After a seeming eternity of sleep, Janet opened her eyes. The lights on the ceiling were clear, ordinary objects, a relief after the dreams.
She remembered a lost dream self, cowering from something in the sky….
Turning her head, she saw Sam, Richard and Margot, and Orton.
“It’s okay,” Sam said. “You’ll be up soon.”
You’re so kind, she thought, remembering why she was here. It might not be okay for long. She tried to smile, but she was tired again, and sleep began to press her into a calm oblivion.
“She needs weeks of rest,” Margot said. “I’ll stay with her.’
She’s my friend, Janet thought.
They sat in a circle of chairs on the huge black floor of the observation level—Sam, Richard and Margot, Janet, Orton, Alard, Commander Mason, Greg Michaels, and Mike Basil. All the dome screens were on, creating the illusion of an open night sky.
Sam looked at Janet next to him; a new independence had taken hold of her, making her mysterious and desirable. He would still wake up from dreaming that for some inexplicable reason she had died, only to find her warmly next to him, surprising him with her presence; he had fallen in love again.
All their faces were half in starlight, half in the amber glow of Jupiter’s full phase. As they spoke, they would look up at the giant hanging above the distant mountains. Callisto was a silvery disk; Europa and Io were oranges about to chase each other across Jove’s streaked face.
Sam was beginning to feel at home. On the map, Ganymede City was a cluster of domes and underground warrens in the northeast, only a few hundred kilometers from the moon’s north pole. To the south lay lava plains and mountains, glaciers and deep valleys which held occasional mists.
“After you take Asterome out,” Mason was saying, “certainly in this century, after we’ve begun our economic recovery, we’ll probably send out smaller ships in various directions from the sun. Phobos and Deimos might make the beginnings of additional macroworlds. I’m sure that the asteroid dwellers will develop in this direction. We’ll need all the insurance we can afford. Maybe the anomaly around earth won’t grow any larger; maybe it will fade and we can go back for a look.”
And twenty worlds circle Jupiter and Saturn, Sam thought, worlds we might want to work into something people can live on. Mars and Venus can be terraformed….
Orton grunted at his right. He had been out of cigars and cigarettes for weeks and had been unable to locate even a small cache.
Mason got up from her chair next to Orton and stretched. “Back home on Mars they’re saying the universe is a queer place and we should not overstep ourselves. Our survivors are the most educated and skilled human beings of all time, and still they’re superstitious.”
“The war—” Alard started to say.
“There’s risk in everything,” Richard said. “What may result from our holocaust may yet be good.”
“That good and bad will happen is inevitable,” Janet said. Sam noted a coldness in her voice, as if she were speaking to a stranger.
“Inevitable,” Sam said. “It is a strange universe.”
“Sam, Janet—last call,” Alard said.
“No,” Janet answered before Sam could reply. “Our place is here, where we failed, where we have to pick up the pieces.”
We don’t deserve to go, Sam thought.
Alard tried to make the best of it. “Ganymede has a new governor, and he’s getting the feel of useful work again—right, Sam?”
Sam nodded. Janet would never show Richard and Margot how much she would miss them. They would have a new start. She was letting go as she had let go of Jack; perhaps now she would have a chance to be herself; that would be the Janet, Sam knew, who could love him. Sunspace had to let go of its child now; macrolife had to be born as an act of wild faith or not at all. Richard and Margot had to leave before they became overimpressed with humankind’s capacity for cruelty and failure; they would have enough failures of their own.
“When is departure?” Sam asked.
“When we’ve finished testing the gravitic pusher units,” Richard answered. “They still produce pretty weak gravitic shortwaves for the power we put in. We have to be sure of one g acceleration for indefinite periods.”
Orton was going, of course. If anyone were to try and stop him now, he would tear Ganymede City down piece by prefabricated piece. Sam wondered what kind of societies would develop when Asterome grew and reproduced.
“We’ll miss you,” Margot said, looking at Janet.
Janet would go back into organizing what was left of Bulero Enterprises on Mars and Ganymede, assembling all the records, plans of projects, and memories into two central facilities. Sam knew that he would have to teach as well as govern; he had a lot to learn. Suddenly he realized that he might well be the last living professional philosopher anywhere; the implacable unknown had given him another chance, after all.
He looked up and saw Europa’s and Io’s shadows moving across Jupiter’s clouds….
He was alone, yet it seemed that those who had gone were still sitting here with him under the stars. Jupiter hid the sun. Sam waited, thinking of those last moments here, more than two years ago….
There had been embraces and handshaking, clumsy words and averted eyes; the effort to get through to the other person had been desperate. Margot and Janet went off to be alone; Orton and he forgave each other’s sins a dozen times. The final conversation with Richard had been impersonal—about the undesirability of deciding the future in advance; it had ended with Richard pleading with him to come along, almost ordering him to convince Janet. “There’s got to be an end to Bulero guilt,” Richard had said. But not yet. Sam remembered Margot’s passionate kiss, so freely given.
