by Ken   MacLeod
Editorial Reviews

Amazon.com
With his third novel, Ken MacLeod elaborates on the future timeline from his first two works, The
Star Fraction (1995) and The Stone Canal (1996). Most relevant is book two, which established a
colony on the remote world of New Mars via a spatial wormhole created by superhumans--
transcendent machine-hosted intelligences called the "fast-folk." The original fast-folk crashed
from too much contemplation of their metaphorical navels, but their descendants on Jupiter still
harass Earth with virus transmissions that have killed off computers and the Internet. Enter heroine
Ellen May Ngwethu of the Cassini Division, an elite space-going force created to defend against
the fast-folk. Her wild doings in the 24th century's anarcho-socialist utopia make for fun reading--
everyone will covet her smart-matter clothing that can become a spacesuit, combat outfit, evening
gown, or satellite dish at will. But the Division's political philosophy is brutally tough, with
alarming plans to use a planet-wrecking doomsday weapon against "enemies," who may not be
hostile at all. In a climax of slam-bang space battle, MacLeod crashes the ongoing ethical debate
into a brick wall and leaves you gasping. Witty, skillful, provocative, but just a trifle too glibly
resolved. --David Langford, Amazon.co.uk --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable
edition of this title.


From Library Journal
As an agent of the elite Cassini Division, Ellen May Ngewthu conceives of a bold plan to stop the
incursions of godlike posthumans, whose arrogance nearly destroyed humankind and whose
existence still threatens the safety of the Solar Union. Set in the 24th century, MacLeod's third
novel features nonstop action and a tough-as-nails protagonist. Large libraries should consider this
title for their old-style sf adventure fans.
Copyright 1999 Reed Business Information, Inc. --This text refers to an out of print or unavailable
edition of this title.


Spotlight Reviews
             Slow - Boring - Lacks Creativity, October 17, 2000
    Reviewer:
   The Cassini Division "doesnt" read like Iain M Banks or Vernor Vinge despite what a few [...]
reviewers have claimed. Banks creates exotic locations/charactes better - while Vinge has no
trouble mapping out scope and a "sense of wonder." This book seemed more like a "bad" novel
from Stephen Baxer or Charles Sheffield - authors who "can" write brilliantly at times.
   So why did I bother with this book knowing that it has recieved poor reviews? If you read the
back cover, the premise for the novel is actually quite interesting. A soldier and leader of the
Cassini Division has to stop God-Like beings who disintegrated Ganymede. These beings punched
a wormhole into Jovian space and are bombarding the inner solar system with powerfull data
viruses.
   While some of the science and technical parts of the Cassini Division are interesting, the details
were always glossed over. And it takes a good 100 pages before the science is really mentioned
anyway.
   Ken Macleod doesnt put much emphasis on the military aspect of the lead character - Ellen May
Ngewthu. All she really does throughout the novel is converse with other characters about how
humanity "must" commit mass genocide against the superior beings. Now I have no problems with
the "morality" issue that some reviewers complained about, but it is here, that the Cassini Division
failed to impress me. The characters act and talk as if they are telling the "reader" about ethics and
the implications of genocide. It makes for some very childish dialog throughout the later pages of
the book.
   PRO: The Concepts are interesting. And the political backdrop for the novel has above average
depth - C. J. Cherryh, Jack Vance, and Lois McMaster Bujold are still better at politics and
sociology however.
   CON: The Concepts are not given the attention they need. The book starts slow and doest pick
up till after 100 pages into it. The character dialog is horrible. The interaction with the Jovians
lacks imagination. And the Cassini Division has a very predictable ending.
   RECOMENDATION: Skip this book and "maybe" look for it at the library. --This text refers to
               Terrific hard SF in the Vernor Vinge tradition, July 31, 2000
    Reviewer:
   Idea-packed science fiction driven by the ramifications of a group of humans who have passed
through the evolutionary "singularity" and become something beyond our knowledge, and who now
live in Jupiter, emitting radio viruses forcing Earth to radically change its technology. If that
weren't enough, McLeod also presents an anarcho-socialist society and contrasts it with an anarcho-
capitalist society and does so in a much more plausible manner than (say) Robert Heinlein ever did.
Protagonist Ellen is a key member of the Cassini Division, tasked to deal with the post-humans if
necessary, and on a mission to secure a manner in which to do so. Her point of view is decidedly
prejudiced, which is a big part of what makes this book enjoyable: It's got characterization, world-
building, AND a plot. One of the best novels I've read in several years, it's hard to believe it's under
300 pages. --This text refers to the Hardcover edition.
    All Customer Reviews
            Ideas That Push The Envelope Of Possibilities!, June 9, 2002
    Reviewer:
   Ellen May Ngwethu is the central character in this sequel to THE STONE CANAL, and this
novel begins many years later. Ellen is a member of the Jupiter system based 'Cassini Division',
their purpose is to destroy any posthuman life they encounter, primarily around the planet Jupiter.
In the beginning of this novel Ellen travels to Earth as the commander of the fusion ship 'Terrible
Beauty' to enlist the help of Dr. I.K. Malley, the physicist who knows more about the wormhole
near Jupiter than anyone else, connecting our solar system to where New Mars is located,
thousands of light years distant. The Cassini Division would like to travel through the wormhole to
New Mars so they would be able to search for and destroy any posthumans found there.
   There is debate as to whether or not the posthumans are conscious at all, and Macleod illustrates
a racism here that one day may actually take place to our detriment and shame: is posthuman life
conscious or just a computer program emulation of consciousness? Also discussed is the question
of identity when a mind is uploaded into a computer, is the person the same as the original, or just a
copy, with the original alive or dead giving added debate. This is a very complex topic and
Macleod touches on it briefly as he presents to us a far ranging philosophical view of what it means
to be human in this future he has spun, several hundred years from now, a future after the
'Singularity' in which science and technology has very nearly totally transformed life as we know it
and how we live, great reading indeed. Plot and character development were good, and this novel is
full of many interesting ideas, not necessarily original, including nano-fabrication of food and
almost anything else, mind viruses, wormholes (most unlikely part of the book), anti-aging pills for
eternal youth, mind back-ups in computers (with it's ensuing questions of identity), cloning,
artificial people, smart suits (the book is worth reading just for this).
   The book was a page turner for me, and I loved it's no-nonsense forward looking philosophy.
              Decent Adventure Novel, March 18, 2002

             Reviewer:

   This is a reasonably entertaining book. The plot concerns the efforts of humans, assisted by
advanced technology including everyone's fad favorite, nanotechnology, to combat sentient 'post-
human' entities who developed from a melding of human minds with computer technology. This
book contains a lot of entertaining ideas and suffers from MacLeod's tendency to pack a large
volume of material into a relatively short book. Plot and characterization suffer considerably as a
result.
                                    About the Author
   Ken MacLeod graduated with a B.Sc. in Zoology from Glasgow University in 1976. Following
research in biomechanics at Brunel University, he worked in a variety of manual and clerical jobs
while completing an M.Phil. thesis. He previously worked as a computer analyst/programmer in
Edinburgh, but is now a full-time writer. He lives in West Lothian, Scotland, with his wife and
children, and is the author of two previous novels, The Star Fraction, runner-up for the Arthur C.
Clarke Award, and The Stone Canal.
Contents
About the Author
1 Looking Backward
2 After London
3 News From Nowhere
4 The State of the Art
5 The Coming Race
6 Valhalla
8 City of the Living Dead
9 A Modern Utopia
10 In the Days of the Comet
11 Looking Forward
                                1      Looking Backward
    THERE ARE, still, still photographs of the woman who gate-crashed the party on the
observation deck of the Casa Azores, one evening in the early summer of 2303. They show her
absurdly young about twenty, less than a tenth of her real age and tall; muscles built-up by
induction isotonics and not dragged down by gravity; hair a black nebula; dark skin, epicanthic
eyelids, a flattish nose, and thin lips whose grin is showing broad white teeth. She carries in her
right hand a litre bottle of carbon-copy Lagrange 2046. Her left hand is at her shoulder, and on its
crooked forefinger is slung a bolero jacket the colour of old gold, matching a gown whose almost
circular skirts hem is swinging about her ankles as she strides in. What looks like a small monkey
is perched on her right, bare, shoulder.
    Something flashed. I blinked away annular afterimages, and glared at a young man clad in
cobalt-blue pyjamas who lowered a boxy apparatus of lenses and reflectors with a brief apologetic
smile as he ducked away into the crowd. Apart from him, my arrival had gone unnoticed.
Although the deck was a good hundred metres square, it didn’t have room for everybody who was
invited, let alone everybody who’d turned up. The natural progress of the evening, with people
hitting off and drifting away to more private surroundings, would ease the pressure, but not yet.
    There was room enough, however, for a variety of activities: close dancing, huddled eating,
sprawled drinking, intense talking; and for a surprising number of children to scamper among them
all. Cunningly focused sound systems kept each cluster of revellers relatively content with, and
compact in, their particular ambience. The local fashions seemed to fit the party, loose and fluid
but close to the body: women in saris or shifts, men in pyjama-suits or serious-looking togas and
tabards. The predominant colours were the basic sea-silk tones of blue, green, red, and white. My
own outfit, though distinctive, didn’t seem out of place.
    The centre of the deck was taken up by the ten-metre-wide pillar of the building’s air shaft.
Somewhere in one of the groups around it, talking above the faint white noise of the falling air,
would be the couple whose presence was the occasion for the party the people I’d come to speak to,
if only for a moment. There was no point in pushing through the crowd like anyone here who
really wanted to, I’d reach them eventually by always making sure I was headed in their direction.
    I made my way to a drinks table, put down my bottle and picked up a glass of Mare Imbrium
white. The first sip let me know that it was, aptly enough, very dry. My slight grimace met a
knowing smile. It came from the man in blue, who’d somehow managed to appear in front of me.
    “Aren’t you used to it?”
    So he knew, or had guessed, whence I came. I made a show of inspecting him, over a second
sip. He was, unlike me, genuinely young. Not bad-looking, in the Angloslav way, with dirty-
blonde tousled hair and pink, shaved face; broad cheekbones, blue eyes. Almost as tall as me taller,
if I took my shoes off. His curious device hung on a strap around his neck.
    “Comet vodka’s more to my taste,” I said. I handed the glass into the monkey-thing’s small
black paws and stuck out my hand. “Ellen May Ngwethu. Pleased to meet you, neighbour.”
    “Stephan Vrij,” he said, shaking hands. “Likewise.” He watched as the drink was returned.
    “Smart monkey,” he said.
    “That’s right,” I replied, unhelpfully. Smart spacesuit, was the truth of it, but people down here
tended to get edgy around that sort of stuff.
   “Well,” he went on, “I’m on the block committee, and tonight I’m supposed to welcome the
uninvited and the unexpected.”
   “Ah, thanks. And to flash bright lights at them?”
   “It’s a camera,” he said, hefting it. “I made it myself.”
   It was the first time I’d seen a camera visible to the naked eye.
   My interest in this wasn’t entirely feigned in order to divert any questions about myself, but after
a few minutes of his explaining about celluloid film and focal lengths he seemed unsurprised that
my glazed-over gaze was wandering. He smiled and said: “Well, enjoy yourself, Ellen. I see some
other new arrivals.”
   “See you around.” I watched him thread his way back towards the doors. So my picture would
turn up in the building’s newspaper, and a hundred thousand people would see it. Fame. But not
such as to worry about. This was the middle of the Atlantic, and the middle of nowhere.
   The Casa Azores was (is? unlikely I’ll stick to the past tense, though the pangs are sharp) on
Graciosa, a small island in an archipelago in the North Atlantic, which is (probably, even now) an
ocean on Earth. It was so far from anywhere that, even from its kilometre-high observation deck,
you couldn’t observe its neighbouring islands. The sea and sky views might be impressive, but
right now all the huge windows showed was reflected light from within. The lift from which I’d
made my entrance was at the edge, and I had to get to the central area within the next few hours,
sometime after the crowd had thinned but before everyone was too exhausted to think.
   I drained the glass, picked up a bottle of good Sungrazer Stolichnya, gave the monkey a clutch
of stemmed goblets to hold in its little fingers, and set out to work the party.
   “Nanotech’s all right in itself,” a small and very intense artist was explaining. “I mean, you can
see atoms, right? Heck, with the bucky waldoes you can feel them, move them about and stick
them together. It’s mechanical linkages all the way up to your fingers. And to your screen, for that
matter. But all that electronic quantum stuff is, like, spooky ...”
   She had other listeners. I moved on.
   “You’re from space? Oh, great. I work with the people in the orbitals. We do zaps. Say
you’ve got a replicator outbreak somewhere, natural or nano, like it makes a difference ... anyway,
before the zap we all sorta wander around the evac zone, one, to check there’s nobody there and,
two, just to soak up and record anything that might get lost. You don’t get much time, you’re in an
isolation suit that has to be flashed off you before you come out, for obvious reasons takes most of
your body hair with it, too but even so, you can see and feel and hear a lot, and for hours or days,
depending on how fast the outbreak’s spreading, there’s nobody else around for tens of kilometres.
You know, just about every one I’ve done, I’ve picked up a species that wasn’t in the bank. Genus,
sometimes. Not known to science, as they say. Ran out of girlfriends to name them after, had to
start on my actual relatives. And then you come out, and you sit around with the goggles and
watch the zap. I mean, I like to see the flash, it’s the next best thing to watching a nuke go off.”
   The ecologist stopped and took another deep hit on the hookah. I waved away his offer of a
toke. He sighed.
   “The times when there’s nobody around but you ... You just gotta love that wilderness
experience.”
   I had reached halfway across to the centre of the room. I wanted to offer the stoned scientist a
shot of vodka, but the monkey had, in a moment of abstraction, devoured my last spare glass. The
man didn’t mind. He assured me he’d remember my name, and that some beetle or bug or
bacterium would, one day, be named in my honour. I realised that I couldn’t remember his name.
Or perhaps he hadn’t told me, or perhaps ... a certain amount of passive smoking was going on
around here. I thanked him, and moved on.
    “And don’t do things like that,” I murmured. “It’s conspicuous.” A cold paw teased my ear, and
a faint, buzzing voice said: “We’re low on silicates.”
    I scratched the little pseudo-beast in response, and hoped no one had noticed my lips move. I
felt a sudden pang of hunger and a need for a head-clearing dose of coffee, and stopped at the
nearest buffet table. A woman wearing a plain, stained white apron over a gorgeous green sari
ladled me a hot plate of limpets in tomato sauce. (All real, if it matters. I guess it must: my mouth
waters at the memory, even now.) I decided on a glass of white wine. There were empty chairs
around, so I sat. The woman sat, too, at the other side of the table, and chatted with me as I ate.
    “I’ve just spoken to our special guests,” she said. She had an unusual accent. “Such interesting
people. An artificial woman, and a man from the stars! And back from the dead, in a sense.” She
looked at me sharply. “Perhaps you’ll have met them before, being from space yourself?”
    I smiled at her. “How come everyone knows I’m from space?” “Your dress, neighbour,” she
said. “Gold is a space thing, isn’t it? It isn’t one of our colours.” “Of course,” I said. For a
moment I’d thought she’d guessed it was a spacesuit. After she’d spoken, after I’d had a minute to
observe how she moved, the subtle way her face cast its expressions, it was obvious that she was
well into her second century. There would be no fooling her. She looked right back at me, her
eyes shining like the pins in her piled-up black hair.
    “Gold is such a useful metal,” she said. “You know, Lenin thought we’d use it for urinals ...”
    I laughed. “Not his only mistake!”
    Her reply was a degree or two cooler that her first remarks. “He didn’t make many, and those he
did were the opposite of ... what’s usually held against him. He thought too highly of people, as
individuals and in the mass. Anyway,” she went on, complacently, “some of us still think highly of
him.”
    I’d placed her accent now. “In South Africa?” They were a notoriously conservative lot. Some
of them were virtually Communists.
    “Why, yes, neighbour!” She smiled. “And you’re from ... now don’t tell me ... not near-Earth;
not Lagrange ... and you’re no Loony or Martian, that’s for sure.” She frowned, watching as I lifted
my glass, looking past me at, perhaps, her memory of how I’d walked up to the table. Weighing
and measuring my reflexes. “Yes!” She clapped her hands. “You’re a Callistan girl, aren’t you?
And that means.. .”
    Her eyes widened a fraction, her brows rose.
    “Yes,” I said quietly. “The Cassini Division. And yes, I’ve seen your guests before.” I winked,
ever so slightly, and made a tiny downward movement with my fingers as I reached across the table
for a piece of bread. Not one in a hundred would have as much as noticed the gesture. She
understood it, and smiled, and talked about other things.
    The Cassini Division ... In astronomy, the Cassini Division is a dark band in the rings of Saturn.
In the astronautics of the Heliocene Epoch, the Cassini Division was the proud name originally
given in jest of a dark band indeed, a military force in the ring of Jupiter. You know about the ring
of Jupiter but to us it was more than a remarkable product of planetary engineering, it was a
standing reminder of the power of our enemies. It was our Guantanamo, our Berlin Wall. (Look
them up. Earth history. There are files.) The Cassini Division was the Solar Union’s front-line
force, our collective fist in the enemy’s face. In our classless society it was the closest thing to an
elite; in our anarchy, the nearest we came to a state; in our commonwealth, it held the greatest share
of riches. Its recruits chose themselves, and not many could meet a standard of that rigour. In
terms of sheer fire power the Division could have flattened all the states Earth ever knew, and still
had enough left over for a bit of target practice to occupy the afternoon. The resources it controlled
could have bought everything on Earth, in the age when that world was owned and it still stood
ready for the exchange, to give as good as it got, to pit our human might against the puny wrath of
gods.
   In other words ... the Division was there to kick post-human ass. And we did.
   (And yes. I’m still proud of it.) The South African woman might have had unsound views about
Vladimir Ilyich, but she turned out to be one of the “old comrades”. Although the International had
long since dissolved into the Union, its former members maintained their contacts, their veterans”
freemasonry. I’d never really approved of this, but it-helped me here. She introduced me to one of
her friends, who introduced me to another, and so on. By an unspoken agreement they passed me
along their chain of acquaintance, moving me through the crowd a lot faster than I’d managed on
my own. Only half-an-hour after I’d finished my coffee, I found myself among a small cluster of
people, at the focus of which were the party’s special guests: the artificial woman, and the man who
had come back from the stars, and from the dead. Even five years after their arrival, they could still
pull a crowd all the more so because they seldom did, preferring to wander around and talk to
people they happened to meet.
   The artificial woman was called Meg. She didn’t look artificial right now, and indeed her body
cloned from that of some long dead Malaysian-American porn actress, I understand was in some
respects more natural than mine. Only her personality was artificial.
   It was a human personality in every way we’d ever been able to observe, but it was she’d always
insisted running on top of a genuine artificial intelligence.
   In which case the small, pretty woman standing a couple of yards away from me, elegantly
smoking a tobacco cigarette, with her black hair hanging to her waist, and wearing a long black
silk-satin shift and (unless my eyes deceived me) absolutely nothing else, was the only autonomous
Al on Earth. A troubling thought, and it had troubled me ever since I’d met her.
   The autonomous AI hadn’t noticed me yet. She was looking at her companion, Jonathan Wilde,
the man who had come back. Wilde, as usual, was holding forth; as usual, waving his hands; as
usual, smoking tobacco, a vile habit that seemed hardwired into him and Meg both. He was a tall
man, sharp-featured, hook-nosed, loud-voiced. His accent had changed, but still rang strangely in
my ears.
   “never actually met him,” he was saying, “but I did see him on television, and read some of what
he put out during the Fall Revolution. I must say it’s a surprise to find him still remembered.” He
paused, flashing a quick, rueful smile. “Especially since I’m forgotten!”
   People around him laughed. It was one of Wilde’s standing jokes that the ideas he or rather, the
human being of which he was a copy had espoused back in the twenty-first century were now of
interest only to antiquarians, and that his name was only a footnote in the history of the Space
Movement. In some odd way, this very obscurity flattered his vanity.
   As he stood there grinning he saw me. He stared at me, as if momentarily confused. Meg
turned and saw me and gave me a welcoming smile. Wilde nodded slightly, and returned to his
discourse. I didn’t know whether to feel slighted or relieved. As the first person he’d seen on his
emergence from the wormhole, I had some importance in Wilde’s life ... but I didn’t want him
introducing me as such, and thus letting everyone present know where I was from.
   Meg stepped over and caught my hands.
   “It’s good to see you again, Ellen.”
    “Yeah, you too,” I said, and meant it. Her personality might be synthetic, but its appeal was
genuine. I’d sometimes wondered what she saw in Wilde, whose fabled charm had never worked
on me. “What brings you here?” Meg asked.
    “You don’t make yourselves easy to find,” I said lightly. “So I thought I’d take the
opportunity.”
    Meg smiled. “You’re a busy woman, Ellen. You want something.”
    “Oh, you know,” I said. “Perhaps we can talk about it later?”
    She was looking up at me, a small frown on her smooth brow.
    “Of course,” she said. “Things should quiet down, soon.”
    I laughed. “You mean, like when Wilde’s spoken to everybody?”
    “Something like that.” She drew me to a nearby seat, just outside the huddle, and I sat down
with her. “This is all a bit exhausting,” she said absently. She stroked one bare foot with the other,
and stubbed out her cigarette. The monkey hopped from my shoulder and clutched the edge of the
ashtray, its big eyes entreating me. I shook my head at it. It bared its teeth, then turned away from
me and let Meg play with it.
    Wilde’s voice, carrying: “this whole thing: turning his sayings into a scripture, and him into a
martyred prophet it’s almost the only irrationality you people have left! I think he would have
laughed!” And with that Wilde’s laugh boomed, and those around him joined in, hesitantly. The
conversation broke up over the next few minutes, and Wilde ambled over and sat down beside me.
The three of us were perched as if on a log in an eddied swirl. Around us people partied on; now
and again someone would drift over, see no response signalled, and turn away. Some left, but most
hung around, tactfully out of earshot.
