The feeling of blissful interconnection that DIED officers felt when they either received or completed their orders was called the Glory, and while her companions fell around her, Dory smiled with intense pleasure as the Glory washed over her.
The sensation only lasted a moment, however, and then she was rallying the other soldiers and storming the building on which the railgun was perched. After they were inside, there was some intense hall-to-hall fighting, but Met soldiers were dressed out like attack helicopters used to be on Earth—rockets, projectile weapons—and all around them, stretched out for many meters, a grist pellicle that served as an advance scout, could see around corners, and could, to a limited extent, attack in and of itself, like a long stinging tentacle. The fremden didn’t stand a chance in close quarters. Dory took point as her unit charged up the stairs (the lifts were disabled), and she, personally, took the converted railgun out with an arm rocket, along with its civ crew. Before the final assault, she thought of Zavers, and toyed with the idea of letting the civs die slowly, but settled for a clean kill. Killing cleanly where possible was part of her orders, anyway, and if you wanted to feel the Glory, you had to obey orders.
The school recruiter back in Clarit Bolsa on the Vas had told Dory it would be like this, but she hadn’t really believed—not even after the merci simulation and the class vote on the coolness factor of being a Met soldier (93% approval, with a 75% rip quotient). Both Dory’s parents were big supporters of Director Amés, and every e-week they watched the show The Department of Immunity Presents together, so Dory figured she might as well give the Department of Immunity recruiter a chance to personalize her settings.
Fifty-three seconds later she had totally understood about order and how chaos needed it, and basically manufactured it out of nothing. The recruiter had shown Dory some extremely cool virtuality graphics of things called Mandelbrot sets.
“See how it goes down? Pattern, then chaos, then repeated pattern? See how the little patterns are basically repetitions of larger? That’s the way the New Hierarchy is going to arise out of this present chaos. You’re a seed crystal, Dory. You could be, that is. Don’t you want to be an attractor?”
Being an attractor sounded good to her.
“Rip,” Dory had said, and she’d signed up. Her parents had been proud as hell. Something better was coming. Some real order was going to arise from all this mess of a solar system, and Amés was the one who could pull it off, pull everyone up. And those who didn’t want to be pulled up? They could stay where they were, as long as they didn’t get in the way of the uplifted. But, you know, they always did. And that was what the Department of Immunity and being a Met soldier was all about. Getting obstructionists the hell out of the way so a good change could come, so that order could finally flow. You didn’t want to kill anybody, but sometimes you had to, for their own good.
That was only a year ago, and here she was, fucking on Titan, a moon of Saturn. Taking out the strange elements, sweeping the system clean.
And with the Glory as a reward. With Director Amés smiling down through the command chain right on her, saying, Dory, you did a hell of a job. Dory, I will not forget you when it comes time for medals and promotions. And, with the dead fremden lying about her and their stupid railgun blown to pieces, Dory stood on top of the apartment building against the red photochemical smog of Titan as the Met forces subjugated the rest of Laketown. She watched the portions of the town that had been on fire surrender themselves to the extreme cold. She felt a tingle when the merci blackout was lifted, and General Haysay announced the surrender of the remaining ground forces, and the subjugation of the moon. She knew from vinculum sidebands that what was left of the fremden space fleet was gathering above, to make one last stand. But the ground was taken, planetary defenses were in Met hands. What were they going to do, attack their own populace?
The fact was, Amés had won. And when Amés won, everyone, all along the vinculum, got a share of the Glory.
And Dory, standing there, got her share of it, too. Like the sun. Like a warm shower on a cold morning. Fucking marvelous! Fucking 101 percent approval rating!
“Rip,” Dory said, and smiled like a madwoman. Then she and her unit stacked the enemy bodies and set them to dissolve into the general grist.
It was only after the Glory faded that Dory and the squad went to collect their own dead and pack them into the cremation cubes for their trips back. All except Zavers. They couldn’t get the fremden grist to let him go, so they had to leave him there, all froze up and nine hundred million miles away from home.
And then it started to snow—real methane, this time—and Dory watched as the flakes filled in Zavers’s eyes and the lines around his mouth so that he didn’t look so much like he was being tortured or something.
Zavers had been a good guy, really. Her first lay, to tell the truth, at least with full penetration. He had been all right, even though he hadn’t gotten Dory to come. Nobody had, and she wondered if it was really the big deal everybody made it out to be.
She wondered how it would compare to the Glory.
Then it was time to move on. She gave a last glance at Zavers and felt like she was sorry about something, but couldn’t say what. It wasn’t like the guy had meant that much to her. But he had been a good guy. Basically tender. She looked around and found the rest of the squad looking at her.
“Where to, Sarge?” asked Darkroom, the guy from Mars.
“To our next glorious destination,” she told him. “Wherever the fuck that is.”
Then she felt it again. The weird feeling. Sorry, when there was nothing to be sorry about.
“Rip,” Darkroom said.
“Shut the fuck up,” replied Dory.
