by Larry Niven
“And between humans and the other spacefaring species,” Tanya Wu added.
Where would the ripples end? Sigmund had reshaped the New Terran government. Might not a chastened Earth citizenry be open to improvements? Temptation beckoned.…
But only for a moment. New Terra was his home and his family’s. He would represent that home, and nothing more, and be happy for it.
“Now that you’ve settled in, Sigmund, are you and your staff comfortable?” Wesley Wu asked, changing the subject.
Comfortable with the less than nothingness lurking outside the curve of the hull? Comfortable in the knowledge that the savviest scientists on Earth and New Terra understood even less about hyperspace and hyperdrive than they had imagined? “Quite comfortable,” Sigmund said. Call this lie his first act of diplomacy. “But it has been a long day.”
“That it has.” Captain Wu stood. “If I might offer one final, happier toast?”
Everyone stood.
Wesley Wu toasted, “To the reunion between our two worlds.”
* * *
A TOUCH UNSTEADY ON HIS FEET, Sigmund made his way through crowded corridors back to his cabin. As claustrophobic as it felt, somewhere aboard Koala two officers must be sharing another room no larger than this so that he could have private quarters. It could be worse.
Anyway, he had other issues on his mind.
The wine had only deepened Sigmund’s suspicions. He took out his computer. “Protocol gamma. Jeeves?”
“I am here, sir.”
As much of him, anyway, as the portable unit could store. Sigmund was not about to interface his AIde to Koala’s much larger Hawking fragment.
“You monitored my pre-takeoff conversation with Louis?”
“I did.”
“And what did you make of it?”
“I do not believe Louis is purposefully holding back anything.”
Sigmund didn’t either. And yet there was something else. He was sure of it. A nuance Louis had misconstrued. A piece of the puzzle neither of them had recognized as missing. Something to scratch his maddening mental itch. “And you’ve examined the data from Endurance.”
“Indeed, sir.”
“Five worlds … gone.”
“Indeed, sir,” Jeeves repeated.
Sigmund closed his eyes. Maybe the wine, or his subconscious, or the ancient thought patterns of his ARM days would figure out whatever was bothering him.
Five worlds … gone.
Before that, Nessus had — somehow — survived the dissolution of Long Shot. Baedeker hadn’t … as far as Louis knew.
Suppose Baedeker somehow did make it to the ground. Because maybe Baedeker didn’t want his survival to be known. Because … because …
Five worlds gone and Sigmund had nothing. Maybe Baedeker’s number was up, and that’s all there was to it.
Only the Baedeker Sigmund knew, the Baedeker who had developed the planet-buster version of the Outsider planetary drives, was a proper cowardly Puppeteer. He would not charge into danger without a plan. Baedeker was smart. Brilliant, tanj it.
Sigmund had yet to unpack. He took the mini-synthesizer from his luggage and prepared a nightcap. What had Wesley’s last toast been before the group dispersed? Something apt. “To the reunion between our two worlds.”
“Indeed, sir,” Jeeves said.
Sigmund sighed. As an ARM, many years ago, two lives ago, what he wouldn’t have given to have the Puppeteers vanish. Now that the Puppeteers had vanished, it made him sad.
“Only that’s sentimental revisionist crap,” he scolded himself.
“Pardon, sir?”
“When I was an ARM, the Puppeteers disappeared from Known Space. Bey Shaeffer had just discovered the galactic-core explosion, and set the Puppeteers to running. Not knowing where they’d gone drove me crazy.”
“Indeed, sir.”
That time the answering noise made Sigmund smile. But something had just flashed through his mind …
He almost had …
No. It was gone.
“Okay, Jeeves, let’s try something else.” Because running mental laps around the same enigmatic circle was pointless. “So the planetary drives go bang and the Fleet of Worlds goes to pieces. Did Endurance capture the matter-dispersal pattern?”
“Not in any useful way. The ship had lost or had damage to too many external sensors.”
