La Trascendencia Dorada (69 page)

Read La Trascendencia Dorada Online

Authors: John C. Wright

Tags: #Ciencia-Ficción

BOOK: La Trascendencia Dorada
4.28Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

The clock said, “Sir—”

“Quiet. Leave me to the torment of my thoughts…”

“But, sir, you asked me to—”

“Did I not command silence?!”

“Sir, you asked me to tell you whenever someone was approaching.”

“Approaching…?” Helion straightened on his throne, his eyes bright and alert. Who could be here, on this last night before the Transcendence? With one segment of his mind (which he could divide to perform many parallel tasks at once) Helion sent a message to Descent Traffic Control, demanding an explanation. But the Descent Sophotech was occupied with pre-Transcendence business; only a limited partial mind was standing watch, a copy of one of Helion’s squires of honor, Leukios. He replied, “No ship is approaching, milord. She is docked.” “Docked? How did a ship come to dock?” “By the normal routine. I engaged the magnetohydrodynamic field generators to create a helmet streamer reaching up past the base corona, to create a zone of colder plasma through which the vessel could descend. I posted a report an hour ago. Your seneschal refused to pass the message along, asserting that you had instructed all servant systems to leave you in private.”

With another segment of his mind he ran an identity check. Since the Sophotechs were absent, he was not sure to whom he spoke, what type or level of mind, nor what the voice symbols were supposed to indicate, but the answer came back: “Helion, your guest is protected under the protocols of the masquerade. Identification is not available.”

“Tell me where this intruder is, at least?” “That is beyond the scope of my duties.” “Then switch me to your supervisor.” “My supervisor is Helion of the Silver-Gray, who is the only sapient being aboard the Array at this time----”

With a third segment of mind, simultaneously, he queried his Coryphaeus, a partial mind tasked with counting and coordinating the motions of men and animals throughout the unmeasured vastness of Solar Array habitat space. Helion was old enough to remember the days when police minds and watchman circuits were necessary to ensure that people would not violate the property or privacy of another. His Coryphaeus also had a security submind, dating from the late Sixth Era, one of the oldest servants of the many in Helion’s employ.

“Your visitor is now a hundred twenty-eight meters away from you, approaching along the main axial corridor of the command section, Golden Elder Strand Zero Center, Heliopolis Major.”

“Here, in other words, within my private sanctum?”

“Yes, milord.”

“Why was an intruder allowed to pass my doors? Why wasn’t he stopped at the outer atrium, at the inner gate, at the command doors, or at my privacy doors?”

The Coryphaeus answered in its archaic accent: “By your instruction.”

“My instruction…? I told you all to guard my solitude.”

“In the case where two orders contradict, I am to assent to the higher priority. This order is of the highest class of priority I recognize. I shall repeat the text.”

Helion’s own voice, blurred and faint as if from an ancient recording, came then, and the words were in an older rhythm, with words and expressions Helion had not used for four thousand years. He almost did not recognize the voice as his own, so different was it from his present way of speaking: “…I tell you, if ever when my best-loved friend should come again, whole or partial or anysomeway that be, hale him within, and let him pass. Let pass all doors and barricados, open firewalls, bridge delays, but bring him to me in all haste, or any who presents himself as him: he has priority higher than anything else I am doing or shall do hereafter, if only he will come again! If only he would call! Let be admitted any who come under the name of Hyacinth-Subhelion Septimus Gray…”

Then the Coryphaeus asked, “Those are your orders, eight thousand years old, but never revoked. What are your orders now?”

Hyacinth-Subhelion Septimus Gray. It was the name of a dead man.

Helion said, “How can it be Hyacinth?”

The Coryphaeus replied, “It was not said that this was Hyacinth, sir, only that this visitor is wearing the identity of Hyacinth, and in a fashion allowed by the masquerade. What are your orders?”

He heard the footsteps sounding on the balcony in the distance. Through an archway, lit by windows of fire to either side, a figure now came forward, and paused.

Helion rose to his feet, staring. With an abrupt gesture, he turned a mirror toward the figure, as if to amplify the view and see the other’s face more closely; but then be stopped. It was a violation of Silver-Gray forms of politeness to examine a guest by remote viewers, or speak by wire, when the other came for a face-to-face meeting.

Helion saw only a Silver-Gray cloak, trimmed richly with gold and green, and a glimpse of pale white armor beneath. It was a fashion Hyacinth himself used to affect, in the days just after he had lost the right to be Helion, but he still dressed and looked as much like Helion as copyright and sumptuary laws would allow.