    We exchanged greetings and then Wilde leaned away from me and sat shoulder-to-shoulder with
Meg.
    “Well, Ellen,” he said. “You got us where you want us.” He lit a cigarette and accepted a shot of
vodka. He looked down at his glass. “This has already had several other drinks in it,” he observed.
“Nice thing about vodka, of course, is it doesn’t matter. Any taste is an improvement. I’m drunk
already. So if there’s anything you forgot to ask us, in the debriefing -“
    “Interrogation.” I always hated the old statist euphemisms.
    “go right ahead. Now’s your chance.” He swayed farther back and looked at me with a defiant
grin.
    “You know what I want, Wilde,” I said heavily. I was a bit drunk myself, and more than a little
tired. Gravity gets you down (and space sucks, but that’s life). “Don’t ask me to spell it out.”
    He leaned forward. I could smell the smoke and spirits on his breath.
    “Oh, I know better than that,” he said. “The same old question. Well, it’s the same old answer:
no. There is no way, no fucking way I’m going to give you people what you are so carefully not
asking for.”
    “Why not?”
    Always the same question, which always got the same answer: “I won’t let you lot get your
hands on the place.”
    I felt my fists clench at my sides, and slowly relaxed them.
    “We don’t want the wretched place!”
    “Hah!” said Wilde, with open disbelief. “Whatever. It won’t be me who gives you the means to
take it.”
    It would have to be somebody else who did, then, I thought. I kept my voice steady, and quiet.
    “Not even to fight the Outwarders?”
   “You don’t need it to fight the Outwarders.”
   “Isn’t that for us to judge?”
   Wilde nodded. “Sure. You make your judgements, and I‘ll make mine.”
   I wanted to shake the answer out of him. I would have had no compunction about it. As far as I
was concerned, he wasn’t a human being, just a clever copy of one.
   I also, paradoxically, wished I could regard him as a fellow human, as a neighbour. This just
served to increase my frustration. If I could have taken Wilde into my confidence, and let him
know just how bad, how fast, things were going, he might very well have agreed to tell me all I
needed to know. But the Division trusted him even less than he trusted us. Telling him the full
truth might trigger things far, far worse. Wilde and Meg had both been in the hands of the enemy,
were quite literally products of the enemy, and even now we weren’t one hundred per cent
confident that they were or were only what they claimed, and seemed, to be. I thought for a
moment of what it might be like if we ever had to treat them as an outbreak and hit them with an
orbital zap. There would be no warning, no evacuation, no last-minute work for the ecologists.
The monkey-thing bounded from Meg’s lap to mine. I let it scurry up my arm and nestle on my
shoulder, and smoothed out the lap of my skirt. I looked up.
   “That’s fine,” I said. “It’s up to you.” I shrugged, the false animal’s false fur brushing my
cheek. “You do what seems best.” I stood up and smiled at them both.
   For a moment Wilde looked nonplussed. I hoped he’d be so thrown off balance by my lack of
persistence that he would change his mind. But the ploy didn’t work. I would have to go for the
second option: more difficult, more perilous and, if anything, less likely to succeed.
   “Goodbye,” I said. “See you around.”
   In hell, probably.
   I leaned over the guardrail around the roof of the Casa Azores and looked down. The ground
was a thousand metres below. I felt no vertigo. I’ve climbed taller trees. There were lights along
the beach, bobbing boats in front of the beach, then a breakwater; and beyond that, blue-green
fields of algae, fish-farms and kelp plantations and ocean thermal-energy converters, all the way to
the horizon. Airships whether on night-work or recreation I didn’t know drifted like silvery
bubbles above them. The building itself, although in the middle of all this thermal power, drew its
electricity from a different source. Technically the whole structure was a Carson Tower, powered
by cooled air from the top falling down a central shaft and turning turbines on the way.
   It was cold on the roof. I turned away from the downward view, wrapped the bolero jacket
around my shoulders, and looked at the sky. Once my irises had adjusted, I could see Jupiter,
among the clutter of orbital factories, mirrors, lightsails, satellites, and habitats. With binoculars, I
could have seen Callisto, Io, Europa and the ring. It was as good a symbol as any of the forces we
were up against.
   Our enemies, by some process which even after two centuries was, as we say, not well
understood, had disintegrated Jupiter’s largest moon, Ganymede, to leave that ring of hurrying
debris and worrying machinery. And originally within the ring, but now well outside it was
something even more impressive and threatening: a sixteen-hundred-metre-wide gap in space-time,
a wormhole gate to the stars.
   Two centuries ago, the Outwarders people like ourselves, who scant years earlier had been
arguing politics with us in the sweaty confines of primitive space habitats had become very much
not like us: post-human, and superhuman. Men Like Gods, like. The Ring was their work, as was
the Gate.
   After these triumphs, nemesis. Their fast minds hit some limit in processing-speed, or attained
enlightenment, or perhaps simply wandered. Most of them distintegrated, others drifted into the
Jovian atmosphere, where they re-established some kind of contact with reality.
   Their only contact with us, a few years later, was a burst of radioborne information viruses
which failed to take over, but managed to crash, every computer in the Solar System. The dark
twenty-second century settled down like drizzle.
   Humanity struggled through the Fall, the Green Death, and the Crash, and came out of the dark
century with a deep disapproval of the capitalist system (which brought the Fall), for the Greens
(who brought the Death), and for the Outwarders (who brought the Crash, and whose viral
programs still radiated, making electronic computation and communication hazardous at best).
   The capitalist system was abolished, the Greens became extinct, and the Outwarders The
Outwarders had still to be dealt with.
   I checked that I was alone on the roof. The chill, fluted funnels of the Carson process sighed in
their endless breath, their beaded condensation quivering into driblets. I moved around in their
shadow, and sighted on, not low-looming Jupiter, but the Moon. I squatted, spreading the dress
carelessly, and reached up and scratched the monkey’s head and whispered in its ear.
   The monkey began to melt into the jacket’s shoulder, and then dress and jacket together flowed
like mercury, and reshaped themselves into a ten-foot-wide dish aerial within which I crouched, my
head covered by a fine net that spun itself up from where the collar had been. A needle-thin rod
grew swiftly to the aerial’s focus. Threads of wire spooled out across the deck, seeking power
sources, II finding one in seconds. The transformed smart-suit hummed around me.
   “It’s still no,” I said. “Going for the second option.”
   “Tight-beam message sent,” said the suit. “Acknowledged by Lagrange relay.”
   And that was that. The recipients of the message would know what I meant by “the second
option”. Nobody else would. My mission was confined to more than radio silence; the whole
reason I’d come here myself was that we couldn’t even trust word-of-mouth. The narrow-beamed
radio message would be picked up and passed on by laser, which had the advantage that the Jovians
could neither interfere with nor overhear it. It would be bounced to our ship, the Terrible Beauty,
which was at this moment on the other side of the Earth, and sent on to the Division’s base on
Callisto. There would be a bare acknowledgement from Callisto, in a matter of hours. I was not
going to wait around for it, not like this. I stood up and told the suit to resume its previous shape.
When the dress was restored I gave it an unnecessary but celebratory twirl, and spun straight into
somebody’s arms. As I stumbled back a pace I saw that I’d bumped into Stephan Vrij, the
photographer.
   We stood looking at each other for a moment.
   “The things you see when you don’t have your camera,” I said.
   “I didn’t follow you,” he said awkwardly. “I was just looking around. Last part of my job for
the evening. It’s amazing the crazy things people do up here, after a party.”
   “Can you forget this?” I asked.
   “OK,” he said. He looked away.
   “Then I’ll promise to forget you.” I reached out and caught his hand. “Come on. I’ve had a lot
of drinks, and you’ve had none, right?”
   “Yes,” he said, looking a bit puzzled as I tugged at his hand and set off determinedly towards the
elevator shaft. I grinned down at him.
   “What better way to start the night?”
   “You have a point there,” he said.
    “Well, no,” I said, “I rather hope you ...”
    Laughing, we went to his room.
    When you are among another people, or another people is among you, and you lust after their
strange flesh, go you and take your pleasure in them, and have sons and daughters by them, and
your people shall live long upon the lands and your children shall fill the skies.
    So it is written in the Books of Jordan, anyway. Genetics, chapter 3, verse 8.
    I woke in a comfortable, if disorderly, bed. Stephan Vrij snored peacefully beside me. We were
both naked, and I was under a quilt. I drew the quilt over him and he rolled over in his sleep.
    From the angle of the light through the window, it was midmorning on another fine day. The
room was made of something that looked and smelled like pine, but it had never been cut into
planks then hammered or glued together (which some people on Earth still do, as I later discovered,
and not all of them because they have to but because they can afford the time to indulge such fads).
Instead, it had been grown on-site, the walls and floor curving into each other, utility cables
emerging like vines from the knotholes. Glossy monochrome pictures of people, landscapes,
seascapes were stuck to the walls. They looked detailed and precise, just like photographs, apart
from the lack of colour. Scattered about, on the low chairs and table or on the floor, was a rather
embarrassing quantity and diversity of lingerie. Evidently I had been showing off, or the smart-suit
had. My memories of the night were hazy, and warm.
    I lay there a few minutes, smiling to myself and hoping I’d got pregnant. Doing so just before a
war seemed perverse it’s traditionally done afterwards but this war would be over before the
pregnancy was noticeable. If we won, I might not be back on Earth for a long time, and we needed
all the genes we could get. If we lost ... but defeat wasn’t worth thinking about.
    I rolled out of bed and gathered the bits and pieces and set them to work reassembling
themselves into hiking gear, apart from the one or two items that would be serviceable as
underwear. Not that I actually needed underwear in a smart-matter spacesuit, but they Were very
nice. So, in their own way, were the shorts and socks, boots and rucksack that came together on the
floor. The suit always slid have good taste.
    The apartment was pretty basic and standard, and the functional logic of it was familiar, so I had
no difficulty in finding the makings of breakfast. I brought the breakfast through to Stephan, and
we ate it, and made love for a final time. Stephan took some photographs of me, and I promised
again to forget him, and we said goodbye.
    I suppose he has forgotten me, by now, but I like to think that someone still has the photographs.
    Down at ground level it was hot. The sun was high in the sky, enormous, so bright I could see it
with my eyes closed and so hot it hurt my skin. Even the air was hot. It’s one of the things they
don’t tell you about, like gravity.
                                     2     After London
    Between the base of the tower and the beach were some low buildings. Stores and warehouses
of equipment for use by people working in the blue-greens or playing on the beach, refreshment
stalls, eating-houses, and so on. I wandered along the shore road, looking for the tourist place.
    Naked small children ran about, yelling, racing from the tower to the beach and back.
Somewhat older children lolled in shade and listened to adults or adolescents as they talked
earnestly in front of a flip-chart or above a machine. Now and again a child would join one of
these groups; now and again a child would rise, nod politely to the teacher, and wander off to do
something else.
    Two such children were minding the tourist place when I found it. The store was easy enough to
spot, a rough construction of seacrete and plastic and what looked like driftwood, but was probably
scrap synthetic wood. I told myself it must be more solid than it looked, as I ducked under the sea-
silk awning and stood blinking in the cool, dim interior.
    Inside, the walls were lined with sagging shelves, which were piled with everything a tourist
might need. Old tin boxes of gold and silver coins, new plastic boxes of bullets, firearms oiled and
racked, hats, scarves, boots. From the ceiling hung a wide range of casual clothing: loose
sundresses, seal-fur suits, tee shirts and towelling robes. There seemed to be more possible
destinations than the number of possible tourists. I was alone in the store, apart from a boy and a
girl sitting on the counter with a chessboard between them.
    The boy looked up. “Hi,” he said. He waved his hand. “Help yourself. If you want something
that isn’t there, let us know.” He smiled absently then returned to frowning over the chessboard. I
dug through clinking piles of dollars, rubles, marks, pounds, and yen to make up sixty grams of
gold and a hundred of silver, in the smallest coins I could find. From the weapons rack I selected a
.45 automatic and a dozen clips of ammunition. Food and other consumables I could get anywhere,
and the suit had produced better boots, socks, etc. than anything here. But I couldn’t pass up the
chance of an amazing penknife with a red handle marked with an inlaid steel cross within a shield.
It had two blades and a lot of ingenious tools. I was sure I’d find a use for most of them.
    I said goodbye to the children, promised to pass on anything I didn’t use (with a mental
reservation about the knife), and stepped out again into the sunlight. After a few seconds I went
back inside and picked up a pair of sunglasses. The girl’s laughter followed me out.
    Now that I didn’t have to screw up my eyes to look up, it was easy to work out the location of
the airport from the paths of the airships and microlights and helicopters. I followed the coast road
for a couple of miles until I reached it. I got several offers of lifts on the way, but I declined them
all. Despite the heat, and the gravity, and the moments of disorientation when some conservative
part of my brain decided the horizon just could not be that far away, I had to get used to walking in
the open on the surface of this planet; and soon, to my surprise, I found that I enjoyed it. The sea
breeze carried the homely scent of blue-green fields, the distant converters shimmered and
hummed, the nearby waters within the artificial reef sparkled, and on them swimmers and boating-
parties filled the air with joyous cries.
    The airport was on a spit of land that extended a few hundred yards, traversing the reef-barrier.
Airships wallowed at mooring masts, “copters and microlights buzzed between them. High
overhead, the diamond-fibre flying-wings used for serious lifting strained at their cables like
gigantic kites. I had arrived on one, from the Guine spaceport, and it looked as if I’d have to leave
on one. The thought of an airship passage was appealing, but it would take too long. I didn’t know
how much time I had to spare, but the final deadline, the Impact Event, was less than three weeks
away. Whatever I did had to be done before that.
    Just before the airport perimeter fence I turned and looked back at the Casa Azores. From here
it was possible to see it, if not take it all in. A hundred and fifty metres square at the base, tapering
in its kilometre height to a hundred at the top. The sides looked oddly natural, covered by climbing
plants and hanging gardens, pocked by glider-ports, and by window-bays which shone like ice.
Built and maintained by quadrillions of organically engineered nanomachines, it was almost as
remarkable as a tree, and a good deal more efficient. The way of life that it and the surrounding
aquaculture sustained was not mine, but it was one I was happy to protect. Plenty of interesting
work, and plenty of interesting leisure; adventure if you wanted it, ease if you preferred that.
Indefinitely extended youth and health. Anything that you couldn’t get for the asking you could,
with some feasible commitment of time and trouble, nanofacture for yourself.
    The paucity of broadcast media, and the difficulties of real-time communication, were the only
losses from the world before the Fall and the Crash. We had tried to make it an opportunity. All
the entertainment and knowledge to be found among thirty billion people was (eventually)
available on pipe, and live action provided by the steady, casual arrival and departure of
entertainers and researchers and lecturers. The absence of artificial celebrity meant the endless
presence of surprise.
    Throughout the Inner System Earth, near-Earth, Lagrange, Luna, Mars, and the Belt variants of
this same way of life went on. Cultures and languages were more diverse than ever, but the system
that underpinned them was the same everywhere. In floating cities, in artificial mountains stepped
like ziggurats, in towers like this or taller, in towns below the ground, in huge orbital habitats, in
sunlit pressure domes, in caves of ice, most people had settled into this lifestyle: simple, self-
sufficient, low-impact, and ecologically sound.
    It was sustainable materially and psychologically, a climax community of the human species, the
natural environment of a conscious animal, which that conscious animal, after so much time and
trouble, had at last made for itself. We called it the Heliocene Epoch. It seemed like a moment in
the sun, but there was no reason, in principle, why it couldn’t outlast the sun, and spread to all the
suns of the sky.
    With our solar mirrors we controlled the polar caps. The glaciations and mass extinctions that
had marked the Pleistocene were over; the next ice age, long overdue, would never come. With our
space-based lasers and nukes, we could shield the earth from asteroid impacts. We could bring
back lost species from the DNA in museum exhibits. Soon, any century now, we would control the
Milankovitch cycle. We were secure.
    No wonder they had so few tourists here: who would want to leave a place like this? I sighed,
with a small shiver, and turned to the airport gate. w 2 After London I GOT MY airship journey,
after all. The flying-wing route took me as far as Bristol, a city that was still a port for Atlantic
traffic, though no longer for trade. The old city with its docks had been fairly well preserved, but
the quays where sugar (exchanged for, and grown by, slaves) had once been landed now sustained
only recreational craft. The new town was in the fashionable Aztec pyramid style, with a
projecting air-jetty about halfway up. We landed there at one p.m., having left Graciosa at eleven.
I was lucky to catch the day’s second flight to London. It left at around one-thirty in the afternoon,
and would reach Alexandra Port about six. This is the sort of thing that happens when you travel
inside an atmosphere.
   Weather, of course, is another. I stepped out of the, lift and on to the roof, to find large drops of
water falling from the grey sky, on to me. I dug out of my rucksack a hooded cape all part of the
suit, naturally and put it on. With the hood to keep water out of my eyes, it was easier to see where
I was. The roof had the size and appearance of a small park apart from the hills in the distance and
the curious visual effects the rain made, it could have been under a municipal dome anywhere. I
walked across the grass, past dripping trees and bushes, to where a small and gaily coloured
dirigible was moored to a central pylon. Other people were also making their way over, a couple of
dozen in all when we’d climbed the spiral staircase and crossed the gangway to the airship’s
gondola. My fellow passengers were dressed similarly to me, but most carried rather more
equipment. From overheard conversations as we shook out our wet overclothes and took our seats,
I gathered that most of them were at least to themselves serious eco-tourists, earnestly studying
natural history or urban archaeology. But few had resisted the temptation to bring a rod or a rifle.
The hunting and fishing in London was reputed to be excellent.
   The seating was arranged in a manner more like a room than a vehicle, but I had no difficulty
getting a ,seat by a window. The airship cast off on schedule, rising through the low cloud and then
passing beyond it. After staring out the window for half-an-hour at deciduous woodland
interrupted only by old roads and new buildings, I got up and wandered around asking people what
refreshments they wanted, then went to the galley and prepared them.
   While the coffee was brewing I was joined by a woman who introduced herself as Suze. She
was small, brown-haired, hazel eyed, dark-skinned. Very English. I figured her for being about
her apparent age.
   “Did you know,” she said as we poured coffee into mugs and tea into cups, “that in the old
system, there were people who did this as a full-time occupation?”
   “Did what?”
   “Serve refreshments on aircraft.” I knew this perfectly well.
   “Really?” I said. “Why? Did they ... enjoy it or something?”
   “No,” she said earnestly, “they did it because it was a way of getting what they needed to live
on.”
   I waved a hand at the rack of sandwiches. “You mean this was all they had to eat?”
   “No, no, it was because -“
   She laughed suddenly. “You’re winding me up, aren’t you?”
   “Yes,” I admitted. I started pouring the coffee. “Let’s see if we can do the job better than the
wage slaves, shall we?”
   When we’d finished serving lunch to the other passengers we took our own trays. I saw that she,
like myself, was making to sit alone, so I asked her to join me. We talked as we ate.
   It wasn’t polite to ask neighbours what they were doing, where they were going, and so on. You
had to work around to it, and not pry if they didn’t open up.
   “Why did you tell me that thing about the old system?” I asked.
   “At the moment,” Suze said, “I’m a sociologist.”
   I dragged up the unfamiliar word from old memories.
   “Someone who studies society?” She nodded. “Yes, but there’s not much to study any more!
“How d’you mean?”
   “Look around you.” She waved a hand. “These days, you want to investigate society, and what
do you find?”
   It was a rhetorical question, but I really wanted to know her answer.
   “Well,” she went on, “it’s all so obvious, so transparent. We all know how things work from the
age of about five or so. You go and try to find out, and somebody will just tell you! And it’ll be
true, there are no secrets, nothing going on behind the scenes. Because there are no scenes, know
what I mean?”
   “Yes, of course,” I said, thinking Ha! Little do you know, girl! “So what society do you study, if
not our own?”
   “I study the old system,” Suze said, “and I do learn interesting things. Sometimes I just can’t
help telling people about them. And anyway, it’s a way of getting people to talk.”
   I snorted. “Yeah, it’s a great line,” I said. “Almost anything you’re doing, you can say to
someone, “Did you know that under the wages system, some people had to do this every day or
starve to death?” “
   She laughed at my mock-shocked tone and saucer eyes. For the next few minutes we vied to
suggest some activity to which the statement didn’t apply, and found our resources of ribaldry and
gruesomeness inadequate to the task.
   “All the same,” she said when we’d given up, “it is fascinating in a way.” She shot me a glance,
as if unsure whether to go on. “Capitalism had a sort of ... elegance about it. The trouble is, well,
the old people, uh, no offence, aren’t very good at explaining it, because they hate it so much, and
the old books . . .” She sighed and shrugged. “They just don’t make sense. They have all these
equations in them, like real science, but you look at the assumptions and you think, hey, wait a
minute, that can’t be right, so how did it work? Anyway,” she went on, more firmly, “it’s the only
interesting sociological question left.” She looked out of the window, then leaned forward and
spoke quietly. “That’s why I go to London,” she confided. “To talk to people outside the Union.”
   Then she leaned back, and looked at me as if defying me to be shocked, unsure that she hadn’t
misjudged my broad-mindedness. I didn’t need to feign my response I was pleased, and interested.
   We had, of course, a network of agents and contacts in the London area, and the old comrades
could always be counted on but my mission was too secret even for them. Nobody knew I was
coming, or what I was looking for, although that information-leakage couldn’t be delayed much
longer. I had expected to have to rely on hastily learned, and possibly outdated, background.
   Now I had the possibility of a guide. This could be a stroke. of luck! Or something else
entirely, if I wanted to be paranoid about it. Her earlier comments about there being no secrets
were too transparent to be some kind of double bluff; if she were involved in any secrets herself
(other than her to some distasteful interests) she would hardly have brought the subject up. And
anyway, she was too young ...
   I studied her face, and tried to hide my second thoughts, my second-guessing of myself. You
lose the knack for conspiracy, over the decades and centuries. The Division was not the Union,
true enough, but even our politics had weathered and softened into non-lethality, like a rusty
artillery piece in a mossy emplacement all our destructive power was directed outwards.
