Read A Night Without Stars Online
Authors: Peter F. Hamilton
The star was classified as an A7 on the Morgan-Keenan system, hotter and brighter than the G2-class star humans had evolved under. At two and a half AUs out, where Zoreia orbited, Nigel Sheldon had to wear sunglasses; not even his modified green eyes could cope with the sharper light of his new world's sun.
He reached the top of a gentle rise where he could see the lush green of terrestrial grass sweeping out across the landscape in all directions. Grass was always the easy part of terraforming a new world. After Zoreia's land had been seed-bombed, the colonists had waited thirty years for the roots and microbes and insects and worms and dead leaves to generate a deep enough layer of soil before starting on larger plants. Nigel stared across the forests that had spread out across the rumpled ground. Birds flocked among the higher branches, their nests safe from the predatory animals that stalked among the trunks. Now that the biosphere was complete, they were slowly introducing more sophisticated animals.
Zoreia was a modest triumph, given that only 250 years ago, when the fleet of colony starships had come thundering into the star system, it had been an airless barren rock. They had achieved so much, and not just on the planet. Oran and Bourke, two of the huge city habitats, were visible in the clear topaz sky, orbiting 150,000 kilometers out, far above the two small moons they'd maneuvered into orbit to create some spectacular tides. And beyond thatâ¦Nigel smiled as his retinal filters activated. The surface of the blue-white star had three even brighter blemishes along the equator, like intense flowers of energy. The petals were vast streamers of plasma, pouring up into space at near-relativistic velocity, then twisting away into the J-nodes. Somewhere on the other side of the sun, the matter was streaming out of corresponding J-nodes, but changed, modified into the grid of their first Dyson shell, which would be more than a million and a half kilometers across when it was finished in a couple of years.
An awareness seeped into the lowest level of his consciousnessâknowledge coming from Central. There was a disturbance in hyperspace outside the star system, but approaching fast. The knowledge expanded up to full awareness, and he witnessed a line being drawn through the quantum fields that underpinned reality, driving straight for Zoreia. Its signature was familiar enough: a Commonwealth ultradrive. But this was a small ship, nothing like the behemoths of the colony fleet that had brought the Sheldon Dynasty to this place. Nigel sighed wryly as he drew up a list of who it might be carrying. It was a short list: just two names.
The ultradrive ship flashed through the star system and dropped out of hyperspace beside Oran.
“You have a visit request,” Central informed him.
“So I sense,” he replied drily. “Well, it looks like my diary is clear for today. Let her in.” His biononic field function detected the planetary T-sphere engage and enact.
Paula Myo was teleported onto the ground barely four meters away.
Nigel almost laughed. It took just over five years for an ultradrive ship to fly from the Commonwealth to Zoreia. You had to
really
want to get here to attempt such a flight. And Paula had done it alone, in suspension. Yet here she stood wearing a gray business suit, her jet-black hair neatly styled. The amazing thing was, he knew that she'd consider this to be just another working day.
“Paula!” He gave her a hug and a platonic kiss on the cheek. “Welcome to the Andromeda galaxy.”
“Stars are still stars. Only the distance is greater.”
“Oh, very profound.” He waited until she'd turned full circle to take in the vista. Then she tipped her head back and squinted at the dazzling sun.
“Coronal matter transferenceânow, that is impressive,” she admitted.
“Why, thank you.”
“You built yourself an ANA?”
“Central. It has the same technology base, yes, but we don't just download ourselves into it when we become jaded with life. The point of life is to avoid becoming jaded.”
“Profound,” she shot back.
Nigel chuckled. “It's good to see you.”
“And you. This seems to be an interesting civilization you're building here. What would you call it?”
“I dunno. High-end pastoral?”
“Hmmm. Silfen-lite, then?”
“Ouch.”
“Sorry.” She glanced about the wide empty landscape again. “Do you have homes?”
“Those that want them have them.”
“Do you want one, Nigel?”
“Right now I'm happy just traveling around by myself. You realize no one has ever set foot on this ground before? I like that.”
“Doesn't sound like you. You were always so busy.”
“I help out with Central and our major projects. I don't have to be in the office. Not that we have any.”
“And what about people? Do you need to be with them?”