The hooded figure stood on the balcony, motionless, perhaps watching Helion as closely as the other watched him.

Helion said to his Coryphaeus: “I will receive the visitor. Admit him.”

And a bridge extended from the rotunda across the wide space to the balcony.

Helion watched the white-cloaked figure approaching. He turned off his sense filter for a moment and examined the visitor’s true shape: a squat, pyramidal body, made of carbon-silicon, approaching through an opaque, dense medium that filled this place. Helion was not using sight (normal vision was not possible here) but was using echolocation.

The body told him nothing. Anyone entering the special environment of the Solar Array would have to adjust his body to this configuration; materials and routines for making the transmogrification were found aboard every drop ship in solsynchronous orbit.

Helion turned his sense filter back on. The hooded figure now stood not ten meters away, at the foot of the little hill of tiered thought boxes on which Helion had his throne.

Helion spoke first: “Is this some ghost I see before me, stirred up from some unquiet archive? Wakened, perhaps, by some unexpected power Earthmind has unleashed on this, the last night before we drown our separate humanity in all-embracing glory? If so, go back! Return to whatever museum or noumenal casket had carried your dead thoughts through all these years. The dead have nothing to say to the living.”

A neutral voice came from the hood. It was sent as text, but Helion’s sense filter interpreted it as a voice, did not add any detail of inflection, pitch, or rhythm. It sounded like a ghost talking indeed. “The dead can allow the living to recall the lives they used to live. Dead loved ones can warn the living of loves they are soon to lose.”

“Who are you?”

The cold and eerie voice came again: “Does my appearance frighten you? I had to assume this shape to be allowed to pass your doors. I cannot appear in my own shape; a terrible fate befalls whoever beholds me as I am!”

Helion squinted. “That is a line from one of Daphne’s Gothic melodramas. Owlswick Abbey—she wrote the scene flowchart script.”

“Many name her as the finest authoress of this time. I do her no dishonor to speak words she invents.”

Helion, with deliberate slowness, resumed his seat, and now he leaned his elbow upon his throne arm, hiding a half smile behind his knuckle, looking up from beneath his brow.

“And what is this warning you come to bring me, old ghost?”

“Just this: Do not lose your son, Phaethon, as you lost your bosom friend Hyacinth. Do not lose yourself. Phaethon knows the dying thought of your former self: you and he spoke just before you died, during a storm when no recording systems were alert. With that thought you can reconstruct your memory by extrapolation; you can become what Helion would have been, had he lived. The Curia will call you Helion and grant you his name and place and face and property. Otherwise, you are Helion Secundus, and Phaethon takes all your fortune with him into exile; this Solar Array, Helions house and memory caskets, riches, copyrights, thoughtrights, everything! But if you agree to loan Phaethon funds enough to buy his starship’s debts, and give him once again clear title to the vessel, he will tell all he knows, or, if that fails to make you into Helion, he will award to you your fortunes nonetheless.” Helion stared down for a time at the robed and hooded figure. Then he let free a sigh, and spoke in a tired tone: “Daphne, you know I cannot agree to those terms. I swore, long ago, to uphold the establishment of the College of Hortators, as our only dike against the tide of inhumanity which waits to inundate us. That oath I shall not breach, not even to regain my true self again, not while I love honor more than life.”

Daphne threw back the hood she wore, and signaled a waiver of her masquerade. Helion saw her face and heard her voice. “You are now in exile if you knowingly consort with me,” she said. “But I think you should join us: Temer Lacedaimon is here, outside, beyond the pale, and so is Aurelian Sophotech!”

“What?!!”

“Yes!”

“That means the Transcendance…”

She shook her head, her smile flashed. “Will not include the Hortators. They will not be in our future, then, will they? Or will you join the boycott yourself, and let the future you dreamed up, the one the Peers love so much, just go to waste, unheard?”

Helion frowned. “I should cut you out from my sense filter now, and hear no more of this … but… Aurelian in exile? He communicates with the Earth-mind. Is she in exile now, too?”

“Why do you think none of the Sophotechs is speaking?’ ”

“I thought they were preparing for the Transcendance…”

“They are preparing for war!”

There was a pause while Helion’s language routine brought that word up out of ancient memory, and checked the connotations for him. He said, “You do not call Phaethon’s conflict with the Hortators a war, do you? This is not a metaphor.”

