Nebula Awards Showcase 2012 (34 page)

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Authors: James Patrick Kelly,John Kessel

Tags: #Science Fiction, #General, #Fiction, #Short Stories, #Science Fiction; American, #Anthologies (Multiple Authors), #made by MadMaxAU

BOOK: Nebula Awards Showcase 2012
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“I did not mention you by name,” I said, glad I’d managed to avoid slipping up. “But she requested that I bring you to her. I think this is a chance to convince a swale with real authority to do something to stop sexual assault.”

 

After a short pause, Neuter Kimball said, “Why do you say Leviathan has real authority?”

 

“She told me she is the first and greatest of all swales. Isn’t that true?” I asked, suddenly worried that I’d been taken in by a swale con artist.

 

“She told you?” Neuter Kimball said. “We are not supposed to talk of it to humans, but if she has revealed herself as a god to you, then that is her choice.”

 

“A god? Leviathan is not a god. She’s just . . .” I stopped. What was I going to say: an ancient immortal being who created an entire race of intelligent beings? If that didn’t fit the definition of a god, it was pretty close. “Neuter Kimball, if you believe Leviathan to be a god, why did you join the Church?”

 

“Because I do not want her as my god.”

 

“Why not?”

 

Another long pause. “I probably should not have said anything about her.”

 

Going to see Leviathan to plead the case for Neuter Kimball had seemed like a great opportunity. Now I wasn’t so sure. “If you think you will be in any danger from Leviathan, you don’t have to go.”

 

“Do you believe God is greater than Leviathan?” Its alto voice was plaintive.

 

“Yes, I do,” I said.

 

“Then I will have faith in God and go with you.”

 

~ * ~

 

Unlike the much larger solar shuttle that had brought me to Sol Central Station, the observation shuttle had room for only two people. I strapped into the copilot’s seat next to Dr. Merced, although we were both essentially passengers because the shuttle’s computer would do the actual piloting.

 

After getting clearance from Traffic Control, the computer spun up the superconducting magnets for the Heim drive and we left the station.

 

On a monitor, I watched the computer-generated visualization of our shuttle approaching the energy shield that protected us from the twenty-eight million degrees Fahrenheit and the 340 billion atmospheres of pressure. I held my breath as the shield stretched, forming a bulge around the shuttle. Soon we were in a bubble still connected by a thin tube to the shield around the station. Then the tube snapped, and our bubble wobbled a bit before settling down to a sphere.

 

“You can start breathing again,” said Dr. Merced with a wry smile.

 

I did. “It was that noticeable?”

 

With a chuckle, she said, “The energy shield is not going to fail. It’s a self-sustaining reaction powered by the energy of the solar plasma around it.”

 

“Yeah, but on the station I can usually avoid thinking about what would happen if for some reason it did fail.”

 

“The good news is, if it did fail, you wouldn’t notice.”

 

“There’s a backup system?” I asked.

 

“No.” She grinned. “You’ll just be dead before you have time to notice.”

 

“Thank you for that tremendously comforting insight, Dr. Merced,” I said.

 

“Look, we’re going to be shipmates for the next couple of days, so why don’t you drop the Dr. Merced bit and call me Juanita?”

 

I nodded. “Thank you, Juanita. And you can call me . . . Your Excellency.”

 

Juanita snorted. “I can already tell this is going to be a long trip. Oh, looks like our escort has arrived.”

 

On the monitor, a swale twice the size of our energy shield bubble undulated closer. A text overlay read
Kimball (Class 1, Neuter)
.

 

“Let’s get the full view,” she said and pressed a few buttons.

 

I gasped as a full holographic display surrounded us, as if we were traveling in a glass sphere. Against the yellow background of the Sun, a giant swirl of orange and red swam alongside us. “Kimball” was superimposed in dark green letters.

 

“Can I talk to it?” I asked.

 

“Computer, set up an open channel with Kimball,” said Juanita.

 

“Channel open,” said the computer.

 

“Hello, Neuter Kimball,” I said. “It’s nice to finally meet you.”

 

“It is nice to meet you, too, President Malan, although I hope you will forgive me for not shaking your hand.”