   I decided that, whether her presence was fortuitous, or the outcome of one of those hidden forces
whose existence she’d so naively denied, I couldn’t lose. If she was innocent, then I’d gain some
valuable contacts and information if not, the only way to find out was by playing along.
   So I said: “Hmm, that’s interesting. Do you know many non-cooperators?” (That was the polite
term; the others included “parasites”, “scabs”, “scum”, and spoken with a sneer and a pretend spit
“bankers”.) It was considered all right to exchange coins with them for their odd handicrafts and
eccentric nanofactures, and to employ them as guides but most people shrank from any closer
contact, as if the non-cos carried some invisible skin disease.
    “A few,” she said, looking relieved. “I’m studying, you know, trade Patterns in the Thames
Valley.”
    “Trade patterns?”
    “Most people think the non-cos live by scrounging stuff from the Union, but that’s just a
prejudice.” She grimaced; she was still talking in a low voice, as if not wanting the other
passengers to overhear. “Actually they’re pretty self-sufficient. They make things and swap them
among themselves, using little metal weights for indirect swaps. That’s why whenever they offer
to do things for tourists, they only do it for metal weights.” Suze laughed. “There I go again. I’m
sure you know all this.”
    “Well, in theory,” I admitted, “but it’ll be interesting to see how it works in practice. The fact is,
I’m going to London to find a certain person.” I thought about risks. I’d be making inquiries after
this guy as soon as we landed, among all kinds of people. No matter how discreet I was about it,
word would get around. There seemed to be no harm in starting now. “His name is Isambard
Kingdom Malley.”
    “He’s alive?” Suze sounded incredulous. “In London?” Comprehension dawned on her face.
    “Yes,” I said. “He’s a non-co.”
    Isambard Kingdom Malley was, or had been, a physicist. He worked out the Theory of
Everything. The final equations. When I was as young as I look, there was a fashion for tee shirts
with the Malley equations on them. TOE shirts, we called them. The equations, at least, were
elegant.
    Malley was born in 2039, so he was six years old at the time of the Fall Revolution. His theory
was born in the early 2o6os, in the brief surge of new technologies and research advances that
marked the period when the US/UN empire had fallen, but the barbarians had not yet won. His last
paper was the modest classic Space-time manipulation with non-exotic matter, Malley, I K, Phys.
Rev. D 128 (10), 3182 (2080). It established the theoretical possibility of the quantum-chaotic
wormhole and the vacuum-fluctuation virtual mass drive. Its celebrated “Appendix II: Engineering
Considerations” pointed out some practical problems with constructing the Gate and the Drive,
notably that it would require about a billion times as much computational power as was currently
available.
    A week after the article’s publication, the journal was shut down by the gang in charge of its
local fragment of the Former United States, for “un-Scriptural physical speculation”, “blasphemy”,
and (according to some sources) “witchcraft”. There’s a certain elegiac aptness in the thought that
the paper which pointed the road to the stars was published in what turned out to be the journal’s
final issue: the West was still soaring when it fell.
    Thirteen years later, the Outwarders built the wormhole gate and torched off their interstellar
probe, reaching for the end of space and time. That it never did reach the expected end that it was,
in fact, still going strong, still transmitting almost incomprehensible data from an unimaginable
futurity refuted Malley’s Theory of Everything, which had been based on the hitherto impregnable
Standard Model finite-universe cosmology. But Malley’s was still the only theory we had. It fitted
all the data, except the irrefragable fact of the probe. Within the limits of our engineering, the
theory still worked. Nobody had come up with anything to replace it. (This was a sore point with
me. I sometimes thought it reflected badly on our society: perhaps, after all, it does take some
fundamental social insecurity to sharpen the wits of genius. Perhaps we had no more chance of
developing further fundamental physics than the Pacific Islanders had of developing the steam
engine. Or I hoped it could just be that a Newton, an Einstein or a Malley doesn’t come along very
often.) I suspected that Malley would have been an Outwarder himself, but he never made it to
space. America’s last launch sites were already being stormed by mobs who thought rockets
damaged the ozone layer, or made holes in the crystal spheres of the firmament.
    He fled America for Japan, and then quixotically returned to England at the time of the Green
Death, where he worked to the best of his growing ability and dwindling resources as a medicine
man, dealing out antibiotics and anti-geriatrics to superstitious settlers and nostalgic refugees,
administering the telomere hack to frightened adolescents who understood it, if at all, as yet another
rite-of-passage ordeal. We knew he’d survived the century of barbarism, and that he’d registered to
vote in the elections that formally abolished capitalism and established the Solar Union. Evidently
he’d voted against the social revolution, because in the subsequent century of the world
commonwealth he had retreated to he wilds of London, a stubborn non-cooperator.
    We badly needed his cooperation now.
    Malley was apparently following the Epicurean injunction to “live unknown”. Suze had never
heard so much as a rumour of him.
    “Would you like me to come with you, at least part of the way?” she suggested. “I could help
you find your way around, and you could well, to be honest there are places I’d rather not go on my
own.
    “Yes, I’d like that very much,” I said. “That’s real neighbourly of you, Suze.”
    She gave me a full-beam smile and asked, “How do you expect to track him down? Do you
have any idea where he is? And why do you want to talk to him, anyway? If you don’t mind me
asking.”
    I scratched my ear and looked out of the window. We were again above some low cloud, and
through its dazzling white a town rose on our left. “Swindon tower,” Suze remarked. Ahead of us
the airship’s shadow raced like a rippling fluke across the contours of the clouds. I looked back at
Suze.
    “No, I don’t mind you asking,” I said. “I’ll tell you the answers once we have a bit more
privacy. And then, it’ll be up to you whether you want to come along with me or not.”
    “That’s OK,” she said.
    “Tell me what you’ve found out about London,” I said, and she did. By the time she had
finished, we were almost there. We looked out at woodlands and marshes, ruins and the traces of
streets and arterial roads, at the junctions of which smoke drifted up from the chimneys of huddled
settlements. Suze began excitedly pointing out landmarks: Heathrow airport, its hexagram of
runways only visible from the air, like the sigil of some ancient cult addressed to gods in the sky;
the Thames Flood Barrier far to the east, a lonely line of silver dots in the Thames flood plain;
Hyde Park with its historic Speaker’s Corner, where the Memorial to the Unknown Socialist rose a
hundred metres above the trees, gazing in the disdain of victory at the fallen or falling towers of the
City; and, as the airship turned and began to drift lower, our destination, the proud pylons of
Alexandra Port.
    The sight of Alexandra Port set the hairs of my nape prickling. It had been one of the early
centres of the space movement which was the common ancestor of the Outwarders and ourselves;
there were people alive today whose journey into space had begun in its crowded concourses,
waiting for the airship connection to the launch sites of Guine and Khazakhstan. Its mooring masts
were their Statue of Liberty, their Ellis Island.
    Or their Botany Bay. My fingernails were digging into my palms. I turned away and prepared
to disembark.
    The airship settled, its motors humming as they steadied its position, just above the terminal’s
flat roof. A wheeled stairway rolled up to the exit and we all trooped down. Two or three people
working on maintenance boarded the dirigible and began checking it over; although its automated
systems were more than adequate to the task, there’s something about aviation which keeps the
habit of human supervision alive.
    From the terminal’s roof we could see an almost panoramic view of London, its rolling hills
hazy with woodsmoke. The trees were interrupted here and there by towers whose steel and
concrete had survived two centuries of neglect, and by broad corridors around ancient roadways.
To the east the Lee Water broadened out to the Hackney marshes and the distant gleam of the
Thames. On the nearby hills to the west the ruins of the old brick buildings and streets were still,
barely, visible as crumbling walls and cracked slabs among the trees.
    It was a common misconception one which, to be honest, none of us had ever found it politic to
publicly correct, though the facts were there for anyone who cared to look that the Green Death was
a single plague, the result of a virus genetically engineered by some Green faction in a fit of
Malthusian overkill. More sober epidemiology has revealed that it was several diseases, probably
natural, all of which hit at the same time and which were spread by soldiers, refugees and settlers.
The disorder, and the weakening of the social immune-systems of medicine and science, were
indeed partly the responsibility of the Green gangs and their many allies and precursors, going back
through a century or more of irrationalism and anti-humanism. Indeed, the panicky abandonment
of the cities as plague-centres was itself, in part, the outcome of that way of thinking, and it
probably led to more deaths than the diseases ever did. So, while the Greens weren’t quite as
responsible as folk once thought for the billions of deaths, I find it hard to reproach anyone for the
so-called “excesses” after the liberation. (The execution figures were inflated by over-enthusiastic
local committees, anyway. It wasn’t more than a hundred thousand, worldwide. Tops. Honestly.)
The long-term effect of the Green Death wasn’t on the size of the population which bounced back
sharply after the social revolution, and was now coming along very nicely, thank you but on its
distribution. Most of the old metropoles remained empty, long after they became perfectly safe to
live in. They were happily left, quite appropriately, to those who rejected the new society and
preferred some version of the old.
    The countryside, too, was reverting to the wild, as agriculture was replaced by aquaculture,
hydroponics, and artificial photosynthesis. It was less frequently ceded to the non-cos than the old
cities, however, because of its recreational value to people from the dense arcologies of the Union.
    Alexandra Port itself had changed little, because it had never been abandoned to the ravages of
nature or man. In the Green Death it had been a conduit for refugees going out and relief flowing
in, and even in the West’s century of collapse it had been maintained by the earthbound remnant of
the Space Movement, its boundaries guarded, its personnel supplied from outside, a garrison in the
midst of desolation.
    It was all just like in the old pictures, I thought as we descended to the concourse: the People’s
Palace, retro-styled even when it was new, back in the twentieth century, and the newer, twenty-
first century terminal buildings and workshops sprawling across the crown of the hill under the
high pylons. The only evidence of modern technology I could see was the escalator down which
we rode and its continuation in the walkway which carried us to the exit. Their seamless flow of
plastic not nanotech, just clever would have baffled the complex’s early engineers.
    We walked over to the People’s Palace, now a guesthouse as well as a home for the people
working in the port. I looked at the sun, and at my watch.
    “Shall we stay here for the night?” I suggested. “Go on our travels in the morning?”
    Suze nodded. “Yeah, it’s too late to go travelling,” she said. “I do know some places to sleep in
London, but they’re strictly something you do for the experience.” We checked at the board in the
foyer and found there were plenty of vacancies; most of our fellow tourists apparently preferred the
dubious glamour and adventure of finding accommodation in one of London’s native inns or
shooting lodges. We selected a double room in the west wing, and took our stuff up. There was a
small stove, coffee, and other supplies in the room, and an invitation to the evening meal and/or
later social activities. While Suze was showering, I asked the suit to make an unobtrusive sweep of
the room. It found nothing, apart from the expected wildlife and the standard cleany-crawlies.
There were definitely none of the other kind of bugs not that I seriously expected any, but it was
routine, like the airship inspection.
   Suze stepped out of the shower just as the suit’s agent was reporting back.
   “Oh!” she said. “A pet mouse. How sweet!”
   “Grrr,” said the suit, but I’m sure all Suze heard was a squeak. I took a shower myself, and
emerged to find that Suze had brewed some coffee and dressed for dinner.
   “Thanks,” I said, taking the coffee. “Nice dress.”
   Suze looked down at it smugly. “Fortuny pleats, they’re called,” she said. “You can just ball it
up in a rucksack, and when you shake it out it still looks great.”
   “Ah,” I said, “I have something to show you.”
   I climbed back into my clothes, which were still sweaty and crumpled from travelling. They all
added up to only part of the suit the rest being the mouse, and the rucksack with its contents but
there was still enough for it to do the Cinderella trick, and mimic net and lace from an archived
memory of debutante froth. I twirled, and grinned at Suze’s open mouth.
   “Smart-matter spacesuit,” I explained, sitting down and patting its bouffant skirts. Suze was still
goggle-eyed.
   “You’re from space?”
   “Yes,” I said. “The Cassini Division, in fact.”
   “Wow!” Suze’s amazed look turned to an awed, and slightly guilty, excitement which I’d
encountered before. In a world of abundance, of peace and security, the Division was the biggest
focus for the dangerous appeal of danger, the sexy thrill of violence. There were those who
despised and feared it for that very reason, and those who sometimes secretly, even from
themselves loved it. Suze, it seemed, was among the latter.
   “That’s why I want to talk to Malley,” I said.
   “About the wormhole?” Sharp girl.
   “Yes. We want him to show us how to get through it. To New Mars.”
   “Start our own settlement?”
   I shook my head firmly. “We-don’t need another lot of deserts!” Something some sudden light
in her eyes told me her secret answer: we do, we do! Not everybody would feel that way, but I
knew that enough did for Wilde to have seen that look all the many times he told his tales. No
wonder he had the crazy notion that if we could go through, we’d colonize the place.
   “So why do we need to go through?” Suze asked. “Why now?”
   “We need to go through,” I said carefully, “because there’s a chance that the people on the other
side of the wormhole are tinkering about with the same entities that the Outwarders became the
Jovians on this side. We’re going to go through, and stop them, with whatever it takes.” (This was
true, as far as it went, which was not very far.) Suze sat back in one of the armchairs and looked at
me, shaking her head.
   “Why don’t people know about this? Why haven’t we been told?”
   “We’re not keeping it exactly secret,” I said. “It’s just that we’ve released the information in
scientific reports and so on, rather than making a big splash of it. So far, everybody who’s
managed to figure out what’s going on must have agreed with us that there’s no need to panic.”
   “That may be right,” she said indignantly, “but there is a need to discuss it! You can’t just go
and do something like that, without any, any -“
   “Authorization? Actually, we can, in the sense that nobody could stop us. We wouldn’t want to
do that, because we that is, the Division would fall apart if we ever went against the Union, because
we’d have a strong and well-armed minority who didn’t want to go against the Union. But as a
matter of fact, we do have authorization. We’re mandated to protect the Inner System from outside
threats, and if a possible post-human invasion coming out of the wormhole isn’t one, I don’t know
what is.”
   Suze still looked troubled. “What about the New Martians?” she asked. “I don’t see them going
along with it.”
   I laughed. “If they’re still people ... they’re just a bunch of noncos. And we know how to deal
with them.”
   Suze shot me an odd glance, and seemed about to speak, but whatever was on her mind, she
thought better of it.
   “Well,” she said brightly, “enough of this. Let’s go and grab ourselves some aircraftmen.”
Dinner was in the great hall, with one of the daily planning meetings before it (we sat it out in the
bar) and a dance afterwards. The hall, a former exhibition centre, was decorated with murals
depicting episodes from London’s history: the Plague, the Fire, the Blitz, the Death; the battles of
Cable Street, Lewisham, Trafalgar Square, . Norlonto; the horrors of life under the Greens (one
particularly imaginative panel showed some persecuted rationalist tied to a tree and left to die of
starvation and dehydration, gloating Green savages dancing around and a woman loyally lurking in
nearby bushes, recording the words of the black gospel he croaked from his parched mouth); the
joy and vengeance of liberation, cheering crowds welcoming the Sino-Soviet troops (the Sheenisov,
as everybody still calls them) and stringing up Green chiefs and witchdoctors from their own sacred
trees; the tense balloting of the social revolution. Uplifting stuff.
   The other decoration in the hall, that of its occupants, was more attractive. Costume on Earth
tends to follow local traditions and techniques; here, it was a native style, picked up (as we later
noticed) from the non-cos: cotton, with lots of dyes and embroidery. Some of the clothes worn
after work were far more beautiful than ours, but at least our party frocks marked us out as visitors.
We had no lack of attention, and we did, indeed, pull an aircraftman each.
   Early the next morning we made our separate ways back to the room in which neither of us had
spent the night, gathered up our gear, and had breakfast in the main hall. In the daylight the murals
looked lurid and naive rather than heroic. The sunlight through the roof panels was bright and
warm. Suze spread out a map.
   “Well,” she said, “where are we going today?”
   “Our friend currently lives in Ealing Forest,” I said. “I have a kind of address for him. He
hangs out in some non-co technical college, and he’s known to scour the markets for old books and
gear.”
   “Easy,” said Suze. “We drive down the main path to Camden Market, stash the car at the Union
depot, then take a boat up the canal to the North Circular -“ her finger jabbed at a trail marked on e
map, then traced it to another thin line “then down into Ealing.”
    “You sure the canal’s quickest?” Suze nodded briskly. “The roads are kept up by the non-cos,
and they’re just what you’d expect. The waterways are ours. Everything from the dredging to the
lock-keeping is done by Union machines.”
    “Why?”
    She shrugged. “It’s the least obtrusive way of keeping a presence. And if we ever need to
increase it, the canals have the great advantage of going round the back, especially with
hovercraft.”
    “Hmm,” I said. “I wonder if we could get away with borrowing a hovercraft.”
    “Too noisy. The tourists don’t like it, and it makes the locals expect trouble.”
    At the car-pool we selected a rugged, low-slung buggy with wheels that could, according to the
spec, cope with any pothole or tree root in London. The controls were standard, but I didn’t yet
trust my reflexes in this gravity, so Suze took the wheel. We drove down the long, curving road to
the southern exit, through a crowd of importunate people (for me, a new and alarming experience;
for Suze: “Just beggars and pedlars; you’ll get used to it”), up and over a hill, and down into the
wild woods.
    The vehicle’s compact electric engine was quiet. As we drove slowly along the muddy
trackways, in the shade of tall oaks and elms dripping with the previous night’s rain, we could hear
constant birdsong, the occasional howl of a wolf or bark of a fox, and the far-off, uncanny
whooping laugh of gibbons. Kestrels hovered high above the forest paths. Wood pigeons clattered
among the trees, and now and again the vivid flash of a parakeet passed before our startled eyes.
Every so often a small deer would bound on to the path, take one look at us and sprint away, its
thudding hooves unexpectedly loud.
    Most of the ruins on either side were covered with ivy, its green cables silently and slowly
dragging the crumbled brickwork back into the earth. Some of the walls, however, bore the marks
of recent repair, with clay and wattle or bricks cannibalized from other ruins making good the gaps,
and the roofs usually a floor or two lower than the originals beamed and thatched. There were
clearings where entire villages had been built from recycled materials, with not a trace of the
original buildings left standing. We got used to treating rising smoke ahead as a signal to slow
down and watch out for scuttling chickens, ambling pigs, barking dogs and racing, yelling children.
The interest of the adults varied from covert and sullen to open and servile, the latter type
frantically drawing our attention to wares that were depicted or described on garish signboards.
    I put to Suze a question that had occurred to me from comparing old political maps with the
current geographical ones: that the present communities might be remnants of the ancient, with
Christian fundamentalists flourishing here, anarchic tribes around Alexandra Port, usurers still
haunting the leaning towers down by the river, Muslims to the east and Hindus to the west ... but
she disabused me of this fanciful notion. The vast migrations of the Death and the dark century had
literally walked over the great city, leaving of its former fractious cultures not a trace.
    The human traffic on the path increased as, over the next hour, we approached Camden Market.
There were few powered vehicles, and horse-drawn ones were only a little more frequent.
Pedestrians generally walked in groups: gay parties of tourists with rucksacks and rifles, who
waved and greeted us as we passed; and serious squads of non-cos, tramping with heavy loads on
their backs, or on overburdened animals, or on similarly overloaded carts. The noncos usually
spared us no more than a calculating glance or a canny smile.
    Camden Lock Market, a vast, trampled clearing at the intersection of several roads and a major
canal, had the look of a place which the trees and their worshippers had never conquered. Like
Alexandra Port, but for economic rather than strategic reasons, it had remained alive and
functioning through all the disasters that had befallen the city. In physical extent it was actually
larger than it had been in the twenty-first century, because some of London’s other traditional
markets, in the East, were now six feet under the Thames estuary at low tide.
   Our first stop was the Union depot, a stockaded area on the edge of the market. Inside the
casually guarded gate were a low garage, a Warehouse, and a rest-and-recreation building. Suze
gave the last a disparaging glance.
   “For wimps,” she remarked. “What’s the point of coming here if you’re not willing to mix?”
   After we’d garaged the vehicle, hoisted our packs, holstered our 3I pistols and wandered around
for a few minutes, I began to see exactly what the point was. The place was guaranteed to give
most Union people a severe culture shock. To me it looked like utter chaos, and sounded to use
words whose roots lie in ancient experiences of similar situations like a barbarous babel.
   The market consisted of: long fenced-off areas packed with sadeyed beasts; marble tables
running with the blood, piled with the flesh of beasts; fish swimming in glass tanks or flopping on
slabs; canopied wooden tables stacked with pottery, weaponry, books, machinery, clothes, textiles,
herbs, drugs, antiquities, foodstuffs; racks from which coats swayed and dresses fluttered in the
warm breeze.
   Each of the stalls and tables had behind it someone whose fulltime occupation was minding it,
watching over it, talking to anybody on the other side of the table and passing wares over and
taking money back. The sellers and the buyers filled the air with the sound of their dickering,
bickering, joking, teasing, offering, refusing; and with the recorded music which every stall-holder,
and most of their customers, discordantly inflicted on everybody else, played at an unsociable
volume from portable devices which were aptly called loudspeakers.
   Then there were the smells: of the animals and their dung and their slaughter, of the people and
their sweat and the scents which failed to disguise it, of smoked herbal drugs which were, I began
to suspect, not a recreation here but a necessity.
   I stopped in front of a stall on which dried leaves of tobacco and hemp were laid out in labelled
bundles, neatly sorted into opentopped boxes. The woman behind the stall was prettily dressed in
an embroidered cotton blouse and a printed cotton long skirt, gathered at the waist with a
drawstring. It was hard to work out her age like many of the adult non-cos, she seemed to combine
the detached watchfulness of age with the innocent selfishness of youth, and, on top of that, her
cosmetics made a baffling mask: her cheeks reddened, the rest of her face whitened, eyes darkened
and lips flushed, as if she’d been awake all night and was now in a state of sexual arousal. But she
had an attractive smile.
