Beyond the Farthest Suns (5 page)

BOOK: Beyond the Farthest Suns
11.89Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“Initiate the action and test it on a closed loop. Then choose the best approach and put us there. Kamon hasn't left our tail?”

“No, he still follows. And still jams.”

“Then my message didn't get through.” Somehow it didn't matter much.

Fairchild gave the final order. Edith watched from his side with a small, knowing smile. She was trying to remem­ber her childhood. There had been so many pleasant things then. She'd married Disjohn, in fact, because he reminded her of the strength of her father.

She needed that strength now.

She wished she had the strength of a father near.

The ship was otherwise empty. Her corridors echoed as the impact of the nebula's clouds bucked her and made her groan.

The tiny neutron star pulsated regularly, surrounded by a halo of accelerated particles, a natural gen­erator of radio energy. The two normal singularities orbited each other, light-days apart. The violet influx of gases outlined them clearly. Like two whirlpools whose surfaces have been smeared with oil, they glowed in disparate, shim­mering mazes of light. Starlight ran in rings around them. Ghost images of each other flickered in the rings, and the ghosts carried rings of stars, and images of other ghosts.

The universe was being twisted into ridiculous failures and inconceivable alterations.

Here time and space rushed into multi-dimensional holes so rapidly that an object had to move at the speed of light to stay in one place. It was a Red Queen's race on a cosmic scale.

In drawing diagrams of what happens in the singularity below the event horizons, space and time axes cross and replace each other. The word “singularity” itself is a phrase of no more significance than “boojum.” It implies points in any mathematical fabric where results start coming out in infinities.

Thus, Graetikin knew, they would soon step off the pages of one book which had told their lives until now, leave that book behind and everything associated with it, and risk a plunge into null.

The naked singularity invisibly approached.

Kamon's thoughts grew fuzzy and uncoordinated. He bris­tled with rage as one portion of his mind came unbalanced in the ritual, and kicked out with his tail at the bulkhead before him. He dented the inch-thick steel. Then he re­gained his balance.

The holy display of the black holes dominated every­thing.

He was ready. A tiny reserved part of him set his weapons for a last-ditch attempt, then vanished into the calm pool of his prepared being.

Disjohn Fairchild felt a giddiness he'd never known before, as if he were being spun on a carnival toy, but every part of him felt it differently.

“I'm expanding,” Lady Fairchild said. “I'm getting bigger. Alice down the rabbit hole—”

Still the ship fell.

And fell.

Edith gasped. The bridge darkened for the blink of an eye, then was suddenly aglow with scattered bits of ghost lightning. She held her hands in front of her eyes and saw a blue halo around them like Cherenkov radiation.

Expan­sion. Alteration. The desk in front of her, and her arms on the desk, broke into color-separated images and developed intricate networks of filigree, became crystalline, net-like, tingled and shimmered and pulsed, then repeated in reverse and became solid again. Everything smelled of dust and age, musty, like vast libraries.

Both ships ended their existence in status geometry at the same moment.

Kamon followed at a different angle and hit the affect-field at the same instant the Fairchild ship did. As he had known and expected, his warp-wave created a temporary event horizon and he was divested of his ma­terial form.

The Fairchild ship survived its fall. Graetikin's equa­tions, thus far, were wholly accurate.

None of them could conceive of what happened in the interface. It was not chaos—it was instead a sea of quiet, an end to action. The destruction and rearrangement of rules and constants led to a lassitude of space-time, an end­less sargasso of thought and event, mired and tangled and gray.

Then each experienced that peculiar quality of his or her world­line which made them unique. Fairchild, stable and strong, did not see much to surprise him. Graetikin marveled at a new insight into his work. Edith, still wrapped in her childhood, had a nightmare and woke far in her past, screaming for her father.

Again the darkness. The ouroboros of the hole spat them out. The computers triggered a lengthy jump, as best as they were able, for the actions of their smallest circuits were still not statistically reliable. This was the chance Graetikin knew they all had to take.