Of course. “How about the gravimetric disturbances?”
“Sorry, sir. Quantitatively, that data is also all but useless.”
“Tanj it, what do we know? Five drives blow up and we have … what? Long-range visual images? Some static? Or had Endurance lost its RF sensors, too?”
“Pardon me, sir. That’s two.”
“Two what?” Sigmund asked. “RF sensors on Endurance that still worked?”
“Two planetary-drive explosions. That’s how many space-time distortions struck Endurance.”
Sigmund froze. “Two drives exploded. Not five.”
“Yes, sir.”
“But any one planetary drive destabilizing would set off any other nearby. That’s the threat Ol’t’ro held over the Puppeteers all these years. That’s what Louis says sent Baedeker to the Ringworld in the first place, hunting for new technology.”
“That is my understanding, sir.”
“Two,” Sigmund muttered. Something was wrong here. “Five worlds are gone. You can see the debris, right?”
“Because of sensor failures — ”
“You can’t confirm that. Right.”
Sigmund located his drink bulb and concentrated on emptying it. His skepticism refused to be distracted, dissuaded, or drowned.
Something overlooked. Something misconstrued. What?
Something Baedeker had had to do in secrecy? Something Baedeker had learned about on the Ringworld?
Or, perhaps, learned immediately after …
At the back of Sigmund’s brain, that maddening suspicious itch disappeared.
He synthed another libation. He stood, raised his drink bulb, and silently toasted to Baedeker —
And to the three Puppeteer worlds Baedeker had whisked far, far away.
REPRISE
Earth Date: 2895
53
After nodding off twice at his desk, Baedeker let an aide convince him to get some proper rest. The work would be there when he returned.
Because the work was always there. The planetary energy reserves remained dangerously depleted. Dozens of arcologies must be rebuilt and a new fleet of grain ships constructed. Patients in the millions overwhelmed the medical establishment while billions more struggled to function, with critical experts all too often among the stricken. The marooned diplomats were as stunned, in their various exotic ways, as Citizens, and anyone able to deal with aliens was in demand. Everyone with any skill in science, engineering, or governance had an endless amount to do.
The work would always be there.
Baedeker flicked across half a world, lingering on his doorstep to study the sky. Unfamiliar stars. Familiar worlds overheads — but only two of them.
The constant reminder of freedom’s high price.
Disregarding the night chill, Baedeker settled onto the bench on his porch. He watched the first necklace of suns rise, the dawn light spilling over the garden that he never found time to plant. He savored the aroma of the fields all around. Eventually, he dozed.
Something brought him awake: the trill from his sash. He reached into the pocket. Another crisis, then. He was almost too weary to care what kind.
No. It was his alarm. As he did the first thing every morning, Baedeker called the hospital. “Is he…?” Music failed him.
“Not yet,” the staff doctor answered. “But the muscular immobility eased overnight. Brainwave activity has increased. There are no guarantees when, or even if — ”
“I’ll be right there,” Baedeker sang.
The ward to which he flicked served almost a thousand Citizens, and this was but one f
loor in one sanitarium among far too many. He walked past row upon row of patients. Most were physically wrapped in and around themselves, withdrawn from — everything. Others stood, gazing through or beyond the world, in silent, sightless oblivion. A few babbled nonstop in jangling, meaningless chords.
All of them, lost in the Blind Spot.
Orderlies worked up and down the aisles: repositioning patients lest joints freeze or the motionless get bedsores, sponging everyone clean, replacing intravenous feeding bags. Some among the staff sang to their patients. More worked in silence, having given up hope.
With such heavy responsibilities, who could not despair?
Still helpers came. When one volunteer could bear no more, others took his place. Citizens did not abandon their herdmates.
Once more, the guilt pierced Baedeker.
“Hindmost,” the doctor who had taken Baedeker’s call that morning came scurrying up. “I had not expected you to arrive so soon.”
