“Let Shingen-Hu be the judge,” Thrax answered.
“We are in troubled times. The currents that once shimmered and glinted across the night skies have become few and weak. Many come to learn, but few shall ride. Why, stranger, should Shingen-Hu choose you?”
“Again, let Shingen-Hu be the judge. I cannot give his reasons. Only mine.”
The monk nodded and seemed satisfied. “You come to serve, and not to demand,” he pronounced, climbing down from the rock. “Follow me. I will take you to Shingen-Hu.”
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
The others had gone to take care of various chores, leaving Hunt and Gina together at the dinner table. They had all agreed to meet later in the mess area for a nightcap—or two, or maybe several.
Gina stared down at her coffee cup and unconsciously traced a question mark lightly on the tabletop with her finger. “Is it true that some of the animals on Jevien have an uncanny resemblance to ones found in Earth’s mythology?” she asked after a long silence.
Hunt had been watching her, thinking to himself that she was the most refreshing personality he had encountered in a long time. It wasn’t just that she was curious about everything, which was an attraction in itself, and that she took the trouble to find out something about the things that intrigued her; she did it without making an attention-getting display of it, or taking it to the point of where it started to get tedious. Her judgment in knowing how far to go was just right, which was one of the first things in making people attractive to be around. In the course of the meal she had won the company’s acceptance by refraining from thrusting herself on them, listening to Danchekker’s expositions without pandering like a student, putting Duncan at ease by not flaunting her femininity, and avoiding triggering rivalry vibes from Sandy. In fact, she and Sandy had gotten along instantly, like sisters.
“Do you know, you’ve never come back with a line that I expected, yet,” Hunt replied.
“Seriously, I read about it somewhere. There’s a kind of horned wolf with talons that’s exactly like the Slavonic ‘kikimora.’ Another has parts of what look like a lion, a peacock, and a dog, just like the ‘simurgh’ of Iran. And would you believe a plumed, goggle-eyed reptile, practically identical to all those Mexican carvings?”
Roman Catholicism became a symbol of Irish nationalism. What Saint Patrick brought was Christianity.”
“You mean the original?”
“Something a lot closer to it, anyhow. And it flourished because it fitted with the ways of the native culture. It spread from there through Scotland and England into northern Europe. But then it collided with the institutionalized Jevienese counterfeit being pushed northward, and it was destroyed. The first papal mission didn’t reach England until a hundred sixty-five years after Patrick died.”
“How do you know all this?”
“My mother’s side of the family comes from Wexford. I go there for vacations and lived there for a while once.”
“When did Patrick die?” Hunt asked, realizing that he really, had no idea.
“In the fifth century. He was probably born in Wales and carried across by pirates.”
“So we’re talking about a long time before that, then.”
“Oh yes. In terms of literature and learning, they were unsurpassed anywhere in Western Europe long before Caesar crossed the Channel.”
“Let me see, every English schoolboy knows that. Fifty-five B.C., yes?”
“Right. Their race was unique, descended from a mixture of Celts and a pre—Celtic stock from the eastern Mediterranean.” Gina stared across the room and smiled to herself. “It wasn’t at all the kind of repressive thing that people were conditioned to think of later, you know. It was a very earthy, zestful, life-loving culture.”
“In what kind of way?” Hunt asked.
“The way women were treated, for a start. They were completely equal, with full rights of property—unusual in itself, for the times. Sex was a considered a healthy and enjoyable part of life, the way it ought to be. Nobody connected it with sinning.”
“The real life of Riley, eh?” Hunt commented.
“They had an easygoing attitude to all personal relations. Polygamy was fairly normal. And then, so was polyandry. So you could have a string of wives, but each of them might have several husbands. But if a particular match didn’t work out, it was easy to dissolve. You just went to a holy place, stood back-to-back, said the right words, and walked ten paces. So children weren’t emotionally crippled by having to grow up with two people hating each other in a self-
imposed prison; but if the marriage didn’t work out, they weren’t traumatized, either, because they had so many other anchor points among this network of people who liked each other.”
“It all sounds very civilized to me,” Hunt said.
“And that was where early Christianity hung on,” Gina said again. “So maybe it gives us an idea of what it really had to say.”
Hunt watched the faraway expression on Gina’s face for a few seconds, then grinned impudently. “Oh, I can see where you’re coming from,” he teased. “It’s nothing to do with humanist philosophies at all. You just like the thought of having a string of men to pick from.”
“Well, why should men have all the fun?” she retorted, refusing to be put on the defensive.
“Ahah! The real Gina emerges.”
“I’m merely stating a principle.”
“What’s wrong with it? Don’t women fantasize?”
