Intervention

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Intervention Page 19

by Julian May


  "You can talk, Falto, " Lashi Ala shot back. "Your people haven't been saddled with the bulk of the planetary surveillance and manifestation as we Simbiari have. Why the Lylmik didn't appoint you smug little mauve pricks as prime contractors for Earth, I'll never know! You like hu­mans. "

  Rola'eroo came as close to chuckling as his phlegmatic race was ca­pable. "Perhaps that is the very reason why Poltroy was not given the proctorship. Despite certain imputations of favoritism, I am convinced that the Lylmik desire a fair and just evaluation of humanity. And this" — he offered a magisterial nod to Lashi Ala — "the citizens of the Simbiari Polity will conscientiously provide. "

  "Oh, well, of course, " she muttered.

  RipRip Muml gave a delicate shudder. "Thanks be to the Tranquil Infinite that we have been spared close contact with Earth. Its artistic productions are exquisite, but the reverberations of violence and suffer­ing are a sore trial to truly sensitive minds. "

  "I've noticed, " said Lashi sweetly, "that you Gi are too sensitive for any number of tedious but necessary assignments. "

  The great yellow eyes blinked in innocent reproach.

  Falto the Poltroyan interposed diplomatically. "We all do the jobs we're best suited for, given the mind-set of the planet under evalua­tion. "

  "And with a race as bumptious as humanity, you Simbiari end up carrying the can!" RipRip gave its phallus a cheerful flourish.

  Lashi responded with simple dignity. "We know very well that our people are still imperfectly Unified — and I did not mean to imply that we regretted our first assignment as prime contractor to an emerging Mind. On the contrary, we are honored by the Milieu's mandate. " She hesitated, a troubled expression crossing her now glistening face. "But the Oversight Authority concedes that Earth is an anomaly. It seems counter to all logic, therefore, that the Concilium should assign its proctorship to us, the most junior Polity in the Milieu. Surely this difficult and barbaric world would fare better under the more sympa­thetic guidance of Poltroy — or, even better, under the stern direction that the Krondaku vouchsafed to Gi, Poltroyans, and Simbiari alike. "

  The Krondak magnate's mind-tone was detached and serene. "My race has proctored more than seventeen thousand planetary Minds since the Lylmik raised us to Unity. Only you three survived to coadunation and membership in the Milieu. "

  "We've never had a winner in seventy-two tries, " the Poltroyan ad­mitted, "and we're still smarting over the Yanalon fiasco. A tough-minded Simb primacy might have saved that world... Don't sell your abilities short, Lashi Ala Adassti. "

  "You mustn't feel downhearted or put-upon, " the hermaphrodite added kindly. "Think how the Unity will rejoice if you succeed! We Gi will never enjoy such a triumph. We're too frivolous and sex-obsessed ever to be appointed planetary proctors. No newborn coadunate Mind will ever call us its foster-parents — and we are the poorer thereby. "

  A harmonious chord of chimes sounded in the mental ears of the four magnates. Outside the viewports the iridescent glow intensified. The shuttle-craft was approaching the terminus of the overgrown tunnel, an iris gateway of yellow metal that opened slowly like the expanding pupil of a great golden eye.

  Welcome. And high thoughts to you, most beloved colleagues. Please debark and join us in the hospitality chamber.

  The shuttle had halted at the gateway. Rola'eroo extended a tentacle and activated the hatch mechanism, admitting a billow of warm, superoxygenated atmosphere to the airlock. The four entities toddled, strode, stalked, and slithered down the integral gangway, crossed a short expanse of anemonoid turf flanked by crystal foliage, and entered the Lylmik sanctum. The gate shut behind them.

  It was rather dim inside, comfortably so after the brilliant part of the ship they had just traversed. The walls and flooring were gently corru­gated, transparent, and seemed to be holding back an encompassing volume of bubbly liquid that swirled slowly in ever-changing eddies of blue and green. In the center of the room was a crescent-shaped table with three seats for the Gi, the Poltroyan, and the Simb — and a squat­ting spot for the ponderous Krondaku. Besides the furniture, which was austere in design and made of the warm yellow metal, the room con­tained only a low dais about three meters square, formed by slight exaggerations of the floor ribbing.