The empty chairs sat with him one day, and all those people he had known were somehow contained in the bright star that was rushing toward Jupiter in half phase, to steal some of its gravitational energy for the outward push to the stars.
Somewhere out there, Asterome was moving at a considerable fraction of light speed. He imagined its shield of force, a birthing shroud repelling gas and dust from the newborn creature coming out of the trillion-mile whirlpool of sunspace.
Biological time was slowing for Richard, Margot, and Orton, while he and Janet grew older. Recent communications were becoming unreliable.
He thought of Kiichi Nakamura. The Hawaiian had recently committed suicide in the Martian prison. Janet had urged Sam to visit the general before he was removed to Mars.
“What do you want from me?” the general had asked from the corner of his cell.
“Janet suggested that I see you.”
“Oh—she feels sorry for me.” He tried to smooth back his black hair.
“You need a barber.”
Sam had stood in the center of the cell until the general spoke again. “I suppose, Mr. Bulero—“
“Sam, please.”
“I suppose that I am to explain myself.”
“If you want to.” What had shaken Sam was the way the man had suddenly looked up at him.
“You think me a villain and a fool?”
“I think I do,” Sam said, feeling guilty.
“You think yourself a perceptive man.”
“What was I to see? Tell me.”
“I saw Asterome as a source of recovery, while Alard—“
“But Asterome is helping.”
“It remains independent when we need everything.”
“I see your point, but I think we’ll manage. Centralization is a debatable virtue. Asterome is not the only source of recovery left, and there are greater things to consider—but that’s not it. Your methods set lawless precedents for later strife—your means pollute what may be reasonable ends. Our future is dirty enough from what we have to carry around inside. Asterome will have its chance and we’ll have ours, for what it’s worth.”
“I believed the situation called for desperate measures.”
“What can I say? You may have been well meaning—but you were wrong. A lot of history was against you. Asterome left us what it had to give. You fail to see that it had to leave, to begin the proliferation of macrolife. That’s the long-range goal for which it was built.”
“What? What are you talking about?”
Sam had tried to explain, but Nakamura had shaken his head in disagreement. “All you Buleros are a pack of dreamers! Your bulerium destroyed the world, my family, and whatever career I might have had.” Then he had looked down at the floor, refusing to speak further.
“You might have contributed your talents, but you’re still thinking in terms of personal glory.”
But you might be right about other things, Sam said to himself, remembering the desolation of the broken man in the cell. Only future time will justify Asterome’s leaving, but not for us. For us there is the consolation that humanity no longer has its eggs in one basket. If we are to die, it will be from internal failures, from the ungovernable dark places of the mind—the scaffolding left over from evolution’s bloody building program—not from a lack of vision. Apocalypse is the eye of a needle, through which we pass into a different world. Whitehead had once said that it was the business of the future to be dangerous, that the major advances in civilization were processes that all but wrecked the societies in which they occurred. It was as close as he would ever come to a statement of faith. It begged the question, of course, saying no more than that there are things which cannot be decided in advance.
He smiled, knowing that he would not have let a student get away with such talk, yet it had involved a man’s life and the future of a whole branch of humanity. Deliberate, deductive reason was such a conservative, clockwork thing, best used on known quantities, not on creative acts, which are always a mix of known and unknown. It was almost as if the universe had been designed to be knowable but not exhaustible…an involving creation, one that would not be boring or statically perfect for its inhabitants, but always presenting new things and people. The best of all possible worlds, or a shell game? He resented the lurking, layered, Troy-like nature of the human mind, where old impulses lingered in the shadow of reason, going about their subterranean business in a billion-year-old maze. I could have easily killed Nakamura….
A river of light carried the sun out from behind Jove’s face, beginning the week. High in its orbit, the solar mirror brightened into life and Sam thought of Soong.
It was getting on toward the spring of 2026, the spring that would have been on earth, but Sam sensed the coming of spring here also, despite Jupiter and the dark mountains. Ganymede only appeared to be sleeping under its glaciers, with humanity hibernating in its dark crannies; the spring here was one of waiting to live again, while listening for the stars to speak with the voices of humankind’s children.
Suddenly Sam realized that even if earth were to be miraculously returned to them, people now living on Mars or Ganymede could not go back; they would be unused to the higher gravity. Only Asterome had people living in three-quarters earth normal. By the time earth became habitable again—and that might be never—there would be no humans in sunspace who could live on the home planet without mechanical aids. A struggling colony would have to readapt to earth by giving birth to a new generation, for which earth gravity would again be the norm. The great human summer of time to come, he realized, would be lived out of the cradle, in free space, around the sun in space habitats, and out among the stars.