“Of course they do.” She caught the look in his eye and smiled impishly. “And yes, who knows? Maybe one day if you tell me yours, I’ll tell you mine.”
Hunt laughed and picked up his coffee cup. He finished the contents and allowed the silence to draw a curtain across the subject. “How are we doing for time?” he asked, setting the cup down. “Will any of the others be in the bar yet?”
Gina glanced at her watch. “It’s a bit early. What else is there to see of the ship?”
“Oh, I think I’ve had it with being dragged around for one day. You know, I really do make a lousy tourist.”
“That’s too bad. I can’t wait to see Jevien. Just imagine, a real, actual, alien planet. And we’ll be there tomorrow. I still haven’t really gotten over all this.”
Hunt looked at her thoughtfully. “Maybe we don’t have to keep you waiting that long,” he said.
Gina looked puzzled. “Why? What are you talking about?”
“What you just said has given me an idea . . . VISAR, are there any couplers nearby?”
“A bank of them, to the right outside the door you came in through,” VISA.R replied.
“Are there two free right now?”
“What are you doing?” Gina murmured.
“Wait, and you’ll see.”
“Plenty,” VISAR replied.
Hunt stood up. “Come on,” he said to Gina. “You haven’t seen half of Ganymean communications yet. This’ll be the fastest interstellar trip you ever dreamed of. I guarantee it.”
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
The room was just a cubicle, its main furnishing being a kind of rediner, padded in red, with several panels of what looked like a multicolored crystalline material above and on either side of a concave support where the occupant’s head would be. The wall behind carried equipment and fittings of unfamiliar construction.
Gina ran her eye over the interior. “I take it this is how you connect into the Thurien virtual—travel net,” she guessed.
“That’s right,” Hunt said. He tapped the communicator disk attached behind his ear. “This gadget that they gave you when you came aboard is just a two-way audiovisual link to VISAR—a viphone that goes straight into your head instead of through screens and senses. But this is the full works.”
“What they call total neural stimulation?”
“Instead of you having to go take your sense to wherever the information is, this brings the information to your senses—provided that the place you want to �
��go’ is wired with sensors for the system. It wouldn’t work too well for Times Square or the middle of the Gobi. Also, it intercepts the motor and speech outputs from your brain, and generates the feedback that you’d experience from moving around and interacting there.”
Gina nodded but still looked unsure. After a few seconds, she said, “And all of that two—way information transfer takes place instantly through the same—what do you call it, ‘dimension’?”
‘‘I—space.’’
“That’s it . . . that this ship goes through to get to Jevien, right?”
‘‘Yes.”
“Okay. . . But the ship has to spend a whole day getting out past Pluto before it can use i-space. How come this coupler can do it from right here? Or how come you can do it from Goddard, for that matter?”
Hunt was already nodding. “A port big enough to take a ship would mess up everybody’s astronomical tables if you projected it into a planetary system. So instant planet-to-planet hopping is out. But for communications it’s a different matter. You can send information on a gamma-frequency laser into a microtoroid that can be generated on planetary surfaces—or in ships like this one—without undesirable side effects. The Thuriens use it for most of their routine business and social calling—and you don’t have to worry about drinking the water or catching any foreign bugs. It’s got a lot of advantages.”
Gina moved forward and touched the material of the recliner curiously. It was soft and yielding. Hunt watched from inside the do~irway. “So what do I do?” she asked.
“Just take a seat. VISAR will handle the rest.”
Gina hesitated for a moment, feeling just a trifle self-conscious. The she lowered herself into the recliner, settled her feet on the rest, and let herself sink back. A warm, drowsy feeling swept over her, causing her head to drop back automatically onto the concave support, which was also padded. She felt more relaxed than she could ever remember. The interior of the cubicle seemed to be floating distantly in a detached kind of way. A part of her mind was aware that she had been thinking coherently only moments before, and that someone else had been there for some reason, but she was unable to recall who or why, or really to care. Nothing really mattered.
“Like it?” She recognized the voice as VISAR’s.
“It’s great. What do I do—just lie back and enjoy it?”
“First, we’ll need to register some more of your personal cerebral patterns,” VISAR said. “It only takes a few seconds.” When Gina had first tried the communicator disk, she had experienced a strange series of sensations and illusions in her hearing and vision. VISAR had explained that the range and activity levels in the sensory parts of the brain varied from individual to individual, and it was necessary to tune the system to give the right responses. Once established, the parameters were stored away for future reference, making the process a onetime thing, analogous to fingerprinting. Presumably VISAR now needed to extend its records to accommodate the other sensory centers, too.
Gina found herself becoming acutely conscious of the pressure of the recliner against her body, the touch of her clothes, and even the feeling of air flowing through her nostrils as she breathed. She could feel her own pulses all over, and then a weird tingling unrolling down her spine. VISAR was experimenting with her sense of touch, exercising her nervous system through its range of responses and reading the neural activity.