  The Earth Oversight Authority took their places and waited. Lashi Ala betrayed her apprehension by smearing the table surface with dabs of ichor from her perspiring hands. She tucked them into the sleeves of her uniform, where there were blotting pads, and buffed away the smears with her elbows. The other three Overseers tactfully averted their eyes and veiled their brains.

  Above the dais there appeared a small atmospheric maelstrom.

  Our heartfelt felicitations to you, dear colleagues, upon the success­ful completion of Earth's first phase of intensified overt manifestation.

  In metaconcert, the Authority responded: We are gratified that the Supervisory Body approves, and herewith present a digest of data rele­vant to progress in coadunation of the World Mind. [Display.]

  The maelstrom was enlarging, spinning in a plane perpendicular to the dais, and five distinct whorls were condensing out of it.

  How interesting that the outbreaks of metapsychic operancy among the humans are so widely scattered. Even though the genes for high mental function are present in all racial groups, one notes that its phenotypic expression crops out with special vigor among certain Celtic and Oriental populations.

  This has been allowed for in ethnodynamic equations. The sorting factors have a fascinating Darwinian aspect, in that those groups subject to great environmental — as opposed to social — stress tend to manifest the metapsychic traits most strongly. Thus the Georgian, Alpine, Hebridean, and Eastern Canadian Celts tend to become operant more rapidly than their more numerous Irish and French congeners. The same is true of the Asian irruptive locus, with the North Siberian, Mongol, and Hokkaido groups most noteworthy, together with the isolate frac­tions flourishing in Tibet and Finland. Unfortunately, the Australian aboriginal locus has become nearly extinct, as have the Kalahari and Pigmy concentrations in Africa. The Nilotic group trembles on the brink due to severe social disruption. In any case, these southern pop­ulations are now almost too small to be viable reservoirs of operant genotypes.

  Tragic. But as we know, operancy must be combined with ethnic dynamism if coadunation of the Mind is to be achieved.

  And on Earth, dynamism is largely a Northern function, due to the complex interaction of stress factors.

  "Northern hyperfertility isn't to be sneezed at, either, " murmured the Poltroyan, ex-concert. "Which is why I put my money on the Canucks in the operancy sweepstakes. "

  The other three Overseers flinched at the effrontery of their small colleague, but the Lylmik seemed amused.

  You are most perceptive, Faltonin-Virminonin! It is indeed from that group, especially the northeastern Franco-Americans, that we expect the largest numbers of natural operants to be born during this critical pre-Intervention phase of proctorship.

  The five atmospheric vortices had now assumed a decidedly material aspect. The Gi and the Krondaku, being the most ultrasensitive mem­bers of the metaconcert, realized with some excitement that the Super­visors were about to do them the unusual honor of assuming astral bodies — or, at least, astral heads. The news ignited the entire Author­ity, especially Lashi Ala, who had never experienced a Lylmik vis-à-vis encounter.

  They asked: Is it your wish, then, that we devise plans for the special encouragement of these Franco-American operants?

  By no means. This is a task reserved for others.

  Others?... What others?

  But before the Oversight Authority could pursue this puzzle further, they were completely distracted by the apparition unfolding before them. Above the dais now floated five heads. Perhaps in consideration of the Poltroyan, Gi, and Simb representatives, who had largely humanoid features, the heads each developed two eyes and a single smiling mouth. Their psychocreative flesh
was roseate with no trace of hair, feathering, scales, or other epidermal outgrowth. The eyes of the central head were gray; those of the four surrounding heads were a brilliant aquamarine green. The Lylmik had no necks, but from their occipital regions trailed multiple ectoplasmic filaments like pale gauzy scarves stirring in a light breeze. Strangely, each of the different Authority magnates thought that the heads were supremely beautiful. Even those who had seen this manifestation of the Lylmik before felt that they could look into those eyes forever without tiring; and poor Lashi Ala, meeting them for the first time, was reduced to bewitched helplessness.

  "I am Noetic Concordance, " said the uppermost head.

  "I am Eupathic Impulse, " said the lowest.

  "I am Homologous Trend, " said the right-hand head.

  "I am Asymptotic Essence, " said the one on the left.