   “Suze,” I said, nudging, “could we ?”
   Suze grinned and nodded, then, when I reached into the pocket of my rucksack, frowned and
shook her head.
   “I’ll do it,” she murmured.
   She looked up at the woman behind the table, and fingered a leaf labelled “Kent Ganja”.
   “How much you got on this?”
   “Best stuff, lady,” the woman said. “Two grams gold, five grams silver an ounce.”
   (That’s what I later worked out she said. At the time her strange singsong went into my ears as:
“Besstuff laidy, two gramzgold five gramzsilveranahnce.”) Suze recoiled. “Fackinell!” she said.
“Thassexpensiv init?” (I still haven’t figured that one; I’ll leave it as it sounded.) “Nah,” said the
woman. “From cross the riveh, thatiz. Transport’s fackin criminal. You won’t get cheaper
anywhere.”
   She waved around at the rest of the market. “Try “t an” see f y”selves. you’ll be back.”
    “Not likely,” said Suze, taking me by the elbow and firmly steering me away. We’d gone only a
few steps when the woman called out: “Awright, I’ll give you a special, just to try it aht. Frow in
paypas, too.”
    Back we went and the bargain, after a few more verbal exchanges, was concluded. To my
surprise both the woman and Suze were smiling at each other, both apparently satisfied with an
outcome which they had each insisted would, if repeated too often, reduce one or the other to
complete wretchedness.
    We sat down at a table a few yards away and ordered coffee and bread rolls stuffed with cooked
meat which had almost certainly not been grown from blue-greens. I’m not sentimental about
beasts, but I tried not to think about it too much marine molluscs are one thing, vertebrates are
something else. When we’d finished eating Suze built a small joint of tobacco and hemp, lit it and
passed it to me after a few appreciative puffs. “Good stuff,” she said.
    I tested and confirmed this. “Yes,” I said. “Just like the woman said it was. But won’t she ...
dislike you for the way you made her accept such a small amount of silver for it?”
    Suze guffawed. “She got a very good price an acceptable Mount of silver for it. She’s happy
with the silver, and we’re happy with the hemp. Oh, thanks.”
    I looked at her as she drew on it again. “So you were both lying?”
    “No, of course not,” Suze chuckled. “It’s a convention. Like bluffing in a strategy game.”
    “But why did you bother to go through it? Why didn’t you just give her what she asked in the
first place? I mean ...” I shrugged, having enough nous to understand that saying out loud how
much metal we had on us might not be a good idea.
    “Ah,” said Suze. “That’s an interesting point. In theory, OK, all the Union tourists here could
bring as much, uh, negotiables as they could carry, and buy anything they wanted. All that would
happen is that the amount the locals expected for their goods would go up, and everybody would be
worse off all round. That’s one of the things that get explained to first-timers. It used to be called
inflation when there were states.” She frowned. “Sort of, except they used pretend money -“
    I cut her off hastily, not wanting to get my head around yet another complication (pretend
money? Say what?).
    “OK, but if the woman had stuck with her first offer, what oh! I see. You’d have gone to
another stall.”
    Suze grinned, passing back the joint. “Make an economist of you yet.”
    “Hah! Hard to believe, now, that the whole world was once run like this.”
    Suze nodded soberly. “This, and various combinations of this and pushing people around.
Weird.”
    We got up to leave, and were recalled by an indignant yell from the food-stall minder.
    “Sorree!” Suze said to him, blushing as she passed him a silver coin. “Keep the change.”
    It took her even longer to explain to me about that: the custom of a price that wasn’t a price, on
top of the price; a sum that was never asked for, but whose omission was always resented. We
wandered on towards the stalls of books and machines. The smoke, and the coffee and food, had
shifted my brain chemistry in the way I’d hoped. They were helping me to adjust to what was
going on around me, but I still let Suze do the talking.
    She browsed the bookstalls and _machine. shops and nanotech tanks, making the occasional
small purchase and apparently idle inquiries after Malley. Sometimes she used his full name,
sometimes she just wondered aloud if anyone had heard of “the scientist” or “the old doc”. Most of
the sellers seemed to know her by sight, and gave her less of a hard bargain than some other Union
tourists were getting. At the last stall she picked up and leafed through an obsolete textbook of
physics which she’d dug up from one of the plastic boxes at the foot of the stall.
   “I wish I knew someone who could explain this to me,” she said, casually handing the book to
the seller. He was plump, even for a non-co, pink-skinned, and wrapped in a curious multicoloured
patchwork coat that made him look like some tubby wizard. He glanced at the book; his eyes
narrowed and his grip suddenly tightened. He pulled the book back.
   “Sorry, miss,” he said. “Not for sale.”
   Suze gave him her best innocent-tourist look.
   “Oh? That’s a shame. Why not?”
   “I’ve been asked to save anything by this bloke Wheeler for the professor.”
   “Sure,” said Suze. “Professor Malley, isn’t it?” She seemed to forget the matter, leaning
forward and pouncing on a copy of the rare Home Workshop Nanotech (Loompanics, 2052). “Hey,
look at this!” She passed it to me and looked again at the stall-holder, eyebrows raised.
   “Yeah, Malley,” he said. “He comes by now and again. Ain’t seen him for a few weeks,
though.”
   “He’s still running a school down Ealing way, ain’t he?”
   “That’s right,” said the stall-holder. His accent blended in with the local speech, but his diction
was clearer, at least to me. Suze glanced at the price pencilled on the book’s inside cover, and
passed the man a gold coin, without her customary haggling. He seemed to take this as a payment
for a little more than the book (I was beginning to grasp how these people’s minds worked, I
thought smugly) and went on: “Funny you should be asking after him.” He scratched the stubble on
his upper chin. “Couple of your lot -“ he coughed “uh, Union members were through the other day,
looking for him.”
   I felt a jolt of surprise.
   “Yes, he’s quite famous really,” Suze responded lightly. “I’m sure lots of people want to talk to
him. I wonder if they’re anyone I know?”
   He shrugged. “Hard to say, you people all what I mean is, they were two blokes, right, about
your age real age and about her height.” He indicated me. “Tall, dark, but not uh, more sort of
Indian-looking than you ladies, if you know what I mean.”
   “Did you notice,” I asked carefully, “anything unusual in the way they moved?”
   His face brightened. “Yeah! That’s it! Something about them bothered me. Couldn’t put me
finger on it. But one of them had a funny way of hanging on to the edge of the table, like what
you’re doing now -“ I let go and straightened up, self-consciously “and they both had a way of
dropping things. Books they’d picked up.” He took a pencil from behind his ear and demonstrated,
mimicking someone absently putting the pencil down a foot above the table, then turning back and
looking for it where it wasn’t. We all laughed.
   “I think I know who they are,” I smiled. “When exactly did you say they were here?”
   “Must’ve been Sunday,” the man said. “Weekend market. Today’s midweek.”
   Today was I had to think for a moment Wednesday. I nodded and smiled. “Thanks very much.”
   “Be seeing you,” the stall-holder said.
   “Cheers, Tommy,” Suze said, and we left, Suze intent on the old book she’d bought, pointing
out to me its appallingly accurate instructions for building nanotech replicators using only a
primitive computer, a scanning tunnelling electron microscope made out of television parts, and a
few chemicals likely to be found under the kitchen sink in which the results could be “safely
isolated” according to the book’s demonically irresponsible author, one Dr Frank N. Stein
(probably a pseudonym, Suze told me solemnly).
    “”Sold for informational purposes only”,” she said, incredulously quoting the publisher’s
disclaimer. “You know, the stuff in this book is still dangerous! You could start your very own
outbreak with it!”
    “Just as well you’ve got it out of the non-cos” hot little hands,” I said.
    She glanced at me. “Hmm,” she said. “That’s a point. Never thought of that.”
    We had reached the end of one of the aisles of stalls. I walked on, until we’d reached the edge
of the clearing. Suze followed me into the shade of one of the tall trees. We sat down on springy
beech mast and gazed back at the ever-busier market.
    “Well,” I said, letting out a long sigh, “I had no idea they still made “em like you, Suze. That
was brilliant. You could be like one of those guys from the old days, a spy or a detective or
whatever.”
    “Ah, thanks.” Suze picked up a dried kernel and began picking at it with her fingernails. “I
suppose I am in a way. An investigator.” She shot me an awkward, almost embarrassed look, and I
wondered, not for the first time, what social pressures as undetectable to her, perhaps, as the
pressure of the air she breathed bore down on her from the society she wasn’t investigating: her
own. “So there are other people looking for Malley.”
    “Yes,” I said. “And none that I know, I’ll tell you that.”
    “Perhaps they really are just students, keen on talking to a great physicist,” Suze said in a flat
tone. “What was that about the way they moved?”
    “Spacers,” I said. “Classic low-gee reflexes. Lagrangers or Loonies, if you ask me. Not from
the Division, as far as I know.”
    “But would you know?”
    “I reckon so.”
    Suze cocked an eyebrow at me. “I know about need-to-know,” she said. She looked down
again, then up. “From books.”
    I took this as a reproof, and had a momentary impulse to tell her everything. But I resisted it.
    “That book dealer,” I said. “You called him Tommy. You know him?, “Chatted to him a couple
of times,” she said. “He’s he’s exUnion.”
    “Really? Well, that explains the way he talks.”
    Suze laughed. “We’re all so conscious of our superiority, aren’t we?”
    “I suppose so.” Well, we were superior. I’d never considered the Matter. “Why should anyone
leave the Union?”
    “I’ve asked him that,” Suze said. “Couldn’t get any answer out of him that made sense.” It
sounded like an admission of personal fiiiure. “He didn’t get on with neighbours, that’s how he put
it.”
    “With thirty billion to choose from? I’m surprised he can get on With anybody.”
    “I don’t think he meant any particular neighbours.” I grimaced. “Weird. Anyway, it’s his
business.”
    “That’s exactly how he put it!” I stared up at the sun-dappled leaves. A squirrel bounded along
a low branch, looked at me and began scolding, just like my conscience.
    “It’s almost noon,” I said. “I think I’d best be on my way.”
    Suze’s face fell. “You don’t want me to come along?”
    I leaned over and squeezed her hand. “You’ve helped me a lot, Suze. But ... I really think it
wouldn’t be fair to get you further into this. It could be more dangerous than you expect.”
    She expostulated further, to no avail; but with outward cheerfulness led me to the canal-boat
dock, and said goodbye to me with an unexpected and more than neighbourly embrace.
    I borrowed a small inflatable with an electric outboard. It could make five kilometres an hour,
and even with the inevitable delays in locks, would only take a couple of hours to get me to the
Union station at the intersection of the Grand Union Canal and the trail known as the North
Circular.
    The canal, under the oak and beech and overhanging willow that crowded its banks, was often
dark. The towpath had not been maintained, so the only traffic was self-powered: the slowly
chugging barges of non-co traders and travellers, the silently skimming launches, skiffs, and kayaks
of Union trippers. Dredgers and other maintenance-robots went about their work, shiny metal crabs
glimpsed crawling along the bottom or clambering on the banks. Shoals of minnows and
sticklebacks lifted their noses to the surface, spotting the water like brief, local flurries of rain;
herons and kingfishers took aim in response. Where the stone or brickwork bank was crumbled to
the waterline, deer and wallabies looked up as I passed. The bridges were mostly recent, wooden;
all but a few of the old stone bridges had long since collapsed, and their remains had been hauled
from the water and dumped in unceremonious heaps at each side.
    I settled back in the dinghy’s air-cushioning, the tiller under one elbow, and relaxed my muscles
while letting my mind freewheel, gradually overcoming the lingering effect of the joint. From the
collar of my shirt I allowed a tendril of the suit to creep up my neck, over my jaw and cheek and
around the back of my eyeball, where it patched into my optic nerve. It would be noticed by
anyone closer than a few feet away, and probably recognized, but to anyone further away would
look like a strange, hair-thin scar. For the moment I left it to maintain my position on a
representation of the map, which with a deliberate wink I could view in front of my eyes like an
after-image. Minute by minute the tiny bead of my real-time Global Position moved along the
kinked and curved wire of the scaled-down canal.
    I watched it all, and worried. Two men from space were after Malley, and they had three days”
start on me. One of the more minor things I hadn’t told Suze was that there was a faction no, that
was putting it too strongly a school of thought in the Division (and, more widely, among the space
settlers outside it, and even on Earth) which wanted to negotiate with the Outwarders, if such a
thing were possible. As if! The very thought of attempting to negotiate with entities who could use
any communication to corrupt your brain as easily as hacking a computer made me feel cold and
sick. If the men looking for Malley were part of this group appeasers, we called them then we
could be in the worst kind of trouble.
    And there was no way I could call for help, without increasing whatever danger I was in.
    The boat’s engine had a bit more speed in it, for emergencies; I leaned forward, and pushed
down hard on the stick. I reached the Union station a quarter of an hour earlier than I’d estimated.
I deflated the boat, picked up another gas-cylinder for it, and packed it in another borrowed buggy.
Then it was a matter of driving southward, picking my way carefully among upheaved concrete
slabs and fallen trees.
    Traffic was slow on the North Circular.
                              3       News From Nowhere
    GUNNERY’s GOING ballistic. The alarms set bulkheads drumming, periodontal ligaments
resonating: my whole jaw aches as I slam into my seat. I bounce back, then it grabs me and hugs
me in. Suit goes rigid for a second (I can’t move!), everything goes black for a second (we’ll get
that bug out of the next release or somebody DIES!, then the optical fibres cut in and the joints
articulate and my fingers are tapping the armrest pads and I’m in charge.
    “Shut that noise!”
    My teeth and ears sing with relief. I’m looking straight ahead. The Gate is sixty-odd miles
away, right in the sights, as always, and the number of invading ships or projectile comets or
Lovecraftian unspeakables heading straight at us is, count “em, none.
    “If this is another bodging drill I’ll -“
    “THIS IS NOT A DRILL,” says the ship. Its voice drops as the magnification racks up; lenses
zoom, cameras click. “Look.”
    It’s tiny. The graticule reading shows, what? 24 inches across. In starboard Fire Control,
somebody laughs. My first thought is welcome back, Pioneer ho! It is, indeed, like some early
space probe: body like a spider”s, brain like a gnat”s; but (second thought) not one of ours. It
matches none of the spacecraft designs humans have ever built (I know them all, like the faces of
old friends) and the apparently solid instrumentation of the thing is (click, click) suddenly,
blatantly, nanotech stuff. Fractal depths of smart-matter come into focus as the zoom increases and
the probe continues to drift towards us: surfaces flowing, crawling I hit the cut-out and the view
dwindles to a speck. There wasn’t enough definition to implement a Langford visual hack (but you
would think that, wouldn’t you?) and I set the micro-scale babbages skittering across print-out and
they report back in seconds that it’s clear. No nasty viruses have impacted our retinae, raced up our
optic nerves and taken over our minds (but they would say that, wouldn’t they?) and paranoia
beckons Enough. Ignore your feelings. Trust the computers.
    (And yes, I know the Langford hack is just a viral meme in its own right, replicating down the
centuries like an old joke, wasting resources every time we act on the insignificant off chance that
if someone could think of it, somehow it could be done. What kind of twisted mind starts these
things?) There are two dozen ships in the wing this watch, and since just before the alert (all of
ninety seconds ago) every ship-to-ship radio has been shut down and physically unplugged: total
radio silence is the ships” first reflex, even before they warn their crews. Decades of nothing
coming through but the odd rock, decades of drills for every imaginable (and then some)
contingency. Everybody in the Division has to do it, the stints come round regular as orbits, and
every time it’s drilled into you that if something does happen, you’re on your own.
    We’re all right behind you. But when you’re up against the superhuman, the orders run in
reverse: the first is sauve qui peut, the second is “havoc”, the third is “no quarter” ... you get the
picture.
    Our swords are permanently notched.
    Thinking for myself is what I’m here for. At this moment the glorious possibility of First
Contact is clamouring with the alarming thought that this thing originates with our long-departed or
ever-present enemies. The little probe has closed its distance by ten miles, and seems to be
decelerating: its puffs of reaction-mass volatiles another piece of evidence that it isn’t some long-
lost voyager.
   “Hailing it,” I say, and key out a standard all-bands interrogative ,and a single radar sweep. To
my surprise there’s an immediate response. The babbages chatter for a second and then my suit’s
interpreters spell out the message: “Cometary mining vessel NK slash eight-seven-one out of Ship
City to unidentified, please respond, over.”
   I don’t take it in; my mind’s still full of clutter about this craft’s being (since it’s obviously not
the enemy coming back and telling us resistance is useless, etc.) a genuine alien space probe. To
my lasting harrassment, the only thing I can think of (but did I think?) is to 4I hit the video
transmission and say, my voice squeaky with astonishment: “Speak Angloslav, robot?”
   More computer chatter, then a human voice: “English?”
   “Yes, English,” I babble happily, still speaking falsetto, still hearing space opera, “you pick it up
from old transmissions, yes? Language has changed -“
   At that point the video input starts up, the image grainy through anti-virus snow. It’s the face of
an old, old man. He’s had the telomere hack, and some fairly primitive rejuvenation, but that’s it.
The significance of all the machine has said dawns on me. This is no alien emissary, but something
almost as strange: the digital ghost of an escaped prisoner, one of the Outwarders” bondsmen who,
two centuries ago, had fled their orbital work camp for whatever lay beyond the Gate.
   “Much has changed,” I tell it.
   Remembering my first encounter with what turned out to be the replicated minds of Wilde and
Meg could still make my ears burn, as I found when the recollection came to me while I drove
down a relatively clear stretch of the trail, just north of Ealing Forest.
   I knew roughly who or what he was straight away. He had no idea who we were, and was
surprised when we told him. I don’t think he believed us. Partially overcoming our mutual
suspicions took hours of talk, followed by almost direct physical contact before Wilde and Meg
would accept that we were human. Even after we had taken the stored cells they’d brought with
them (kept like a lucky charm through all their robotic adventures) and re-grown bodies for the pair
of them, and transferred their minds to the new brains, I could never bring myself to think of them
as human. Their tale of what had happened to them did nothing to reduce my unease.
   Wilde told us that the human and ex-human labourers had hacked a path through a spun-off
“daughter wormhole” to a just about-habitable world they called New Mars. The uploaded ones
had turned themselves back into humans, and were “now” (thousands of light years away, and
thousands of years in the future) turning New Mars into a new Earth, in a rather cavalier I brought
the buggy to a halt beside a six-foot-high hawthorn hedge, a sort of natural barbed-wire
entanglement, just a few paces before the gap in that hedge containing the gate of Ealing Technical
College. I turned off the engine, and sat back for a moment, stretching and relaxing muscles that
had tensed in the long and alert drive here, and looked around. The College was a mid-twenty-first
century building whose steel, concrete and glass had been built for blast. Its squat, three-storey
bulk had survived the machinery of a more insidious destruction a lot better than the score or so of
older buildings in the clearing that surrounded it. These had long since been reprocessed into low
dwellings with all the usual accompaniments of non-co post-urban life, children and dogs and pigs
and shit.
   It was about four in the afternoon. The shadows of the forest’s hundred-foot oaks and elms
covered a good quarter of the clearing. A hundred yards away, on the edge of the forest, smoke
rose from behind a small shed from which the ringing of repeatedly struck metal could be heard; a
low-tech version of a forge, I guessed, wondering idly what it was called. The few adults about
treated me with more than usual non-cooperation, pointedly ignoring my presence and sharply
tugging away any children who didn’t. I left the rucksack in the back like a fierce dog, it could
look after itself but made sure my holstered pistol was obvious as I walked to the gate.
    The gate, of stout creosoted wood, was closed with a latch, evidently designed to keep out any
animal less intelligent than a dog. I closed t behind me and strolled up ten yards of flagstoned path
to the main entrance. To left and right of the path were vegetable gardens, terraforming process
which exploited the local system’s large complement of comets.
    Society on New Mars was what Wilde called a free market anarchy. To us, it sounded more like
a multiple mutual tyranny. The most powerful person in it was our oldest surviving enemy a man
called David Reid, the original owner of the forced-labour company. He had in his possession
copies of the stored mind-states of the Outwarders, and was open to the argument that it would be
safe to reboot them Real Soon Now.
    Imagine our delight. with plots marked out in stretched string and lettered labels. A young man,
kneeling on an old sack and poking at the soil, looked up at me incuriously.
    On the concrete slab above the double doors some original name had been chiselled off, and the
new one carved in, with much embellishment of leaves, hammers, sickles, and glassware to mask
this necessary vandalism. The windows on the ground floor were little more than slots; on the
other floors they were a more normal size. Glancing up, I saw that several of them had been
cracked, in a time so distant that some green algae or moss had settled there and spread along the
zigzag flaws. Tough glass. The walls themselves, of course, were covered with ivy.
    I pushed at the door, which swung open to admit me to a broad foyer with stone stairs ascending
to left and right, and a wide U-shaped wooden barrier in the middle, behind which a young man sat,
smoking a pipe and reading a book. No one else was about, though a murmur of voices and the
sounds of machinery carried from other parts of the building. There was a strong smell of non-
mineral oil, presumably used for lubrication rather than cookery. Lighting was provided by the
doorway, the stairwells, and a very bright tube above where the man sat. (“I’ve never met a non-co
yet,” Suze had told me, “who was too proud to generate electricity, or too poor to steal it.”) As the
door swung back behind me, the man glanced up, laid down his pipe casually and kept his hand
where it was, behind the sill of the desk. He eyed me warily as I walked up. He had a thin face and
narrow beard, and was wearing a homespun cotton shirt.
    “Good afternoon, lady,” he said.
    “Good afternoon, man,” I replied with equal formality. “I wonder if I could speak to Dr
Malley?”
    He bristled. “I’m afraid not,” he said. The muscles of his right arm tensed.
    “If he’s busy, I’ll wait,” I said, glancing around as though looking for a seat.
    “It ain’t that,” he said. “Waiting wouldn’t do no good. Dr Malley says he don’t want to see no
more of you people.”
    “Any more of what people?”
    He looked away, looked back defiantly.
