hawaiian hip, in shorts and gaudy
flowered shirts and thongs.
Benjamin had to settle several immediate personnel problems,
holding a quick general meeting to announce the "structural
change," which included a layering of Deputy Administrators,
Action Team Leaders, and Section Heads in a chart neatly printed for
prominent display. With Kingsley and Arno beside him he answered a
few questions, but thankfully most fell to Martinez.
Then he had to patrol the Center corridors as the U Agency types
moved in, finding office space and mediating. It was like two
different species having to suddenly share the same territory.
"Colleagues," Arno had said, and this proved to mean that
some of the U Agency people were faces he recognized. Apparently they
had been hired as consultants, perhaps quite recently. Some of them
seemed faintly embarrassed, but they moved with the same crisp
efficiency as the others. Was there prior training to do this sort of
thing?
It would have been easy to blame Kingsley for this, to see him as
Benjamin's primary antagonist. But within three hours of this shock,
the two men were bound down the mountain in Benjamin's car, headed
for a dinner they had planned days before. They drove in silence, the
aroma of burning sugarcane drifting up from the fields toward Hilo.
They quite deliberately spoke only of Hawaii itself as Benjamin
took the slope at high speed, tires howling on the curves, bamboo
forests flickering past with their dry smells.
Kingsley seemed able to relax and truly enjoy the ride down to
their beachfront home. After taking off their shoes in standard
island good manners, Kingsley stopped to admire the photos in
the entrance hall of Channing's career: aboard the space station, on
an EVA, taking data in blazing sunlight. As he did, Benjamin sought
out Channing and embraced her with a fervor that surprised him.
Channing sensed the soured mood of the men and quickly deflected
it with drinks of mango and papaya and rum, amid soft Japanese music,
all counterpointed by the wind chimes in their back garden. The air
seemed layered with fragrances and talk ran to island gossip. But
then she wanted to be kept up on the gossip and it all came out.
"I don't think you fully appreciate why I acted,"
Kingsley said at last, once the describing was done.
"You bet I don't," Benjamin shot back. He had
been holding his tongue because the last few hours had
drastically shifted the power balance between the two men, and he was
unsure how to deal with it. "Neither does Martinez."
"She does not know my methods, but you, with our ancient
association, might have guessed my intention well before I was
ready to reveal it."
"I'm afraid I'm being sidelined after the first few plays."
"That will not happen, I assure you." Kingsley sat back
and wrapped both hands around one knee, leaning back as though to
relieve knotted muscles. He carries tension that way, same as me,
Benjamin thought. But doesn't show it in the face or voice.
"I'm pretty damned mad."
"With good reason, given what you know. Let me say I
appreciated your not giving voice to that at the Center. It would
have done no good."
Channing had let them go through the first quick rush of it, their
words coming out in machine-gun volleys. Now she made a show of
fetching some nibble food, leaving them with a lingering observation:
"I'm impressed that a U.S. agency will spring so quickly on the
advice of a Brit astronomer."
"I've been functioning as a sort of scientist-diplomat since
well before the Astronomer Royal appointment," Kingsley called
after her. "My good fortune that I've made the right contacts."
"I admire your understatement," she called from the
kitchen.
"Why not tell me?" Benjamin demanded, irked at her
cavalier nonchalance at this whole abrupt maneuver.
"Because it would have compromised a delicate transition."
Benjamin sat back and crossed his arms, demanding, "Explain.
Better be good, too."
"I've been asking people around the world to work on this
intruder problem, sending e-mails and calling—any idea
why?"
"To get them involved?" Channing ventured when Benjamin
just shook his head. "So these U Agency types would have
to come in?"
"Dead right. I want this controlled by the United States, not
by some United Nations committee."
Benjamin nodded. "A nation can act quickly, a committee,
never."
"And there's more, isn't there?" Channing bore in on
Kingsley, leaning forward, her hostess skills giving way to her
professional ones.
"You could always spot my motives," Kingsley laughed.
"The U Agency fellows will pull in some 'foreign advisers' right
away."
Benjamin saw it. "And the people you e-mailed the most,
brought into the discussion earliest—"
"They'll be the ones recruited." Kingsley smiled.
"And the astronomers I saw today working for the Agency—"
"Exactly. They were brought in the traditional way, a
consultancy for a sum they could scarcely decline."
"They know what we're doing?"
"Of course. Some have been monitoring our work— which
impresses them, I'm happy to say—since the first week."
Channing said, "You make it sound like moving chess pieces."
Kingsley looked reflective. "I suppose it is. All done very
diplomatically, of course, through all the proper channels. I was
afraid I was being a bit obvious, but so far Arno has not caught on."
"You believe," Benjamin said, sitting back and gazing up
at the hard, bright stars visible through the softly rattling fronds
of palm trees.
"I wanted bright people here, people I knew from my work.
Screens are going to start coming down soon, I'll wager."
"Really?" Channing chewed her lip, her face pale in the
gloom.
"This is the calm before the storm—a very long storm,
quite probably," Kingsley finished morosely, taking a long pull
at his drink.
Benjamin told her about the trajectory Kingsley had displayed.
"It's moving faster, cutting the time to reach Jupiter."
"And that provokes the U Agency?" she asked wonderingly.
Kingsley studied the leafy garden with a skewed slant to his
mouth. "I felt bound to let those above know, as did Victoria.
We spoke of it the second day I was here. I did not include you
two in my thoughts because, frankly, I felt it was a side issue, just
a reporting up the chain of command sort of thing. But quite quickly
it caught the attention of certain people at the NSF, then DARPA—my
sources tell me."
Benjamin disliked both what he was learning and getting it from
Kingsley. The man had mastered astronomy, international
diplomacy, and—no doubt, they would soon learn— figure
skating. Now he knew how laymen felt when confronting the complex
weave of astronomy with only newspaper-level knowledge. He hated
playing straight man here, but stifled that and asked, "Why in
the world would the Defense Advanced Research Project Agency have
connections to NSF's astronomy office?"
"There is a standing procedure, ever since the Air Force
began detecting what turned out to be gamma-ray bursters, remember?"
Kingsley smiled. "Their satellites designed to detect nuclear
explosions found signals coming from the sky. Bursters bequeathed us
this alliance of interests."
"And from there on, let me guess," Benjamin said, "it
went to the National Security Council, then the President's Science
Adviser."
Kingsley raised an eyebrow in appreciation. "You know more of
this labyrinth than I expected. Pretty nearly so, yes."
"So we're stuck having to work with those Chicken Littles,
huh?" Channing said.
Kingsley gave her a puzzled glance. "Uh, Chicken…"
"The U Agency's purpose is to stop disasters before they
grow, mostly by taking action across national and even continental
boundaries. They're a quietly accepted part of global integration,"
she rattled off knowledgeably.
Benjamin was surprised at how much she knew. When she had a mind
to, she showed as much acuity as Kingsley. And he, in turn, had small
blind spots, like not remembering who Chicken Little was. The man's
concentration upon his career had swept all else from his mind. Most
astronomers were distracted sorts, unable to recognize many of the
faces on the magazines next to the checkout line in markets. Kingsley
took this to an extreme, but his footing among the corridors of power
was deft and firm.
With lacerating sarcasm, Channing made fun of the U types,
reminding them that she had some dealings with the Agency in her
"spacesuit days." Her eyes danced with memories. "The
two most common elements in the universe are hydrogen and stupidity,
and. they've got plenty of both."
Benjamin felt their home around them like a warm cocoon and
hoped that it could be a quiet refuge from the growing tumult outside
as word inevitably spread. Something big was coming, and he was
not ready. Above he saw the spray of glimmering that was the plane of
the galaxy, the Milky Way, and wondered from which, of all those
stars, this thing had come. It had been gobbling up iceteroids for
some time, no doubt, so its initial incoming direction was no clue.
It could be from anywhere. Given the vast spaces between the
suns, it could have been traveling for centuries, millennia. And what
unimaginable technology lay behind the downright weird signatures of
the intruder?
Starship? The word seemed inadequate for the energies the thing
poured forth. They needed a better term, a name that carried the
mystery of it.
4
Channing gave it a name that stuck, within a week. One much better
than "X-l" or "intruder."
To concentrate and save her energy, she worked in the quiet of her
home study. A doctor had told her that fighting this disease would be
like the late career of a fading boxer: pacing yourself, resting when
you could, so you could go a few hard rounds when you had to. She had
a countdown to heed, and now the Center had one, too, with the
intruder.
A few days after the entrance of the U Agency, she noticed a
small detail in the high-resolution pictures of the intruder's
spectacular collisions.
The hottest region had an extended magnetosphere, a glowing dot
that kept expanding with each collision. She compared images from all
available kinds of telescopes— starting with the radio's
spindly jet, up through an infrared blur of hot gas, on into the
visible spectra that revealed sharp streamers of agitated atoms
arcing like geysers from the core, and finally on into the X rays
that showed a white-hot center of intense heat, a seething central
furnace that grew larger with every collision.
The entire range of deep space telescopes now sent images to
the Center, a gusher of data each time the intruder devoured another
hapless chunk of matter in its path. One collision had decidedly
different spectral signatures. Careful analysis showed emission lines
from silicon, carbon, iron. It had struck an asteroid. With the same
outcome—a jet of microwave-emitting electrons, hot gas,
and plasma, trailing the intruder, a neon sign seen all the way
across the solar system.
Overlaying all these results with some sophisticated graphics, she
got a consistent picture.
The strong magnetic field was building in a huge active region,
lighting up brilliantly, growing. She suggested some adroit
observations, brought them to Kingsley's attention, and soon enough
the big-dish "ears" of Earth's radio telescope net were
mapping the moving magnetic region in intricate detail. They were the
first to see a bull's-eye disk, with circular lanes of varying
luminosity centered on an unresolved blur.
So she took it into the Center and the Gang of Four. "Looks
like a target," Benjamin said. "A bull's-eye."
"An accretion disk," Kingsley observed dryly, his
expression showing his lifelong dislike of homey analogies for
astrophysical objects. "The mass it has acquired is spiraling
in. It collides, rubs, and gets warm. Hot enough and the matter emits
radiation." He nodded to Channing, who sat at the controls of
one of their big-screen displays—a fresh compensation for
their enforced collaboration with the U Agency, who had just
installed higher-power computers and flat-screen displays of
eye-opening quality. "Your working hypothesis is proved."
"I'm that obvious?" Channing was slightly miffed at
having her thunder stolen.
Benjamin called up from the massive Center computers his
compilation of the radio telescope data. Using Channing's discovery
of the high magnetic fields, they had been able to take quick
snapshot-like radio maps of the inner region.
"Here, I've made it into a film," Benjamin said. "It
even has a plot, sort of."
The view opened far out in deep space, our sun a mere glimmering
spark. In an overlay, Channing saw vast swarms of rock and iceteroids
orbiting. Suddenly a strange glowing disk like an uncoiling silvery
snake plunged across the field of view. It struck an iceteroid with a
brilliant flash. Gaudy luminous streamers clasped the doomed
mile-wide chunk of ice.
"They were lucky enough to get a series of maps and optical
images when it hit its latest victim," Benjamin said to the
darkened room. "I've blended them here."
The snake coiled up and deformed, becoming all mouth. Blue-hot, it
gnawed its way through the ice. Channing knew that at its speeds,
these had to be images made in slices finer than a millisecond. The
eerie beauty of it was captivating, the lapping strands of magnetic
fields flickering among the flying fragments.
Then something luminous emerged like a wasp from a cocoon at
the other side of an expanding ball of hot gas. The intruder moved
on, now bearing a halo like an immense multicolored rainbow around a
central bright hoop. But within the inner ring lay an utterly black
core. The rainbow was a momentarily expanded disk of matter, she
guessed, a hundred-kilometer-wide firework accelerating inward.
"So we have seen the beast at last," she murmured into
the shocked silence of the room as the images faded to black.
Benjamin stood next to the big screen, his suntan giving him an
odd bronzed look in the small lamp of the speaker's podium. A casual
audience of astronomers who had come in for the show peppered him
with questions and he fielded them well, the distances and times and
resolutions at his fingertips.
She let the moment wash over her. To her surprise, she had not
been surprised. It looked just the way she had seen it in her dreams.
Fevered, troubled dreams.
Finally Kingsley got her attention by addressing a public question
to her. "You hinted by e-mail that you had a name for the
object," Kingsley said with amusement.
"I suggest we call it the Eater of All Things."
"Because it is a black hole," Kingsley finished for her.
"Exactly," Benjamin put in. "I kept the secret
pretty well while she massaged her data, but I'll bet half the people
here have been thinking the same thing—without saying so."
This was the first truly public announcement. They looked at each
other silently, so it was left to Amy Major to say, "You don't
want to alarm the U people, correct?"
"Right," Benjamin said. "The spectral shifts—those
reds and blues we found early on, remember? They fit the black hole
idea. Now we can see it trapping mass. Case closed."
Channing leaned back and regarded their Gang of Four in the Big
Screen Room, as the U types had labeled it. They had slapped labels
on rooms all over the Center. "I hope we're under no illusions
that all this data isn't being copied by the U computers they just
installed. They'll have this processed shot of Benjamin's by now."
"And they are far from dumb," Kingsley agreed.
"Particularly the newest fellow, Randall. Knew him on a
visiting appointment at Harvard, before he went 'underground,' as the
U people say."
"Into classified work," Benjamin supplied for Amy.
"Oh." Amy seemed startled that an astronomer would go
into any other line. Her expression plainly said, Once you
understand how big and wonderful the universe is, how could you do
anything else?
Channing permitted herself a nostalgic smile, remembering
when she had worn just such an earnest expression—and had meant
it.
5
Benjamin had a pad mounted on a tree in the garden, ostensibly for
a dartboard. He and Kingsley had a game or two in the next few days,
Kingsley casually tossing with his unerring accuracy born of a
thousand pub crawls, winning easily. Afterward Benjamin took the
board back inside to keep it out of the dependable tropical rain
showers and then had considerable use for the cushion's other, secret
purpose. Often when he got home he would take a stroll in the garden
while Channing finished making dinner, her favorite daily task.
When he reached the portion out of view of the house, he would
approach the cushion and give it half a dozen good, solid punches. He
had discovered this outlet years before and realized quite well that
his need of it told him something about his feelings.
He made good use of the cushion every evening now. As the flood of
data deepened, he staked out a clear position that learning more is
the best short-term goal. In this the Center staff backed him
solidly.
"Ummm," Channing said over a dinner of baked ono in
papaya-ginger sauce, "and good ol' savvy Kingsley sees this as a
power clash from which he can profit."
"Uh, yes. I was going to put it a little more delicately—"
"To that Arno guy you can be diplomatic, but it's wasted on
me, dear. Kingsley is just staying in character. The U Agency isn't
using a hobnailed boots approach; they're smarter than that. It's
more what we used to call at NASA a 'soft presence' style—you
know they're there and can take over the operation in a millisecond,
and they convey that without saying anything."
Benjamin admired how she could sum up what had taken him days to
realize. "Yup, subtle they are."
"So far."
"Meaning?"
"They don't have to stay that way."
He was having trouble river-rafting in the fast administrative
U Agency waters. They operated as if they knew what mattered before
they asked questions, so the answers had better fit their
expectations. And pronto. He heard "cut to the chase"
several times a day. "I keep getting signals like that," he
admitted.
"I'm not there all the time, so maybe I can see it in a
clearer perspective. Everybody's getting more tense and the whole
thing is going to crack open pretty soon."
"I hope not."
"Kingsley handled the public announcement very well, but it's
a stopgap."
"He can keep on handling it, for all I care." Benjamin
had found the whole press conference an anxiety squeeze from start to
finish. He had not mastered the art of saying only enough to cover
the subject, avoiding any speculation even when badgered.
So it had been no surprise when Martinez gave Kingsley the
spokesman job. He had downplayed any danger, though of course the
mainstream reporters leaped on that immediately, implying with
sneers and eyebrows yet another "cover-up." Yet somehow,
with a few quiet prebriefings and some postbriefing hospitality to
various opinion-setters, Kingsley had managed to get just the right
media angle: huge global interest, but so far, just curiosity.
"It helps that there's this new water war between Turkey,
Syria, and Iraq. Plenty of juicy footage," Channing said.
"Oh, I hadn't noticed."
"That's why he's Astronomer Royal. He timed the press
conference in late afternoon, when the global news coverage was
already locked up, plenty of shooting scenes ready to go"
"I hope that explains why some of the U Agency's hired-gun
astronomers have been arranging to get their own private
channels of information."
"How?" She had been serenely distant so far, picking at
her fish, but now frowned.
"Getting their own simultaneous feeds on the Long Arm data,
among others."
"A precaution?"
"Against who? Me? I can't see them worried about that."
"How can we be sure the data stays in-house?"
"We can't, not now."
"They want to have somebody on the outside checking us?"
He felt pleased that she had arrived at his conclusion. Her
instincts were good for this kind of infighting, a legacy of her NASA
days, whereas his had been dulled by years of routine administration.
"So what can I do?"
"Nothing. It's probably a Kingsley maneuver we don't
understand yet."
"I hope so."
There had been several such. As Kingsley had warned, there were
"side effects" of working with the U Agency umbrella
over them. Their home and his apartment had been carefully invaded,
searched, analyzed—purely pro forma, of course—and then
just as carefully put back as they were. Their electronic records had
yielded e-mail addresses, and most valuably, the system still carried
the signatures of recent use. This gave the e-mail paths of
Kingsley's recent messages, though even to the best of agents the
system could not divulge their content; that was erased. The Agency
and those over it did not realize that his leaving the e-mail tags in
place was a neat way of ensuring that his correspondents would be
rounded up and brought to him, to keep the lid on word of the
intruder.
In this manner, he gained a few people he had not asked for,
explaining that some nuance was a good idea in these matters.
Kingsley also hoped that they did not catch on when, earlier, he had
deliberately been rude to several bureaucratic figures,
precisely to provoke this measure. Of this last touch he was openly
proud; "actually Machiavellian," he termed it.
But the next day, when the two of them caught Kingsley alone for a
moment and pressed him on the issue of the U Agency having separate
access to incoming data, he denied any involvement. "Arno is the
best of that lot, believe me," Kingsley explained, spreading his
palms, face up in a gesture of openness—a little
defensively, Benjamin thought.
Channing looked worried. "Then we go to Theory B."
"Which is?" Kingsley asked, sitting on the edge of his
new polished teak desk. The U Agency had offered it when he decided
to stay indefinitely. Not that he had any real choice, he had noted
to Benjamin, and one might as well take the good with the bad in such
matters.
"That they want a backup team to check us."
Kingsley nodded and Benjamin felt compelled to say, "And in
case we can't do the job anymore."
Both Channing and Kingsley shot questioning looks at him. "In
case we're put out of action."
"How?" Kingsley asked.
"Politically, suppose the United Nations decides to make this
their party?"
"We're on American soil."
"But the United States is pretty unpopular in the Security
Council over this war business," Benjamin said.
"It couldn't go that far," Channing said.
"Just a thought," Benjamin said lightly. Then, jibing,
"I'm sure Kingsley has a better Theory B."
But he did not, and their conversation broke off. There were more
concrete issues to think about. It was by now clear that magnetic
nozzles, like those of rockets but immensely larger, had begun
to flare behind the intruder. A plume jet many thousands of
kilometers long now twisted and flared. Each step of their
understanding was being revealed by incremental observations,
science as detective work, and the entire Center staff was fitting
together more parts to the puzzle daily. The Long Arm got better
close-ups of the Eater as it sped inward, still slamming into more
iceteroids daily. It had been barely six weeks since the first
detection.
They met with Martinez and Arno later that same day to discuss
moving several existing deep space probes to rendezvous with the
Eater for close-up study. They had at their command advanced light,
unmanned spacecraft—descendants of NASA's
faster-cheaper-smaller doctrine of the 1990s, developed for
computer-enhanced exploration of the solar system. Assisted by ion
rockets, these were the Searcher Class spacecraft, and to Benjamin's
astonishment, Kingsley casually called up the right people at NASA
and began moving them into position to intercept and study the Eater.
The smell of unalloyed power was heavy in the room, though
unremarked.
The afternoon waxed on. Benjamin keenly sensed the rising
tension in the Center, a kind of electrical energy that he felt as he
walked the corridors, listening to detailed technical
conversations. A compressed tautness laced through the conversations
about Janskys of measurement and arc-seconds of resolution,
technical terms freighted with a gathering sense of storm.
Arno casually waved away worries that they could muster resources
quickly. Channing obliquely brought up the U.N. possibility and Arno
looked grim for only a fraction of a second before returning to
his patented ceramic smile. "No chance," he said. Benjamin
had noticed that at points of tension Arno seemed to revert to a
Clint Eastwood-Gary Cooper imitation.
Still, Arno's certainty was reassuring, for so little else was.
Within an hour they received a gusher of data from the Arecibo radio
dish, still the largest in the world. This huge array of metal held
its cupped ear to the cosmos in Puerto Rico, in a high mountain bowl
that swept across the sky, listening intently. Only at certain
hours did its sweep include the Eater's trajectory, and so far they
had heard little more than the electromagnetic hiss of the intruder's
flailing jet tail. Now, though, the radio telescope picked up an
intense, high-definition pulse of emission. An hour later the Eater
fell below Arecibo's horizon and the Very Large Array spread across
New Mexico's high plateau took up the task.
They had tracked the Eater now in great detail, adding images
to the Long Arm's pictures of the Eater's inner core. Now the point
was not mapping, but rather signal reception. Something highly
detailed was coming from the very core of the intruder, and it made
no sense.
Benjamin watched all this with a growing sense of urgency. He
could scarcely ignore the obvious fact that Channing was fading as
the afternoon waxed on, her eyes hollowing out and mouth seeming to
grow thinner, hands trembling under the strain of work. But she
refused to go home. Upon her sallow skin there came an expression of
adamant energy, and she said, "I'll stay. I'll stay."
This carried a hard existential weight and he was cowed by the
hard certainty in her voice. He loved this woman and sometimes he
understood her in a way he could not express—to her or to
himself—and he did as she wanted. He helped her settle into one
of the rather luxurious new leather form-fitting chairs before the
big-screen display and they watched the sliding columns of compressed
data. The entire processing capability of the Center bore down on
what Arecibo and the VLA had found.
"Unmistakably artificial," Kingsley was the first to
say.
"A message?" Channing said with her wan yet edgy
energy.
A staff specialist came in and displayed the enormous broadband
complexity of the transmission and the Gang of Four plus some U
Agency astrophysicists went through the data stream with him. "It's
digital, encoded in a fashion we haven't cracked yet," the
specialist said.
While they puzzled over what this might mean, Arno drew Benjamin
and Kingsley aside. "Thought you might use the services of a
bright cryptographer I had brought in."
"He's here?" Benjamin asked to cover his surprise.
"She, yes."
"That slim woman I asked about?" Kingsley pressed him.
"That's the one." Arno's smile had a touch of preening
in it.
"You suspected we would need one, from the very first."
Kingsley nodded his head ever so slightly in respect.
"Just covering all the bases."
Benjamin could see why the woman had caught Kingsley's interest,
for she was quite attractive. Conversely, he wondered why he had not
noticed her himself, even among the confusing crowd of new people in
the Center. When distracted, one did not notice being
distracted.
In short order, she broke the code; it proved to be deceptively
simple. "It's frame-compressed at high speed," she
announced to the jammed room. As word spread, people slipped in.
Arno and his aides were so drawn into the suspense that they
were not even policing the "information boundaries," as
they put it.
Benjamin asked, "How about slowing the signal?"
The cryptographer looked a little irked. "We are. Here, the
run is nearly finished—"
Onto the screen leaped a string of break-down interpretations.
Plainly the sender had meant this to be easily read. In short order,
everyone in the room saw that it was a very short message in over a
hundred languages. Each language carried the same terse message.
Chinese, Spanish, then third in the string was English:
I DESIRE CONVERSE.
PART THREE
A DERANGED GOD
APRIL
1
In the moments after the revelation, Benjamin noted that
scientists and U Agency types alike looked the same: jaws agape, eyes
blinking in wonder, disbelief wrenching mouths askew, nostrils
flared. And for once, nobody had anything coherent to say.
Consternation is a term far too abstract to describe the next
twenty-four hours at the High Energy Astrophysics Center. The simple
three words—though there were more in other languages, with
many different shadings of meaning— immediately split the staff
at the Center into factions.
For decades a small band of astronomers, principally at the Search
for Extraterrestrial Intelligence Institute, had listened in the
radio bands for signals from other civilizations. They and many
others had debated the abstract principles involved in answering a
message—should one be received. Most favored not answering
immediately. There seemed no rush to reply, considering the huge
travel times of light between stars. But with the Eater less than an
hour's time delay away, that argument slid into an ethical debate.
Who should speak for Earth?
Arno made no secret of his view. "We do. The whole world has
fed its astronomical data here, we have the best people in the field
right down the hall, and the White House has given us freedom of
movement—so we do it."
Most astronomers did not feel that way. Anxiety beset them, knots
meeting around the coffee urns in tight-lipped arguments. Channing
stayed away from these. "The U Agency will call the shots here,"
she said to Benjamin in his office. "Notice that they're all
behind Arno? No brooders there."
"They're hired guns," Benjamin said. He gazed at his
desktop screen, where the long strings of the message glowed. "I
desire converse, too, but how?"
"You're the scientific head here," Channing said softly.
She felt the familiar old fatigue gliding up through her bones but
pushed it down, her heart tripping with a quick, high rhythm. "Do
it."
Benjamin jerked his eyes away from the screen, startled. "Me?"
"You discovered it."
"Amy did."
"Okay, bring in Amy. The discoverers get to name the object,
that's standard—"
"You named it."
"—so we extend that right, say that the discoverers get
to talk to it."
He chuckled, clasping his long, bony hands behind his neck and
leaning back. "Don't take up a legal career. Too big a leap."
"I'm serious. That thing is moving fast and obviously it can
think fast. Learning a hundred languages, just from eavesdropping?"
"An old cliche of B movies—"
"But probably right. Not answering right away, that sends it
a message, too."
Benjamin looked startled again. "I suppose so, but…"
"Look, the halls are packed outside with astronomers making
guesses. Suddenly nobody's an expert. I heard some guy floating a
theory that some undetected planet is orbiting the black hole, and
the message is from there."
"Nonsense."
"Of course, and there'll be more like it. How could anything
like a zone livable for life-forms like us survive passage
between the stars?" She snorted derisively. "No, it'll take
a while to face the fact—that this is something utterly
strange."
"What did its three little words mean, exactly? Converse as
in conversation? Or as in the contrary?"
"It's a stilted diction, but I'll bet on conversation. It's
bound to get context and syntax a little confused. Languages are
species-specific, but this thing managed to make sense and even
construct a simple sentence that meant something. Give it a break."
"Fine—so how do we talk to it?"
"Simply," she said simply.
"What should all of humanity say?"
"Keep it easy, just as the Eater did."
He brightened. "Maybe just 'We desire converse, too.'?"
"Who could blame you for that? It's the truth, and it gives
nothing away."
"I don't know. It's an overwhelming responsibility."
She watched him work it out on his own. She felt lazy and weirdly
relaxed, despite her hammering heart. There had been another
appointment with Dr. Mendenham early this morning, which she had
dearly wanted to skip but didn't. She had gotten up at dawn and made
herself one of her crazy breakfasts to boost her spirits, fish and
eggs with paprika. A treatment course of mahi-mahi should be added to
the therapy regimen, she had decided. Trouble was, you thudded
back down under the bland gray reality of modern medicine and all of
its grisly matter-of-fact manner.
Without her noticing it, Benjamin had gotten on the phone, talking
to somebody at Arecibo, his sentences sliding by her like glazed word
nuggets—side lobes, milliarc-sec-onds, sampling time, rep
rate.
She had other concerns, minor itches. The morning's treatments now
irked her in myriad ways, especially her skin. Nowadays her fashion
taste boiled down to whatever didn't itch, period. She wore hats to
cover her patchy induced baldness, not caring that in some she looked
like a lampshade in a brothel. She also discovered that an older
woman could wear bright lipstick during the day without looking like
she just had a binge with a jam jar. Or maybe everybody was just too
polite to notice.
Now Benjamin was mustering people into the room and here was
Kingsley, squatting down next to her, his slender face lined with
concern. She put him off with a wavering sentence and shushed him
into silence so that she could hear. Arno sat on a corner of
Benjamin's desk, in his standard maneuver to dominate the room,
straightening the seams in his standard Mancetti suit, charcoal-black
today, all the while arguing quietly but intensely with one of his
aides.
The meeting began. All good scientists had big egos, and the high
nervousness of the room brought that out. While young, they had been
outstanding at something widely admired. Brightest in their
class, smarter than anybody they knew, it was bound to go to their
heads. The wiser ones outgrew it, some becoming even mildly
humble before the immensity of unanswered questions facing them.
Some—alas, even some of the best—never did.
A few of the Center astronomers made their cases against any reply
right away, in tones of subdued outrage. She wondered why
scientists so often couched their views in abstract terms while
giving their game away by the tone of voice, seemingly unaware that
most people could read their emotions more tellingly than their
ideas. It all seemed funny now, as she watched it from the high perch
her quirky physiology had cooked up for today. She had told
Kingsley that she didn't do drugs anymore because she could get the
same effect by standing up fast, but he had taken the joke
completely deadpan. Did she honestly look that frail?
Maybe, but she could still track the labyrinths of the argument
as it worked around the room. The same views emerged in different
guises, long on logic, brimming with unstated passion.
We have no right to speak for all the human race.
But only we have a prayer of knowing how to respond.
How can you? The idea's outrageous!
It might be dangerous to answer. The thing could learn how to
destroy us.
It might be dangerous not to answer. And it has huge energies
at its command already.
It's already taken the giant step of learning our languages.
That implies an intelligence far beyond ours. Don't try to
second-guess it.
But the sheer arrogance—!
Have you considered that it might be dangerous either way?
Finally Arno spoke. "This is still a matter of some secrecy,
though we cannot expect it to remain so for long. It is also a matter
under the governance of the United States, occurring on our
territory, though in an international facility."
Protests, exclamations, as everybody in the room saw which way it
was going to go. Arno brushed them aside.
"I have gotten a quick okay from the White House. They
believe a reply is in order, and soon. I have been authorized to
transmit one simple line."
He looked at Benjamin, and Channing saw that somehow they had
planned this, right in front of her, and she had missed it. Maybe she
was more feeble than she thought. Here she was at the center of
historic events, distracted by her itches and not tracking.
Benjamin said, peeling off the words, "We desire converse
also."
2
An answer came from the Eater at the minimum possible interval,
allowing for the 8.7 Astronomical Units it had to cross—seventy-two
minutes.
By this time Arno had told Benjamin and Martinez to keep their
staff "in order," meaning that they were not to leak any
whisper of the messages. His U Agency team held a "briefing"
for the Center astronomers, rather delicately laying out the security
precautions that would henceforth surround the Center's activities.
In the middle of this conference, the reply arrived.
I AM ENGAGED TO CONVERSE.
MY FORMS WILL MAKE ORDER
TO CONVEY MEANING.
"What in hell does that mean?" Arno asked in a tight
tone, the first sign of tension Benjamin had detected in the man.
"I would venture," Kingsley said in his humble mode,
"that it is organizing itself for a high-bit rate transmission."
Arno looked puzzled, as did most of the rest of those crowded into
the Big Screen Room. Kingsley said smoothly, "I noticed that it
transmitted when Arecibo could receive— indeed, when it was
near the zenith at Arecibo's longitude."
Benjamin said, "We've been using it a lot to map the ionized
regions near the Eater's core. These last few days the team at
Arecibo bounced radar signals off it."
Kingsley nodded. "So it probably has noticed that half the
time our largest receiver is out of view, on the other side of the
Earth from the Eater. The Eater wishes to use the biggest dish we
have, presumably to transfer a great deal, or else it would simply
send messages to every radio telescope we have. I expect, then, that
from now on it will use the second-largest facility—Goldstone,
in the California desert—when Arecibo is out of its sight. We
should find a third dish and send the coordinates in our own next
message, so communication is continuous."
This quick analysis impressed even Benjamin, who reluctantly
nodded; he had not thought of the problem, much less solved it.
Arno folded his arms. "Well, looks like we got a dialogue
going here. What do we say next?"
Channing's thin voice began, and one of Arno's men started to talk
over it, only to cut off abruptly when Arno shot him a severe glance,
eyebrows clamped down tightly above hard eyes. Channing started
again. "Ask the basics. Where it's from, what it is, what it
wants."
This seemed so sensible to the small group—the Gang of Four
plus some U Agency types who seemed spooked by Arno's authority—that
they accepted it, arguing only over the phrasing of the questions.
Again the response came back in only a few seconds more than the
computed delay time due to the finite speed of light.
I AM ONLY ME SELF ALONE. A COMPOSITION OF FIELDS.
"What fields?" Arno wondered.
Kingsley looked at Benjamin. "I suspect, following on Dr.
Knowlton's discoveries, that the black hole's magnetic domain
itself is talking to us."
Astonishment met this bold venture. Benjamin saw Kingsley's thread
and said, "If we're dealing with some… well, magnetic
life… here, that would explain a lot."
Channing said weakly, slowly, "The fields are strong. Maybe
they can contain information—say, stored in the form of Alfven
waves, the most common form of magnetic waves."
Benjamin pointed out that Arecibo's high resolution radar image
showed glowing filaments threading around the Eater's core. "The
tightest picture we can get so far comes from the Very Long Baseline
Array, though, picking out details a few kilometers in size.
There's a tight knot of structures in the strong field region
near the hole."
Amy Major asked incredulously, "But how did they
get
there?"
Kingsley smiled. "I quite know how you feel. This is more
bizarre than anything in our astrophysical zoo. Somehow,
something has impressed knowledge and intelligence into a magnetic
structure."
One of the U Agency men said, "Well, a lot of our technology
stores data in magnetic cores, but those're lattices. Iron, say,
oriented in well-defined states by the field.
But this …"
He let his silence speak for him, and judging from the open
skepticism on many of the faces in the room, Benjamin could see the
idea was not going over well. For reference, Benjamin tapped in a
command and summoned forth the latest mapping in the microwave
frequencies. At the core, just barely visible as a broad dot in these
frequencies, was a disk. He knew that it was dense and hot, the
captured mass like a glowing phonograph record, turning around the
spindle hole that would eventually swallow it all.
A filmy cloud surrounded this bright core, laced by striations
that detailed analysis had already shown to be "magnetic
flux tubes," in the astrophysical jargon. The intricate
architecture of these lines suggested an outline. "An
hourglass," Benjamin said abruptly, seeing the structure
anew.
Dimly visible, once the eye knew where to look, the symmetric
funnel was undeniable.
"The hole is at the center," Kingsley observed, "that
unresolved dot. It draws matter in along those ducts, into an
accretion disk."
"Can't see any disk there," one of the U Agency
astronomers put in.
"Hard to see at this angle, I'll wager," Kingsley came
back smoothly. "And perhaps not luminous at these particular
frequencies, compared with the electron emission in the strong
fields."
One of the house theorists already had a mathematical simulation
of the inner region, which she presented as a slice diagram.
Depending on the weather around the black hole, there could either be
thick inflow from a wide angle, or thin inflow into a disk at
the equator of the system. The inflow formed a thick disk, which
could be slowly swallowed as it spiraled into the hole, reaching
maximum pressure very near the inner edge. But the energy released by
the white-hot mass, just before it dived into the hole, kept open
twin funnels.
"In this model," the theorist said, "the funnels
serve to eject mass, like a rocket nozzle. In steady-state, the
funnel wall is static." The hourglass shape of the funnels was
striking.
The entire region was only the size of a large building. The
larger magnetic realm beyond this could hold enormous stores of mass,
organized by the coherent field structure.
"Unbelievable," Arno whispered.
Still, the room was convinced. Heads nodded and voices called out
speculations on what some of the slender pathways might be.
Plainly small dots of luminosity were moving, as the map
refreshed over the next hour, showing a slow, spiraling inward, down
the twin funnels.
The technical discussion went on, ebbing and flowing with restless
energy. Benjamin moved over to check on Channing. She barely
acknowledged his presence, or much else in the room. Instead, he was
puzzled to find her regarding the Eater's image with an
expression that seemed to mingle awe and longing. He reminded
himself to check with Dr. Mendenham about her medication.
"I should get you home," he whispered.
"No. I want to be here." She did not even glance at him,
keeping her eyes on the big screen's image as fresh data filled in
slight details.
"One cannot but note that the justly termed 'Eater'—or
more generally, 'intruder'—answered only one of the questions
we put to it," Kingsley said at a pause in the discussion.
Channing's voice filled the silence of the room as all looked at
her. "We asked where it's from, what it is, what it wants."
Benjamin said, "And it answered the middle question."
"Maybe it's being coy?" Amy ventured. She spoke
confidently now, her hesitancy in such powerful company now
evaporated in the heat of the hunt.
"Try again. One at a time," Channing said.
Arno authorized sending a further message: "Where are you
from?"
The reply came with the same speed, arriving three hours later.
They had arranged its sentences with proper typography now. The
simple code it sent did not carry a distinction between capitals and
lowercase, so they left it in caps. For the Eater the implied huge
voice seemed natural.
THE GALAXY. I HAVE JOURNEYED THROUGH IT SINCE
THREE BILLION OF YOUR YEARS BEFORE YOUR STAR EXISTED.
"It's been wandering for 7.5 billion years?" an
astronomer asked in a hollow, awed whisper.
The room was silent for a long time.
Channing had refused to go home, and instead had fallen asleep in
a lounge chair in Benjamin's office. Benjamin had noticed that even
when awake her right foot sloped off to the floor, as if she had
forgotten she had one. She roused for the reply and came into the Big
Screen Room to see the message glowing alone on the screen. "Hmmm,
it seems rather cagey about its origins."
The Center was by now getting crowded as more people poured in
under the general U Agency umbrella. Some were directly from the
White House, which apparently was confused about how involved it
should get. The Gang of Four met with Arno and Martinez to plan.
"This is uncharted political territory," Kingsley
observed. "A politician's first instinct is to clamp down upon
that which he or she does not understand."
"I'd like it to stay that way," Channing said.
"I think we all would," Martinez said, "but this is
going to be far larger than we can manage."
Arno looked unsure of himself, and Benjamin realized that events
were spinning out of his control, an anxiety-producing turn for
such a personality. It was hard to exude confidence, the crucial
executive signature, when you did not feel it. He mentioned this to
Kingsley at the coffee urn, and Kingsley chuckled. "Unless one
is a practiced politician, and thus an actor."
"I'm not so impressed with his methods," Benjamin said.
"His people are rubbing mine the wrong way."
"I fear that was inevitable," Kingsley said. "In my
prior experience, science is packed solid with specialists, unused to
working with others."
Channing said wryly, "Look, for guys like Arno, the first
rule of action is if at first you don't succeed, destroy all
evidence that you tried."
"He seems pretty agreeable so far," Benjamin said
cautiously. He had respect for her political intuition; what was
she seeing that he missed?
Channing's energy had abruptly returned, probably fed by
old-fashioned adrenaline. She summoned more by tossing a sugar packet
into her coffee. "There's no hiding from this, though—the
White House has cut him enough slack to mess up."
Kingsley nodded. "Quite astute. He's got to work with such
uncertain materials as ourselves. And clever we may be, but this
problem is incredibly broad. I've already recommended that we
fly out experts in semiotics, the language of signs, in case we are
using too narrow a channel of conversation with this thing. They
may have ideas we can use."
Benjamin had to agree. These days, there were cell biologists
unable to discuss evolutionary theory, physicists who couldn't tell a
protein from a nucleic acid, chemists who did not know an ellipse
from a hyperbola, geologists who could not say why the sky was blue.
Worse, they didn't care. Generalized curiosity was rare and
getting rarer and now they needed a lot of people who could bring in
a broad range of angles of attack.
"I think you're giving Arno too much credit," Channing
insisted. "He's been behind the curve since the Eater began
talking. In situations like this, conventional wisdom won't work.
He's so dense, light bends around him."
Benjamin laid a restraining hand on her arm. "I think you're
overtired."
The rawboned, ravaged look she gave him had a silent desperation.
He did not know where her sudden moods came from, but resolved to
weather them. Trying to toss off the matter lightly, she said, "The
two most common elements in the universe are hydrogen and
stupidity. We shouldn't be surprised to see it show up a lot in the
next few days… that's all."
"I'm taking you home."
"Good idea, best of the day." Then she fainted.
3
Living in a female body—Channing mused, lying in the cool,
slanted light of early morning—was different. She rustled in
the damp sheets, cat-lazy, and watched Benjamin get ready to go back
to the Center after having had less sleep than he should.
Males had low-maintenance bodies; shave, trim fingernails,
haircut whenever it got too obviously long—that was
it.
They were so
pointed in their desire to have women, a
desire she remembered from adolescence as both frightening and
complimentary at once. The sense of the chase lived in them, made
them feel their bodies as jackets carrying their imperatives—sperm,
armies, ideas, civilization—on its perilous journey. They
relished their recklessness, and she had come to understand that it
was not an embracing of death, as some feminists insisted, but a
zesty drive to slam up against the walls of the world, test the
limits.
Even Benjamin's casual moves showed how his sense of space
differed, as if this crisis brought out deep responses. Men's world
fixed on fly balls in a summer sky, the target at the edge of reach
of arrow or gun, the bowl of sky lit by beckoning pinwheel stars, the
far horizon as a target. Men felt their bodies, she suspected, as
taut with lines of potential. Women revolved around a more inner
space, orbiting their more complex innards.
And the penis: willful, answering only to the unconscious. In the
small hours of this morning, she had proved this theorem by explicit
example, getting him erect as he slept, with artful fingers and lips
in a swampy, eager mood that came over her suddenly. In their verbal
love play his got a name, whereas somehow her vagina never did—until
this moment, the idea had never occurred. He could not lie,
erotically; erections spoke truly of what the libido willed.
"Hey, sailor, new in town?" she murmured in her cat
voice.
He came rushing over. "Thought you were asleep. Wow, you were
great."
"For a kiss you get breakfast."
"Sure. Where?"
"On the deck?"
"No, the kiss."
That led to an extended seminar on several ready reaches of her
body and delayed his departure by another half hour. In payment she
demanded to go with him, and predictably he said no, she was too
tired, and just as predictably, she won.
On the drive up, they had their first private conversation about
the Eater since the first message had come in. "You're more
afraid than you're letting on, aren't you?" she asked quietly.
"You bet." He drove with his usual concentration, quick
and able, tires howling on the curves. Well, maybe today it was
justified. Life seemed to be moving faster.
"It's packing a lot of power."
"And with seven billion years of experience, knows how to use
it."
"If it cares to."
"That's just what the politicians will soon realize." He
shot her a glance, his hands tight on the wheel as the road roar grew
under his foot's pressure.
"Why would it be any danger to us?"
"The thing about aliens is, they're alien."
"You think the government will take that attitude?"
"They'd be irresponsible if they didn't."
"Maybe they'll be as out of it as Arno."
"He's doing his best. You really dislike him, don't you?"
"I don't trust him," she said.
"He's secretive, all right," Benjamin allowed. "That
makes me suspicious. We're used to open discussion in the sciences
and he doesn't even pretend to follow that practice. And his people
follow his lead—ask plenty of questions, give damned little
back."
"That, and it's hard to believe that he beat 100,000 other
sperm."
"Not up to the job?"
"Nobody is, granted." She tried to imagine who would be
able to manage a crisis like this and came up empty. "It
demands too much knowledge in one head."
"So use more heads."
This turned out to be the solution the White House had settled
upon, visible as they pulled up to the Center. Or rather, to a guard
post and heavily armed Marines who peered intently at their freshly
made IDs, issued only the day before. The hillside was now,
overnight, festooned with prefab buildings lifted in by
helicopter. Communications cables flowered in great knotted blossoms
on standing pads, attended by squads of blue-overalled workers.
Inside the Center, the foyer had a security team checking IDs
again and a metal detector. This made Benjamin angry, which proved to
be "unproductive," as Kingsley termed it when he had to
rescue them from the Operations Officer's office. They stopped at a
brand-new phalanx of buffet tables, well stocked, and got coffee.
"Is this backed by the CIA?" Benjamin asked.
"I don't think so," Kingsley said judiciously. "The
food is quite poor."
They plunged into work. Channing had to allow that Arno's U Agency
had brought a brisk efficiency to the usual meandering corridor
conversations. In this taut atmosphere, there were no academic
locutions: no
in terms of or
as it were or
if
you will. This Channing fully approved. Leaving NASA, she had
found from a series of visits to the campuses that much of academic
life had come to seem either boring or crazy.
No rival for the craziness of the situation she was in, of course.
Nothing could match the whirl of speculation around her.
It was remarkable that this magnetic creature had been able to
produce even broken, coherent English simply by listening to
radio and TV. A century of fiction had assumed any approaching alien
would be able to do so, to simplify their story lines, without for a
moment considering how prodigious a task it was. The Eater had
no common experience, knew little of the Earth's surface, and was
dealing with a species unknown anywhere else in the galaxy. It did
have vastly more experience dealing with planetary life, though, and
this was apparently what made its work successful.
But with their help it could become much more able, the Eater
said. So there was a team of linguists working with it.
They started with vocabulary. Children learned language beginning
with nouns and built up to abstractions, so the first volley of
signals was an assembly of pictures showing common objects, along
with the nouns for them. Verbs were a little more trouble. Cartoons
proved useful here, showing "throw" and making distinctions
like the difference between "rain" and "to rain."
Here the American Hopi Indian language would have been useful,
since in that tongue English's "it is raining"—with
the implied
it quite invisible, yet a solid noun—was
smoothly rendered simply as "rain." The Eater pointed out
such subtleties as quickly as they arose, making its teachers feel
that English was a patchwork of knocked-together solutions—which,
of course, it was.
They quickly got through a basic five thousand words. Then faster
transmission of whole texts, with illustrations, proceeded with
blinding speed. Kingsley, wearing yesterday's shirt and tie,
related this to her in his clipped mode, teetering on the verge of
irony.
"What do you think will happen next?" she asked him. He
had apparently been here all night, or at least he looked it.
"Depends upon the world reaction, of course," Kingsley
said with surprising crispness. "And how fast we can move before
the heavy hand of 'responsibility' descends, to make us
overcautious."
She blinked. His face was a mask, but she could read a jittery
stress in him, especially in the overcontrolled way he spoke and
moved. "Why do you stress speed?"
"The Eater—your choice of name has stuck, and perhaps
was a bit infelicitous."
"Gee, I love it when you use such fancy terms. How
infelicitous?"
"It's more the title of a horror film, isn't it?"
"Or a bad sci-fi flick," Benjamin said, munching a
donut. He knew well the distinction between true science fiction and
the media dross pumped out in vast, glittery quantities, "sci-fi."
"So you think that'll worsen the first impression, once this
breaks?" Channing asked.
"It's starting to break," Kingsley said with abstract
fatigue. "Impossible to contain, really."
"What really matters here," Benjamin said, "is how
the governments react."
Kingsley managed a dry chuckle. "I remember some head of
state in the TwenCen saying that history teaches us mostly that men
and nations behave wisely once they have exhausted all their other
alternatives."
"I wish I could take the name back," Channing said.
While they slept, and Kingsley had not, the fascination of their
opportunity had worked upon the astronomers. They had asked the Eater
questions about astrophysics, peppering it with a dozen in a single
transmission. This apparently broke the tit-for-tat logjam. The
"intruder"—a name Kingsley still preferred to use,
and thought might work better but had no hope would be taken
up—seemed eager to discuss. It had quickly mastered the
protocols of our digital image processing and filled its broadband
signal with pictures. There were eerie exchanges. It was almost like
a proud parent showing around baby pictures.