“You traveled between galaxies to ask me that?”
“No. The Void has gone.”
“What?”
He'd thought he was of an age when nothing could surprise him, but that news was extraordinary. “What do you mean, gone?”
“It transcended.”
“How the fuck did that happen?”
Paula's lips twitched. “There was a small conflict.”
“Oh, forâ” He threw his hands up in dismay. “The Living Dream morons, they finally went on their pilgrimage.”
“Yes. But they were being manipulated by the Acceleratorsâ”
“Sonofabitch. Ilanthe! I knew the Accelerators were trouble. I told you all before I left.”
“Very prescient of you. Oh, and Gore played a big part, too. I have a summary of critical events on file if you'd like access. It's quite large.”
“Of course it is. You were always thorough, Paula.”
“Thank you.” She turned and stared out across the sweeping grasslands. “Our galaxy is safe now. The Raiel are considering what to do now that their great vigil is over. The Commonwealth is changing, slowly as always. It's a new age of exploration and contact.”
“And yet here you are,” Nigel said wearily. “Why is that, Paula? What could possibly be so important that you'd spend five years flying hereâand five flying back?”
“You know why,” she said softly. “My file isn't complete.”
“Our secret mission.”
“
Your
mission. You went into the Void, Nigel. Two hundred and fifty years ago, you actually got inside. You're unique.”
“My clone went in.”
“And you dreamed his life.”
Nigel closed his eyes. Today was truly a day of emotional surprises. After so long, the pain of her loss was still as strong as it had been the day his clone had detonated the modified quantumbuster. “Paula, it was a long time ago. Let it rest. She's gone now.”
“She?”
“It's personal.”
“You left us, Nigel. When the Raiel brought you home, you flew to another bloody galaxy to escape whatever happened to you in the Void. You didn't tell me what it was. The Raiel won't tell me, either. I have stood in the real Makkathran, and confronted Torux who was with you while you dreamed your clone's life, and he would not tell me.” Her voice rose. “Torux said they were honoring your wishes.”
“Yes,” he said meekly. “They are.”
“You owe me, Nigel. I helped you put that mission together. And more than that. It's personal for me, too. I have an investment in this. I don't just want to know about your mission, I want to know about the fallback. I have a right to know if you ever activated it. So tell me: What happened, Nigel? What happened to your clone in the Void?”
“I became a monster,” he said as tears began to leak down his cheeks.
“How?”
“I didn't land on Querencia.”
“Butâ¦then where?”
“There used to be another human world in the Void. It was called Bienvenido.”
“Oh, crap. Used to be?”
“We never knew it existed. How could we? But it was where the rest of the lost Brandt colony fleet wound up. And me.”
“So you never made contact with Makkathran?”
“No. Once I landed on Bienvenido I had to stay; they were under attack from another alien species. The Fallers. Psychotic expansionists who would frighten even the Prime. I couldn't abandon Bienvenido; those people needed help. I thought I found a way. I was so fucking arrogant, I just went right ahead. One of the Brandt colony ships had survivedâor rather, its armory had.”
“Armory?” Paula asked cautiously.
“Yes. I rebuilt a quantumbuster.”
“Oh, no.”
“Oh, yeah. Because I was right. I was always right. I thought I'd found a weakness in the Void's quantum structure. I believed, I really believed, I could blow it apart from the inside. I promised her I'd save them all. And she put all her trust in me.”
“Nigel.” Paula put her hand on his arm.
“So I detonated it. My clone was actually sitting next to it when it went offâhow's that for a noble sacrifice? Only it didn't work. I should have known. The Raiel sent in a fucking armada of warships with a technology orders of magnitude above Commonwealth weapons, and they couldn't defeat the Void. Instead, it destroyed them. You'd think I'd pause to take that into accountâbut oh, no, I was so far up my own ass I never considered failure.”
“You thought you had an opportunity to terminate the Void. You wouldn't be human if you didn't take it.”