Janet and he had given their germ plasm to a host mother, and the three of them would have a child by Christmas. Sam often wondered in what ways their banked genetic materials would be used on Asterome. Alard had joked about cloning them all someday, but in the time since Asterome’s departure, the idea had acquired some reality for Janet and himself; perhaps there would be a braver Samuel Bulero or a happier Janet. He imagined the eyes that would someday look at a starry sky somewhere far away, and perhaps recognize the sun, and wonder about the earth from which they had come. He thought about the fragile, spontaneous nature of beginnings, the agonizing uncertainties of things new and complex; a crisis point approaches and the new entity must crystallize, become whole and stable, or the light will flicker and die within it, and it will be passed by in time, perhaps to reappear later, or never again. Somewhere in a clear midnight, human consciousness had been born in this way, out of physical complexities, wending its way upward past the watchdogs of instinct into self-recognition. And if the new thing survives its beginnings, it thrives; the uncertainty of its contingent, miraculous start is obliterated; the past becomes a black hole of mysteries….
Last week a faint message had announced that Asterome’s engineers were ready to test the new drive. If successful, the large-scale quantum effect would permit the bridging of space-time on the parsec level; a side benefit might be the development of an instantaneous communications system; but the experiment had to be tried at a substantial fraction of light speed. It had already failed or succeeded by the time the message had arrived. With such a drive, Asterome might return in the near future.
As Sam stood looking out over Ganymede’s surface, the dark yet comforting landscape of his new life, he hoped that here in the ruins of the solar system unreason would now sleep for a time, giving wounds time to heal and love a chance to grow.
No matter how often he sent his thoughts after those who had gone, no matter how far his mind reached or how long his body endured, he would die and others would be born to move through the shadow play of phenomena around him; those who had left sunspace would also die, and others would take their place, until such time when humankind became more than human. He saw all those living on Mars and Ganymede, all those close to him, as ghostly stuff that would fade into nothingness. It outraged him to think it; life was longer than it had been, but nowhere long enough.
I’ll die here.
“Sam, how long have you been here today? You let your class out early, didn’t you?”
He turned and saw her dark shape near the elevator pylon. She came forward and he saw a pencil behind her ear; her hair was tied up on top of her head and the look on her face was there for him. For me, finally.
She handed him a piece of paper.
“From Alard.”
He read the words in the starlight:
ACCELERATING NEARER LIGHT SPEED BEFORE
STARTING EXPERIMENT. IF SUCCESSFUL
YOU MAY NOT HEAR FROM US. FAREWELL.
This message was also more than a year old. He looked at Janet. Her face was calm, and he knew that she was ready to have no further word in her lifetime. They might not be seen or heard from again, and that possibility was closest to death; the darkness between the stars had swallowed them.
Alard and Richard had not been content with the sublight gravitic pushers, which could have taken Asterome to any of the hundred stars within thirty light-years of the sun in reasonable earth and ship times; instead, the macroworld had elected to take the next step in mobility as soon as possible.
Sam pictured Alard’s engineers working to harness the wave effects of dense masses, feeding them with vast electrical forces, as the macroworld’s acceleration shortened light waves fore and lengthened those arriving aft, darkening the universe to human eyes, except for a narrow band of yellow stars circling at right angles to the course. What other distortions of space-time were being created by the contained quantities of unstable bulerite as the universe prepared to black out?
It had already happened. More than one light-year out from the sun, the drive had been cut in—perhaps throwing the macroform into far spaces, from where it could never return. He tried not to dwell on the possibility of complete disaster.
“They’re brave,” Janet said, “to risk everything.”
She’s let go.
He turned and looked out beyond the superconducting power station, where the catapult had just lofted another ingot toward Jupiter, an offering to a god in exchange for energy.
Janet came and embraced him. He kissed her and she held on to him. Farewell, he thought, realizing that the share of glory given him would have to be enough.
Richard tried not to waken Margot as he got up and went out into the solarium; there he turned on the screen for a view of the distant, reddening sun. As he looked at the fading star, he knew that he had what he wanted—something other than the past to give himself to completely—and that he would have to live with the choice, make it work, because it had come to him at great cost, paid for by all humanity; he would not have the right to be unhappy. This fact, as true and deserving to be heard as it was, dragged him down, reminding him again of the past’s ever-present ability to spill into the present and spoil the future.
Planetary history is one long dark age, he thought, an evolving slaughterhouse. He wondered what kind of civilization, if any, would now develop in the home sunspace.
He reached out and changed the view, mentally turning his back on the dwindling darkening sun, and looked outward across the cave of stars.
After a moment, he turned from the diamond-strewn abyss and walked over to the hotel window. He pulled back the curtains and saw that daylight was young in the hollow outside. The town was going about its business as the tribeams slowly grew brighter, fed now by internal sources, not by the sun. He slid open a window and leaned out to look to his distant right, where the trolley was climbing out of the central regions, toward the mountainous ends of the world.