    “Space people.”
    Ah.
    “Listen, young man,” I said. “I’ve come a long way to see Dr Malley. Even longer than you
think. And I’m not going to be stopped by you, or even by whatever laughable weapon you have
your hand on. Using these things fast takes practice, and I have a couple hundred years” head
start.”
    Sheepishly, he withdrew his hand.
    “And now,” I said politely, “I’d thank you to take me to see him.” I sauntered behind his sullen
walk, all the way up two flights of stairs and along a dim-lit corridor” to a room on whose brass
:nameplate showed (among more curlicued foliage, within which the roman capitals lurked like
ruins) the name of Dr I. K. Malley.
    “Knock and enter,” I said quietly, and he did. I followed him into a small office with a wide
window whose evidently thick and old plate glass distorted the outside view. Wooden shelving
along the walls bowed under the weight of books and papers, which also partly covered the floor.
The room smelled of old paper, worn carpet, pipe-smoke, whisky, and sweat. It had two chairs,
one of them behind the desk, which was edge-on to the window. Hunched in it, looking up at us,
was a man whose apparent age must have stabilized about thirty, but who had not touched an anti-
geriatric for at least a hundred years. His hair and stubbly beard were white, his skin dark and
lined, his eyes grey, cold as a Martian winter.
    “I thought I told -“ he began. Then he looked at me and waved a hand with weary resignation.
“It’s all right,” he said in a dull voice. “It wouldn’t do any good, anyway. They’ll just keep
coming.” There ,was a half-empty bottle of whisky on the desk, and a full glass.
    The young man went reluctantly out, scowling in response to my farewell smile. Malley turned
to me and motioned to the room’s other seat, a worn leather armchair by the window. I told him
my name and held out my hand. He looked slightly surprised, and stood up and shook it. His grip
felt like an old leather glove fitted closely. over a metal hand. He was tall, but stooped, and he
wore an pen-necked check cotton shirt and twill trousers. All his clothes ,seemed too wide for his
girth and too short for his limbs. He folded himself back into his seat and leaned his elbows on the
desk.
    “So what do you bastards want now?” he said without preamble or logy. He took a sip of his
drink, and hooded his eyes. I shrugged and spread my hands. “Dr Malley,” I said, “I must tell you
I have very little idea what you’re talking about. I’m here on behalf of the Cassini Division of the
Solar Defence Group, and I assure you that no one else has been sent to see you.”
    Malley fiddled with the bowl of his pipe. His fingers were stubby, their tips ingrained with grey
ash and yellow tar.
    “Day before yesterday,” he said, “a couple of chaps turned up out of the blue, and told me they
were from space defence. Said they were checking out rumours that I was dabbling in AI work.
Total bollocks, of course. I just teach the local farm boys basic electronics. Any bright sparks that
turn up, I throw a bit of Feynman and Hawking at them.” His eyes flashed conspiratorially. “And a
bit of Malley. The few who make any sense of it invariably fuck off and join the Union, no matter
what I say.” He unzipped a leather pouch and began filling the bowl, hands working automatically
as he gazed sadly out of the window. “You could say I’ve been lowering the average intelligence
in these parts a crime in my book, but not, I guess, in yours.”
    He snorted a laugh. I smiled encouragingly; not that I quite understood what he was saying
word for word, but I got his drift.
    “So,” he went on, lighting up his mixture with an antique Zippo, “it was a bit of a surprise to be
leaned on by two of your heavies, leaving me with subtle warnings about dire consequences. The
words “outbreak” and, I think, “red-hot smoking crater” happened to crop up in the conversation.
Just like the good old days under the Yanks. No black suits with bulges at the shoulder, but
otherwise, plus fa change.”
    This, I have to say, gave me pause. There was no law against dabbling with artificial
intelligence (or against anything else, for that matter). There was not even a Union rule against it.
For anything not covered by Union rules (just about everything) we’d settled on the iron rule: “Do
What You Can Get Away With.” But touching off an outbreak of artificial intelligence, disease,
nano-assemblers, or any other kind of replicator was something you couldn’t get away with. Your
neighbours would ostracize you, or boycott you, and if one of the essential amenities they chose not
to supply turned out to be, e.g., your next breath, why then that was something that when the matter
reached the agenda of a neighbourhood moot they would get away with.
   And at worst, if an outbreak actually began to spread, the Inner System’s own space defence
forces would apply the orbital zap. I had never heard of them coming down and threatening people
before the fact. It seemed rather illiberal.
   “Excess of zeal,” I said, partly thinking aloud, partly bluffing. “I’ll have it looked into. But I
assure you the Division has nothing to do with it. We have a rather different proposition to put to
you.”
   “Yes,” he sighed, “I’m sure you do. Hard-cop, soft-cop, and all that.”
   Could it be? The thought that someone else in the Division, or in the wider Solar Defence
apparatus, might be playing games with my mission was so enraging that for a moment,
fortunately, I was speechless. After a second or two I gathered my thoughts, and calmed down: I
might be out of practice at conspiracy, but not at self-control. I shrugged.
   “I know nothing of that,” I said.
   “So what do you want me to do?”
   “Dr Malley,” I said, smiling, “do you know what the people on the other side of the wormhole,
the people Wilde told us about, call it? They call it the Malley Mile.”
   “I’ve seen the tapes,” Malley said dryly. “Flattering, isn’t it?” I had hoped so. Time to lay on
some more.
   “We find ourselves,” I said carefully, “in a position where we urgently need to understand the
wormhole. And on our own, we can’t. There’s only one person who can help us, and that is you.
Would you like to come with me to Jupiter, and do some real physics?”
   Malley was taking a sip of whisky as I said this, and he snorted so hard it went up the back of his
nose. He spluttered, coughed, then leaned back and laughed.
   “So it’s come to this! Thirty billion people in your utopia, and ou have to come to me! You
people really disappoint!” I smiled. “I know what you mean, Dr Malley. And I think what we
want to do may change all that, in the long run. The Division is not the Union. That’s all I want to
say, for now.”
   He rested his chin on a cat’s-cradle of fingers and looked at me.
   “Hmm,” he said. “Interesting. That used to be called the Wolff $ambit.”
   I raised my eyebrows; he shrugged. “Look it up.” (I never did.) “Anyway,” he went on, “you’re
too late.” He refilled his tumbler, and raised it to me in an ironic toast: “Here’s to the scientific
genius of Isambard Kingdom Malley.” He knocked it back and slammed the tumbler down. “And
here’s what has long since pissed it away. This, advancing age, and corrupting youth.”
   “No!” I stood up. “You’re wrong! Those are symptoms. Your real problem is this: you worked
out the most beautiful and successful physical theory a human being ever developed, and then
superhuman beings went right ahead, used it, applied it, took it to the limits and disproved it! And
you have never gotten over the suspicion that, to go beyond your theory, you’d have to go beyond
your human limitations. And now, you can’t even do that!”
   “Precisely,” he said. He refilled the tumbler, again. “Thanks to you people!”
   “Us?” I said, stung by the injustice of this accusation.
   “Yes, you with your armlock on space development and on computer work, your endless cold
war with the Jovians. The Cassini Division has a very cushy number out there, while the rest of the
human population gets fobbed off with a sort of static comfort. Restricted without their noticing,
rationed without knowing what they’re missing. The rations are generous, I’ll give you that, but
basically what you so grandly call the Solar Union is the civilian hinterland of a war economy.”
   This was beyond arguing about.
   “Think what you like,” I said. “But why not come and see for yourself?”
   Malley took out a penknife, unfolded a yellowed steel spike and began poking about in the bowl
of his pipe. I looked away. There was a scrape of flint and the now-familiar smell of burning dried
weed refreshed itself in the room.
   “It’s tempting,” Malley acknowledged. “To be honest, I’d love to see the gate the Malley Mile,
ha-ha! up close. I’d be delighted to find a way through it to the world Wilde described, which
sounds so much more interesting than this one.” (I almost jumped I hadn’t even raised the matter of
navigating the wormhole, which was what we really wanted him to do.) “But like I said, it’s a
waste of time. I can’t handle the math any more. It’s a young man’s game, and the young man
who was Malley is no more.”
   48 He really was sounding dangerously close to maudlin. I sat down again, and leaned across
the desk and looked earnestly into his somewhat bloodshot eyes.
   “Age and alcoholism,” I said, “are curable. As you well know. A couple of treatments and
you’ll feel better than you can remember, better than you can now even imagine. you’ll have
access to the biggest computers the Division has, the best instruments, decades of observations. All
we want you to do is show us the way to New Mars. If you do that, you can do whatever else you
can get away with, just like the rest of us.”
   Malley leaned back, sucking on his pipe. I’d never noticed before the horrible bubbling sound
the tar and spittle make in the things.
   “It’s a deal,” he said.
   It took me a moment to work out that this meant he agreed.
   “You mean, we have a plan?”
   “Yes!” Malley chuckled. “Indeed we do. We have a plan.”
   My plan, at this point, was to retrace my route to Alexandra Port, and get the next airship
connection to a flying-wing flight to Guine, and the next laser-launcher to rendezvous with the
Terrible Beauty, the fusion clipper on which I’d arrived, which was currently parked in low Earth
orbit. On the way a recent update I intended to show or describe to Malley some of the features of
Union society, from which he’d so carefully exiled himself these past one hundred years: the
gigantic Babbage engines churning through their Leontiev material-balance matrices, the sea-farms,
the miles-high skyscrapers, the miles-deep caves, the (almost deserted) great hall of the Central
Planning Board with its golden statue of Mises ...
   Alas for plans.
   “Isn’t there anyone you want to say goodbye to?” Malley was stuffing books, instruments and
stashes of tobacco into an overnight bag with every indication of being ready to leave there and
then. He gave me a wintry smile. “What do you think?”.
   “You’re not in a close relationship?”
   “No doubt the village whore will miss me.”
   I blushed and looked out the window; changed the subject. “Why’s this place built like a
fortress, anyway?” Malley coughed at dust stirred up by his rummaging.
   “Police station. The windows do open, by the way. I understand this was so that prisoners
could dive out of them.”
    Not entirely sure what he meant (or, perhaps, not wanting to believe I understood) I fiddled with
a lock and latch. The window swung open, and I leaned out to inhale a breath of uncontaminated
air. After my first long sigh of relief I looked across at the nodding treetops, the lowering sun, and
down In front of the college was a crowd of about fifty people, mostly adult, and all clutching some
kind of weapon: rifles, shotguns, even like peasants out of an old horror movie pitchforks. Some
were crowded around the gate, others formed a wide semicircle around the buggy, above which the
rucksack part of my suit had transformed itself into a hornet-cloud of buzzing defence-motes.
    I must have said something to draw Malley’s attention. He stuck his head out the window
beside me.
    “Oh, shit!” he said.
    “Is this the doing of that nice young man in reception?”
    “Probably,” said Malley.
    “Why?”
    He turned to me and frowned. “You really don’t get it, do you? People live here because they
don’t like you guys! And they don’t want you taking me away.”
    “You can tell them you’re going because you want to!” He retracted his head. “I can try.”
    The people around the vehicle were backing off from the futile and painful task of attempting
anything against the defence swarm. They moved through the crowd at the gate and, being
apparently more adventurous spirits, began to lead them to the main door. Someone looked up and
saw me. Yells rose and the move towards the door became. a surge.
    They’d be up the stairs in about a minute.
    “Suit!” I screamed, tapping instructions on to my cuff. The swarm above the buggy circled once
then made a beeline for me, and as I ducked back inside they crowded over me and reformed. The
whole of my outfit flowed and reshaped into its basic spacesuit form. The suit went rigid,
everything went black (two releases on, and that one-second bug was still not fixed) and then
became clear and mobile again.
    Malley stared open-mouthed as my clothes changed into seamless matt black close-fitting
armour, with a faceless black ball for a helmet and massively over-muscled shoulders.
    “Nanotech spacesuit,” I explained impatiently. “Out on the window-sill, now!”
    He hesitated, then heard the sound of running feet in the corridor. He grabbed his bag and
clambered out, half-sitting under the swung-up window. I followed him on to the ledge and
wrapped my arms around him. “Hang on,” I told him unnecessarily.
    “Rope,” I requested, and jumped. From the shoulders of the suit a couple of cables extended,
one end grabbing the window-ledge by pure adhesion, the other lowering us rapidly to the ground.
We landed gently. I looked around. The crowd’s vanguard were looking down at us from the
window as the cables snaked back into the suit, the crowd’s stragglers were standing around
between the gate and the doorway, looking at us with expressions that I still remember with
somewhat malicious satisfaction. Malley was tottering on his feet beside me, whey faced. He’d
vomited over the suit; already it was thirstily absorbing the organics. I picked Malley up, like an
actor in a Killer Robot outfit carrying off an actress in a Torn And Revealing outfit, and bounded to
the buggy. The crowd scattered around me. I set Malley down in the passenger seat and hopped
into the driver’s seat.
    I had underestimated the crowd. They were not some panicked mob, but a peasant village,
watching what they saw as the suborning or abduction of a well-liked and much-needed teacher.
Those who’d gone up the stairs were streaming back down, and those who hadn’t were closing
around the buggy. Students, young men mostly, added to the numbers pouring out of the college
doorway. They made no threatening approaches, giving it a good few yards” clearance, but they
formed an increasingly solid mass around us. I looked out at a wall of people dressed in their
colourful wools and cottons, their broad leather belts; at their competently held, though crude,
weapons, their smooth and hostile faces.
   Well, at least they should see my face. “Scroll helmet,” I murmured, and the globe around my
head opened at the top, the aperture widening, then narrowing, as the smart-matter flowed back into
the temporary ring-seal resting on my collarbones. I turned to Malley before anyone could react
and said: 5I “Could you please explain things to them?”
   Malley shrugged. His hands were quivering. He wiped the back of one hand across his mouth
and stood up, gripping the rim of the buggy’s windshield.
   “Hey, friends!” he called out. “Listen to me! Thanks for your concern, but everything’s all right.
I’m going away for a short while with this woman from the ... outside. I’m going of my own free
will. So please don’t worry! Let us through, please.”
   The tallest and toughest-looking man in sight shouldered his way to the front and stood right in
our way.
   “I’m sorry, Dr Malley,” he said. “But we ain’t sure you are going of your own free will. Those
space-folks, those socialists, they can do things to your brain so’s you think you’re doing what you
want, but you’re doing what they want, see?”
   “Not that old lie,” I muttered under my breath. I should have guessed that the non-co dominant
ideology could only be a full-blown paranoid delusional system.
   “I’m sure they can,” Malley said. He’d recovered some of his poise. “But I very much doubt
that they can do it in half an hour.”
   The tall guy looked nonplussed for all of two seconds.
   “Well then,” he said with implacable logic, “she must’ve threatened you. That they’d zap the
village, or something. It’s all right, Dr Malley, you tell us! We ain’t scared of them!”
   “I assure you -“ Malley began, but I knew it was of no use. Argument would get us nowhere. I
couldn’t credibly threaten . Malley, and if it came to threatening the crowd my pistol (now inside
my suit, and pressing painfully against my hip) was no match for their guns. Whether the suit
could recreate the helmet in time to protect me from a shot was an experiment I didn’t care to try.
   “Scroll helmet up,” I whispered, and turned on the engine. In the moment of blackness I reached
up and caught Malley’s shoulder.
   “Get right down!” I yelled, pulling hard. With the other hand I caught the wheel. I groped with
my foot for the control pedal and pushed it down. The buggy leapt forward and as the view cleared
I saw the man in front of us hurl himself out of the way at the last possible second. The others did
likewise, scattering like skittles. And then we were through, careening down the village street in a
flurry of chickens and a shower of stones. One or two .shots were fired, but they whizzed overhead
I doubted that they were seriously aimed to hit. The only people between us and the end of the
village were more interested in getting out of our way than in stopping us. But one of them,
glimpsed as we hurtled past, was holding a rectangular chunk of plastic with a yard-long thin rod
poking up from it. He held it with one end at his mouth and the other at his ear, and was speaking
rapidly into it.
   I had a nasty suspicion that this was a radio.
   “I told you I taught them electronics,” Malley said a few minutes later, as we bounced along yet
another forest track, heading in completely the wrong direction for any return to Alexandra Port.
   “How irresponsible can you get!” I yelled. “Radios can pick up viruses, you know that., “Yeah,
and melt in your hand so what!”
    “What about mind viruses? Have you thought about that?”
    “Of course I have,” Malley said, struggling to get the seatbelt on. “They’re just a fancy term for
ideas you don’t like.”
    “Ideas who don’t like?”
    “You lot,” Malley, said, waving his hand around his head. “The Union. The Division. It’s just
censorship.”
    I laughed so hard that the buggy swung dangerously as I steered around a log. “Sure, like taking
what you want is rationing!”
    “Exactly my point,” Malley said, with unaccountable triumph. I sighed. “Dr Malley, I have
great admiration for you and all you’ve accomplished, and I can even see you’ve been doing good
to these people, but I respectfully suggest that you’re a bit out of touch, or maybe misinformed -“
    “Hah!”
    “and you’ll see things differently once you get out to the Division.”
    “No doubt,” Malley chuckled, wheezing. “No doubt I will.”
    The map still patched to my eye showed that we were nearing Gunnersmere, one of the first fens
of the Thames Estuary. The Village of Under Flyover was marked as a straggle of houses along
.the shore. Ahead, I could already see the trees thinning, oak and beech being replaced by alder and
birch.
    “What do you think they were using the radio for?” I asked. Malley gave me an evil grin. “Oh,
warning ahead, probably.”
    “Skies above, man!” I applied the brake gently and we slithered to a halt in a spray of leaf mould
and beechnuts. Suddenly our surroundings seemed very quiet, apart from sinister cracklings under
the trees, and deserted, apart from flitting shapes in the long shadows. “You mean we’re heading
straight into an ambush?”
    “You are,” Malley said calmly. “I would have stopped you any minute now, but I was waiting
to see how long it’d take before you realized you needed my local knowledge to get you out of
this.”
    I took a deep breath. “OK, Dr Malley. I need your local knowledge. That, or a rescue
chopper.”
    “Maybe both. First things first. Let’s get this buggy off the road, preferably somewhere not too
obvious. There’s a bit of exposed roadway a couple of hundred metres ahead, and some ruins
alongside. Tracks shouldn’t be too conspicuous, especially in poor light.”
    I restarted the engine and let the vehicle roll forward quietly to the area Malley had indicated,
where the chances of wind and weather had laid bare the cracked tarmac. I sought out a ruin whose
approach wasn’t itself covered with plants or plant remains, and found one with a battered concrete
ramp leading to the gap where its doors had been. Within a minute or two we had the buggy
stashed inside a rectangle of crumbled wall, within which nettles, willow-herb and hemp grew to a
height of over six feet. I looked down at the former contents of the rucksack, scattered forlornly in
the rear well of the buggy. I changed the suit into a rucksack and a dappled black-and-green
jumpsuit, then repacked, with the weighty addition of the deflated boat, its electric outboard engine
and fuel cell, and the spare gas cylinder.
    “That’s one possible way out,” Malley acknowledged. “Now what?” I asked.
    “Do you have any way of contacting the nearest Union outpost?”
    Outpost, indeed. “Not directly,” I said. “I could contact them via my ship. It’ll be above the
horizon in about -“ I blinked up the watch floating in my left eye, and checked “fifteen minutes.
But I’d really rather not do that, or send out some general distress -“
   At that moment I heard a rhythmic thudding along the trail in the direction from which we’d
come.
   “What’s that?”
   “Galloping horse,” Malley said. “Get down!”
   We ducked behind the wall. I drew my pistol, wishing as I did so that I’d known of the
properties of nettles before changing my suit: my hands were coming up in a nasty rash. The
thudding sound got closer, then slowed and changed to a clatter as the horse encountered the stretch
of paving. As it drew level I peered out through the stems of weeds.
   A young woman was sitting on the back of the strange, huge beast, holding on and controlling it
by an arrangement of leather straps and metal footrests. She was riding quite slowly now, looking
from side to side. Her clothes were filthy, as were the sides of the horse, and a trickle of blood was
drying below a bruise on her temple. As she turned to the right, almost facing me, I recognized er.
   “Suze!” I called, standing up.
   She jumped and the horse shied and whinnied, then she tugged on the straps she held and said
something, and the beast settled. Malley, with a grunt and a glower, straightened up and followed
more slowly as I skipped over the tumbled brickwork and down to the path.
   “Are you all right, Ellen?” She looked past me at Malley, and her eyes widened. “Is that -?”
   “The great man himself, yes,” I said. “But Suze, what about you? What happened?” Not that it
was hard to guess.
   “I followed you,” she said. “I know you didn’t want me to come, but -7 “It was a kind thought,”
I said.
   “Well.” She smiled down at us, uncertainly. “I took a barge up the canal and borrowed Bonnie
here.” She patted the horse’s neck. “I’ve ridden her before, and she’s much better on the forest
paths than a buggy, you know. When I rode into the village back there the locals w I was Union,
and some sort of riot started, all yelling and inning. They pelted me with stones and, uh, shit. I
didn’t know what was going on, so I just put my head down and dug in my heels. And here I am.”
   Here you are. Another innocent to look after. “Anybody follow you?”
   She shook her head. “What about you?” she asked. t introduced her to Malley and outlined our
plight.
   ~Oh!” she said, peering anxiously around. “You mean there might people out looking for us
right now?”
   “Yes,” I said. “Over to you, Dr Malley.”
   “Call me Sam,” he said, possibly irritated by Suze’s star-struck glances at him. “Everybody
does. Short for Isambard. Right. Suze, can you put a call through to Alexandra Port, arrange a
chopper pick-up?”
   “Yes, of course, Doc Sam.”
   “OK.” He closed his eyes and pinched his forehead with thumb and forefinger, looking as tired
as I felt. “You do that, ask them to be ready for take off in about an hour. We make our way
through the trees to the east of the path, around the back of the village, hide out by the shore, and
then no doubt Ellen here will be able to give them our exact coordinates from her magic suit’s gee-
pals link, right?”