“Ha! We didn't even know Bienvenido existed. Guess what else we didn't know? The Void has a defense mechanism. It's called Honious or Uracus, depending on which planet you're unlucky enough to be on. After my clone died in the blast, I was still dreaming my ANAdroids' life. I watched through their eyes as Uracus opened up and devoured the whole crudding world. They were standing beside her as it happened. I heard her screams.” He shook his head in angry frustration. “I still hear them. The whole fucking planet, Paulaâobliterated. It's been two and a half centuries now, and I still hear her. I still deserve to hear her. There is no punishmentâno sufferingâgreat enough to fit my crime.”
“I'm sorry.”
“Don't be. Not for me.”
She studied him intently for a moment. “Who was she?”
“It doesn't matter. She's dead.”
“A girl.” Paula gave him a forlorn smile. “It's always a girl. Even you, in the end.”
“Even me. Who knew? Guess I'm human after all.”
When it hit the planet's upper atmosphere, the starship
Vermillion
was still traveling at an appreciable fraction of orbital velocity. Like the majority of its onboard systems, the colony vessel's ingrav and regrav drives were glitching badly in the Void, leaving them unable to suspend the titanic bulk against gravity and lower it to a gentle landing as they were designed. But they could still exert some resistance against the planet's hungry gravity, so they strained to slow the starship's otherwise-catastrophic speed. On the bridge, Captain Cornelius and the ten remaining volunteers from the crew did what they could to mitigate the impending disaster. Force fields, normally tough enough to deflect nuclear blasts with ease, headed toward breakdown as they expanded out from the hull. Redline instability warnings bloomed in Cornelius's exovision as they held
Vermillion
secure at the center of a bubble of incandescent plasma five kilometers in diameter.
Vermillion
curved around the planet, tearing a screaming hole through the atmosphere as it aerobraked to a manageable speed, its fiery hypersonic wake scoring a terrible furrow of destruction across every landmass it zoomed over. After seventy-two minutes of this torment it finally dropped to subsonic. They were still traveling at eighty kilometers an hour when their altitude reached zero. A last desperate burst of power was pumped into the fading drive units to brake their speed further. The force fields collapsed on impact, and
Vermillion
's unprotected hull struck the ground.
Their wild flight had brought them to a rumpled stretch of ground just beyond a massive river where the humidity was a constant mist twisting among the verdant trees. This was jungle territory, with a soft loamy ground. But
soft
was a relative term for a transgalactic colony ship more than a kilometer and a half long and massing hundreds of thousands of tons.
It hit at the foot of a small incline, pulverizing vegetation and ripping out a deep gorge. Modules and compartments never designed to withstand such forces broke off, tumbling away to their ruin through the trees. But the main section kept surging onward and upward until it, too, came to rest.
Seventy-five percent of
Vermillion
remained intact through a miraculous combination of good luck and steely nerves. Captain Cornelius was justifiably lauded by the passengers who'd flown down to the planet earlier in much safer shuttles with good old-fashioned solid wings. That hero-worship enabled him to retain his authority as the lost survivors slowly built their civilization in the strange environment of the Void. The threat of the Fallers who began to invade their world from space justified the formation of defensive regiments, of which Cornelius became commander in chief. The machines
Vermillion
had brought from the Commonwealth were largely useless in the Void, where electrical current was inhibited, and anything more complex than a steam engine was subject to constant glitches. The resources that did work, especially the precious medical capsules, were guarded and restricted to the captain and his immediate family, enhancing his power and authority.
Vermillion
's remains became the seat of power on the new, and somewhat ironically named, world of Bienvenido. To protect their declining technological advantage, the Captain's family incorporated the starship's original sections into a working residence, then extended that to embrace an executive complex and military headquarters as well as their private clinic. As the palace grew in size and splendor, so more and more of the ship was built around, but mainly on top of.
After three thousand years, nothing of the
Vermillion
was visible from outside. But by then it was no longer relevant; the nature of the Void had incapacitated even the simplest artifact of Commonwealth technology. The rule of the Captain's family had become established by law, political power, and a brutally effective secret police force.
ThenâsomehowâNigel Sheldon arrived on Bienvenido. A quantumbuster was detonated, and the Void responded with the Great Transition, flinging Bienvenido out into the deepest Gulf of intergalactic space. Technology worked again.
