Galiana rose from her chair, carpets of light wrapping around her. “It was time to end the game, anyway. We’ve got work to do.” She looked down at the girl, who was still staring at the lattice. “Sorry, Felka. Later, maybe.”
Clavain said: “How’s she doing?”
“She’s laughing, Nevil. That has to be progress, doesn’t it?”
“I’d say that depends what she’s laughing about.”
“She beat me. She thought it was funny. I’d say that was a fairly human reaction, wouldn’t you?”
“I’d still be happier if I could convince myself she recognized my face and not my smell, or the sound my footfalls make.”
“You’re the only one of us with a beard, Nevil. It doesn’t take vast amounts of neural processing to spot that.”
Clavain scratched his chin self-consciously as they stepped through into the shuttle’s flight deck. He liked his beard, even though it was trimmed to little more than gray stubble so that he could slip a breather mask on without difficulty. It was as much a link to his past as his memories or the wrinkles Galiana had studiously built into his remodelled body.
“You’re right, of course. Sometimes I just have to remind myself how far we’ve come.”
Galiana smiled – she was getting better at that, though there was still something a little forced about it – and pushed her long, gray-veined black hair behind her ears. “I tell myself the same things when I think about you, Nevil.”
“Mm. But I have come some way, haven’t I?”
“Yes, but that doesn’t mean you haven’t got a considerable distance ahead of you. I could have put that thought into your head in a microsecond, if you allowed me to do so – but you still insist that we communicate by making noises in our throats, the way monkeys do.”
“Well, it’s good practice for you,” Clavain said, hoping that his irritation was not too obvious.
They settled into adjacent seats while avionic displays slithered into take-off configuration. Clavain’s implants allowed him to fly the machine without any manual inputs at all, but – old soldier that he was – he generally preferred tactile controls. So his implants obliged, hallucinating a joystick inset with buttons and levers, and when he reached out to grasp it his hands seemed to close around something solid. He shuddered to think how thoroughly his perceptions of the real world were being doctored to support this illusion; but once he had been flying for a few minutes he generally forgot about it, lost in the joy of piloting.
He got them airborne, then settled the shuttle into level flight towards the fifth ruin that they would be visiting today. Kilometers of ice slid beneath them, only occasionally broken by a protruding ridge or a patch of dry, boulder-strewn ground.
“Just a few shacks, you said?”
Galiana nodded. “A waste of time, but we had to check it out.”
“Any closer to understanding what happened to them?”
“They died, more or less overnight. Mostly through incidents related to the breakdown of normal thought – although one or two may have simply died, as if they had some greater susceptibility to a toxin than the others.”
Clavain smiled, feeling that a small victory was his. “Now you’re looking at a toxin, rather than a psychosis?”
“A toxin’s difficult to explain, Nevil.”
“From Martin Setterholm’s worms, perhaps?”
“Not very likely. Their biohazard containment measures weren’t as good as ours – but they were still adequate. We’ve analyzed those worms and we know they don’t carry anything obviously hostile to us. And even if there were a neurotoxin, how would it affect everyone so quickly? Even if the lab workers had caught something, they’d have fallen ill before anyone else did, sending a warning to the others – but nothing like that happened.” She paused, anticipating Clavain’s next question. “And no; I don’t think that what happened to them is necessarily anything we need worry about, though that doesn’t mean I’m going to rule anything out. But even our oldest technology’s a century ahead of anything they had – and we have the Sandra Voi to retreat to if we run into anything the medichines in our heads can’t handle.”
Clavain always did his best not to think too much about the swarms of sub-cellular machines lacing his brain – supplanting much of it, in fact – but there were times when it was unavoidable. He still had a squeamish reaction to the idea, though it was becoming milder. Now, though, he could not help but view the machines as his allies as intimately a part of him as his immune system. Galiana was right: they would resist anything that tried to interfere with what now passed as the ‘normal’ functioning of his mind.
“Still,” he said, not yet willing to drop his pet theory. “You’ve got to admit something: the Americans – Setterholm especially – were interested in the worms. Too interested, if you ask me.”
“Look who’s talking.”
“Ah, but my interest is strictly forensic. And I can’t help but put the two things together. They were interested in the worms. And they went mad.”
What he said was an oversimplification, of course. It was clear enough that the worms had only preoccupied some of the Americans: those who were most interested in xeno-biology. According to the evidence the Conjoiners had so far gathered, the effort had been largely spearheaded by Setterholm, the man he had found dead at the bottom of the crevasse. Setterholm had traveled widely across Diadem’s snowy wastes, gathering a handful of allies to assist in his work. He had found worms in dozens of ice-fields, grouped into vast colonies. For the most part the other members of the expedition had let him get on with his activities, even as they struggled with the day-to-day business of staying alive in what was still a hostile, alien environment.