   I nodded.
   “Okay,” said Malley. “Suze, you’re going to have to say goodbye to the horse, I’m afraid, but I
assure you the locals won’t maltreat her.”
   Suze removed the horse’s harness and sent her cantering away southward with an affectionate
slap on the rump. Then she unclipped a narrow-band transmitter from her belt, tuned it to the
nearest communications satellite relay, and called up Alexandra Port. She frowned and shook her
head.
    “Message got through, but there’s no acknowledgement.”
    Malley shrugged. “Try again when we get there.”
    He turned, and Suze and I followed him under the trees to the east of the path. The way through
the trees, bearing generally rightward, was much harder than one might expect. They were old
woods, so the canopy was high and thick enough to choke off most undergrowth. However, the
ruins underneath the deceptive layers of leaf mould more than made up for this lack. We banged
our shins on hidden blocks, plunged knee-deep into hidden pits. What appeared to be a dead
branch could turn out to be a disconcertingly solid and sharp prong of rusted metal. Malley
persisted in staying in the denser part of the wood, and walked its treacherous footing with
confidence, carrying his overnight bag like somebody heading for a transport terminal. We
concentrated on avoiding injury and struggled silently or at least inarticulately along behind him.
    After about half an hour of this Malley began to bear a little further right and we shortly
emerged in a more open area of long grass dotted with bushes and low trees. The water was about
a hundred yards away and at this point was almost two miles across. A mile to our left was Under
Flyover with its surrounding fields and gardens. Only a few pillars remained of the structure which
had given it its name.
    Spread out across the fields was a line of people with dogs, working their way systematically
towards where we were and communicating with other people, no doubt out of sight in the forest,
with their hand-held radios. We crouched down and Suze tried again to raise Alexandra Port.
    “Nothing,” she said. “I don’t understand this. It’s like they’re deliberately ignoring us!”
    “Could this be policy?” I asked her. “Is it something to do with the ruckus we I caused back in
that village? Like, if you stir up the non-cos, you’re on your own?”
    She shook her head fiercely. “No way. You’d have some explaining to do, but we always pull
our own people out. Hey, we even help non-cos if they ask for it.”
    Malley grunted. “Huh, usually those who least deserve it village hooligans or thieves.”
    Suze was agreeing with him and the searchers were getting closer.
    “Enough,” I said. “Here’s what we’re going to do.”
    What we did was run hell-for-leather down to the shore. I tore through the long grass, not
bothering to hide or dodge, slid down banks, felt my feet grit on gravel, and pulled the inflation
cord of the boat. Putting the gas cylinder and the motor in place was the only preparation we’d
made.
    The dinghy mhoomphed into shape in about five seconds, even as I was throwing it forward
onto the water. Suze came panting, Malley puffing, behind me and we all splashed through the
shallows and pushed the boat out until the water was knee-deep, then clambered in. It all took less
than a minute, which was more than enough time for yells and yaps to break out. By the time the
first of our pursuers had reached the water’s edge I had the engine started and we were about ten
yards out. A couple of men waded in after us and a dog plunged in and bravely paddled in our
wake.
    I looked back. They were gaining on us, but as the water got r the advantage changed. By the
time the water became too deep to wade, we were beyond their reach. Somebody whistled, and the
dog too turned back. By now six people had gathered on the bank, and as we turned and headed
downriver I noticed that one of them was speaking into a radio.
    “What do you think he’s up to?” I asked Malley. For answer, Malley pointed back along the
shore, to Under Flyover’s long wooden jetty. Four men were just visible, running along the quay.
They scrambled down a ladder and into a boat. With the four of them working two pairs of oars, it
pulled away from the quay and gave us chase.
    “They haven’t a chance,” Malley said, just before two of the men shipped their oars and raised a
mast, then a sail. “Looks like they do,” said Suze.
    With the sail up their rate of closing on us increased visibly, though I figured it would take them
at least half an hour. I steered a course away from the shore, hoping to pick up the main current
and gain some much-needed speed.
    “What is this?” I demanded of Malley. “This is crazy. They must know you want to come
along with us, you could have got away easily back there if you didn’t. They can’t all believe that
story about me brainwashing you, or whatever. So why are they still chasing us?”
    He shrugged. “I don’t know. I’m more surprised that your lot haven’t responded to our call.”
    Not quite my lot, but he was right. It was most disconcerting. I looked around. The sunlight
was by now at a quite acute angle, and the scene the sheet of water over which we moved, the
wooded banks curving to the left ahead of us would in other circumstances have been idyllic.
Waterfowl swam or skimmed the widened river, and its surface was otherwise marred by only a
few small craft .. .
    “What about those other boats?” I asked Suze. “Surely some of them are Union visitors?”
    “Yes, but it’s hard to say which ah!”
    She pointed downriver to a tiny vee of white spray. “We’re saved! That’s a Union patrol boat!”
Carried away by excitement, she began waving her arms and shouting, although the boat a
hydrofoil, I now saw was still a couple of miles off. She desisted after a moment and stripped off
her shirt and began waving that.
    “What does a patrol boat have to do?” I asked. “River rescue, mostly,” said Malley.
    “And maintaining a presence, as they say,” Suze remarked, flapping her shirt and all but
standing up.
    “Do they ever interfere with non-cos?”
    Malley scowled and shook his head. “Maybe they should the Thames boatmen are inclined to
take what the traffic will bear. Daylight robbery.”
    I didn’t understand this, but Suze gave it an appreciative laugh.
    The hydrofoil’s course shifted a fraction. “They’ve seen us,” I said. I looked over my shoulder.
The men in the boat were working the sail again, tacking off in a different direction. Within a few
minutes the hydrofoil a thirty-foot launch, painted white, its ensign the Union’s starry plough had
cut back its engine and dropped into the water, and circled behind us and hove to alongside. The
woman at the wheel waved to us and called out: “Hi! You having trouble with those people?”
    “Yes!” I yelled. “Thanks for coming to help.”
    “That’s fine,” she said. “Where are you going?”
    I thought for a moment. “Alexandra Port but the mouth of the Lee would be fine, if you want to
give us a lift.”
    “Sure. No problem. Come aboard.” She threw us a rope, and we pulled the wallowing dinghy
in to a small ladder at the side of her boat. First Malley, then Suze, then I climbed in, and I used a
boathook to haul the dinghy up after me. The woman, who introduced herself as Carla, had long
blonde hair and a suntanned face and a smile that showed crooked teeth. Her yellow jumpsuit had
a small patch with her name and “River Patrol” stitched on it.
    “Did you pick up a call?” Suze asked. “We tried to hail Alexandra Port.”
   Carla shook her head. She motioned us into the cabin in front of the cockpit, and re-started the
engine. “Make yourselves comfortable,” she yelled. “Tell me about what happened when I’ve got
this thing on course.”
   The boat picked up speed, the foils dug into the water and we lifted off. “Malley lit his pipe,
Suze settled to gazing out of the window, and I stood beside Carla and told her a conveniently
edited version of what had gone on. She was as baffled by the non-response as we were. We
crossed Gunnersmere, Hammersea, Southwater and had just reached the City Basin when Carla
remarked: “There’s a lot of non-co boats on the river this evening ...”
   I had noticed the boats, but not having any basis for comparison hadn’t known it was unusual.
Rowing boats, sailboats, skiffs, steam launches, smoke-trailing wood burners, and barges were
visible all across the pool, their courses at first uncoordinated, and then as I looked again and again
obviously converging. On us.
   Carla noticed it a few seconds after I did. She frowned and tried her communications
equipment. The microwave laser pinged off whatever satellite it was tuned to, but no response
came back. The boats were still at a distance a few hundred yards all around but were slowly
surrounding us. Suze and Malley came out of the cabin and we watched in silent puzzlement and
growing dismay.
   “This is too much,” I said. “No more miss nice girl. Carla, please take fast evasive action
before they block us off completely.”
   She grinned and gave me the thumbs-up and pulled out the throttle. The boat shot forward, then
began a curving course towards the City towers, which gleamed gold and bronze in the low sun,
like drunken, armoured Goliaths wading out to meet some aquatic David. Between them and us
were a couple of non-co craft: a four-man rowing boat, perhaps similar to the one that had first
followed us, which skittered across the water like a surface-tension bug; and a much slower,
heavier wood-fired puffer that chugged with shocking determination across our bows. Carla
touched the wheel, once to left, once to right. The rowing boat was swamped, and I glimpsed white
faces from the steam boat’s decks as we hurtled past its stern with yards to spare. Then we were in
among the leaning, looming towers, our reflection speeding and flashing in their glassy flanks.
   I stepped carefully to the rear deck and squatted down and flowed the suit into its dish aerial
form, and sent an urgent call to the Terrible Beauty.
   The others were clinging to any available handhold, and looking at me in bemusement as I stood
up with the reconstituted clothes climbing back over my skin.
   “Twenty minutes,” I said. Our wake set waves crossing and recrossing the geometric spaces of
the boxed canyons. The non-cos” vessels prowled about the flooded buildings but kept well back.
   “Until what happens?” Carla asked.
   6o I grinned, suddenly cocksure again, already back in my own world, already far above this
one, with its conspiracies of non-cooperators, its unresponsive rescue services, its general principle
of leaving far too much to a natural world and a prehistoric humanity that pounced on any moment
of weakness.
   “Watch the sky,” I told them. “Terrible Beauty’s coming down.”
   It was Malley who spotted it first, a new and brighter evening star low in the glare of the sunset.
Although it was coming down, it seemed to climb, as it moved away from the horizon and towards
us. Twice it seemed to flare, and broader secondary flashes drifted away. Then, closer, it really did
flare, with a thunder that tumbled down to us through miles of air, and that was as suddenly
replaced by the screaming whistle of the aerobraking flues. Plumes of superheated air founted from
its surface, then the third and final parachute was deployed, a half-mile-wide canopy of monolayer
carbon filament on which the huge ship floated like the seed beneath a thistledown.
    “Head for mid-channel,” I told Carla. She complied, barely able to take her gaze away from the
descending ship. The harrassing boats fled from its encroaching shadow in a widening circle of
accelerating haste. We nosed out from among the towers and set a course to meet it, as if in
perverse defiance of the surrounding panic.
    “Oh, oh!” cried Suze. “It’s beautiful terrible beauty all right!”
    Its surfaces glowing like a lantern, curved like a shell, intricate like a vase; its shape like the
paradoxical egg of an alien, avian species that lived in higher dimensions; its sound like a choir of
angry angels or a host of adoring devils, the Terrible Beauty released its” drogue, which flitted out
of sight above the towers and trees, and no doubt made more than one fortune for whoever found it;
fired its attitude jets and its final retro-flare, sending roiling clouds of steam across the water
towards us, and settled at last on the riverbed of the Pool of London.
    “That,” said Malley, “is the most shocking waste of delta-vee I have ever seen.”
    “Carla looked at me sidelong. I nodded: “Full ahead.” The hydrofoil urged across the few
hundred yards that separated us from the probable object on the river. As we drew closer the water
hissed 6z and bubbled, and the foils failed to support our craft. Carla moved a control lever and the
hull sank back; skilfully she adjusted our speed until we came almost to a halt beneath the
spaceship’s curving overhang. Around us, the silvery bellies of killed or stunned fishes flashed in
the churning water. Some of them had undoubtedly been cooked alive; I found myself hoping that
the intake valves already open and gulping in water, thirsty to replace the squandered reaction-mass
would filter some of them off to the commissary. It was probable: like many of the Division’s
mechanisms, the ship had a sensitive nose and a ravenous appetite for usable organics.
    About fifty feet above us, at the Terrible Beauty’s widest diameter, a hatch unlidded and a face
peered down at us: Tony Girard, currently the security officer on the ship.
    “Hi, Ellen!” he shouted. “Sending a ladder down.”
    I caught the plastic ladder as it reached the boat, and turned to Malley. “After you.”
    Malley grinned at me, all cynicism gone from his face. He looked like a small boy about to go
on a carnival ride. He picked up his bag, looped its longest strap across the back of his neck and
under his armpits, and set off up the ladder.
    “Carla,” I said, “we’ll obviously wait till you’re well clear before we lift, but will you be all
right?”
    She made a performance of shading her eyes and looking around the now almost deserted stretch
of river. “I’ll be fine,” she said. “There’s a Union station at the mouth of the Lee. I’ll find out
there why nobody answered your call or mine, and why there weren’t any other patrol boats around
to help.” Her expression darkened. “Somebody’s gonna have some hard questions to answer.”
    “Contact us when they do,” I said, scribbling a note of our call sign and passing it to her, along
with the money I’d taken from Graciosa. “And thanks for everything. Anybody gives you trouble,
you just give us a call.” I jerked my thumb at the ship, and she smiled grateful for the moral
support, but probably not taking my promise seriously. This is a mistake people make about the
Division, but each person only makes it once. I smiled, half to myself, and grasped Suze’s
shoulder.
    “You were great,” I said. “You helped me a lot, and it was real neighbourly of you to come after
us.”
    “Even if it wasn’t necessary!” Suze laughed. “Forget goodbyes, Ellen. I’m coming with you.”
She put her hand on one of the steps of the ladder.
    “What? You can’t -“
    “I can,” she said confidently. “Anybody in the Union can join the Division if there’s a ship
available to take them, and -“ she patted the hull “here it is.”
    She was right. It was a rule, but in practice it was only applied by experienced spacers from the
Inner System defences joining the Division as a natural progression, and by members of various
administrative committees coming out to exercise what they supposed was democratic oversight.
We had long experience in dissuading starry-eyed youngsters from Earth, but ultimately we could
only dissuade, and if the new volunteer turned out to be useless gently disillusion them with some
really boring tasks.
    “But Suze!” I expostulated. “You’ve got a job to do here. Something’s up among the non-cos
all this radio communication, nobody knew that was going on. You’d do better to use what you
know to help the Union find out -“
    She held up her free hand. “No,” she said. “I’m useless for that now. The non-cos saw me with
you, and we’ve seen how fast word can spread. They won’t trust me any more, and they’d be right!
And if you’re really going to where you said I wouldn’t miss that chance for anything. I’m
coming.”
    And with that she turned away and climbed swiftly up the ladder. I watched her almost halfway,
then looked at Carla. She had an ironic smirk, as if to say, you’ll have trouble with that one. The
only response I could think of was to shrug and spread my hands.
    “That’s life,” I said, shaking my head, and then followed my new comrade up the ladder and into
the ship.
                               4      The State of the Art
   The sound of that hatch sealing behind me was the most welcome I’d heard for some time.
Tony Girard caught me by the forearms, and then let himself be swept into a hug.
   ‘It’s great to be back!’ I said when I’d let go of him and he’d stood aside, red-faced, as we
stepped out of the airlock. The inner hatch closed behind us and we heard a brief, muffled surge as
the airlock filled with water. The deck thrummed under my feet, the curving walls of the narrow
corridor enclosed me, the familiar shipboard smells of metal and plastic and blue-green, of
endlessly recycled air and water and organics, filled my grateful nostrils. ‘That was a brilliant
landing, I must say.’
   ‘Great to have you back,’ Tony said. ‘Especially with such success.’ I turned the sides of my
mouth downward. ‘Wilde would’ve been better. He knows the way -‘
   ‘And who’s to say it still works? We’ll get more out of Malley in the long run. You did fine.’
   ‘Hope you’re right. Have to dry him out and give his brain a reboot first.’ Tony laughed. ‘Two
tabs from the medical bay. I’ve pulled worse cases out of brawls in Aldringrad.’ He motioned me
to precede him along the radial corridor. ‘Who’s the little sweetie?’
   ‘Calls herself Suze,’ I told him. ‘Don’t know her other names. She’s just volunteered. I met
her by chance, and she’s been helpful. She’s a sociologist -‘
   ‘A what?’ I glanced back at him. He rolled his eyes up, then down. ‘Oh, right, I see.’ He
blinked hard, shutting off his suit’s encyclopaedia.
   ‘Check her out,’ I advised. ‘She’s nice, but -‘ I spread my fingers and waggled my hand where
he could see it over my shoulder.
   ‘Gotcha,’ he said. ‘You had some trouble with the locals?’
   ‘Minor trouble,’ I said. ‘No tissue damage to anyone but something serious is going on. Malley
was leaned on by a couple of guys who claimed to be from the Inner System’s space defence, and
the descriptions of them check out, low-gee reflexes and all that. Hinted that he was a potential
source of an outbreak. He denies it, but what he’s actually been doing is teaching electronics to the
noncos no harm in that, but the grubby sods are using radios.’
   ‘Mind viruses could have been the worry.’
   ‘Possible,’ I said. ‘Or maybe the appeasers have picked up some hint of what we’re up to. The
local Union rep is looking into it, she’ll be in touch.’
   ‘I’ll keep an ear out,’ Tony said. We’d reached the internal doorway to the mid deck. ‘Oh, and
Ellen ...’
   ‘Yes?’ I paused, my hand on the plate, and looked back at him. He eyed me up and down and
mimed disapproval. ‘You can’t face the rest of the crew dressed like that.’
   ‘Oh.’ I looked down at my torn jumpsuit, stained webbing, scratched boots; thumbed the straps
of my backpack. ‘I suppose not.’ I put down the bits of hardware I’d accumulated and hesitated
before transforming the suit. In the natural human environment of free fall or low-gee most of us
went for some permutation of closely fitting and lightly floating; but we weren’t going to enjoy that
comfortable condition for some time, and I’d need some padding. I selected the appropriate
parameters, and let the suit come up with something to match them. I found myself in a bulky,
quilted one-piece with the arms and legs sealed at the wide cuffs to skintight gloves and socks. It
had a thrown-back anorak hood which could quickly convert to a helmet in an emergency. Deep
pockets were on the front of each thigh. The whole thing was presumably modelled on its race
memory of a Project Apollo spacesuit, except that it was rendered in pale pink satin quilting, and
embellished with a deep pink satin sash and lot of lace, ribbons and bows, all pink.
    The suit has its little moods, sometimes.
    ‘Oh, very dignified,’ Tony said. ‘You look like somebody’s great, great grandmother in a bed
jacket.’ So that was what was on its mind. There were several layers of clothing underneath; from
the feel of them, the suit had elaborated further on the maternal-boudoir theme. Perhaps it had
registered that I was pregnant, even though I hadn’t asked it to check. It was quite touching, in a
way.
    ‘I am somebody’s great, great grandmother,’ I reminded Tony, as I gathered up the pistol,
ammo, and clasp knife. He looked at the last with covetous interest.
    ‘A Swiss Army knife!’ he said. ‘Can I have that? ‘No,’ I said, pocketing it. ‘You can have the
gun, though. I think our new recruits will expect it of the security officer.’
    ‘Yeah,’ he said as I pushed the plate and the door slid open. ‘I just don’t think they’ll expect
that suit of the skipper.’ The mid deck is the control area on a fusion clipper. Circular, fifty feet
across and fifteen feet high, it’s shielded from the engine by the main water tanks, and from
external radiation by shells of water between the outer and inner hull. It looks and feels like a
greenhouse, warm and slightly humid, with illumination provided by water-filtered sunlight and
electric lamps; the instrumentation and cabling intertwined with the hydroponics and the inevitable
coiled tubes of transparent plastic through which the algae circulate. In a sunstorm the whole
company usually up to sixty, counting crew and passengers can crowd into it, but most of the time
it’s occupied only by the active crew. On this trip there were no passengers, so we were all there.
    My wonderful team, my gang. Tony Girard beside me, my security expert, whose conspiratorial
skills went back to the old faction fights in Lagrange. Jaime Andrades, the navigator, who joked
that his talents came from his Portuguese ancestry, but who was a pure-black survivor of the
famously disastrous Angolan moon colony. Boris Grobovski, the gunner, who’d spent his first
century of adulthood with the Sino-Soviet mobile artillery, in their slow but inexorable advance
from Vladivostok to Lisbon, spreading democracy from sea to shining sea. Andrea Gromova, the
pilot, who had started out, before the Fall, boosting antique Energias crammed with bonded
labourers from the privatized gulags to the asteroid mining camps, then gone over to the revolution
in the battle of New South Yorkshire. Lu Yeng, the computer specialist; at seventy, she was the
youngest, born on Callisto. Her parents had come there in the initial negotiations between the
Union and the Division. The intensity of her experience with neutralizing Outwarder viruses more
than made up for her relative youth, although in political terms she was a bit naive, retaining an odd
reverence for Kim NokYung, Shin Se-Ha and other finders ,of the true knowledge.
    None of the crew so much as raised an eyebrow at my suit when Tony and I strode out on to the
mid deck. Eccentricity is policy. Suze and Malley were sitting together on the edge of an
acceleration couch, and they had some difficulty not laughing out loud. I gave them a withering
glance, and grinned and waved at the other crew members, who were spread out around the circle
of a dozen or so acceleration couches.
    ‘Thanks, everybody,’ I said. ‘That was an excellent landing. Congratulations to Jaime and
Andrea.’ The navigator and pilot waved back. I walked straight over to the nearest acceleration
couch and lay down. Tony settled in another couch, hauled down a boomborne instrument
resembling a television screen with handlebars, and began scanning.
    ‘Tony,’ I asked after a minute, ‘are there any people within a mile of us?’ He kept twisting the
bars for a few seconds.
    ‘Nah,’ he said. ‘None on the water, for sure, and any who’re too deep in the trees for me to pick
up should be safe enough.’
    ‘Sound the alarm anyway,’ I said.
    The internal alarms on a fighter-bomber are cacophonous. The external alarms on a fusion-
clipper about to lift from a planet are calculated to wake the dead and send them running anywhere
out of its range. We only heard it faintly ourselves, but it still set our teeth on edge. I let it sound
for ten minutes while we went through the final checklist: everybody strapped in, water-intake
valves closed, fusion lasers powered up, flight path clear ...
    ‘OK, comrades,’ I said, ‘let’s lift.’ Andrea eased out the fusion regulator, and the ship rose,
slowly at first, shuddering from nose to tail.
    ‘Fifty feet,’ Andrea intoned. ‘One hundred, hundred and fifty, two hundred ...’
