Teague said, “The cabins are in a circle in the next module; they’re numbered one to six. Why not just take them in alphabetical order — Ching, Fontana, Moira, Peake, Ravi, and me in that order?”
Fontana giggled, biting into her ham sandwich — she supposed it was synthetic protein, but it tasted like a ham sandwich, so she decided to think of it as one. “That still separates women from men, three on a side! Purely by the accidents of the alphabet!”
“I don’t expect we’ll be spending all that much time in the sleeping quarters,” Moira said, “they make the cubicles at the Academy seem like auditoriums. One sleeping net and one shower with toilet per private cabin, and that’s it.”
“Wearing disposable clothing, that’s about all we need,” Ching said. “I notice they’ve each got separate DeMag units, though—”
“That’s so you can read, study, or write without the books and papers floating away,” Peake said, “and sleep at full gravity. And if you want to practice in private, your instrument will stay put… I assume you all know the mechanics of a violin depend on gravity, so you can get friction against the strings. The gym is set for one-half to two gravities, for physical training. I assume I don’t have to warn you to work out at full gravity at least half the time, so your muscles won’t atrophy.”
“And speaking of music,” Moira said, “I’d like to know if we have a complete string quartet. I play cello, and I know you play viola, Ching, because I’ve played with you. Ravi, you play the violin, don’t you?”
“Only the way we all do. I haven’t touched one since I was fourteen; I play the drums. Jazz drums, steel drums, and the Indian table. And somehow I think all I have here on the Ship is a small set of tabla — weight problem.”
“Teague, you play—”
“Flute, wooden recorder, and several woodwinds. I could probably manage second violin sometimes. Peake’s the best violinist we have on board.”
Moira said, “I guess that makes you our concertmas-ter, then, Peake—”
He looked away and a spasm of pain crossed his face.
That last day in the music room, his violin tucked under his chin, Jimson’s piano delicately interlocking with his mind…. He said thickly, “Look, let’s leave it, I’m not going to feel much like playing for a while. Do you mind?”
“Yes, I do,” Moira said, setting her chin. “You know as well as I do why we were taught the violin, and required to specialize in music — so we’d all have some recreation in common. I think having a regular music session once a day is even more important than having Teague’s gripe session, or meals together.”
Peake stared at the floor. He said, “Look—” again, and couldn’t go on. Why was he here with all these people he didn’t really know and didn’t want to know, and the only person he had ever cared about, or ever would care about, the other half of himself, at the other end of a slowly lengthening separation which would space out intolerably, in distance and time, until he and Jimson were at opposite ends of a vast and lengthening nowhere….
Jimson’s face, white and strained and tearful. You don’t care enough to stay, he had flung at Peake, I knew we wouldn’t both make Ship, but I thought you’d care enough to stay….
But how could he have done that, after twelve years of the finest education in the world, education that he, a black kaffir from one of the kaffirland reserves in South Africa, could never have had on his own continent…. UNEPS had given him this, and now it was his turn to make some return to the only world he knew. Fontana had voiced it; he wanted it out of his power to have second thoughts. Only jimson had not been able to see it that way… there was no music he could ever play again that would not have Jimson’s face tied into every note, gladness and sorrow and love and sex and misery… he turned away toward the window opening on space and the returning space station, and said, “Let’s talk about it some other time. All right?”
“No,” Ching said, “that’s the one thing we can’t do — walk out on this kind of disagreement. Moira’s right, we do need regular musical sessions, and we can’t have them without you, Peake; that would take all the point out of having them. The whole purpose of making music together—”
Peake shrugged and dropped into a chair. The DeMag units were low enough in here that he did not sink into it, but he did not float away either. “Okay. No arguments.”
“That’s not the point—” Moira began.
“Hold it,” Fontana said quietly, “I think this is turning into the first of those once-a-day sessions we agreed to have, and I think we need it out into the open. We start holding back on gripes and grievances, trying to be too polite, and we’ll get explosions. Ching, you said something earlier that made me really angry; you said you’d hoped for Chris or Mei Mei or Fly or, as you put it, somebody with some computer sense; and here’s Peake sulking because he doesn’t have Jimson to play duets with—”
“I am not sulking!” Peake yelled, with such violence that he bobbed up from the surface of his chair in the light gravity.
“I know what Fontana’s driving at,” Moira said, “I think we ought to make it a rule that we don’t talk about anyone — anyone we left behind. They’re dead to us, whatever happens. Let the past go.”
“I refuse to do that,” Ravi said. “We need to remember. We need roots, a sense of our past. We have a right to remember.”
“To remember, yes,” Fontana said, “but not to hurt each other making comparisons with people who aren’t here — people we never had to meet under this kind of strain. People who might, or might not, have turned out more congenial than the ones we have. Look, all six of us are going to be together for a long, long time; close-quarters together, hothouse together, too damn much together; and the one thing we don’t need is to rub elbows with the idealized memories of people who aren’t here!”