WITNESS, THE LATE EVOLUTION OF A STAR, WHICH YOU
TERM THE ROSETTE NEBULA, LOOKED LIKE THIS FROM THE SIDE WHEN IT WAS
YOUNG.
The display was awesome, close-ups of giant rosy clouds of
shimmering molecules, beautiful testaments to the death throes of a
star. The Eater had been traveling near it and for the first time
Channing appreciated the limitation astronomers seldom
remembered: seeing objects from one angle left questions forever
unanswerable.
"This gives us a handle on its trajectory, then,"
Benjamin observed swiftly.
Kingsley nodded. "We can work backward, using these other
images—the Magellanic Cloud, the Galactic Center— and
determine its past."
Some of the images were impossible to match with anything
ever seen from Earth. Others almost matter-of-factly revised in an
instant their picture of the galaxy's geography. The view of the
Galactic Center showed what generations of artists had imagined, the
glowing bulge of billions of stars that shone in all colors, a
swollen majesty rent by lanes of ebony dust and amber striations no
one could explain.
It thrilled her, tightened her throat. A bounty now came flooding
into the Center as the Eater fed data through Arecibo and Goldstone
and the new dish at Neb Attahl, India.
"My God, it'll put us all out of work," she murmured.
"Astronomers? Quite the opposite, I expect," Kingsley
said.
"Yeah, we'll be trying to understand these—and the
Eater itself—for a generation at least," Benjamin said,
biting into his second donut, balancing a plate on his knee in the
Big Screen Room.
"Well," Channing said ironically, "it's good to
know you won't be forced into retirement."
This pleasant interlude lasted only an hour. Martinez discovered
they had come in and held a meeting. Clearly she was struggling to
find her role in all this, a small fish caught in a tidal wave.
Arno's men had tried to clamp down on the whole story, but it got out
through the porous Washington system. In part, that was because the
astronomers did not like the U Agency's increasingly abrupt manner.
Their styles clashed fundamentally, as mirrored in their clothes:
government buttoned-up look against tropical techno-hip. Even in
Martinez's oil-upon-the-waters meeting, there were several edgy,
sharp-tongued interchanges.
They watched some television, where the story had broken in
more or less the correct essentials only two hours before. At
first there was a stunned, worldwide awe. Religious proclamations,
stentorian speeches by assorted politicians who could not tell a
spiral galaxy from a supernova.
Astronomers who were called in to consult at first refused to
credit the story. Only release of the Rosette Nebula image convinced
these. The release itself was a fortunate error. A Center staffer had
sent it as a compressed file to a colleague, instead of zipping it to
yet another subagency in Washington; they had, weirdly, WebNet
addresses near each other in her file directory.
Within another hour or two, the astronomers outside those in the
know fathomed the significance of the Rosette image. Immediately,
they raised uncomfortable questions. This was an utterly alien
entity, carrying the mass of our entire moon—another factoid
which had leaked, this time through Australia. What could it do?
The Gang of Four sneaked off from the ongoing Martinez meeting to
discuss just this. Amy looked as though she had spent the night as
Kingsley had, fueled by coffee. "I've been trying to figure what
it might do."
"A more important point is what it wants," Kingsley
observed with a pensive gaze.
Amy said, "It didn't answer our third question. Ever."
"Exactly."
With her advanced computer skills, and the help of a squad of
cryptographers from the U Agency, Amy had been in on every exchange
in the transcription process. She shook her head. "It doesn't
answer any questions that verge on that, either."
"Curious," Kingsley said mysteriously. Channing could
tell that he had his own theories, but was unwilling to share them.
He had been wrong quite enough for the last week, thank you.
"If it wanted," Benjamin said, "it could plunge
straight through the Earth, bore a hole."
Kingsley snorted derisively. "And kill itself, by stripping
away the magnetic structures that
are the intelligence of
the thing? No, it will be rather more clever."
Channing had her own worse case and decided to venture it. "With
those magnetic funnels, it could blowtorch the top of our
atmosphere."
Kingsley looked delighted at an idea he had not had himself.
"Ummm… you're entirely correct."
"That would work?" Amy asked, startled.
"Absolutely," Kingsley said with an oblivious authority;
he was, after all, the Astronomer Royal. "
Sic transit gloria
mundi, eh? 'Thus passeth away the glory of the world,' if my
Latin is still decent."
"Is there enough energy density in its system to drill
through the atmosphere?" Benjamin asked. Channing knew this
well, one of his favorite maneuvers. Deflect the issue into a
calculation to get time to think.
Even in a potentially mortal
crisis, we play games.
They found a blackboard—white, actually, with those smelly
marking pens—and spent half an hour checking Kingsley's
assertion. Finally Benjamin dropped his marker and agreed. "Dead
on. It could roast us all, in time."
Kingsley said archly, "If it doesn't get bored first."
Channing had been resting in a lounge chair, especially brought in
by one of the U Agency gofers—a rather pleasant aspect of
the Agency's otherwise annoying presence. She brightened with a fresh
notion. "Then let's try to keep it amused, why don't we? I
wonder if it likes jokes."
4
Actually, it did—but its own humor was weird, unfunny:
LIFE HAS CONTRADICTIONS. BUT CONTRADICTIONS KILL
LIFE.
"That's a joke?" Benjamin asked the room, the first to
speak up. After his words were out, he was suddenly embarrassed,
wishing he could take them back. Maybe there was some deep semiotic
content he had missed? There were hugely powerful people here, able
to eject him from the Center forever with the rise of a single
eyebrow. But heads nodded in agreement and no one disagreed.
The Operating Group, as named by Arno, now encompassed
twenty-eight members. It met in the colloquium hall, the Center's
largest. Armed guards barred every doorway and three electro-sniffer
teams had worked over the room before anyone was allowed to say
anything. Having to sit in silence for even ten minutes was
difficult, given the air of strain in the room.
"Plainly, we need to know more," Kingsley said from the
podium, nodding to Benjamin.
The Eater's latest transmission hung in glowing letters on a large
flat screen that dominated the room. They had just watched several of
the Eater's purported ideas of humor pa-rade across this screen,
including some images of things no one could even recognize. The
Eater seemed to equate what to humans would be verbal humor with an
inexplicable visual humor that looked like tangled threads of
corroded surfaces, in virulent colors.
"Every telescope in the solar system is trained on it. We are
learning as quickly as we can." He paused. "And now,
something rather curious."
The team from the White House sat in the front row, two seats over
from Benjamin, and their faces showed blank incomprehension.
They probably had never advanced beyond high school chemistry, he
realized, and saw the world as wholly human, filled with the vectors
of human power. Technology was to them the product of human labor, no
more, and science consisted of stories heard on TV, of no interest
to people involved with the Real World.
"Several astronomers have noticed a similarity between the
Eater's electromagnetic 'buzz'—that is, what we believe to be
its internal transmissions—and signals already detected
years previous, from a star not very far away." Kingsley paused
and looked out over the crowd. "Most curious."
Benjamin waited through an odd, hesitant silence.
What the
hell, got to keep this rolling. And Kingsley looks like he could use
some help up there. "Maybe there's a similar object
orbiting—visiting—that star, too?"
Nods from the astronomical contingent.
We've got the momentum
here, Benjamin realized.
The rest are hopelessly far off
their turf.
"If there were," Kingsley argued, "this intruder
would know about it already. It has been everywhere, seen
everything, for many billions of years."
Why not give the number: seven? Benjamin then realized
that every detail had been hastily classified, and Kingsley was
playing it safe. The political types might not know the implications
of such an immense lifetime and leak it.
More silence.
Well, we might as well turn this into a little
colloquium. That's what the room's for.
"Not so," he said, spreading his arms to both sides of
his seat, hooking a hand around Channing's shoulder.
Might as
well make a claim on this idea, too. "We have one small
advantage over it. Our telescopes are scattered all over the
solar system. To pick up this distant source would be impossible
with a receiving antenna the size of the Eater. It's a matter of
resolving power. By my calculations"—he let the phrase
hang there just an extra second, to establish some authority
with this crowd—"it's blind to faraway objects smaller
than stars. That probably includes this thing near another
star—whatever it is."
This last was pure bluff. He had not kept up with the literature
very well, had no clue what Kingsley was referring to.
Kingsley said crisply, "I suggest we have a special assistant
team set about making detailed comparisons. Any and all knowledge may
prove useful. I believe, in fact, that should be our general
principle. Gather, sift, think, wait."
Arno rose—his standard room-ruling maneuver, adapted for an
auditorium. His eyes swept the room. "Plainly, ladies and
gentlemen, something more is needed. I believe I speak for the entire
U Agency when I say that we believe this body, the President's
authorized Operating Group, should take control of the entire deep
space network."
Some murmurs of assent from the political faction. The astronomers
looked sour. Some muttered objections.
Arno swept this away with a broad gesture. "We must
immediately—and secretly—launch the new Searcher
craft, using the best, highest-density Deep Link bands. With a
connection of such high quality, they can be flown under direction
by people on Earth."
"An interactive control, close to the source?" a NASA
official asked.
"Exactly. Do we—you, madam—have that capability?"
"There are Searchers in Jupiter space." The woman wore
one of the new NASA uniforms, introduced a year before, handsome deep
blue and gold. "We could begin a few of the micropackages on the
way, launching at high velocity, on trajectories to intercept
eventually…" Her voice trailed off, plainly not prepared
for this possibility.
"I believe this group should so recommend," Arno
finished and sat down.
Kingsley said, "I believe that has much to recommend it. We
cannot know the intruder's trajectory, and it plainly has the ability
to alter it in a moment. It is nearing Jupiter, and knowledge gained
there should prove invaluable."
"I think we shouldn't launch everything now," Benjamin
said, amazed at his continuing audacity. The quiet administrator
of only a month ago would have been cowed into utter silence in such
a gathering.
Kingsley's mouth pursed, startled. "Why?"
"We may need them closer to home." This blunt
possibility sent a ripple of concern through the auditorium.
"The intruder has not announced any plans to come closer. Its
present trajectory shall carry it through the Jovian system. Amy?"
Perhaps emboldened by Benjamin, she had held up her hand. "Well,
it only said this once, in the middle of another subject entirely,
but…" Benjamin could see a sudden bout of stage fright
seize her, a mere postdoc in such company, but then she plunged
ahead. "It said it was going to 'acquire mass and momentum' at
Jupiter."
"Quite possibly to gain the velocity it needs to escape the
solar system," Kingsley said with a confidence Benjamin found
unsettling. "It is a rover among the stars, after all."
"That's an assumption," Benjamin shot back.
"Of course, of course." Kingsley gave him an odd look,
as though asking him to go along.
The hell with that. "We lack any understanding of what it
wants to do."
Kingsley said sternly, "But lack of evidence is not evidence
of lack."
Arno said, "I believe our business here is finished."
On this awkward note, the meeting broke up. Benjamin cornered
Kingsley backstage and demanded, "Why'd you do that?"
The angular face clouded. "They are rattled enough already,
damn it."
"They need to be prepared for the possibility that it's not
an innocent explorer."
"We cannot prepare for everything."
"We can at least think—"
"
You think for a moment. Do you seriously believe
that what we say doesn't go outside the room?"
"No, of course not." Here Benjamin knew he was on shaky
ground. "The White House hears, plus no doubt Congress and
various allies. Not my turf, but—"
"Decidedly not. I do not have the luxury of merely keeping
my nose buried in the astrophysics."
"It doesn't do this discussion any good for you to keep
referring to your mysterious higher knowledge. I know you move
in bigger circles, sure, but—"
"Being aware of the problem on different levels is precisely
what's needed, I should think." Kingsley bristled, his shoulders
squaring off in a gesture Benjamin remembered seeing long ago, back
in that seminar where they met.
Not much has changed.
"Look, I don't want you throwing your weight around with my
people—"
"I don't delve into any such matters," Kingsley shot
back, eyes narrowing.
"I see you in there talking to Amy a lot."
"We enjoy working together. There is a lot of interesting
astro—"
"Just remember you're a guest here."
"I should think such distinctions are largely moot by now."
"Not to me."
"If you believe you can keep the usual methods of working,
you are being naive."
Bristling at "naive," Benjamin jutted his chin forward.
"There's got to be a role for the science in this thing, not
just politics."
To Benjamin's surprise, Kingsley nodded and gave him a tilted look
of newfound respect. "I fear, old friend, that the two are now
quite inseparable."
5
In the press of events, she was getting so disorganized that
she ended up using an ancient panty hose as a coffee filter when she
couldn't find towel paper. As her energy had ebbed, she had adopted
rougher rules: if you need to vacuum the bed, it's time to change the
sheets. Rugs did have to be beaten now and then, not just threatened.
Finally she gave up and found a cleaning lady.
Still, sloppiness seemed within the broad parameters allowed
on the Big Island, where salty beach types rubbed shoulders with
anal-retentive "cybrarians" at the Data Retention
Center just over the hill. For the last year of gathering
illness, she had tended more toward the style of her neighbors in the
opposite direction, people just down the road whose car had a rag as
a gas cap.
Channing had hidden her gathering fatigue as well as possible.
Her years at NASA had taught her to give no sign of weakness, or else
lose your spot in the mission rotation. After the space station and
the Mars adventure, there were plenty of surplus astronauts, each a
model of competitive connivance.
Even in crisis, the Center was not nearly so bad, and having
a husband who just happened to run its scientific wing helped, but
still—best to look vigorous. Falling asleep in a crucial
discussion, then fainting—not good, girl. So she planned her
forays to work carefully, not letting the dark-rimmed eyes show,
sipping coffee to stay up. She had learned to let Benjamin drive her
home when she started to ebb; he was getting good at spotting the
cusp, down to the exact moment.
But she had to admit that probably most people just weren't paying
attention, thank God. Benjamin had persuaded her to sit in on a
panel reviewing "Semiotics of Contact," a topic that
swiftly came to cover a hodgepodge of issues—but mostly,
anything the astronomers didn't want to deal with.
She went in late in the morning and today saw a van with a HONK IF
YOU LOVE PEACE AND QUIET bumper sticker. So she honked; she loved
paradoxes. Such as her gathering feeling for Kingsley. Who would have
thought
that still smoldered? A smelly bone, best buried in
the backyard of her life. She had written him off to his wife, a
classic type: big eyes, big hips, dark curly hair you could bury
your hand in up to the wrist. How pleasant, to know that even such a
goddess could lose out in the romance wars!
She arrived at the Center after threading the multilayered
checkpoints. The TV platform set up in the foreyard had guards around
it, big-shouldered types carrying automatic weapons.
A bit
overdone, she thought, then realized that the weaponry was not
for real use, but display. Arno's way of saying,
We're being
serious here.
Already the media mavens had taken off from the news, CNN with
twenty-four-hour coverage. Within months there would be spinoff
movies, no doubt, thoughtful magazine pieces and books, the Eater
finally entering the media hereafter as videos or the
inspiration for toys.
She came late into the Semiotics Working Group, as Arno had
labeled it, hoping nobody noticed, so of course it was at a pause in
speakers and everyone looked her way. Still, it was fun to just sit
and listen to the flood of informed speculation that poured from
the visiting experts.
The astronomers had quickly been revealed as the Peter Pans of
humanity. They never truly grew up and kept their curiosity like a
membership card. Most believed the Saganesque doctrine that aliens
would be peaceful, ruled by curiosity, eager for high-minded
discourse. Carl Sagan had been a conventional antimilitary liberal,
and so assumed that a radio message from space would shock humanity,
damping down wars and ushering in a cosmic sense of cooperation
between nations.
Humanists were made of tougher stuff. Nonsense, they said, but
more politely. Why hadn't the Europeans' discovery of the
Americas halted warfare in Europe? Instead, they fought over the
spoils. Would the Eater somehow become fodder for our ancient primate
aggressions?
Another Saganesque doctrine was that contact with aliens would
yield a bounty of science and technology. Half credit on this one:
plenty of science, so far only astronomy, but no technology. The
Eater had none. It seemed to be a magnetic construction, first made
by some ancient alien race. Its origins were still blurry
because of its coyly obtuse phrasing. It had said:
I CAME INTO BEING BY ARTIFICE OF ANCIENT
BIOLOGICAL BEINGS. AFTER THAT I VOYAGED AND BECAME LARGER IN SELF AND
IN PURPOSE.
Whole squads of semioticists and linguists now labored over such
sentences, mining with their contextual and semantic matrices,
but little glittering ore appeared beyond the obvious. The extreme
humanists argued instead that, beyond the pretty pictures it seemed
so eager to send, we probably could learn little from the Eater of
All Things. Science simply gave us the very best chimpanzee view
of the universe. Our vision was shaped by evolution, sharpened to
find edible roots or tasty, easy prey on a flat plain. Our sense
of beauty came from throwing honed rocks along the beautifully
simple arc of a parabola to strike herbivores with cutting
edges.
The Eater's technology used magnetic induction, control of hot
plasmas, advanced electromagnetics, and probably much else we could
not guess. "Face it," one panelist said, "unless an
alien is a lot like us, we can't learn much from it. Even with
goodwill—and we don't have really good evidence of that,
so far—we
can't harvest technology from a creature so
different."
This deflated Arno's adjutants. They were easy to pick out,
because in the status-shuffling of personnel here a person's
authority was inversely proportional to the number of pens in their
shirt pocket.
Her pager beeped her. Reluctantly she left the room as a decoding
expert began drawing conclusions about the Eater's habits in encoding
information. It had been steadily getting better at understanding
human computers and methods, so the bit stream coming down from it
carried an ever-higher density content—mostly astronomical
pictures in wavelengths ranging from the low radio to the high gamma
ray. One of the tidbits that intrigued her was that the Eater had
spent much time between the stars, taking centuries to cross
those abysses. Very low frequency electromagnetic waves were
reflected by the higher density in the solar system, so could never
penetrate. The Eater had pictures of the galaxy made by receiving
these waves, a whole field of astronomy impossible from Earth.
The call was from Benjamin and she found him in the Big Screen
Room. "How's the semiotics?" he whispered.
"They're impressive, I suppose, in their way." She
studied the screen, which showed a beautiful view of the solar
system seen from the Eater's present location.
"They seemed to be talking gibberish jargon when I looked
in."
"Well, maybe my inferiority complex isn't as good as yours."
He got the small joke, one of the traits that had endeared him to
her long ago. Kingsley had, too, but in a subtly different way,
more as a conspirator than as a simple act of merriment. She wondered
for a moment about that and then Arno came striding in, exuding grim
confidence.
At first she thought he was going to give an aria in the key of
"I," taking credit for the "great advances" they
had all made, but then he unveiled an extended message from the
Eater. It had "a supplication": it wanted humanity, which
it seemed to regard as a single entity, to transmit a store of its
art, music, and "prevalent enrichment."
"Does that mean our culture?" a leading member of the
humanist team asked.
"I trust the deciphering team can tell us that soon."
"Seems probable," Channing said. She had always felt
that the humanities were too important to be left to the humanists.
And now, apparently, the field might come to include the
nonhuman. For the Eater proposed a trade.
"The bounty of other, alien societies," Arno said
grandly. "That appears to be what it is promising."
The crowd murmured with a strange tenor she had seldom heard:
eagerness and caution sounding in the same anxious key.
Kingsley and many from NASA looked relieved. Unlike Benjamin's
suspicions, there seemed no threat here. Arno, their principal
conduit to the White House, was plainly out of his depth. He had said
his piece and now gazed out over the crowd as if trying to read a
script in too tiny a typeface.
She leaned toward Benjamin. "So the culture vulture theory
of the Sagan crowd looks right."
He said, "It still isn't headed for Earth, either."
Arno was going on about ramifications. "An international
committee can assemble a compendium of our greatest works, the arts
and mathematics, perhaps even science— though there may be a
security issue there."
"Let us offer whatever data it wants," a voice from in
front said.
The final decision would come from on high, of course, and that
lent an air of liberation to what followed. The discussion went
quickly, specialists vying to spell out how to do all this.
The battalions of data managers, as they were termed, had already
erected an elaborate architecture to deal with speaking to the
Eater. What was not so obvious, but now clear, was that in
transferring information—say, the Library of Congress—the
Eater would learn a good deal more about how our computers thought.
It was astoundingly swift at learning our computer languages. Some of
its remarks in passing implied that all this was rather primitive
stuff—to it.
She and Benjamin stayed for hours, following the discussion,
volunteering nothing. This was not their province. Toward the end,
though, Benjamin made a remark she would remember later. "It's
getting close to Jupiter. Let's see what we learn there."
"You're not so sure this cultural shotgun is what it wants?"
"Thing about aliens is, they're alien."
"Ummm. I remember an old movie about an art collector who
went around buying up living artists' work, and then killing them, to
increase resale value."
"Good grief, you're in a great mood."
"Just the old mind wandering. I suppose everyone's taking
comfort in the fact that once it's at Jupiter, it's in close range of
our Searchers. We'll learn more."
He gave her his angular grin. "Old Army saying. 'If the enemy
is in range, so are you.' "
6
Benjamin clasped her to him with a trembling energy. She
kissed him with an equal fervor and then, without a word or the need
of any, he left for the Center.
She had agreed to rest a good part of each day, but insisted on
being at the Center for a few hours, at least. Each day he hoped she
would just plain rest, and each day he was disappointed. She
came up around noon to catch the day's energy at its full swell.
Benjamin was pleased that even in the hubbub, people looked
after her, included her in the flow of work. There was quite enough
of it to share.
They had both been surprised at how quickly the U.S. government
had gotten in line on the cultural transfer process. The usual
cautionary voices had loudly complained about giving away secrets
that could be used against all humanity, but the sheer
strangeness of the Eater made it hard to see how a digitized image of
the Parthenon could be a defense secret. "Good ol' Carl
Sagan," Channing had remarked. "Who would've guessed
that his view of aliens would have infiltrated the Congress?"
Indeed, they needed a figure like Sagan, dead now for decades, who
could command the confidence of the greater public. Like all good
popularizers in science, he had been roundly punished for it by his
colleagues, denied membership in the National Academy of
Sciences and the subject of
tsk-tsk gossip by many who were
not his equals as scientist or educator. No such astronomer had
arisen since Sagan's time, and the best the profession could muster
were various pale figures from the usual scientific bureaucracy.
Compared with them, Kingsley did quite well, and so had
undertaken a lot of the Center's public relations work—when
not shouldered aside by Arno.
Both Benjamin and Kingsley suspected that the political leadership
was mounting precautionary measures, but there was no insider word of
such plans. At the Center all policy matters, and even the different
spectral bands of the observing teams, had become more and more
boxed into neat little compartments.
The Center was preoccupied with shepherding the data flow to the
Eater. Channing had become edgy and preoccupied, following the
Eater news obsessively, making fun of Arno. ("Maybe his major
purpose in life is to serve as a warning to others.") Sometimes
she seemed to surprise even herself with her brittle humor, as if she
did not fully know how black a mood lay beneath it.
Benjamin thought about her, fruitlessly as usual, as he came into
the new wing of the Center. It had been thrown up in a day by teams
who descended in massive helicopters. The big new office complex was
a rectangular intrusion into a hillside carved unceremoniously for
it. Each floor was one big room, the nondenominational Office: a
three-dimensional grid bounded below by a plane of thin nylon
carpet, two meters above by a parallel plane of pale acoustical tile.
This space suffered punctuation by vertical Sheetrock planes that
came to shoulder height, barely enough to give the illusion of
partial privacy and damp conversations. Squares of recessed
fluorescent lighting beamed down on the symbolic Euclidean
realization of pragmatic idealism, a space of unimpeded flows.
Spherical immersion tanks dotted the space between the
rectangular sheets that stretched to infinity, and around them
technicians moved with insect energies. In these the cyber-link
specialists kept in close touch with the array of satellites and
sensors they now had spying on the interloper.
A cube farm: big rooms clogged with cubicles for the drones. When
something loud happened, the prairie-dog heads would pop up over the
half-height walls.
As the Eater plunged closer to Jupiter, it had rhapsodized about
alien cultures it had visited, sending samples of outre art via the
microwave high-bandwidth links. Some were released to the public,
particularly if they seemed innocuous. Predictably, distinctions
between "photographs" and "art" were difficult to
make. There were apparently straightforward views of landscapes,
odd life-forms, stars, and planets, even some "cities" that
might just as well have been regularly arranged hills. With thousands
of such images to chew upon, the public seemed satisfied.
Carefully the government figures charged with filtering the
information did not give away the true vast size of the galleys it
sent. Nor did they release unsettling images of grotesque scenes,
hideous aliens, and unaccounted-for devastation. The Eater
provided little or no commentary, so battalions of assembled art
critics, photo experts, and other sorts labored to interpret these.
So far the world reaction had been varied—there were always
alarmists—but comparatively mild. The sense of wonder was
working overtime among the world media, though that would undoubtedly
give way in time, Benjamin thought.
The more advanced works were another matter. These the computers
had assembled into holographic forms and an entire yawning
gallery displayed them. Benjamin stopped there to see what was new.
Even knowing how much effort was being marshalled worldwide on
deciphering the Eater's transmission load, he was daily astonished at
how much new work appeared.
It was eerie work, subtly ominous. Portraits of creatures and
places in twisted perspectives, 3D manifestations of objects
that appeared impossible, color schemes that plainly operated beyond
the visible range.
He went into the Big Screen Room. The ranging grid showed the
orange profile of the Eater at the very edge of Jupiter's moon
system. There was a crowd and he found a seat at the back only
because a new staffer gave up his, leaping to his feet when he
saw Benjamin's ID badge.
A murmur. Benjamin watched as one of the Searcher 'scopes came
online. Its high-resolution image flickered through several spectral
ranges, settled on the best. Kingsley materialized in the seat beside
him; a staffer had given up his for the Astronomer Royal. The
incoming image sharpened at the hands of the specialists. "It's
veered in the last hour," Kingsley whispered, "and appears
headed for an outer moon of the system."
"Couldn't we have predicted that?"
"Some did." Kingsley shrugged. "It does not respond
to questions about its plans."
"Still? I thought it was talking more now."
"The linguists have given up trying to render its little
parables in literal ways."
"They seem more like puzzles to me."
"That, too. 'Cultural dissonance,' as one of them termed it."
"I'll have to remember that one." Benjamin grinned
dryly. "Sounds almost like it means something."
Suddenly the screen brightened. In a spectacular few seconds,
the orange profile warped into a slender funnel, blazing
brightly.
"It's ingesting," Kingsley said matter-of-factly. "I
suppose it met a tasty rock."
"We knew it had some motivation."
"Note how no one seems very worried? I believe we are all
simply too tired for that."
"I wondered if it was just me. I figured I was beyond being
surprised anymore."
"I rather hope so."
Benjamin had stacks of work waiting in his office, but once again
he gave way to the temptation of just watching. The Eater was moving
at nearly a hundredth the speed of light, an incredible velocity. The
plasma types had given up hope of explaining how its magnetic fields
could withstand the sheer friction of encountering solid matter and
ionizing it.
"Something beyond our present understanding is happening
right before our eyes," Kingsley murmured. "I have almost
gotten used to these routine miracles it performs."
The images coiled into a complex conduit of magnetic fields,
etched out in the brilliant radiance of superheated matter. In a few
moments, it had destroyed a moon, grazing it just right, so that some
matter was sucked in while the majority was thrown away, adding
thrust.
A keening note sounded in the room. A fresh signal, high and
sharp. "It now sends us codes earmarked for audio playing,
once it worked out how our hearing functions," Kingsley
whispered.
"It's… weird. Ugly," Benjamin said.
"I believe a proper translation is that it is singing to 'all
humanity' as part of its payment for our cultural legacy."
Benjamin studied Kingsley's lean profile in the shadows. "It's
like some…"
"We should not impose our categories upon it," Kingsley
said crisply.
"Sounds like you've been listening to the semiotics people
again."
"Just trying to keep an open mind."
"Damn it, to me that stuff sounds like, like…"
"A deranged god, yes."
"Maybe in all that time between the stars, it's gotten
crazy."
"By its own account—one we have received, but it is so
complex the specialists still can't find human referents—it has
endured such passages many millions of times."
"So it says."
Kingsley nodded, a sour sigh of fatigue escaping. "And we
have come to accept what it says."
The semiotics teams had been feeding it vast stores of cultural
information, with some commentary to help it fathom the masses of it.
Most texts, like the Encyclopaedia Britan-nica—still the best
all-round summary of knowledge—were already available in highly
compressed styles. These flowed out and were duly digested.
Material from the sciences encountered no trouble; the intruder
hardly commented upon them, except to remark obliquely on their
"engaging simplicity." Benjamin took this to be an attempt
at a compliment, while others seemed to see it as an insult.
The social sciences came next. These confused the Eater
considerably. It asked many questions that led them back to the
vocabulary lessons. The Eater did not have categories that translated
readily into ethics, aesthetics, or philosophy.
The arts were even harder. It seemed unable to get beyond
pictorial methods that were not nearly photographic; abstractions
it either asked many puzzled questions about or ignored. In this the
Eater seemed to ally with the majority of current popular taste.
"I wonder if it is telling us the truth about anything."
Benjamin mused.
Kingsley's mouth tipped up on one end. "Why would it lie? It
can stamp upon us as if we were insects."
Benjamin nodded and suddenly felt Kingsley as a fellow soldier in
arms, worn by the same incessant pressures.
"Crazy, you said?" Kingsley said distantly. "From
the long times it has spent between the stars? Remember, it has been
alone all its life. Do not think of it as a social being."
"But it asks for social things, our culture."
Kingsley mused silently, watching the orange signature on the
screen creep toward the rim of the gas giant planet, and then said
suddenly, "Crazy? I would rather use an Amercanism,
spooky!"
Benjamin wondered if their speculations had any less foundation
than what the semiotics and social science teams said. "I heard
a biologist talking at the coffee machine the other day. He pointed
out that it may be the only member of its species."
'That makes no sense. We still have no idea how it came to be."
"Something tells me we're going to find out."
"From it?"
"It may not even know."
"Find out from experience, then?"
"Yeah."
The next several hours were as unsettling as anything Benjamin had
ever encountered.
The black hole and its attendant blossom of magnetic flux swooped
in toward the banded crescent. An air of anxious foreboding settled
over the viewers at this meeting between Jupiter—the solar
system's great gas giant, a world that had claimed the bulk of all
the mass that orbited its star—and a hole in space-time that
had the mass of a moon packed into a core the size of a table.
Its trajectory arced down into the vast atmosphere. And in a long,
luminous moment, the Eater drank in a thick slice of the upper
layers, gulping in hydrogen with glowing magnetic talons.
The audience around Benjamin came to life. Gasps and murmurs
filled the room. There were few words and he caught an undertone of
uneasy dread.
The image shifted as the bristling glow followed a long, looping
flyby. To study life-forms that do exist there, it said. It even sent
short spurts of lectures on the forms it found. One of Kingsley's new
aides brought word of these messages, printed out from the
translators, as they came in.
"Look at the detail," Benjamin read at Kingsley's
shoulder. "Balloon life, a thousand kilometers deep into
the cloud deck."
"It is teaching us about our own neighborhood," Kingsley
said.
"Yeah, along with a few remarks about our being unable to do
it."
"Well, that is one rather human trait," Kingsley
remarked sardonically. "Plainly it loves having an audience."
"It's been alone for longer than we've had a civilization."
In the next hour, it compared its findings with similar dives into
other massive worlds it had known.
Data swarmed in. Sliding sheets of information filled screens
throughout the Center. Sighing, Kingsley remarked, "Data is not
knowledge, and certainly it is not wisdom. What does this
mean?"
As they watched through a long, laboring afternoon, the swelling
magnetic blossom dove and gained mass—three times. An enormous,
luminous accretion disk spread out like a circle around it.
Arno appeared before them, gray and shaken. "We have just
registered fresh jets of high-energy emission from it. The
atmospheric entries are over. We have a preliminary determination
of its trajectory."
They all waited through a confused silence. Arno did not seem able
to speak. Then he said, "The… intruder… it has
again picked up speed—and is headed for Earth."
Benjamin bowed his head and realized he had known it all along. He
turned toward Kingsley and in narrowed, apprehensive eyes he saw
the same knowledge.
PART FOUR
THE MAGNETIC HOURGLASS
MAY
1
She had hoped it was Benjamin, home early with the latest news,
but instead the thrumming in the driveway was a package delivery
woman. She opened the package to discover—oh, joy!—that
the Right to Die Society had targeted her with an offer of a
do-it-yourself home suicide kit. The four-color glossy foldout
was lovingly detailed.
Their primary product was the Exit Bag, with its "sturdy
clear plastic sack the size of a garbage bag, a soft elastic
neckband, and Velcro fasteners to ensure a snug fit, plus detailed
instructions for use." Quite a well-done brochure, especially
when one realized that they were not expecting a lot of repeat
business.
She made a special trip out through the garden to throw this into
the trash, heaving it with a grunt of relish. Somehow, in this
age of zero privacy, her illness had become a marketable trait.
Sickies were usually stuck at home, so they could be targeted. She
had hung a chalkboard next to the telephone for messages and when
salesmen called she would run her fingernails across it until they
hung up. Somehow the sound never had irritated her, so she might as
well use the fact to advantage.
She paused in the garden, drawing in the sweet tropical air with
real relish, and just for fun punched Benjamin's dartboard backing.
The slam of her fists into it was no doubt deplorable, primitive,
pointless—and oddly satisfying. The exertion left her panting,
head swimming.
As her reward, the world gave her the growl of a car as it spat
gravel coming down their driveway. She angled over to greet Benjamin
and again it wasn't him. Kingsley unlim-bered from his small sports
car, one of the tiny jobs that flaunted its fuel economy. His frame
was slimly elegant in gray slacks with a flowery Hawaiian shirt.
"I was going by—"
"Never mind, I haven't seen enough of you for days and days,"
she said with a quick fervor that surprised her. Where's that
from?
"I had hoped to catch Benjamin. I'm coming back from an
emergency meeting in Hilo, held in a massive airplane standing on the
runway. It would seem that is the new technique for being
security conscious, control all access." He gave her a crooked
smile. "Good to see you."
"It was more Washington people?"
"And U.N., yes. Lots of frowns, shows of concern, brave
speeches. No ideas, of course."
"Any concrete help?"
"They are hopelessly behind the curve. When confronted with
something genuinely new, the bulk of the U.N. responds on time
scales of years, not hours."
"Is the United States doing any better—really?"
"A bit, but only by standing aside and letting the U Agency
operate. You may recall I had something like that in mind."
"Ah, that Brit modesty again. Most becoming."
During the worldwide panic of the last few days, she had been more
happy than ever to be on the most isolated island chain in the world.
The U Agency had seized access to the Big Island and was buttoning up
the place. The Agency remained mysterious even in action, which
kept the media mavens abuzz but information-starved. As nearly as she
could judge, with some cryptic remarks from Kingsley, it had emerged
as the can-do element in the U.S. government, in collaboration with
various allies. Bureaucratic style favored setting up a new
agency to actually do things, while the older agencies spent time in
turf wars. This stood in the long tradition of the CIA, which begat
the NS A, and onward during the late TwenCen into a plethora of
acronymed "black technology infrastructure" groups, which
then eventually demanded consolidation into the U Agency, with
its larger than purely national agenda. Or so she gathered.
"How's the news?" she said with an attempt at lightness,
ushering him with body language into the garden.
"We made an enormous public relations error in announcing
the time of the Eater's Jupiter rendezvous. I see that now."
"Did we have a choice? Any competent astronomer could
calculate it."
"True, but we could have controlled admittance to the large
telescopes' images. Perhaps even prevented the visual media from
getting close-ups of what it did to Jupiter."
"Don't blame yourself. It would come out—hell, every
amateur with a ten-inch telescope could see the flares."
The later stages of the Eater's devouring had been heralded
by the bright jet behind it, lancing forth like a spear pointed
backward at the troubled crescent of Jupiter.
Kingsley sighed, collapsing into a lounge chair. "And now
everyone wants to know what can it do to Earth."
"And the answer is?"
"As I recall, you first pointed out its ability to scorch our
upper atmosphere. I opened with that and it seemed quite sufficient
to induce panic among the 'advisers' on that airplane."
"Good to know I'm still useful," she said archly.
"They concluded—big surprise here—that we need to
know much more about its thinking and purpose."
"How insightful."
"So the figures from the Air Force and NASA came forward
with a new crash program to integrate the classified technology with
NASA's near-Earth craft."
"Anticipating that it will come that close? I suppose we
could field some potent ships within, say, the distance to the moon."
Kingsley nodded pensively and she could see him thinking, so
she went inside and got some drinks together, including one for
Benjamin when he showed up. When she returned, he was still staring
into space but stirred at her approach. He gulped the wine
cooler gratefully and said, "After some years at this, I've
learned that 'pilot' is a bureaucrat's way of saying two things
at once: "This is but the first,' plus 'we believe it will work,
but…' Still, they committed themselves to outfitting new
ships, both manned and not, ready within weeks."
"Let's hope we don't need them."
"I suspect we all are suffering from an unconscious
fatalism, brought on by weariness—at least on my part. The
policy people, as well."
"They aren't used to confronting something this strange?"
"That may be it. In astronomy, the new is delightful, a
revelation."
"In politics, it's a problem. Makes me wonder what the next
revelation will be."
"I don't think you should be bothering yourself with this,
truly." Kingsley's gaze came back from abstract distance to a
worried focus on her.
"I like it. And what should I be doing, fretting over my
rickety body?"
"It's a fine one, quite worth the attention."
He stood and she turned away toward the flowers, their heady
fragrance. "Don't start."
"I'm only expressing what we both feel."
"No, what you feel. I'm…" She could not think of
the right word.
"Troubled, I know. But I feel radiating from you a need, and
something in me wants to answer it."
His long hands clasped her arms from behind and she bowed her
head, the honeyed air swarming in her nostrils.
His hands were strong, certain, deliberate, and she was the
opposite. "How… how much of this is unfinished
business?"
"From decades ago?"
His voice came softly through the layered air and it helped a
great deal that she could not see him. But the hands remained on her
upper arms, calm and reassuring and altogether welcome.
"Somehow it's not over," she managed to get out.
"When I saw you again, after so long…"
"Me, too."
"I don't believe we're being altogether rotten about this."
She laughed silently, head hanging. "Not so far."
"I didn't mean that. Only that you need support and—"
"And if Benjamin's too busy to give it, you will."
"Someone must."
"Support, that's all?"
He turned her gently with the long, big hands and she tilted her
head up to look into his eyes. They were unreadable. "Maybe
that was one thing I always liked about you, that I couldn't tell
what you were going to say or do."
"And with Benjamin you could."
"Something like that. The lure of the unknown."
"I don't mean anything wholly sexual in this," he said
with an almost schoolboy earnestness.
"I know. I wouldn't do anything like that."
"I'm quite certain not, yes."
She wished she were half as sure as he seemed. She could not
predict what she was going to do these days, or understand why.
"It's emotions here, not actions."
"Yes, yes." He seemed suddenly embarrassed.
"New territory. I've never died before."
"It's… the physicians… they—"
"Pretty damned sure. I've got maybe a few weeks."
"Benjamin knows."
"Some of it. The technical stuff is pretty boring."
"Shouldn't you be under more care?"
"I hate hospitals, and the hospice I stopped by gave me the
creeps."
"But surely—"
"I'm giving in to my personality flaws. Without them I'd have
no personality at all, most days."
He smiled wanly. "Your tongue is as fine as ever."
She kissed him suddenly and just as suddenly broke it off.
He blinked, engagingly flustered. "I scarcely expected…
it would not have been…"
"Appropriate? Right."
"There are levels here…" He was appealingly
awkward.
"Yeah, and me, I'm at one with my duality."
This provoked a grin from him, dispelling his mood. "You're
amazing."
"Just improbable. Side effect of the chem supporters they've
shot me full of."
"Medication?" His eyes widened in alarm.
"A new line of delights. Keeps your metabolism running pretty
flat and steady, just ducky until the whole system crashes. I've got
some embedded chips just below the skin, tasting my blood and
titrating into it some little bags of wonder-drug stuff."
"I think I read something about those."
"The bags they tipped into my upper thighs. They don't even
itch or anything." This was too much detail, she saw.
His hands had lessened their hold and she could sense him
wondering how to get out of this moment. Very delicately, taking
all the time in the world, she kissed him lightly on his uncertain
lips. "Thanks. A gal needs some appreciation."
"More than that."
"Love, if you want. I still love you, in a way I haven't got
the language for. Just having you here is fine, nothing more
expected."
"I knew when I saw you again, knew it instantly."
"So did I."
She leaned down and kissed his right hand. It seemed an infinitely
precious movement, living in a moment carved in the elastic, fragrant
air, as if all life should be fashioned from such passing, exquisite
gestures. An hypnotic illusion, of course, quite possibly the outcome
of titrated solutions doing their chemical work, but absolutely right
at this time, this place.
He dropped his hands and they stood in a quiet glade of the
garden, silent and warm. Then came the spitting of gravel and
Benjamin's car rumbled to a stop in the driveway.
She hung in the long easeful glide away from that jeweled moment,
passing as they all do, clinging to it while Benjamin arrived
and she kissed him. So soon after Kingsley, it felt awkward. Kingsley
retreated to his silent reserve. In the first moments, she felt a
tension between the two men, as though Benjamin sensed something and
did not know how to deal with it. Then he visibly shrugged and
accepted a drink with a wobbly smile.
Benjamin cracked whatever remained of her crystal serenity with
news. The updated determination of the Eater's trajectory confirmed
that it was bound on an accelerating orbit for Earth.
"Unmistakable," Benjamin said firmly as they moved indoors.
"How much time do we have?" Kingsley asked, his voice
full of caution, as though he was still prying himself out of the
last half hour.
"A few weeks, if it continues at its present acceleration."
"Surely it must run out of fuel."
"There are several asteroids it could snag on the way."
"Ah, a chance to learn something more of its processes,"
Kingsley said judiciously.
"Digestion, you mean," Channing said, handing Benjamin
a dark wine cooler.
"Quite so."
"Wish we hadn't named it Eater. The media's, well, eating
it up. Scaring the whole damn world."
Benjamin seemed to come out of some other place, eyes taking in
die garden at last, then her. "How are you?" He put down
the drink and embraced her, his hands on her arms in an eerie echo of
Kingsley's.
"Glad to have my two favorite men here. I needn't suffer in
silence while I can still moan, whimper, and complain."
"Which she never does," Kingsley said gallantly.
"Better living through chemistry," she said lightly,
feeling light in the head as well. "Come, fair swains, ply me
with technobabble."
Which they did.
2
He opened his front door to get the newspaper, gummy-mouthed and
rumpled, and found a camera snout eyeing him from two feet away.
"Just a word, sir, Doctor, about—"
Thus did he discover that he was the target of what he would later
hear termed a "celeb stakeout." He slammed the door hard
and several thoughts rushed by in parallel. Sure, they were just
doing their jobs, all for a public that Really Wanted To Know. But
this was their house. He felt invaded. How was he going to
fetch his newspaper?
He felt a spike of swirling anxiety, his trajectory out of
control. And then a third sensation: a spurt of excitement. People,
millions of them, wanted to know about him. There was a
primitive primate pleasure in being paid attention to. He was
interesting. Tomorrow maybe a hurricane in Florida or a babe
in a scandal would be better, but for today, it was Dr. Benjamin
Knowlton.
This diffuse delight lasted until he and Channing got into the
Center, past a gauntlet of security and media that lengthened by
the day. Only weeks ago the Center had been a comfortable
two-story complex with broad swaths of grass and tropical plants
setting it off. The only visible sign of its purpose had been
the large microwave dishes on nearby hills. Now bare tilt-up walls
framed the buildings, windowless and gray slabs forking into wings.
Not a blade of grass re-mained anywhere; all was mud or "fastcrete,"
the new wonder material.
"Wow." Channing pointed. "They're putting up
another new building."
"One of those prefab jobs, chopper them in and lower the
walls into that fast-dry concrete." Benjamin wondered what fresh
echelon of overseers this heralded.
"We could use more thinking, less managing," Channing
said.
"That Semiotics Group, can I sit in?"
"I think they're inside an 'information firewall,' as the
jargon puts it."
"But how are we going to link the maps of the Eater, which
are sharpening as it approaches, with how it actually works?"
She shook her head wordlessly in the calm way that had come over
her in the last few days. They had given up their daily battle over
her coming into the Center. She would, and that was that.
When he went in alone, she followed in her car. He had toyed with
disabling it and realized that she would simply get a ride some
other, more tiring way.
They went through the newly expanded main foyer. News items
shimmered on big screens, where a crowd of media people watched. Arno
was giving a briefing elsewhere in the complex, his head looming on a
screen here like a luminous world with hyperactive mountain chains
working on it. "Not again," Channing said. "He's up
there every day."
"I think he has to be. The Story of the Millennium, they're
calling it."
She scoffed. "Barely started on the millennium and we're
laying claim to it. And Arno, his talks are like a minibikini,
touching on the essentials but not really covering much."
"That's a talent now, not a lack."
She went into the Semiotics Division hallway and he entered
his new office suite. He had his own foyer—like this morning, a
spurt of delight; he was being paid attention to— from
which radiated prefab, bone white, fluorescent-lit hall-ways and
byways where hundreds of astronomers and data analysts labored.
Within half an hour, the high had dissipated in the usual swamp of
memos, Alert Notices, data dumps, and plain old institutional
noise. These absorbed his morning, but not his attention, which
kept veering off. He suppressed the urge to sit in on the meetings
Channing attended, with her instinct for ferreting out the most
interesting work. He wanted to be in those sessions, both to be with
her and to hear about something other than optical resolution,
luminosities, report summaries, spectra, and fights over 'scope
time. Thus were his days whittled away, with precious few moments to
actually think.
Just before noon he had to take an important issue "up top,"
as the U Agency termed it, and so walked into Kingsley as he stood
before a TV camera, while on a huge wall screen the President of the
United States lounged in a terry-cloth robe, hair wet, with an indoor
swimming pool behind him. A glass of orange juice, half-empty, stood
on a small table and the President's legs were thick with black hair.
Kingsley stood at attention, addressing his remarks to a pointer
mike, his face concentrated. Kingsley's secretary left Benjamin
standing in shadows and he stayed there, suspecting something
afoot. Kingsley had not noticed him, blinded by a brilliant pool of
light with the emblem of the Center behind him. The man knew how
to play to the dramatic. His small staff sat farther away, people new
to the Center who ignored Benjamin. A technician gave the start sign.
The President's warm drawl described how "a swarm of
Searchers is damn near ready to go, so you've got no worry there."
The man was obviously speaking from prepared notes, eyes tracking
left and right as he spoke, but it came over as utterly offhand and
sincere. He deplored the "spreading panic" and was
sorry "that this makes you astronomers' job even harder,"
though—with a chuckle—"now you know what it's like
being in the media fishbowl."
Kingsley said, "Sir, we have doom criers surrounding the
observatories farther up the mountain."
"I thought the island was sealed." A puzzled frown, a
glance off camera.
"These are locals, I fear."
"Then we'll just have 'em rounded up."
"I would appreciate that."
"Want and expect the best of you, Mr. Kingsley." A
flicker of the eyelids. Someone had told him of the slip, but the
President saw no way to correct easily, so just glided on. "You've
been doin' great."
Benjamin had to admit as the conversation went on that Kingsley
was adroit, slick, even amusing. Though British, he easily rode over
the issue of nationality, getting the President and the Pentagon
to promote him as controller of Earth's response to the Eater's
approach. Benjamin stood undetected by Kingsley's staff, who were all
watching the President as though hypnotized. Well, the man did have a
presence, a quality Benjamin knew he would never acquire. That was
why, in a way, he chose a slight pause in the talk to walk straight
onstage, taking a spot next to Kingsley.
"Mr. President—" and he was into a quick
introduction, as though this had all been planned. "Sir, I'm
Benjamin Knowlton, head of Astronomy Division. This is a world
problem, and you can't let it seem as if you're ignoring the rest of
the planet."