    ‘At two thousand feet, go for the burn,’ I said.
    ‘Eat proton death, Canary Wharf !’ said Suze.
    ‘Hey, come on,’ I said. ‘A few broken windows.’ Ten seconds later Andrea pulled out the
regulator all the way, and a succession of invisible people started an unkind experiment to find out
how many could lie on top of me. By the time we reached orbit, they’d piled up seven deep.
    The drive shut off, and they all went away. I unbuckled and let myself drift for a moment,
enjoying the sensation while it lasted. ‘Everybody all right?’ I called out. Everybody was.
    ‘Okay,’ I said, ‘don’t get too happy in free fall. We’re going to pick up some ice, and then we’re
boosting all the way at one gee.’
    ‘Thank god for that,’ said Malley, who was clinging to his couch as if he were afraid of falling
off. Suze had the silent, pale look of someone who is determined not to think about being sick.
Several crew members made mutinous moaning noises.
    ‘Shut up, you lot,’ I said. ‘I’ve been in one gee for three days, while you’ve all been loafing
about in orbit. You can live with it for another ten days.’
    ‘But we’ve already lived with it for ten days,’ grumbled Andrea. ‘On the way in.’ Malley rolled
on his couch and looked over at me. ‘So you’ll have been in one gee for all of twenty-three days?
I wonder how the human frame can stand it.’
    ‘It can’t,’ I said, launching myself over to float above him. ‘Hence many of the ills that flesh is
heir to. Which reminds me.’ I grabbed a boom and pushed myself over to the medical bay and
clicked out three surgeries.
    ‘Just swallow these,’ I told him on my return. He clutched the colour-coded capsules and looked
at them suspiciously. ‘What’ll they do?’
    ‘One’s to stop your addictions you’ll still enjoy a drink or a smoke, but you won’t need them
one to rejuvenate you circulation, muscle tone, skin and so on and one to burnish up your
synapses.’ I grinned at his suspicious look. ‘Just the hardware the software’s still down to you. No
commie brainwashing involved, honest.’
    ‘I guess I have to trust you sometimes,’ he said wryly, and placed the surgeries in his mouth and
swallowed hard. ‘All I feel right now is I could do with a drink.’
    ‘Better wait until we’re under acceleration,’ I said. ‘Squirting from bulbs ain’t much fun.’ Suze
observed this with dull interest.
    ‘I don’t suppose,’ she asked plaintively, ‘you have anything for space sickness?’
    ‘I’m afraid not,’ I said. ‘You just have to get used to it.’ I refrained from adding the bit about
the first six months being the worst.
    Suze fixed her gaze on something above her and nodded, her lips set in a thin line. I felt sorry
for her, but at the same time a little amused that she’d come up with the same request as every other
newbie we’d ever lifted. A cure for motion sickness, indeed! What did they expect from medical
nanotechnology miracles? ‘What’s with the imperial units?’ Malley asked, as we watched and
listened to Andrea guiding us in to dock with the ice tanker.
    ‘You’ll hear arguments about human scale and intuition and convenience and so forth,’ I
explained, ‘but the older and coarser characters in space will sum it up in two words: fucking
NASA. Most of the space settlements were built with ex-NASA stock or to NASA spec way back
in the early days, and ever since then it’s been too much trouble to change. We’re locked into it.’
    ‘Yeah,’ said Andrea. ‘Which is why we are now two point five seven miles from a hundred
thousand metric tons of ice. You’ve just gotta love the consistency of it all.’
    ‘Mind you,’ Malley chuckled, his teeth clenched on an unlit pipe, ‘I suppose I should be
grateful. The Malley One Point Five Eight Kilometres just wouldn’t have the same ring to it.’ Even
Suze managed a laugh, though she was still looking a bit green. The thought of the mess she could
at any moment make impelled me to seek out a couple of suits. I hauled them over and thrust one
each to Malley and Suze.
    ‘What do I do with this?’ Suze asked, drifting away with her arms wrapped around a twenty-
pound, eighteen-inch ball of rubbery glop.
    ‘Just let it get to know you,’ I told her. It was already flowing around her waist and across her
midriff. ‘It’ll take the form of a set of basic fatigues and backpack in the first instance, and it’ll
show you how to vary that if you want. It can mimic almost any texture and external appearance
you specify.’ I waved a satin-gloved hand, pink lace flurrying around my forearm. ‘If you don’t
specify the details, expect surprises! But no matter how frivolous it may look, it reacts to vacuum
before you can blink. If you go outside, or if we have, uh, a sudden loss of cabin pressure, it snaps
into a spacesuit. Grab an oxy bottle if you can, but if necessary it can work on a closed-loop basis
indefinitely.’
    ‘What about the clothes we’ve got on?’ Malley asked.
    ‘They will be assimilated,’ I assured him. ‘The suit can reprocess just about anything.’ Suze
looked around, rather wildly, as the smart-matter crawled up her arms.
    ‘What about going to the toilet?’ she said.
    ‘There’s a place called the head, over there oh, you mean if you’re outside in the suit?’
    ‘Yes.’
    ‘Like I said,’ I reiterated patiently, ‘the suit can reprocess just about anything.’ At this point she
gave the suit an opportunity to demonstrate this ability and several others, including that of
catching projectile droplets. I left them to it.
    An hour later we had replaced the reaction-mass and fuel used up in the Terrible Beauty’s
unscheduled planetary surface excursion, and were accelerating at a steady one gravity in a more-
or-less straight line across the plane of the ecliptic to Jupiter or rather, to where Jupiter would be in
ten days’ time. After five days, we’d turn off the engine, swing the ship around, and decelerate at
one gravity the rest of the way. This, as anyone will tell you, is not the most fuel-efficient way to
get around. Most of the transport in the Solar System hardly used any fuel at all, and was pretty
fast even so; with a big enough light sail you can get from Earth orbit to Mars orbit in weeks,
Jupiter in months. We had no compunction about using fusion-clippers, on the minority of
journeys for which we didn’t have weeks or months to play with.
    (As it happens, fuel efficiency, or even reaction-mass, wasn’t the limiting factor. With the laser-
fusion drive and the practically inexhaustible amounts of ice available, we could have used clippers
for everything. The limiting factor was the availability of ships.) The return to weight made Malley
and Suze a lot more cheerful, and the rest of us a little less. We made our way down the stairwell
from the command deck to the commissary. It was a slightly smaller room, also circular, with
several small tables and one big round table, more than adequate for all of us. In the centre of that
table was the serving lift, and at each setting was a menu mat. I sat down with Malley on one side
and Suze on the other.
   ‘You can dial up quite a wide range of foods and drinks,’ I explained, ‘but for obvious reasons
anything made with boiling water is a specialty of the house.’ I scrolled the menu. ‘May I
recommend the Thames salmon, freshly caught?’ Most of us made the same choice, tapping the
appropriate lines on the menu, and the steaming, almond-flaked dishes rose from the centre of the
table and were passed eagerly around. Now that it had the template, the kitchen could carbon-copy
‘freshly caught’ Thames salmon till the drive went out, but the real thing did have a thrill. It’s
subjective, but as Malley (slightly drunk on Tranquilitatis 2296, and high on the first buzz from the
swallowed surgeries) tried to tell us, value was all subjective anyway. He seemed to think he was
making a point, and we politely deferred to this misconception.
   We finished eating and shoved the plates back into the middle. The lift silently sank away with
them. Malley fished in his pocket (his suit had based its initial form on what he’d been wearing,
and had a quaint tweedy appearance) and pulled out his pipe and tobacco.
   ‘Is it OK to smoke on the ship?’ he asked.
   ‘Sure,’ I said. ‘We’re sitting sixty feet above a fusion torch, man. Fire is the least of our
worries.’ I hoped he’d give it a rest when the addiction passed, though. Various comrades
unthinkingly wrinkled their noses, until someone tapped a command on their mat to increase the
ventilation.
   By the time we reached the coffee I had introduced everybody: Andrea, Jaime, Boris, Tony and
Yeng. Suze looked at me when I’d finished and said: ‘But Ellen who are you?’ We all laughed.
‘Ellen May Ngwethu,’ I said. ‘I was born in 2041, in a Lagrange space settlement, so I’m almost as
old as Malley I mean, Sam! Fought in the initial split between the Earth Tendency and the
Outwarders, and on Earth during the dark century. I worked on Earth Defence for a long time, then
moved out to Jupiter. I’ve been in the Cassini Division for the past, let me see, seventy-odd years,
and right now I’m on the Division’s Command Committee, and I’m the liaison on the Jovian
Anomaly Research Committee. That’s a non-military, scientific body which is responsible to the
Solar Council and has the next-to-final say in what the Division gets up to. The Solar Council has
the final say.’ I smiled around the table. ‘In theory. In practice, the Division does what it pleases.’
Suze looked slightly shocked, Malley smug.
   ‘I know the theory,’ Malley said. ‘In theory, everyone does what they damn well please. “The
free development of each is the condition of the war of all against all”, or some such nonsense.’
Yeng frowned at this comment; Malley turned up his hands. ‘Screw the politics I gather from what
you’ve just said, Ellen May Ngwethu, that you are what in a more openly hierarchical arrangement
would be called a member of the General Staff. A top military officer and politician. So what the
fuck are you doing getting your hands dirty, rolling about in the mud on the kulak reservation, all
just to lift an old physicist?’
   ‘Good question,’ I said. Malley looked me in the eye and began fiddling with his pipe; I wished
I had something equally distracting with which to occupy my hands. ‘One part of the answer is that
we don’t work the way you think our committees may look like a hierarchy if you draw them out
on a schematic, but that’s all. It genuinely isn’t some kind of concealed top-down structure. So if
the Command Committee wants certain kinds of job done, it doesn’t have some poor minion down
below to send off and do it. We’re elected to do a job, and I was the best for this one.
    ‘The other part of the answer is that we need to keep what we’re doing secret. Apart from the
Division’s Command Committee, the only people who know that we’re planning an assault through
the wormhole are those of us on this ship.’ I looked around. ‘We’re it, we’re the team, and you’re
in! If you don’t like what we’re doing, you’re both free to pull out, but not to leave the Division’s
space until it’s all over.’ Malley and Suze both looked troubled and about to speak. Suze said it
first: ‘But who are you keeping all this a secret from?’
    ‘From the Jovians,’ Tony said.
    ‘But but -‘ Malley was almost stuttering, as his synapses misfired with excited articulation. ‘The
Jovians, the Outwarders, they’re, they’re just mad, they’re trapped in their own virtual realities!’ I
glanced around the team, and caught minute nods and shrugs.
    ‘Not any more,’ I said. ‘But it’s a long story, and we’ve all had a long day. Tomorrow for that.
Let me show you around the ship.’ One thing that distinguishes a fusion-clipper from most
spacecraft is that its internal layout has a definite ‘up’ and ‘down’; and because this one was only
carrying the crew there was plenty of room in which to show Malley and Suze around. After
dinner I used my remaining energy to climb up and down stairways all over the ship and explain all
that could be explained.
    The fusion-clipper’s hull is like a somewhat pear-shaped egg, two hundred feet long and seventy
across at its widest diameter, which is occupied by the commissary and the command deck. The
narrow end tapers to the jet, and contains the fusion torch, the main water tanks, and the life-
support systems. Above, or forward, from the command deck are the sleeping-quarters cramped,
but festooned with climbing plants and recycling tubes (hard to distinguish, in practice) which give
it a more open feel. Above that, clustered around the big glass eye of the heat shield, are the active-
defence laser cannon, for dealing with any wandering space junk which (at the sort of velocities a
fusion-clipper can reach) all has to be dealt with.
    Our tour ended in the sleeping gallery which, typically for this class of ship, was deliberately
designed to resemble a cliff-face of caves overlooking the central air well, whose bottom was the
transparent mid deck roof and whose top was the transparent forward heat shield, through which a a
distorted but distinct pattern of stars could be seen. The erratic, silent flaring of incoming dust and
meteoroids, vaporized by the reflex lasers of the ship’s active-defence system, provided a soothing
analogue of the shooting stars in a natural sky.
    Malley leaned over a guardrail and looked up and down.
    ‘Why the recycling plant?’ he asked. ‘The journey times are days or weeks. Why not just carry
supplies?’
    ‘Not all the journeys are so short, and they don’t all end at ports,’ I said.
    ‘I-hmm,’ he said. ‘Colonizing.’
    ‘Well,’ I shrugged, ‘there’s the Kuiper Belt, and the Oort.’
    ‘And New Mars?’ Suze asked mischievously. ‘We plan ahead,’ I agreed. They both laughed.
    Malley stretched and yawned. ‘You were right,’ he said. ‘Time for bed. Now where did I leave
my bag?’ I retrieved their luggage, such as it was, then showed them their cabins and crawled into
mine. With just enough room to stand up and to lie down in, its rounded walls veined with
translucent tubes ferrying swirling swarms of engineered noctilucent protozoa, it was like an
undersea cave, with the sand-coloured foam rectangle of the bed its only furnishing. I let the outer
garment of the spacesuit change into a thick quilt and pillow; and discovered that for the inner
layers the suit had extended its range of textures to fluffy knitted wool and brushed silk tricot, and
its range of colours to ecru, beige, and several shades of peach. It was all very cosy. I unfastened a
few bows, pulled the quilt over my head, and went to sleep.
    ‘You want to live in a dream world!’ I accuse.
    I’m clinging by my left big toe to a hole in an angled aluminium bracket, floating at right angles
to the kid I’m arguing with, and squirting jets of hash beer into my mouth from a nozzled plastic
bottle that once contained something quite different (whose taste lingers) in the crowded recreation-
deck (or, inevitably: ‘wreckdeck’) of an Earth Defence battlesat abandoned to squatters and orbital
decay and it’s 2062 and I just know it can’t be, and I’m dreaming. So the accusation doesn’t carry
much conviction.
    The kid is about nineteen and must be a recent arrival: he’s fat, and nobody gets or stays fat in
free fall (it’s that great weightloss diet we have). His face, dotted with more eruptions than Io, calls
to mind all the pizzas he must’ve stuffed in it. His eyes tend to bulge: the modern equivalent of
pebble lenses, due to several corrective cornea ops for reading-induced myopia. Disdaining the
hops and hemp as unhealthy, he’s sucking some vile cocktail of smart drugs, spiked with euphorics.
He knows everything.
    ‘You’re the dreamer,’ he says. He waves a hand at the window, thirty feet away on the other
side of the wreck-deck. Through the mass of drifting drinkers, through clouds of smoke and stray
droplets, the image of a brick-red surface crawls past. Madagascar, I’d know it anywhere. ‘You’re
still stuck in commie altruism. You want to help people who’re beyond help. They’re doomed.
“Earth the Third World”, ha-ha. Time to grow up and get with the programme, Ellen. Time to
move it out. There’s a big universe out there.’
    ‘My point exactly.’ I gesture, too, at what’s now the Indian Ocean. ‘And Earth is part of it. You
want to live in a virtual reality.’
    ‘Not entirely.’ He smiles, showing bad teeth. ‘We’ll pay a lot of attention to the outside we’ll
have to, if we’re gonna turn all that dumb mass into smart-matter. Matter that thinks, and dreams.
A world of wonders, where you can be anything you like, not what chance and your genes have
made you.’
    ‘I don’t want to turn the universe into a big computer running virtual realities,’ I tell him. ‘And
don’t call me a “commie altruist”, by the way. It’s just ordinary human concern. I just don’t like to
see people suffer, so it would be very unselfish of me to ignore ten billion people blundering into
the dark.’
    ‘You won’t have to see them suffer,’ he tells me, with insufferable assurance. ‘You can just edit
them out. Anyway, their problems are their problem. Why make them yours?’
    ‘Because I care about them, and if that sounds altruistic, just think of it this way: I’m selfish
enough to want to be, oh, the princess of the Galaxy! OK at a pinch, I’d be happy just to live
forever in a Galactic Empire. I personally want to see a universe crowded with people having a
good time.’ I wave expansively at the wreck-deck, to illustrate.
    ‘People!’ He snorts. ‘Where’s your ambition? We can do better than that.’
    ‘You want to be machines.’ I knock back a shot of the drink. ‘I don’t.’ He shrugs. ‘If you want
to live in space, you’re better off as a machine than as a bag of sea water. The human body’s
design spec is: a spacesuit for a fish. Machines are at home in the universe.’ I give him a grin so
wide and delighted that he thinks I like him, and I come back with a quote from a dated dystopia
that had a huge resonance for me when I was a kid: This Perfect Day by Ira Levin. (Not that we
were in any danger of that perfect day, or any other, but the book spoke to me.) “’Machines are at
home in the universe. People are aliens.”’ He’s still smiling back, still thinks I’m agreeing. The
hash beer drives me to stoned and pissed elaboration: ‘Strangers in a strange land. Marx was
wrong we aren’t alienated from our humanity, alienation is humanity. We’re always capable of
stepping back and looking at what we’re doing, from the outside as it were we have an outside,
inside, and it’s as infinite as space. No Turing test can come close, no matter how good it is at
faking an organism. Machines calculate; people count. Machines have programs; people have
purposes.’ I stop and stare at him and take another shot of beer. ‘So there.’
    ‘People are machines too,’ he says. ‘And machines will have all we have, once we’ve
transferred our minds to them.’
    ‘That’s what you call it. Stripping your brain away layer by layer and modelling it on a
computer is what I call dying.’
    ‘It’s transcending,’ he says. He slaps his chest, almost setting himself spinning. ‘This is dying.
“The meat is murder.”’
    ‘Yeah,’ I say cruelly. ‘If I had your body, I’d want to be something else.’ He doesn’t take this as
the crushing put-down it’s intended to be. ‘Yes,’ he says, still smiling. ‘When I upload, I might
model my virtual body on yours.’ My attention is distracted by the television screen at the end of
the bar, where my parents’ faces have appeared, talking to me in a language I don’t understand,
smiling, reassuring. Their twitching, dead-but-galvanized bodies are drifting in front of the screen,
attached by pipes that are sucking up their brains. ‘Goodbye, Ellen,’ they’re saying, ‘goodbye. See
you in ten thousand years.’ Furious, I turn back to the kid, but he’s already changed, from slob to
blob, a paramecium shape buzzing with fractal cilia, a patch of which snows to pixels and freezes
to a face my face.
    ‘I like your body,’ he says.
    ‘In your dreams!’ I yell at him. ‘In your dreams!’ And I wake.
    The quilt cuddles me, the pillow drinks my tears. ‘Hush,’ it soothes. ‘Everything will be all
right.’ The following morning I got up at about i roo hours, ship time (which, conveniently for
those of us who’d boarded yesterday, was the same as GMT), and made my way to the mid deck.
Rather to my embarrassment, I was the last to arrive, and the rest of the team had honoured the
occasion by setting their suits to various approximations of nattily masculine militarism. Andrea
and Boris were entertaining Suze and Malley with a demonstration of the active-defence system,
which although automated, could be overridden to provide a spectacular shoot-‘em-up game with
(mostly tiny, but fast) meteoroids as targets. The others were amusing themselves in less
productive ways.
    I grunted a good-morning to all of them and had a solitary and thoughtful breakfast in the
commissary, chasing the wisps of disturbed dream away with strong coffee. I took my third mug
with me back up the stairs and sat down on a couch.
    ‘OK comrades,’ I said. ‘We’re in session. Yeng, would you like to chair?’ She nodded, pushing
away her goggles and nanotech tank, and clapped her hands. ‘Come on, guys. Turn the aiming-
computers back on and come over here.’ Andrea, Boris, Malley and Suze dragged themselves away
from the manual fire controls and settled down on the ends of couches. I got a shy smile from
Suze, a cocky grin from Malley. The surgeries’ work, though by no means complete, had
transformed his appearance overnight: straightening his stance, smoothing the skin on his face,
wiping the wrinkles from around his eyes.
    ‘Your little pills have certainly done something for my reflexes,’ he said. Boris spread his hand
and made a rocking motion: ‘Considering what you started with ...’ The two men laughed; I hoped
it indicated, at however tentative a level, the beginning of friendship.
    ‘Suze, Sam,’ I began, ‘the rest of us all know what I’m going to tell you, but each of us may be
able to answer different questions, so...’ I worked the long, low seat’s controls, raising the central
overhead cluster of instrumentation and lowering a boom on which was suspended a holographic
projection apparatus. Tendrils snaked out from my gloves into the system’s interface. The electric
lamps turned off, and I keyed up a football-sized image of Jupiter, softly glowing. I set it spinning
with exaggerated speed in the light from the outside, under the refracted, multiply-distorted images
of the real stars above us.
    ‘A brief history of the Jovian system,’ I said. ‘Let’s start with how it was before the Outwarders
got underway with Project Jove.’ The four Galilean moons shuttled around it, the Great Red Spot
turned with the planet’s coloured bands. ‘Here’s the first indication that something big was going
on, which we noticed in zo9o. Real archive tape from the Farside Observatory.’ Ganymede
disintegrated not exploding, not flying apart, just separating into millions of bits which, on this
time-lapsed view, immediately spread out to form a ring.
    We’d all seen it before it’s the Zapruder film of astronautics: the most widely known image, and
the most thoroughly studied and argued-over sequence of photographs, in the history of space
exploration. The technician who recorded it had a sense of humour as well as a sense of history,
and I played the audio tape of his (alleged) first reaction: ‘Oh my stars, it’s full of gods!’ Small
polite laughs all round. ‘OK,’ I said, ‘we’ve all heard it. But he was right. And we still don’t
know how they did it, even in principle. Sam Malley proved the concept of the Gate and the Drive,
and nanotech and uploading were all understood well in advance essentially as far back as the
nineteen-eighties. But shattering the biggest moon in the solar system came as, um, a bit of a
shock.’ The most frightening moment of my life, to be exact. I nodded to Tony, who took up that
side of the story.