Even before they had all died things had been far from easy. The self-replicating robots that had brought them here in the first place had failed years before, leaving the delicate life-support systems of their shelters to slowly collapse; each malfunction a little harder to rectify than the last. Diadem was getting colder, too – sliding inexorably into a deep ice-age. It had been the Americans’ misfortune to arrive at the coming of a great, centuries-long winter. Now, Clavain thought, it was colder still; the polar ice-caps rushing toward each other like long-separated lovers.
“It must have been fast, whatever it was,” Clavain mused. “They’d already abandoned most of the outlying bases by then, huddling together back at the main settlement. By then they only had enough spare parts and technical know-how to run a single fusion power plant.”
“Which failed.”
“Yes – but that doesn’t mean much. It couldn’t run itself, not by then – it needed constant tinkering. Eventually the people with the right know-how must have succumbed to the . . . whatever it was – and then the reactor stopped working and they all died of the cold. But they were in trouble long before the reactor failed.”
Galiana seemed on the point of saying something. Clavain could always tell when she was about to speak; it was as if some leakage from her thoughts reached his brain even as she composed what she would say.
“Well?” he said, when the silence had stretched long enough.
“I was just thinking,” she said. “A reactor of that type – it doesn’t need any exotic isotopes, does it? No tritium or deuterium?”
“No. Just plain old hydrogen. You could get all you needed from seawater.”
“Or ice,” Galiana said.
They vectored in for the next landing site. Toadstools, Clavain thought: half a dozen black metal towers of varying height surmounted by domed black habitat modules, interlinked by a web of elevated, pressurised walkways. Each of the domes was thirty or forty meters wide, perched a hundred or more metres above the ice, festooned with narrow, armored windows, sensors, and communications antennae. A tonguelike extension from one of the tallest domes was clearly a landing pad. In fact, as he came closer, he saw that there was an aircraft parked on it; one of the blunt-winged machines that the Americans had used to get ar
ound in. It was dusted with ice, but it would probably still fly with a little persuasion.
He inched the shuttle down, one of its skids only just inside the edge of the pad. Clearly the landing pad had only really been intended for one aircraft at a time.
“Nevil . . .” Galiana said. “I’m not sure I like this.”
He felt tension, but could not be sure if it was his own or Galiana’s leaking into his head.
“What don’t you like?”
“There shouldn’t be an aircraft here,” Galiana said.
“Why not?”
She spoke softly, reminding him that the evacuation of the outlying settlements had been orderly, compared to the subsequent crisis. “This base should have been shut down and mothballed with all the others.”
“Then someone stayed behind here,” Clavain suggested.
Galiana nodded. “Or someone came back.”
There was a third presence with them now another hue of thought bleeding into his mind. Felka had come into the cockpit. He could taste her apprehension.
“You sense it, too,” he said, wonderingly, looking into the face of the terribly damaged girl. “Our discomfort. And you don’t like it any more than we do, do you?”
Galiana took the girl’s hand. “It’s all right, Felka.”
She must have said that just for Clavain’s benefit. Before her mouth had even opened Galiana would have planted reassuring thoughts in Felka’s mind, attempting to still the disquiet with the subtlest of neural adjustments. Clavain thought of an expert Ikebana artist minutely altering the placement of a single flower in the interests of harmony.
“Everything will be OK,” Clavain said. “There’s nothing here that can harm you.”
Galiana took a moment, blank-eyed, to commune with the other Conjoiners in and around Diadem. Most of them were still in orbit, observing things from the ship. She told them about the aircraft and notified them that she and Clavain were going to enter the structure.
He saw Felka’s hand tighten around Galiana’s wrist.
“She wants to come as well,” Galiana said.
“She’ll be safer if she stays here.”
“She doesn’t want to be alone.”
Clavain chose his words carefully. “I thought Conjoiners – I mean we – could never be truly alone, Galiana.”
“There might be a communicational block inside the structure. It’ll be better if she stays physically close to us.”
“Is that the only reason?”
“No, of course not.” For a moment he felt a sting of her anger, prickling his mind like sea-spray. “She’s still human, Nevil – no matter what we’ve done to her mind. We can’t erase a million years of evolution. She may not be very good at recognizing faces, but she recognizes the need for companionship.”
He raised his hands. “I never doubted it.”
“Then why are you arguing?”
Clavain smiled. He’d had this conversation so many times before, with so many women. He had been married to some of them. It was oddly comforting to be having it again, light-years from home, wearing a new body, his mind clotted with machines and confronting the matriarch of what should have been a feared and hated hive-mind. At the epicenter of so much strangeness, a tiff was almost to be welcomed.
“I just don’t want anything to hurt her.”
“Oh. And I do?”
“Never mind,” he said, gritting his teeth. “Let’s just get in and out, shall we?”
The base, like all the American structures, had been built for posterity. Not by people, however, but by swarms of diligent self-replicating robots. That was how the Americans had reached Diadem: they had been brought here as frozen fertilized cells in the armored, radiation-proofed bellies of star-crossing von Neumann robots. The robots had been launched toward several solar systems about a century before the Sandra Voi had left Mars. Upon arrival on Diadem they had set about breeding; making copies of themselves from local ores. When their numbers had reached some threshold they had turned over their energies to the construction of bases; luxurious accommodations for the human children that would then be grown in their wombs.