A curious glance to the side. "Well, I never intended—"
"No doubt, sir, but that is how it's playing out here. I'm
more in touch with the international astronomical community than
anyone else here, even Kingsley. I know how this is playing among
those we must rely upon for full-sky coverage of the Eater,
continuous contact, and the use of many dozens of telescopes on Earth
and off."
His pulse thumped, he could not quite get enough breath, but he
held his place. One of Kingsley's aides gestured from off camera,
someone whispered, "Get security," but Benjamin
knew—or hoped he did—that Kingsley would not permit the
appearance of disorder here. Pure luck walking in on this, and he had
to go with it.
"I haven't heard anything from State about such trouble."
"This isn't about diplomats, it's about keeping ourselves in
an alliance with others. I had trouble with a German satellite
manager just this morning, demanding that we forward data and images
that they don't have. I receive similar demands every day, and
the voices are getting more strident."
"I'd think, this being science, that you all would share."
The President appeared genuinely puzzled.
"That's how it should work. But this buttoned-up security
posture is a mistake. You can't keep this under wraps—particularly
if it's wrapped in the U.S. flag."
This line seemed to tell. The President blinked and said with
calculated shrewdness, "You have a bargain in mind?"
"Just an idea. How to work it out I leave"—he
could not resist—"to Mr. Kingsley. I believe we should
have shared control of the Mauna Kea facility and the world network
of astronomers. Full disclosure at dedicated Mesh sites. Nothing
held back."
"Nothing?" Plainly the President had never heard of the
idea from any of his staff.
"For the moment, nothing."
"I hear it's not telling us much about what it plans,"
the President said.
"Precisely why it should be safe to reveal it," Kingsley
came in smoothly. "I endorse Dr. Knowlton's proposal."
The President blinked again. "I'll have to think about this.
How come that Arno fellow didn't say anything about it?"
"He thought it best if I—we—proposed it
directly," Benjamin said, looking straight into the camera
in the way he had gathered conveyed sincerity. Very useful,
especially when lying.
"Well, I appreciate your views." The President looked
ready to sign off, in fact raised eyebrows toward someone off camera,
but then said, "Say, you really think they'd do that? The other
astronomers? Cut us off from their data and so on?"
"I do, sir," Benjamin said, and in another second the
President's image dwindled away, like water down a drain.
3
Channing heard about the fracas on the way back from lunch. She
had wondered why Benjamin did not join her, but she was grateful for
the chance to just sit by herself, eat quickly, and leave. The others
in the Semiotics Group knew enough to leave her alone, so she got to
simply lie down on a convenient bed in the infirmary to snag an
hour's delicious nap. When she woke up, he was there.
"I hear you made a name for yourself today," she
murmured sleepily.
He grinned, obviously on a high. "Ah, but what name's that?"
" 'Bastard,' I overheard that. Also 'maniac' and 'amateur.'
"
"You've been listening to U Agency types."
"Not entirely, but yes—they talk more than
astronomers."
"Kingsley was frosty after we went off the air. I was amazed
that he recovered fast enough not to appear provoked, to just
stand there while I went on."
"His job—and yours—depends on Washington's
confidence in him."
"Sure, but then to endorse my idea—that was amazing."
"We talked about these issues only last night."
"Sure, but that was dinner conversation."
"Kingsley wasn't saying anything like that to the President,
then?"
"Not at all. I'm afraid he'll try to get even now."
"Kingsley? Not his style."
"He's not a saint. Look, in your NASA days, you'd have done
the same."
"I don't get even, I get odder." She liked the small
smile he gave her at the joke, an old one but serviceable enough to
break the tension she felt in him.
"Come on. Arno called me in, and I'd like you there."
"Sure, I'm all slept out," though she wasn't.
The virtue of scientists lay principally in their curiosity. It
could overcome hastily imposed U Agency management structures with
ease. Fresh data trumped or bypassed the arteriosclerotic pyramids of
power and information flow the Agency had erected, all quite
automatically, following its standard crisis-management directives.
Kingsley understood quite well the habits of mind that advanced,
classified research followed, though he had given few hints
about how he had acquired the knowledge.
Standard security regulation used strict separation of functions,
at times keeping the right hand from even knowing there was a
left hand. The Manhattan Project had been the historically honored
example of this approach, dividing each element of the A-bomb problem
from the other, with transmission only on a Need to Know basis.
Historians of science now believed that bomb production had been
delayed about a year by this method. Under a more open strategy, the
United States could have used bombs against Berlin, perhaps
destroying the German regime from the air rather than on the ground.
This might have kept the U.S.S.R. out of Europe altogether, vastly
altering the Cold War that followed. Bureaucracy mattered. It irked
scientists, but it shaped history.
Astronomy defeated even this outdated compartmenting method. The
entire science depended upon telescopes that could peer at vastly
different wavelengths, spread over a spectrum from the low radio to
gamma rays, a factor in wavelength of a million billion. Seldom could
an astronomical object be understood without seeing it throughout
much of this huge range.
As well, the habits of mind that astronomers brought to the Eater
would not stop at a wavelength barrier. To understand the
steadily deepening radio maps, for example, demanded spectra in
the optical or X-ray ranges. Astronomy was integrative and could not
be atomized. This fact—as much as Benjamin's walking into "a
presidential conversation that took me days to
organize!"—brought Arno to a rare fit of anger.
The first part of the meeting was predictable, and Channing found
herself nodding off. She reprimanded herself, whispering to a
concerned Kingsley that it was like dozing at a bullfight, but in
fact Arno could do nothing but bluster about Benjamin's intervention.
The President was considering his proposal, and that was that.
No amount of U Agency tweaking could put the horse back in the barn.
Still, Benjamin had been doing more—sending needed
information to groups outside the Center.
"I hold you responsible for these leaks, Knowlton," Arno
finished his military-style dressing-down, smacking a palm onto the
desk he sat upon.
" 'Leaks'? My people are merging their different views to
make sense out of them," Benjamin said, looking rather
surprised at how calm he had remained in the face of a
five-minute monologue.
"We can't have it."
Kingsley at last said something, waiting until the right moment.
"I believe we have a fundamental misunderstanding here,
friends. The Eater is perhaps a week or two away. No one with the
slightest sense of proportion will sequester data that might help us
deal with it, once it has arrived."
'That's not the way we work here," Arno said, pausing between
each word.
"Then it must become so," Kingsley said amiably.
"I'm going farther up the chain on this," Arno said
darkly.
"I'm afraid we have already done that," Kingsley said.
She saw suddenly that Kingsley had played this exactly right, yet
again maneuvering with an intuitive skill that could not be
conscious. Benjamin's move, which he obviously had been
pondering for days and yet had not revealed to her, was deliberate
and risky. But Benjamin was like Salieri playing alongside Kingsley's
Mozart. Already Kingsley had co-opted Benjamin's point and used it
against Arno, a triumph that would undoubtedly echo in the echelons
back in Washington.
She returned to the Semiotics Group meeting and Benjamin came
along. "Done enough for today," he said affably. "You
guys are having better ideas. I might as well hear them."
Perhaps so, she told him, though some people, even in NASA, were
showing the strain, carried away by the majesty of the Eater and its
beautiful disk. "A higher form of life, virtually a god,"
one of them had said at a coffee break.
"I hope that doesn't catch on," Benjamin said.
On their way, they passed through the main foyer. At its new high
speed, the Eater would reach Earth within an estimated time that
kept changing as it encountered fresh mass to ingest. Tracking its
velocity, a digital clock now loomed over the tallest wall of the
foyer. It had begun ticking down the time remaining. One of the media
sorts had already dubbed it the Doomsday Clock. Benjamin grimaced.
Beside it, feeds from observatories gave views of the magnetic
labyrinth and its plasma clouds.
They settled into seats in the back row and listened to arguments
about how to best communicate, negotiate, and placate the Eater. She
was still impressed by the fact that any understanding could pass
between entities of such different basic substrata: a magnetically
shaped plasma talking to walking packets of water. The specialists
argued that this was possible because there were general templates
for organizing intelligence.
This must be true in a very sweeping way, a woman from Stanford
argued. Scientists often congratulated themselves on having figured
out how the universe worked, as if it were following our logic. But
in fact humans had evolved out of the universe, and so fit it well.
Our minds had been conditioned by brutal evolution to methods of
understanding that worked finely enough to keep us alive, at least
long enough to reproduce. Some ancient ancestor had found the
supposedly simple things of life—how to move, find food,
evade predators—enormously complicated and hard to remember.
Such an ancestor faded from the gene pool, selected against by the
rough rub of chance. We had descended from ancestors who found
beauty in nature, a sense of the inevitable logic and purity in its
design.
Intelligence reflected the universe's own designs, and so had
similar patterns, even though arising in very different physical
forms. This view emerged as she and Benjamin watched, until one
grizzled type from the University of California at Irvine
remarked, "Yeah, but the animals are a lot like us, too, and
look at how we treat them."
Benjamin asked ironically, "You mean we should not expect
it to share our view of our own importance?"
The gray-bearded man nodded. "Or our morality. That's an
evolved system of ideas, and this thing is utterly asocial. It's a
loner."
Benjamin seemed commendably unembarrassed to speak among
specialists in a field he did not know. She admired his courage, then
realized that if the detailed talk she had heard here before could
not be translated into something others could comprehend, it would be
useless in the days ahead.
Benjamin asked, "Cooperation with others of its kind never
happened, as far as we can tell. The latest transmissions from
it say that it was made by a very early, intelligent civilization
whose planet was being chewed up by the black hole. They managed to
download their own culture into it, translating into magnetic
information stored in waves."
This sent a rustle through the room. Benjamin leaned toward her
and whispered, "Just as I thought. This firewall security system
has kept a lot away from the guys who actually need it."
His revelation provoked quick reactions, which Benjamin fielded
easily. It was very big news and he enjoyed delivering it in an
offhand way.
Now she understood why he had come here. He was still on the move,
steering through treacherous waters nobody knew. She felt a burst of
love for him, and to her surprise, fresh respect. "Go get 'em,
tiger."
"What else can you tell us?" the graybeard asked.
Benjamin plunged in. Sure enough, some important Eater messages
had either not gotten through, or were distorted. "Experts with
an axe to grind, putting their own spin in." Benjamin summed it
up.
The discussion turned into just the sort of free-for-all she had
missed so far among the rather stiff semiotics gang. She turned over
the issues as others with more energy attacked them, and somehow the
ideas mingled with a vaguely forming plan of her own.
This being had lived longer than the Earth had existed. To it, a
million years would be like a day in a human life. She tried to think
how it would view life-forms anchored on planets. Mayflies.
Whole generations would pass as flashes of lightning, momentarily
illuminating their tiny landscapes. Eons would stream by,
civilizations on the march like characters in some larger drama
witnessed only by the truly long-lived. Birth, death, and all agonies
in between—these would merge into a simultaneous whole. Rather
than a static snapshot, such a being could see a smear of lives as a
canvas backdrop to the stately pace of a galaxy on the move,
turning like a pinwheel in the great night. Whole species would be
the players then, blossoming momentarily for the delectation of vast,
slow entities beyond understanding.
Compared to it, humans were passing ephemerals. To a baby, a year
was like a lifetime because it was his lifetime, so far. By
age ten, the next year was only a 10 percent increase in his
store of years. At a hundred, time ticked ten times faster still. She
tried to imagine living to a thousand, when a year would have the
impact of a few hours in such a roomy life. Now multiply this
effect by another factor of a million, she mused.
She wondered if anyone was paying attention to the Eater's own
artworks, beamed down in compressed digital packets. It had remarked,
THE TRUE STATE OF SUCH RESULTANTS RESIDES IN MY
FIELD STRUCTURES. I SEND ONLY NUMERICAL ANALOGS.
What would its creations say to them if they could be seen in
their natural form?
4
He got used to the media onslaught within a day or two, then
irritated, then bored.
Not that he was, as one reporter archly termed it, "seriously
famous," but he did have his head bashed by swinging TV cameras,
got chased down an alley, backed into a corner, all with the sound
effects: questions barked, name called, bystanders' applause and
boos—all got to be like the weather whenever he left a
building. "Over here, Dr. Knowlton, look this way!"
Dimly he realized what was so fundamentally misguided about liking
that sort of attention. He was allowing them to define who he was,
whether he was worthwhile. The media meat grinder ate and also
excreted.
When public pronouncements shifted to the ever-adept Kingsley and
to other, more distant members of the Executive Committee, some
of the zip went out of it. There were still big crowds at the fences
and gates when he went to an ExComm meeting, but it was oddly irksome
when he got out of a limousine to hear the paparazzi shout, "Who
is it? Who's that? Oh, it's nobody. Only Knowlton."
He had gotten lulled into the feeling that somehow he controlled
the lurching beast, just with the sound of his voice. He tried to
speak clearly, exactly at first, then found that the hectoring
pundits wanted answers to sensational questions, and were miffed if
they didn't get an emotional expressiveness.
When he saw the sound snippets they cut his remarks into, he
wondered if perhaps there was indeed some truth to the old
superstition that having your picture taken let the camera rob a
piece of-your soul.
"Pity the people who are looking at this story through such
distorting lenses," Channing had said. The Center personnel,
sheltered behind regiments of security, barely got a glimpse of the
chaos pervading the planet.
What Benjamin did see revealed the unreality of the experience
for others. The world was so media-saturated, so shaped toward
capturing eyeballs rather than merely carrying information, that
the unfolding events were experienced as theater, a show. Politics
had long ago become primarily performance, and now even the supposed
elite—ministers and professors, pundits and prophets—alike
wanted the same commodity: audience, attention.
DANGER FROM SPACE! SEE IT ALL RIGHT
HERE
MILLIONS DIE?—AND YOU'LL KNOW WHY.
He grudgingly appeared on a panel discussion for World
Tonight, featuring supposedly learned commentary. One part of
the show was called "The Cultural Critic Corner."
"The Eater has become not so much a thing to think of,
but to think with," the fabulous-looking woman said. "A
figure in constant symbolic motion, shuttling in our collective
unconscious between science and fantasy, nature and culture, the
image of the other and a mirror of the self." He shook his head
and without warning found himself in an argument using terms he did
not know. By the end of it, he was determined that he would
never do that again.
Kingsley had a far better on-camera presence. He remarked to
Channing and Benjamin, over lunch at the Center cafeteria,
"Governments always wish to be reassuring. We have to tell the
truth while suppressing panic, and I do what I can."
"A stylish Brit accent helps," Channing said, poking at
a salad. "Evokes authority."
"Sure," Benjamin said. "Look at our own Beltway
Empire. The Department of Health and Human Services deals more
with sickness than health. The Department of Energy spends more on
nuclear weapons than on energy. The Department of Defense was
meant to wage war."
Kingsley said, "If necessary, DoD will always add. And your
classic American strategy was to defend itself in somebody
else's country."
"Only here, it's the whole planet," Channing added. "You
think it's going to come close?"
"To Earth, you mean?" She knew Kingsley disliked being
put on the spot so plainly, but he fielded it nicely, looking
unworried. "It caught another asteroid early this morning.
Latest orbitals say it will be here within fifteen days."
"The Searchers got anything new?" Benjamin asked, his
high, raw voice giving away his uneasiness.
"Better interior definition, some spectra."
"Any chance we could talk it into stopping at, say, the
moon?" Channing asked.
"It fails to respond to all such discussions."
"Ummm. God doesn't answer His mail."
But then abruptly it did.
An hour later Kingsley sought out Benjamin and Channing and
hurried them to his office. "It's readily responding to a whole
class of questions. More about where it came from originally, for
one."
They stared at the message on his screen.
ONCE LONG AGO IT WAS A MERE NATURAL SINGULARITY.
A MINOR REMNANT OF SOME EARLY ASTROPHYSICAL EVENT. PERHAPS A
FRACTIONAL REMNANT OF A SUPERNOVA. THEN BY ACCIDENT THIS OBJECT,
WHICH IS NOW MY PRESENT CORE, TUNNELED THROUGH THE PLANET OF AN
ANCIENT CIVILIZATION.
Amy had come in while they talked. She had been away for days,
working with specialists elsewhere in integrating the tight, highly
secure communications network the U Agency was putting in place among
astronomers around the world. Kingsley was effusively glad to see her
back. She studied the message and said, "It could then orbit in
and out of the planet. Along its path some rock would fall into the
hole, releasing explosive energy."
"How much?" Kingsley asked.
"Maybe ten percent of the MC
2, with M the
infalling matter at a rate…" She scribbled a moment.
"It's a traveling, continuous hydrogen bomb."
Channing said with a jerky lightness, "Not in My Backyard
with a vengeance. The residents would have very little time to react
before the entire planet was a wreck."
Benjamin said slowly, "At that rate, blowing a huge tunnel
through the world, there would be immediate seismic damage all over
the globe."
"Ask it what happened," Amy said.
THAT SOCIETY SAW THAT THE ONLY WAY TO PRESERVE
IT-SELF WAS TO DEPOSIT SOME FRACTION OF THEY-SELF INTO
REPRESENTATIONS. THIS DONE, THESE RECORDINGS THEY EMBEDDED IN THE
MAGNETIC HALO OF THE PECULIARITY THAT IS MY CENTER. THAT OLDEST
CIVILIZATION IS TERMED THE OLD ONE. IT INVENTED THE PROCESS AND
RESIDES WITHIN THE LARGER IT.
Kingsley remarked, "Notice how it sometimes refers to itself
in a neutral manner, as 'it' and elsewhere, its parts as 'the disk'
and 'field repositories,' whatever they might be— all rather
than using a possessive."
Channing said, "I guess a semiotics type would say that those
are too 'primate-centered constructions' for it to comfortably
use."
They asked more and with some delay—the Eater was beaming
down unintelligible 'cultural' data—a later transmission
seemed to answer their questions.
THESE PATTERNS STILL LIVE AS MAGNETIC WAVES,
PROPAGATING IN COMPLEX PATTERNS THROUGHOUT MY NIMBUS OF FIELDS. WITH
AGE AND MUCH TIME THE PERSONALITIES SO EMBEDDED GAINED CONTROL OVER
THE MASS FLOWING INTO THE HOLE. THEY-SELVES USED THIS TO ERECT THE
GUIDING JETS OF ENFLAMED MATTER. THIS MADE THE OLD ONE A VOYAGER. IT
VENTURED INTO THE SPACES BETWEEN THE SUNS IN PURSUIT OF KNOWLEDGE AND
DIVERSITY. NEAR OTHER STARS IT FOUND WORLDS WITH LIFE. AT SOME IT
COULD TRANSFIX FORMS OF LIVING INTELLIGENCES. THESE JOYOUSLY ADDED TO
THE WEALTH OF THE HALO AS THEY WERE GATHERED UP. SLOWLY GREW THE
ABILITY TO MANIPULATE THE MAGNETIC FLUXES EVER MORE ARTFULLY FROM THE
FLAMING DISK THAT RIMS THE SINGULARITY. IN TIME, THE MANY PERSONAE
INHABITED AND ENLARGED THE GATHERING ABUNDANCE/FULLNESS OF WHAT HAD
ONCE BEEN CRUDE MASS AND GEOMETRY, WITHOUT IMPORT OR PROSPECT.
"Read it twice," Kingsley said. "Its linguistic
range has grown enormously and there are subtleties here."
Benjamin did not challenge the implied authority in Kingsley's
voice. These matters were certainly beyond his own range. Nobody was
an expert here. In the silence of the office, he said, "And this
has been going on for nearly eight billion years."
Channing said thoughtfully, "Maybe this explains the Fermi
Paradox? Why we have had no visiting aliens, and hear none in the
radio bands of the galaxy?"
Benjamin nodded. "They've been… eaten."
"That may be an implication, admittedly," Kingsley
allowed. "It does not
say that it simply swallows
civilizations."
Benjamin said, "It records them."
"In some sense we cannot imagine right now," Kingsley
said.
"You made the basic point weeks ago," Benjamin said.
"That if it slammed into the Earth the collision with solid
matter would strip away the magnetic field structures around it."
"Kill the Eater itself," Channing said. 'That's
reassuring."
"So how does it 'gather up' intelligences?" Benjamin
asked.
Kingsley said in measured tones, "I do not believe we wish to
discover that."
5
Long before now, as her strength had waned, dinner and a movie had
become takeout and a video. She had to get away from the Eater for a
bit, so she went home early and fell into a familiar crevasse of her
own interior. So many different flavors of depression to choose from!
Gray existential despair, fruity sorrows of remembered childhood,
dimly sensed wrongs done to people now dead, the sobering sadness
that made life seem to be mostly burdens: phone calls, chores,
tedious newspapers wide-eyed with Eater news and views, mostly the
latter by people who knew no astrophysics.
Losing your mind, like losing your car keys, she found to be a
hassle. It was also ridiculous.
Why don't you just get up?
her no-nonsense self would ask and, stupidly, she still just
idiotically lay there. She had once done skydiving. It had been
easier to crawl along a strut toward a plane's wingtip against an
eighty-mile-an-hour wind at eight thousand feet than to get out
of bed
right now.
Drugs helped. She did well with "selective
serotonin-re-uptake inhibitors," an endless parade of chemical
adjustments known only by their acronyms, since no human could
remember their true names, or would want to. Handling her "bodily
management" was tricky, especially the drains, especially
with the cheerleading nurse they sent around: "Serosanguinous
fluid, very good!"
So the unholy ghost of depression had come again, turning her
into a zombie who could not read or turn on the 3-D or lift the phone
to call for help. Benjamin worked late and she drifted. She got angry
at him for his absence, even though she understood it. Then she came
to appreciate the time to herself. Time to get down to the Self at
last.
Some nerves once scraped raw now felt cloaked in lead. She had
read up on depression, of course, the eternal student's
conviction that learning would bring wisdom, or a solution. But
it was no help to be told that mildly depressed people were actually
more realistic than happy people, had a more balanced view. The happy
really
were mindless, believing all sorts of positive,
self-enhancing illusions.
So her sense of menacing sadness was at least genuine. How
reassuring.
So she lay in the moist, fragrant tropical gloom and listened
to the idiot, joyful insects celebrate the coming of night and
thought of what she had to celebrate. Not much. Hard to live in the
joy of the moment when the moments were getting few.
But she was nurturing an idea and that helped.
So much to do.
In the end, that made her get up and use the computer in her home
office. The sheets of e-mail tags she ignored, hunting down
information on cerebral theory, data-stacking technology, and
advanced research in recent review papers, their language so tangled
that she could scarcely read the abstracts.
She had become fascinated by the "sculptures" the Eater
had transmitted. After a hurried glance at them in two-dimensional
slices—the Eater's preferred mode of data packing, for
reasons unexplained by it or anyone—the semioticists had rushed
on to the more intensive later transmissions. As the night
deepened, she used the Executive Committee's worldwide preemption of
computer meshes to make full-scale holograms of the alien art. She
had at her command dozens of cyber-aces and used them ruthlessly.
They pressed into service vast complexes of parallel processing
arrays. The U Agency certainly knew how to muster the troops, she
thought, as enormous data files flickered across her screen. It was
hard work, but in the middle of it she suddenly noticed that her
depression had evaporated.
6
Benjamin was preparing to weave his weary way home when Channing
came through the door of his section, looking downright brisk. He was
so startled that her quick, efficient kiss left him blinking as she
swept on. "Got to use the rep chamber," she called back to
him airily.
He finished a small job that had a deadline well past, then
hurried after her. The representation chamber was a new cyber-marvel
assembled by a U Agency team to give full, all-surround images. They
were using it to project images of the Eater from every spectral
band, so that one could get the illusion of walking through its
magnetic realms.
When he came in, though, Channing was standing at the center and
he could not make sense of what surrounded her. Slithering,
glistening bodies worked through a soupy air, in pirouettes and
glides like dancing, swimming birds.
Then, with no transition he could catch, the shapes changed to
craggy wedges of enameled light. These contorted into shapes
whose outline he could grasp without comprehending for a moment what
they were. He had the distinct sensation of seeing something the
wrong way around, like one of those black-and-white optical illusions
that can suddenly jump from being an old crone seen in outline
to a vase. Here, though, the effect did not snap back and forth
between two simple choices. The shapes would jolt into something
else, like a miniature misshapen tree suddenly becoming an animal
with two necks, then a machine moving on beams of light, then a
wrenched, pale building that extruded layers of rooms, each lit by
what seemed like purple fires.
All this happened just fast enough for him to grasp a fleeting
feel for what was revealed, and then the shapes would strain and
wring into something else, on and on in an endless parade of
strangeness. They did not repeat while he watched. Each shape
followed its own patterns.
Channing was wandering inside the 3-D representations. Among their
uncanny beauties, her face glowed with an expression he could
not read. She reached up into the air, alive with holographic color
and mass, and caressed the images.
He called to her across the darkened image-pit, but she did not
respond. He felt a rising tension in him, something straining, and a
blinding headache descended like a veil. He had to leave. Worry
creased his face as he wobbled down the corridor outside. The
headache settled into his eyes with a piercing pain.
He downed four aspirin as Kingsley came through the door of his
office, quickly closed it, and went without a word to Benjamin's
screen console. "What's up?" Benjamin asked raggedly. This
was like no headache he had ever suffered. He could not seem to get
his eyes to behave right, as though they were receiving instructions
from a different part of his brain.
"In the middle of a rather ordinary transmission, it ceased
sending, then sent this."
IT-SELF NOW DECIDES TO HARVEST REMNANTS OF
YOU-SELVES. IT SENDS NOW INSTRUCTIONS OF HOW TO COMPLY. REMNANTS
SHALL BE IMPACTED IN PLACE.
Benjamin read as rapidly as his vision would allow. Pages of
instructions. With each revelation he gave a grunt of amazement.
Kingsley said nothing, pacing back and forth before the desk, looking
firmly at the carpet. Kingsley's blue shirt and pale brown suit were
rumpled and creased, as though he had been sleeping in his clothes.
"It's all there. Very clear, clear indeed," Kingsley
said abruptly. "It is coming to 'harvest' us as a species. It
demands a hundred thousand people, sacrificed and uploaded into
digital form to transmit by microwave."
"Good grief. How?"
"It will translate them into 'magnetic selves' to form a
'company of their selfkind,' it says."
Benjamin asked hollowly, "
That's why it came?"
"Apparently. It has said before that it suffers from
something like outright boredom, though it does not use that
term."
"I don't think we can even do this…"
"It says that since we have the 'minimum requirement'—
computers, digitization—then it can teach us the rest."
"How convenient for us." Benjamin tried to get his mind
around what the Eater might mean. "All to be part of some kind
of… 'company'?"
"For its library, I suspect. Or museum. Or zoo."
"Someplace it can go and, uh, put up its feet and…"
"Read people like books? As good an analogy as any, I
suppose."
"It doesn't say?"
There was more from the Eater, sheets of technical description.
"It will make of them these 'remnants,' I gather."
" 'Remnants'? Meaning the rest of us will be gone? Dead?"
"I believe it sees us all as ephemeral. A 'remnant' would be
kept for its own uses for far longer than we would live."
"Or for as long as it found the remnant interesting,"
Benjamin mused.
Kingsley turned suddenly and faced Benjamin across his messy desk.
"I haven't talked to anyone else about this. Arno will get it
within minutes and will come running to us in a pure blind panic."
"And he'll want to know what to do," Benjamin said with
a sinking resignation. Though the Center now housed whole battalions
of specialists and there was surely no shortage of opinions to be
had, the pace of events was too rapid to allow much to filter up from
below. He and Kingsley would have to have opinions, plans, and
options about this.
Kingsley said in a weary gray voice, "And I have not a clue
what to say."
"This is for the politicos."
"I do hope so. They are not at their best when required to
act quickly."
"We can't comply, of course."
"I wish I understood quite why." Kingsley frowned.
"Muslim, Buddhist… Completely contrary to my instinct,
the world's religions appear to agree with you. And I do not know
why."
"I believe they're stunned. Aren't we?"
"I am, at least. I would think they'd be more concerned for
the mass, the flock, than the individual."
He chuckled. "I can't explain it. Maybe it's just that being
stunned can bring out deep responses. This feels to me to have come
from someplace nobody knew."
"Because no society has faced anything remotely like this
before."
"Maybe in the Old Testament. I never finished reading it. The
size of
War and Peace."
He allowed himself a small grin. "It might fancy a
comparison with Jehovah."
"That stilted tone is its way of imitating our ancient voice
of authority?"
"I meant more than it merely using a tactic. Perhaps the way
to get a grasp of matters is that it may be playing a role, but
primarily for itself. It transcends any notion we might have of being
self-involved."
"Or it could be adopting a mode that worked before. Maybe it
thinks of us as a species it knows about. Or a genera. Order.
Kingdom—that's the highest biological class, isn't it?"
He was lost in thought. "So it may well have a policy,
then—based solely upon its classifying of us—regarding
what to do if we fail to comply."
"I hope it won't come to that."
Kingsley's face seemed to sharpen harshly, his chin drawing
down in derision. "Note the tone of address it uses."
"Yeah, that's an order, all right."
"One we must obey," Channing said. They both turned in
surprise. She had slipped through the door without their noticing.
"What?" Benjamin demanded. "Why?"
"Something I can't explain, but from what I just saw…"
Her voice drained away and she seemed lost in thought.
"I cannot imagine that we would subject people to such a
thing," Kingsley said with crisp dignity.
"I can't imagine we won't," Channing said, her voice so
serene and mild and certain that it sent a chill through Benjamin.
PART FIVE
A THINKING THING
JUNE
1
In her purse lurked her neuroses writ small. Survival-ist
provisions like chocolate bars and breath mints, nail polish and
Kleenexes, Chap Sticks and thread and a palm computer and a wrinkled
notebook and assorted pens: yellow, blue, black. She also had taken
lately to hoarding: unpaired gloves, broken eyeglass frames, bits of
tape and twine. Peering in, she felt as if she gazed into her
unconscious, where dark objects conspired with painful memories.
She had retreated to ever-larger purses roughly at the time she was
diagnosed. Before she had used briefcases or book bags, the
businesslike approach of a woman who no longer announced that she
carried her house on her back. Yet she still associated purses with
her mother's generation: solid, sure, but also awkwardly dressed and
uptight, clunky and a bit out of it. The purse's shadowy collective
unconscious now prompted her with fragments of her past selves. It
reeked of pruderies and fears, anxieties hidden from the world but
carried everywhere, like a Freudian fanny-pack.
She used this bulky brown satchel to keep herself afloat at the
Center. She could hide her medication and carry it with her, and when
a nurse came to administer the more difficult injections, she could
use Benjamin's spacious office, with its little "executive
alcoves" for deal-making away from the main room of walnut desk
and Big Screen Comm Center. When Benjamin or Kingsley—the only
people who took much notice of her, luckily, in the hubbub—protested
that she should be home working, she quoted Einstein: "Only a
monomaniac gets anything done."
"All too true," Kingsley said somberly, his luminous
eyes looming over his slender, lined face. "You're…
looking well."
She had an urge to laugh at his obvious struggle to find a
remotely plausible compliment, but suppressed it. "You're a
dear, dear liar." She kissed him lightly, a satisfying soft
smack.
To her surprise, this flustered him. To smooth matters over, she
went with him for a coffee and deliberately chose one of the
high-octane variety named Kaff. He looked troubled most of the
time now, but her choice made him frown further. "Should you be,
well—"
"Taking in caffeine? Mendenham says not to, but my body says,
'Either gimme some or lie down.' "
"A demanding body."
"You should know."
Again he startled her by blushing. "I believe I can recall,"
he managed.
"As the prospect of having much more of it fades, I live in
my sensual past." Teasing him was unfair, but the world was not
exactly packed full of fun lately, and she needed the ego boost. So
she rationalized as she watched him put his composure back on.
She could even see it happening in his face, mouth getting resolute
again. Under the pressure here, maybe his barrier against facial
giveaways was falling.
"You have every right to," came out judiciously phrased.
"If there's anything—"
"A lot, but it's probably immoral or something. Content me by
telling me the gossip."
This put him on his favorite ground, the slightly disguised
lecture. The great game now was not astrophysics but amateur
alien psychology. "The creature going on obliviously, chattering
about all sorts of things, as if we are all waiting here for its
orders."
"And we aren't?"
"The leadership is saying and doing nothing."
"They've had two days to think it over—"
"My dear, this is a matter for the entire world. In two days,
they cannot agree on the color of blue."
"They'd better hurry."
"There's mildly good news there. It's braking."
"Ah, good. How?"
"Only an astronomer would make that her first question."
He grinned and for a quick moment some of the old joy brimmed between
them. "Most would want to know how many more days that gives us,
which is perhaps now fifteen in all. To answer how—through
a forward-pointing jet, quite powerful. Apparently it found fresh
quarry and has extended this jet, anchoring it firmly with magnetic
flux ropes in a helical pattern. That funnels and ejects hot matter
from its accretion disk."
The coffee had given her enough energy to be incredulous.
"That's slowing it enough?"
"I know, a simple calculation shows that slowing a mass
exceeding our moon's, down from a velocity of hundreds of kilometers
a second is, well, an incredible demand."
"It's an incredible creature. What's it say about
this?"
"Its deceleration? Nothing. Not one to give way to Proustian
introspection, it seems."
"Skip the literature. I'll settle for hearing how it does the
jet trick."
"Understanding how it thinks is now critical, I gather."
"Sure, right after we understand how we think."
"Touche. It did refer to Proust the other day, I saw.
Something about his understanding of time being what one would
expect of 'doomed intelligences,' I believe the phrase was."
"Well, as a fellow doomed intelligence, I agree. Never could
abide Proust, anyway."
"Nor I. Its transmissions are fascinating stuff and I look in
on them when I can."
"I should, too," she said distantly.
"It's sending masses of stuff, a million words a day."
Too casually he looked at her hands, which were fidgeting—and
not due to the Kaff. "I gather you have been looking at its own
inventory of art."
"Ummm, yes. It appended a note saying that these were
representative works from other members of our class."
He frowned. " 'Class'? As technological civilizations?"
"No, as what it called 'dreaming vertebrates.' With the
implication that our class is fairly common."
"Good Lord. I wonder if those working out its orders know
that. I'll have to tell them."
"Orders?"
"Oh yes, it has a menu and proceeds to order up whatever it
fancies."
"From what? Our broadcast media?"
"And references such as the Encyclopaedia. Still having a bit
of trouble keeping straight that people pass from the scene so
quickly. Or else thinks we're somehow hiding them away still."
"Who does it want?"
"Artists, scientists, sports figures. It caught transmissions
from decades past as it approached our solar system. It even sends
the pictures of those it wants. Lauren Bacall, Einstein, Bob Dylan,
Gandhi, Esther Dyson, Jack Nicholson, and Hillary Clinton, as I
remember."
She felt a chill then at the reality of what was coming at them
across the solar system. "Good… grief."
"Yes, imagine the feelings of those on the list."
"They've been told?"
"It would seem. Of course many are dead, but others are now
near death. Arno wondered aloud if any would be willing to, you know,
give up the remainder of their lives"—he shrugged, eyes
rolling skyward—"for humanity and so on."
"To… copy… them." The word was hard to get
out.
"It has already sent 'helpful additions' to our computing and
other technologies that it says will permit us to 'read' a good deal
of the memory stored in brains. Seems incredible to me."
"It… wants all the person?"
"So I gather." He looked at her quizzically.
"Why should we do it?"
"It does not need to brag about its threatening abilities, of
course. Apparently brute intimidation has worked before."
"We all judge from our experience," she said lightly.
"What does this tell us about other intelligent life in the
galaxy?"
"They must have complied, I suppose, else it would not think
this a winning strategy."
"Something about the idea gets me in my, well, my gut."
"Me, too. In terms of game theory, doing a cost-benefit sort
of analysis—"
She chuckled loudly. Kingsley stopped, blinked. "You think
I'm off the mark."
" 'Applying game theory'—that's the kind of idea only
an intellectual would believe. This is a gut issue."
Ruefully he tried to share in the humor of it, managing a thin
smile. "I suppose I betray my origins."
"You may think that way, but I'll bet ordinary people sure
don't."
He nodded energetically. "I think you're dead-on right."
"To deal in people this way is as profound an insult as I can
imagine."
"Ummm. Perhaps this hints at what we should call a fate worse
than death?"
"How are people reacting?"
He sighed with gray exasperation. "Those above are dithering,
terrified. News has gotten out, of course. Arno tried to see that all
radio telescopes that could pick up the Eater's transmissions were in
our control, but that notion failed immediately."
"Too many?"
"Far too many. A small dish with superior software in Sri
Lanka picked up the vital part of the story. The Eater sent it
several times in different terminology, apparently to be sure it was
understood."
Benjamin came by, saw them, and hurried over. "Been looking
for you both. Come on. You can watch in my office."
From his tight-mouthed expression she could read that the morning
had not gone well. She labored up from her chair. "More trouble
with Arno?"
"He's trying to find scapegoats for the leaks."
"This place is a sieve, in any case," Kingsley said
amiably, unconcerned, as they both slowed to her pace.
'The Sri Lanka was bad enough, but somebody's letting other stuff
get out," Benjamin said as they entered his office. Two
assistants waved for his attention, but he in turn waved them away.
Something had toughened in him in all this and he seemed more assured
than he had ever been. She was proud of him, especially when she saw
the strain on the faces of Center personnel. Benjamin's expression
was un-lined, though intent.
He punched up the international news—not difficult, since
channels carried virtually nothing else since the Eater had left
Jupiter space. "What's the reaction?" Channing asked,
sinking into a form-fitting chair that clasped her in its leathery
embrace.
"Horror," Benjamin said. "Here—"
They watched reaction shots from some of those 'ordered up' on the
Eater's menu. After the third one, her attention drifted and she let
events slide by for a while. When she came back, there was the news
Benjamin had brought them in for.
Some totalitarian governments had started to comply. Footage of
people rounded up—criminals, the politically out of favor—and
being herded away.
"To have their brains sliced-and-diced and uploaded into
computers," Benjamin said. "Incredible."
"And the bastards in charge are claiming to do it for the
benefit of all mankind," Kingsley said.
"Transparent," Benjamin said with disgust.
The twenty-first century had no lack of dictators. In the crush of
populations among the tropical nations particularly, the strongman
promises of order and equal shares, though seldom fulfilled, found a
ready audience.
"They know their unsavory reputations," Kingsley
observed, "and this move allows them to appear as
benefactors of humanity while consolidating internal power. Rather
neat, overall."
Another news flash, this time yet another intercepted Eater
message. "Not from here," Benjamin said. "Some dish
grabbed it."
The Eater encouraged this latest development from the dictators.
It wanted a large, functioning "eternal society" to join
it, addressing humanity as though it were a unity.
I DESIRE CONVERSE WITH A TRUE VARIETY OF YOU.
2
Benjamin did not want to go for even a short walk on the beach,
but she insisted. The day's events had been unsettling, as usual, and
he felt the old island softness creep into him as they made their way
through palms and onto the broad, warm sand. The sunset was a
spectacular streaked composition in purple and orange. She could
barely manage making her way in the white sand.
"When will we be able to see it as a naked eye object?"
she asked, gazing up.
"Inside a week, I believe, if its deceleration continues as
is."
"Should be pretty."
He turned to her suddenly, back to the sunset. "Look, I can
step down from running things, spend these days together. Here
on the beach, as much as we can."
"Your heart wins out over your head," she said
abstractly, gazing at the fading fingers of deepening red that arced
over them.
"Sure, sure, for you." They embraced and he felt a warm
wave of relief. "I'll see Arno tomorrow, quit—"
"No, I need you to talk to him, but not about that."
He blinked, seeing something strange come into her face. "But…"
Fervently she grasped his arms, hugged him, stepped back. "I
want to go."
" 'Go'? Where? What—" Then he saw it.
"Upload me."
"That's… that's—" His throat tightened
painfully.
"Crazy, as crazy as what's already happening."
He scrambled for rational reasons. "It's untried, chancy—"
"It's not to evade death," she said in a
straightforward, businesslike voice. "I know that a copy is not
the original. I'll be gone, as far as the little 'me' that rides
around behind my eyes. And I'm not going to discuss whether an
uploaded 'person' has free will, either—philosophy doesn't ring
my chimes, not now. I've got another reason, one you can argue for
with Arno and the others."
"If you think I'll—"
"Hear me out, lover. I want to control a Searcher
spacecraft, fly it into the Eater. They need onboard guidance to
do that. I can be uploaded into a control module."
"Not like those bastards in the tropics." He was trying
to see what drove her to this, but his mind didn't seem to be working
very well. Did she think some digital replica was like becoming one
of those sculptures, the alien ones?
She abandoned the business voice and pleaded nakedly. "I can
help, even after I'm gone."
"And you are an astronaut," he said lamely. "You'll
get back into space, sort of."
"I hadn't thought of it that way." She hugged him.
He recoiled from her grasp, confused. "You're saying, 'Kill
me early'? No."
"It
is my life."
"No!"
She reached out with a soft, tentative hand. "Something of me
will come through. Maybe."
He looked at her trembling lips and kissed them. It was
wrenchingly hard to resist her. "But I want every remaining
moment with the
real you, damn it."
Channing picked up a handful of sand and let it run through her
hands, trickling into the passing breeze like an hourglass. "Time
runs out for all of us. I just want to control my end."
"But this method, it's bound to wear you down. You could
easily die sooner."
"Saving what, a few weeks of wasting away? No—I want
win-win, remember? This way, we get the Searcher swarm to work
better. And I get… something nobody's done."
"They don't know what the hell they're doing with this stuff,
it's just parts of technology slammed together, it's…" He
ground down into silence.
"I've read the reports, preliminary and sketchy but
promising." Back to the business voice, crisp and NASA all
the way. "They get lots out of the cerebral cortex. Trouble is,
reading the deeper parts of the brain."
"But they won't capture
you."
"The body won't be worth much. I'm a walking ruin already."
He had never liked her talking about herself this way, especially
not the body he had learned to worship in so many ways. "I can't
believe they can read you like some neuronal book."
"All of me is beautiful and valuable," she said, tone
now light and brittle. "Even the ugly, stupid, and disgusting
parts."
Was part of him drawn to the idea of giving her some form of
digital immortality? A last flight?
Confused, his mouth working with unrelieved strain, he turned and
walked on. Without them noticing, the sun had glimmered away and the
sky slid into purple darkness.
3
At dawn she was weak with a numbing hollowness in her bones that
cried out to be left alone. A separate child-self, wanting only the
comfort it remembered from an impossibly distant time.
Channing gave it a few minutes to get used to the idea, and then
very slowly and silently got out of bed. Going out through the
kitchen, she grabbed a banana for energy. Opened slowly enough, the
back door did not creak. In shadowy silence, the car started suddenly
and she got out of the driveway before he could come running out, in
case he woke. She drove up the hill behind one of the behemoth jobs
from the cheap-gas decades, its plate proudly announcing VANZILLA. A
hastily made sign on it carried the logo of a news network and she
tromped down, enjoying the surge of acceleration as she shot around
it.
Arno wasn't in yet. Summoning more of what appeared to be her last
energies, she snagged a muffin and coffee and found Kingsley. He wore
the same clothes as yesterday. He even sat and listened to her whole
case, his fingers steepled before him as if he were worshipping. Amy
Major came in, looking equally bedraggled, touched Kingsley's sleeve,
then had the good sense to leave.
At last she was done, her voice trailing away before she could
make herself frame a naked plea.
"I guessed yesterday," he said from behind his fingers.
"Then you'll support me?"
"I can't imagine not doing so. But what I feel does not
matter, surely, compared to Benjamin."
"He's thinking it over."
"You bring it up before your own husband has—"
"There's no time."
He shook his head. "I cannot manage my personal feelings
and give you reliable advice at the same time."
"Look, you've faced my death. I'm
going?'
"But certainly you cannot expect me or Benjamin to hasten
that."
"Think of it as an assisted suicide with a big upside."
He finally broke down then, his facade crumbling. He bent slowly
over his desk and his head bowed until it rested on a yellow writing
pad. She let him sit like that, part of her wanting to comfort him
and the other wanting to let the moment work upon him, in a cool
and bloodless way that came back to her from somewhere in her years
devoted to her own momentum. She had always had this streak, a
compact, composed sense of self that let her know when, for example,
she could let a man go, send him back for a fluff and fold while she
went on with her life. She needed that now, and so she used it,
letting the silence run on because it was running her way.
In time it worked. Kingsley had plenty to say, his fine long
sentences purling out as she let him work his way to an understanding
of what he would have to do to help her. But the cusp moment had
passed in that silence and now he was the old Kingsley, put back
together with hardly any of the cracks showing.
"I am of course aware of your tragic situation," Arno
said by way of preamble, "and that knowledge led me to consider
the matter in detail."
He was in his familiar perch on the edge of his desk. Here came
his patented warm, understanding, yet commanding smile. "I like
the idea. As you argue, this will give us a 'digital presence' of
higher order than anything available in existing Searcher
craft."
Benjamin was there by this time, still early morning. In the
caverns of the expanded Center, there were no windows—for
security reasons—so she readily lost sense of time. The
stretches of memory lapse and simple stupor added to the effect.
I'll
be timeless pretty soon now, one way or the other, she mused.
Then she snapped awake, aware that she was drifting again, right in
the middle of Arno's speech.
He was dwelling on the technical details, on up to the grand
questions. Would her simulation be bound by the craft's programming?
No, though the philosophical issue of whether a simulation behaved
like a person was beyond anybody, at their primitive level of
understanding. And so on.
She saw in Benjamin's grim, set jaw his stifled anger at how she
had outflanked him, going around to Kingsley. Well, she would make it
up to him.
Something special, great meal, wine, a Victoria's
Secret evening, the works. Then she blinked and knew she was
beyond that, too, thoroughly out of it now, no body worth bothering
with anymore. Or mind, either, to judge from her slippery hold on
events.
Kingsley was speaking now, and Benjamin was arguing, and it was
all under glass for her. Kingsley arguing that Benjamin was "too
close to the issue," then some military types coming into Arno's
office, earnest expressions turning to blank-faced when they realized
she,
the one, was there. Kingsley's clashes with Benjamin
had been personal, bitter in their tone, and she let all that sweep
away from her. Pieces of the discussion came to her from the dozen
men in the room.
"… barely technically possible…"
"… research in this area is still crudely developed…"
"… U Agency wishes to sequester her data…"
"… crash basis, can get the black box up to orbital
rendezvous within a day…"
One of the Air Force generals she had seen interviewed on 3-D sat
nearby and said, looking right at her, "The whole world is on a
war footing, after all—the first interstellar war."
She roused herself to quote a famous bureaucratic maxim. "You
can get great things done as long as you don't have to get credit for
it." Then she sank back and let them try to figure out what
it meant.
She saw, from an airy distance, that she had slipped free of
ambition, a clean escape. No longer did the fires of desire for fame
or success burn in her; they were banked forever. Now much of her
earlier striving seemed pointless, even contemptible. She could be a
spectator now. But even in the End Game, as chess players called it,
the old astronaut ambition governed.
Arno again, speaking to her. "We all respect your
contribution. It is a very valiant thing you do, for all
humanity."
She gave him a long look that should have struck several
centimeters out of his back. "No heroics. I'm doing this to
do
it."
Then the Air Force and NASA types came in and she tried to hold on
to the thread but failed.
Keep quiet, so they don't know,
her good sense told her. Even that wasn't easy.
Somehow the big stuff went by smoothly, but she snagged on vexing
details. One of the NASA astronaut contingent described how the
control systems of the Searcher craft would be refitted to accept her
commands—or rather, the digital "her." He outlined
how this would be the ultimate in compact control systems, "…
manned, I mean crewed," with a nervous glance at Channing.
She said slowly and with shaky clarity, even though she was not
really sure she was right, "The word 'manned' comes from the
Latin for hand, I believe, as in 'manipulate.' Nothing sexist about
it."