  The central head, which radiated the most overwhelming power of all, had the softest voice. "And I am Atoning Unifex. We of the Super­visory Body embrace you and your organization. We thank you for what you have done, and charge you to carry on your assigned tasks in spite of discouragements, doubts, and difficulties. It is known to us that the small planet we are orbiting at this moment occupies a critical place in the probability lattices. From it may emerge a Mind that will exceed all others in metapsychic potential. It is known to us that this Mind will be capable of destroying our beloved Galactic Milieu. It is further known to us that this Mind will also be capable of magnifying the Milieu immensely, accelerating the Unification of all the inhabited star-systems. For this reason we have directed this extraordinary attempt at Intervention. It involves a great risk. But all evolutionary leaps are hazardous, and without risk-taking there can only be stagnation, the triumph of entropy, and eventual death. Do you understand this, col­leagues?"

  We understand.

  "Mental potential is not actualization. The human race must reach an acceptable level of operancy largely through its own efforts. We can guide, but we cannot force evolution of the Mind. Thus there still exists the possibility that this rising operant population may founder — either through internal or external calamity. There exists another possibility, fortunately diminishing, that the entire world may perish in a suicidal conflict. So Intervention is not certain. But we shall work toward it... you in your way and we in ours, full of trust. "

  We understand.

  "Go now and initiate the next Oversight phase. From time to time we will lend special assistance. "

  We do not understand, but we acquiesce willingly.

  The central head nodded. The eyes of all five were ablaze with irre­sistible psychic energy. The heads began melting away to ectoplasmic vapor, but the eyes remained to focus Unifying power.

  Join with us, said the Supervisors, and the minds of the Overseers rushed into the joyous light.

  A long time later, when the four awoke in their shuttle-craft, they instinctively came together to gaze out of a viewport at the blue planet rolling below.

  "Incredible, " said the Krondaku.

  "What an experience!" Lashi Ala was still in a state of near-total bemusement. "I agree — it was quite incredible. "

  The Gi shook its head, gently corrective. "While Unity with the

  Lylmik is memorable, it is not the matter that Rola'eroo Mobak finds difficult to believe. "

  "Certainly not, " the monster growled. "It's what they said. "

  The Poltroyan pursed lavender lips and hoisted a single eyebrow in unspoken query.

  "The head in the middle. " RipRip Muml amplified its speech with a remembered vision. "It said that the Lylmik were going to assist us. That's even more unprecedented than their original veto of the Concilium pull-out vote!"

  Rola'eroo said, "You will also recall that the Lylmik Supervisors told us that we were not to attempt positive reinforcement of the Franco-American operant group... that the task would be undertaken by oth­ers. "

  Both Poltroyan eyebrows shot up and the ruby optics bulged. "Love's Oath! You can't mean it!"

  "I conclude that certain human operants are to be shepherded by the Lylmik themselves, " Rola'eroo asserted. "By these aloof beings who scarcely ever condescend to participate in the Concilium deliberations, who tantalize us and confuse us when they are not vexing us with their mystical vagary. "

  "There was nothing vague, " Lashi said, "about that crew we met today. That central head was downright blunt. "

  "Most uncharacteristic, " the Krondaku said. "We must ponder the implications strenuously. "

  The Gi had turned to the port and contemplated the blue planet with a certain foreboding. Its irrepressible genitalia were blanched and sub­dued. "Earthlings! Do you know — I'm beginning to be quite afraid of them. "

  "Nonsense!" said Lashi Ala stoutly. "We Simbiari know humanity better than any of you. They don't scare us. "

  The three other entities exchanged thoughts of sudden, shared com­prehension.

  The End Of Part One

  PART II

  The Disclosure

  1

  NEW YORK CITY, EARTH

  21 FEBRUARY 1978

  THE FLIGHT FROM Chicago had been over an hour late, and helicopter shuttle service between Kennedy and Manhattan had been disrupted by the same fog that had delayed the airplane. The car-rental counter was mobbed, but here Kieran O'Connor's coercion expedited procurement of a Cadillac limousine. He and Arnold Pakkala, his ex­ecutive assistant, took the front seat while Jase Cassidy and Adam Grondin got into the back. Then they were off in a squeal of expen­sive rubber, with the minds of Cassidy and Grondin clearing the way and Pakkala driving like the battle-trained Chicago commuter that he was.