“The entrance door’s intact,” Galiana said, when they had crossed from the shuttle to the smooth black side of the dome, stooping against the wind. “And there’s still some residual power in its circuits.”
That was a Conjoiner trick that always faintly unnerved him. Like sharks, Conjoiners were sensitive to ambient electrical fields. Mapped into her vision, Galiana would see the energized circuits superimposed on the door like a ghostly neon maze. Now she extended her hand toward the lock, palm first.
“I’m accessing the opening mechanism. Interfacing with it now.” Behind her mask, she saw her face scrunch in concentration. Galiana only ever frowned before when having to think hard. With her hand outstretched she looked like a wizard attempting some particularly demanding enchantment.
“Hmm,” she said. “Nice old software protocols. Nothing too difficult.”
“Careful,” Clavain said. “I wouldn’t put it past them to have put some kind of trap”
“There’s no trap,” she said. “But there is – ah, yes – a verbal entry code. Well, here goes.” She spoke loudly, so that her voice could travel through the air to the door even above the howl of the wind: “Open Sesame.”
Lights flicked from red to green; dislodging a frosting of ice, the door slid ponderously aside to reveal a dimly lit interior chamber. The base must have been running on a trickle of emergency power for decades.
Felka and Clavain lingered while Galiana crossed the threshold. “Well?” she challenged, turning around. “Are you two sissies coming or not?”
Felka offered a hand. He took hers and the two of them – the old soldier and the girl who could barely grasp the difference between two human faces – took a series of tentative steps inside.
“What you just did; that business with your hand and the password . . .” Clavain paused. “That was a joke, wasn’t it?”
Galiana looked at him blank-faced. “How could it have been? Everyone knows we haven’t got anything remotely resembling a sense of humor.”
Clavain nodded gravely. “That was my understanding, but I just wanted to be sure.”
There was no trace of the wind inside, but it would still have been too cold to remove their suits, even had they not been concerned about contamination. They worked their way along a series of winding corridors, of which some were dark and some were bathed in feeble, pea-green lighting. Now and then they passed the entrance to a room full of equipment, but nothing that looked like a laboratory or living quarters. Then they descended a series of stairs and found themselves crossing one of the sealed walkways between the toadstools. Clavain had seen a few other American settlements built like this one; they were designed to remain useful even as they sank slowly into the ice.
The bridge led to what was obviously the main habitation section. Now there were lounges, bedrooms, laboratories, and kitchens – enough for a crew of perhaps fifty or sixty. But there were no signs of any bodies, and the place did not look as if it had been abandoned in a hurry. The equipment was neatly packed away and there were no half-eaten meals on the tables. There was frost everywhere, but that was just the moisture that had frozen out of the air when the base cooled down.
“They were expecting to come back,” Galiana said.
Clavain nodded. “They couldn’t have had much of an idea of what lay ahead of them.”
They moved on, crossing another bridge until they arrived in a toadstool that was almost entirely dedicated to bio-analysis laboratories. Galiana had to use her neural trick to get them inside again, the machines in her head sweet-talking the duller machines entombed in the doors. The low-ceilinged labs were bathed in green light, but Galiana found a wall panel that brought the lighting up a notch and even caused some bench equipment to wake up, pulsing stand-by lights.
Clavain looked around, recognizing centrifuges, gene-sequencers, ga
s chromatographys, and scanning-tunnelling microscopes. There were at least a dozen other hunks of gleaming machinery whose function eluded him. A wall-sized cabinet held dozens of pull-out drawers, each of which contained hundreds of culture dishes, test-tubes, and gel slides. Clavain glanced at the samples, reading the tiny labels. There were bacteria and single-cell cultures with unpronounceable code names, most of which were marked with Diadem map coordinates and a date. But there were also drawers full of samples with Latin names; comparison samples that must have come from Earth. The robots could easily have carried the tiny parent organisms from which these larger samples had been grown or cloned. Perhaps the Americans had been experimenting with the hardiness of Earth-born organisms, with a view to terraforming Diadem at some point in the future.
He closed the drawer silently and moved to a set of larger sample tubes racked on a desk. He picked one from the rack and raised it to the light, examining the smoky things inside. It was a sample of worms, indistinguishable from those he had collected on the glacier a few hours earlier. A breeding tangle, probably, harvested from the intersection point of two worm tunnels. Some of the worms in the tangle would be exchanging genes; others would be fighting; others would be allowing themselves to be digested by adults or newly hatched young – all behaving according to rigidly deterministic laws of caste and sex. The tangle looked dead, but that meant nothing with the worms. Their metabolism was fantastically slow; each individual easily capable of living for thousands of years. It would take them months just to crawl along some of the longer cracks in the ice, let alone move between some of the larger tangles.
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