“I mean war with the Second Oecumene, which killed my horse and tricked the Hortators into banishing Phaethon. The attack on him was real! Everything Phaethon said was true! Why didn’t you believe him, just believe him, instead of listening to other folk?! He would never have disbelieved, no matter what, in you!”

The sophistication of Helion’s mental system allowed him to embrace sudden revolutions of outlook without disorientation. Assistance circuits in his thalamus and hypothalamus made connections, reassessed emotional reactions, calculated a multitude of implications.

Because of this, he straightened on his throne and spoke in a calm, quick voice: “It took ten thousand years for the Last Broadcast to reach Sol from Cygnus X-1. Vafnir’s people sent one-way robot vessels, which, moving at far less than the speed of light, arrived some thirty thousand years after the death broadcast was received. Long enough for some sort of civilization to revive.

“No civilization answered their requests to build a breaking laser. The vessels fell through the dark Swan system with their light-sails spread wide, and to this day continue to infinity … as the probes passed the Cygnus X-l system, their readings showed conditions were indeed as the Last Broadcast depicted. No sign of industrial activity, no radio noise. Silence. Death.

“But the survivors of that event might have hidden themselves. It would not be difficult. The signals of an extrasystemic civilization, especially one ten thousand light-years away, could easily escape the notice of our astronomers.”

Daphne said, “Or the messages supposedly sent back from the robot probes had not come from them at all. The probes could have been destroyed. Their message content could have been forged. We are talking about a thousand light-years away, right? It can’t have been a very strong or complex signal. And our astronomers are picking it up one hundred centuries after it was sent.”

“In either case”—his eyes glittered dangerously—we are assuming an entire culture willing to go to extraordinary lengths to remain hidden. If that is so, what strategies would they have adopted? I submit that the Silent Oecumene would have, if they could afford the resources, both sent out additional colonies, in order to disperse their numbers, and posted watchers—what is the old term for it—?”

Daphne knew the word, “Spies.”

“Thank you. And posted spies within our Oecumene, to negate any efforts which might lead to their discovery.”

“You said the Silent Ones might have established colonies…? Just like what Phaethon wanted… Where? How many?”

Helion raised his hand and sent an image into her sense filter. Suddenly the rotunda where they were now seemed to float in deep space, with stars overhead and underfoot, a wide, three-dimensional array.

Helion said, “Here is Cygnus X-l. Observe; I surround it with concentric bubbles of possible travel times for ships of the type of Ao Ormgorgon’s Naglfar, built with Fifth Era technology. Likely candidates for star colonies are shown in white… I now rank the possible colony stars according to their desirability as hiding places, not as colonies, taking into account the presence of nebular dust and natural sources of radio noise which might mask large-scale industrial activity from Golden Oecumene astronomers.”

A sphere appeared around Cygnus X-l, and stars within the sphere were lit with ranking numerals. Slender lines from Cygnus X-l showed possible travel paths, none intruding anywhere near the space near Sol.

Helion continued: “Now then, making a rough estimate of the natural resources of the Silent Oecumene (and they do have limits on their resources—their black hole can produce tremendous useful energy, but it is nevertheless immobile), I conclude that, of these possible target stars, and assuming expeditions the size of the multigeneration ship Naglfar, there could be between five hundred and twelve hundred colonial systems, with at least two hundred expeditions still in flight, and destined to reach their targets over the next three millennia…”

More figures and light signs appeared near certain of the stars, and certain travel paths lit up, showing the locations of possible expeditions still in flight. “If we assume a less cost intensive method of spread, such as, for example, microscopic nanotechnology spore packages wafted through space on stellar winds or propelled by light-sail launching lasers, the possible zone of colonies is smaller, because the travel time is larger…” A littler sphere of light, smaller than the first, appeared around Cygnus X-l. This one did not even reach all the way back to Sol. Helion said, “So we can assume the colonization takes place by shipping.” Daphne had not finished upbraiding Helion about his conduct toward Phaethon, and wanted to get back to the subject of the bargain she wished to compel him to accept. But, nonetheless, she found herself distracted by the scope of Helion’s speculations. “So the Silent Oecumene is… what…? An interstellar empire?”

Other books

Two Notorious Dukes by Norton, Lyndsey
Tears of Pearl by Tasha Alexander
The Wedding Caper by Janice Thompson
Wrong by Jana Aston
Immortal Blood (1) by Artso, Ramz
Rough Riders by Jordan Silver
Homeless Bird by Gloria Whelan