Everyone smiled and she saw that they were on her side, as much as
anyone could be. Comforting. But Benjamin was stern and dire, his
big-eyed gaze full of fear and confusion.
4
"Agencies despise uncertainties, old fellow," Kingsley
said, "but we are scientists and know that knowledge is based
upon doing experiments that can fail."
Benjamin sensed that this was a set speech, well honed in the
corridors of power, but let it do its work on him, anyway. Kingsley
had a way of letting you in on the secrets of command. This last
sentence filled him with hope. "You're saying they aren't
going to go for her idea?"
"No, I am saying that Arno is going against the instincts of
those above him. Our only chance lies in how rattled they are up
there."
Benjamin's elation fizzled away. He might as well admit how he
actually felt, even if it was to Kingsley. He could hardly say this
to Channing: "I'm against it, y'know."
Absolutely expressionless: "I suspected as much."
"Yeah?" Somehow Kingsley's razor precision made him use
sloppy Americanisms in return. "I… don't want her to
suffer any more. This thing…"
"It won't truly be her."
"But it'll be
like her so much."
"A copy is not the original."
"If they map her, though, there'll be two of her at once."
His confusion welled up in him like bile.
"The Air Force types say they cannot realistically fly it,
her, before the, ah, original is… gone."
"So there'll be no direct comparison."
Kingsley nodded. "If it works at all."
"She's counting on it."
"So are many people now. I surmise from my work over the last
two days that it has caught the imagination of both NASA and the
military. It even plays well internationally."
"How come?" He had been so wrapped up with her that he
had not even thought about this angle.
"It brings the entire matter to human scale."
" 'Human scale'? That's the only way I can see it."
"Of course." Kingsley reached across the coffee table
and put a reassuring hand on Benjamin's shoulder, the first time he
could remember such a gesture passing between them. "They mean
valiant woman astronaut—"
"Daring last dramatic attempt—"
"Heroic expedition into the heart of the monster. That sort
of thing."
Pale smiles passed between the two men. They sipped their coffee
for a moment in silence, the other Center personnel at nearby
tables a thousand miles away.
"If they do it, they will build her into a heroine
overnight."
"Crap. Don't want that."
"Your will—or mine, for that matter—has nothing
to do with it."
His sense of helplessness rose, a queasy sour lump in his stomach.
"She may get near the thing, all right, but what can she do?"
"The President asked me if she could carry nuclear
warheads."
"On a Searcher?"
"Quite right, impossible, far too much mass."
"So what use will she be?" Benjamin had heard very
little of the technical plans. She had been resting nearly all
the time and he had liked staying home almost like the old days, the
two of them alone on a long weekend.
"Reconnaissance, mostly."
"What will be her link to us?"
"A broad bandwidth, secure line, with backup satellites
launched to keep her in sight."
"Well, at least she'll get a spectacular ride."
"Ah, you're not expecting this simulation of her to…"
"Survive? No, don't want to think about that."
Kingsley sat back and from the shift in his tone Benjamin knew
that their moment of closeness was over. "An experiment
that gives you a clear answer is not a failure. It can surprise,
however, and the best do just that. The true trick in science is to
know what question your experiment is truly asking."
This was another set piece, obviously to prop up a shield between
the two men, and Benjamin resented it. "Come on, this is a war,
not an experiment."
Kingsley would not come out from behind his fresh new barrier. "We
must still think like scientists. Knowledge is our only way out of
this predicament."
"Excuse me, but I'm not all that damn worried about the
problems of politicians right now."
"Still, realize that they aren't scientists. They fear
failure, by which they mean unpredictability."
"They're sending her in for reconn and she'll die in there.
Only she'll already be dead for me, got it?" He realized that he
was shouting, coffee spilled in his lap, and had gotten to his feet
somehow, and people were staring.
Channing lay back on their couch with a strange smile. "
Sic
transit gloria mundi, wasn't that what Kingsley said? 'Thus
passeth away the glory of the world.'—and I'm not even named
Gloria."
Benjamin had finally told her his feelings, blurting them out
within ten minutes of arriving home. His talk with Kingsley had given
him the courage to say it all. Had that been Kingsley's real motive?
Not impossible. "So I'm not going back to the Center. I'll stay
here with you, right through to…"
"The finish," she finished for him softly. "I know,
it's been an immense strain on you. Come here."
Some snuggling, he seeming to need it more than she, and then
Channing was off again, manic. On the couch and floor were documents,
all homework to prepare her for "My new life as digits,"
she remarked with an odd, sunny expression. She had been studying
between naps and injections from the attending nurse, a hovering
presence.
"Got you a little something, though," she said, fumbling
among some papers.
"You went out?"
"I had Harriet drive me."
"Uh, she's…" He was having trouble keeping track,
with events piling up. Perhaps some part of him did not want to face
even the bare fact that she now needed a home aide.
"My nurse, the new one. I was getting cabin fever. Imagine
what I'll be like when I'm in a little box, eh?"
She presented him with "a parting gift"—an
hourglass.
"I… don't…"
"
Sic transit. Time passes."
"It looks like the magnetic funnels of the Eater."
"That, too. Call it a visual pun."
"I think…"
She kissed him slowly, breathing in long drawn sighs, as though
laboring. "Don't think. The whole rest of my goddamned
existence, I'm going to be nothing but a thinking thing."
They went back into their bedroom then, hearts thudding.
"A little personal therapy, Harriet," Channing called.
He managed to trip over their rattan furniture on the way,
carrying her—
so frightening, her lightness—and
then it was enveloping, the air liquid and their skins like the
silent slide of silk.
5
Dying was more interesting than she had feared. You got mail about
it, even. The public only knew that she had volunteered to be
uploaded, nothing about the true mission. They presumed that, like
the others already transmitted by microwave as O's and 1's, she would
shortly become a digital commodity for the Eater to relish.
Even such momentary renown combusted with her faded astronaut
glory to make her a momentary celeb. Being slightly world famous and
sheltered by armed guards up and down the street gave dying a
certain, well, zest. The postman still delivered, apocalypse coming
or not, and so she got bags of letters.
It was impossible to take this unasked correspondence at face
value. These people were probably doomed, too, if the Eater grew
irritated, and they knew it. Still…
To their credit, men did not decorate their notes with scented,
colored stationery, dotting
i's with circles or even hearts.
With big ridiculous loops to their
p's and
q's,
women's letters were a topographical pain, even when writing
premature condolence notes with a smiley face at the end.
We
shall pray for you, many of them concluded.
Prayers were fine, but as she had weakened she had become an
aficionado of bed linen. Piqu
é,
matelass
é,
Porthault, Egyptian cotton
vs. English linen, dotted Swiss,
chenille. Gourmet sleeping, though they couldn't contend with the
sheer contentment of snuggling against Benjamin. But when she rested
through the day, lying alone in luxury, the 280-threads-per-inch
seemed to
matter.
Harriet reluctantly took her out, usually in the mornings when she
was most energetic. Benjamin was at home as much as possible, but
shooing him off to the Center did them both good. The U Agency had
added to Dr. Mendenham a corps of specialists and the "sustaining
terminal" class of drugs, introduced first in the 2010s, had
been doing a stunning job of keeping her aloft, despite the
steady growth of tumors and other blights distributed throughout her
body. They hurt some, and then a lot. In astronaut training, they had
taught her to displace herself from the pain and still function, a
talent that came in handy. She got fond of morphine in the bad
times, and liked Mozart particularly that way.
Go, Wolfgang!
On a sunny Tuesday, she voyaged out with Harriet, listening
to a wrist-radio talk show that hashed over the visibility of
the Eater. She had seen it the night before, a pinprick of blue light
from the decelerating jet, pointed straight at Earth. Predictably,
this excited everyone, as though until they could see it with their
own eyes the whole thing was a mere theory.
A brilliant, tropical day, enough to persuade her that the Problem
of Evil was just a rumor. It was so windy she saw a dog sticking its
head out of a parked car. In the market, at a display of I love you
only Valentine cards, she bought one to leave behind for Benjamin,
especially since there was the added inducement, now available in
multipacks! She did not realize that she was laughing so hard until
it turned to sobbing and Harriet led her out.
On a lark, she went to one of the new casinos on the island,
Harriet in tow. Nobody recognized the world-famous astronaut hero
lady. While playing craps and blackjack, she noticed that most of the
steady players were weirdly superstitious. One at the blackjack
table always said, "Thin to win, deep to weep," when he cut
the cards, always leaving only a thin stack at the top, apparently
believing this affected the game. Others wouldn't cut the cards,
folding arms and pronouncing profoundly, "I won't cut my own
throat." Others would not accept higher denominations of
chips, even though they were winning. Some got attached to lucky
chips when they played and would snatch the sacred chip back from the
dealer or croupier if it was lost. Others turned over their chips so
the Gambling Gods could not read their denominations and see
that they were getting too lucky. She even saw two who would get up
and walk around their chairs every time the dice changed hands, as
another way to confuse fate.
Yet was this any worse than the other symptoms she saw? The
Gambling Gods didn't exist, but neither did any others she knew.
Still, only the day before she had looked up Psalm 90:
For when thou art angry all our days are gone;
we
bring our years to an end, as if it were a tale that is told.
So
teach us to number our days.
T.S. Eliot had been right: the spirit killeth, but the letter
giveth life. Who would have thought that her wobbly Episcopalian
would come back, like a native tongue somehow forgotten?
Strange indeed, considering that all her adult life she had felt
that to exist implied a duty to burn with a hard, gemlike flame,
living as a passionate vehicle of life's eternal transience. To
prevail without God or any metaphysical hydraulics, without
foundations in an accidental prison sentence handed down to us by a
deity who did not exist.
She was halfway tempted to bring such matters up to the Eater
itself. Now that Arno had cleared the way for her, she could do
anything she wanted with the Semiotics Group data flow. The Eater was
now within a light-minute of turnaround time, and as quick as ever.
Working with the team that monitored and conversed with it around the
clock, she noted oddities.
When it said "Greetings" or "Goodbye" or used
"please," some witnesses seemed to feel this meant it was
becoming friendlier. Using their language necessarily made it seem
more human, but surely it was clever enough to recognize social
lubricant words and use them as a matter of course. Any natural
language would have both redundancy and deliberate padding, for
living creatures were not perfect conduits of meaning. Superficial
linguistic gesture meant little. Certainly reading into them the
personality that resided in magnetic strands was a huge error, like
trying to eff the ineffable.
The Eater was being as pleasant as it could be, while letting its
demand stand. This schizophrenic feature drove many in the Semiotics
Group to distraction, but she was untroubled. It was alien, and
fitted itself into human categories only roughly.
That saturated even the Eater's apparently casual conversation
with implied meaning. In one exchange with a physicist, it had
pointed out that planetary life labored under weighty
restrictions—and here the pun was clearly intended. Gravity
makes it hard for life-forms to grow large, defeating economies of
scale. Muscle and bone protect delicate neurological circuits,
and these take up most of any body. Muscle burns energy and
oxygen, bone hampers movement even as it protects brains. Ideally the
largest creatures should be the smartest, but in fact these had been
dinosaurs and whales and other relatively unbright forms. Being
forced to move at the bottom of a gravity well, the Eater meditated,
meant that planetary life, the gravitationally challenged, could
never match space-born forms. The immense interlocking neurological
networks of the Eater, spun of sheer gossamer magnetic fields
and filmy plasma, had far higher information content than even the
human brain, on a pound-for-pound basis. A diffuse, ionized medium
was
THE OBVIOUS BEST SITE FOR LIFE IN THE LONG RUN
as the Eater put it.
A further limitation, it said, came from the paltry energy budget
of planets. Earth's life ran on the sunlight falling through its air,
plus a small volcanic contribution, and a bit from the ebbing decay
of radioactive materials. The Eater lived on a huge energy budget,
whenever it could harvest an iceteroid. Though to human eyes their
world's bounty was prodigious, in energy terms it was tiny—a
thousand watts per square meter exposed to the sun. The Eater enjoyed
a billion times this bounty, coursing through its mesh of trapping
fields and vigorous particles.
The bounty of semiotic theory was a gusher of speculation.
She skimmed through learned-sounding papers based on the wildest of
ideas.
… transparently it thinks of itself as a kind
of traveling Ego, when actually its focus upon instant
gratification of its needs, be they icestroids or personality
copies, makes it much more an unrestrained Id. Clearly what it lacks
is a Superego…
… with proper guarantees that they would not
be mistreated, a more socially responsible Eater could garner many
more volunteers for uploading…
… it is fitting to ask: Who is most interested
in collecting mayflies?—that is, short-lived
life. Clearly, amateur collectors and entomologists. Eater is a bit
of both. Losing half a million mayflies to obtain a good specimen is
nothing to a collector seeking a perfect sample of a rare breed.
Anything we can do to make ourselves appear ordinary lessens its
desire to collect us. Refusing to kill ourselves to furnish copies
for it may well signal stupidity to Eater, and thus make us
uninteresting. Caving in immediately might signal our "commonness,"
since apparently most societies have done so; it has collected many.
Paradoxically, complying would reduce our value to a collector.
We should entertain the notion that our response has been mixed. Some
wish to submit, others to fight. This rather contradictory response
may make us an interesting and valuable item to add to the
collection…
… while it must "eat," it dislikes
being called Eater. No matter how it denies consciously this
connection with the needs of lower life-forms, this explains why
it is fascinated with the unconscious structures in human minds—and
thus desires our whole minds, not just its products, works of art,
etc…
All these were projections of human categories on to the Eater.
None seemed to deal with her suspicion that many societies had
attacked it with weapons as advanced as Earth's. It would have
evolved a way to survive even the most fierce of assaults. Kingsley
had guessed that the most they could expect was to drive it away.
Of even that she was more and more unsure. Still, she read through
the tangle of speculations. She put herself through this because she
was venturing into its territory. Her NASA years had taught a firm
lesson:
do your homework.
But the eerie tang of the thing, that was the most basic lesson,
and the hardest to truly learn.
She fled from these sessions back to the comforts of home.
She barely had time to suffer Harriet's injections when a neighbor
knocked: there was a party, and they would like to have her and
Benjamin come, though of course they knew how busy…
It was delightful. Like most hard-driving professionals, she and
Benjamin had only a distant connection to their town. Their province
was the global world, firmly secured by electronic media and airline
tickets.
But outside their lives, the rhythms of the tropical island
culture went on. Natives called the mainlanders
haole but
welcomed them. The Polynesian blended here with Asian. She liked the
rituals of this O Bon Odori, a Japanese dance festival that let her
dress up in a blue and white cotton ukata, feast on juicy BBQ squid,
gingery pancakes and luscious mango shave ice, fried noodles, and
sweetened bean confections. That evening beloved ghosts were
supposed to return from the spirit world and briefly visit, as they
had been doing for the 1,400-year tradition of the festival. The
ghosts got tiny dishes set out for them: roasted eggplant, squash and
potatoes cooked in sesame oil. At dusk families gathered at
graveyards to burn incense and escort the ghost-souls with flickering
paper lanterns. Dried hempseed burned in bowls to guide them to the
proper homes, where families could talk to the ghosts and be sure of
being heard. At the end of the season, the ghosts got farewell rice
dumplings and hypnotic taiko drums.
No one mentioned the Eater, though some children tried to make out
its blue-white glimmer in the sky. Their neighbors kept a
sympathetic blanket of nonchalance wrapped around the evening, making
small talk.
She and Benjamin walked home together over the bumpy tar roads.
She inhaled the aromatic air and wondered what it would be like to
live as digital abstraction, free of body.
Yea, though I walk through the valley of the shadow
of death,
I will fear no evil;
for thou art with me;
thy rod
and thy staff, they comfort me.
It took everything she had, but they made love in the close, moist
night air and it gave her something she could not name.
6
He tried to smile with assurance, but his face felt as if it would
crack like hard plaster.
The President was visiting, along with assorted members of the
self-luminous set, U.N. and allies. Show of confidence. All
hands onboard. Face the approaching crisis with a firm hand.
None of this was for the Center staff, of course. The media were
the whole point. But there had to be something for the President and
entourage to actually do, so Arno and Martinez took him on a tour.
Plenty of shots of his craggy visage gazing sternly at the latest
maps of the Eater interior. Nodding, taking it all in with a
concerned yet confident scowl.
After the well-lighted photo ops, a reception. Maximum attention
to Channing, now in a wheelchair to underline the precarious state of
her health. She did need it. Benjamin stayed beside her with the
nurse and she managed to chatter amiably with the President. Only
then did Benjamin have to step forward and shake the presidential
hand. Offered with the legendary charm, it was firm. Benjamin joined
in the photos with Channing, all smiles but not too joyous, as this
was a crisis.
Then the two of them, plus Kingsley and Arno, sat at the
presidential table for a ritual snack. Talk flowed, guided by the
President and the Secretary of the United Nations.
Kingsley glided gracefully through all this, and from him Benjamin
learned an important lesson.
"Sharp, smart people—we're all that," Kingsley
said to him and Channing. "And at a do like this, we meet others
no less sharp, but also blessed with charm and an easy social
facility, a talent that cannot be learned or imitated."
Channing watched the President, whose attention illuminated
the other half of their circular table, and nodded. "The
spotlight of his gaze."
Short sentences were all she could manage now, but these words
brightened Kingsley. "Yes!—precisely. That charisma
conveys to its target a sense that you are indeed special, that the
charmer and the charmed form tightly orbiting worlds."
Benjamin saw the point now. "So you get caught up."
Kingsley seemed unafraid of dissecting a performance going on only
a few feet away. Benjamin saw why: nobody was paying the slightest
attention to them.
Kingsley said, "Just so. Basking in this warm glow, imagine
that you notice a mediocrity at the edge of your special binary,
someone not worth bothering with. But the charmer turns and includes
the mediocrity"—he did a perfect mid-American accent—"
Hi,
gladtaseeya." Channing laughed and Kingsley beamed. "So
then this inferior's eyes brighten as pleasant small talk and
personal tales pass among you, now a party of three. Now, what is
passing through your mind?"
This he addressed to Channing, who came back quickly with, "You
listen with a little smile." A cough. "Hiding your secret."
"Exactly!" Kingsley beamed.
"Because," she went on, "the poor old mediocrity.
Does not
know. That this is just social fluff. That the
primary relationship here. Is between you. And the charming
leader."
"As usual," Kingsley said happily, "quite
observant. 'Poor mediocrity,' you think! But even laughter and good
spirits cannot conceal the dreadful moment when you catch a glance
from the mediocrity—"
"And see that he is thinking. Exactly the same thing. About
you," Channing finished.
Benjamin laughed, caught up in the sheer headlong joy of it. "And
that frozen instant is a glimpse into the social abyss."
Kingsley grinned. "Absolutely. The truly genius social
creatures, they dwell on levels far above us."
Then he saw why the moment was so wonderful. This was the way the
three of them had been back at Cambridge, in the years when the world
had seemed utterly open, brim-full with promise. And together they
had captured it together again, for a glancing moment.
With the media whisked out of sight, the presidential party got
down to business.
Then when the President spoke, it was less to convey information
than to make others react according to his plan. Benjamin watched
through the several hours of discussions, trying to see how the
master communicators achieved this effect.
Flattery, subtle bribery, psychology, even flat-out threat—
all these came into play, some as difficult to catch as a momentary
reflection on an ocean wave. As long as their plan kept working,
means did not matter. Usually arguments couched logically but
carrying a deep emotional appeal worked best with the U.N.
representatives. This was a political culture in which
short-term interests always dominated long-term concerns in the minds
of virtually everyone, but in this crisis they were out of their
depth, facing a hard fact.
The Eater would not negotiate; it was not remotely political,
resembling more the weather than a person. This had barely penetrated
to the political elite, Benjamin saw, as various men reported on
attempts to cajole, wheedle or threaten the Eater, all total
failures. They were unused to the Eater's pattern of simply ignoring
the high and powerful. Instead, it preferred to pursue discussions
with members of the Semiotic Group, on topics cultural and
biological. The President could not find a way to soften this,
finally used his standard approach of following the bald truth with a
side of sentiment.
A specialist enlisted by the White House displayed on a large
screen a "typical passage" from the Eater, in response to
an attempt to negotiate on the issue of uploading people.
I HAVE NEED OF THESE MINDS. ONLY BY CLOSE
RELATION TO THEM CAN I FURTHER STUDY YOU, AND IN MY SCRUTINY YOU
SHALL FIND YOUR ULTIMATE RESIDENCE UPON THE GALACTIC STAGE. YOUR
MINDS' IMPRESSIVE TALENTS AROSE IN PART AS COURTSHIP TOOLS, I CAN SEE
ALREADY. YOU EVOLVED THEM TO ATTRACT AND ENTERTAIN SEXUAL PARTNERS
FOR THE LONG PERIODS NEEDED TO PRODUCE AND REAR YOUR CHILDREN. YOUR
OWN RESEARCH SHOWS THAT THE MOST DESIRED TRAITS BOTH SEXES HAVE IN A
MATE ARE KINDNESS AND INTELLIGENCE. YOUR STANDARD ARGUMENT IS THAT
WOMEN PREFER POWER AND MONEY, OR THE SIGNS OF THE ABILITY TO GET
THOSE. MEN ARE DRAWN TO SMOOTH SKIN, YOUTH, A PROPORTION OF WAIST TO
HIP. ALL TRUE-BUT NOT PRIMARY. KINDNESS AND INTELLIGENCE ARE MORE
ABSTRACT QUALITIES, BOTH INFERRED FROM SPEECH. THESE I CAN
CONTEMPLATE ONLY BY PROLONGED EXPOSURE.
Exasperated, the specialist said, "Now, how can we deal with
a thing that answers clear, direct questions like this?"
"Gingerly, I should think," Kingsley whispered to
Benjamin and Channing. They were sitting to the side, near the
rear of the big new auditorium, behind a phalanx of military and
policy people.
The unwieldy group then broke into subsections, each in a
different room. They finally got to meet with the Action Team—there
seemed to be a new term for every feature of the problem now—devoted
to Channing's mission.
A group Benjamin had not even heard of gave a report on what the
intelligence specialists thought was going on in the Eater's
innermost regions. A Defense Department satellite of advanced design
had made a map, using X-ray emission. From that, NASA had already
sent a Searcher hurtling directly at the Eater's core. Piecing
together the X-ray pictures and the Searcher's views as it flew in,
they produced a processed picture:
"We see here a cutaway view," a prominent black hole
theorist explained. She was a slender, sharp-faced woman with a ready
smile, in her element, playing before the most powerful crowd in the
world. "The outer surface is the last point at which an object
can orbit the hole. The surface is only about ten meters across."
Benjamin asked, "The Searcher tried to orbit it?"
" 'Tried' is the word," the affable woman said. "It
failed. Instead, it flew closer in—the ergosphere."
Benjamin persisted. "It has a bulge?"
"Yes, and we're seeing it here from about twenty-five
degrees above the equator. That's why the inner sphere—the
hole itself—looks a little distorted."
He barely remembered the term, ergosphere, and did not want to
show any ignorance. "The hole is rotating rapidly— that is
our principal finding. That is apparently how it manages the
enormous magnetic arches and funnels outside. The rotation couples
with the accretion disk in a kind of enormous motor."
The discussion picked up then and Benjamin could barely follow.
The bulge of the outer surface arose from the swirl of space that a
black hole's rotation created. Because that swirl was outside the
inner sphere, the hole stored rotational energy in the region between
the two surfaces. Thus, erg from the Latin for energy.
"What happened to the Searcher?" Benjamin asked,
feeling awash in the discussion.
"It was one of the miniaturized models, high velocity, ion
propulsion. Small enough to survive the heating from the accretion
disk. We flew it in at a thirty-degree angle, a steep dive."
A NASA official added proudly, "Miniaturized small enough to
get into the hole's vicinity without being torn apart by tidal
forces, either."
"It flew into the ergosphere," the woman said, "on
automatic program, of course. It sent one last gasp of data,
which gave us this figure. We never heard from it again."
"The hole swallowed it," a man from Caltech said
authoritatively.
"We don't know that," the woman countered.
"The hole would have to grab it," the man
answered testily.
"It's a completely warped space-time," the woman said.
"There are other paths available. The Searcher could escape
through the outer boundary of the ergosphere—if it had enough
energy."
"I calculate that it did not," the Caltech fellow said.
"So do I, but there are intermediate fates."
"Such as?"
"The Searcher could exit the ergosphere along a path that
pops out into another space-time, or another time in our own space."
"Like a time machine?" the man asked incredulously.
"A theoretical possibility, yes," the woman said.
"Point is, it's gone," Channing whispered.
The audience overheard this and looked silently at her. She was
going into this place, Benjamin read in their eyes, and they
half-envied her. She sensed this and said in a croak, "The
physics is great, sure. But this isn't a natural black hole. It's
been built up… by an intelligence."
"We must not think of it as being the kind of structure we
think of as intelligence at all," a noted evolutionary biologist
remarked. "It is not of a species. It is unique, a
construction."
"A self-construction," a voice added, "maybe more
like a self-programming computer. Gotta be a way to think about it
from a cybernetic angle—"
Kingsley's incisive voice broke in. "We fondly imagine that
evolution drives toward higher intelligence. But eagles would think
evolution favored flight, elephants would naturally prefer the
importance of great strength, sharks would feel that swimming was the
ultimate desirable trait, and eminent Victorians would be quite
convinced that evolution preferred Victorians."
Only Channing found this amusing.
7
She had learned from the morning paper that when Halley's Comet
filled the skies in 1910, word spread that the Earth would pass
through the gases of the tail. There was worldwide panic, directives
from the Pope, quite a few suicides.
She quickly calculated over coffee that the entire tail,
compressed to a solid, might have fit into a briefcase. Ignorance
could be fatal.
Benjamin had to go to a seminar by a specialist in "extreme
case fear responses," which someone high up at the U Agency
thought would be helpful in the times ahead. He wasn't inclined to
go, but Channing shooed him out of the house before her
three-car-plus-ambulance escort arrived. Still, she was so fretful on
the drive to the clinic that the driver finally leaned back to where
she lay and said very patiently, "Please don't drive when
you're not driving."
She had to go through the preps for her "reading," as
the diffident specialists put it, which meant another day of tedium.
Still, while the preps took hold, she had herself wheeled into a room
where she could watch the show on a big screen. Just for laughs, she
said, and they dared not contradict her. This was a special site
just for her, plus a few other people who were very ill and had
volunteered to be uploaded. Arno had certainly cleared her way;
the screen for her to view was his latest indulgence.
The speaker was quick, efficient, and despite expectations,
interesting. The best way to confront fear in a group was to make the
group diverse, she said. Assemblies that were all men or all women
fared badly when confronted with danger or merely the unknown. Less
obvious, but supported by research, was a finding that mixing
age groups was good. One exerted more self-control in front of
strangers and dissimilar people.
The bad news was that preexisting groups did not respond well
to fear. Even tests on championship athletic teams showed that they
reacted badly to simple dramas like getting stuck in an elevator.
Luckily, being "high phobic-tolerant" correlated with being
in good physical condition, and most astronomers met at least the
minimum standards there. Living in Hawaii had made them more
outdoorsy than the usual run of the profession, and astronomers as a
whole were more athletic than the norm. But altogether, the Center
could expect some fairly large levels of panic in the days to come.
"How come?" she wondered aloud.
Nobody watching the screen answered, but her "psych escort"
put in helpfully, "They're planning for it to maybe attack
some way."
"Huh? Why?" Being at the supposedly center of events and
yet quite out of it was not fun.
The escort was sweet but slow, it seemed. "The Eater…
it might get angry."
"Anger isn't a category we can be sure it even possesses."
"Well, the governments, they've agreed to not let it have all
those people."
"It wants the complete list?"
"Every one."
"Has it made threats?"
"It doesn't say anything about that."
"Coy bastard, huh?"
"The news, it says the Eater is giving us the silent
treatment."
"Actually, it's gabby. You just have to ask the right
question."
On her palm computer, she punched up the conversation she had from
yesterday, in reply to some demand by the U.N. It was perfectly
indirect:
YOUR DISCOURSE EXPLAINS YOUR PROPENSITY FOR
GOSSIP AS A GROOMING SUBSTITUTE. MY-SELF'S ANALYSIS OF YOUR DRAMAS
SHOWS YOUR FINEST ARTISTS DEVOTING TWO-THIRDS OF YOUR CONVERSATION TO
IT. LABORERS AND LEARNED ALIKE PREFER TO TALK ABOUT PEOPLE, NOT IDEAS
OR ISSUES. WITHOUT GOSSIP, YOUR SPECIES MIGHT NEVER HAVE BOTHERED TO
LEARN HOW TO TALK. PHYSICAL GROOMING IS STILL MORE SATISFYING TO THE
OTHER OF YOUR ORDER, THE PRIMATES. THUS THEY DO NOT SPEAK. CHAT IS
UNLIKE HUNTERS CALLING OUT IN A MASTODON HUNT, OR GATHERERS REPORTING
WHERE THE HERBS ARE, WHICH CLEARLY HAD USES FOR YOU. THIS TALK OF
OTHERS AND FORMING POWER COALITIONS WERE EVEN MORE IMPORTANT. I CAN
SEE THAT TALK IS MORE EFFICIENT THAN PHYSICALLY GROOMING EVERY OTHER
MEMBER OF A TRIBE, WHEN TRIBES BECOME LARGE. TALK IS EASIER THAN
PETTING, FOR YOU CAN DO IT TO SEVERAL AT ONCE, WHILE YOU ARE
PERFORMING OTHER TASKS. THIS SUGGESTS A USEFUL RESEARCH PROJECT MIGHT
AIM TO MEASURE SEROTONIN PRODUCTION DURING GOSSIPING TO VERIFY THIS
VIEW. I COMMEND IT TO YOUR SCIENTISTS.
So it was advancing theories about humans already. Even suggesting
research! Who could have guessed that their first alien contact would
be so abstract?
With more experience of intelligence throughout the galaxy, it
could generalize in ways impossible to visualize. What more could it
tell us about ourselves? She felt a chill then, the awe and allure of
the utterly strange.
Then she was into the treatment, that flat medicinal smell, the
attendants pushing her down the corridors, eyes watching her—the
famous astronaut heroine!—from doorways. Into the cool ceramic
air of the special clinic, which had been set up on a hillside with
the now-routine incredible speed.
Then the teams around her very attentively got down to the grungy
details of how to extract the information in her head. In principle,
the experts had explained, they could do this without knowing in
detail how the brain worked. Instead, they used the principles
of copying software to recognize neurons and then replace all
the functions of each neuron with a computer simulation.
Neurons held her identity, encoded in myriad connections. It was
not enough to know the location and type of neuron, though. They also
had to see how each one responded and sent electrical signals, how it
was affected by its chemical environment—a swamp of
detail. Impossible without the rooms of computers she had glimpsed on
the way in.
All for little ol' me. Pleasant, to be the center of
attention on your deathbed. Research animal plus world-class news
object. They informed her early on, days ago, that she thought
differently when her adrenal glands had been squirting into her
bloodstream.
I've known that all my life. Goes with being
temperamental.
She lay still as a buzzing bank of magnetic readers sat atop her
skull, like a mechanical hairdo. These nests of quantum detectors
registered her thoughts while she watched videos of sunsets, tiger
attacks, pictures of Benjamin and her mother, a steak, flowers,
storms, even porno—they apologized in advance for that, but it
was actually good, the sly devils. Then smells, sounds, touches.
She did arithmetic on demand, listened to music, to railroad trains
and children laughing. Sheet sensors covering the crown of her brain
built a three-dimensional map of each thin layer of her brain cells.
Added to a general map of human neural structure, teams of surgeons
wrote programs to model the myriad idiosyncratic ways she thought.
This working model then got sharpened. The surgeons compared
its output signals to those she emitted when they showed the same
pictures, flashed lights, fed her, played music.
Like getting a dress tailored, she thought,
only this
cost millions of bucks per hour. Flash by neuronal flash, the
computer model came to echo her.
But an echo isn't the song.
"It's not you," Kingsley agreed when he came to visit.
They gave her breaks to keep her neural tone tip-top, and let him in
to recalibrate her sense of being human, she supposed. "Just
a simulation."
"It's all there'll be of me, pretty soon."
He gazed at her soulfully, wordlessly. "If it's any
consolation, I heard from Arno how they're doing this trick in
the dictatorships."
"Pretty rough? Make you watch old black-and-white movies?"
"I think I'd settle for
Citizen Kane happily enough.
But no, they haven't these magnetic sheet recorders. To reach the
deeper layers, the surgeon's easiest path is simply to shave away
your brain."
"So… their brains, to be fully read, must die?"
"One ends up with an excavated skull. Luckily, the brain has
no pain perceptors down there in its spaghetti snarls of nerves."
"Gee, Dr. Science, that's spiffy."
"Not a voyage for the squeamish, no."
"And they don't even want to go, either." She gazed up
into the hard fluorescent glow as if an answer lay there. "Makes
this seem easy."
He held her hand for a while and they did not speak. She slowly
registered that he was crying, and felt bad about that, and then just
let it go. That was getting to be automatic: releasing the
moment, permitting the passing parade to wash over her like the warm
waves of the Pacific. With a sudden pang, she realized that she would
probably never feel that salty caress again, and then she was crying,
too.
Kingsley said quietly, "I've always loved you."
She had dreaded this moment and was tempted to let it drift by.
But no, he deserved better than that.
Before she could bring herself to speak, he added, "I simply
did not know until recently just how much."
After what seemed like a long time, she mustered some self-respect
and made her voice behave. In a faint rasp she said, "I have
always loved you. In my way. But this last year has taught me that
the man I truly felt the real thing for was Benjamin. Always him."
He nodded. A rueful smile played upon his lips. They looked at
each other with an emotion she felt powerfully but could not hope to
tell him about.
A long silence tiptoed by. Gratefully, she drifted.
Kingsley worked the conversation around to ground they could both
stand on. He was good at doing that, she realized; she had not even
noticed the transition. Small talk, reminiscences… Then:
"Obviously," he said, "the material self will be gone.
Your represented self will remain, in silicon."
"Yeah, it says so, right here in the contract."
"Quite right. This is experimental."
"Always happy to be at the cutting edge. When do they do
that?"
"Cut? Not at all, I gather."
"I wonder. After I'm dead, wouldn't they recover more if they
could use invasive surgery?"
"
À la the
dictators?"
"I'm willing to give this the best effort."
"Heroic, but I think unnecessary."
"I just want the best copy, is all." To her mind, this
wasn't remotely valorous. In her pantheon, science had few heroes.
Most good science came from bright minds at play, like Benjamin
and Kingsley. Able to turn an elegant insight, to find beguiling
tricks in arcane matters—pretty, amusing, a frolic. Play, even
intellectual play, was fun, good in its own right.
"You are going to fly into the mouth of the monster. Classic
Beowulf-style hero, by my measure."
He was being charming, hardly able to keep his feelings from
flooding out, but she disagreed profoundly. Her heroes stuck it out
against hard opposition, drove toward daunting goals, accepting pain
and failure and keeping on, anyway. All the way through astronaut
training, those had been her ideals. This making a Xerox of herself
was a last gesture, not bravery. Maybe just foolishness.
"No,
I won't. My copy will." He sat gazing down
at his hands and she wondered how to get him out of his funk. Be
bright, cheery. Men were so grateful for that. "Continuity,
that's really it, right?"
"How so?" Head up, plainly happier to be off on
abstractions.
"That's the essence of it, of the identity problem. We do it
all the time, really. When we sleep, the unconscious remains active,
so we get continuity at a broad level."
"Ah. Your point is that no one wakes up and thinks they are a
new person."
"Yeah, only lately, I feel a thousand years old."
"Patients brain-cooled until their brain waves lapse can
later revive with their sense of self intact." His brow
furrowed, then relaxed. "I see—how will we know it's
truly 'you,' eh?"
"I suppose you could just log on to the computer aboard the
Searcher, my ship, and read me out."
"But I don't know you like that. I know you—love you—
this ordinary old, human way."
"Inside I'm a mess, lemme tell you."
"You look orderly and understandable from a distance."
"And only that way. Close up, inside, I'm ugly."
"All of us live inside, always close up. Other people look
methodical and tidy only because they're at long range."
"That's comforting."
He pressed her hand into his. "I'll know you."
"How?"
"You'll think of something, m'love." He grinned, but
there was no elation behind it. "I know you."
8
A few more days had crept by, and now that they were at the nexus
of it all, he felt only a yawning vacancy.
"This must be the strangest thing anyone has ever done,"
Benjamin said to her. The specialists' army had withdrawn, leaving
them in an enclosed space, almost comforting in its intimacy. They
were surrounded by advanced magnetic reading gear and diagnostics.
She smiled. "Yeah, and out of love, at that."
"To… leave me something?"
"That's part of it, for me. But love is a big, cheesy word,
able to cover a lot of things."
Channing was fully uploaded now. The last few hours had been
pretty painful for her and she had stood up well, sweat popping out
on her brow. He had wiped it away carefully. She had kept waving away
even the light painkillers they had offered. "Don't wanna cloud
the picture," she had kept repeating earlier. As though she were
an artist at work on her last oil painting.
The offhand weirdness of the scene kept throwing him. They had
come to him with a proposal about the use of her brain afterward. He
had listened and gone through confusion to anger to swirling doubt
and then he had made them go away. Their idea was to slice her dead
brain layer by layer, so that scanning machines could read the deep
detail digitally, getting better resolution to sharpen the
simulation.
This had sent a cold horror running through him. They had put it
as nicely as they could, but still it meant slowly planing away
her brain. In the end, her entire cranium would be excavated, leaving
half a skull. He could not bear the picture.
She struggled up out of her fog and managed a wrecked smile. "You
have to die to be resurrected."
"I'll…" The words stuck in his throat.
"You'll see me again." She gave him a blissful look.
"Goodbye, lover."
It was the last thing she said.
After a night of no sleep and a lot of sour drinking with
Kingsley, he met with the specialists again. They showed him the long
black box housing Channing's uploaded mind. "Reduced to a
featureless…" he began, but could not finish the
sentence.
"We'll be processing, compiling, and organizing," a
woman in a smart executive suit said.
"Fine."
"In a few days—"
"Fine. Just shut up."
He understood all the parts of the arguments. Magnetic induction
loops, tiny and superconducting, could map individual neurons.
Laying bare the intricacies of the visual cortex, or evolution's
kludgy tangle in the limbic system, had already unleashed new
definitions of Genus Homo. Still, nobody considered Homo Digital
to be an equal manifestation. Parts were not the whole.
They played a voicebox rendering, a voice repeating, sounding
exactly like her. He saw them looking hopefully at him and he didn't
give a damn about their marvelous trick. Numbly he pulled from his
coat pocket the hourglass she had given him. He set it atop the
box—
her, now—and watched until its sand had run
down.
He wondered what it might mean to upend it, to start the cycle
again. He struggled with the thought.
No.
The decision came as a release.
* * *
It was a slow day for the Neptune Society, so theirs was the sole
party when he went out with a few friends from the Center. The
captain wondered if he wanted the champagne before or after. After,
he said. There were little printed cards set out next to the
champagne with some doggerel titled LET ME GO inside and the data:
ENTERED INTO LIFE OCTOBER 15, 1978, and ENTERED INTO REST, but he
could not read the date through some blurring that had gotten
into his eyes.
He gazed up into a sullen cloud cover, a pearly gray plane halfway
up Mauna Kea. This pathetic fallacy still quite accurately mirrored
his curiously displaced mood. The sea was flat and glassy and he said
little on the way out. They gathered at the bow and the captain gave
him the urn, blue with odd markings. Not his to keep, as if he would
want to. Off came the lid and inside were gritty gray ashes, the
color of the sky. He poured the powdery stream and bits of bone into
dark blue water. Some of it spread on the surface, some blowing away
on a mild wind, but most of it plunged deeply, an inverse plume that
seemed like transposed smoke rising to the depths. He had not
expected that. His intellect, spinning endlessly in its own high
vacuum, told him immediately that it must be the heavier parts
sinking, but that did not explain why a bubble burst in his chest and
his throat closed and the world seemed to whirl away for a long
moment, suspending him over an aching void.
Someone murmured something of farewell and he could not echo it,
getting only partway through some words before his voice became a
whistle through a crack in the world. He had wanted to say simply
goodbye, but it came out why? and he did not know
why at all. Then the captain pressed a bunch of flowers into his hand
and he tossed them after the ashes. The boat slowly circled the
floating flowers and he could not take his eyes off them and that was
all there was.
* * *
The next day on the big screen he watched the black box being
inserted into a Searcher craft.
Some commentator spoke with grave excitement. Arno made a little
speech. It launched and he felt a pang at the brave plume of rocket
exhaust. Cheering. At least nobody pounded him on the back.
What had she said in that last hour? First, a pained I can't
go on like this.
Before he could speak, she had provided her own jibe.
That's what you think.
PART SIX
ULTIMATA
JULY
1
Like bad breath, Kingsley had often noted, ideology was something
noticed only in others.
Even at this supreme crisis, nattering concerns of infinitesimal
weight furrowed the brows of supposedly wise leaders. Here at
power's proud pinnacle, the politician's aversion to risk reared
above all else.
"Dr. Dart," the President said, "how can we be sure
this will work? I have a grave responsibility here, ordering the use
of nuclear warheads."
"I should think, sir, that nothing is certain here."
"But using these weapons so near Earth, I… well…"
The President let his voice trail off into the air-conditioned,
enameled silence, as if to do so allowed someone to come in with a
quick solution to his grave dilemma.
Sorry, not getting off so easily this go. Kingsley smiled
slightly as the occasion seemed to demand. "We hope to short out
some of the flowing currents in the vicinity of the black hole. The
thing's a giant circuit, really—a 'homopolar generator,' in the
physics jargon."
A German general from European Unified Command said sternly,
"These are the very best warheads, Mr. President."
"Ah, I'm sure," the worried politician said, his eyes
moving from side to side as if seeking a way out. The idea of
having all allies present—to spread the responsibility and thus
risk, Kingsley supposed—gummed up matters nicely.
"Surely, the quality of arms is not the issue," Kingsley
said.
The general said smoothly, absolutely right on cue, "We have
every assurance of success."
"The Eater comprises an immensely complex balance of forces,
utilizing gravitational, magnetic, and kinetic energy stores. It
vaguely resembles the region near a pulsar—a rotating,
highly magnetized neutron star, that is."
"It's like a star?" the President asked, as if this
would simplify his problem. He had seen stars, after all.
"The region around it is. The Russian term for a black hole
once was"—a nod at the New Russian Premier— "
'frozen star,' because seen from outside, a collapsing mass appears
to stop imploding at a certain point. It hangs up, its infall seeming
to halt. The star fades from our view like a reddening Cheshire cat,
leaving only its grin—that is, its gravitational attraction."
"No light, just gravity?" the President asked. He was a
bright man, but he had lived in a world in which only what other
people thought mattered. The physical world was just a bare stage.
Techno-goodies and assorted abstract wonders came occasionally in
from stage left, altering the action mostly by adding prizes to the
unending human competition that was really the point of it all.
"In France, the equivalent phrase trou noir has
obscene connotations, so 'frozen star' would be better," a woman
from the State Department added unhelpfully.
The President was a practiced ignorer; while nodding, he did not
take his eyes from Kingsley. "These maps of it, it looks like a
kind of interstellar octopus with magnetic arms."
"Not a bad description," Kingsley allowed.
"I can't see how we can kill an octopus without having to
chop off its legs," the President said.
"Kill the head," Kingsley said. "The legs are
secured by the accretion disk, plus those anchored directly in the
black hole itself."
"I see," the President said. "We try to get at this
little disk it carries around."
"More that the disk carries the hole, sir. The hole is just a
singularity, a gravitational sink, nothing more. The essence of the
Eater lies in the magnetic structures erected using the accretion
disk as a foundation. If we can shake that foundation, we can
damage the great house the Eater has built upon it."
"I understand," the President said in a tone conveying
admirably that he did not.
"More precisely, my point is that we cannot solve the pulsar
problem, even after half a century of trying. On the face of it, a
reliable model of the black hole's inner regions—and their
functions—is impossible."
"Then I don't think I can authorize—"
"But you must!" the Secretary of State broke in. "The
consequences of not following through—"
"These are our weapons and delivery systems,"
the President shot back, showing why he was President.
"But the world alliance agreed—"
"To leave final judgment, moment by moment, to the nation
actually doing the job," the President finished. "I am
keeping my options open."
"Not attacking this thing—"
"May yet prove to be the best course," Kingsley felt
himself forced to say, before this deteriorated further. The
Secretary of State had been rumored to be a highly political
appointment from a wheat state, he remembered hearing. Something
about shoring up support with a domestic ethnic constituency, which
unfortunately appeared to be a major theme of this administration,
rather than competence. "Only its response to our counteroffers
will tell the tale."
"But it doesn't answer," the Secretary of State said
moodily.
"Silences are the most artful phase of diplomacy,"
Kingsley said, and instantly saw that this was the wrong tack. The
Secretary of State's eyes widened a millimeter. Plainly he did not
like being reminded, however indirectly, of his lack of background in
diplomacy. "A strategy you have employed well in the past, as I
recall." There. That might put a Band-Aid on the wound.
The Secretary of State opened his mouth and paused, apparently
to let this buildup set the stage for a devastating reply, but the
President wasn't having any. He smacked an open palm on the mahogany
table between them and said, "I have to be convinced that using
weapons of mass destruction is necessary. I'm authorizing only
readiness. No codes are to be passed down the line, as insurance in
case we lose communications."
This was the essential practical point. No one knew what the Eater
could do to their web of connections. Yet targeting nuclear-tipped
warheads on the beast's interior demanded timing of fractions of a
second, for fast-burn missiles closing at very high speed.
"If I take the Secretary's point, he is quite right, there is
likely to be no time for deliberation."
Actually, "dithering" would better describe the tortured
path whereby they had reached this point. Kingsley had never operated
at this level and had always fondly imagined that matters proceeded
here with a swift clarity that made lower echelons look like the
swamp they so often were, in his experience. It was never pleasant to
discover that one was naive, and in this case it was quietly
horrifying.
The Secretary gave Kingsley a quick nod. Fine; with such people
the striking of instantaneous alliances was automatic, part of the
conversational thrust, encumbering one for no longer than the need
demanded. Certainly not grounds to neglect a later opportunity for
betrayal, either.
The President mulled this over for some seconds. "That's a
powerful argument for striking early, then, before it reaches inside
these belts you mentioned."
"The Van Allen belts?" Kingsley had been called upon to
deliver minilectures with slides the day previous.
"You said it may have trouble moving so fast, once it's
inside the magnet sphere."
The President was a reasonably quick study and Kingsley would not
think for an instant of correcting him on jargon. "Yes, sir, the
Earth's magnetosphere may deform its outer regions. Of course, it may
be able to deal with that. It is experienced."
"Yeah, eight billion years of experience," the President
said with sudden, sour energy.
"Your point is that targeting could be better done before it
is that close?" Kingsley prompted. There were only eight people
in the room and all seemed to suffer from the fatigue he saw
everywhere at this command center outside Washington. Only the
guards seemed fresh.
"Is that true?" the President asked the room.
The Secretary of State had been making permission-to-speak noises
for some time and now answered, "There are grave consequences if
we engage it close to the atmosphere."
"Don't want to let it get that close, do we?" the
President said. "We've got enough chaos to deal with now."
This summoned forth rather relieved murmurs of agreement.
"Got our hands full just dealing with the breakdown in the
cities," a domestic adviser said. More murmurs.
"Any ideas what happens if we fail?" the President asked
the room.
"It has announced no purpose here beyond acquiring those
uploads," the Secretary of State said. This he had gotten
from Kingsley's report of the day before.
The President pressed him, something like dread in the overlarge
eyes. "What's the downside?"