Thirty-six
Aubry followed Leo Sherman down a maze of passageways, always leading farther away from the more traveled corridors of the bolsa and toward—well, Aubry had never been in such places before. The passages grew narrower, then stopped being passages at all and became ducts. Aubry and Leo Sherman squeezed through a series of narrow openings, crawled along a few hundred feet of floor, then squeezed through more. Not only were the passages getting narrower, they were getting wetter. Aubry wanted to ask Leo Sherman about this, but he kept a good pace up and wouldn’t stop and talk until at least two hours after she’d parted with her father. Finally, they twisted and turned their way through a cavelike tube that no regular-sized person could have navigated. Aubry understood why they had sent the littler man to pick her up. Whoever they were.
The tube fed out into a large round room, where other tubes joined it. There was a changing breeze in the room, and Aubry was almost certain she could see the walls move in and out slightly—as if they were breathing.
“Now,” said Leo Sherman, “we rest.”
“Where in the world are we?” asked Aubry. “I didn’t know places like this existed in the Met.”
“There’s the chemical Met, and then there’s the biological Met. Where we are now—this whole area just under the skin of the bolsas—it’s called the Integument. It’s kind of a hodgepodge thing, the Integument, neither vegetable nor mineral. I’ve spent a lot of time wandering around in it. It’s kind of my specialty actually. I’m a merci reporter, I guess you might call me, though what I actually do is write these things called essays about nature in the Met—”
“I know what an essay is,” said Aubry, feeling a bit annoyed. “I can read, you know.”
“You or your software?” he asked her.
“I learned to read when I was four years old,” Aubry told him. “But I have excellent translation algorithms and top-of-the-line Broca grist.”
“Pleased to hear it,” Leo Sherman said. “My work is available on the merci. Maybe someday you might want to read it. But first, we have to get out of here.”
“Where are we?”
“This is a recycling sac—keeps some of th
e e-mix of the gases stable before shipment.”
“Shipment?”
“You’ll see.”
“What are those?” Aubry asked, pointing to some black cables that fed in along the bottom of one of the tubes.
“Power cables. They work sort of like nerves in our bodies—through ionic transfer of a charge. It’s slow, but amazingly efficient.”
“And somebody came up with all this?”
“Yes and no,” said Leo Sherman. He pulled a water bottle from a small pouch on the waist of his pants, drank some, then passed it to Aubry. “You have to fend for yourself when you’re in the Integument. The grist around here won’t recognize your pellicle’s interaction nodes. So you can’t order up water from out of the walls, like you’re used to doing. And you just have to be careful in general. This place is not designed with your safety in mind.”
“But, Mr. Sherman—”
“Nix with that! It’s Leo. There’s already a Sherman who likes to go by his title.”
“Well, Leo, then,” said Aubry, feeling a little funny using the man’s first name. On Mercury, it wasn’t done for children to address adults so familiarly. “What do you mean when you say ‘yes and no’? Did somebody build this place, or didn’t they?”
“People laid down the parameters,” Leo said, “the basic principles of biological interaction. But this is all self-replicating.” Leo pointed around him. “These walls, the ducts, the other layers—they’re all made up of bioengineered living matter. It’s made of something like cells. The Integument is something like a forest, too. Like a forest somebody planted nearly four hundred years ago. Things have grown here that nobody knows about. Things have evolved. You must have wondered why the walls started to feel so sticky?”
“I had noticed that,” said Aubry.
“They are alive!” Leo continued. “They need to respire. They have to recognize certain substances that come in contact with them. They are actually able to capture and analyze molecules with that thin layer of goo that coats everything. It’s a method of communication.”
“Like smell?” said Aubrey.
Leo smiled. “Now you’re catching on,” he said. “There’s some wonderful stuff I could show you around here, only we haven’t got time.”
“Where are we going, anyway?” Aubry said, taking a drink of the water and passing it back to Leo.
“There is another method of transportation in the Met besides the pithways. It’s a lot slower, but it has the advantage of being completely unmonitored by the Department of Immunity.”
“There’s something the Department of Immunity doesn’t know about?” Aubry asked.
“Oh, they know about it,” said Leo. “They just don’t think anybody would be crazy enough to use it.”
“But we’re crazy enough, huh?” said Aubry.
“Aw, come on. It’ll be fun.” Leo stood up and helped Aubry to her feet. “We’d better get a move on. We’ve still got a ways to go.”
They were three more hours working their way through narrow passages and gaps. The farther along they got, the more the walls and floors began to resemble the internal cavities of some great beast.
And, according to Leo, that’s exactly what they were.
“But does it have a brain?” Aubry asked as they wound their way around what looked for all the world like a gigantic tonsil suspended like a stalactite.
“Good question,” answered Leo. “What do you think? Does the Earth have a brain?”
“I’ve never been to Earth.”
“Use your imagination. Think about the jungles and rain forests that you’ve read about, the ecological balance that we’ve restored by basically letting the place alone and allowing it to go back to wilderness.”