She felt herself convulsing in spasms—and then realized that she wasn’t moving at all; the sensation was due to rapid variations of sensitivity occurring all over her skin. She felt hot, then cold, then itchy, then prickly, and finally numb. Sweet, sour, bitter, then again sweet tastes came and went in her mouth; her nose experienced a succession of odors.. . And all of a sudden, she was wide awake and alert again, and everything was normal.
“That’s it,” VISAR informed her. “How would you like me for your dentist?”
Gina was too intrigued by what was going on to reply, but as she waited, a her brow creased in puzzlement. It didn’t seem as if anything much was going on.
She sat up and found Hunt still standing in the doorway, leaning one shoulder against the side, arms folded, watching her curiously with an odd smile twisting his mouth.
“Can I get up now?” she asked him.
“Sure.”
She put her feet on the floor, sat upright, and stood cautiously, not quite knowing what to expect. Nothing changed. Everything felt normal.
“So, what happened?” she asked uncertainly. “Technical hitch?”
“You think so, eh?”
“You mean it worked?”
“Thurien engineering works. That’s one thing you never have to worry about.”
“But. . . we’re still in the ship. I thought we were supposed to be going to Jevien.”
“No. You’re falling into the illusion already. Virtual travel, remember? You knew you weren’t really going anywhere.”
Gina put a hand to her brow and shook her head. “Okay. Let’s not
start getting picky about words. You know what I mean. I thought that sensory information from Jevlen was supposed to be coming to me.”
“VISAR, give us a preview,” Hunt instructed.
At once, Gina and Hunt were standing in a wide, circular space like a gallery, overlooking a central area below. There were figures walking this way and that, some human, some Ganymean. As Gina stared, a small group consisting of two Ganymeans surrounded by a half-dozen or more humans gesticulating and seemingly talking all at once passed close by. Although the conversation was presumably being conducted in an alien tongue, the snatches that came through were transformed into English.
thousands of them, with nothing to do. They must be entertained. You have to arrange something.”
“Why can’t they learn to entertain themselves?” one of the Ganymeans asked, sounding harassed.
“They have always been entertained. It is their right!”
Gina looked at Hunt disbelievingly. He grinned back at her, clearly enjoying himself. “Let’s take a walk,” he suggested, and led the way across to the rail at the gallery’s edge. Gina’s mind was in too much turmoil for her to do anything but follow mechanically.
They looked down over a concourse of various levels and partly enclosed spaces, where more figures were standing or sitting, walking, arid going about their business. The concourse appeared to connect to other spaces beyond, and had pedestrian avenues entering from several directions. The architecture was unusual, with generous use of curvature and asymmetrical divisions of space that blended strange notions of aesthetics and ornamentation with what was clearly a functional purpose. Gina’s first thought as she began to recover her reeling senses was of a Moorishly inspired airport terminal. It was all definitely very futuristic, and unquestionably alien. . . but it did keep itself tidily to definite planes, without assaulting the eye with anything resembling the geometric chaos of the Thurien spacecraft.
But as she continued looking, a puzzling aspect of it all registered itself. For what was supposed to be a glimpse of an advanced, technologically adept culture, it was all rather shabby. The finishing on the elaborately styled shapes and surfaces was drab and unimaginative, with a general air of wear and neglect and tiredness. There were lights that weren’t working, panels missing from one of the walls, and on the far side a whole, partly dismantled section closed off by barriers, with machines that looked like maintenance robots standing idle.
Hunt indicated a direction with his hand, and they began walking around the gallery toward a series of low arches on its outer edge. The figures around them passed by unheeding. Gina had to remind herself that she was merely perceiving what was taking place at a distant location; the people who were actually there had no knowledge of her “presence.”
Beyond the arches was a semicircular, windowed space, an eating lounge of some kind, with seats and tables on several tiered levels. Again, the surroundings were plain and utilitarian. The figures, human and Ganymea
n, took no notice as Hunt and Gina descended a stepped aisle to a clear area along the window wall, which turned out to be a continuous expanse of glass. That was when Gina realized that the sky was not blue, but light green, with strange, curling, sheetlike clouds of streaky orange.
The city beneath the pale green sky extended away and below them in waves of interconnected towers, terraces, and heaps of architecture that at first defied comprehension. But then Gina noticed that one of the bridges nearby was missing two of its central spans; a tower beyond it was showing daylight through its windows and seemed to be a derelict shell; below them, a terraced roof had had several sections removed and was open to the elements.
Finally she looked back at Hunt.
Hogan, James - Giant Series 04 - Entoverse (v1.1) Page 11