The Secretary said, "It could retaliate, I suppose."
"Of course," the President said irritably. "Point
is, how? Dr. Dart? What's U think?"
"Its range of response is very large. It could inflict
considerable damage."
"How about what the media are hot on? Flying through the
Earth, eating it, all that?"
"To plunge into our surface would strip the hole of its
magnetic fields, essentially killing the intelligence lodged there."
"Good to hear. It'll keep its distance?"
"It is entirely composed of plasma and gas managed by fields.
To collide directly with a solid object would be fatal."
A Science Adviser aide asked, "How come it could eat
asteroids?"
"A grazing collision, using its jet to pre-ionize much of the
asteroid. It collects the debris using its fields."
"So what can it do to us?" the President insisted.
"I suspect we do not wish to find out," Kingsley said.
"Let's hear from DoD," the President said.
The Defense Secretary was a quiet but impressive man, exuding a
sort of iron conviction Kingsley had seldom seen, for a pointed
counterexample, in the English cabinet. But he was obviously starved
for material, for his own technical groups had not envisioned many
scenarios beyond what the Eater had already displayed. These the
President hashed over. Clearly there was danger to all assets in
space, national and private alike.
Kingsley kept quiet, a welcome relief. He was there for
astrophysical advising, bundled off by Arno, yet to his surprise
had been drawn quickly into the very center of decision-making. The
intruder's ability to hand them surprises had shortened the lines of
communication inside the administration. By the time the
specialists could figure out what was going on, their insights were
needed at the very top. No time for the usual opinion-pruning,
spin-alignment, and image-laundering of conventional policy.
In turmoil, everyone—even the immensely powerful—
turned to authority. Kingsley had inherited the robes of the high
scientific priesthood, not by a thorough selection process, but
through the offhand accidents with which history crowded its
great events.
"We have to be ready to launch against it soon," the
Secretary of Defense came in.
The President raised tired eyebrows. "And?"
Just the soft pitch the Secretary had wanted to coax forth,
altogether too obviously. "We're on top of that, sir. Our
people are just about in position."
"This is for the China option?" the President said
vaguely, looking at his leatherbound briefing book. "I'm getting
split opinions on that one. U is split."
A nervous silence. A few heads looked up alertly, others seemed to
duck.
The President blinked. "Oh, sorry, that's another meeting,
isn't it? This damned thing's got a lot of parts." He tried a
sunny smile beamed around the room. "Don't seem to fit right."
The Defense Secretary said hastily, "That's for the later
discussion—"
"And targeting, that's a big technical problem, right?"
the President prompted. Heads nodded. "Got people on that? Good,
then."
The President looked satisfied, a subtle shift apparently
signaling the end of the meeting. The man's time was being sliced
thin, a style of governance by crisis the Americans had developed to
its frazzling fulfillment. He slipped into mechanically affable,
look-confident mode as people left, nodding and smiling broadly as if
on the campaign trail.
Blank-faced aides ushered Kingsley out of the central sanctum.
This was by far the most heady rubbing up against raw power that he
had ever experienced, yet it left him curiously unmoved. No one
got to even the relatively minor level of Astronomer Royal without
some hunger for power, or at least the look-at-me urge that reached
far back into the primate chain of evolution. But the vastly greater
authority of this company around him, which he was sure would have
left him breathless only months ago, seemed to pale compared
with the implications of the bright blue spotlight that now hung in
the sky over Earth.
His working group convened again in one of the innumerable
conference rooms buried in this mountain retreat. If civilization
collapsed, the planners apparently had provided that talking could go
on indefinitely.
He paid close attention to the gaggle of theorists who had
analyzed the magnetic avenues near the black hole. They had cobbled
together ideas from the study of pulsars and quasars and their story
fit together reasonably well. Yet the Eater was not a natural system,
a crucial distinction. He had not been stretching matters when he had
told the President the extent of the uncertainty here.
The working group milled around this central fact and then, given
the press of time, ended with a list of targeting options. Luckily,
Kingsley had begged off chairmanship of this group, and a bulky
French astrophysicist got the job of carrying their conclusions to
figures in the Department of Defense and to their parallel figures
with the U.N.-based coalition. The political nuances now seemed even
more complicated than the physics.
Kingsley got away pretty quickly, dodging the usual pockets of
undersecretaries and such who always wanted one's "angle"
on the thinking of the inner circle. The familiar Washington
circuitry of instant analysis and jockeying for position ran on at
high voltage, blissfully unaware that this was an event unparalleled
in the experience of even this remarkable—and remarkably
lucky—nation.
Some of the policy mannerisms here were identical to those of
London. Always be clever, but never be certain. That held
for a good 90 percent of the time, for example. It was no good in
this crisis, since only firm answers had any chance of being heard
over the din.
Perhaps, he pondered, that explained his anomalous entry into
these elevated circles. He had been willing to make predictions
that came true—and not only about basic physics and astronomy.
These minds around him were used to dealing with social forces that
were, in the large, predictable. But the very concept of the utterly
strange was for them the stuff of horror, not thought. Yet science
taught its practitioners, at an intuitive level, that the universe
was fundamentally of the Other.
Still, he felt a curious claustrophobia in the entire
proceedings. It would be good to escape back to Hawaii.
Regrettably, he had agreed to submit to an interview arranged for
the press pool. Arno had not worked out well in that regard, proving
too brusque for the whipsaw warm-and-reassuring pose useful before
the cameras. As well, Kingsley's attempts to fashion Benjamin
Knowlton into a serviceable media buffer had failed ignominiously.
After losing Channing, the fellow would probably be much worse. It
had hit him hard.
So he found himself facing a battery of the modern breed of
journalist, faces famous in their own right for being at great events
while having no responsibility for them. Their assurance equaled only
their ignorance as they shot questions at him and he tried to
convey some of the scientific issues without looking impossibly
prissy about terminology.
He got through a vague description of what they knew of the hole's
interior regions, and then a savant of the image works asked, "Why
is an Englishman leading the scientific arm of what is mostly a
United States effort?"
Kingsley paused just long enough to give the appearance of
thinking this over. "Because the Americans have pulled in those
they can work with, I suppose."
"There's a resolution before the Security Council to force
control into the Council's hands explicitly—"
"Yes, very bad move."
"—and world opinion is lining up pretty solidly behind
it."
"The only solidity to be gained here is through the alliance
the United States has yet again stitched together. Who could imagine,
say, the Chinese doing remotely likewise?"
"But assembling the wisest heads of all nations at the U.N.
would—"
"Be a madhouse."
"But certainly with everyone's lives at stake—"
"Since the Gulf War of thirty-two years ago, the Americans
have twice more put together a coalition to deal with a rogue state.
This one deals with a rogue entity, but the classic means of
alliance diplomacy are the essential skills."
"As a scientist, how are you qualified—"
This last from a frowzy woman apparently noted for her "incisive"
questions. He put a stop to her by turning his back and walking away,
which from startled looks from the "handlers" assigned
to him was Just Not Done to Famous Media Personalities. Nonetheless,
it got him quickly out of the floodlit room and shortly after into a
helicopter for Dulles.
Everywhere people seemed to have only a dim notion of what was at
stake in this crisis. He avoided conversation with people in nearby
seats from State and Defense. Takeoff was delayed by several people
maneuvering for seats near others. The Marine guard got irked at
this, quite rightly, and threatened to throw a White House aide off
if he would not "get your ass in gear," a delicious
American turn of phrase that no foreigner could ever get exactly
right in intonation.
"Hey, Kingsley," a fellow from the U Agency called,
plunking himself down next to him before Kingsley could think of a
plausible reason why the seat had to be kept open as a grave matter
of national security. "Herb Mansfield. I met you a couple weeks
ago on the Big Island. You heading back?"
'To Hawaii? Yes."
"We'd like you to catch a chopper at Dulles, visit us over by
Langley."
"Sorry, can't. Have to"—What's the
Americanism?— "mind the store."
"We had a few things to go over."
Something ominous in his tone? "I believe there are a
plentitude of you fellows at the Center."
"Not policy stuff."
"Scientific?"
"Personal."
The helicopter roared into the air then, giving him time to judge
this odd approach. He barely knew this man. There was an air of heavy
assurance about the way he wore his gray suit and undistinguished
tie, a massive sense that he was not used to being differed with.
When they had cleared the trees over the nearby hills, Kingsley said,
"I didn't think you cared."
This lightness had no effect upon the government armor. "Oh,
we do. Vital personnel we are taking a big interest in."
How nice. "I am scarcely vital."
"You handled getting your friends into the Center pretty
well."
"I prefer to work with people I know."
"Funny you didn't bring your wife in."
"She is not a scientist."
"Talked to her lately?"
"I haven't spoken to her in months; I don't like to
interrupt her."
This little joke provoked not even a twinge of his upper lip. The
helicopter hammered at the long pause between them. All right,
then, dead earnest it is. "I suppose I might find it
difficult?"
"Some people are hard to reach."
He had to admire the style of this threat, as anyone overhearing
it would think it completely bland chat. "You may have
overestimated the value of that particular card."
"Don't think so."
"We are separated."
No big effect, but the eyes lost a touch of hardness.
Kingsley sat back and allowed himself the luxury of looking
out at greenery zooming by. Generally this sort, from his admittedly
limited experience, took a steely stare as the lingua franca
of such negotiations. Perhaps a show of indifference would work
best. He took his time with the scenery. Then: "I don't believe
you have weighed all factors here."
"I think so, friend."
"Negative inducements seldom work."
A shift of mood in the otherwise uninteresting face. "Maybe
not, for a customer like you. Let me shift the terms."
"Do."
"Your wife could be taken to one of the shelters."
"Which are?"
"The hot ticket. How come you don't know?"
"I have been rather busy."
"A global system, using the old shelters put up to protect
national asset people in case of nuclear war."
"Which this promises to be."
"Right, hadn't thought of it that way. Anyway, we stocked
these up, got them running. Spot for your wife in one of ours, the
best."
"If I…"
"Do your duty."
"I might remind you that I am not required to feel any
patriotic sentiment."
"Yeah, but you're one of us."
"And I have a job you do not seem to properly appreciate. I
work for the world now."
"And for us. The U is making this all happen for you—
and fast."
"I am aware of that. And Mr. Arno knows I shall cooperate."
"Just wanted you to know she can have the spot—"
"So long as I am a good boy."
"Uh huh. Want me to have her picked up?"
A long pause. A small, malicious part of him visualized how irked
she would be, to be incarcerated among such types as these. On the
other hand, she would be safer, and he did have feelings for her. He
loved her, in a way he had been incapable of conveying very well. Not
a night passed, even in these circumstances, when he did not wonder
how she was getting on.
He made himself stop thinking of that. Seconds mattered here,
decisions that could affect everything of importance to him. "Yes,
I believe so."
"Good decision. We'll give her top-flight treatment, believe
me."
"Will there be a flight involved?"
"Huh? Oh, will we bring her here?"
"Versus, say, getting her into the parallel U.K. citadel."
"Well, I don't know, but—" He reached for his
portable, punched two numbers, and was speaking into it before
Kingsley could tell him to not bother.
Kingsley sat thinking rapidly. Obviously some faction in the U
Agency wanted him well in hand. A split in the U.S. government
itself? An all-encompassing emergency could provoke extreme reactions
in nations as well as in people. The President had been edgy and had
referred glancingly to a division in the advice he was getting. By
coming into such advanced policy disputes late, Kingsley became a
pawn readily conscripted with a touch of leverage. The U Agency was
more accustomed to using muscle.
Taking deep breaths, a decision percolated up from within,
tightening his stomach muscles with a tingling anticipation. He
recalled from schoolyard scrapes that the best way of dealing with a
punch was to duck it. Very well.
Only after Herb had rung off did he realize that the reassuring
report Herb was giving them, smiling all the while, would work in
nicely. Herb's superiors would take it that matters were going well.
That would, in turn, give Kingsley more time to act once they were on
the ground.
Herb gave a reassuring nod. "They say sure, we can move her
over here."
"Actually, I'd rather she were in England. The installation
is out toward Wales, I believe, and that is country she has always
appreciated."
Herb frowned. "Afraid it's done, friend."
"Not changeable?"
"I really don't want to go back and keep switching—"
"Very well. I understand."
Though he had not planned matters this way, this tiny sign was
just what he needed to resolve him to a course of action. Now if only
he could bring it off.
"We want to be on your side in this thing, y'know," Herb
said.
As if it had a sense of timing, the helicopter began its yowling
descent. The world had a habit of forcing his hand, of late. "All
right. Done."
They landed in one of the great pools of light that dotted Dulles.
Most of the airport had been closed off for national security reasons
for weeks now. Aircraft of every description, many military,
took off in a continual background yowl.
Their party got out and walked quickly into the terminal. The
usual Dulles passenger transports worked the truncated civilian part
of the field, moving like ponderous, big-windowed apartments on
wheels.
The U Agency type stuck with him as he made his way upstairs.
There was a special check-in counter for people traveling on
government craft. His special flight to Hawaii was to leave in less
than an hour. Herb announced, "Y'know, I might just come along
on that same jet, if there's room."
"Oh?" Herb did not seem to doubt that there would be a
seat for him. This sudden decision was more confirmation of
Kingsley's working hypothesis. The plan he had improvised was
unfolding from his unconscious. There was something tensely delicious
in allowing it to do so in its own good sweet time.
The big executive jet for their group was already in place at the
end of a passenger ramp, guarded by two conspicuously armed Army
men. Such a plane was wasteful, but mandatory in the pecking order.
Protocol officers babbled at him while he watched the crowd, but no
one came forward to join the U Agency fellow. Very good.
Perhaps half an hour before boarding, but there was much to do.
"Unbearable in here, isn't it?" Kingsley began, his heart
thudding at this opening pawn move.
"Yeah, they overheat these places."
"Let's get a breath, shall we?"
Herb thought a second too long, perhaps realizing that there was
no plausible reason to object. "Sure, sure."
They went out a side door and down a corridor, Kingsley furiously
trying to remember times before when he had wandered through this
terminal. After a false lead, he found a door that opened out onto a
broad parapet, the sort of use-less ornament to the building where no
one actually went. Sure enough, there was no one looking at the
waning sunset. Planes buzzed on the field about twenty feet below.
Kingsley put his briefcase down and made a show of sucking in a
lungful of moist air.
"We can go around to the other side, should be able to see
the burning in D.C.," Herb volunteered, his voice mellow in
good-buddy mode.
"That should be a sight. Still out of control?"
"Yup. Got the National Guard in now."
"Pity."
"People just plain going crazy, is what it is."
Idly Kingsley walked along into a more shadowy zone. Herb tagged
after. Kingsley thought again through his chain of logic and could
see no flaw in it. Still… "I presume she can
leave the facility in the U.K. whenever she likes?"
Herb did not pause. "Oh, sure."
Clear enough, then. A trap being set, disguised as a plum.
Herb was a remarkably inept liar.
"See that big one? What sort is it?" He pointed out onto
the field.
As Herb followed the line Kingsley checked again in both
directions along the parapet. No one in view. The parapet's guard
rail was of raised concrete with a thick lip, suitable for leaning
on. This Herb proceeded to do, gazing out at the moving airplanes.
Kingsley had taken a course in judo long ago and had been trying
to remember some of it over the last few minutes. Frustratingly,
the only item he could call up was the instructor's admonition
that the body had to learn the moves, not the nasty old,
unreliable mind.
Fair enough, he thought, stooping slightly to grab the
belt at Herb's back. Now the difficult part. As Herb turned,
Kingsley took a firm hold of the back of the man's suit and shirt
collar. He dropped farther and turned himself, bending his knees to
take Herb's weight. As he pulled the man over onto his back, he heard
a strangled exclamation, "Wha—"
He felt the weight come fully onto his back and a fist slammed
into his left ribs. The pain made him suck in air. Kingsley turned
farther, lifted with the one burst of energy he had. The other fist
pounded at him. "Help—"
This shout Kingsley cut off by straightening up suddenly and
twisting. This heaved Herb over the guard rail. The body went partway
over, then the suit coat caught in the railing somehow. "Help—"
Kingsley found the wadded coat cloth that was exerting just enough
strength to keep Herb's scrabbling hands and feet on the parapet's
lip. He shoved at the body and it was gone. A soft thump came from
below. He leaned over. Herb lay on his side about fifteen feet below.
A trickle of blood had started down his brow and ran onto the tarmac.
There seemed to be no loading crew nearby and no sign that anyone
had seen. On the other hand, Kingsley could not see the ground floor
of the terminal, tucked back below the parapet. Herb did not move.
He trotted back to his briefcase, picked it up, and started
walking in a perfectly ordinary fashion. Airplane roars matched his
hammering heart. He succumbed to the temptation to look over the
parapet again. Still no movement from Herb.
But now a woman in overalls was running toward the body from the
right. She called out something that an airplane takeoff drowned
out. In the bright light, she looked up at Kingsley and he jerked his
head back, probably too late to avoid being identified. Damn.
Stupid, of course, once one was committed, to look back.
He walked quickly back inside and past the gate where his airplane
would soon begin boarding. This part of it he had not fully thought
out, but he knew it was a good idea to get out of the
government-controlled part of the terminal. This proved simple, as
all the security measures were directed to screening out the opposite
flow. He walked through some guards and down an escalator.
At the American Airlines counter, he saw a flight for
Hawaii leaving within the hour. To Oahu, not the Big Island, but
that was a small inconvenience. He did not dally at the counter,
where anyone could see him, and instead found his way to the
Admirals' Club, where he had a lifetime membership.
He had often enjoyed the perks of this club, but never so much as
now. Here he had no difficulty booking onto the flight, so long as he
was willing to go first-class. If sailing on the Titanic,
why not? he thought a bit wildly.
He knew the airlines kept their own bookings of first-class. There
was a fair chance that even the U Agency, should it be searching
soon, would not find access to those files right away. A chance, at
least.
He went straight along to the private telephone rooms they kept
down a deeply carpeted corridor and dialed. He found himself holding
his breath, This would all prove to be a ludicrous, dangerous waste
unless—
"Hello?" A fuzzy voice. "Hope you've got a good
reason to—"
"I do. Listen quickly." He had to rely on her
recognizing his voice. His name might touch off one of those
listening programs governments used to target calls. "You're to
pack a bag, enough for a week, and leave the house immediately."
"What? Why would I—"
"Because you are in danger. Some people are going to try to
round you up. I'd suggest going to a friend's, someone they cannot
easily trace."
"But what's this about? Why would they—"
'To use you as hostage. Once they have you, I'd do what they
want."
"Who is this 'they'?"
"That's the dicey part. I don't know, not precisely."
"Then why should I—"
"There are forces at work here I do not fully understand."
She was fully awake now. "It's pretty damned arrogant—"
"No doubt, but pointless to debate now. Just move. Go to a
hotel to get your bearings if you want."
"Whozzat?" a male voice came from the background.
"Quiet," she said quickly. Then, to let the speaker
know, she added, "Kingsley, I don't follow your orders any
longer."
"I hope that you've kept matters reasonably discreet?"
"What? Oh, what the hell, I don't care if you know. Yes, I've
been quiet about him, if you must—"
"And your newfound friend has a place?"
"Well, of course, he's not a street person—oh, I see."
"Yes. Hole up there for tonight, probably safer than being in
a nearby hotel registry."
"I haven't said that I would—"
"There isn't time to have a pleasant little debate about
this. I just injured a man, perhaps killed him, all to make this
telephone call."
"What?" The newfound friend was saying something in the
background again.
"I can't talk much longer. Be out of the house inside half an
hour."
"But I don't know… I… What's this about—"
"You might actually be safer in a shelter, old girl, but I
can't have them using you against me."
"My God, do you think things are going to get—"
"I don't know how badly we might fare, but others with more
power are covering a lot of different bets. You and I are very minor
figures in all this, but we may share the fate of a church mouse who
sleeps with a restless elephant. Best to be elsewhere."
"I still don't—"
"Go to the boyfriend's. Don't tell me where it is. They might
have had the foresight to tap this phone."
"He's not a 'boyfriend,' he's much more—"
"No time for that. Go. I'd advise a nice trip to someplace in
the country. Then get a secure lodging for the week to come."
"Damn it, I—"
"Got to ring off now. I still love you, you know."
He hung up and let out a long, rattling sigh.
Now a brisk walk to the auto-cab stand. He used his credit card,
got in, and punched for a hotel in D.C. As the car paused, he got
out, secured the door, and watched the humpbacked car dutifully
trundle down the ramp and into the controlled section of the
highway. An easy trace for anyone to follow.
He went around the terminal on the outside. The yellow glow from
D.C. filled the eastern sky. He saw an ambulance pulling away, lights
flashing. It seemed unlikely that Herb had died of the fall.
Kingsley had seen no other way to gain the time and get free of
the U Agency. A moment's reflection had shown that the only safe
haven for him now was back on the Big Island, but interception while
on a government flight was surely certain. And he most certainly did
not want to fall into the hands of the lot at Langley.
Most probably they had people in the terminal by now. He surveyed
the impossibly crowded waiting bays. Far too easy for them to pick
him up while in that crowd, and quite possibly they had thought
of the Admirals' Club by now. The jam of vexed people had an air of
fevered impatience, something beyond the usual expected from
delayed flights.
This was the first time he had seen firsthand how the ordinary
world was dealing with the Eater's approach, the fever of anxiety
that somehow permeated the air of every ordinary moment. Even in
this air-conditioned terminal, he caught the sour smell of something
elemental and unsettled.
He wondered what England was like now. He had to guard against the
mixture of envy and contempt Europeans often felt while in the United
States. Americans had their blemishes, particularly a curious kind of
practical self-righteousness, but at least they did not brim
with the world-weariness Europeans often equated with cultural
maturity. Europe was a comfy land going nowhere now, and the Eater
must strike many of his countrymen as an affront to their assumed
eminence in the world. All humanity was all truly in the same trap
now, stuck at the bottom of a frail atmosphere beneath a being that
cared nothing for human assumptions.
A small band of musicians was performing for the throng. Public
entertainment was so common now he never gave it a thought. In the
leisure-rich 2020s, more and more people were pop musicians,
filmmakers, actors, or "alternative" comedians,
artists all—except that they had no audience. Bands performed
for free at parties, jokesters eagerly launched into their routines
at dinner parties. Thankfully, there were a few artistic areas where
lack of aptitude did inhibit performance; there were few
struggling trapeze artists. But in his experience that did not stop a
contralto from bursting into song in the living room at house
parties, provoking a quick exodus to the far reaches of the
house.
This lot was halfway decent, their Latin rhythms rolling over the
edgy crowds, quite possibly lightening the mood. Faces relaxed near
the swaying music. Some looked for an upturned hat to toss change
into, but there was none; these were gratis performers.
For the third time, he saw a woman in a severe suit watching
him. Stupid to be out here like this, he admonished himself
and took advantage of a passing clump of Chinese tourists to slip
away. She followed him onto a concourse and he used the usual
elevator ploy to go up one, then back down, exiting as the doors to
the next elevator closed upon her startled face.
He spent the remainder of his wait in the men's room, popping out
to get boarding information. This apparently worked, for on his third
excursion, they were ushering first-class onboard. He badly needed
the proffered drink by the time he settled in.
It took him a while to work out why this flight was worse than
usual. He had been on many torturous red-eyes, even one in which a
screeching cat escaped its cage and spent hours in the dim
netherworld of coach-class, eluding pursuers. But this flight
had a restless anger. Abrupt insults exchanged over stowed
carry-ons. Seat kickers behind.
Quarrels over meal selections running out. The attendants were
frayed.
Kingsley adopted his standard maneuver to avoid conversation,
pulling out a sheaf of work and at the first question telling the
chap to his left that he was in insurance. That did not deter the
woman to his right, so he leaned toward the window and said
expectantly, "Think we'll see any UFOs?" For insurance, he
took from his briefcase some working papers and placed atop them
insignia from the Internal Revenue Service that he had
downloaded from their Web site long before. A sure conversation
killer.
Au revoir, États-Unis!
he toasted with an agreeable California claret as they cleared
American air space. Hawaii was a state, of course, but never felt
like the rest of the United States. He made himself concentrate upon
the wine to slow his still thudding heart. Adrenaline zest had gotten
him through the airport, but now he needed to be calm. There was
surely more to come.
He had received by classified e-mail a selection of recent Eater
messages. Scanning them, he wondered at the sort of mind that
slithered from one subject to another, unaware of the impact upon the
swarms of minds that would receive its words.
THERE WERE 1018 SECONDS SINCE WHAT YOU
TERM THE BIG BANG AND WHICH COULD BETTER BE TRANSLATED AS AN
EMERGENCE, NOT AN EXPLOSION. THERE ARE 1088 PARTICLES IN
THE KNOWN UNIVERSE. THESE ARE TINY NUMBERS COMPARED WITH THE WAYS OF
COMBINING INFORMATION, THE TRUE FONT OF INTELLIGENCE. HERE LODGES THE
TRUE RICHNESS OF CREATION. A DECK OF YOUR GAME CARDS CAN BE ASSEMBLED
IN 1068 WAYS. EACH NEW SHUFFLE PROBABLY HAS NEVER BEEN
DEALT BEFORE. REARRANGING THE 0'S AND 1'S ON A MEGABYTE OF MEMORY
COULD YIELD 1035 MILLION DIFFERENT BYTE STRINGS. THE TRUE
CONSTRAINT ON NATURE IS NOT THINGS BUT WAYS OF ARRANGING THEM, AND IN
THIS THERE ARE NO TRUE BOUNDS.
All this, apparently, as cheerleading for people to relish
uploading into the Eater's "library." Or so a naive human
mind could read it.
I MANIFEST MY-SELF THROUGH GRAVITATIONAL ENERGY,
WHICH IS IN THIS UNIVERSE THE LARGEST IN QUANTITY. IT ALSO IS THE
LEAST DISORDERED AND FROM THIS SUPERIOR QUALITY CAN CHANGE EASILY
INTO OTHER FORMS. THUS I BRING IMMINENT ORDER TO YOUR KIND.
He supposed one should expect a being unique and isolated to
become something of an egomaniac. What choice did it have? Every
other intelligence it had encountered vanished into the abyss of
astronomical time, devoured by its own terminal brevity.
YOUR LIFETIME COMPRISES A TRILLION OF YOUR BRAIN
EVENTS. YOU ARE AQUEOUS SUSPENSIONS OF MOLECULES AND SO COMPRISE A
TRANSIENT MEDIUM. CAUGHT IN YOUR SMALL BOX OF TIME, YOU CANNOT ATTAIN
THE HEIGHTS OF SOME FORMS I HAVE WITNESSED.
Apparently the biologists had caught its attention. The Eater was
notorious by now for abruptly swerving among subjects and ignoring
entreaties. This fit the developing model for its own mental
organization: a compilation of many magnetic knots storing separate
agents of mental structure.
Each agent could come forward as a governing principle and shine
the spotlight of consciousness upon itself. In this sense, the Eater
had access to its own unconscious—unlike humans. It could watch
itself thinking, and so felt no need to dress itself in the clothing
of a smoothly operating over-mind, to be one "person."
I HAVE SEEN AND NOW CARRY WITH ME THE MINDS OF
BEINGS WHO STORED THEMSELVES IN THE CLAY ARRAYS OF THEIR WORLD'S MUD.
THESE COULD THINK IN SPANS OF MILLIONTHS OF YOUR SECONDS, WHILE
YOURSELVES CAN ONLY MASTER THOUSANDTHS. I ORBITED FOR MANY OF
YOUR MILLENNIA A CLOUD THE SIZE OF YOUR PLANETARY SYSTEM AND THIS
CREATURE THOUGHT FAR SLOWER THAN YOU. BUT IT WAS MORE VAST THAN ANY I
HAVE FOUND AND HAD THOUGHT FOR LONGER THAN YOUR STAR HAS BURNED.
He wondered how they could deal with this. The fear he had seen in
the President's eyes was global. Would the volunteered uploads
from the dictatorial nations be enough? Or did it have further
amusements in store for itself, at humanity's expense?
Well, only a few days to go until they all found out. The cabin
was dark, the plane on its long night arc over the Pacific. He
looked out a window and with practiced eye could find the blue-white
blotch that was the Eater's decelerating jet. Brighter, nearer,
hanging like a strange eye in the blackness.
He allowed himself to think of Channing a bit. Her upload had
apparently gone reasonably well and now "she" cruised in
orbit. Apparently the specialists were engaged in "linearizing"
her onboard consciousness from afar, an unparalleled technical
feat. Fuel pods were being attached to give her multiple booster
capability. Her whole remaining self was a mere speck perched atop
masses of refrigerated hydrogen.
Then, without noticing the transition, he was awakening as they
banked over Honolulu. Time to get back into the game.
No one intercepted him as he disembarked. The terminal reeked of
festering anxiety. Once aloft he had phoned Arno and asked for an
escort, giving enough detail to convince him that there were factions
at war now within the U Agency. "Something about China,"
Kingsley added.
"Don't repeat that word," Arno said hastily.
"It's a fairly well-known nation." Kingsley could not
resist the jab. Arno should never have allowed Kingsley to go
into a situation inadequately forearmed. Put it down to haste and the
press of events, but still…
Sure enough, three men he recognized from the Center and carrying
the right recognition code met him at the gate. Wordlessly they took
him to a private federal airplane, gray and unmarked. In short order,
or so it seemed to his hazy state of mind, they were landing at the
new field just scraped from the valley near the Center.
He was quite knackered and begged off going straightaway to
the Center. Kingsley rang off and called ahead to his private number.
"Be there soon," he said, not trusting himself to go
any further with the driver and two burly guards, who crisply took
him to his flat.
She answered his knock. He embraced her gratefully. She had
started their relationship wearing ratty housecoats, but had quickly
learned how he liked to be greeted—by an actual woman, not a
housekeeper. Dressed in suitable nineteenth-century undergarments,
red or black if possible.
Sailing on the Titanic, he thought
fuzzily,
why go steerage?
"Thanks, luv," he murmured at her black merry widow,
"but afraid it's no use this time."
"I'll be here when you wake up."
"Can't say how long that will be."
"Pretty bad?" A warm kiss.
"What's the saying? 'Politicians, diapers—both should
be changed regularly, and for the same reason.' Particularly the ones
with guns."
She laughed softly, as if to say it did not matter whether she had
heard this chestnut before. He hugged her. To be in her arms was
quite enough, thank you. They had been drawn to each other as the
crisis deepened. In the face of the abyss, people needed each other.
He wondered if he was falling in love with her. Something in him
hoped so.
"Something to drink?" Amy asked.
"Lately, I sup solely from the cup of knowledge." He
kissed her again, this time urgently, something escaping from
him, letting out the leaden fog of his desperation.
2
Benjamin could not mourn her anymore.
For three days, he had gone on beach walks and sat staring at the
bottom of various bottles, talked with friends, and read over
obsessively her last writings. Nothing helped. In the afternoon of
the third full day, he so dreaded the coming of shadows that he
fled. He finally knew that he had to go to the Center and face the
unknown that loomed there.
A traffic tie-up and even more guards than the last time stopped
him outside the new, high gates a full kilometer from the Center.
Someone spotted him stuck in the jam and ushered him around, down a
side road where he still had to submit to the triple-check of ID,
retinas, and all. Sunset brimmed over the hills and he could pick out
in profile the snouts of tactical-range missiles, installed only days
before.
Just who were they defending against? No one had explained.
There were more U Agency faces in the corridors every day, but they
never spoke, just looked professionally grim.
He peered upward, eastward, and there it was: a hard blue-white
dot spiking down at them. The Eater was decelerating at a
prodigious rate. Its forward jet ejected mass apparently
accumulated in its accretion disk, which X-ray telescopes showed had
thickened to resemble a fat, rotating donut. Now the donut was
dwindling fast, its stored matter fed by glowing streamers into the
braking jet.
Nobody understood how the system could have stocked up so much
mass, enough to shove around the incredibly dense nugget of the black
hole. The magnetic labyrinth around it must have remarkable retention
ability. The hard radiation coming out of the jet got degraded into
visible light, the whole glowing over ten times brighter than the
full moon.
Cults had begun worshipping it by night, he had heard. The wave of
suicides which was sweeping the world focused upon doing
themselves in "view" of the Eater, as if it saw or cared.
He could feel nothing for such people, not even pity. They were just
marks on a chart, statistics floating beyond the gray veil that
shrouded his world.
Inside, he spotted Kingsley looking tired, talking to a U Agency
woman in a conference room. The man had just returned from
Washington and had left several e-mails for Benjamin, asking for a
meeting with Arno. Benjamin ducked away and went to his own office.
There was a lot of paperwork to do. Somehow even the supreme
crisis of human history could not avoid its tedium. He plowed
through, thankfully oblivious, for an hour. Then he got the expected
call, and when he reached Arno's office, there was Kingsley. They
shook hands silently, and after a moment's awkwardness, business
picked up.
"This is just to inform you," Arno said, waving at a
screen that carried specifics about missiles.
Kingsley seemed to comprehend the news at a glance. Benjamin shook
his head to dispel his numbness, but it was not physical. "What
am I looking at here?" he asked finally.
"Missile classes and capability," Arno said.
Even with this, it took him a moment to pick out the crucial
detail. "That's a submarine-based missile," he said
blankly.
"That's the point," Arno said. "We just launched
three from off the coast of China, near a peninsula."
Kingsley said, "The Liaodong Peninsula."
"Why from there?" Benjamin was startled. "And subs
are built for ICBMs, not shots into deep space."
Arno said, "The Department of Defense used a new class of
ICBM, specially fitted with one hard-nosed warhead, rather than the
usual multiple suite."
"The launch point nicely placed just south of the
peninsula," Kingsley said dryly, "halfway between
Beijing to the west and the Korean capital, Pyongyang, to the east.
It is an interesting historical accident that the capitals of our
primary antagonists in Asia are at nearly the same latitude and
only a few hundred kilometers apart."
Then Benjamin saw. "If the Eater can backtrack the launch, it
will believe the Chinese or North Koreans did it."
"And exact a retribution, perhaps," Kingsley said.
"Unless we knock it out, which is the idea," Arno said.
Anger cleared his head remarkably. "This… this is
crazy."
"President didn't think so, and Kingsley was right there
advising him." Arno even held a hand out to Kingsley, as if to
pass the buck.
Benjamin said hotly, "But the risk—"
"It can do a hell of a lot to us we already know about. Plus
plenty we don't know, I'll bet." Arno straightened the seam of
his blue suit, keeping him in good order under fire.
"Fail and it'll be able to punish us big time, too,"
Benjamin shot back.
Kingsley said mildly, "We should remember that it is
entirely alien. The notion of revenge may well not apply to its
thinking."
Arno looked pained. "You always say something like that. Not
that I'm agreeing with Benjamin here, but how can it not want to hit
back?"
"Punishment deters by setting an example, all to lend
credence to threat." Kingsley steepled his fingers. "That,
and not the sweetness of revenge, is its utility—to
us.
Punishment is a social mechanism, well evolved in us because it
keeps tribal discipline. This thing
has no tribe."
"It's done this before, though," Benjamin said, though
his mind was still trying to work its way around what Arno had so
casually implied. He wasn't used to these high altitudes in the
policy mountain range. "Maybe thousands of times, even millions,
it's come into a solar system and demanded what it wanted from
intelligent species."
Kingsley said airily, "And, just as for us, it regards its
history as philosophy teaching by examples?"
"So it's learned how to threaten and hurt?" Arno looked
skeptical.
"It sure knows how to whipsaw us, doesn't it?" Benjamin
asserted. "Look at how its demand for uploaded people has split
us already. A lot of people are saying, 'Why not give up a few
hundred it specifically asked for? Then make up the rest from the
nations that are only too happy to discard their "undesirables"
in a good cause.' "
Arno said, "The U.N. has taken a stated position against
making any individual undergo—"
"So far," Kingsley said distantly. "It could
undoubtedly kill millions if it wanted, and the moment it starts,
there will be plenty of voices calling for us to cave in."
Benjamin said, "And we're shooting at it already? Why not
wait?"
"If punishment is to be exacted," Kingsley said, "I
surmise that the coalition of powers rather wishes it to be
bestowed upon their strategic rivals."
Arno nodded. "The launch point's far enough away from our
nearest strategic holding, the Siberian Republic."
"A team at Caltech argues," Kingsley said, "that
the Eater cannot resolve the launch point better than about a hundred
kilometers. Similarly its anticipated response. So its retribution
may well include the capital of an enemy."
"I had no idea we were so far in…" Benjamin
faltered. He was not cut out for this sort of thing.
"The President wants to kill it now," Arno said.
Kingsley said, "Plus getting what I believe is termed a
'twofer.' Devastation for China or Korea or both if the attempt
fails."
Benjamin jabbed a finger at the launch parameters. "The
Chinese have good observing satellites. They'll have seen these lift
off already."
Arno smiled without humor. "We have
a few tricks to hide our plumes. And what can the Chinese do, anyway?
The birds are gone."
"This is monstrous," Benjamin said, still angry.
"There is a monster in our skies," Arno replied simply.
The missiles took eight hours to reach the Eater. This was a
remarkable achievement, as the launch vehicles had to attain a
final speed in the range of twenty kilometers per second.
Benjamin had no idea that strategic warfare had advanced to such
potentials. The missiles converged upon the Eater's outer regions at
about half a million kilometers above the Earth's atmosphere.
The rendezvous was well beyond the Earth's dipolar magnetic
belts, which could retain the plasma the warheads would generate.
This was the crucial requirement. Releasing high-energy particles
into the regions near the many thousands of communications satellites
would destroy them by charging them up until the potentials shorted
out components.
This was what the missiles tried to do. They flew into the black
hole's magnetosphere and detonated in a pattern calculated to
send currents fleeing along the field lines. This was to occur
slightly after dawn in Hawaii. The Eater hung low on the horizon. The
Center was packed, silent crowds before every screen.
Benjamin went outside with Kingsley. They were of the last
generation which felt that events were more real if seen in person,
rather than watched over authenticity-inducing TV screens.
"No trouble spotting the bastard," Kingsley said, facing
into the warm offshore breeze. Solid and moist, the tropical lushness
lay beneath the fierce glare of a blue-white dot.
"How good does the targeting have to be?" Benjamin asked
to focus his attention. He was still distracted and foggy and
wondered if this internal weather would be permanent.
"Not terribly, the magnetosphere theorists say. The vital
region is about a hundred kilometers across and they are closing at
speeds that allow the warhead triggers to go off within a
microsecond's accuracy."
"So we can hit it within a few meters' accuracy? Wow."
"These weapons chaps are quite able. Impressive.
Unfortunately, our understanding of the underlying magnetic
geometry is muddy. I am not optimistic."
"Want to lay odds?" Benjamin chided him.
Kingsley had spilled most of the insider stories from his trip,
including the incredible bit about the U Agency guy at Dulles.
Benjamin still had trouble believing that things had gotten so
extreme. But then, he had told himself, they had spent months holed
up here, while the world outside went through a conceptual beating.
So far this entire thing had been easier for scientists to take
because they were used to rubbing against the irreducible
reality of a universe that was in a sense even worse than the
hostility of the Eater. The TwenCen had cemented a solid belief that
the universe was indifferent. For many ordinary people, that
view was impossible to accept. Not that the eerie interest of the
Eater was much solace.
"On success? Small, I should think."
"Let's be quantitative."
Kingsley smiled. "All right, what odds do you give me?"
"Three to one for a fizzle."
"I'm not quite that large a fool."
"You really don't think we can short it out?"
"Quite unlikely."
"But you helped target them."
"Precisely. I am not married to models, particularly those
devised by theorists like ourselves."
"Okay, ten to one."
"That I can accept. Stakes?"
"I'll put up a thousand bucks."
"So if the Eater dies, your bank account does, too."
"Don't give a damn. I'm betting on American warheads."
"Good point. A general treated me to an hour's lesson on how
hardened and compact they are. 'A megaton inside a suitcase,' the
fellow boasted."
"Damn right," Benjamin said and wondered why he felt
called upon to swagger around like this.
"I shall cheerfully pay up."
They waited in silence in the soft, salty wind. The ocean lay like
a smooth blanket and the world held its breath.
The three flashes came as one, a hard white blink and then a
fast-fading yellow. A cheer came faintly up the hillside, ragged and
angry, from a thousand voices inside the buildings.
"I'd pray if I believed any of that," Benjamin said.
"As would I."
"It'll be a while before we know—"
"No, we've failed."
"What?"
"The color of the jet emission has not even altered. Its
ejection is operating normally."
"Well, that could—"
"To succeed, we had to disrupt its control mechanisms. Moving
mass into those magnetic funnels is a colossal endeavor. We
haven't a clue how it pulls off the trick. If it can still do that,
it has survived."
Benjamin had known it, too, but something made him argue with
Kingsley. "Yeah. Yeah."
"Where is she?"
"In an orbit timed to put her on the other side of the Earth
right now."
"Good show."
"You think she'll…"
"Have to be used?" Kingsley gave him a long,
sympathetic gaze. "Inevitably."
"Damn, damn, I…"
Kingsley put a hand on his shoulder. "That is, above all,
what she wished."
3
Kingsley quickly realized the next morning that to the
bureaucratic mind, the most pressing matter would, of course, be the
assigning of blame.
This fell to an assortment of U Agency types. These in the general
Executive Committee meeting used "It is believed" rather
than "I think," theorists who said "It has long been
known," when they meant "I can't remember who did this,"
or stated portentously "It is not unreasonable to assume"
instead of "Would you believe?" Those defending their
ideas—the imported target specialists, DoD experts and the
like, retreated into "It might be argued that," which was a
dead-on clue that it actually meant "I have such a good answer
to that objection that I shall now raise it myself…"
These were the same sort whose speech included "progressing
an action plan" and "calendarizing a project." Only
painfully did it penetrate that the calendar here was set entirely
by a being nobody understood.
Part of the problem in assigning responsibility was the swelling
numbers of Center consultants, U Agency staff, assorted
specialists, and the like. More moved in as the possibility of
communications failure grew. The Eater might chop the human digital
networks with a single swipe.
In the end, there was plenty of blame to go around.
All Earth's telescopes and diagnostics, concentrated upon the
comparatively tiny region of a few hundred kilometers around the
rapidly decelerating Eater's core, saw much that no one comprehended.
The huge energies of the three warheads had sent great plumes of
high temperature plasma into the magnetic geometry, all right. But
somehow it flowed along the field lines and then into the accretion
disk. More fuel for the Eater of All Things.
"The Eater ate them," Amy Major observed laconically.
"And like us all, eating makes you bigger."
It had swelled, become more luminous. In the next few hours, the
Eater crossed the remaining half a million kilometers to Earth,
bearing in on a spiral orbit.
Kingsley watched the U Agency break down into factions that fed
upon each other. Outside the Center battalions of newsfolk demanded
answers. Washington already knew that, fundamentally, there were
none. The Eater said nothing about the attack, until two hours later:
MY-SELVES NOTE THAT YOUR INTERCOMMUNICATIONS
REFER TO ME AS A PROCESSOR OF FOOD. THIS IS NOT A SERVICEABLE
DISTINCTION. INGESTION IS SHARED BY NEARLY ALL LIFE-FORMS. I WISH YOU
TO REFER TO ME BY A TERM MORE NEARLY DESCRIBING MY ESSENTIAL BEING IN
YOUR MEASURE. ULTIMATA
"Looks like a signature," Arno commented to the
Semiotics Group.
"But what's it mean?" a voice called, and others chimed
in:
"The ultimate?"
"Should be singular."
"It says 'my-selves,' though."
"So it's what? An anthology intelligence?"
"Like Father, Son, and Holy Ghost?"
"Don't be humorous about that!"
"About life and death? Laughing is best."
"Ultimate as in final? Fatal?"
"Maybe it's the plural of ultimatum."
This last from a University of Oklahoma professor sent a chill
through the room.
Later, secluded in his office, Arno asked the old working group of
Martinez, Amy, Benjamin, and Kingsley if they thought these were
reasonable readings. Amy said, "It knows dozens of languages by
now. Choosing a name like that—well, it proves it's learned how
to pun."
"To underline that it wishes its demand for specific persons
obeyed," Kingsley said.
Amy said, "There's a Mesh story that says they're reading the
sections of Einstein's brain that were in formaldehyde."
"Lots of luck deciphering that," Benjamin said.
Amy waved the Einstein matter away as a stunt, but then said
earnestly, "There are thousands of specialists working on the
whole uploading problem. They're learning every day. If we have to
give it all those people, the technology will be ready."
Arno asked her, "How many volunteers?"
"Real ones? A few dozen."
Arno looked startled. "But the Mesh says there are already
over ten thousand."
"That's counting captive 'volunteers' from dictators."
"How about reading in the brains of those just dead?"
Arno pressed. "There are eight billion people on Earth. Dying at
a rate of better than a hundred thousand every
day—"
"Everybody's resisting that," Amy said briskly. "Most
aren't anywhere near a facility that has the equipment. And anyway,
the magnetic sensing process takes several days, minimum. Dying
patients aren't up to it, and their readings get screwed up, too."
"The Eater doesn't know that," Arno said.
Kingsley said, "Not so. It samples all our radio and TV. It
can eavesdrop on a great welter of talk."
Amy seemed more energetic than the men here, and Kingsley marveled
again at how she had become steadily stronger as this crisis
developed. That had first drawn him to her, the sheer sense of
untapped energy. She had an appetite for detail, for stitching
together the innumerable Eater messages, then shopping them out
to the working groups—all the while remaining a warm,
insightful woman, not an office automaton, as did so many of both
sexes in these fear-fraught days.
"I… see." Arno's former spotless attire had
eroded. His suit was unpressed, tie askew, shoes unpolished—all
mirroring his wrecked face, which was not used to receiving a
serving of unremitting bad news. No sleep and pressure from above had
not been kind. "Well, at least we've solved the question of who
was after Kingsley."
This made Kingsley brighten. "How is old buddy Herb?"
"Conscious, finally. He'll recover. He was from the
China-option faction, I found out."
'Trying to silence opponents?" Kingsley guessed.
"They wanted you in hand to control reactions and help with
follow-up targeting," Arno said.
This startled them all. "They planned on failing?" Amy
asked.
"Any good general has a retreat in mind," Arno said.
"They wanted to hit it several times, overload it."
Kingsley guessed again, "But didn't say so to the
President."
"Seems so," Arno said. "He overruled that, of
course. If they'd had you to head up the advocates, maybe they'd have
won, be slugging it out with the Eater right now."
Benjamin said angrily, "Inside our satellite belt? That would
skragg all our communications."
"Yep," Arno said blandly. "I'm getting so nothing
surprises me, even from Washington."
"The pronuke faction is vanquished, then?" Kingsley
asked.
"Not at all." Arno grinned cynically. "They just
sit in the back of the room now."
"Ah, politics," Amy said.
Arno's screen beeped and a priority message appeared, more from
the Eater:
IT IS INCONSISTENT WITH THE NATURE OF THE
UNIVERSE FOR A SEVERELY LIMITED, NATURALLY EMERGED BEING SUCH AS A
HUMAN TO BE FULLY ACQUAINTED WITH THE DIVINE, OR WITH CREATED BEINGS
OF HIGHER ORDERS.
"Cryptic son of a bitch, isn't it?" Arno prodded them.
"Sounds ominous," Benjamin said.
"Think so? It hasn't even taken notice of what we did."
Arno's eyes darkened with worry.
"All this time," Benjamin asked, "it's been
carrying on dozens of conversations with specialists, as though
nothing happened?"
"Right." Arno thumbed a control. "Here's one that
got booted to me. Goes to motives, maybe."
YOU ARE A BEAUTIFUL BRIEF MUSIC, YOU THIRD ORDER
CHIMPANZEES.
"So it does know how to toss off a compliment," Amy said
sardonically.
"At least that's positive," Arno said a touch
defensively.