 

I smiled. “Forgiven.” I was constantly surprised how much swales seemed to know about our customs and culture, compared with how little we seemed to know of theirs. “And I’m here with Dr. Merced, who is a scientist—”

 

Juanita laughed. “It’s known me a lot longer than it’s known you.”

 

“Hello, Juanita,” said Neuter Kimball. “I’m glad you are with us.”

 

“Shortly after I began my work here,” Juanita said, “it was the first solcetacean I observed personally. It went by the human name Pemberly back then.”

 

“Another swale had transmitted
Pride and Prejudice
to me, and I decided to seek out humans to see what they were like,” Neuter Kimball said. “You are a fascinating race.”

 

The thought came to me that maybe there had been some pride and prejudice between me and Juanita—possibly because she was annoyed that a swale she particularly liked had become a Mormon. But maybe we could work out our differences and—I shoved that thought away. “Swales are also fascinating. I hope to understand you as well someday as you understand us.”

 

“Kimball, our shuttle is on a course to take us to Leviathan, so you can just follow us,” said Juanita. “But stay at least fifty meters away from us.”

 

“I will keep my distance,” said Neuter Kimball.

 

I must have shown my puzzlement because Juanita pressed a button to mute the call and said, “Solcetaceans and energy shields don’t play well together. A few years back, a Class 1—about Kimball’s size—was showing off for a couple of observers, and glanced off a shuttle’s energy shield. It tore a big chunk off the solcetacean that took months to heal.”

 

“What about the shuttle? And the people inside?” Sometimes I got the feeling she cared more about swales than about people.

 

After a moment, Juanita said, “This shuttle was the replacement.”

 

“What happened?”

 

“The shield did
not
collapse, but part of the solcetacean made it through—probably because the shield works similarly to how solcetaceans hold their bodies together, so the shield sort of merged with the solcetacean’s skin. When they recovered the shuttle, they found that the plasma had vaporized part of it, including the crew compartment.”

 

“I guess it’s good I didn’t hear about this before coming on this trip,” I said.

 

“Don’t worry—this shuttle was built with an ablative shell specifically to withstand that sort of accident,” she said. “So I’m really more concerned with what would happen to Kimball if it bumped into us.”

 

“Or Leviathan?”

 

“Leviathan’s so big, she might not even notice.”

 

~ * ~

 

I spent most of the sixteen-hour trip polishing and improving what I would say to Leviathan to convince her to outlaw coerced sexual activity. I had been a debater in high school and college, so I felt I knew how to construct a convincing argument. But eventually I reached the point where I felt I was making my prepared speech worse, not better.

 

“Approaching destination,” the computer said.

 

I blinked a few times to clear my eyes, straightened up in my seat, and began looking around. Neuter Kimball’s orange and red form moved silently beside us. I scanned the holographic image for more orange and red, but didn’t see any.

 

“There,” said Juanita, pointing ahead of us. She pressed a button, and dark green letters sprang up:
Leviathan (Class 10, Female)
.

 

Staring harder, I noticed a bright spot above the letters. As we drew closer, I could distinguish white, violet, and blue swirling together. “She’s not orange or red.”

 

“It’s all false color, anyway,” Juanita said, “but this imaging system uses color to indicate energy levels. Leviathan is actually hotter than the surrounding solar plasma. We think she carries out fusion inside herself.”

 

Leviathan grew in our view, stretching out to fill most of the holographic screen in front of us. The intricate dance of violet and blue amid the white was mesmerizing. Eventually she shone so brightly that I had to squint to reduce the glare. “Aren’t we getting too close?” I asked.

 

“We’re still three kilometers away,” Juanita said. But she added, “Computer, hold position relative to Leviathan.”

 

“Neuter Kimball, are you ready?” I asked.

 

“I feel a bit like Abinidi going before King Noah,” it said.

 

I kind of agreed, but I said, “Try to think of it as Ammon going before King Lamoni instead.”

 

“That would be better,” said Neuter Kimball. “But I am ready in any case.”

 

Juanita hit the mute. “What was that about?”

