Paradox Moon: The First Book of Regenesis

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Paradox Moon: The First Book of Regenesis Page 13

by D. Scott Dickinson


  The scene is stunning, overloading his senses with its endless vista and scarlet radiance. So brilliant are the vermillion tones of the near wall and valley floor they hurt the man’s eyes and he is forced to shade them with his hand. So enormous are the dimensions of the valley that it seems to go on forever.

  ∆ ∆ ∆

  Rested, the band resumes its trek through the green tunnel toward the widening light at its end. The final leg of the journey is a winding descent over scree and deadfall that threaten to bar their way. But after a long, exhausting downward climb, the spent band finally reaches the inviting light.

  They emerge into a space so vast, so endless it feels like the very rim of the world.

  Looking up, the leader cringes at the sight of the violet-red-yellow monster still in pursuit of the sole surviving sun.

  Looking ahead, he sees no horizon—only the vague void of infinite space. And he fearfully wonders if they finally have reached the far limit of solid earth.

  In closer perspective, he stares at the scarlet hues of a sheer cliff that climbs out of view above him and of level rock-strewn ground that marches out of sight into the distance ahead of him. Every visible surface seems awash in blood, and the intensity of color jolts his senses.

  Looking back, the leader sees there is no escape from this forbidding landscape, save for the way they have come.

  Viewed from here, it is a ribbon of lush pampas winding down a broad crease in the sheer escarpment, with switchbacks at each recurring bend and spilling out onto the valley’s level floor.

  The vertical green ravine is fed by rivulets of water trickling down the talus on each side of the descending pampas, and the leader is gladdened by the presence of a wide pool they all spill into at the foot of the ravine.

  The difficult, enervating climb down the ravine saps their energy and blunts their will.

  Although the sun rides high in the sky, the leader knows the band cannot go farther this day. Spying a well-shaded crawl space under a high shelf of scree, the leader motions his band to rest there and regain their strength.

  At the end of this day, the encroaching shadows of dusk find the members of the band sleeping soundly beneath the rocky shelf at the base of the ravine. But their leader remains on the cusp of wakefulness, haunted by turbulent visions of sky and space.

  In his first dream, the sun is swallowed by the violet-red-yellow monster stalking it, and the world is plunged into darkness.

  In the nightmare that follows, the band stumbles blindly through the blackness, falling off the edge of the world into the nothingness beyond.

  The leader awakens in an agitated state of uncertainty, unsure of his band’s fate and dreading what these dreams portend. He dwells on the troubling visions until the shadows of night are chased away by the reassuring light of a new dawn.

  As he stretches awake, the leader sees a solitary figure moving toward the band in the gathering light.

  ∆ ∆ ∆

  Grateful to be standing upon the dry, open land, the man spends the remainder of the day and the night asleep on the ground near the mouth of the cave. The gentle stillness of the place eases his mind and relaxes his body as he drifts into deep, peaceful slumber.

  The early light of a new day finds him refreshed and invigorated, eager for whatever challenges and discoveries lie ahead. First, though, he must find water.

  Since the cave was the source of several rivulets, he decides to explore the area around the base of the cliff before striking out into the barren landscape ahead.

  Walking a few steps away to gain a better perspective of the cliff’s sheer surface, the man discovers a vertical crease enlivened by a verdant ribbon cascading from the top of the cliff to its base far below. The feature is so distant he cannot distinguish any detail, just its irregular appearance and its contrast against the ochre of the surrounding cliff.

  But he knows green is the color of life, and water is its well-spring.

  The man sets out at once for the verdant ravine. It is a long trek, and he becomes more and more excited as the bright green ribbon resolves itself into thick, reedy blades of pampas adorning the winding vertical contours of the ravine.

  As he draws near, the pampas is not the only life that materializes.

  There are the leader and his band, gathered at the base of the ravine, waving him on. Raising his arms in salutation, the man rejoins his erstwhile companions.

  When he signals his parching thirst, a member of the band leads him to the low pool formed by narrow rills of water trickling down the stony surface of the cliff.

  After drinking his fill, the man falls in with the band as they journey into the blood-red barrens toward a distant haze. There are many boulders scattered along the path. They are unremarkable and of indifferent shape and size.

  Indeed, the land is devoid of any landmark beyond the steep escarpment they are leaving behind.

  Night finds them in the center of an unusually symmetrical array of boulders standing side-by-side in concentric rings radiating outward from the band’s central position.

  Accustomed to accepting things as they are, the furry bipeds evince no curiosity. But the man is spooked by the unnatural order and wonders how the rocks came to form such a neat geometric pattern.

  His uneasiness is brushed aside when the leader calls a halt to the day’s march and the man makes preparations for sleep. Despite his misgivings, the night is uneventful and the travelers get a full measure of rest.

  For the man, and him alone, everything is about to change!

  Shaking off his torpor, the man is first to rise in the early dawn of a new day. To satisfy his gnawing hunger, he retrieves the papaya-like fruit from his pockets, shells them and eats the soft reddish pulp within. Again, his thoughts begin to drift into a dream-like state.