"I think a bit of physics may be a better guide here than
amateur psychoanalysis of an alien mind," Kingsley said.
"You mean its refueling problem," Amy said.
"Quite. It has shed so much energy to slow its prodigious
velocity, to get into orbit just above us. Why we do not know, beyond
its demands. Still, if it is ever to leave, it must gain mass."
"From where?" Arno asked. "The President wants a
list of possibilities from us."
"And options for further action?" Kingsley asked dryly.
"Yes—and right away."
"That'll be due to the prodding of the Science Adviser."
Arno nodded. "It'll be in a nearly circular orbit soon, the
trajectory guys project. What will it do then? It can't actually
run right into the planet, you all say—"
"Its capabilities are beyond our horizons," Benjamin
said.
"The easiest mass to harvest," Amy put in, "is our
upper atmosphere. Nice and diffuse, ionized on contact."
This startled Arno. "It would do that? So close to us—"
"It apparently believes itself of a vastly different and
superior order, in the biological sense," Kingsley observed
distantly. "And probably of a different moral order, as
well."
The next few hours proved this to be so.
The Eater began to skate across the top of the atmosphere,
skimming over two hundred kilometers high.
Its braking had lit the sky with a many-colored glow rivaling
the sun. Vast clouds fumed where its deceleration jet struck the air.
It had knifed through the thin upper air in a virulent red
firework—aerobraking on a scale vastly beyond the puny
spacecraft that humanity had sent into the atmospheres of Mars
and Jupiter.
It was like a cannonball tens of miles across, Kingsley thought as
he watched the seething display on the big screens. Devouring the air
in its wake and using this grist to feed its braking jet. Tunneling
through the sky.
In its wake the air closed again. This sent monstrous bass
thunderclaps rolling down across whole continents.
The entire Center population emptied onto the surrounding
hills to see the thing rise over the western Pacific. The security
officers tried but could hardly contain them, over a thousand strong.
In the slanting afternoon light, it was easily visible, a
radiance that paled the sunlight.
It was already supping of the rarefied gas at that altitude,
steadily lowering further, circling the planet in under three hours
now.
It seemed to Kingsley like a great spiderweb of innumerable
strands. Its looping, dipolar pattern was a brittle blue, laced with
flickering orange and yellow spikes as electrodynamic forces
worked through it. A snarl of angry purple marked where the leading
jet somehow sucked ionized air into the knotted muzzle of tight field
lines.
"Bet it's hungry," Amy said.
"Ah, but for what?" Kingsley answered. It came off as
more brittle Brit wit, but he meant it earnestly. It had not come
here to sample the air, perhaps not even to sample humanity.
He put an arm around her and she nuzzled him, body trembling. He
was surprised to feel in her a quaking fear, expressed entirely
in body language. So much for the sharp facade.
He, on the other hand, was far better at the stiff-upper-lip act,
in fact had done something like that fa
çade—he
now felt, suddenly—all through his life. Pretending to be
meaner than he in fact was, for starters. He was thinking about this,
intently, when he saw Benjamin standing nearby and regarding
them with genuine surprise.
Well, they hadn't been secretive about it, just private. And what
was a man to do at such a time, in any case?
Benjamin came over and stood awkwardly, obviously not wanting to
broach the subject of Amy and yet not wanting to let it go. Kingsley
felt a burst of affection for this man, who had endured so much these
last few months. But he was no good at expressing such emotions,
either. They stood next to each other in the strange, sudden silence
that had descended upon the hills all around.
The Eater grew in scale as it passed overhead, unfolding more
luminous blue field lines.
These peeled off from the web, lit—or so a Center
astrophysicist nearby speculated—by excited oxygen lines
as already ionized atoms were caught and compressed by field
tensions. It behaved precisely like a beast unfurling great magnetic
wings.
At its edge began a medley of glows—yellow, ivory, a satiny
green. An atmospheric chemist nearby estimated that this came from
its processing of nitrogen and oxygen, the air's two principal gases,
in different molecular states. The fretting of light gave the crowd a
better view of the size of the thing and gasps came from the crowds.
It revolved slowly, as though basking in this bath.
"Thin gruel," Kingsley said.
Only then did he realize the sensation of heady lightness that had
been building in him for several moments. An airy lifting.
A creaking came from trees nearby. The crowd stirred like wheat
blown by a wind. A shuddering started to come up through his feet. He
felt uneasy, then comprehended—
"It's tide. The Eater's mass is raising a tide on the surface
of the Earth."
Amy gasped. The sense of lifting strengthened as the Eater neared
the peak of the sky, drawing them toward it.
"It's the mass of a moon, orbiting just a few hundred
kilometers away," Amy said wonderingly.
The crowd sighed. There was no other word for it. A collective
easing as gravity ebbed for a moment. Kingsley felt a release from
the burden of weight, stirring his blood at a fundamental level. How
like a god…
Then they all simply stood and
felt.
Awe, Kingsley recalled, was a mingling of fear and reverence.
Probably few watching from the moist, warm slopes believed in God,
but the press of foreboding wonder upon these people was palpable.
The most unexpected aspect of the moment was the thing's monstrous
beauty. It rotated again, this time around a different axis. A spew
of fire-red brilliance came suddenly from the very center of it,
where lurked the accretion disk. The fine field lines of the new jet
worked with amber light, extending itself out of the mesh of bruised
brilliance. The slow rotation began bringing the jet to point toward
the planet's surface.
The first atoms from Earth's air have sputtered down onto the
disk, Kingsley guessed.
Can the jet be preparing to raise
the orbit already? The disk was a mere bright scarlet dot.
Hopeless to glimpse the black dot that was the cause of it all,
but he tried anyway and failed.
" 'Gruel'?" Benjamin said in a croak. "It can
convert maybe ten percent of the mass-energy of what it grabs. Mc
2
is a big number, even from thin air, if it's getting spent in your
own neighborhood."
Kingsley hoped that this remark would not be predictive, but he
was proved wrong on this same orbit.
The Eater's jet rotated further as the Eater arced across the
Pacific and the western United States. Its orbit was tilted with
respect to the equatorial plane by about forty degrees, so that it
rose to high latitudes as it crossed the twilight line.
No one had foreseen what came next.
The jet brimmed with pulsing ruby light at its core. Then a spike
of hard blue light shot from it. Satellite spectral analysis showed
this to be high-energy plasma, mostly ionized nitrogen.
This fresh jet struck the upper layers of the atmosphere with a
splash of fiery virulence, stripping atoms, heating them, depositing
a fraction of the converted mc
2 energy harvested from
the tenuous reaches above.
Such energy is restless, always moving. The illuminated spot
expanded and reradiated in the infrared spectrum. This propagated
downward. Within a minute, a tongue of heat radiation licked at
the surface. Where it struck, scorching flames rose.
The jet first forked down above the Midwest. Within minutes,
it grew a hundredfold in power. The Eater's central engine was
the union of gravity, the fruit of its compacted mass. This coupled
with exquisite dexterity to utterly weightless magnetic conduits and
accelerators. Watching it function was a rebuke to humanity's pride.
This was engineering of a kind and scale to which not even the mad
had aspired.
Within moments, the torch was brighter than an early morning sun.
It hung in the night air like a moving, radiant lance.
By Ohio the infrared heating had become fierce. It wandered
as the Eater rotated, bringing the focus above West Virginia.
"It's writing," Amy whispered. "With a plasma pen."
Kingsley blinked. "On the forests."
"In a line miles wide."
The jet played with skill, tracing out a flowing script. Clearly
in the loops and jots there was meaning, but— "No language
we know," an expert said nearby. "Something from its past?"
"Cosmic graffiti," Amy said.
Benjamin murmured, "Not everything it does is an attempt
at communication. Maybe it's just writing its name."
A long silence fell over the crowd in the Center. They watched
with a cold, gathering dread.
Only when it had left the rugged mountains did the brutal heat
begin to rise yet again. The entire Eater surged in brilliance,
a cobweb prickly with ominous radiance. Millions watched it swell and
blossom, its central, shining shaft now unbearably bright to the eye.
Crowds turned from it in terror, but by then its target had become
clear to the defensive forces that watched from myriad
artificial eyes in orbit and on the ground.
As the resplendent tongue plunged still farther down, into the
moist clouds that shrouded the District of Columbia, steam burst
where it licked.
The cloud cover evaporated in seconds. Then the hammer blow of
infrared struck the river and instantly vapor began to rise there.
Tar bubbled on the roofs of tenements. Trees steamed, then erupted
into flame. Within moments, the entire District smoked, then roared
out an answer in flame.
People standing in the streets and parks to watch felt their hair
crisp and crackle as they ran for cover. Cloth smoked. Fabrics
melted. The air hummed. Their homes followed suit, shake roofs
flaming into pyres within seconds.
The Eater pulsed, keeping its jet turned artfully toward the
District even as it passed toward the horizon and out over Chesapeake
Bay and the Atlantic. The jet ebbed. Orange lightning traced along
its retreating shaft. Within a few more minutes, it was a mere
kindled spire attached to the broadening web of spiderweb
brilliance that dominated the black sky.
A helicopter got a shot of the Eater setting on the horizon like a
luminous insect scuttling after fresh prey.
Fire alarms wailed in a chorus of thousands below.
Behind it, the thing left a simmering record of ruin.
"It makes its point well," Kingsley said a while later,
when the shock had begun to wear off. The old Gang of Four, minus
Channing, found itself in a seminar room, like the meetings they had
held what seemed a thousand years before. "It was not fooled for
a moment by the launches from China."
"But
how?" Arno demanded. "The
President—thank God, he was underground in the
Catskills—demands to know."
"I imagine it is quite versed in our politics by this time.
It has been freely dipping into our torrent of news for at least
months now—and probably much longer."
"What can we
do?" Benjamin asked.
"I fear even the generals are stymied. I certainly am."
Kingsley felt he should be with Amy now, but he could not very well
leave immediately. Her parents lived in Silver Spring, a suburb of
the devastated area, and she had broken down as they viewed the
aftermath. City-wide fires still raged.
"Give it what it wants," Benjamin said.
"We can't," Arno said. "To force people, kill
them—that violates every moral code."
Kingsley said, "I very much doubt that our notions of
morality figure largely in this thing's worldview."
"We have to take a stand," Arno said, but without much
conviction.
"We are all making the same calculations from our own moral
calculus, I suspect," Kingsley said, "and I do not believe
we much like the outcome."
"Let it
have them!" Benjamin said wildly.
Arno looked at Benjamin, then at Kingsley, who gave him no sign of
help. Benjamin gulped, took a breath, then said in a ragged voice,
"Look, the thing's probably killed a hundred thousand already.
What goddamned difference does it make if… if…"
"I suggest we begin sending it what we have," Kingsley
said coolly.
"Why?" Arno asked anxiously. 'That'll take maybe a few
days and then it will want more."
"Right. But we will gain time."
'To do what? That's what the President, what the U. goddamned
N. wants to know."
"Kill it, if you want."
"How?" Arno demanded.
"I do not know."
Arno's screen beeped and a fresh message appeared:
HE MAKETH ME TO LIE DOWN IN GREEN PASTURES;
HE
LEADEST ME BESIDE THE STILL WATERS.
A long silence.
"I rather admire its choice of quotations." Kingsley
spoke to cover his own sensation of a rigid chill that swept up from
his belly. "It may have a sense of something we could call
irony."
Amy said, "More like Zeus than Jehovah."
"Gentlemen," Arno said in a wobbly voice, "we have
to tell them something. You saw the crowd outside this office. Good
scientists, technical people, sure. That's what they are. But they
couldn't come up with anything in their present state of mind."
"Fear paralyzes," Kingsley observed to gain time.
"Anywhere it wants, it can do that-—any time it likes,"
Arno went on.
Kingsley realized that Benjamin had begun to weep, quite quietly.
"I advise preoccupying it with fresh input. Give it what we
have."
"Then what?"
"Understand it further, certainly. Then kill it, as I said."
"We have nukes, plenty of them—"
"Pointless."
"Probably so. But it's what we've got."
"Not entirely."
They waited for him to complete his thought, and for a moment,
something caught in his throat and he could not go on.
Kingsley thought swiftly yet carefully about the properties
of magnetic jets. For Benjamin and himself, long ago, the subject had
been a suitable battleground for polite academic dispute, arcane
calculations, airy and fun. Now he contemplated with cold fear the
same images, now augmented with horror. A black hole spinning in
its high vault of utter darkness, rotation warping space around it.
That distortion, in turn, twisted the assembly of minds that
thronged outside the hole, intelligences caught in a magnetic prison
older than the sun. The entire grotesque assembly was now
impregnable, had proved immune to the defenses of the thousands of
civilizations it had consumed like a majestic, marauding appetite—
"We have Channing."
PART SEVEN
NO BODY IN A BOX
1
She popped—
—flowed—
—expanded—
—out
into the flexing space before her.
Plunging. Riding translucent highways along parabolic lines, she
felt unfamiliar muscles work with red heat down her spine, up her
legs, skating across a velvet skin she could not see.
She seemed to fill the fat balloon of soft blackness around her.
Yet in an eye flick she could be anywhere in that geometry, one
of myriad tiny glowing flecks.
Points of view. Searchers. All coasting in a beehive swarm above
the great slow-spinning sphere of Earth, itself a mottled
infrared mosaic.
So she was a central point in a rotating coordinate frame. And
simultaneously the skeletal ivory frame itself. Diffuse, like a fog.
Yet if she chose to be, she could anchor herself at a joint.
Cartesian questions, she thought with icy shock. Baby,
I got dent mind-body duality blues. To be a box and know it, yet
wonder what it means.
If she thought about herself, a whole interior world
welled up. Teeth sang in their sockets. The calcium rods that framed
her chest were chromed ribs, slick and sliding in swift metallic
grace, Ah, so clean! Purpling storms raced down squeezed
veins, up shuddering ligaments. Her toes rattled, strumming, talking
to the ground she could never again tread. Her ankles were dancing on
their own, her bald head thrown back, neck stretched into spaghetti
by a halo of polarized light. Now her spine turned parabolic and
crackling as she banked on jets that were her feet, running
in sheer weightless abandon. Hurricane hallways yawned in her.
What is this thing I am?—and from her a lockjawed
agony-song screeched. It reverberated in hip sockets polished by
blue-green, hungry worms. They swarmed over bone lattices, eating in
rhapsodic hunger.
Pain? Plenty of it.
So stop. Click. Just like that—
The torture fingers left her, blew away in the escaping fragile
seconds, leaving her cool and smooth and sure. To be a box.
Down she went, across and through—all equivalent in this
space of freedom-as-thing. She saw before her, around her, in full
three dimensions. The Searcher spacecraft, a silvery swarm
zooming in toward the graceful arching luminesce of the Eater.
A blink—and the Searchers became her many eyes.
Her point of view shot through the realm of the magnetic strands,
high above the disk of hot matter in the black hole's equatorial
plane. Beyond rolled the gravid Earth in regal, moist splendor.
Around her magnetic palaces made a luminous dominion, a
steel-wire spider at the gnawing center of a gigantic web. She
swiveled and found the core—geysers and light storms arcing
from the utterly black center of it all.
A rattle of human-speak came to her like pebbles on a tin roof.
Careful, vector to 0.347 x 1.274.
Yessah, boss. Here there be tygers, galleries of magnetic forces
to traverse.
Skating. She eased delicately past white-hot waterfalls,
green-rich tornadoes of turbulence. Tock!—a
stone-storm of crass dusty plasma clattered against her carbon
carapace. Raw food the Eater had stored. Or a weapon; one could not
be sure.
Did it know they were here? Of course, impossible to believe
it could not sense along its electromagnetic tendrils these flashing
solid motes. Two Searchers already drifted, charred by discharges.
So it would kill them if it could locate them. Us. Me.
More Searchers rose from below to aid her. Abruptly some sparked
to burnt cinders at the very rim of magnetic stresses, killed by some
edge defense. She had lodged in several knots already, then had to
bail out as they arced with huge potentials.
Yet she could not shake the airy feeling of floating suspended
above a huge abyss.
Diffuse am I, for I am nothing that has ever existed. Like the
Eater—one of a kind.
Getting heady here. Careful. Too easy to get drawn into phony
poetic abstraction.
And what else dwelled here? Hesitantly, working as intermediary
with Control, she felt her way among ropes of snarled flux. Edgy,
tentative, the whispery sounds came— voices, calls, and cries
and strange haunting musics, wisps of convex lore, echoes of…
what? A multitude floated in her global, three-dimensional
eyes—shining, ghostlike creatures of strands and velvet,
lustrous lattice.
Creeping among complex innards. Yet again she felt a cool distance
from events. She was free to slide in and out of this world.
Only a lack of imagination saves me from immobilizing myself
with imaginary fears.
Her eyes were all-seeing, swiveling impossibly, anywhere she
wanted. In her other self, the eyes had been where the brain surfaced
and supped from the world, taking in light along an optic nerve that
both transmitted and filtered, doing the brain's work before the glow
even arrived at the cerebrum.
Now she felt a wedge between her and the world she could behold. A
chunk of glassy silence that measured and knew, separately.
Gingerly she burrowed into that watery pane. A dizzy, jolting
ascent took her. Suddenly she was hanging above the entire solar
system. She glimpsed it as a spheroid cloud of debris, filigreed with
bands and shells of flying shrapnel.
She knew instantly that these fragments could be pumped into long
ellipses, into wobbly orbits that could now and then make a sharp
hook by skimming near another piece of scrap, and slam into a
blundering planet.
"What was that?" she asked aloud. (How? Yet they rang
like words.)
Control's monotone answered, "You slipped into the overview
mode of our entire Searcher system inventory. Don't do that again.
Concentrate."
"Yessah." Control was, well, controlling. It (he?—yes,
it felt like a he) kept missing the point of her experience here.
Instantly, some subself presented a catalog of possible wisecrack
material:
One sandwich short of a picnic.
Elevator doesn't
go to the top floor.
One brick short of a full load.
Couple
chapters missing from the book.
Half a bubble off plumb.
Gears
stripped off a few cogs.
A beer short of a six-pack.
Now where did that—
The enormity of what had happened to her descended.
Benjamin, forever gone from her.
The world—swallowed in abstraction.
No salty tang of sandy beach.
Just a bunch of digits.
So when she wanted to speak, an inventory of retorts had duly
shuffled into her mind, read off like a computer file. Not invention,
but a handy list of stock phrases. Because it was waiting for just
that use—somewhere.
No, not somewhere.
Here. Blackboxville.
Had her mind had those lists in it all her life? She could
understand why the brain researchers wanted to use simulations such
as herself. Here, a mind could sometimes watch itself.
"Try to focus all the Searchers onto the core."
Control's voice now was smoother, warm, and soothing. A response to
her irked state? "Channing, we have got to get better
resolution."
She felt her eyes seem to
cross and then rush outward.
Suddenly she sensed the hourglass magnetic funnels, alive in their
luminous ivory, as mass flowed down them. Fitfully the aching matter
lit the turning, narrowing pipes. Each headed toward doom.
The fields were firmly anchored in a bright, glowing disk at the
center of the hourglass neck. The Eater's intelligence, she knew,
resided in these magnetic structures she could make out—knotted
and furled, like lustrous ribbons surrounding the slowly
rotating hourglass.
Zoom, she moved. At her finest viewing scale she could make out
the magnetic intricacy—whorls and helices as complex as the
mapping of a brain. Here the legacy of a thousand alien races rested,
she knew (but how?).
All this stood upon the brilliant disk at the neck. Glowing mass
flowed down the hourglass neck, heading toward the glare.
The inner realm of the Eater was its foundation, the turning
accretion disk. She blinked, recalibrated specter. It brimmed red-hot
at its rim, a kilometer from the dark center. The disk was thickest
at its edge,
a hundred meters tall some part of her crisply
told her.
As the infalling, gyrating mass moved inward to its fate, it
heated further by friction. Inward it seethed with luminosity,
shading in from red to amber to yellow to white, and then to a final,
virulent blue. The red rim was already 3,000 degrees (a subself
informed her). Abstractly she knew that in the slide inward the
doomed mass exceeded the temperature of the surface of the sun,
greater than 5,000 degrees.
"Look closer," Control said in the comforting tones of…
who? Memory would not fetch this forth…
Closer. There at the very center—nothing, a blank
blackness. Like a hallucinogenic record turning to its own
furious music, faster and faster toward the center, where the spindle
hole was a nothing.
But not quite nothing. At higher resolution—and blinded
against the glare—she could see a fat weight that warped light
around it. At its very edge, red refractions and darting rainbow
sparklers marked the space. She saw that an ellipsoid spun
there, furiously laced by crimson arcs. As she watched, fiery matter
traced its last trajectory inward, skating along the rim of the
whirling dark. These paths swerved inward, and a very few skipped
through the wrenching blackness to emerge again.
"Unstable orbits, I see," Control said.
She felt a wave of immense dread. Yet she headed down there.
2
Benjamin drove stolidly toward the Center. His arms were of lead,
his head swiveled on scratchy ratchets.
That morning a poll had reported that the world was praying
more since news had come of the Eater. There was even a statistical
breakdown, showing what were the hot topics on the prayer circuit:
1. Family's health and happiness 83%
2. Salvation from
black hole 81%
3. Personal spiritual salvation 78%
4. Return of
Jesus Christ 55%
5. Good grades 43%
6. End of an addiction
30%
7. Victory in sports 23%
8. Material possessions 18%
9.
Bad tidings for someone else 5%
"Good to know the species hasn't lost its bloody-mindedness,"
Kingsley remarked from the seat next to him.
" 'Bad tidings for someone else,' " Benjamin said
sourly. "As if there weren't enough."
"Um. You mean this news of the Eater's course correction?"
"Yeah. What's it moving to higher altitude for?"
"It won't say, as usual."
On the drive, he saw yet another church going up, this time in a
converted gas station. Stumps of pump stands extruded from the
concrete islands in front. Churches were thronged every day now. New
ones jutted their flick-knife spires above the palms.
He had gotten better and could now go for maybe a whole hour
without thinking of her. He had found himself reviewing their
life together to get himself ready for what was to come this morning.
They had followed what he supposed to be a predictable arc. Passion
had settled down into possession, courtship into partnership,
acute pleasure into pleasant habit. For both of them, lives that once
had seemed to spread infinitely before them had narrowed to one
mortal career. To accomplish anything definite, they had given up
everything else, sailing for one point of the compass. Yet he had the
hollow feeling of missed opportunities. Could something be made
good through what he had to do next?
"It shouldn't be too demanding," Kingsley said out of
the silence.
"I'm that easy to read?"
"Old friend, depression is simple to diagnose. You are
acting under intolerable pressures."
He slammed a fist into the steering wheel. "I have to keep
working."
"Of course. And you're vital."
"If only I could sleep."
"Haven't been getting a lot of that myself, either."
"At least—"
"What? Ah, you were going to say, at least I have Amy."
"Yeah."
"And so I do. Not as though it is a betrayal of my dear
wife."
"How is she?"
"Had word just last night. Coded, of course. From a country
cottage she arranged through friends. Indeed, the U Agency had
conducted an extensive search for her. She barely got away."
"You're sure they were going to hold her hostage?"
"One is never certain. I felt that I could not risk it."
"She might have been safer."
"With
that"—a finger poked
skyward—"prowling the skies? I expect it can strike any
place it likes, to whatever depth."
"The infrared only bakes the surface."
"Do we truly wish to learn more of its capabilities?"
"Ummm, good point."
They let a companionable silence build between them. Benjamin was
comfortable this way, just sliding on from moment to moment, trying
not to think of what they would ask him to do. As they left their car
and passed through the layers of security at the Center, he felt
tensions building in him again, but fought them down.
There passed before his eyes procedures and people and none of it
left any lasting impression. Amy Major, looking more worn than usual,
was there when they got to the Control wing. She came out and
greeted them and Kingsley instantly asked, "What signs do
we have of its state of mind?"
"Still no mention of the whole Washington burning episode,"
Amy said.
"Damn." Kingsley's face was knotted with frustration.
"How can we conceivably understand it if the thing gives no
clue?"
"I suppose that's the point," Amy said mildly, putting a
hand on his sleeve.
For some reason, that simple gesture brought a tightness welling
into Benjamin's throat. He almost lost his remaining scraps of
composure then. It took a moment and a dodge about going for coffee
before he could trust himself to speak. "What's it saying,
then?"
Amy called up its latest dispatch to the Semiotics contingent:
YOUR BIOSPHERE HAS MANIFESTED FOUR PINNACLES OF
SOCIAL EVOLUTION. FIRST WERE THE COLONIAL, SPINELESS SUCH AS THE
CORAL REEFS. THEY ACHIEVED NEARLY PERFECT COHESION AMONG INDIVIDUAL
UNITS THAT DIFFERED LITTLE IN THEIR GENES. INSECTS ATTAINED A PEAK,
THOUGH WITH MUCH MORE DIFFERENCE BETWEEN INDIVIDUALS. STILL LESSER
PERFECTION OF SOCIAL GRACE CAME WITH THE SPINED ANIMALS OTHER THAN
YOUR-SELVES. THEY COOPERATE BUT HAVE MUCH DIFFERENT GENOMES. THIS
TREND FROM CORALS TO ANTS TO BABOONS MY-SELF HAS SEEN ON HUNDREDS OF
WORLDS. COMPLEXITY SELECTS FOR SELFISH, LESS SOCIAL BEHAVIOR. THE
BEAUTY OF THIS LOGIC IS PROFOUND: WHEN GENETICALLY NEARLY IDENTICAL,
ALTRUISM ABOUNDS AND COOPERATION THRIVES. AS GENETIC RELATEDNESS
EBBS, SO DOES INTENSITY OF SOCIAL BEHAVIOR. UNTIL YOUR KIND.
YOUR-SELVES EMPLOY SOCIAL STRUCTURES OF THE SPINED CLASS BUT
COMPLEXIFY IT. YOU RETAIN SELFISHNESS BUT USE INTELLIGENCE TO CONSULT
YOUR PAST AND PLAN YOUR FUTURE. THIS REVERSED THE DOWNWARD TREND IN
COOPERATION THAT MARKED THE LAST BILLION YEARS OF YOUR BIOSPHERE'S
EVOLUTION. THIS IS YOUR UNIQUE ASPECT, AS THE THREE OTHER MODES I
MENTIONED ARE PEAKS SCALED REPEATEDLY BY INDEPENDENTLY EVOLVING LINES
OF CREATURES.
"Intriguing miserable little lecture, isn't it?"
Kingsley said. "Makes one wonder if its droll sense of humor
extends to making fun of us through acute boredom."
"Sounds like a curator making up the label it will put on its
newest exhibit," Benjamin said.
"Good analogy," Amy said. "Now shall we… ?"
Here came the part he had been dreading. They marched him through
a large bay filled with work stations, people quietly monitoring the
intricate tasks of managing the Searcher fleet. They were an exact
duplicate of NASA's operating room at Houston, assembled here at
blinding speed in case communications broke down. Backup was the
watchword.
In a separate room, they seated him at the center of a kind of
spherical viewscreen. Leads measured his vital signs, a complex head
gear descended, much buzzing and clicking began as they got him
calibrated. He had given up trying to fathom all the technology.
Then—
He was
with her. No point in wondering how it was done;
he felt himself suddenly in a presence he recognized. He had to
struggle to not look around and find her. But she was nowhere at all,
he reminded himself. Instead, the spherical screens showed him what
she saw, a field of dark dominion dotted with Searcher radar images.
"How are you, lover?" she asked.
"I… am doing… okay." Like molasses, his
tongue.
"I am, too."
He could not help himself. "What does it feel like to be…
a mathematical construction?"
"However I want it to feel."
"You can control…"
"The body simulation? Yes. My feelings, in the old sense?
No."
Her voice had shifted into a cool, analytical mode. But it was
hers, all the same. How did they do it? Or was she… it…
doing this? "I… see. No pain?"
"Physical, no. I… I miss you so much."
He could not seem to get his breath. "Well, here I am."
"With me. Again. Thank you for coming."
Alarm filled his otherwise empty mind. He could not think of
anything to say that did not seem to mean something else. "Do
you… like the work?"
"Let us say that I am willing to make the mistakes if someone
else is willing to learn from them."
"Ah. Yes."
"You are wondering if this is really me."
"I wonder who you are, yes, but—" He froze. But
what?
"Perhaps you are afraid that I am her?"
"Damn, you were always good at reading me."
"Do not give me that much credit. I made my mistakes."
"You were smarter than I was."
"I often proved that high intelligence did not necessarily
guarantee fine table manners."
He tried to laugh and could not. Somehow the remark was amusing,
but the delivery was wrong. He tried a gruff, bantering tone.
"Yeah, old girl, you did."
"I would feel better if you did not use the past tense."
"Oh. I didn't mean—"
"Just a joke."
"I always liked your jokes."
"They were an acquired taste. Remember what my grandfather
used to say? 'Eat a live toad at breakfast and nothing worse will
happen to you the rest of the day.' My jokes played that role for
some people."
"Yeah, I
do remember your telling me that." He
felt a wash of relief. If this voice knew that much about her
past—but then he felt confusions rise again. The specialists
had said that they could copy memories without knowing what they
were. Like a symphony laid down on a disk, the machine that did it
didn't need to know harmony or structure.
Just a recording. But she was so real.
Better get back onto something that would let him conceal his
tornado of feeling. "How's the job going?" The words
sounded phony, but maybe she wouldn't notice.
She laughed, surprising him again. "Like being a bird,
sometimes."
"Sounds great."
"I spent a lot of time just getting used to this
body-that-isn't."
"Bird body?" He didn't know where this was going, but at
least it wasn't about how he felt, a subject upon which he was no
expert.
"Birdbrain, it feels like sometimes."
She pinged right back to his pong, but wasn't giving much away.
Okay, be direct. "They moved you around the Earth after
it hit Washington?"
"Yes, I got an extra booster attached by a crew that flew up
to rendezvous. That got me out here, to keep me away from that damned
jet. How many people did it kill?"
"A quarter of a million, the last I heard." He had
stopped listening to the news then.
"It's moving out now, I heard." Actually, he had seen
the jet flare and drive the thing away from the low orbit. And heard
the muted cheering of hundreds around him, outside in the night. The
yelling had blended anger and wavering hope.
"Slow but steady. Don't know—damn, there goes
another."
"Another what?"
A silence. Then: "Another satellite, a communications one
this time. It got the Fabricante orbital an hour ago. There were two
people aboard."
"Damn. It's doing that? I really ought to keep up."
"You've had a lot of grief. Give yourself a rest."
Suddenly her voice was not the cool, businesslike tone that she
had been using. The words resonated with feminine notes he had come
to love. He said, "You need me. I hope."
"Oh yes, I do more than ever."
"You've got it in view?"
"I can see the orange plume of the jet, but I'm staying away.
Tracking the satellite damage. It's eaten hundreds—"
Onto the enveloping spherical screen blossomed a sharp image.
Coils of magnetic field tightening around a chunky satellite. Folding
it in. Then vaporizing it with a virulent arc of high voltage. The
plasma glowed green and violet traceries sucked it along the
field lines, bound for the accretion disk.
"Got tired of our atmosphere?" he asked.
"Or bored."
"Are you getting some feeling for it?"
"It has a lot of parts and they fit together in a way I can't
see yet."
"Don't get any closer."
"I'm thousands of klicks away."
"Keep it that way."
"I think it knows I'm here."
Alarm stuck in his throat. "How?"
"I don't know, just an intuition."
"Has it done anything, struck against you?"
"No, and I don't know why not, either. Probably I'm just not
important enough."
"You are to me. Don't get closer."
"Distance didn't do the President any good, did it?"
"What do you mean?"
"It blasted the terrain around that dugout of his in the
Catskills on its next pass over the D.C. area."
"It did?" He really wasn't keeping track. Or had he
heard and just forgotten? He had to admit he didn't give a damn about
what happened to the President.
"I believe he survived—barely. It doesn't say a word
about any of that, of course."
"Our spanking administered, it drops the subject?"
Benjamin knew his words were coming out jagged.
"Nope, Kingsley was right. Keep away from human analogies."
He didn't want to say what immediately came to mind, so sure
enough, she did instead: "Speaking as an analogy myself, I
think that's good advice."
He could not summon even a dutiful chuckle, but she laughed with
what seemed to be gusto.
3
"Nothing is impossible to those who do not have to do it,"
Kingsley remarked caustically.
Arno bristled. "I have every assurance from the President
that—"
"That he doesn't know what he is doing," Kingsley
finished. He instantly reprimanded himself for this childish
outburst, but Arno's face already congested with red anger.
"You are not to take this any further—"
"Sorry, but I have to say this is stupid."
"If it can't hear our media, it won't know as much."
"Yes, but hasn't a moment's inspection of its many
transmissions told us that it likes listening in?"
"Intelligence has established that leaks onto cable TV led it
to deduce that the launches were ours."
'This thing is not an idiot. It knows quite well the state of
international politics. Little children in the street guessed the
truth—why shouldn't the Eater?"
Arno subsided slightly, long enough for Benjamin to say, "I
don't think it's a good idea, either."
"Who
cares?' Arno flared again. "You guys don't
get any say. The White House just wondered what you thought it would
do when the President's—
and the U.N.'s—shutdown
starts."
"When will it be?" Kingsley asked with what he hoped was
a calm, interested expression.
Hard to attain these days, though.
Arno glanced at his watch. "Two hours."
"Expect something bad," Benjamin said, then went back to
looking at his shoes.
"I agree," Kingsley said.
"Why? The whole planet ceases all transmissions, including
satellite cable traffic, telephones, radio, TV. So what?"
"It will not like any sign that we're breaking off contact,"
Benjamin said, a lackluster sentence that he tossed off as though he
was thinking of something else. Which he probably was. Since
leaving the comm apparatus where he had spent several hours with the
Channing-craft, he had been distracted. No surprise, but Kingsley
needed help and in this climate old allies were the best. At least
with Benjamin, he did not have to watch his back.
"I don't see why that has to be," Arno said. "It's
been sending lots of chatty stuff, never mentions the D.C. thing or
the missiles."
"Aliens are alien," Kingsley said, trying not to sound
as though he were talking to a child. "Do not misread—which
is to say, do not ascribe easy motives to its statements."
"Look, the Security Council thinks this is the best way to
show it that we aren't giving away any secrets, not anymore."
"How jolly."
"Look, it even sent a commentary on Marcus Aurelius to one of
the cultural semiotics people. Philosophy—and it seemed to
agree with this guy." Arno mugged a bit and folded his arms,
leaning back against his desk in a way that Kingsley had come to know
signaled what Arno thought was a put-away shot.
Kingsley disliked obvious displays of erudition, but here was a
useful place for it. "Aurelius was a stoic, resigned to the evil
of the world, wishing to detach himself from it. Also happened to be
an Emperor of Rome, which curiously enough made detachment an easier
prospect. Before organized press conferences, as I recall. Not
the sort of attitude I would wish of a thing that could incinerate
the planet."
Arno looked wounded, an about-face from
his flash of belligerence only moments before. Everyone seemed to be
running on fast-forward now. He said gravely, "It's getting more
refined, if that's the right word."
"Is it progress if a cannibal uses a knife and fork?"
Kingsley asked, crossing his legs wearily.
Benjamin laughed, just the wrong thing to do. Sarcasm was useful
only if played deadpan straight. Arno did not take Benjamin's
chuckling well, reddening up in the nose and cheeks again.
"I mean that you cannot mistake a change of style for change
of purpose." Kingsley hoped that stating the obvious would get
them back on track. People under strain sometimes had such a
reset ability, and perhaps it could get him out of this scrape.
"I understand," Arno said, "but the President wants
an assessment of what to expect
when"—heavy
emphasis here, with eyebrows—"the shutdown starts."
"Retribution, I should say," Kingsley said.
Benjamin managed a wan smile, still regarding his shoes with
intense interest. "You're slipping into human thought modes
yourself, ol' King boy. Alien, it might do anything."
Arno said hotly, "That's no damn good, tell the White House
the sonuvabitch could do any damn thing—"
"Though it has the utility of being true," Kingsley
said.
"I bet it will do both." Benjamin looked up then and
smiled, as if at a joke he alone knew. "Something nasty, and
something weird."
"Good point," Kingsley said. "No reason it must do
only one thing."
"You guys are no damn use at all."
"You bet," Benjamin said with something that resembled
happiness. Kingsley studied him, but could make nothing of the
expression on his old friend's face.
4
Benjamin wondered when the gray curtains would go away. They hung
everywhere, deadening, muffling. Even this latest bad news took
place behind the veils. He registered the dispatches, but his pulse
did not quicken and the world remained its flat, pallid tone.
"What the hell
is it?" Arno asked the assembled
mix.
Amy said in a voice obviously kept clear and deliberate, after the
panic of the last ten minutes, "A magnetic loop. It's tight,
small, and moving at very high velocity."
"Headed where?" Arno asked a man in a gray suit whom
Benjamin had never seen before.
"Intersecting the Pacific region in about twenty minutes."
"It's that fast? The Eater's a long way out now, nearly
geosynchronous." Arno looked around the room for help.
"The hole ejected it half an hour ago," Amy said. "We
caught it all across the spectrum."
"What'll we do?" Arno glanced at his watch, at his U
Agency advisers, back to the astronomers.
"No time for a warning," Benjamin said, just to be
saying something.
"Where'll it hit?" Arno licked his lips.
"Looks like mid-Pacific," the gray-suited man said.
"Why in hell shoot at that?"
"We are in the mid-Pacific," Kingsley said quietly.
"At us? It's shooting at us?"
"A testable hypothesis," Kingsley said. "I imagine
this is intended to establish some principle. Were the Eater human, I
would suppose this would be in retaliation for some injury."
A voice across the room said irritably, "We haven't done
anything."
Benjamin said, "We cut off all radio and TV. When did that
start?"
Arno bit his lip. "About an hour ago."
"Long enough for the planet to rotate a bit," Kingsley
added. "Enough time to establish that the silence did not arise
from a power outage or accident."
"Why this, then?" a voice called.
Amy said, "It wants electromagnetic transmissions resumed.
It launches a magnetic loop, using electromagnetic acceleration.
Maybe that's the connection."
Arno glowered. "Sounds pretty far-fetched."
Amy gave him a long, level look and her voice was steady. "It
anchors its magnetic fields in the accretion disk and on the hole
itself. It managed to disconnect one of its field lines and tie the
ends together, then propel it out through the overall magnetic
structure. We've never seen anything like it, not even in the
magnetic arches that grow on the sun, structures thousands of
kilometers across."
"So?" Arno was weighing all this, but saw no way to go.
Kingsley said diplomatically, "I believe Amy's point is that
the Eater knows magnetics the way your tongue knows your teeth."
Arno grimaced at this as the big screen filled behind him. A view
from one of the few surviving satellites, Benjamin saw, looking at a
tangent to the Pacific. Sunset was behind the satellite and the image
was in the near-infrared. The ocean shimmered dimly and some stars
stood out as yellow.
These false colors threw off Benjamin's judgment for a moment as
he studied the vectors of the problem. Against the black sky a
luminous blue hoop moved. Its trajectory was simple to estimate.
Measured by eye, its distance from the curve of the Earth was
closing.
"How big?" Arno's mouth drew into an alarmed thin line.
"It started out a few kilometers across," Amy said.
"Elementary electrodynamics—once a loop is free, it
expands. Or should."
"What can it do?" Arno pressed.
"Let's go outside and see." Benjamin made for the door.
"Huh?" Arno held up a hand. "What's the deal?"
It proved to be easily visible. The slanted angle cast the perfect
circle into an ellipse. It had hit the upper atmosphere and glowed a
cherry red. "We're seeing some molecular line, must be," a
voice commented in the darkness. Benjamin realized that word had
spread and now hundreds stood nearby on an open, grassy hill
immediately behind the Center. A soft tropical breeze warmed the
thick air.
Amy said, "It's headed this way."
The crowd rustled anxiously. "They have every reason to
worry," Benjamin said to Kingsley and Amy.
"You think it's aimed at us?" someone nearby whispered.
"What else that's relevant to the Eater is in the Pacific?"
Benjamin whispered back.
"What can it do?" Arno suddenly asked. Benjamin jumped
at the rough, distressed voice just over his shoulder. "I mean,
this isn't like that jet."
"It's magnetic energy, efficiently stored," Benjamin
answered. "Right now it's banking to the left—see?"
The hoop had slid slightly to the side. "Probably hobnobbing
with the Earth's field, though I guess it's much bigger than ours."
"Right," Amy said. "Imagine, throwing off a loop
and aiming it accurately through our dipolar field structure. Got to
admire its ability."
"Best not to stress that particular angle," Kingsley
advised. "Though I concur."
"What can it
do?" Arno insisted.
Nobody spoke, so Benjamin guessed, "The energy density
is pretty high, if it had around ten kiloGauss fields where it
started, back in the accretion disk. I'd estimate—" He
multiplied the energy density, which scaled as the square of the
field strength, by a reasonable volume. This he judged by eye as the
glowing thing crawled across the blackness. Getting larger,
spreading. "Around a hundred kilotons of available energy, if it
can annihilate all the field."
"Everybody inside!" Arno shouted suddenly.
"Why?" someone called.
"Security!" Arno bellowed. "Get them inside—
now!"
Benjamin avoided the herd stampeding for the buildings by walking
quickly into a stand of eucalyptus nearby. When he turned to watch
the sky, he saw figures following him and realized he was an amateur
at this, they certainly would use infrared goggles or something to
round people up.
"Good idea," Kingsley whispered. Amy was with him. "I
rather figure the buildings are more dangerous, not less."
"Why?" Benjamin asked.
"I doubt your calculation applies here. No simple way to get
more than a small fraction of the field energy to annihilate.
How would the hoop twist around to get the fields counteraligned,
then rub them together?"
Amy whispered, "I see—so instead, it'll just produce an
electromagnetic sizzle."
"Seems reasonable." Kingsley moved deeper in among the
heavily scented eucalyptus.
Benjamin jibed, "Reasonable? Violating the
remember-it's-alien rule, aren't you?"
"Ah, but you see, it's not stupid. Surely it's playing by the
same physics rule book as ourselves."
Amy said, "It made a remark about exactly that a few days
ago, I saw. Something about our having the basics down, but missing
the larger point. Irked the hell out of the physics guys when it
wouldn't tell them anything more, aside from some math nobody could
recognize."
"I wonder if it has a cruel streak," Benjamin murmured.
"They begged it for details. It wouldn't even answer."
"It prefers rather different modes of reply, I'll wager,"
Kingsley whispered.
The tall eucalyptus trees rattled their branches in the sea
breeze. The contrast of their moist aroma and the coolly descending
luminosity above was striking. Benjamin moved to see the sky better.
Kingsley called, "Stay well back. They're searching."
But now the numerous Security men were craning up at the sky. The
loop was inflating, filling the black bowl, dimming the stars.
Its glow had shifted to an eerie, bile green. They could see
elaborate structure now. Soundlessly the green strands coiled and
flexed like strange, swelling snakes.
Now one edge of the loop alone striped across their view. At its
edges, a thin line of orange flared. "Shock boundary, I bet,"
Amy mused.
Filmy green filaments twisted above them, closing fast. There
seemed to Benjamin no place to flee—and no reason to run,
anyway. It would come and the whole matter was out of his hands.
Beyond intellectual curiosity, none of this had moved him.
Now they could see the full complexity of it as the emerald
strands shaded into delicate lime structures. Apparently it was
traveling faster than sound, for nothing disturbed the soft symphony
of the wind. Palm fronds rattled and someone shouted in the
distance. Life went on beneath an olive sky.
Just before it hit, he heard a crackling from the Center. A power
pole nearby burst into a yellow firework. Sizzling balls arced up in
a blinding fountain.
"Transformers blowing," Kingsley said in a normal voice.
"I do hope Arno thought to switch off the power."
Amy said, "The lights are still on in there."
"Damn."
The human body cannot perceive magnetic field except at enormous
strengths. Still, Benjamin felt a pulse of electricity jitter
through him as all the lights went out. Immediately afterward his
skin itched in quick, darting waves. Then it was all over, the
familiar night sky returning, constellations embodying human legends
stretched across a comforting black. Yet as he gazed up, the distant
fuzzy blue-white of the Eater hung like a threat among the myriad
stars—one of them, celestial, not like anything a primate born
in moist chemistry could comprehend.
He breathed in the almost liquid density of tropical air and let
it out with a sigh. Magnetic fields could not directly harm beings
who were, after all, packages of long organic molecules in dilute
solutions, capable of standing erect and studying stars.
Maybe there was some small comfort in that bare fact.
He walked down the hill toward the Center with Amy and Kingsley.
Cries came up toward them. Somewhere a window shattered.
It was a while before he noticed that the gray veils were gone for
him. But he knew that they would return whenever he thought of her.
5
"Not overly surprising," Kingsley said as he unwound
into one of the massage chairs Benjamin had in his office.
For
Channing came the memory.
"What?" Benjamin was still a bit foggy. Even Arno's
anger after the attack—"Why didn't you guys
warn
me?"— had not shaken him into paying much attention.
Understandable, even in an ordinary time. But in this on-rolling
calamity, ordinary sensibilities had to be put aside. Kingsley firmly
told himself that he could not take the time to be the sympathetic
friend, letting time heal wounds. There was no time—not for
anyone.
"That she seems so like Channing," Kingsley said as
mildly as he could.
"Oh. She… is Channing."
"An interesting philosophical issue, but not my point."
"All the Channing I've got left."
"Quite." An emotional truth, and there was the nub of
the problem. How to put this? Directly, perhaps? Always risky, but he
owed Benjamin that. "The essential of this issue is whether she
can be relied upon to perform as would the Channing we knew."
"Know," Benjamin corrected without looking up from the
floor.
"Old friend, there are sophomore distinctions to be made here
that have ramifications on policy."
Benjamin gave a dry chuckle. "I sense a lecture coming on."
"A short one, I hope. Asking for an objective understanding
of an interior experience is a contradiction. Objectivity is a
direction along which understanding can travel, starting with the
utterly subjective, but there is no true, final destination
along that axis."
"So we can't know if she's 'really' Channing?" Benjamin
said caustically. "Fine. So be it. I'll take what I can get."
"We can expect her to be a quite good… simulation."
"It's all of her there is."
"Yes." This was a damnable situation, but he had
promised Arno that he would try to deal with the problem. Far
better a friend than the team of mind managers Arno had recruited.
How to proceed? Retreat to the technical? Perhaps. At least he would
feel better himself on some safe ground for a moment. .
"The data-processing issue is no longer a major roadblock,
after all," Kingsley said, probably a bit too brightly.
"Estimates I've seen hold that the total memory of a
hundred-year-old person could be about 10
15 bits—a
pentabit, the experts label it. That may be transmitted by optical
fiber in a few minutes. Microwaves, somewhat longer."
"Ah." Benjamin's lined face said quite eloquently that
he did not like this way of thinking of the woman he loved. Quite
right, but there it was.
"So they may have—what was that awful word they
used?—'harvested' quite a lot of her, even given the
difficulties with her physical deterioration."
Benjamin said, "I never thought it could be like this. Maybe
a thing like a computer program, accessing memory files, a robot…
that's what I imagined."
"The computer johnnies are advancing relentlessly. Quite left
me behind long ago."
"Look." He leaned forward earnestly. "She's still
the woman who was an astronaut. She's reliable."
"I take your point. That is what Arno wishes to know and
cannot properly ask. So an old friend gets to do the dirty work."
"Yeah. Why?"
"Well, they have contingency plans…" Best to let
that one trail off, fraught with implication. Not that Kingsley knew
all the possible options. Arno never showed all his cards.
"They always do. Guys behind desks dreaming up stuff for
other people to do."