“Now listen—” Peake began, but Moira went on:
“No, you listen, I’m not finished. I don’t even mean you, personally. I’m trying to establish a principle, not get personal about anybody, I think every one of us could have picked what they’d consider a perfect crew, and somehow I doubt if any one of us would have picked any one of the others here—”
“What you mean is, you wouldn’t,” Ching said precisely. “Nice to know what you think of us, Moira.”
She brushed that aside too. “I refuse to get into a fight with you, Ching, don’t try to provoke it. I mean, here we are, six of us, none of us consulted about our preferences for the others—”
“They must have taken compatibility into account,” Teague said. “I doubt if they would pick six people they knew couldn’t stand one another!”
Moira shrugged. “Oh, I’m sure they trusted us not to murder each other, took real antipathies into account. But—”
Ching wasn’t so sure. She said in a low voice, “I think they chose people who had demonstrated that they could conform if they had to.”
“But whatever they decided,” Moira said, “we are here. It’s like those arranged marriages they used to have, hundreds of years ago, it’s done and can’t be undone. What God, or the Academy, has joined together, let no man put asunder. The six of us are here, and there are no others, and we’d better work out a way to care about each other; because there’s nobody else for any of us, and we are not going to get any second chances!”
That, Peake thought, was laying it right out on the line, putting into words what they all knew and which he, at least, had never really faced. He set his jaw tight and said, “All right. Agreed.”
“Agreed,” Ching said promptly, adding, “I was out of line.”
Peake said, “I’ll play anything you want me to. But we’d better pick an hour which will work for the day people and the night people both, unless somehow our internal rhythms adjust. Which they might, at this distance — I don’t think anyone really has tested circadian rhythms over long periods of time in zero-gee or alternating gravities. There might be some studies in the computer library, done on th
e Moon or space station. Meanwhile, I tend to be a day person myself, but I’m not extreme about it one way or the other.”
But, while the others were discussing the optimum time of an arbitrary day for the shared music session, Peake sat silent, watching the space station go and return in its orbit across their window — they were still in orbit around it.
It had been a flea-brained idea anyhow, the commitment he had made with Jimson. Dimly, he knew they had both been too young for the kind of lifetime commitment they had wanted to make. He had scorned people like Fly and Moira and Chris, whose wholesale sexual experimentation had been close to the promiscuous, but he knew he had gone to an equally dangerous other extreme; he had been so wrapped up in Jimson that he had made too few other friends.
I’m not the only one. There’s Ching, I don’t think she did any experimenting at all, she must be as lonely as I am… or worse. But she’s used to it… it was her choice, and I…. Then he recognized that as self-pity and cut it off.
“You play the viola, don’t you, Ching?”
“Violin, too,” she said, nodding, “but I thought it would be interesting to specialize in an instrument no one else plays very often.”
“There isn’t much solo literature for it.”
“True,” Ching said, “but then, I’m not interested in being a solo performer, and it got me a place in a lot of string quartets. Because I’m a good violist, not a second-rate violinist trying to play the viola.”
Humility, Peake wondered, or a very shrewd assessment of the kind of team-oriented thinking they’d want on the Ship? Had Ching gambled, cleverly, for a place in the most exclusive string quartet of all?
Fontana watched them talking agreeably about Mozart and Beethoven quartets, improvisational jazz sessions, and wondered if this was the final test, one called survival; how they sorted themselves out, no guidelines, no rules. She might be the Ship’s psychologist, but Moira had forestalled the first suggestion she might have made in that capacity — making it a firm rule that the past should not be used as a defense against the present. Peake might have agreed not to talk about Jim-son; but could anyone stop him from brooding? Would he be able to put it aside, would he need help, would she be able to give it if he did?
And it was Peake who broke into a discussion of the technique for synthesizing violin strings by saying, “But now that we’ve settled the important things, like the make-up of our string quartet, can we try discussing a couple of very minor things, like where we are going, and when do we leave? What’s the procedure?”
“I think,” Moira said, “we’ve had all the orders we’re going to get. When we’re ready to go, we just go, and that’s that.”
“Go where?” Ching asked. “Do we plot a course at random?”
“That’s up to you,” Ravi said, “you have the computer library. You know where planets have been found and colonized, you should make the decision about whether we try for a planet in an area where habitable planets have already been found, or whether we head in a new direction, where we’d have a chance at finding new, wholly untouched stars.”
“I can only get that information on the Bridge,” Ching said. “Has everyone had enough to eat?”
As they went back, one by one, through the dizzying shifts in gravity orientation — this time they were prepared for it and no one lost balance — Fontana reflected that already they had exercised the human habit of naming things; the room with consoles and computation equipment had become the Bridge, by analogy with a ship at sea, in spite of the fact that none of them had ever been on a naval ship. Still, she was glad that the vast observation window, with its lenticular view of half the visible universe, was opaqued against the endless stars; there was only a pale reflection of the colored winking lights on the control panels. Ching slid into a seat before the computer; Peake glanced at his chronometer and said to Ravi, “Toss you for day shift.”