  Looking around, he is startled to find the open, endless vistas of yesterday are gone.

  In their place is a virtual diorama of creatures that roamed his world at the end of the Pleistocene, when glaciers covered the earth.

  Shuffling parades of woolly mammoths.

  Stalking prides of great saber-toothed cats.

  Slinking packs of dire wolves.

  Plodding caravans of hook-nosed macrauchenia ungulates.

  Towering hulks of megatherium ground sloths, giant short-face bears and other megafauna.

  All of these, as well as teeming herds of other long-extinct fauna, march across the man’s vision.

  Transfixed by the surreal procession of creatures from a distant world and time, the man does not notice the leader summoning the band, now fully awake, to begin the day’s journey. They are nearly at the outermost ring of the boulder array when the man’s limbic brain alerts him to the peril they are walking into.

  Like a giant tapestry of moving images, the diorama continues to stream through his consciousness as he runs toward the departing band to warn them of their danger.

  The leader is walking between a fierce giant bear and a feeding megatherium, while the other members of the band are caught between great, crouching saber-toothed cats and slinking dire wolves.

  Unsheathing his hand-axe and knife, the man races to their aid while crying out in alarm. Stopping in mid-stride, the members of the band look back at the man with blank expressions of incomprehension. Leaping to the leader’s side and raising his axe, the man takes a terrific swing at the giant short-face bear, and is thrown to the ground by the momentum as his axe slices through . . .

  A mirage!

  The jarring fall jolts the man back to reality.

  Gone are the giant bear and sloth. Gone are the mammoths, the saber-toothed cats and the wolves. Gone are the ungulates. Gone is the entire diorama of Ice Age creatures. In its place are the empty vistas of the rift valley.

  Counting himself the victim of some psychedelic diurnal dream, the man looks sheepishly at the confused members of the band and shrugs his shoulders in a gesture of resignation. For their part, the band dismisses the man’
s antics as just another strange behavior of one who mysteriously disappears and reappears for no apparent reason.

  Once beyond the evenly spaced geometric rings, the day’s trek is uneventful. The boulders become sparser, and the band makes good progress. But the distant haze is no closer or better defined and, if anything, appears to be farther away and less distinct than when they set out from the base of the cliff.

  As shadows lengthen, the leader sees a small mesa in the distance, and he motions the company in its direction.

  They arrive at the mesa in total darkness and immediately ascend to its top—a bare, flat plateau ideally suited for a camp-site. Wearied from their extended trek into the night, they fall out and are soon asleep.

  Chapter 23. The Judas Molecule

  The man is first to awaken, and he is relieved to see the unbroken, tangible cinnabar barrens he knows are real.

  The mesa’s raised plateau affords an expansive view of the landscape and, in the light of a new day, the man espies a subtle distortion at ground level in the distance ahead. It is too remote for him to make out any real detail, but its low profile suggests it hugs the ground and is more narrow than wide.

  The sun is high overhead when they reach the slight rise of ground.

  It is an adit whose opening is only a few feet high but several feet wide, and it emits a bright reddish-brown glow. Crouching, the man perceives that the source of the light lies beyond a rough, ragged crawl space through the rocky lip of the opening.

  And, he observes, there isn’t a flutter of air venting out from its open mouth.

  Commanding the others to remain outside, the leader joins the man and, together, they crawl through the stillness of the confined space to the edge of a brightly illuminated cavern. Its sienna walls are aglow with reflected light from a massive river of magma flowing the length of the cavern.

  Again, the man is confronted with the conundrum of ice-cold ambient air beside white-hot molten rock. Curiously, the air seems impervious to the heat and, even more curiously, none of it seeks escape through the open vent of the adit.

  Reaching his hand into the main cavern, he feels the icy touch of gelid air streaming across his fingertips. When they begin to numb, he withdraws his hand and discovers his fingers are tipped with frosty rime.

  The leader is not surprised, having witnessed the howling, sucking craters on the arctic tundra. But the man is perplexed and fails to make any connection with the blasting heat he felt at the equatorial vents.

  For him, the mystery only deepens as he puzzles over the unnatural attraction between the hot flowing magma and the cold streaming air. It is beyond his experience and reason and, as a trained scientist, he is stumped.

  The answer lies in the unique geology and peculiar chemistry of the small moon. The relationship between the super-cooled airstream and the super-heated magma manifests a singular process of molecular interaction that breathes life into the planet, and the very atoms of air and molten rock conspire to keep it so.

  Equilibrium is maintained through the fundamental influence of electromagnetism. The intermolecular forces that give matter its form are “bent” to overcome the bonding tendency of charged atoms on the surfaces of the moving airstream and magma-flow. Generating an electromagnetic field that holds both in relative position, even as the one moves swiftly over the other.

  The molecules of air are in constant convectional turmoil, their bonded atoms “excited” by magnetic force as they are drawn to the airstream’s outer band. Like a Judas goat, each wave of excited molecules pulls other molecules behind it as they are successively destroyed and replaced.

  The result is an ionized, self-regenerating, seamless membrane binding the airstream together, even as its outer band is in constant flux.