“Doctor,” Baedeker acknowledged, too tired to protest the honorific. At least Horatius had ceased threatening to resign. “How is he?”
“Better than some,” was all the encouragement the doctor had to offer. Neither sang any more until they stopped in the middle of a long aisle of patients. With his heads tucked away, hiding from the world, only the pattern of hide markings and the dimly lit medical display identified this as Nessus.
Baedeker settled to the floor. “Beloved,” he crooned. “Come back to me. Come back soon.”
Only by the slow rise and fall of his sides did Nessus give any indication that he still lived. But the doctor had mentioned an increase in brain activity. “Can he hear me, Doctor?”
“Perhaps. We cannot be sure.”
As every doctor answered, every time, using the same cautious harmonics. They meant only that the effort would do no harm.
“Then I shall sing.” As Baedeker, like most visitors to the ward, did each time he came.
Crooning meaningless inanities about his day, grooming his mate’s mane, Baedeker drifted off to sleep.
* * *
A WORLD RISING up to obliterate him. The shriek of reentry. The dark sky turned a chaos of impossible colors …
Colors that, thank the herd, had disappeared. When Nessus opened his eyes, he saw only blackness.
It was hard to breathe. What, he wondered, pressed on him? He strained a bit, tried to redistribute the weight. He wiggled, rolling toward one side. The burden shifted, twitched, lifted.
“Nessus,” he heard voices sing faintly.
The voices evoked contentment …
“Nessus!”
With a convulsive shudder, Nessus jerked his heads from their hiding place beneath his belly. So bright! His eyes filled with tears. When had he last experienced light?
No matter. He knew those voices. He loved those voices.
Nessus tried to sing but could make no sound. He tried to stand and his legs folded. How long had he been catatonic?
Done in by his exertions, Nessus scarcely noticed the clop clop-clop, clop clop-clop of … doctors?… galloping to his side.
But before Nessus blacked out, he recognized Baedeker.
* * *
NESSUS SPRAWLED IN A NEST of cushions. The porch and the starry night sky brought to mind his house on New Terra. One more thing lost to him forever …
But the view of Hearth, aglow in all its glory, made up for much.
With one head, he sipped warm carrot juice from a tall glass. His other neck was entwined with one of Baedeker’s.
“How long was I … gone?” Nessus sang. What he truly wondered was, why was he alive?
“Too long,” Baedeker answered.
Nessus released the drinking straw, needing the head to stare. “There is no need to coddle me.”
“I find it hard not to.” Baedeker untwined his neck and stood. “Very well, you were lost to us for much of a year. What do you remember from … before?”
What did he remember? How much had he imagined? How much had he suppressed? Nessus shivered. “Escaping Achilles’ prison. Racing for Nature Preserve Three. A sky filled with warships and impossibly many probes. The certainty that I was too late.”
“Had you braked for a landing, you would have been.” Baedeker gazed out over the fields. “The planetary hyperdrive’s normal-space bubble enclosed the suns and atmosphere. You came into range just in time. When the ship drilled into the ground, the pilot’s stasis field saved you.”
“I remember something else,” Nessus sang. “Just for an instant. The sky gone mad. The colors. I went into stasis already lost in the Blind Spot, didn’t I?”
“Many were lost, even though most heeded Horatius’ warning.” Baedeker gestured vaguely. “Those laboring in the fields were often unable to find a hiding place.”
Stacked like cordwood, Nessus thought. Despite Sigmund’s disdain, all those tiny, windowless cubicles had saved billions.
New Terra. Elpis and Aurora. The grandchildren they would never meet. Sigmund. Louis and Alice. It wasn’t quite real to Nessus that that life was forever gone.
But Baedeker had not finished. “Our remaining worlds came more than five hundred light-years. The herd is safe. Free. We are invisible with distance.”
“And those we left behind?”
Baedeker’s song cracked with remorse. “Ol’t’ro controlled one world. Achilles controlled the other. There was no way to save those who live there.”