Ravi raised his eyebrows. “Why? You clearly prefer day shift; I unquestionably prefer night. Why risk committing each of us to our least favorite time? If we had the same preference, it would make some sense…”
Peake shrugged. “We’ll run on Greenwich Time for ship operations; Mean Solar Time for navigation. It’s 1409 hours; day shift from 0800 to 2000 okay with you?”
“Fine,” said Ravi, and Peake slipped into the seat before the navigation controls. Moira was already in the drive seat. Fontana noticed there were ten seats built into the control-room which they had called the Bridge. She took one of them. Ravi sat where he could see what Peake was doing. Teague was bending over Moira, studying the control drives with interest.
Moira said, “The drives are ready to go; the only question is, where. We have to leave the Solar System in the direction we’re intending to end up — I don’t have to tell you that. Where are we going, Ching?”
Ching stared at the printout on the greenish console before her, navigation co-ordinates of the known colonies; and blindly up at the opaqued star-screen. The whole universe lay before them — and they expected her to make that decision? She said in a low voice, “You’re asking me to play God,” and something in her voice communicated her sense of awe, of immensity, to Ravi. She had always been so aloof, so much in command of herself, that Ravi, too, was shaken.
Did she feel it, too, that wonderment? he asked himself, and because Ching had always repelled any too-personal approach, Ravi knew he could not ask.
He glanced at the opaqued star-glass, thinking of the crowding immensity of the stars beyond. Unexplored territory. A universe at their feet. Fragments; a scant half dozen colonies out there, millions of billions of stars, and the six of them in their frail little ship, to find a habitable planet in all that wilderness….
He said, and he heard his voice shaking, “I read somewhere, once, that for man to map and explore space was as if a colony of mudfish in a waterhole in the outback of Australia should map the coastline of Australia and every rock in the Greater Barrier Reef.”
Only with the help of God, he thought; mankind aJone could never have done it. And he knew that if he had said it aloud they would all have mocked him; so he was silent.
Teague looked at Ravi, sympathetically. He had gone through this during his first year in the study of astronomy. Facing the indifference of enormous galaxies, the smallness of his own kind against the universe. He said, good-naturedly, “Well, this colony of mudfish has done it. And Ching has the results in the computer. Which way, Ching?”
They were all looking at her now. She said, trying to make her voice matter-of-fact, “I don’t think it’s fair to ask me to make a decision of that size. Not when it affects all of you. I honestly think this is the place for Moira’s consensus decision.”
“You’re the one with the information,” Teague said, “and you were the one who seemed, a while ago, to be in favor of command decisions. What does it matter which way we go? As long as we stay out of black holes, we’re just as likely — speaking from statistic analysis — to find a habitable planet in one direction as in the next.”
Moira exploded. “How can you say that, Teague? Are you saying we can stick a pin in a star-map — or whatever the equivalent would be in the computer — and pick a direction at random?”
“Not at all,” Teague said, “I’m simply pointing out that whatever way we go, we are equally likely, or unlikely, to find a good planet, or not to find one.”
Peake said, “It would seem sensible to go in the direction where we know colonies have already been established, observe the conditions near there, and go on to found neighbor colonies by mapping and surveying the next dozen star-systems or so.”
“That at least gives us a place to start,” Fontana said, “and it would make for an orderly approach.”
“And I’m willing to bet,” Moira said, “that the last fifty or sixty Ships have done exactly that.”
“Why shouldn’t they?” Ching asked. “It seems the logical thing to do.”
“We’ll never know,” Teagu
e said, “because we are Survey Ship one hundred and three. The colonies were founded, as I remember, by year-ships seven, ten, eleven, and nineteen. The crews of those Ships are probably in their thirties or forties by now — I’d have to figure out the time-dilatation equations, and I don’t have them on the tip of my tongue the way Ravi probably does — but we have no news of any later Ships, though ships twenty-four and twenty-five could, theoretically, be reporting any day now. Depending on where they went; and we may or may not ever know that.”
“Which is one reason for heading toward an established colony,” said Peake. “It might be our only chance for any contact with the human race again in our lifetime.”
“You’re talking as if we were going to age at Earth-time,” Teague said. “As we approach light-speed, our age will slow down and for us, biologically speaking, time will virtually stop. Of course we can’t be sure we’ll see them for years, unless we choose to visit one of the established colonies first. But I think we’re expected to find a planet and report it ready for colonization first. Then we can visit already-established colonies, and by that time there will certainly be others.”
Peake thought; even if I could ever come back, jimson would be an old man and I still young. He had known that, intellectually. Now it became suddenly personal, and frightening. And meaningful, with a horrible personal meaning that left him speechless, staring into the console of the navigation instruments.
“I still think it makes sense to explore outward from the known colonies, in an orderly fashion,” Ravi said. “We should stay in contact with the known human settlements; otherwise the chances we’d ever run across one by accident — well, the old needle in a haystack analogy would be very good odds by comparison.”
“But if we find a planet in a wholly new direction,” Moira argued, “then humanity can spread in that many more new directions without being wholly lost. We’d establish a new beachhead in the Galaxy—”
Survey Ship Page 4