"We have many such now, all around the globe. Not that we get
all their input. The magnetic attack took out a great deal, but we're
getting most of the high-bit-rate equipment back online. 'Crippled
but defiant' is, I think, the motto."
"The reason I asked, she wants to know what to expect."
"Ummm. Just what one would expect."
Alarm whitened Benjamin's eyes. "She's going in?"
"She must. The Searchers go well ahead of her, of course. But
she's got to be near them, not on the other side of the planet."
"Look, keep her standing a long way off."
"I will, I assure you. But she may not do what we want."
"Why not?"
"She has autonomous control of her propulsion. There are
extras all over her Searcher module. Everything they could bolt on,
it would seem."
"She used to talk about the free will problem. Here it is. Is
a simulation unpredictable?"
"No one knows, not at this level of technical ability. We may
not have the computational power to even decide the issue in a useful
passage of time." Kingsley grinned. "She always had a taste
for paradoxes. This one is, no doubt, delicious to her."
" 'Delicious'?" Benjamin gazed off into space. "I
hope so."
"I believe she wants us to anticipate."
"I see." Benjamin sat up, brushing aside his
reflections. "Say, what do you make of all this data we're
getting?"
Benjamin's open-faced entreaty was disarming. In the last few
weeks, Kingsley had spent a great deal of his time trying to
fathom what the people who thought about thinking made of the Eater's
structure. As usual with those most comfortable among
abstractions, the gritty truths of a wholly new way of organizing a
mind sent most of them packing. The few who remained dealt in
analogy, and he could not blame them.
To his relief, Amy came in and sat. Without a word, she somehow
lifted the tension in the room—only one of her many admirable
qualities. He filled her in on matters and she nodded. "Sorry
I'm late. We're getting stretched thin. Arno is bringing in more
people and somebody has to integrate them with existing systems."
"We're to be independent of NASA and the others, I gather,"
Kingsley said.
"In case we lose all the remaining satellites, yes." She
brushed back her hair, a gesture that usually meant she was thinking
hard. "Do you think we could?"
Benjamin said, "Easily. It has a large appetite."
"One should be grateful that it discovered the apparently
more bountiful feast of our satellites," Kingsley mused.
"Is the damage from the tidal stresses still going on?"
Amy asked.
"Earthquakes and the like, yes. We're spared the collapsing
buildings and large tides," Kingsley said.
"Thank God. I hadn't heard…" Benjamin's subdued
tone trailed off and he stared into space.
"Makes one appreciate as never before the simple fact that
tidal forces drop off as the cube of distance, not merely the
square," Kingsley said. "A ruthless tutelage in
undergraduate mechanics."
This attempt to swerve the discussion into more abstract avenues
failed; Benjamin did not react. He and Amy exchanged glances.
She said, "We've got to get some idea of what Channing is going
to confront if she goes in further."
This roused Benjamin to blinking awareness. He sat up and said
with a hollow briskness, "The magnetic geometry, yeah. I've
looked at some of the old models. Not much use. We're skating on our
own here."
Good, Kingsley thought,
back on solid technical
grounds. Best way to keep him sailing upright. "I think we
have to follow analogies here. Alien this bastard may be, but
its physics is the same as ours."
Amy came straight in with some material they had discussed in
private. Her usual crisp delivery: "Human brains operate on
direct current, like telephones. Radio and TV use alternating current
and deliver information far faster than D.C. My guess is that the
Eater uses electromagnetic waves to send signals across itself, so
its natural flow rate is not the petty human scale of ten or twenty
bits per second. Instead, the Eater can transmit data at about
the same rate that the entire human body receives all its sense data
and processes it. Maybe as much as ten billion bits per second."
Benjamin responded, "Okay, but to do that demands high,
oscillating voltages. Which fits—it shorts out satellites,
boils them off as plasma, grabs them with magnetic grapples,
swallows them."
Kingsley said mordantly, "Reminds one of spiders. This
picture means, though, that the bastard has to keep itself thoroughly
clean."
Amy nodded. "Because impurities could short out its high
voltages."
Benjamin joined in with sudden fervor, "And burn away its
enormous energy stores into useless heat."
"Good," Amy said. "I was thinking about what
Channing might meet if she goes as far in as its magnetosphere. The
D.C. voltages and speeds of human expression are imposed by our
hopelessly slow, serial method of stringing words together.
Luckily, human thinking is far faster than human talking or reading,
which is why all the true mental heavy lifting is done by the
nonconscious mind. All our data suggest that the Eater's speed
is essential, because it's vastly different in mental organization.
That's what we have to attack, or at least understand."
When Kingsley first met Amy, it had been uncommon for her to
deliver little lectures like this, but she had grown in confidence.
After his failures with his wife, this small feat pleased him. He
urged her along with: "If I follow your drift, the human mind
can be visualized—by the cliche analogy to computers—as a
great number of parallel processors, simultaneously filtering
and analyzing the exterior world. On the other hand, the Eater's
mind—"
"Which it described itself, when we asked it," Amy put
in.
"—is something more like a standing whirlwind, with
whorls of thought entering and diverging from the general rotation as
needed. All that, interlaced in radial symmetries that follow the
ceaseless cylindrical twirl of the disk and magnetic fields."
"How can that possibly work?" Benjamin asked.
"Simply shows the limitations of analogies," Kingsley
said with a dry smile.
"We don't have to work out the whole mental process,"
Amy said. "That's impossible. Maybe we can get just enough to
guide her through."
Kingsley tried to wrestle aloud with a vague set of ideas, an
approach he usually tried only when desperate, as it opened his
uncertainties to all. Surely this was the most desperate he had
ever been. "As I recall, from the myriad messages the thing
sent, the Eater had once remarked that humans were very nearly all
alike, so their communications and styles of thinking were suited to
that fact. The Eater is radically different, so translation between
us is enormously harder."
"Is that why it just won't talk about what it's doing?"
Amy asked.
"Perhaps. I was just thinking aloud about a remark it made
some weeks ago, concerning its physiology."
Amy said, "It's so strange. We can't be sure that even crude
analogies mean anything."
"It still has to satisfy conservation of mass-energy,"
Benjamin said. "But yeah, I agree."
Kingsley made a tent with his fingers. There was something
here, he felt it, and talking was the best way to flush the game from
the shrubbery of his mind. "The bastard said that it could
experience pain if its equilibrium were disturbed, just as
humans get indigestion, headaches, and soreness. The Eater's
indigestion came from disruption of the smooth rotation of its
accretion disk, interrupting the trickle of mass that kept its inner
edge a glaring violet. Upset, it said, came from snarls in the
magnetic fields as they encountered vagrant fields from
outside."
"That's its version of Montezuma's revenge?" Benjamin
asked.
"Apparently." Kingsley worked his mouth around,
puzzling out what this implied. "Based upon that, I should
imagine that disruption could also come from radioactivity trapped
into the disk, which could increase ionization locally. That
might trigger something resembling pain."
"Pain, fine," Benjamin said. "But we have to kill
it."
Kingsley glanced at the hand-lettered sign he kept on his wall.
His first act upon moving into any workplace was to visibly resurrect
the advice he had received the first year he had come up to Oxford:
SATURATION
INCUBATION
ILLUMINATION
The great nineteenth-century physicist Hermann von Helmholtz had
argued that these were the steps in having a new idea. You had to
immerse yourself in the problem, concentrating, and then let the
mass of thoughts simmer. Maybe all that happened during such
incubation was the withering away of whatever bad ideas were blocking
you. Then, often when you were doing something else, the answer would
appear, as if delivered by some other agency of yourself.
For the scientist, there was necessarily another stage:
verification. You had to see if the bright idea actually worked.
But with the Eater there would be only one chance.
"I propose we try to use a one-two punch, then,"
Kingsley said slowly. "Use its dislike of plasmas to move it,
and then deliver a blow it cannot counter."
"Where? If nuclear weapons don't work…" Amy
shrugged.
"Forget the magnetic structure, which it quite rightly
defends as its mind. At the center of its mind lies the hole.
Attack that, I'd guess."
Benjamin studied him as though he were quite lunatic. "Attack
a singularity in space-time?"
"The extreme curvature arises from the matter that once
passed through the event horizon," Kingsley said. "The
steep gradient in gravitation is a ghost of mass that died there,
passing who knows where. I propose that we consider giving the
bastard not mass but its opposite."
6
Blessed are the flexible, for they can tie themselves into
knots.
She had thought this state would be sublime, ghostly. Instead, she
had hauled along her whole stinky, tangled neuroses-ridden self.
Sure, she now flew in space in a way no astronaut could. But her mind
was still tied to her body. Worse, knowing the body was a digital
figment did no good.
Tracking the beast demanded fresh navigation skills, fast
movement, and her reward was sore "muscles." The
programmers, in her opinion, had left entirely too much of her
mind-body link. If she overused her gorgeous ion jets, they ached.
Turn too fast and the "knees" smarted, sharp and cutting.
Simulation she might be, but why the body's baggage? What next,
callused feet?
The illusion was good. Her breath whooshed and wheezed in and out.
No oxygen at all here, but they had thought she needed the sensation
to quiet her pseudo-nervous system, make it think she was
breathing. In fact, it was breathing her.
She took a deep nonbreath and fell into a shadowy space dotted by
orbiting debris. This was a messy Eater, gobbling up satellites and
leaving twinkling motes. She shepherded her Searchers through this in
pursuit of the glowing archwork ahead. Or below; directions were free
of gravity's grip, here.
Far better than being an astronaut in the creaky old space
station. She had watched the dear old patchwork of bad plumbing and
congressional nightmares—abandoned, finally—as the
Eater dismembered it. Good riddance! It had crippled the pursuit of
better goals for decades. They owed the monster for that, at least.
But nothing else. She felt her giddy sense of weightless purpose
as her pretty blue ion jets thrummed and spewed, taking her
up/down/sidewise. Getting better at this, but still it made her
balance whirl. Thank God they had edited out the entire inner-ear
responses.
Now the hard part. She glided into the first filmy tendrils of the
beast. Ionized streamers marked the feathery magnetic fields.
Their tug she felt as a brushing pressure against her aluminum
carapace. Careful, don't alert the misbegotten monster. Down,
hard—then a calculated swerve.
If at first you don't succeed, kiddo, skydiving is not your
sport.
She had lost a dozen Searchers finding out scraps of largely
incoherent information. The labyrinths of fields confined dense
thickets of Alfven waves, forming webbed patterns. It did not
seem to mind intrusion, but the rule was, read and be eaten.
"I'm back," Benjamin's wavering tones came. She grasped
them like ripe, liquid fruit. The message's cypher-defenses peeled
away as she filtered them—their only defense against the
Eater eavesdropping. So far it seemed to have worked. Seemed.
"Missed you. It's not so much the dark here, but the cold."
"I thought you couldn't feel temperature."
"Category error, lover. It feels like a chill, so it is.
Maybe it's actually the color green in disguise."
"I had to go to a meeting, find out what's happening."
"What's that cliche'? About nobody on their deathbed
regretting time missed at the office?"
"I suppose you'd know." He was too somber, needed some
joshing.
"I always kinda missed the ol' office. Remember, though, this
is the me of when they recorded. How long has it been?"
He blinked, startled. "Weeks. My God, you don't know what's
happened?"
"Oh sure, I got all the news. A bath of it. But no personal
stuff."
He wore his thoughtful distraction expression. It was looking
ragged. "Hundreds of thousands have died. And I don't give a
damn."
"You don't have the room for it."
"That's a good way to put it. I've felt like a monster."
"Caring only about my dying doesn't make you an ogre, not in
my book."
"Getting the balance right…"
His voice trailed off and she knew exactly what he was thinking.
Well, better face it. "I'm alive this way, and all
those people dead, really dead—all because of the Eater."
"Yeah. Life's going too fast for me now, kid."
He was back to putting on a brave face, but it wouldn't work with
her. She could feel how close to shattering he was. "Me, too.
Just live in it, Benjamin, like a suit of clothes."
He blinked. "That's what it's like for you?"
"Has to be. I don't even sleep anymore."
"My God, that must be…"
"Refreshing, actually. The thought just doesn't come up."
"You're always wide awake?"
"Yep, and without my old love, caffeine, too."
"What's it like to pilot a rocket?" He was still
uncomfortable, but they had always used their love of the
technical to get through bumpy spots. Fair enough.
"It's made me realize that when we open our eyes each
morning, there's waiting a world we've spent a lifetime learning to
see. We make it up."
"And you're free of that now?"
"No, just so aware of it. When I was living down
there,
I'd see everything with a filter over it—experience, habit,
memory."
"Now it's all new."
"Not entirely. I swoop, I dive, but it feels like running,
not really flying. My body is always, in a very profound way, telling
me a story."
"The body you don't have."
"Right. Weird, huh? So I wonder what the Eater feels. It has
no solid body."
"Even the black hole really is a hole. Not a mass, a thing it
can feel."
"I suppose. The magnetic storage of information, I wonder
what it feels like?"
"Stay away from that," he said with quick alarm.
"I think I've got to go there."
"Observe. That's all you're supposed to do."
"Y'know, I'm in charge up here." Just to slide the
point in.
"Don't scare me." His face was naked again and she felt
a burst of warmth for him.
"Tell me what you guys know now, then. I need to know."
He was glad to lapse into tech-mode again. The experts thought it
was best for her to get her input this way, through Benjamin, and
neither of them cared to know why. They liked it; that was all that
mattered.
"The way Amy describes it, there are captive—well,
'passengers' might be the best word—in the Eater's
magnetic 'files.' It keeps records of cultures it has visited."
Channing said, "That's what it calls 'Remnants'?"
"You know about that?"
"They gave me thick files of what it's been saying. I can
read it ten thousand times faster than I could with eyes."
"Does that help?"
"Understand it? At least it puts me on a processing level
more nearly like its own."
"Ominous stuff it's sending, seems to me," Benjamin said
delicately.
"I've picked up waves from the distinctive knots in the
magnetic structure. There are tens of thousands of them, at a
minimum. They're living entities, all right. Somehow they share its
general knowledge, so some at least have learned to speak to us. They
say they were 'harvested' by the Eater."
"Magnetic ghosts." He shivered; she could feel his inner
states by reading the expressions of his pinched mouth.
"There's something else, an 'Old One.' Any idea what that
is?"
"Last I heard, the theory people here think it might be the
original civilization that uploaded itself into the magneto-sphere.
Just a guess, really."
"Ask Amy for me? See if there's anything new on this 'Old
One'?"
"Sure."
"I suppose you don't have to. This whole conversation, it's
monitored, right?"
"I suppose so. Haven't thought."
Dear thing, he wouldn't. "Privacy is not giving a
damn."
She had not expected this to make him cry, but it did.
7
Kingsley stood beside Benjamin as they watched the launch on a
wall screen. History in the making, if anyone lived to write it down.
He was partly there to see the event, but mostly to steady
Benjamin, should he start to fall over. That had happened twice
already from apparently random causes. If Benjamin were seen to get
visibly worse—distracted, morose, or worse—Arno would see
him off the property straightaway. That would depress the man even
more. Leaving him alone in their house would invite something far
worse still.
"Steady there," he whispered. Benjamin took no notice,
just stared.
The view was of a lumbering airframe framed by puffball clouds
that could have been anywhere; these were above Arizona. He still had
a bit of trouble getting excited about these air carrier, three-stage
jobs. Takeoff from any large airport, drop the rocket plane at
60,000 feet, whereupon the sleek silver dart shot to low Earth orbit.
This one would in turn deposit its burden, a fat cylinder instructed
to find and attach to the Channing-Searcher craft.
The modular stairway to the stars, as the cliche went.
Economical, certainly. Without it, they could never have fielded
an armada of Searchers and support vessels to meet the Eater. Still,
he missed the anachronistic liftoff and rolling thunder.
The dagger-nosed rocket plane fell from the airframe belly and
fired its engine. In an eye blink, it was a dwindling dot.
Benjamin murmured stoically. Kingsley wondered what was going
through his friend's mind and then, musing, recalled Arno and
the Marcus Aurelius reference made by the Eater. Why had the creature
dwelled upon Aurelius?
Stoic indeed, that was the smart course in such times. Did the
isolation of Aurelius at the top of the Roman Empire correspond
remotely to the utter loneliness of the Eater? The paradoxical
permanence of change must loom as an immensely larger metaphor
for it.
Such a being, though constructed by an ancient intelligence,
surely had undergone developments resembling evolution. Parts of
so huge an intelligence could compete and mutate as magnetic fluxes
carrying the genetic material of whole cultures. There could
presumably be selection for what Kingsley supposed could be called
"supermemes"—to coin an utterly inadequate term for
something that could only be conjectured.
Amy said from Benjamin's other side, 'They've set up a bar."
"Capital idea," Kingsley said with utterly false
enthusiasm.
"Think that's a good idea?" Benjamin asked mildly.
"I believe it to be a necessity." Kingsley made a
beeline for the bar before the crowd noticed it. It was admirably
stocked and he complimented Arno on it as the man took a gin and
tonic and the barman prepared Kingsley's exact specifications.
Arno seemed pleased and proud. "Great idea, wasn't it?"
Unlikely he was referring to the bar, but what else? Before
Kingsley could rummage through a list of suspects, Arno added, "The
antimatter thing."
"Quite so." This would not seem immodest because clearly
Arno had forgotten who had thought of it.
"My guys are sure it'll work—and they should know."
"Certainly." How to play this? Arno was not
exactly a torrent of information at the best of times. His
habits of concealment, well learned in other agencies known
chiefly by their initials, still held.
"They've done the simulations, pretty sure it'll work."
"The physics is a bit dicey. I—"
"They've discovered a lot of new stuff."
Arno's certainty was granite-hard, so Kingsley tried a
mood-altering diversion. "Well, the classic joke about
scientists and women is true of me, I'm afraid."
Arno frowned. "Haven't heard it."
"For scientists, it is better for a woman to wear a lot of
clothes that take time to take off, you see, because they are always
more excited by the search than by the discovery."
This got a hearty laugh that did not appear to be put on.
Pressures of the job escaping, Kingsley surmised. From
Arno's lined face he could see that it would be good to keep things
going on the good-fellow front. Always a wise idea, but essential
in a crisis of any size; and there had never been one larger.
"Timing is crucial, of course," he said quickly—to
pry forth some information before Arno's mood shifted.
"We've put down that U.N. negotiation position, too,"
Arno said. "They wanted to give it everything."
"All the people?"
"And more. You've seen the new list?"
"It wants more?"
"You bet. Raising the ante to over half a million names."
"Extracted from the news media, I imagine."
"No wonder it got so hot about our turning the TV and radio
off."
"The moral landscape has turned into a minefield,
admittedly. Some voices are arguing that we are likely to incur
more than half a million dead if it decides to skate along the
atmosphere and give us the jet again."
Something in Arno's smile gave him warning. "Maybe you should
be reading the list instead of listening to those 'voices,' my Royal
Astronomer."
"I'm on the list?"
"The monster watches a lot of TV."
"And you?"
"Yeah. Damned if I know how it got me."
"Benjamin?"
"Sure. Half the people working on this, easy."
"My God."
"Apparently that's what it thinks it is."
This sobering talk made the alcohol all the more necessary,
in Kingsley's opinion. Still, quite enough had been done along the
lines of intimidate-the-out-of-it-scientist. Before he left the
bar, he decided a gesture of indifference was required. "I'd go
like a shot if it would settle this matter," he said.
"You haven't been keeping up on the gusher of transmissions
it sends," Arno said comfortably. "It doesn't like the
'harvests' we routed to it, of people recorded using the
electromagnetic-induction technique."
"The technique Channing received?"
"Yes, only she got more detailed attention. Lots more. We're
having to do all this in a rush, people knocking themselves out,
around the clock—"
"Why does the bastard not like the results?"
"Low definition of some areas of the brain, I hear."
"We knew that. The regions that regulate body function,
digestion and motor skills and the like."
"Yeah, it says it wants more of them."
"I gather we impose some body simulation to make up the
difference?"
"Not good enough, it says. It prefers the skull-shaving
technique some other countries used."
"Ah. Have to rethink my position, then." He kept his
tone light and collected the drinks before beating a retreat.
He was on firm ground with Arno when discussing astrophysics,
but the man had an uncanny way of getting the stiletto in when the
subject shifted. The matter-of-fact horror of it all weighed
heavily now. And Arno had a sly relish in unveiling the latest faces
of the thing that hung in their sky like a great, glowering eye.
"New drink?" Amy asked, peering at his.
"Pernod and tequila with a dash of lemon. I believe it's
called a 'macho.' " This joke went unrecognized, perhaps
justifiably, and Benjamin began discussing the Eater's dynamics.
"You've learned a lot from her," Amy said.
"That's the idea, right?" Despite his earlier eyebrow
raising, Benjamin slurped down his beer. "Give her a
'friendly interface,' the Operations term was."
"I'm sure you're the crucial element," Kingsley said,
believing every word. Certainly fellows like Arno would have
driven Channing to suicide by now if they'd been in the loop.
"I wonder why it doesn't like the EM reader method?" Amy
mused.
Kingsley said, "I expect it is a connoisseur in such
matters."
"How?" Benjamin looked both puzzled and distracted, a
difficult combination to fathom.
"It has enforced such orders and used the results perhaps
thousands of times before," Kingsley said.
"I wonder what it does with them?" Amy asked, taking a
strong pull at her gin and tonic.
"I rather suspect we do not wish to know."
Benjamin looked soberly into Kingsley's eyes. "That bad,
huh?"
"Morality is a species-specific concept. The Eater
transcends species themselves, since it is an artificial
construction left to evolve now for a time longer than the Earth
has existed. Outside our experience in a way that does not reward
considerations of right and wrong."
Benjamin gave a grim smile. "Sounds like a classy way of
saying it can do what it damn well pleases, so don't think about it."
"Well put," Kingsley said as an aide tugged at his
elbow.
The man whispered, "You're needed immediately in Conference
B."
Kingsley shot back, "I'm bringing these two with me."
"Sir, they weren't included—"
"Then I'm not coming."
"Well, I don't know, I'll have to—"
"Come along." He ushered Amy and Benjamin forward.
When they reached the inevitable battalion of Security personnel,
there was the usual orchestration of knitted foreheads and
worried doubts. He got through that with a combination of
bluster and can't-tolerate-this-oversight fast talk.
"No matter," he said to Amy as they walked down a hall
with a phalanx of guards. "This is just the usual confusion. The
U Agency is acting in this crisis like what the world plainly needs—a
multinational government by default. Yet it will share all the
irksome traits of the old style nation-state, principally rust in the
gears."
"Your wife is still undercover?" Amy asked.
"Comfortably so, I gather."
She had caught on. Rather than skulk around, it was better to
quite obviously flout their rules. Doing so earned a certain measure
of grudging bureaucratic respect. Such strategies had served well in
these days.
He had learned a lot. To avoid getting entangled in
interference-blocking, running errands, and other lubricating
distractions, he had to step lively. There were nations to soothe and
endless anxieties issuing from the ever-intruding snout of the media
pig. And with exquisite irony, the reward for many, including
himself, was to make the Eater's list.
Straightaway he gathered the intent of the meeting. Arno was
running it. His mouth twisted at the sight of Amy and Benjamin, but
something kept him from objecting—quite possibly, time
pressure. Each figure around the long table had a little sign
detailing their positions, chimpanzee hierarchy again, but the
discussion was the least formal of any Kingsley had yet seen.
Everyone was in a barely controlled panic. The magnetic attack had
placed one rim of the loop upon the Center and another upon
installations of "strategic value" elsewhere in the
Hawaiian Islands, one woman from Defense said. A similar loop
had landed about an hour later upon the area outside Washington,
quite neatly destroying communications. No one had heard from the
President since. "Whereabouts and fate unknown," Arno
summed up.
For a world that routinely looked to the United States to pull
together alliances, this was a trauma. It did not help that as the
meeting proceeded news came of a third loop on its way. Some men
rushed out to get details.
"It is now obvious that we had better carry on
independently," Arno said. "We can't rely on anyone
else."
"We can still reach Channing from here?" Benjamin asked.
The entire table looked at him as though he had shouted in church.
He was not a policy maven, but they knew who he was. Their gaze said
that his role was to be a gallant warrior, bravely talking his
sim-wife through it all, and leave the actual thinking to them.
"I believe so, yes," Arno answered after a two-beat
pause. "We have DoD antennae positioned offshore in case these
here—the replacement ones, after our losses—get knocked
out again."
"Where is our fallback installation?" Kingsley asked.
"We want to keep that information closely guarded," a
severe woman in a black pants suit said. She was new, like most
of the faces here. Probably from Washington. Crisp, narrow-eyed, the
usual.
"Just how are we to flee there, then?"
Arno snorted testily, "All right, it's up at the 'scopes."
"The top of Mauna Kea?" Benjamin said disbelievingly.
"But that's so exposed."
"Everything is," Arno shot back. "We're living at
the bottom of a well."
"And we can line-of-sight to the fleet," the DoD woman
added. "Gives us a big effective platform for operations."
Apparently both U.S. Pacific fleets had been drawn secretly
into a perimeter around the Hawaiian Islands. Kingsley had not heard
of this, but there did seem a lot of military aircraft in the sky
lately, many of them heavy helicopters suitable for carrying
substantial equipment up the slopes to 14,000 feet. That they had
constructed a redoubt atop the mountain without even Center personnel
noting the fact was a tribute, probably to someone in this room.
"We are counting on another attack, once our assault
begins," Arno said. "Maybe even the jet."
This sobered everyone. "It's out near geosynchronous orbit
now, finishing off the rest of our satellites," a man nearby
said. "Cracks 'em open like nuts. That jet can't reach this far,
I heard."
Kingsley came in smoothly, "I believe Dr. Knowlton is the
expert on this."
It was best to build Benjamin's position here on technical
grounds, not let him be seen as distraught-husband-off-the-rails.
Benjamin seemed to get this point without even a glance at Kingsley.
He deftly led them through a discussion of the jet, highlighting what
his astrophysics team had learned by observing it incinerate
Washington. "The magnetic focusing will work at just about
any distance," Benjamin concluded. "The Eater sets up
a circuit effectively. Beautiful physics. The current in the jet
self-pinches itself, and the return route for the circuit flows
through the cocoon of plasma the jet generates outside it."
"Very neat," someone commented. A puzzled silence.
Kingsley understood this remark, however. He wondered for an
instant if an appreciation for the aesthetics of physics and
engineering could form a better grounds for comprehension
between utterly different life-forms than the old routine of serial
language.
Such abstractions were swept away, however, by a minor tsunami of
moral objection from several around the table. How dare the fellow
speak well of the monster, etc.? In the name of decency, and more
along those lines.
This gave Benjamin time to think, so that he broke into the
pointless jibes with, "It will be under stress—electromagnetic
ones, not psychological—when it uses its jet, though. That's
the time to hit it."
This got their attention. The DoD woman stalled for time by
reviewing their own thinking. Actually, the term was undeserved.
They had cooked up a bigger nuclear warhead attack, counting on
Channing to deliver the knockout at the end. This she presented in
eager-terrier style, looking eagerly back and forth along the
table like a girl scout bringing home a prize. Kingsley guessed
this strategy's primary asset was that it would allow DoD to claim
the victory, should there be one, since Channing would certainly not
survive to do so.
Swatting down this notion consumed a full hour. Such trench
warfare was interrupted by news that the third loop had landed, again
quite neatly, on Beijing.
"Seems our Chinese friends did something nasty, too,"
Arno said with dry relish.
This shook everyone. Kingsley found Arno's remark chilling, for
reasons entirely separate from the China attack.
Those in the room were getting more rattled. They drank coffee,
ate some spongy tropical kind of donuts, and murmured like a Greek
chorus uncertain of their song. But Arno would not call for a break.
Instead, the lady from DoD came forward again and kept saying in
various uninstructive ways, "Leave the fighting to those who
know." To this, the physicists rebutted, "Sorry, you are
plainly outgunned and need new ideas."
It was a predictable collision that needed to get worked through.
Institutional thinking was on the hedgehog model, knowing one solid
thing. Kingsley preferred the fox model, as he had leaped over
several hedgehogs in his life. Only toward the end of the hour did he
manage to get a word in and derail the slow-motion train wreck the
meeting was evolving into.
"I recommend using Channing and her Searchers alone," he
said. "During the time the jet is on, if it chooses to use it."
This simple suggestion took another hour to thrash through in
classic committee fashion. Kingsley had to defend the use of
antimatter, first carefully defining it and reviewing the
decades of research that had led to a packet the size of a wallet
containing the explosive power of a hundred hydrogen fusion warheads.
Not that technical arguments carried the day, of course. He was
dealing with Americans and so played out the accent bit, using
"shedule" and "lehzure." To buttress the tactical
side, he slid a few recognizable names past at the right speed to be
fully caught, yet not so slowly that they would suspect he was
trotting them by deliberately. All these he had conferred
with—briefly, of course, but no one need know that.
In the policy dust-up that necessarily followed his presentation,
he called in Benjamin again. Amy twice. Each time they provided the
right scientific detail and fell back to let him drive the point
home. Sketches of the Eater interior. Routes into it while avoiding
magnetic turbulence, and most importantly, the accretion disk. Old
methods he had first learned on Cambridge committees came into play.
Knowing that his foes lay in wait, he paused to breathe in the
clearly defined middle of his sentences. This let him rush past the
period and into the next sentence, allowing no one to make a smooth
interruption.
The next hour meandered on until Arno struck. This was lamentably
often the best way to settle an issue. Exhaust everyone, then cut
through the Gordian verbiage with an Alexandrian sword. He was de
facto in charge here, bar word from Washington. Therefore he took
command of the military resources and ordered them to stand down,
awaiting further orders.
Kingsley was reasonably up on American constitutional law, but
this looked doubtful to him. Arno's appointment was through DoD, and
the secretary of that massive agency could assume the presidency
should the true President be unreachable. Plus the Speaker of the
House, president pro tempore of the Senate, Secretary of State, and
so on.
This entire argument seemed wobbly, but Arno sold it to the room
in short order. The thin veneer of bureaucratic calm had dissolved
about an hour before, and now the panic among them made them reach
for any seemingly solid solution. Rule by Arno apparently played
this emotional function.
Kingsley shook hands with him afterward, murmuring congratulations
sincerely meant. He had never seen as deft a maneuver carried out at
the airy heights of power. Though of course he did not say so, he
ardently hoped that he never would again.
8
Into the living tree of event-space.
At the ragged red rim of the magnetosphere, she felt the first
crackling electrical discharges, alive with writhing forks. With her
all-eyed view, she could see the fretful working of the magnetic
intelligence. It reminded her of many natural patterns: pale blue
frost flowers of growing crystals. The oxygen-rich red in bronchi of
lungs. Whorls of streams, plunging ever forward into fractal
turbulence.
Pretty—and quite deadly. With an agonized shriek, one of her
leading Searchers flared into a cinder.
Ripples of intense Alfven waves told her that the Eater was
sensing/thinking/moving. All those functions were linked in its
world. The cybertechs had explained all this in their arcane lingo.
To her it was not dry theory but experience—the
restless slither of magnetic fields around her like a supple fluid.
She was gaining a sense of it, an intuition fed by her swimming
through the invisible thing-that-thought. How strange her former
brain now seemed! She had caught portions of the Eater's thought and
now could see human intelligence anew. Compress a life onto a sheet,
paper-thin. Crumple it. Stuff it into a bony carrying case. With
that, primates had evolved to store a hundred billion neurons, all
firing like matchheads in a webbed array still only poorly
understood.
No more, for her. Now she was a slab of silicon, being mated
to—thunk—a cylinder of death.
The attachment complete, she dove.
She vectored a swarm of missiles into the outer swelling of the
magnetosphere. To her, the Eater was an enormous blue blossom of
spiderweb-fine lines, each snarled with innumerable knots.
Time to go to work. She began the attack upon the magnetic
equilibrium. Deftly she guided nuclear-tipped plasma bursts to the
spot where the fields could be forced to reconnect.
Behind her, an enormous cloud of bright barium exploded into
billows. The solar wind blew around the Eater, fended off by its
magnetic pressure. The beast was like a small planet, defending
itself against the solar bath. But the barium was far denser
than the thin wind. She watched the Eater retract field lines,
avoiding the prickly energy of the high plasma flux.
"You're on it!" Benjamin's excited voice came.
"I always wanted to fly a fighter against the fearsome
enemy," she said. "This is better." To show him, she
did a tight turn, airy and graceful on her ion plumes.
"The package made it?"
"It's riding on my right."
"Try the other methods first. That's only a last-chance
backup."
He was trying to keep his voice level, businesslike, but it
wouldn't work with her. She could read him. That was the downside of
using Benjamin as intermediary, but Arno probably hadn't thought
of that. Benjamin was supposed to steady her up here, and he did. And
it worked both ways, thank goodness. She wondered if she had ever
loved him more, back when she had a real body to express it.
"Things tough down there?"
"It got the house."
"What?!"
"The electromagnetic induction from that field loop slamming
into the island. It blew the transformer at the end of our street.
The fire spread all the way to Hakahulua Street. When I got there,
the house was just smoldering black stuff."
Her heart sank. All gone—"Damn!"
"It's killed a lot of people, some in our neighborhood.
Pacemakers went out. There were a lot of effects nobody can explain."
She started to cry and the wrenching sobs were utterly real,
coming up from her nonexistent lungs and through a clenched throat.
She let the spasms run. Part of her agonized. The other basked
in the fleshy feel of living. Mind-body again.
"I… God. I guess I was never going to go there again…
but…"
"Yeah. I'll miss it, too."
"Everything we had…"
"Not quite. After you… left… I took all the
photo albums, our wedding stuff, and put it in a safe deposit
box."
A gale of joy blew through her. "Wonderful!"—and
she was back aloft again, bird swooping, spirit rising.
"Whoa, girl, tune it."
"Oops, my mood swings are going over the top."
"You have reason to."
She made herself slow down. No fighting the body, no intellect
arm wrestling with hormones. She simply concentrated and the
gusty spirit blew away, leaving a precise, analytical glaze over her
mind. Not that it would hold for long, she wagered.
"Ah!" A sharp crack in his background sounds. "We're
getting heavy weather here on top of all that. I—"
"The Eater's sending that."
"What? How?"
"I can sense it from here. It's acting like a voltage source,
driving the global electrical circuit. Currents running everywhere
up here."
"Why's it after us?"
"It must've figured out where our command centers are."
"That fits." He grimaced. "We just lost even the
supposedly secure links with Washington."
Alarm resounded in her like a hollow gong. "You're getting
cut off?"
"Every other channel died hours ago. We've got only the
antennae here, that's it."
"They're locked on the satellites below me?"
"Those few are our only targets now. It's eaten everything
else in the sky."
"If you get blanked out—"
"Yeah." A strumming, pregnant silence hung between them.
"It seems to be making a big ionized layer right over the
island."
"Putting a conducting plate between me and you."
"So far, it's failing. Feels like Zeus throwing thunderbolts
down here."
"I've got to do something."
"Operations says they don't have all the Searchers within
range yet."
She fumed. "I'll go with what I have."
"No, don't. Look, the black hole theorists, they've got some
new input for you. I'm sending it on a sidebar channel—"
And here it blossomed in her spherical view: a 3-D color computer
simulation of the black hole itself. An orange oblate spheroid,
spinning hellishly fast. A sedate sphere, fattened by its own
rotation until it grew an ocean-blue bloat at the equator.
Benjamin said, "Point is, the ergosphere—that's the
midrift bulge, in blue—has zones with so much rotational
energy, you can fly through them safely."
"Oh sure."
"Do I detect sarcasm?"
"No, realism."
"They're saying you could bank in over the accretion disk,
drop your donation, and then veer in. That'll give you the energy to
escape."
"All this at an appreciable fraction of the speed of light."
"You don't sound convinced."
"Do you?"
"They say it's your only chance."
"And what order of magnitude would those odds be?"
"Not great, right."
"Well, send up the trajectory, anyway. I'll log it in."
"Remember, there are relativistic effects this close in—"
"Yeah, so I'll have slowed time to deal with."
"And it'll help you a little. Give you more time to execute
the maneuver."
"And catch up on my reading. Did you know they stored the
whole goddamned text of War and Peace in my buffer?"
"Huh? Why in the world?"
"Something to do with buttressing my long term memory."
His face clouded and he obviously struggled for words. "Look,
this is the only way, they say…"
"I register. I'm not really what I once was to you. I can't
be."
"You are."
"I'm as much as I can be, that's all."
"Enough for me."
"I'll try to make it back out."
"I… guess that's all I can ask for."
His face broke into rasters, lost color. "I'm having trouble
with the link here—"
"The lightning, it's—" His lips moved, but no
sound came through.
"Benjamin, don't—"
A spray of gray static showered across his image. Then that froze…
stuttered… and was gone.
"Benjamin!"
She coasted alone in a suddenly eerie silence. Alone.
She close-upped the globe below. Hawaii lay in view, just emerging
from the dawn line. Angry blue-gray clouds shrouded the Big Island.
She could make out the forks of de-scending electricity. Not just
local lightning, but the larger discharges as well: sprites, the vast
thin glowing sheets that climbed down from the ionosphere.
Alone. Shepherd to several hundred Searchers. Mother hen to an egg
that rode in its cylindrical majesty beneath her tail.
She had not thought she could carry out the complexity of all this
by herself. Operations had agreed.
Now she would have to try. Preparation would—here her
subself, full of calculation, provided a fast estimate—take at
least another day. Then she could begin.
Without Benjamin. The leaden realization dragged at her. At the
back of her mind, something else was vying for her attention.
Presiding over her inner self was like keeping an unruly grammar
school class in order…
A quick blip of information squirted through her filters.
A message, digitized Eater-style, but riding to her on the
magnetosonic waves she had slowly learned to decipher.
FROM YOUR EXODUS 23:19:
"NO MAN SHALL SEE
ME AND LIVE."
"Oh yeah?" she muttered to herself. But it chilled her
all the same.
PART EIGHT
A HEAVEN OF SORTS
1
Lightning tore at the dark-bellied clouds with yellow talons,
ripping rain from them in shimmering veils. Kingsley watched out the
narrow windows, still feeling in his English soul that rain should
properly be accompanied by cold. Here, sheets of it swept through
cloyingly warm air.
Great crashes rattled the prefab walls of the Center. The crowd of
people around the big screens flinched as the hammering booms
rolled unceasingly over them.
"Bit dicey, I'd say." Kingsley turned away from the
static-filled screens. "There's no hope of reaching her using
the high frequency bands?"
Amy shook her head. "The techs say it's got an ionized
blanket over the island now."
"Even in the 96 gigaHertz band?"
"As soon as they start at that frequency, it runs up the
plasma density in a spot above the transmitters."
Benjamin said shakily, "A huge current discharge, right down
a funnel from the ionosphere. How in the world can it do that from so
far out?"
" 'How in the world' is precisely it." Kingsley sized up
the disarray he saw in the faces around them. "It has had
practice on other worlds. It knows planetary atmospheres the way
we know our backyards."
Amy said, "Or better, the way birds know air."
"It cut her off so fast," Benjamin said.
"It knows she's there. Senses what we plan, probably,"
Amy said somberly.
Kingsley ground his teeth. "It's seen a lot of tricks, I'll
wager."
"We're checkmated," Amy said. "Those Searchers,
they're like pawns, cut off without even a knight to—"
"Ah, that's the point, isn't it?" Kingsley thought
rapidly. A fleeting idea had scurried by.
While he gazed into the distance, Benjamin said flatly, "It's
got to be worried. Why bother to cut us off from her and the
Searchers? It's concerned."
Kingsley nodded. "A compliment, I suppose."
Amy roused from her depression slightly. "So it knows that we
can do it real damage this way?"
Benjamin visibly rallied himself. "It moves to cut her off
from Operations, right? Which implies that it works kinda the same
way? With a managing center."
Kingsley liked to frame ideas as he thought them through, and so
said out loud, "It's searching for our command center. We never
said we had one. It assumes we do because it does!"
Amy brightened. "Those interceptions Channing got—they
were magnetic wave transmissions inside the Eater's magnetosphere. If
we could trace their routes—"
"—we'd get a clue to its central command, right,"
Benjamin finished.
"Quite a job," Amy said. "We'd have to—"
"Never mind how tough it is," Arno broke in. "Get
on it."
Kingsley had concentrated upon the exchange so intently that he
had completely missed Arno's eavesdropping. He was pleased that Amy
and Benjamin had pulled the same idea out of their gray matter that
he had been vainly pursuing. Somewhat reassuring, when others
believe a passing notion has substance. What had his examiner
muttered, long ago at Oxford? The universe is under no obligation
to make sense, though a doctoral thesis is. People craved order,
meaning, some certainty in the face of immense mystery. No matter the
price.
The others chattered on, plainly glad to have something to do.
There was perhaps shelter in numbers. In primate talk— a form
of grooming, hadn't the Eater said?
As yet another rattling hammer blow fell upon the Center, he felt
the need of whatever shelter—even intellectual—he could
find.
2
Benjamin wasn't having any. "Come on, it makes no sense."
Arno gave him the full glowering treatment. Heavy on the eyebrows,
stentorian voice, rigid at-attention gaze. "It's the only way we
can get this information to her."
"But I've got no experience at any of this—"
"Neither does anyone here. Not anybody who can understand
the material."
"I've never been in space and—"
"It's easy. I've done it."
Arno did look like the type who would shell out big bucks for a
suborbital shot, an hour or two of zero-g, and great views. Probably
some high-level government gig had taken him up. Benjamin shook his
head adamantly. "I'll be a lot higher up in orbit. I'm not used
to zero-g."
"So maybe you'll throw up some. So what?"
He gritted his teeth. "I won't be worth a damn."
A heavy pause. "It's your duty."
To punctuate this, a rolling series of crashes and thunder rolls
swept through the center. They were so common now, nobody even
cringed.
An aide ran in and said, "We got everybody out of the E wing.
It's totalled."
"How many casualties?"
"Plenty of injured. We're setting up Medical in G wing. Got
three known dead."
Arno nodded, waved him away, looked blankly at Benjamin.
"Well?"
"Okay, I'll go. I don't even see how I can—"
"We'll get you to the airstrip. I've got a first-stage
carrier coming in from Oahu."
"You knew I would."
Arno grinned, an unusual expression for him. "Sure, you're an
all right guy."
This locker room style did not bother Benjamin, though he
recognized the method. "She's in there. Close to it."
"Near as we can tell, yes."
"I'll have to look after her." A part of him said, If
there's any chance it's really her, I've got to act on it.
"As well you should. She's the center of coordination."
"That antimatter trap you sent—"
"It's a last-ditch thing. Main thing is, we're going for the
plasma assault. Kingsley thinks that'll herd it around."
"Enough for the nuclear warheads to get in close."
"I know. It failed before. But maybe we can overwhelm it."
Benjamin had no real faith in this, but he could think of nothing
else. A fighter against the ropes should try to slug his way out; the
time for sublety was past.
But then, a fistfight analogy was primate thinking, wasn't it? The
Eater would be quite aware of all that. Though were humans really
like other, vaguely similar forms evolved around distant stars? How
special were these latest products of fitness selection among
hominids?
He wondered how often in history men had made desperate moves
with the same lack of confidence. The fog of battle, he
recalled the term. Delirium was more like it.
Soon enough Kingsley was seizing him by the shoulders, a
remarkable gesture for him. "I'll be alongside for the
briefings. Amy, too."
"Great. I really appreciate it."
Their presence proved to be crucial. Benjamin sat through hurried
yet extensive dissections of what they had learned of the Eater's
structures. Amy and Kingsley helped him through the spots when he
would blank out, losing the thread.
"Like a brain?" one of the specialists said in answer to
Benjamin's question. "We're stacked on top, newer brain on the
outside. Form dictates function. Within the limits of being a kludge,
of course—sticking new parts on while the older ones are
running. On the other hand, the Eater's able to rearrange itself
whenever it wants, as nearly as we can tell. So no—it's
completely different."
"Then why should I trust any of this?" Benjamin shot
back. "It keeps changing."
"Because it's all we've got."
This looked pretty flimsy to him, all the theorizing based on
interpretations of magnetic wave packets. Channing had picked up most
of the data they were using as she darted around at the fringes of
the thing. There was a category of localized information the
specialists called the "Remnants"—apparently,
the records of civilizations encountered in the far past by the
Eater.
"We figure they, too, were 'harvested' by the Eater,"
the specialist said. "But they're not just libraries. They
interact. Talk to each other. To the Eater, wherever its intelligence
is."
"Magnetic ghosts," Benjamin said.
"Yes, in a way."
"All the people we shipped up to it, that's what they'll
become?"
"We guess so. The information density in the thing is
incredible."
"That word doesn't mean much anymore."
One Remnant was an especially powerful agency the cybertechs
called the "Old One."
"Now, that may be the essence of the Eater, the original race
that started it all," a horn-rimmed, earnest woman said. "It
seems to have pieces of itself distributed all over the
magnetosphere. None of the other characteristic wave packets do
that."
'This is all just a bunch of guesses," Benjamin said harshly.
"Right you are," she said.
Later, still unsettled from this, he asked Kingsley and Amy, "Why
doesn't it just kill us all?"
Kingsley understood power and had a ready reply. He was holding up
pretty well through all this, the upside of his classic Brit
reserve. "A universal urge," he said. "It doesn't want
us all dead; it wants us all compliant."
Grimly, Arno convened with the survivors of high command who
could reach the islands. The Eater was slamming away at the United
States, pelting it with cyclones, electrical nightmares, fierce
winds. Planes did not venture into the snarling skies. The American
habit of taking the lead in international matters had now made
it the principal target.
Arno and the others tried to raise the stakes. In the last few
weeks, various backup missions had gotten into position. Arno
used these. There seemed no one in the entire national power
apparatus who could stop the on-rolling momentum he had started.
A manned spacecraft with hydrogen bombs tried a suicide mission.
They had bombs doped with elements that might interfere with the
magnetic filaments, perhaps producing an electromagnetic pulse to
scramble the field lines' snarls, lowering their information-bearing
capacity.
The Eater figured this out, of course. It hulled the ship with
high-speed gravel, shot from its accretion disk. The thin-walled
vessel was shredded in a moment.
This rattled Benjamin considerably. The military advisers
reassured him, as well as they could when he knew they were dealing
with a complete unknown. What did lessons learned by such theorists,
from the strategies of Waterloo and Gettysburg and Stalingrad, mean
here? Less than nothing.
But Benjamin had Channing to help, they reminded him. Maybe that
would matter.
In the hushed, defeated atmosphere at the Center, the staff
labored on. Nobody talked much. The Eater was as chatty as ever,
transmitting at high-bit rates any number of reflections on life,
culture, and much else. This unnerved them all still further.
YOU WOULD PROFIT FROM INVESTIGATIONS MYSELF HAS
CARRIED OUT OVER THREE BILLION YEARS. HERE I DETAIL THEM BRIEFLY.
FROM THE MOMENT OF MY ORIGINS, IN MY KERNEL INTELLIGENCE, I WONDERED
IF THERE COULD BE A FAR HIGHER BEING THAN MY-SELF FOR EXAMPLE, A
CLASS THAT HARNESSES THE LUMINOSITY AVAILABLE IN THE STARLIGHT OF AN
ENTIRE GALAXY. THIS WOULD BE VISIBLE AT GREAT DISTANCES: A LACK OF
LUMINOSITY COMPARED WITH MASS, AS REVEALED BY STELLAR ORBITS IN THE
SUMMED GRAVITATIONAL POTENTIAL. GALAXIES, I HAVE DETERMINED, OBEY
SCALING LAWS BETWEEN THEIR SURFACE BRIGHTNESS, RADIUS, AND MASS. A
HIGHER ENTITY FEEDING ON LUMINOSITY WOULD BREAK THESE SCALING RULES.