“I don’t see how it could,” Aubry said, after she’d thought for a while. “But sometimes it acts as if it did.”
“Good question and good answer,” Leo replied. “The same thing applies here. Everything has come to work together so beautifully that sometimes you think there must be a controlling intelligence, but in every case—at least every case I know of—if you start looking at what you imagined to be thoughts, you find simple processes.”
“But you can do exactly the same thing with a brain,” Aubry said, pleased to have found a way to continue the conversation. Leo, unlike most adults, seemed to think of her as his intellectual equal, even if she didn’t know as many facts as an adult did. She got the feeling he was really telling her his own ideas, and not trying to play some kind of teaching game with the end already in mind. Aubry was much too bright for most games of that sort to trick her for very long, and she usually could see where the teacher was going and then some long before the teacher realized he or she was found out.
“And a brain very definitely thinks thoughts,” Leo answered. “I know.”
“So why couldn’t the Met be a gigantic developing intelligence, and me and you being like neurons or something?”
“You may be right,” said Leo. “But answer me this. If we assume that we are actually neurons in some kind of giant overmind, how would you ever know? Can you think of some means to find out? Some experiment we could do that would tell us?”
By this time they were squeezing through an extremely narrow passage, and Aubry was glad to have something else to think about rather than her sense of claustrophobia, which was fast closing in on her.
“We could . . . maybe use some kind of entropy test. Couldn’t we assume that an intelligent system would create more order than another system that was alive, but not intelligent?”
“Pretty smart idea, but then the problem is the same as trying to tell whether you’re floating around in space or falling down a black elevator shaft—that is, there’s no fixed point of reference. Are you going to assume that the Met is supersentient, but the Earth isn’t? Or the other way around? What living system are you absolutely certain isn’t sentient, that could serve as a measuring stick?”
“What about some alien life-form? Isn’t there some kind of lichen or something on the bottom of the Lost Sea on Europa?”
“That’s . . . we don’t know about that. Some good people were lost trying to find out.” For a moment, Aubry caught a glimpse of Leo’s face, and it seemed very sad. Then he continued the argument. “But how do you know that its ecology is not sentient? You’d be assuming what you wanted to prove, either way.”
“So it may be that the Met is sentient, but there’s no way of proving it?”
“I can’t think of one,” Leo replied, “other than the World Spirit sitting us down and saying a personal hello to each of us.”
“Bummer,” said Aubry.
“I don’t know about that,” Leo said. “To paraphrase Raphael Merced, there’s something to be said for acting locally as if the world had meaning and needed us to do what we think is right, but letting the bigger picture remain cloudy. At least for me, it kind of serves the necessary function of getting me off my ass and doing something.”
Finally, they arrived at a terminus, where it was impossible to go any farther.
“Time to give Mother Nature a hand,” said Leo. He held out his own hand, and a thin sheath of fire sprang up on it. Aubry had spent most of life being told never to do this with one’s grist, and it was kind of exciting to be breaking the rules. She lit up her own hand. The two of them applied the flame to the end of the tube they’d been walking through. After a moment, it seemed to shudder, and then the sides contracted. At the same time, the tube “floor” under them convulsed, so that they were thrown forward through the new opening, head over heels. They landed in a soft mass of greenish material that looked like a mound of penicillin.
They were in an enormous cavern. The walls were lit by a bioluminal glow, and what at first glance appeared to be a stream flowed through the middle of the cavern. When she got to the stream, though, Aubry saw that it
wasn’t flowing water at all.
“What is that?” she asked. “It looks like snot.”
“Remarkably similar consistency,” Leo said. “But it’s actually something like limbic fluid. There’s a lot of reduction processes going on inside, and it’s crammed full of oxygen.”
“You mean . . .”
“You can breathe it.”
“Gross.”
Suddenly, as if it had sneezed, the entire cavern convulsed. Aubry was almost thrown off her feet by the wave motion that passed through the floor. And the little cataract of fluid was covered over, squeezed as if it were a tube, and squirted toward the cavern’s edge, where it disappeared into a hole in the wall.
“Here we are at our train station,” said Leo. “All aboard!”
“Train station?”
“Or pithway stop, or what have you. We have arrived at our transportation.”
“Where?”
“Here. We call this the sluice. And the stuff in it we call the sluice juice.”
“You can’t mean—”
“The sluice interconnects all the bolsas strung along the Met. It maintains ecological balance and serves all kinds of secondary functions. It keeps the Met healthy, and it’s the healthiest place in the Met, as a result.”
“I am not getting in that stuff.”
“It’s perfectly breathable, Aubry.”
“I am not going swimming in a river of snot.”
“It’s healthy, life-giving snot.”
“I can’t believe you want me to do this.”
“It’s really fun, Aubry, after you get over the initial . . . idea of it. With a proper map, which I’ve got in my noggin”—Leo tapped his head—“the sluice juice will take you anywhere in the Met that you want to go.”
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