 

“References to the Book of Mormon. Abinidi was burned at the stake after preaching to King Noah, but King Lamoni was converted by Ammon’s preaching.”

 

She just shook her head, muttering something about fairy tales, then said, “Computer, set up an open channel to Leviathan.”

 

“Channel open,” the computer replied.

 

“Leviathan, this is President Malan,” I said. “I have come with my church member, Neuter Kimball, as you requested. We petition you to tell your people—”

 

“Silence, human,” boomed the voice from the speaker. “It is not yet time for you to speak.”

 

I shut up.

 

“You will come with me,” Leviathan said. Her form brightened. There was a blinding flash, then the holographic system compensated and lowered its brightness.

 

It took several seconds before the afterimage cleared enough for me to make out shapes. Leviathan still loomed in front, and Neuter Kimball remained beside us.

 

“Uh-oh,” said Juanita.

 

“What?” I blinked hard, trying to clear my vision. The Sun’s background seemed blue instead of yellow.

 

“I don’t think we’re in Kansas anymore.” Juanita tapped at her keyboard. “Leviathan ported us to another star—one with a core much hotter than the Sun. Looks like the shield is holding, for now.” She took the Lord’s name in vain—or possibly it was a heartfelt prayer for help—and added, “We’re stuck here unless she takes us back.”

 

“What about Neuter Kimball?” I asked.

 

“Only a Class 6 or larger can open a portal on its own.”

 

Green letters began popping up on the screen.
Unknown (Class 10, Male).Unknown (Class 9, Female). Unknown (Class 10, Neuter).Unknown (Class 8, Male).
My eyes adjusted enough that I could see their forms. Dozens of swales surrounded us, all of them tagged Class 8 or higher.

 

“What have you gotten us into?” Juanita said.

 

I said a silent prayer and hoped for the best. “It’s a great opportunity for both of us. Think of what you’re going to discover.”

 

She took a deep breath. “You’re right. It’s just that I was prepared to study Leviathan, not sixty Class 8 and up. No one’s ever seen more than three or four giant ones together.”

 

“Is Leviathan the biggest one here?”

 

After checking a readout, Juanita said, “Yes, but not by much.” She pointed at a swale off to the left. “That male is only about 2 percent smaller.”

 

“So it looks like she wasn’t lying about that.”

 

She nodded her agreement, then said, “Why did you say it’s a great opportunity for you?”

 

I swept my arm across the view. “These must be the most prestigious swales, the leaders. If I can talk to them, convince them to make a law against sexual assault, then the smaller swales will accept it. That has to be why Leviathan brought me and Neuter Kimball here.”

 

“You are wrong,” said Neuter Kimball. Juanita must have taken the mute off at some point.

 

“Why do you say that?”

 

“This is a deathwatch council,” said Neuter Kimball. “They are here to watch me die so they can tell all swales that my death was deserved.”

 

“What?” I said. “What have you done?”

 

“I’m sure Leviathan will—”

 

Leviathan’s voice cut Neuter Kimball’s off. “This little one has abandoned me in favor of a human god. Such error I could forgive. But on its behalf, the tiny human seeks to impose its moral code on us. The human’s mind is infinitesimal compared to ours. The human’s life is short; the history of its race is short. It is the least of us, and yet it seeks power over us.”

 

“I don’t seek power over—” I began.

 

“Silence!” Leviathan thundered. “The human must see the error of its ways. Kimball!”

 

“Yes, Leviathan?”

 

“Your life is forfeit. But I will grant reprieve if you will renounce the human religion and return to me.”

 

I had read of martyrdom in the scriptures and history of the Church all my life. But nowadays it was supposed to be a merely academic exercise, as you examined your faith to see if it was strong enough that you would die for the gospel of Christ. Actual killing over religious belief wasn’t supposed to happen anymore.

 

And I found my own faith lacking as I hoped that Neuter Kimball’s faith was weak, that it would deny the faith and live rather than be killed.

 

“I am to be Abinidi after all, President Malan,” said Neuter Kimball. “I choose to live as a Mormon, and I will die as one if it be God’s will.”

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