IN THE MANY THOUSANDS OF GALAXIES I HAVE OBSERVED, NONE SHOWS SUCH
DIMINUTION. THUS THERE ARE NO GREATER FORMS OF LIFE THAN MY-SELF.
I
COMPRISE THE ULTIMATA.
"Gee, that's great news," Amy said dryly. "We don't
have to worry about anything worse than this guy."
They all laughed, utterly without humor.
They gave him one session of deep electro-sleep. To make him
remotely in condition to fly, the physicians said. He had heard of
the method, which in practice seemed innocent enough: small patches
on his head, a soothing sound, a sensation of skating across a
gray plain—and he was waking up ten hours later, feeling better
than he had in months.
Then it was just airplanes. Arno's team went with him in a convoy
to the freshly scraped landing field a few kilometers from the
Center. There a chopper carried him to the Kona airport. It was a
deserted landscape pelted by high winds and rains. Enormous waves
churned in across the black lava fields and chewed at the runways.
A sleek jet took him to Oahu. Again a barren plain with the
military holding a perimeter. No flights except his. The suborbital
carrier was of a design he had never seen before, bulky and somehow
muscular in its aluminum sleekness. No time delays at all—they
hustled him across a hundred meters of slick asphalt and into
the passenger cylinder of the beast. They even had an
umbrella-carrier who ran alongside. Somebody was taping his every
move, too.
The rumble of its huge engines shook him as he belted in. A
steward showed him the space gear, patiently explaining each and
helping him try them on. He dimly saw that this was part of their
method. Keep him busy, focused, no time for fear or imagination. He
welcomed it. A fringe of his depression lifted as their wheels
left the ground.
The craft labored up through decks of roiled clouds. Above 35,000
feet, a clarity came to the seethe outside. They crossed out of the
cone that the Eater maintained over the islands. Engines fought the
inrushing winds and slowly spiraled them up to 50,000 feet.
Their rise slowed as the jet gulped the thinning air. They took
him into the orbital craft then, all suited up and primed with
anti-zero-g medical aids. The moment when they dropped the
dart-shaped ship from the jet's bay was a foretaste of orbit, but he
did not feel like vomiting. The rocket's kick in the ass brought a
heady rush. Vibration, massive weight. A blue-white view through the
port that quickly eased into black. Real orbital zero-g was fun. He
was enjoying playing with a floating pen and the view outside
when they came for him. Into a smaller compartment he went. The pilot
sat a meter away and the view was better.
"A closet with a view," Benjamin said amiably. He was
feeling so good he did not even wonder why.
"Yeah, Cap'n," the pilot said. "They rushed me up
here so fast, I'm still going through the manifest. Gimmie a min.
Name's Sharon."
"So beautiful."
"Real pretty for a suicide run."
This jolted Benjamin a little. He craned to see the Eater, out
somewhere near the moon. A blue speck.
"We've got boosters out the kazoo," Sharon said. "Hope
you're ready for a roller coaster."
"I've got a date with my girl," he countered. "
Go."
Now he knew why he felt so fine.
3
Channing said, "That phrase, 'my kernel intelligence'—I
agree with Kingsley. That might be the Old One."
"Could be. Can you reach it?"
She sensed Benjamin floating in the cowling of his sensaround as
he watched/felt her. He was sending all sorts of secondary
sensation—the headset pressure, visual processing cues,
the wheeze of his shallow breathing. But these were just add-ons to
his abstractions, or so they came to her. The miniboosters tugged at
him as the craft accelerated and she heard their angry snarl. These
she gobbled up, for they suddenly reminded her of how achingly far
she was from her old, real body. Emotions washed over her aplenty,
but she was sensation-starved.
"The cyberguys have identified a whole catalog of different
'signature' memory waves," she said, accessing her crisp
memories. "The Old One has a trademark bunch of Alfven waves
tagging its parts, as nearly as they can make out. Those tags are all
over the dipolar shape of the fields. A diffuse storage method.
Probably to give it a holographic quality."
"So we can kill part of it, maybe, but not all."
"Smart bastard, it is."
"This 200 gigaHertz band works beautifully," he said
mildly, the mellow tones telling her that they had done a good job on
him. He had weathered the trip untroubled. "You're so…
full."
"I love having you so close."
Somehow he was now more deeply embedded in the space of her
perceptions. Like pale sunlight beams lancing through her 3-D self.
The cyberfellas had been sharpening the software again.
"What's that music?"
"Oh." She felt the rhythm eddying through her, called up
by his notice of it. "I have it all the time, I guess. Music
integrates parts of the mind that make sense of memory, of
timing and language. It retools me. When I started up here, I thought
it was pointless, working in areas with no real use, like motor
control. Until I found that the designers used those parts to pilot
my Searchers. Thrifty guys."
"It's more than music, isn't it. It's…"
"Feeling? Yeah, I caught on to that once I used it some. The
story they fed me is, there must've been neural mechanisms that
deciphered music in the early hominid brain. That may have developed
as a way to communicate emotion before language came along."
"Wow, it feels different."
"Yeah, somebody's going to make a bundle selling this, once
it gets out of the R&D stage."
Their chat flowed easily, part of reintegrating with him. Sensory
input laced with meaning, weaving a comfy fabric around them both.
Two of my favorites—
clothes and sex…
An echoing voice boomed suddenly, "Channing? Benjamin?
This is Kingsley."
It came as a dash of chilly rainwater on a hot skillet. They both
flinched. "Yuh, yes?" she managed.
"Sorry to break in—"
"I'm surprised you can," Benjamin said. "Pretty
narrowband, though."
"That's the point of having you up there. I may fall out at
any time. All the monster has to do is throw a plasma screen between
us."
"Your signal's pretty jittery now," Channing said.
"Losing the low frequencies. That checks with a plasma cloak
just a little too low in density."
"I'll be quick. Pretty rough here, it is. This signal has to
go out on an undersea cable and then through a chain of satellites."
"Everybody okay?"
His hesitation told her all she wanted to know. "As well as
can be expected."
"Judging from what I can see," Channing said, "I'd
say get away from the Center. There's a tube of plasma flow pinning
the islands like a needle."
"And low-frequency electromagnetic stuff," Benjamin
said. "I can see it on the displays in front of me."
"We have little choice. Arno's arranged a bolt hole for us if
it gets bad."
"Arno must be pretty pumped," Benjamin said.
"Indeed. He wants me to provide interface on this."
"You can see the Eater?"
"No, nothing. It's good at blinding us. But I do know that,
using a relay through the Navy, we've started the plasma dumping."
Channing felt/saw/smelled it already—a spike of barium
ionization at the nearer edge of the Eater's magnetosphere. Like a
puke-green worm eating at a fat blue apple. And the dwindling motes
of Searchers who had delivered the barium, zapped by the Eater
within moments. But they had worked.
"Think that'll drive it?" Benjamin asked. She could feel
him sending edgy, exploring fingers through her sensorium.
"We hope so," Kingsley said. His voice was flat,
low-quality, riding a meager trail of bits. "It's been following
a slow trajectory outward, and Arno believes this will look like
another ineffectual failure of an attack."
Channing said doubtfully, "To edge it around the moon."
"I'll admit, this is wholly conjectural," Kingsley said.
"Like me and my life," she said.
Benjamin asked, "We're
sure it can't decode these
transmissions?"
"They are going under a screen signal. Even if it can
penetrate that, we have already laid down a pattern strongly
suggesting that you are a feint. So it may very well discount
what it can decipher."
"More Waterloo thinking," Benjamin said cryptically. "I
still—"
"I SHOULD THINK YOU SHOULD START YOUR DIVE!" Kingsley
suddenly bellowed. "Oh, sorry, having transfer problems again.
I—"
And he was gone. "Damn, this setup is rickety," Benjamin
said.
"He was right, though. I'm starting."
Red muscle-clenchings down her spine. Quickenings. Abstractions
rendered into a cool sort of body language. She sensed one hundred
and thirty-four Searchers start their programmed accelerations. Her
subsystems updated them every few moments. Furious work seethed just
below her conscious perception, a strumming insect-hive frenzy.
Into the whirlpool.
Her astronaut training took over. She quick-checked twenty things
in the time it took to breathe out. (Thinking that, the breathing
sensation came back on, full.)
She wasn't going to survive this, but training is training.
"I love you," Benjamin said.
"Ummm. I love you, too, but, well, love the mind, miss the
body."
He chuckled in that old way of his.
The webbed intricacy of the magnetosphere rushed at her. "Here
goes."
"Good—"
He had started to say goodbye. There had been altogether too much
of that lately. More than enough for a lifetime, and here she was
into her second one. She was damned if she was going through this all
sober and noble.
"Got a puzzle for you, lover. Why did kamikaze pilots bother
to wear helmets?"
4
Weirdly colored lightning snarled through the thick air. Kingsley
helped some men carry gear out of the collapsed shell of the main
building. Through the patter of the unending rain, he heard distant
shouts. More bodies were recovered from the adjacent wings.
A bolt came slamming down and narrowly missed—
crack!
The impact staggered him and shattered a guard station a hundred
meters down slope. The shock wave hit like a cuff to the body by a
giant hand. He dropped his burden in, of course, the largest puddle
within view. The box held ferrex computer memories, delicate stuff
probably not aided by immersion. He levered the box up again, getting
mud over his jacket. Clothes had long since ceased to matter—he
had been living in this suit for two days—but the warning
twinge in his back said he was getting close to collapse.
Fatigue blurred the mind quite enough, thank you, without the
piercing pains to which his rebellious spine was prone.
A communications building upslope disappeared in fire as they
loaded the 4X truck. Arno came limping out from the smoking ruins
carrying his own two overnight cases with large red DEFENSE GRADE 10
labels. From the look on the man's face, Kingsley decided it was best
not to refer to the last-ditch lightning rod screen the teams had run
up the night before. Their puny defense had withered beneath the
incessant voltages the Eater had somehow concocted above the island.
Kingsley decided that reference to any of Arno's decisions
was not on for now. Pointless, anyway. Probably nothing could
have aided the situation. Stick to the practical, then, with a
straightforward "Where shall we go?"
For the first time, Arno showed both confusion and alarm—in
approximately equal proportions. An aide ran up and held an umbrella
over Arno, allowing the man time to recoup. After an awkward moment,
the aide produced an umbrella and handed it to Kingsley, who gave a
polite nod. He was already hopelessly drenched, but the thought was
the important thing, Kingsley supposed.
Arno managed, "I'd… I'd say we spread out."
"How can we continue working, then?"
" 'Working'?"
"Yes, regain contact with Benjamin."
"Working." The concept seemed to need tossing over in
his mind.
"We have to get a new base of operations. Plainly the Eater
has targeted us quite well here."
"Working."
"Reaching Benjamin. That is our proper job."
"Washington…"
"Forget Washington. It might not even exist any longer."
This jab made Arno blink, startling him from his daze. "The
comm unit's gone. Totalled. No way we can get an uplink."
"Probably so, but there remain the big dishes up at the top."
Someone shouted at them and then ran off. " 'Top'?"
"The observatory complex at the peak of Mauna Kea."
"Hell, higher up, it'll get even more lightning, won't it?"
"We can't be sure. The Eater must have targeted us very
specifically. This isn't happening over at Kona, for example."
"Yeah, the tech boys figure it backtracked on our narrow-beam
transmissions. Wish they'd thought of that before."
He spotted Amy working with a medical team. Kingsley called to her
and she looked around as if she could not tell where the voice came
from. Probably stunned from the thunderclaps and lightning strikes,
ears humming. His were ringing as well, but that did not prevent him
from hearing the cries of the injured as they were loaded into
whatever vehicles could serve. Kingsley waved, did a dance, and
she picked him out. Arno was engaged with two of his staff and this
gave Kingsley time to embrace her, then just stand together
silently beneath the umbrella. He wanted to stay like that, not move
an inch, but finally he asked her about the observatories. As
always, she knew far more than he expected.
When he got Arno's attention back, he said, "The last anyone
heard, the system up top was working."
"It's damned vulnerable up there," Arno said, blinking
rapidly. Was the man faltering? Not surprising, really.
"Benjamin's going to have no backup," Amy said flatly.
"I can't think what we could do…" Arno's voice
trailed off and he stared through the rain at the milling personnel
and wrecked buildings, his empire flattened.
Amy said crisply, "If we can get some of this gear up to the
data processing facility at the peak, we can use the bands above 100
gigs."
Arno shook his head slowly. "I still don't see—"
"The Eater's holding a plasma discharge over our heads here.
We go up to fourteen thousand feet, we're above that."
Arno rallied enough to jut his chin out. "Until it finds us
there."
"Until then, we can still talk to Benjamin," Amy said.
Kingsley found interesting how Amy and Arno had interchanged
roles. She always saw problems, but now proposed solutions; he, the
reverse. Even now Arno stood in the softly pelting rain and just
stared at them. No doubt the man would come back to himself, but
when?
Moments moved by. Nothing. "I'll help organize some of the
specialists," he said to move matters along.
"Ah, okay." Arno did not move.
"I should think you would need to instruct your
lieutenants."
"Right."
"Quite soon."
"Right."
With Amy, he found Arno's bevy of next-in-command types and got
them at least moving in roughly the same direction. Arno slowly
came to resemble himself again. Within an hour, something like a
convoy departed to wind its way up the Saddle Road. At the last
moment, Arno summoned up with his bureaucratic magic wand a fleet of
limousines. Into these sleek black Lincoln Continentals they wedged,
not wanting to ride in the backs of trucks. Prudently Arno had kept
the limos on the island since the threat of a presidential visit had
loomed, then receded, weeks before. Amid slashing lightning,
they wallowed off into gray, thick rain.
Arno insisted that Kingsley and Amy ride with him, and though
Kingsley wanted nothing more than to lean back and nod off, Arno
chose this moment to demand a summary of the "scientific
situation."
"What do you think the Eater will do next?"
Kingsley was tempted to retreat to his now-standard
aliens-are-alien argument, but this newly revived Arno did not seem
in the mood to accept that and let him sleep. He leaned forward,
summoning up energies he did not until a moment before know that he
had. An aide handed him a gin and tonic with crackling cold ice,
fresh from the limo bar. This incongruity disarmed him momentarily
and he took a sip. What the hell, it was calories. At least Amy was
beside him. He needed her much more than the drink, but it, too, was
comforting. He dimly noted that his drink hand was trembling and
wondered abstractly why.
"It's concerned. Not perhaps desperate; we can't flatter
ourselves with entertaining that notion. But concerned, since it is
wasting its most vital resource—the hot, fluid, ionized mass
that is compressed by gravitational gradients into the disk that
orbits it."
Arno was a difficult audience because he knew just enough to ask
questions. "It didn't use that to burn Washington. Or to
shotgun that ship."
"In a way it did," Kingsley said. "The jets it
creates, the gravel it used to poke holes in that ship—they
come ultimately from the infalling energy and mass in its disk."
Arno frowned. "It's got a lot in that disk. Hell, I could see
it glowing in the sky. Back when I could see the sky, I mean."
"Indeed. Yet mass is a scarce resource for it now, as it has
expended a great deal decelerating on its approach to us. To be sure,
it retrieved some in our upper atmosphere. Amy has estimated that it
could catch in the range of several tens of tons per minute with the
expanded field region it has flowered forth. Integrating that
over its cruise around the Earth in several shallow orbits, one gets
a substantial mass. But still a good deal less than it needs. And
therefore
desires, for I suspect it experiences its most
basic needs as a hunger. Desire is a more rarefied way to put
it. This thing is best regarded as an extremely sophisticated,
moving appetite with more experience than any civilization could
possibly have. And of a different kind, as well, one we can explore
only by working out the most basic constraints upon it."
This extended blurt Arno greeted with his patented skeptical
gaze. He took so long to say anything that Kingsley wondered whether
the man was slipping back into his earlier semicatatonia. Then
he looked at one of his lieutenants, wedged into the far end of the
limo with a security type, and said, "We got any new
intelligence on this?"
"Nosir. Nothing
works."
"No lines to DoD?"
"Nosir."
"The airborne White House?"
"Nosir, it hit us pretty bad."
"Well then." Arno seemed to have decided something, for
he now gazed stolidly at Kingsley across the short separation of
the limousine's center well. "What you got?"
"Our strategy, if it deserves such a name, is simple. The one
thing it must have to move on with is matter. Our first maneuver is
to explode canisters of barium near it. Barium ionizes easily in the
solar ultraviolet. The plasma is disagreeable to the Eater, so
it will move away."
"Herding it, I remember that."
"But it needs mass, so we suspect—"
"Hope," Amy put in. "A more honest word."
"Quite. We hope that it will move toward the most readily
available, substantial mass in its vicinity."
"Right, the moon."
"Yet by the logic we settled upon long ago, when we first
understood its nature, the Eater cannot simply plunge into the moon.
That would strip it of its magnetic fields—and thus its mind.
Suicide."
"So it grazes the moon. Orbits in, real close." Arno
nodded. Kingsley could see he was reconstructing this, as if his
memory were disarranged.
"And that is where we use matter again—the key to
destroying it, as well."
"Antimatter," Arno said. He clung to the word.
"The antimatter Channing carries is lodged in cylindrical,
highly magnetic traps. If she can eject the contents at the
innermost edge of the Eater's own mass deposit—the
accreting mass in its disk—that will disrupt the magnetic
fields that are anchored there."
"So?"
"Its greatest energy density lies there."
"So annihilating the mass that ties those fields." Amy
put in, "might give the Eater a lobotomy."
Arno's mouth sketched a skeptical curve. "But not kill it."
"There is a possibility," she went on, balancing an
orange juice on her knee. "She could drop some antimatter—
positrons and antiprotons—into the rim of the black hole
itself. There are huge magnetic fields moored there."
"And that would kill it?" Arno asked.
"It would allow the two poles, north and south, of the black
hole itself to unite." She grinned triumphantly.
Arno frowned. "They would then, well, what?"
"Annihilate. North and south are opposite poles, and they
would cancel each other out.
Poof!—all the energy in
the hole's magnetic storage turns to free energy." Amy beamed.
He felt a rush of emotion, mostly pride. This was her idea and she
was justly proud. Kingsley had not even suspected such a thing could
occur, but she had shown it in several detailed calculations.
"And what happens to this Channing simulation?" Arno
asked.
Amy sobered. "The tidal forces, the torques—this close
to the hole, they're tremendous."
Trying to be helpful, Kingsley added, "The trick for it, for
her, is to angle in so that the whirlpool of space-time can pick her
up. That centrifugal action can counter the inward stresses. It's the
only way she could get close enough to carry this out."
Amy went on as Arno struggled to understand. It would all be much
easier if they had the vast graphic displays of the Center, of
course. Science was now mostly a matter of understanding the
pictures shown, not the principles underlying them.
Kingsley sat back and reflected, the gin and tonic helping nicely.
The great trouble with understanding this black hole lay in a simple
fact: calculations were nearly all about the equilibrium. Average
properties, energy theorems and the like. So what did one really
know? He had watched a generation of theorists wrestle with the
same problems.
Take what happened when matter fell in—did it go all the way
to the frightful singularity that lay at the "bottom" of
the hole, and so get chewed up? We thought so, but were not sure.
Could the twisted space-time around a spinning hole, and inside
it, lead to fundamental new properties—say, worm-holes? Not
sure.
At the core, physics smeared into topology, the study of surfaces,
shapes. Geometry ruled.
Near the innermost regions of a rotating hole, snug up against the
singularity, the laws of quantum mechanics object quite
profoundly to infinities. Physics had for decades posted a want ad at
this boundary: NEW THEORY NEEDED. APPLY WITHIN. But to properly
describe this realm demanded a deep view of quantum gravity, which
still—despite much work and false prophets—eluded them
all.
Amy had hit a conceptual wall with Arno. Talk between them
dwindled and they stared out at the pelting fat dollops of rain. A
somber mood descended.
"Perhaps the primary point," Kingsley said, "is
that this simulation of Channing is flying into the utterly unknown.
The only evidence of her deeds will be what happens to the Eater."
"She'll die," Amy said.
"She knew that going in," Arno said flatly, apparently
glad to find a tough-guy line he could use.
"It may be easier for us, when we speak to Benjamin—if
we can even do that—to use 'it' rather than 'her,' "
Kingsley said.
"Good psychology," Amy said. "Prepare him for it."
The limousine stopped. They had finally growled up the rocky,
narrow road to the observatory complex. To Kingsley's surprise, the
rain clouds now hung below them. The sky above was not clear, but at
least there were no glowering dark clouds and crackling
lightning. The telescopes here had long taken advantage of this
property, the extraordinary stability of the air above the dead
volcano.
"Let us hope the bastard cannot find us here," Kingsley
said. He got out of the car and stretched. A dizzying lack of air
made him totter. How could he think up here? Back to work, one last,
desperate time.
5
Benjamin felt her fully now. The old question about whether a
simulation had an internal experience— well, all those abstract
bull sessions dwindled to scraps. Here was her
self, coming
through in her voice, her vision, the sensory smorgasbord of a lived
interior.
"The sand is running, lover," she said.
"Not yet!" he called.
She coasted in a strange Valhalla of cathedral light and glowing
electromagnetic majesty. He floated in his harness, immersed in her
world. Through a small port, he could watch the crescent wonder of
the great water world below, but his eyes did not stray from the
spectacle before him.
Three dots scorched her vision with momentary pinpoint explosions.
"Gotcha!" she cried.
He flinched. "What was that?"
"I nailed three of the nodules where the Old One is stored."
"With Searchers?"
"It killed them, sure. But not fast enough."
"More barium?"
"Yeah, giving the beast an enema."
"The big cloud, it's expanding pretty fast."
He sent her his extra data sources on a tightbeam, high-bit
squirt. A blooming ivory barium cloud licked at the Eater's magnetic
rim.
"Ride 'em, cowboy," she gloated.
"It's heading away, around the moon."
"Hungry, that misbegotten—"
She had stopped abruptly. Benjamin frowned. "What's—"
"It's talking to me."
"About what?"
"Music. Listen."
–RESONANCES WITH HUMAN BRAIN PATTERNS. SOME
SYNCHRONIZE WITH BODILY RHYTHMS. THE BEAT IS ALL. YOUR "CLASSICAL"
MUSIC APPEALS TO A DIFFERENT CLASS OF CADENCES, MORE PURELY MENTAL
RATHER THAN PHYSIOLOGICAL-THOUGH FOR YOU THE TWO ARE NEVER ENTIRELY
SEPARATE, AS WITNESSED BY FOOT TAPPING TO EVEN THE MOST RAREFIED
STRING QUARTET.
"This is insane," Benjamin said.
"Aliens are by definition insane."
Suddenly, on five channels, came a flurry of transmissions,
everything from African tribal intonations to Beethoven, from Chuck
Berry to Gregorian chants, no technique or style neglected.
"What—?!"
STIMULATING TO RECEIVE THESE FORMS OF CEREBRAL
JEST. THROUGH YOU IN THE MOTE NEARBY, I CAN SOMEWHAT KEN HOW THESE
GAMBOLS PLAY OUT IN THE HUMAN SENSORIUM. VERY MUCH AS YOUR OTHER
IRRATIONAL-OR PERHAPS BETTER, SUPERRATIONAL-METHODS PERFORM. AS, FOR
EXAMPLE, IN "LOVE" AND MECHANISMS OF REPRODUCTION.
"We're trying to kill it and it sends us music criticism?"
She said tensely, "Bravado? To distract us?"
HOW BEAUTIFUL IMMORTALITY IS, THE BLISS OF BEING
BLENDED. COME, JOIN ME. WE SHALL VOYAGE AMONG THE STARS TOGETHER.
Baroque music sounded. "Good God, it's a sales pitch,"
she said.
FROM TOO MUCH LOVE OF LIVING
FROM HOPE AND
FEAR SET FREE
WE THANK WITH BRIEF THANKSGIVING
WHATEVER GODS
MAY BE
THAT NO LIFE LIVES FOREVER
THAT DEAD MEN RISE UP
NEVER
THAT EVEN THE WEARIEST RIVER
WINDS SOMEWHERE SAFE TO SEA.
"What in the world…" Benjamin felt an eerie sense
of an intelligence abidingly strange.
'That's supposed to be enticing? Ha!"
"Must be a poem."
Wonderingly she said, "I think I understand. It doesn't
actually believe we will strike against it."
"Why? Because we're scared? It's right—most people are
terrified."
"But not the ones who matter—us. Maybe its experience
with other aliens leads it to believe that any species will make a
rational calculation and give it what it wants."
He blinked. "That's why that stuff about 'superrational
methods,' then? It thinks we have an amusing, unreasonable side,
but—"
"That won't matter in a showdown, right. It's moving fast
now. I'm going after it."
He sensed the surge in her. Not in sight or sound but some other
perception, coming somehow through this intense data link.
He was
with her in a way he never could have been
before.
And she was rushing into the magnetosphere. The barium cloud was a
hovering mass above, the Eater a rushing fountain of light
below. All against hard blacks and the approaching crescent
moon.
Plunge!—he felt her elation. She had once said to
him that all astronauts really wanted to be space birds, and now he
caught the texture of that truth.
"I'm being forced by the explosions at the top and bottom of
the funnels," she gasped.
He could see the hourglass shape. In the fever dream of his
perceptual space, it resembled a dirty Pyrex tube, slowly rotating.
Bits of mass trickled down it. Not much; it was starved. But each
funnel ended in the glaring hot washout of the disk.
And her only sliver of refuge lay toward that hard luminosity.
Searchers flared like matchheads in the shifting, quilted light of
it. They died to erase fractions of the Old One—perhaps. In the
hard vibrating seethe, she could not be sure what effect all this was
having in the form of the magnetic densities around her. Some,
yes—a lessening of pressure skated across her pseudo-skin
like a soft easing. Some success, she felt. But how much was enough?
"Thousands," she answered him without his speaking. "I
can count them now. We're just picking at it. To it, we're—"
"Get out!" he yelled.
"—irritants. It will swat us like flies."
Suddenly the wall he had built around his inner fears shattered.
"My God, get out!"
"I'm in a dive, lover. Blissful hard g's."
"Bail out!"
"Gotta go. The sands are running."
"Wait, you—"
"
Sic transit, Gloria."
Her dreamy voice alarmed him. Had she wanted this final plunge all
along? "No!"
"Yes."
Her signal Dopplered away, like water whirling into a drain.
6
She had studied all the theory and knew that the Searchers were
doomed. And so was she.
But the little cylinder of nestled positrons and dutiful, dumb
antiprotons, tucked into her tail like an awful egg— that would
do nicely.
Diving.
Thirty seconds to go. What was that old movie?
Thirty Seconds Over Tokyo.
And how did it end?
She was still close enough to the human sensorium to perceive
the onrushing Eater in terms that made human sense. Her "eyes"
generalized if they could. They tagged an ensemble of incoming
elements—textures, lines—by seizing on a fragment,
outlining it with a contrast-boundary, and then compressing all that
detail into—
What
was it?
A swollen cathedral of soaring magnetic towers, impossible
perspectives, wrenching structures. All seething with detail
that ramified as you looked at it, then split again into underworlds
of minutia. Such beauty!
And faintly, hymns.
Her Searchers were dying. Amid streaming obelisks of information,
they slipped. Currents found them. Electrocuted.
This place was constructed of electrodynamic flows, she sensed,
that laced through the steepling rivulets to find their targets.
A Searcher was a new resistance in this whirling circuit.
Currents dissipated there in an eye blink. Scorching heat fried
the Searcher chips.
Then quick sparks lit the way before her. Plasma blossomed.
Something had gotten ahead of her and now pried open the magnetic
fortress.
Benjamin—?
She felt a dizzy gush of electric aurorae around her. Dove in a
centrifugal gyre. Eluded them for a second or two—
Hands. That was what it felt like at first.
Fingers probing, finding, learning. Inside her.
Peeling her into onion-skin layers.
Feeling ornery, she went outside and whistled, which made the
neighbor's irritating dog run to the end of its chain and gag itself.
It had woken her up with its damned barking last night—
Memories. Did it relish her worst character flaws?
They had a convention: either could raise a hand and say,
"Time out," and the other would have to be quiet for at
least a minute. Usually she would be chastened, but not so much that
when the "Time's up" signal came she didn't launch right
into nonstop talk again, words jumping out of her mouth to knit up
the damage—
That one hurt more than the choking dog image.
Lost, so much
lost—
This thing knew how to wound.
Searchers dying everywhere. She banked down into the funnel.
At least the magnetic strands did not buffet her here. Still,
turbulent knots of magnetic strands slammed into her carapace.
Static electricity crawled over her. Fever-itch.
It sought her, poked into her mind.
It's seen everything, done
all this before.
She slammed on her remaining ion reserve. A blur of heady
acceleration. Below the bull's-eye disk bristled with eating
brilliance. Storms wracked it.
The Eater was all around her now and knew it. Huge hollow
cries of godlike wrath battered her.
Suddenly she sensed
them, too. Shelves of voices. Minds
in boxes. A zoo of knowledge/data/selves.
Greetings. Please may you kill us?
Blistering speed, now. A plunge into relativistic velocity. She
felt the prickly twist of space-time as a play of stresses all
through her.
Slamming down into the disk.
Bank. Thirty Seconds Over
Topology—
Into the rim of the black hole, skirting the ergosphere's bulge. A
fat waist at the whirring edge.
Please may you—
She shat the antimatter. It trailed behind her and down into the
edge of the furious disk. Annihilating.
Gamma rays coursed out. The whirl of space-time sucked her in and
around. Tidal fingers pulled, stretched, popped seams in her.
Pain-fingers, now.
Matter died. Fizzed away into photons.
The magnetic fields in her wake lost their anchor. The field lines
shot away at the speed of light, freeing the knots and whirls in a
growing cone behind her.
Thanks to you. Pleased that you kill us.
She saw ahead the darkness beyond all night. At its edge,
glimmering hot light. The ergosphere. She fell in a skimming
orbit, on the brink of being swallowed.
Another ship, there. In a wash of gossamer light. Slim, scorched,
skin dented and alive with spider stresses—
It was herself. Time-twisted, so that she saw for one glimmering
instant her own destiny.
7
Benjamin's missiles plunged ahead of her, he knew that much.
Kingsley's updated command hierarchy had helped. The reprogramming
Benjamin had to do by feel alone.
Only with an artful sequence of thermonuclear explosions could he
provide the necessary plasma density. Enough ions could short-circuit
the Eater's equatorial equilibrium. So he had timed it, fired the
warheads—
And it had worked. The virulent fireballs had cleared a path for
her. Did she know it?
He watched a huge sizzling corona of bristling light erupt from
the core of the Eater. Magnetic reconnection of the poles? Spreading—
He sensed her somewhere in there. A sprite, speeding into the maw
of certain extinction.
He lost sight then as the Eater's shimmering ghost-strands fell
below the moon's brimming crescent.
Goodbye—
One burst, then gone. Her.
Abruptly the moon's rim blazed with furious radiance. A titanic
explosion haloed in vibrant colors. Blocking Earth from the
virulence. Kingsley's plan.
Circling around, Benjamin saw that the other side of the moon was
burned brown.
Melted. Peaks slumped. The plains ran with fuming stone.
8
Kingsley embraced Amy with frail passion. The effort of sending
the data, of responding to Benjamin's demands, of fending off Arno's
undoubtedly well-intentioned but irksome attentions… He
was exhausted.
And the Eater had found them again.
Even here inside the soaring vastness of the Keck observatory
dome, he could feel the stones shake as lightning struck.
"We've done all we can," Amy murmured into his chest.
"You lie down, rest—"
"No, I must see how it comes out. Don't want to be asleep for
this."
Arno said, from a shadowy corner where he peered at a
communications screen, "It's sending goddamned lightning down a
cone. Look at this."
With an assistant's help, Arno had patched into one of the
emergency DoD miniobservatories, a package launched after the Eater
had supped its fill of metals from the weather satellites. One had to
admire the Americans, Kingsley thought abstractly. They had backups
of everything, straight off the shelf. The view from three
hundred kilometers up showed clouds across the Pacific, with a neatly
carved hole giving clear skies over Mauna Kea. The Eater was able to
tailor the weather of a planet it had freshly encountered, down to a
scale of a few hundred kilo-meters, while swimming in its magnetic
coils near the moon. In some ways, this was the most impressive of
its feats. He peered at the hole in the cirrus sheets. Down a conduit
that plunged through the entire atmosphere shot sparkling jabs.
"It knows the global circuitry of planets," Amy said.
"That's pretty clear. And it found us from the tight-beam to
Benjamin."
Arno nodded firmly. He seemed fully back now, the manager of
old, but there was a twitching in his lips that boded ill. "The
nukes, they'll go any minute."
"Time to discuss our next strategic move," Kingsley
said.
"This flops, we're finished," Arno said.
"Funnily enough, no. This is a rational creature. Strange but
rational. More so than we, perhaps. We can deal with it even after."
"Frap we can!"
"Someone must." Kingsley was having a hard time holding
on to his decrepit sense of reality. Amy gave him a sympathetic
look, which he answered with a kiss. He put himself on automatic to
encourage this new line of discussion. "We'll do it some damage,
that seems clear."
"And it'll be mad as hell. It'll come after us."
Kingsley deducted several degrees of respect he had harbored
for Arno's hunched-over figure. Earlier the man had rolled up his
sleeves, the first time Kingsley could recall him unwinding even a
bit. Revealed on his left forearm was a tattoo: death before
dishonor.
Quite so, he had thought. He gathered this tattoo
was a standard one for U.S. Marines, which would explain some of
Arno's comportment. The phrase had set Kingsley to thinking, because
behind their antagonism with the Eater was something just so
elemental. Small and puny humans might be, but without much actual
discussion, the entire vast tribe of it had subscribed to just that
emotion. There was something undoubtedly primate-centered and puny
and irrational and still glorious in all this, a mark of a young
species just learning what it was, marching on grim-faced into dark
vistas, humbled and loudmouthed and yet still coming.
Amy opened her mouth to enter the discussion, but Kingsley shook
his head. Time to calm the waters with a big dollop of snake oil.
He got firmly into Arno's field of view and said, "Think of
it as a wounded god. It might go into orbit around the sun and wait
for a more compliant humanity to emerge from its ruins. It has
infinite time available, with patience to match."
"We're out of ideas," Arno said with leaden certainty.
"Not at all. You may dimly remember that months ago one of
the radio astronomy groups spotted emissions similar to the Eater's
from a nearby star. Perhaps merely accidental, of course. But we
should consider selling the Eater on the idea of leaving us in
pursuit of some other intelligence, perhaps like itself."
"That's crazy." Arno muttered. He stared at the
satellite display before him. Forking stabs of electrical ferocity
traced down through clear skies, converging on the mountaintop.
"We have a slight advantage over it. Our radio telescope net
is the size of the inner solar system now. That is how we could
target these emissions. The Eater is too small to pick up and resolve
such transmissions."
"But it's been wandering through the galaxy," Amy said,
looking at Arno's back with a worry clouding her face. "It must
know everything in the spiral disk by now."
"Not so," Kingsley countered with a tone somewhat
approximating optimism. "It does not have the scale or
sensitivity of networks created by little beings working
together, like us. It is solitary, with all the lacks that implies."
Amy got the idea and said almost brightly, "What do we offer
it?"
"The exact coordinates of these emissions. Perhaps the cause
is a fellow magnetic intelligence. Perhaps it is merely an
astrophysical oddity we do not yet know enough to tell from true
intelligence. Be frank about that. Bargain. Entice. Go away, we say
to it, and here's where."
Amy said, "It could come back."
"We can prepare for that. What was that old Daniel Boone
expression? 'Look sharp and keep your powder dry.' "
From Arno he had expected no coruscating shower of wit, nor some
chin-wagging soliloquy of desperation, but still less had he
anticipated that instead the man would begin to weep.
This was, finally, too much. If masculine toughness meant
anything, it surely implied an ability to face uncomfortable truths,
even to the point of the death of humanity. Arno's weakness spread.
Kingsley saw the sudden collapse in Amy's face, a gaping mouth, and
utter despair in her eyes.
He felt precariously close to that himself. Yet he dare not
abandon the methods he knew. Among reason's tools, the hammer was
evidence, the knife was logic. None would work here. But what could?
Let events cure them, he thought despairingly. He had no
ideas.
In a long, sliding moment, he felt profoundly how inadequate
he was, how unsuited were all astronomers, for thinking about a
creature like the Eater. Those who studied stars blithely chattered
about stellar lifetimes encompassing billions of years, while
they saw suns in snapshot, witnessing only a tiny sliver of their
grand and gravid lives trapped in telescopes, capturing light emitted
before humanity existed. That imbued astronomers with a sense of how
like mayflies the human species was, yet it also insulated them. They
could not alter suns. Biologists could help or hinder living things.
Astronomers had lived blithely in the shadow of immensities
without the burden of acting in the glare of such wild perspectives.
Astronomy's coldness carried a foreboding that humans were truly
tiny on the scale of such eternities.
Perhaps they all had shattered, finally, in the face of that.
Suddenly, in this dark, cluttered communications room, with staff
hovering before their screens like acolytes worshipping in a
technological shrine—finally it was all too much. The
claustrophobia of enclosure strummed in him, tightening his chest.
Suddenly he saw his own life, a mere mote in eternity's glare, and
sensed its rising slope. Quite a heady ascent, indeed, far more
than he had ever hoped.
Until here, until now. This was certainly the peak. He would never
again act upon so grand a stage, command such resources, confront so
colossal an enemy. From now on it would be the long smooth slide
down, hearty applause and cushy appointments and modest speeches and
the lot. He could dine out on these events until the grave claimed
him.
The summit.
Here. Now. A satisfying grace note, in a way,
and yet with the ring of doom to it.
Intensely he wanted to hold on to this moment, the very crown of
his life. The Eater might well be dying across the sky outside and he
was here, cowering in a shadowy, man-made cave—ironically, an
observatory, meant to open onto grandeur.
He had to see the damned creature one last time.
Without a word, he turned away. Amy had begun sobbing, too, and he
knew he should comfort her again.
Let it go, he thought,
and let me go in the bargain.
He found a corridor leading out. Down the cold concrete
passageway, head wobbly with lassitude. Shove on the door.
Out,
free.
Cutting cold embraced him. Cleared his head a trifle, even.
Sharp sunlight. Thin air rasping in his throat.
He walked to the edge of a broad steel parapet. He could see clear
up into the deep bowl of sky from here, over the
Keck's
brilliant bulge. The moon hung halfway up to the zenith in a troubled
blue sky.
Faint twitches of fevered light stirred at the edge of the moon's
crescent. Probably from Benjamin's final assault. It would all happen
quite swiftly now.
Head back, teetering in a whipping wind.
He saw the very moment. A huge burnt yellow corona of virulence
lit up the moon's rim. Light crawled and licked around the clean
curve.
She had done it.
He felt a sudden hammering in his chest.
Victory and death.
How wonderful, to see it here, alone, in the utter silence of
a cool clear mountaintop.
He shouted up at the dying sky, a pure roaring cry of released
joy.
Raptly he stood petrified, gazing upward over the eggshell-white
observatory dome. Tendrils of ivory light flowed away from the moon,
arcing out and then narrowing, coming toward the Earth. To see this
demanded substantial ionization of intervening gas, he estimated.
Which required enormous energies, the fruit of the final cataclysm
mercifully hidden from view. The restless glow came rushing
across a quarter of a million miles, reddening as it came.
It fattened. An orange filigree laced the high air. Excited atoms
fluoresced in a great green circle.
Probably, he analyzed,
the electrodynamic effects hitting the upper atmosphere,
driving a wave of ionization and charge imbalances. More lightning
due, probably.
Get back inside? No, live at the peak.
Even in death, the Eater's work was accurate, its geometry
quite precise—a circle that collapsed inward in a spray of
brightening yellow-green. Suddenly he realized that this was a
descending cone. Energies concentrating. He did not notice his hair
standing on end, or the humming air, until it was much too late.
9
Benjamin landed two full days later. A "catcher's mitt"
shuttle snagged him from a looping orbit and brought him down. It was
a long glide across most of the Pacific to Oahu airport, taxiing
to the same spot where he had departed a thousand years before.
In yet another way, he had lost her.
Behind a gray curtain, he went through the motions of being
involved. Arno and Amy met him with news of Kingsley. The Eater's
final paroxysm, as its magnetic structure collapsed, had sent
enormous currents through a circuit that connected moon and Earth. It
had focused its energies upon Mauna Kea, and there the final
vengeance had descended. Those inside the conducting Keck dome
survived, since the currents remained on the outside. No others.
The black hole still remained, of course, a dead spike of
gravitational gradient now. Its still-huge mass performed a slow
gavotte about the moon, and vice versa, so that the Earth now had an
invisible partner in its voyage around the sun. The moon lurched and
gyred as the triple-mass system traced a complex curve. The moon
turned its other face toward Earth for the first time since it became
locked by tidal stresses, an event that had occurred well before life
had advanced beyond the single-cell level. The far side had few
craters and its dark skin had liquefied before the onslaught.
Benjamin's first glimpse of that side momentarily startled him out of
his cottony mood. Clouds trailed across the face, outgassing from the
melted rock. These were the first to grace the lunar skies for
probably four billion years. They lasted only days, making Luna seem
a momentary twin.
Occasionally some stray mass would err into the path of the
now-naked black hole. The flash was visible from Earth, if one were
looking at just the right second. Astronomers immediately began
using the hole as a gravitational lens to focus light from stars and
galaxies passing behind it. Within weeks, papers began appearing,
turning a terror into a tool.
But the billowing magnetic structure was gone. With it vanished
all traces of a mind older than the solar system.
Or so they all thought, until Amy came quietly into his office
in late afternoon. "Got a funny one for you."
He peered at the sheet, alarmed by her tense voice. It was a
report of radio emission from the vicinity of the Eater's orbit.
"High flux, picked up by the microwave network."
"One of our ships, still out there?"
"Don't think so. This looks more like emission from
relativistic electrons."
He stared at her. "A… jet?"
"It could be."
It was. Observations over the next day showed that a fresh jet was
blooming from very close to the black hole itself.
"It's alive," Amy said. "The magnetic field
structure that housed the Old Ones, it must have come through okay."
"Damn. This jet—where is it pushing the hole?"
"Outward," Amy told a crowded auditorium at the base of
Mauna Kea. "It's moving off in a straight line."
A voice called, "Toward what?"
"Suspiciously close to the direction in the sky of that other
emission we saw, months ago. Remember?" Clearly nobody did. Amy
went on, "An electromagnetic spectrum similar to Eater's. Some
people wanted to bargain with the information, maybe get Eater to
leave us alone."
Another voice called, "Companionship?"
Benjamin remembered Kingsley saying that the most they could hope
to do was damage the thing. So Channing had died only to wound…
"It is notably diminished," he rose to say. "The
latest radio maps of the hole vicinity show a knot of extremely
intense fields anchored in the hole itself. A small accretion disk
seems to be building, apparently assembled from the debris in its
vicinity."
"So it can't harm us?" a voice asked anxiously.
"Not now." He felt compelled to add, "It could come
back."
"Then why head out toward that source?" a woman in the
back asked.
"We cannot know." His eyes swept the room and
everywhere he saw naked fear. "But we can be vigilant."
The information was suppressed. The world was not able to take the
shock and uncertainty of this revelation—or so higher heads
than his believed.
It had been folly, he saw, to believe that a creature which had
encountered myriad assaults upon itself could be killed with anything
present-day physics could devise. That they had injured it was a
tribute. A mere few decades earlier, humanity could have done
nothing. He supposed that was some kind of distinction. Not that it
helped him in the dark of night, tossing restlessly.
The hole's course held steady. It was leaving.
But humankind would eventually learn of its true fate, of that he
was sure. And no one would ever truly rest easy again.
There was much to be done to make up humanity's immense
losses, but Benjamin felt no urge to join in.
He knew, without being able to speak of it, that he had to
complete his emotional arc. An abstract term, but he sensed a tension
riding in him.
One day at sunset, he said a final goodbye to her on the beach,
beneath a splendid ruddy streak of cloud. The wrecked sky above still
showed orbiting debris of the battle, twinkling against the emerging
stars. Vagrant energetic electrons struck auroras at the poles,
where great sheets of light surged. He could see soft glows to the
north. That would fade, and with it, some of the horror.
But not all of it, ever. Humanity would never again be able to
gaze at the stars with anything resembling the astronomer's
serenity. Or feel awe at the heavens, untinged by terror.
After the sunset, he came back into his temporary quarters and saw
the hourglass she had given him. He had meant to bring it home before
he left, then forgotten and left it in his car. All he had left now
was a suitcase from the trunk and the hourglass. Everything in his
Center office had burned.
No past. No future. Only this hovering moment.
Outside, the balmy aromas of life resurgent.
The hourglass stood on his desk and captured his gaze.
Sand at the bottom. What would she want him to do with it?
He turned it upside down, beginning his life anew.
Goodbye. Hello.
10
—pop—
—stretching pain—
—and
she zoomed
out—
—away from a brilliance at
her back.
Somehow she knew that this was the twin other mouth of the Eater's
black hole. She had pierced the very center of it and tunneled
through an immeasurable expanse of space-time.
A white hole. Behind her erupted a tongue of plasma, licking hot
at her, pursuing hard and fast—but she shot out into…
… a carnival of gaudy light.
Marvelous, airy cities hung in black space. Weird constructions
rotated. In the distance hung a yellow-green star, too large, but
warm.
She knew without knowing how.
She was in some other space-time, maybe not even in this universe.
It felt different.
Here was where the doomed civilizations, swallowed by the Eater in
its long journey, had ended up. Others, the Eaten, had known enough
to send small missions into the fat equatorial bulge. Venturing into
the realm of physics beyond calculation, they had won through.
They had colonized this space. A place hard fought for, over more
eons than flesh could know. Here swam survivors of countless alien
societies, fruit of ancient desperation.
Waiting patiently in their castles. Knowing how stripped-down
craft would be, after the shredding tidal forces of the hole. Ready
to salvage any compressed intelligence.
Fathom it. Revive it. Her.
And now to greet.
Hello, she thought.
Something like a hailing call came strumming redly through her
sensorium.
For an astronaut, this is a heaven of sorts.
Wonders to explore.
AFTERWORD
One of the notions leading to this novel came to me while reading
one of the classic texts of plasma astrophysics:
It appears that the radical element responsible for
the continuing thread of cosmic unrest is the magnetic field.
What, then, is a magnetic field… that, like a biological form,
is able to reproduce itself and carry on an active life in the
general outflow of starlight, and from there alter the behavior of
stars and galaxies?
—Eugene Parker,
Cosmical
Magnetic Fields
While the ideas in this novel are offered in playful speculation,
I have endeavored to show truthfully, against an extreme
backdrop, how scientists do think, work, and confront the unknown.
Astronomy locates its students in a perspective grander and
perhaps more cold than does any other science. Though the effect
is little noticed, it seems to me to have an appreciable impact, at a
level often below perception, upon how astronomers see the
universe and our place in it. Such lessons are among the most subtle
we can learn.
The initial spur for this work came from my colleague and friend,
Mark O. Martin. Jennifer Brehl's deft and insightful editing yet
again contributed to improving my text.
I have also benefited from discussions with Joan Benford, Dominic
Benford, John Casti, Jay Sanders, Vince Gerardis. Ralph Vicinanza,
Elisabeth Malartre. Joe Miller, John Cramer, Roger Blandford, and
Martin Rees.
The constant assistance of Marilyn Olsen was essential. The
unattributed poem in the last Part is by Swinburne.
The black hole figure in Part V is by Nigel Sharp, and was
generated from an exact computer calculation of the general
relativistic conditions near a rotating black hole. It appeared first
in "Demythologizing the Black Hole," by Richard Matzner,
Tsvi Piran, and Tony Rothman, in
Analog Essays on Science,
edited by Stanley Schmidt, Wiley, 1990, to whom thanks go for
permission to reproduce it.
July 1999