The great, gloomy warrens of vaults underneath the ancient palace, built by the flickering light of valseed oil lamps, were now illuminated by new electric bulbs. It was just as well, Laura Brandt thought as she hurried toward the crypt that housed the wormhole gateway she'd managed to renovate. So many people were rushing around down here, and all of them wearing a look of suppressed fear. Aboveground, Fall alert sirens were shrieking a warning across the city of Varlan. That wasn't strictly accurate. Those new lights in the sky above Bienvenido weren't a Fall, at least not in the usual sense. But it would do, warning people of an impending threat from space.
Marine guards in their smart black uniforms stood outside the big wooden doors that led into the wormhole crypt. For once the doors were wide open, allowing dozens of freshly laid telephone cables to snake inside. It also enabled technicians from the Manhattan Project to wheel in large metal trolleys.
Whyever did I call it that?
Laura wondered.
Probably the mental equivalent of comfort food.
She stopped to let the trolleys clank past, staring at the black iron casing of the big cylinders they carried. The atom bombs weren't streamlined, but then she'd never intended for them to be dropped in the planet's atmosphere.
Inside the crypt, the sound of frantic voices dipped as technicians and officers from the People's Air Defense Force gave the weapons fearful glances. Their arrival was the final confirmation that the threat was terrifyingly real.
The marine guards suddenly snapped off salutes. Laura turned to see Prime Minister Slvasta arriving behind her. He was wearing some kind of yellow-and-blue regimental dress tunic; she never could be bothered to remember which regiment had which colors. As always, Slvasta's empty sleeve was pinned prominently across his chest, the result of an encounter with a Faller. Of all Bienvenido's anachronisms, that was the oddest to Laura. She'd spent the first three hundred years of her life in the Commonwealth, where the concept of people walking around with missing limbs was unheard of. Even if some gross fluke accident did somehow maim a citizen, a replacement clone limb would be grown and attached within weeks. But not here. Here Slvasta was a physical reminder of how vigilance should never be allowed to falter.
She detested him, but needed his authority to instigate her desperate rescue plan for this benighted world. So the oppressive downside of his dictatorial rule had to be quietly overlooked. And her biononicsâincluding full-body force field functionâmeant that he couldn't eliminate her. They were stuck with each other.
Slvasta's usual entourage of cronies formed a phalanx around him. Javier, a fellow leader of the revolution who'd slid smoothly into his role of Slvasta's political adviser, was a huge man who looked as sullen and angry as always; not even the emergency had broken his constant suspicion of Laura. Yannrith stood beside himâSlvasta's bodyguard during the revolution, and now the head of the People's Security Regiment. His appearance matched his job, stiff and forbidding, with a vivid scar on his throat giving his voice a sharp rasping quality. He remained ever alert for Faller nests and even more alert to counter-revolutionary forcesâof which there were, apparently, never-ending processions. Andricea completed the trio: a tall lean woman with a face Laura judged too cruel to be genuinely pretty. She was officially Slvasta's chief bodyguard, though rumor around the People's Congress said that she also shared his bed now that his wife had been sentenced to twenty years in the Pidrui Mines.
“Laura, is everything working?” Slvasta asked.
“Seems to be,” she said grumpily. Fatigue was starting to take its toll, even on her biononics-enriched body.
“The floaters,” he said urgently. “Did you repair the floaters?”
“Yes. They're working.” She closed her eyes, allowing the last five crazy days to flash past like a dream. Biononics had allowed her to keep going without sleep, but she could feel that body-debt lying in wait now. Nonetheless, she and her exhausted team of assistants had managed to refurbish two of the floaters, cannibalizing the others for spare parts. Her earlier experience rebuilding the gateway had provided plenty of insight to the procedure.
“If there's anything else you need, anything at all, just tell me,” he said sincerely. “I'll make sure you get it.”
Democracy. Civil rights. Trial by jury.
“Sure.”
They walked into the crypt together. It was one of the largest chambers beneath the palace, with dusty brick walls curving up to an arched roof, supported by metal ribs that had come from
Vermillion.
Looking around it, Laura was always struck by the resemblance to a European-style church, albeit with a dark gothic quality. It had been abandoned for centuries before she found the ancient machines it housed.