They escaped. The ship rattled and shook like a dog after a swim. The howl of metal made Fairchild's scalp prickle and his arm-hair stand on end. A rush of wind swept the bridge. Edith Fairchild wept quietly and Disjohn, beside her, trembled.

They held each other, sweat dripping and noses flaring, panicked like wild beasts. Graetikin bounced his fingers clumsily over the screen controls, then corrected his foul-up and gave them a view of what lay outside.

“I don't see anything,” Fairchild said.

“I'm astonished we made it,” Graetikin whispered. Disjohn gave him a wild look. The screen showed nothing but cold darkness.

“Scan and chart all radiating sources,” the cap­tain instructed the computer.

“There are no compact sources of radiation. Standard H-R distribution shows nothing. There is only an average temperature,” it said.

“What's the temperature?”

“Two point seven one degrees Kelvin.”

Graetikin slammed his scriber onto the panel. “Any white hole activity? Any sign of the singularity we just came through?”

“Nothing.”

“We had to come out of something!”

“Undefined,” the machine said.

“What does it mean?” Edith asked, holding her chin in her hands.

Graetikin fingered the mar his scriber had made in the panel. “It means we're in a region of heat-death.”

“Where's that?”

“Undefined,” the computer repeated.

“‘Where' is meaningless now,” Graetikin said, eyes dull. “Everything's evenly distributed. We're between beats, at the top of a cycle between expansion and collapse. We've escaped into a dead universe.”

“What can we do?” Disjohn asked. He felt an intense ache for his wife, and wished she were at his side. The grief was so strong, it seemed he had lost her only recently. He looked at Edith. She resembled her mother so much his throat ached. He patted his daughter on the head, but felt none of the reassurance he was trying to give.

“We might go into stasis and wait it out. But we'd have to have a timer, something measuring the pro­gress of the universe outside us. Tens of billions of years. I don't think any of our instruments would last that long.”

“There has to be a way!” Fairchild said.

“I told you, Father,” Edith said. “We were the offenders.” She did a mad little dance. “I told you. We didn't prepare. Why—”

Graetikin thought of them waiting until the ship ran out of energy and food and breathable air. Years, certainly. But years with a burnt-out old politician and his pre-pubescent daughter, a triangle of agonizing possibilities. Even could they survive, they would have no basis for a new life.

Edith's face showed white and distorted. “Why, we're in hell!”

Nestor's ship rounded the nebula and waited. Anna asked the Heu­ritex several times if anything had been sighted, and each time it replied in the negative. “There is no sign,” it said finally. “We would do well to return home.”

“Nothing left,” Anna said. She couldn't convince herself she had done all she could.

“One moment, madame,” the Heuritex said. “This region was devoid of Thrina before.”

“So?”

“There is a signal emerging from the black holes. A single Thrina tone, very strong.”

“That's what started this whole thing,” Anna said quietly. “Ignore it, and let's go home.”

On the edges of the Rift, the old and the sick, the detritus of civilization awaiting rebirth elsewhere, the Aighor pilgrims received the Thri­na, and there was rejoicing.

The death-ships resumed their voyages.

Afterword

“The Venging” is not just about black holes, of course; I'm laying out the details of a space economy that lives and breathes information. This is not the first such prognostication of the Information Age, what I will later (in
Slant
) call the Dataflow age, but it's an early example. Anna's tapas (the root word in Sanskrit denotes “heat,” and the word itself refers to deep meditation) is now to some extent available as tablet computers and smart phones. For historical perspective, however, remember some of the books and movies and TV shows that were influencing me:
Forbidden Planet
, John Brunner's heavily cybernetic
Stand on Zanzibar
and
The Sheep Look Up,
and
Star Trek
's tricorder.

In 1977, in the wake of the success of
Star Wars
, studios and producers all over Los Angeles woke up to find the motion picture landscape changing drastically. Science fiction films—formerly relegated to B-movies by the critics, and occasional blockbusters such as
Forbidden Planet
and
2001: A Space Odyssey
—were rapidly becoming standard fare and very profitable.