  Like iron to lodestone, the icy air is drawn to the magma, as it constantly moves across it, on its subterranean course across this strange world.

  What the man cannot know is that the process of constant molecular destruction is as well a process of constant creation.

  The bonded molecules are rich in carbon dioxide, scrubbed from the atmosphere by the great sucking craters bordering the frigid northern and southern polar regions. As they reach the outer layer of the magma-enveloping airstream, great quantities of free oxygen atoms are released, bleeding into the air as diatomic gas and spiking its oxygen content.

  While the great ocean acts as an important carbon sink for the planet, the land mass no longer contains the once ubiquitous carboniferous and deciduous forests that dominated the temperate latitudes in the distant past.

  Vast as the ocean is, it cannot by itself absorb enough carbon dioxide to restore atmospheric balance on a global scale.

  Expansive as they are, the broad belts of pampas and narrow necklace of equatorial rainforest are not, by themselves, sufficient to maintain a viable atmosphere.

  Vegetation is sparse or absent over the remainder of the super-continent, and the limited extent of photosynthesis is simply unequal to the task.

  The constant release of diatomic oxygen to enrich the air is this small planet’s way of regulating the chemistry of its atmosphere on a global scale.

  It is an explanation for the airstream’s unnatural behavior that will elude the man until he reaches the tundra at the southern polar region and witnesses firsthand the howling, sucking craters which are its source.

  Chapter 24. The Stone Forest

  The leader and the man crawl back out of the adit and rejoin their fellows, resuming the interminable journey across the rift valley. Progress seems slow as, leaving the solitary mesa and low slit of the adit behind, they enter a totally flat, featureless landscape.

  Step after weary step draw them closer to a distant haze, and the man curses the stultifying monotony of the trek every mind-numbing day through the repeated sameness of every previous day.

  Many days and many leagues after leaving the adit, the haze begins to materialize into a most startling horizon!

  They are approaching a steep escarpment whose features send a thrill of expectation through the man and a shudder of apprehension through the band.

  The sheer surface of rock seems to touch the sky as it towers above them, stretching so high it fades seamlessly into a lost horizon.

  Unable to distinguish where the escarpment ends and the sky begins, the furry bipeds stare in awe at what they perceive to be the very end of the world.

  Combined with the overarching presence of the violet-red-yellow monster chasing a threatened sun across the same sky, the lost horizon inspires apocalyptic visions among the band.

  Viewing the same scene, the man marvels at the stupendous height of this far wall of the continental rift valley. He knows from his fly-over it rises to high desert, much like the one he traversed at the start of his journey in the northern latitudes.

  But it is not the sheer height of the escarpment that commands his attention. It is the revealing composition of its rocky surface.

  The wall wears the striations of the ages and, from fieldtrips studying the geological time scale of his own world, he knows they tell the story of this remote moon measured in geologic time.

  The timetable literally rises up from the ground before him, and he possesses the discipline knowledge of lithostratigraphy and the practiced eye of the geophysicist to read it.

  The striations are much wider than those he studied in the walls of the Grand Canyon on his own planet, and the man formulates an either-or working hypothesis:

  Either the distinct geologic eras lasted longer here,

  Or their surface conditions resulted in greater accumulation of mineral deposits.

  Either way, the man is confident he can read the succession, if not length, of geological events that brought this moon from its distant beginnings to its recent past.

  It is a tale he is eager to know.

  As he stands relishing the prospect of decoding the planet’s ancient past, the leader draws his attention. The man turns to see a narrow fiss
ure hidden by a vertical overlay of concealing stone. Slipping behind the lip of stone, they discover a way up the high escarpment.

  The acclivity is clear and gradual, punctuated by switchbacks providing rest-stops as they go.

  The leader is relieved to see such an easy path for their ascent. The man is thrilled to see such a close-up and personal view of the strata they climb.

  The bright-red stratum at the base of the wall bleeds seamlessly into the eternal red of the valley floor, and it betrays the earliest visible evidence of the moon as an iron sphere in its formative infancy. Succeeding layers tell the story of a geologically active adolescence.

  The oozing wounds of volcanism and its healing scars, the diluvian floods and parching droughts, the rise and fall of majestic sierras, the scoured scree of mighty glaciers, the ebb and flow of advancing and receding seas.

  All are read by the comprehending eye of the earth scientist.

  But the most revealing chapter lies far above, in the jet-black tier of char just below the top-surface layer, buried testimony to a past world consumed in flame.

  As the millennia unfold before him, the man muses that the tale of the rocks bears the uniqueness of a fingerprint—this planet’s singular answer to the riddle of the ages.

  But it is an incomplete, unfinished tale.

  Here, the man can read the past only in geologic time. He cannot plumb the much shallower depths of its more recent, historical past. That will be revealed to him by striations from a most unexpected source. One that will give him the clues he lacks here to unlock the tragic conclusion of the story of a remarkable and lost race.

  It is a tale that will end in fire and acid, the new horsemen of an apocalypse visited on a provident world by a rapacious civilization that turned its back on science and laid waste to it.

 

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