Standing at the far end, instead of an altar, the circular gateway shimmered with the purple ghostlight of Cherenkov radiation. It was a CST BC5800d2 model, intended to create small-scale planetary and interplanetary wormhole connections that would transport bulk material about while a new settlement established its manufacturing base.
Vermillion
had carried five of them, all of which were still sealed in their transit shells when Laura had landed on Bienvenido eight years earlier. As the last survivor of the
Vermillion,
she was the only one who understood Commonwealth technology. Even so, getting the wormhole gateway to work had been a devilishly tricky job, especially given everything else she'd had to do.
Every day since she'd landed, Laura mused that she'd committed some terrible crime back in the Commonwealth and this was her punishment: first trapped in a weird temporal loop in the Void, then liberated by Nigel Sheldon, only to fall into this hell populated by people she regarded as psychotic half savages. She'd spent those last eight years trying to educate the mistrustful citizens of Bienvenido, whose society had leveled out to something equivalent to Earth, circa 1850. That education had focused on raising their technology and engineering base by almost a century to combat the Fallersâa mission that had to be approached carefully. Bienvenido was fighting for its life against the alien invaders, and the machines she showed them how to build needed to be reliable, something their very basic factories could produce dependably. So far they had aircraft powered by simple V12 engines, better guns, electricity, and radio. The planes of the new People's Air Force had proved sufficient to hold the Fallers at bay while she got to work renovating the wormholes stored below the palace. The idea behind that was to reach out to the Ring of Trees orbiting high above Bienvenidoâcrystalline alien biotechnology hive spaceships, as near as she could determine, which produced the lethal eggs that Fell as a plague across the planet. Her plan was that once she could open a wormhole amid the Trees, she could nuke them with the primitive fission bombs that the Manhattan Project was painstakingly assembling under her direction. Once the Fallers were eliminated, Bienvenido could finally start to progress along standard socioeconomic lines and hopefully one day reestablish contact with the Commonwealth. It was always a desperate notion, but it was all she had.
Now even that fantastical daydream was dying around her. The threat she'd uncovered on Ursell was closing fast on Bienvenido, and it was potent enough to obliterate humans and Fallers alike.
A row of trestle tables had been set up along one side of the crypt. Senior officers from various regiments sat there, talking into the black Bakelite telephone handsets linking them to their various headquarters, their babbling voices rich with suppressed panic.
“Ma'am,” one of the officers called. “The Space Vigilance Office has confirmed approach tracking. The first invasion fleet is going to reach the atmosphere above Fanrith in seven minutes.”
“Thank you,” Laura said as calmly as she could manage. She knew if she showed any weakness in front of these people, everything would be lost. They were all depending on her to save them. “Can someone get me confirmation on the second fleet?”
“Estimated atmosphere entry over Tothland in twenty-eight minutes,” another of the officers announced.
“Okay. Chief Air Marshal, are you ready?”
“Our squadrons are over Fanrith, ma'am,” the marshal said, her face grim. “We won't let you down.”
Laura gave her a quick nod, fighting to prevent tears from forming. They'd deployed just over four hundred IA-505 air-interceptor planes to the uninhabited Fanrith continentâtwo-thirds of the planet's entire Air Force. The IA-505s were her own design, cobbled together out of her storage lacuna's basic encyclopedia files of the Second World War: terribly flimsy things made from an alloy monocoque structure, with the skin riveted on. The V12 engines powering the props were just supercharged pistons; she hadn't gotten around to introducing turbines yet. Control surfaces moved when the pilot pulled on a joystick, which tugged wires connected to hydraulics. The planes were armed with four powerful pneumatic Gatling guns in the fore and aft turrets. And the crews, seven to a plane, were all proud and eager kids, fiercely loyal to their world, and determined to protect it no matter what. They were delighted with their radical flying war machines, smiling gamely when she went to meet squadrons at their aerodromes, promising her they'd do her proud when they took to the air to blast the Faller eggs apart with their guns.
And now she'd sent them into battle against interplanetary spaceships, crewed by the vilest aliens humans had ever encountered. She'd told Slvasta and the Air Force regiment marshals it was almost certain suicide, but they'd ordered the squadrons into the air anyway. If they hadn't, all Bienvenido would be lost.
Laura blamed herself for that.