I was living in Long Beach at the time with my first wife, Tina. I published an article in the
Los Angeles Times
Calendar section, describing the roots of
Star Wars
in written SF. Suddenly, I started fielding calls from producers all at sea about science fiction, and over the next few weeks, I took a number of interesting meetings. I had a lovely lunch with Gene Roddenberry, who was planning a television reincarnation of
Star Trek
. Mr. Roddenberry had appreciated a comment I made in my article about how science fiction was the kind of horse best ridden by an individual, and how studios turned these stories into camels—a horse designed by a committee.

I met with a number of people at Dino De Laurentiis Productions, and had the pleasure of explaining why hot air rises to Dino's son, who, sadly, died a few years later in a plane accident. De Laurentiis was about to go forward with an ill-conceived but beautifully art-directed version of
Flash Gordon,
and had already optioned Frank Herbert's
Dune.
I tried to convince them to film one of my favorite novels,
The House on the Borderland
by William Hope Hodgson's, but no go. Also nix on Poul Anderson's
Tau Zero.

I heard from a friend, Rick Sternbach, that Disney Studios was working on a film involving a black hole. The project's name at that stage was
Space Probe One.
Here, I thought, was a sterling opportunity. I called the studios and asked about the possibility of becoming a technical advisor. I carried a folio of paintings and a total devotion to the idea of black holes and how they would look. My first meeting was with famed designer John Mansbridge, who then passed me on to Peter Ellenshaw, a master craftsman responsible for matte paintings in many movies. He was art director on
Space Probe One.
(He was also the father of Harrison Ellenshaw, another fine matte artist who produced backgrounds for
Star Wars
and many subsequent films.)

I showed all who were interested my painting of a black hole, done as a possible cover for “The Venging.”
As I spoke with Ellenshaw, studio head Ron Miller (no relation to the astronomical artist) came into Ellenshaw's office to chat, and was soon followed by the screenwriter. He seemed a little out of his depth, but Miller was faithfully sticking with him, and that was and is rare in movies.

It was a heady afternoon. Mansbridge told me I might be called on board the production as a sketch artist. I thought I was better suited to being a technical advisor, or even a script consultant, but what the hell. It was a job, and an interesting one.

I left behind the issue of
Galaxy
Magazine that contained “The Venging.”

I never got the job.

Eventually,
Space Probe One
became
The Black Hole.
It was Peter Ellenshaw's last film, a beautiful production incorporating many technical advances, but otherwise it was pretty abysmal. Oddly enough, there had been a change made in the original movie concept. After passing through the film's glowing, geometric toilet-bowl of a black hole, the good guys end up in a kind of mystical heaven—painted onto the ceiling of the Sistine Chapel. The bad guy, played by German actor Maximilian Schell, ends up quite literally in a Dantean Hell, entombed in his evil robot and surrounded by flames.

Shades of the end of “The Venging”? We'll never know, very likely.

It was ironic, however, that this multi-million dollar production thudded to a halt with an awful pun. The evil robot is named Maximilian. Maximilian Schell ends up in Hell, in Maximilian's shell.

I wonder if anyone at Disney got the joke.

As an after-after-note, I called Disney Studios at one point and Ron Miller answered the phone. Wow! I've never had that experience since—or talked to another studio head in person, for that matter. Charming.

After-after-after note: I could not quite understand why Anna was so down on living forever in this and subsequent stories. Clearly, I was working through some ethical issues. But most of my fiction avoided the topic of biological immortality in later years. (In the Thistledown books, people die but have their mentalities uploaded into City Memory—a prospect that seems to me less and less likely, barring transporter-beam superscience.)

I further explored my issues and objections to biological immortality in
Vitals,
published in early 2002. I doubt that I've reached any final conclusions, however.

Neither did Anna, as we learn in “Perihesperon.”

BOOK: Beyond the Farthest Suns
11.89Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Harsens Island by T. K. Madrid
Valley of Decision by Stanley Middleton
Dragonflight by Anne McCaffrey
The Devil Wears Scrubs by Freida McFadden
Guardian Awakening by C. Osborne Rapley
Death of a Friend by Rebecca Tope
Pass Interference by Natalie Brock
Sweet Like Sugar by Wayne Hoffman