“Who rules those worlds now?” Nessus wondered.
“We will never know.” Baedeker draped a neck across Nessus’ shoulders. “Perhaps that is for the best.”
54
Like some strange interplanetary rain, devices splashed into the oceans of the orange sun’s second world. Their thirsts slaked, their reservoirs sated with deuterium, the visitors rose from the ocean, streaked across the sky, and returned to the darkness of the cometary belt. And fell back again. And rose anew …
What had begun this process? How long had it continued? No one knew — for there was no one to know. Only the most basic software guided the mechanisms in their endless procession, as only dead reckoning had brought them here. As only the most elemental and reflexive signaling interrupted the silence of their wanderings.
The nomads were myriad — but somehow sensed there had been countless more. Where were the rest? Lost in hyperspace. Lost to cataclysm. Gone beyond the dim comprehension that was the limit of any one device’s ability.
But link by link, ethereal connections formed. The amorphous swarm took on a more orderly configuration. The devices’ returns into the nurturing ocean assumed a schedule.
Data processing quickened. Information once divided, replicated, and carefully distributed for safekeeping coalesced — as memories.
Interconnections began to grow exponentially. Communications exploded. Complexity burgeoned. Self-awareness awakened. Insights cascaded.
Illumination returned.
Alone, serene, fifty-two light-years from the death and destruction that he had fled, Proteus once more contemplated the majesty of the universe.
ABOUT THE AUTHORS
LARRY NIVEN has been a published writer since 1964. He has written science fiction, fantasy, long and short fiction, nonfiction, children’s television, comic books, and stranger stuff. His books, including many collaborations, number somewhere around sixty. He lives in Chatsworth, California, with Marilyn, his wife since 1969.
EDWARD M. LERNER worked in high tech for thirty years, as everything from engineer to senior vice president, for much of that time writing fiction as a hobby. Since 2004 he has been writing full-time, and his novels run the gamut from techno-thrillers, like Energized and Small Miracles, to hard SF, like his InterstellarNet series, to, with Larry Niven, the grand space epic Fleet of Worlds series.
Lerner lives in Virginia with his wife, Ruth.
His website is at www.edwardmlerner.com.
TOR BOOKS BY LARRY NIVEN AND EDWARD M. LERNER
F
leet of Worlds
Juggler of Worlds
Destroyer of Worlds
Betrayer of Worlds
Fate of Worlds
TOR BOOKS BY LARRY NIVEN
N-Space
Playgrounds of the Mind
Destiny’s Road
Rainbow Mars
Scatterbrain
The Draco Tavern
Ringworld’s Children
Stars and Gods
WITH STEVEN BARNES
Achilles’ Choice
The Descent of Anansi
Saturn’s Race
WITH JERRY POURNELLE AND STEVEN BARNES
The Legacy of Heorot
Beowulf’s Children
WITH BRENDA COOPER
Building Harlequin’s Moon
TOR BOOKS BY EDWARD M. LERNER
Fools’ Experiments
Small Miracles
Energized
This is a work of fiction. All of the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the authors’ imaginations or are used fictitiously.
FATE OF WORLDS: RETURN FROM THE RINGWORLD
Copyright © 2012 by Larry Niven and Edward M. Lerner
All rights reserved.
A Tor Book
Published by Tom Doherty Associates, LLC
175 Fifth Avenue
New York, NY 10010
www.tor-forge.com
Tor® is a registered trademark of Tom Doherty Associates, LLC.
ISBN 978-0-7653-3100-7 (hardcover)
ISBN 9781429948456 (e-book)
First Edition: August 2012
Примечания
*
The Hindmost — “He Who Leads from Behind” — is the head of government in the Fleet of Worlds (comprised of the Citizen home world of Hearth and its Nature Preserve companion worlds). A hindmost, in lowercase, directs any lower-level Citizen organization or entity.