  Kieran closed his burning eyes and dreamed while the big black au­tomobile roared up the Van Wyck and Long Island expressways in de­fiance of the speed limit. It negotiated the snarl at the Queens-Midtown Tunnel magically and bulldozed its way down 42nd Street. Other ve­hicles seemed to melt out of its way as it streaked up Avenue of the Americas, ignored by patrolling NYPD cruisers. It turned left onto West 57th against the lights, zigzagged from lane to lane amidst traffic ap­parently frozen in place, and plunged into the whorl of Columbus Circle like a black shark invading a sluggish shoal of prey species. Here, with vehicles coming at it from six directions, the limousine faced its keen­est challenge. The targeting eyes of Cassidy and Grondin flicked to and fro and their minds shouted silent commands to the other drivers: You stop! You go right! You move left lane! Up the curb bike! Out of the way walkers! Go! Stop! Gangway! Enchanted buses froze at the curb or lumbered aside; private cars seemed to cower as they yielded; take-out-food delivery boys on bicycles and pedestrians scattered like pigeons before a hawk; even the pugnacious Manhattan taxis were demoralized and swerved out of the limousine's charmed path with tires screeching and brake lights flashing scarlet alarm.

  Arnold Pakkala guided the Cadillac with fluid precision through the chaos, ran a red light for the seventeenth time that night, and floored the accelerator when he attained the comparatively unimpeded reach of Central Park West.

  Adam Grondin said: Kennedy to Central Park 34 minutes. Beautiful Arnie.

  Jase Cassidy said: Time to make it. Chief still asleep?

  Pakkala said: Until I tell him to wake up.

  A map image of New York City seemed to hover in his peripheral vision off to the right, among the lamplit bare trees of the park. He spotted a police cruiser, but Adam and Jase had already fuzzed the minds of the two officers inside. They knew they couldn't possibly have seen a Caddy doing seventy northbound, and turned their attention to a doorman walking three poodles who was suspiciously unencumbered by a pooper-scooper.

  Pakkala said: Only a few blocks more.

  The limousine charged across 65th Street on the fag end of the amber light, then hung a left onto 66th virtually riding the rims. For the last time Cassidy and Grondin exerted their coercive powers to stop the modest flow of vehicles on Columbus. The Cadillac took the final cor­ner smoothly, decelerated, and
drove up the ramp in front of the Lincoln Center for the Performing Arts. A touch of power brakes brought it to a sedate halt.

  Cassidy and Grondin relaxed their overstrained brains with audible groans of relief. Arnold Pakkala's face had gone rigid in the wan light from the instrument panel. Still gripping the steering wheel, he let his head fall back against the padded rest. His eyes closed. The other two men flinched at the orgasmic discharge that energized the interior of the car for an instant, setting their own nerves afire with sympathetic vi­bration. Seconds later Pakkala was sitting ramrod-straight again, not one white hair out of place, stripping off his leather driving gloves with small, neat motions.

  "Jesus, Arnie, I wish you wouldn't do that. " Grondin ripped open a pack of Marlboros with shaking hands and coaxed one out.

  Cassidy wiped his florid face with a handkerchief. "Wouldn't that be a helluva thing for the chief to wake up to? The fallout from your stupid come!"

  Pakkala ignored that. "Mr. O'Connor may continue to sleep until I make certain that our subjects are actually inside, in their box. If our informants erred — of if they lied — other plans will have to be made. "

  "Well, get cracking, dammit, " Cassidy snapped. "Don't just sit around here getting your rocks off. "

  Pakkala's face went rigid again. He seemed to be studying the hub of the steering wheel with blind eyes. Tiny flakes of snow sifted down and smelted to pinpoint droplets when they struck the warm windshield. The engine idled soundlessly and Kieran O'Connor exhaled a deep, sigh­ing breath that was almost a sob.

  Grondin sucked cigarette smoke fiercely. "Poor bastard. "

  Cassidy said, "He'll be all right. Just so long as those two dago butch­ers are in there where we can get at 'em. "

  Nodding at Pakkala, Grondin said, "Arnie'll find out. Umpteen thou­sand people in there, but Arnie'll find 'em if they're inside. Helluva head, old Arnie, even if he has his weird moments. "

 

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