    ‘We all,’ he said, ‘couldn’t help remembering that the Outwarders had announced their intention
of turning everything except the stars into smart-matter, starting with the smaller asteroids and
working their way up, all the way to what they called “Jupiter-sized brains”. They had a saying: “If
it isn’t running programs and it isn’t fusing atoms, it’s just bending space.” So we were all rather
concerned when we saw that.’ He gave us a thin smile. ‘Especially those of us who lived on the
Moon.’ Malley looked up from doodling something on a pad he’d conjured from the knee of his
suit. ‘There may be ways of deriving the, uh, planet-wrecker from the same schema as the Gate,’
he said. ‘I’ve given it some thought over the years, but I’ve never taken it far. I’ll work on it.’
    ‘Good,’ I said, smiling as warmly as I could. ‘Well, on to the Gate.’ I ran the tape forward
again, focusing in on the ring and magnifying the view to what had been the limits of our telescopic
resolution back in the twenty-nineties. A complex cat’s-cradle of girders rapidly took shape, a
three-dimensional web of black threads just inside the ring. At the same time the face of Jupiter
was transformed, its bands fractured by crosscurrents. I cut to close-ups of the structure.
    ‘These shots are from files retrieved from a construction robot by the so-called artificial woman,
Meg, who was Jonathan Wilde’s companion in that robot body,’ I explained. ‘The black struts are
prosaically enough polycarbon I-beams, though they have complex internal machinery. The small
robots you see rocketing about and apparently working on the structure are the bonded labour force,
each of them with a copied human mind running on its onboard computer.’ I paused, compressed
my lips for a moment and took a deep breath, then continued. ‘Now that -‘ I froze the frame, then
let it run on ‘is a very different kind of upload. It’s what we called a “super-organism” and what
the ex-human workers on the project called a “macro”. It’s a smart-matter object, a constellation of
trillions of nanomachines, and one of many. Each of them contains literally millions of minds,
mostly replicated and enhanced descendants of the original Outwarders. Wilde refers to them as
“the fast folk”, and the term has caught on, because it’s apt: their minds are thinking and
experiencing at least a thousand times faster than ours.’ We all sat and stared at the macro, a
nightmarishly gigantic and multicoloured amoeboid shape, its fractal surfaces seething, its
pseudopodia bulging and retracting as it oozed around the girders. Its size dwarfed the tiny, tinny-
looking robots of its pressed servants.
    ‘You’ve never shown these close-ups to people on Earth,’ Suze accused. I nodded briskly.
    ‘That’s right,’ I said. ‘We’ve kept them to ourselves, for now. All anybody in the Inner System
has seen is the fuzzy blobs that showed up in some pictures we got at the time from a spy probe
before it was detected and destroyed.’
    ‘Very democratic of you,’ said Malley. ‘Didn’t want to cause panic, is that it?’
    ‘Not exactly,’ said Tony, leaning forward. ‘If you’re like me, Dr Malley, I’m sure you’re
feeling a reaction of unease or even dread, which is objectively rather hard to justify. We ourselves
fwd it difficult to explain, and suspect it may be deliberately induced by some subtle effect of the
surface patterns. If that’s the case it was presumably intended to overawe the labour force. Tests
on our own personnel have shown that this response might readily translate into a desire for
precipitate action against the present-day descendants of these entities. That’s a pressure we’d
prefer to avoid.’ For the moment, I thought. I went on quickly, showing the subsequent stages of
the construction project in fast-forward. The structure suddenly divided, a smaller, circular section
detaching itself. The Jovian surface swirled, its equator dotted with what looked like waterspouts
which soared in curving trajectories to the ring. A hairline circle around the ring glowed white-hot.
The newly separated structure seemed to fold in on itself, and there, hanging like a film of soap in a
ring, was the Gate itself: a mile-wide circle of stretched space, its edge shimmering with all the
colours of the spectrum.
    ‘The Malley Mile,’ I said. Malley gave us all an ironic bow. ‘If you watch closely you’ll see
the moment where it divides into two just-overlapping circles, the two sides of the wormhole.
There. The small dark object at the centre is the Outwarders’ ship, or probe, which ...’ A line of
light stabbed at a tangent from the glowing line around the great ring, straight for the centre of the
Gate.
    ‘... goes away.’ Everybody blinked; everybody drew breath, even those who’d watched this
scene a hundred times. ‘Taking one side of the wormhole with it. Observe how the plasma jet
apparently just stops when it reaches the Gate. There can be not the slightest doubt that the jet is
passing from the local region of space-time into somewhere else. But in case anybody’s
wondering, we did manage to track the probe for the first few minutes.’ The grainy images flashed
up, showing a streak of light and a blurry dot. ‘As you can see, there’s the plasma jet, coming
apparently out of nowhere and crossing a few hundred yards of space to the probe, where it’s
transformed into kinetic energy via what we presume is, ah, a Malley virtual-mass drive. We
calculate that the probe reached almost the speed of light in a month. After that, things get
complicated, because both sides of the wormhole are in the same reference frame.’ Suze was
looking puzzled. I smiled at Malley. ‘Sam, over to you.’ Malley shrugged. ‘To simplify
drastically ... it’s not really correct to refer to “both sides” of the wormhole. The ship is travelling
at some arbitrarily close approximation to the speed of light, and therefore experiences relativistic
time dilation time runs slower on the ship than it does back home. The truly paradoxical feature of
the wormhole is that both ends are in the same place. So anything passing through one end of the
wormhole arrives at the other end in ship time, which after, say, a year, could be hundreds of light
years away, and hundreds of years in the future. With continued acceleration, the probe reaches the
edge of the observable universe in thirty shipboard years. So, thirty years from launch, anybody
passing through the wormhole arrives instantly at the same location. It is, if you like, a time
machine to the future.’ Suze grinned around at us. ‘If you say so.’ I laughed. ‘Meanwhile, if that’s
the word, quite a lot had been going on around Jupiter.’ The planet’s surface was mottled, the sites
of the still-soaring tornadoes expanding into new variants of the Great Red Spot. I pulled up time-
lapsed shots from the records recovered from Meg’s Al mind. The macros changed as we watched,
their original feverish internal activity speeding up, then slowing to a stop. A few of them seemed
to crystallize, and drifted off towards the Jovian atmosphere. The rest visibly shrivelled, rotting to
skeletal shapes like the veins of dead leaves.
    A new shape burst on the scene, crashing through the dead macros and .their vast construction
site like a stone through cobwebs. The viewpoint zoomed towards it, revealing a long, jury-rigged
assembly of spacecraft and habitats, spinning crazily on its axis and following a precarious course
along the line of the plasma jet. And then the viewpoint was evidently on the cobbled-together
ship, the hot white line strobing past. The shot ended in a burst of blue light.
    ‘Cherenkov radiation,’ I said. ‘They went through the wormhole well, through a side-branch of
it, a daughter wormhole and, as we know, found a new home. Now we’ll leave them for the
moment, and pull back to see what happened on this side.’ I switched to the telescope view: the
fountains of gas, and the jet that they had fed, ceased.
    ‘We’re not sure,’ I said, ‘whether that was planned, the probe having reached some point where
it could continue to accelerate without further input from base; or whether it was a result of the
disaster that you saw unfolding there, or whether indeed it was a response to the escape of the
labour force on that remarkable excuse for a starship.’ Suze was grinning from ear to ear.
    ‘It was quite a feat, that escape,’ she said.
    ‘It sure was,’ said Andrea. ‘I still shudder every time I look at it.’
    ‘Why didn’t they just head for home, for the Inner System?’ Malley asked.
    I shrugged, hiding a moment of pain. ‘Partly because, ironically enough, they didn’t have the
supplies for such a long journey in, uh, real space it would have taken them years to get back to the
nearest human settlement in that thing, and partly because their leaders it wasn’t exactly a
democratic setup, being an orbital labour camp had decided they wanted to go to the stars.’
    ‘Also,’ Tony added, ‘I suspect the post-humans systematically misled them about what was
going on in the Inner System. Wilde certainly thought we jammed their communications, which is
more or less the opposite of the truth.’
    ‘OK,’ Malley said.
    ‘Right,’ I went on. ‘The next thing that happened, about a year later, was the beginning of a
flood of disruptive radio-borne computer viruses from somewhere inside the Jovian atmosphere. It
took us a long time to recover, and even longer to get out there ourselves. Within five years,
however, our telescopes were picking up something with which most of you are by now so familiar
that it’s hard to imagine how awesome it seemed at the time.’ I laughed briefly. ‘There must be
kids today who think this appearance of Jupiter is natural.’ The planet’s image blurred, the orange
banding known since Cassini himself dissolving briefly into chaos, then settling into the new
configuration it had shown for the past couple of centuries: vast hexagonal upwellings, like
Bernoulli convection cells in boiling water.
    ‘As you can see, they were able to affect their environment deliberately or not, we can’t say.
Bear in mind the speed the original post-humans worked at if it was maintained, the entities we
now call the Jovians must have done that over five or six thousand subjective years, so it could
have been just a by-product of their activity. Every five years or so, these cells collapse and
reform, and the radio output changes. We think this represents the repeated rise and fall of post-
human cultures in virtual realities, though for all we know they could just as well have degenerated
to pre-human levels of intelligence, and all this might have no more significance than the work of
coral polyps or bees. The viral messages themselves could be simply a defensive reflex, the
equivalent of a squid’s cloud of ink or a plant’s insecticides.’ Yeng raised her hand, exercising her
chairperson’s right to interrupt. ‘That wouldn’t make it any less dangerous,’ she pointed out.
‘Biological diseases aren’t intelligent either, but they can still threaten us, and the computer viruses
which something out there is generating are definitely a threat.’ I nodded emphatically. ‘Yes ...
which is why our communications are such a bind, and why our most important computers are such
lumbering monsters, and all our computers, right down to the nano scale, are mechanical. But
that’s only part of it. Now and again there’s some kind of attempt at launching things out of the
atmosphere. These attempts have increased over time. Which is where we come in.’ What
followed was basically a propaganda video for the Cassini Division, showing the constant vigilance
of the orbital fleets patrolling just outside the Jovian atmosphere, zapping anything larger than a
grain of sand that looked like heading the wrong way; and the long watch on the Gate. A voice-
over carefully explained that the latter wasn’t the complete waste of time that it might seem,
because we also spooled in the data sent back from the probe, which constantly deepened our
knowledge of the far future of the universe. Malley shared with me a skeptical smile.
   I paused the video. ‘All this is now, sadly, out of date,’ I said. ‘Because something new has
happened.’ I bookmarked the place for later use and brought on some new footage.
   ‘This is recent,’ I said. ‘The last couple of months. We haven’t, uh, put it on general release
yet.’ The huge upwellings died away, as they had two-score times in the past. When they were
renewed, clusters of bubbles appeared within them, bobbing into visibility and then sinking back.
Each time they returned to the surface, the clusters had expanded and proliferated, linked up by
long and (on this scale) thin black lines. I maxed the res, showing dark shapes shuttling within
these black lines, moving in both directions.
   ‘Oh, shit,’ said Malley.
   ‘Quite,’ I said, running overflight scans. ‘It does definitely look like some kind of stable,
organized form of life, with habitats, technology, transport. So far, that’s the best detail we’ve got.
Perhaps most significant of all, there are narrow-cast beam messages passed between these clusters.
We haven’t yet interpreted them, but they sure look like intelligent communication. There’s every
possibility that what we’re seeing is evidence that the Jovians have finally got out of the recurrent
traps of their inherited virtual realities, and have emerged as a new species. They are developing
and changing fast we’re getting traces of flight paths through the atmosphere, and the speed and
frequency of these flights are increasing by the week.’
   ‘Wow,’ said Suze. ‘Aliens!’
   ‘No,’ I said. ‘Post-humans a superhuman, post-Singularity form of life, that may be as far above
us as we are above the ants. Or will be, Real Soon Now.’ I looked around the circle. Malley and
Suze seemed puzzled, but not worried; my crew were united in grim resolution.
   ‘Is this why you’re so keen to get through the wormhole?’ Suze asked. ‘So we can you can
escape, if necessary?’
   ‘That’s part of it,’ I admitted. ‘And part of it is as I said to you we don’t know what’s going on
on the other side. If it’s anything like this, we want to know.’
   ‘There is something else,’ Boris said. ‘Something you should know.’ He nodded to me; I ran the
standard spiel at the place where I’d stopped. It showed off our distant expeditions in the Kuiper
Belt using lasers and tactical nukes to topple cometary orbits in towards the Inner System, sending
them swinging around Jupiter and on to Mars or the Belt.
   I stopped it and brought up the lights. We all sat back and looked at Malley and Suze. All of us,
I suppose, felt as tense as I did; we had decided, in long debates on our journey to Earth, that
Malley (or Wilde, if we’d got him on board) would have to know the full story, because it would be
impossible to conceal it from him once he started work on the wormhole problem, and he was
unlikely to take kindly to being duped.
    Malley’s mouth opened, then closed. He swallowed hard and spoke.
    ‘You’re not serious,’ he said. ‘You can’t be are you telling us you’re going to actually set up a
cometary bombardment and destroy the new Jovians?’
    ‘Yes,’ I said. ‘That’s exactly what we’re going to do. As soon as we saw this new development,
we set things in motion literally out in the Kuiper Belt. It took a lot of work, but it’s ready now.
We’ve set up a train of massive comets, and they’re due to arrive in less than three weeks. We’ll
give them a nudge at the last moment, and there’ll be a succession of impacts all around the planet.
It should work the. new Jovians seem more vulnerable than whatever is making the upwellings.
Those bubbles you see are just that, bubbles in the atmosphere. Most of their technology seems to
be based on manipulation of electromagnetic fields, gas flows, and large-scale chemical reactions.
We are going to direct a stream of fast, heavy comet nuclei into the Jovian atmosphere, hit them
with a force greater than a million nuclear wars, and wipe them out for good.’
    ‘But we don’t even know if they’re hostile!’ Suze protested. ‘Have you tried to contact them?’
    ‘Of course not,’ Yeng said. ‘They’re still churning out the same old viruses. If we deliberately
opened communication with them, who knows but they’d send even more destructive viruses
back?’
    ‘You must be able to build in safeguards,’ Malley said. He rattled his unlit pipe between his
teeth. ‘I don’t see the justification.’
    ‘They’re capable of supplanting us,’ Tony said. ‘At least, there’s a strong chance that they are.
They present a threat to us just by existing. Isn’t that justification enough?’ Suze and Malley both
shook their heads. ‘It’s a bad thing to do,’ Suze said. ‘We could learn from them. We could
persuade them to stop the virus broadcasts. They might not be able to harm us. They might not
even be aware we exist!’
    ‘Here’s hoping,’ said Andrea. ‘That way, they have no chance to fight back.’ We all laughed,
except Suze and Malley.
    ‘What about the morality of it?’ Malley asked.
    Most of us shrugged or smiled. Yeng frowned. ‘Morality?’ she said uncertainly. ‘What’s that?’
Some of us smiled; Malley barked a laugh.
    ‘It’s an ideology,’ Suze said. ‘People used to think that there was a very powerful intelligence
that controlled the universe, and that it told them what to do. Later they found out there was no
intelligence controlling the universe, but for about a century or so after that they thought the
universe told them what to do. Some of them had doubts about that, but they thought that if people
didn’t believe it they would start raping and killing and hurting each other.’ She grimaced. ‘I’ve
never understood why they thought that, because some people were raping and killing and hurting
other people all the time anyway. The reason most people weren’t doing that is because they didn’t
want to in the first place, or because they knew they couldn’t get away with it. We know now that
if we want other people to stop doing bad things we have to make them stop and not let them get
away with it. Which is why we have the Union!’ she concluded triumphantly, a little out of breath,
but evidently pleased that her arcane studies had made some contribution.
    ‘OK,’ said Yeng, ‘I understand. It was something people believed before they had the true
knowledge?’
    ‘That’s right!’ I said. ‘Exactly. So, Sam, you were saying?’ Malley glowered at me. Then his
expression relaxed and he shrugged. ‘All right,’ he said. ‘If that’s the way you see it, fine. I think
all this “Do What Thou Wilt Shall Be The Whole Of The Law” crap is as satanic as the man who
first said it, but let that pass.’ I nodded. It was easy enough to let that pass, because it made no kind
of sense to me.
    ‘So to put it in your terms,’ Malley went on, ‘I don’t think it would be to our advantage to
destroy the Jovians. They are a form of intelligent life, presumably they’re sentient, and disrespect
for sentience is a dangerous thing. A bad precedent. And secondly, as Suze pointed out, we could
benefit from some kind of peaceful interaction with them, if that’s at all possible.’ I stared at him,
somewhat shaken. I had known he was old, and had been a non-cooperator most of his life, but for
a genius he seemed remarkably obtuse.
    ‘First of all,’ I said, ‘you’re right about sentience. We do have to respect it, each and every one
of us, if only for our own peace of mind. But only humans are sentient. Those things out there are
just jumped-up computer programs! They may give the appearance of sentience, but if they do, it’ll
be a protective coloration. You can have a deep, meaningful conversation with your suit hey, you
can have a sexual relationship with it, if that’s your thing but nobody thinks suits are sentient. It’s
just something that suits have evolved, by a kind of natural selection, in order to get along with
humans. The Jovians, if we communicate with them, will no doubt seem sensitive, but they can no
more feel than the eye-spots on a butterfly’s wing can see.’ Malley tilted his head back and roared
with laughter.
    ‘And you people sneer at ideology!’ he spluttered, when he’d calmed down a bit. ‘That’s the
most airtight piece of dogmatic, closed-loop thinking I’ve ever heard! You really mean to say that
no robots, no uploads, no artificial intelligences are truly sentient and worthy of our concern?’
    ‘Absolutely,’ I said. ‘It’s self-evident.’
    ‘And even if you were right, what’s the advantage to you, or us, or anybody, in crushing those
“butterflies’ wings”, blind though they may be? Eh?’
    ‘Let me explain,’ I said patiently. ‘There are no signs of intelligent life anywhere else in the
universe. The Outwarder probe has gone a long way, and none of the data coming back from it has
shown a smidgen of a trace of a signal. We’re alone, apart from the Jovians. If they are superior to
us, no matter how friendly they seem to be, we’ll always be at their mercy. I will not live at the
mercy of anyone or anything. This our best, last, and only chance to have the universe to ourselves,
and we’re going to take it.’ Malley stood up and looked around at all of us, not angry, not
impatient; a bit sad, as though some of the aging damage he was beginning to slough off had settled
back on him.
    ‘Not with my help, you’re not,’ he said.
                                   5 The Coming Race
    Malley stalked over to the stairwell and went down to the commissary. Suze rose, looked at me
anxiously, shrugged and followed him.
    ‘Meeting’s over,’ Yeng said. She glanced around, unsure how to take what had happened, then
decided to look on the bright side. ‘Time we all had some lunch.’ Lunch was usually a relaxed
occasion. This one wasn’t. We hung around the smaller tables in the commissary in ones and
twos. Suze was with Malley on one side of the room, I with Tony on the other. All the talking was
in low voices.
    ‘Think we’ve blown it?’ Tony asked.
    I shrugged. ‘Callisto’s buzzing with talk about the bombardment. We couldn’t have kept it
from him, not without isolation that would’ve made him suspicious and non-cooperative!’ Tony
stroked his beard, and looked searchingly at me. ‘Suppose we’re wrong,’ he said softly. ‘When I
think about what we’re proposing to do well, between you and me, Ellen, I sometimes have qualms
about it myself. Suppose the Jovians aren’t flatlines, suppose they really are conscious, just like
you and me but far better, with a deeper and richer inner life. After all, they may have naturally
evolved away from the earlier Jovians, and they’re no longer some kind of new releases of the old
mad uploads, but a new species, a new flesh. Wouldn’t that make the impact event like, say, some
troop of chimps using rocks to beat out the brains of the first humans?’ I fought down my dismayed
surprise at this incipient flinch, this line wobble as the old comrades would say, coming from of all
people my security officer and oldest ally. I fought down my indignation. If Tony had qualms,
then certainly others would, too, and he was doing me a favour by expressing them.
    ‘All the more reason to do it,’ I said, clapping his shoulder fraternally. ‘Look where not doing it
got the chimps.’ We understood each other perfectly. In our two hundred years of acquaintance,
we had never had a sexual relationship (not counting quick drunk fucks, of course). He just wasn’t
my type, nor I his. But in every other way we knew each other quite intimately. Not that we
agreed on everything, at least not at once, but we knew how to get agreement or agree to differ.
We knew how each other’s minds worked.
    I knew what was going on in Tony’s, right now. Although he intellectually accepted the true
knowledge, he had never been taken by it unlike me, to whom it had struck home with the force of
a revelation.
    The true knowledge ... the phrase is an English translation of a Korean expression meaning
‘modern enlightenment’. Its originators, a group of Japanese and Korean ‘contract employees’
(inaccurate Korean translation, this time, of the English term ‘bonded labourers’) had acquired their
modern enlightenment from battered, ancient editions of the works of Stirner, Nietzsche, Marx,
Engels, Dietzgen, Darwin, and Spencer, which made up the entire philosophical content of their
labour-camp library. (Twentieth century philosophy and science had been excluded by their
employers as decadent or subversive I forget which.) With staggering diligence, they had taken
these works which they ironically treated as the last word in modern thought and synthesized from
them, and from their own bitter experiences, the first socialist philosophy based on totally
pessimistic and cynical conclusions about human nature.
    Life is a process of breaking down and using other matter, and if need be, other life. Therefore,
life is aggression, and successful life is successful aggression. Life is the scum of matter, and
people are the scum of life. There is nothing but matter, forces, space and time, which together
make power. Nothing matters, except what matters to you. Might makes right, and power makes
freedom. You are free to do whatever is in your power, and if you want to survive and thrive you
had better do whatever is in your interests. If your interests conflict with those of others, let the
others pit their power against yours, everyone for theirselves. If your interests coincide with those
of others, let them work together with you, and against the rest. We are what we eat, and we eat
everything.
    All that you really value, and the goodness and truth and beauty of life, have their roots in this
apparently barren soil.
    This is the true knowledge.
    On this rock we had built our church. We had founded our idealism on the most nihilistic
implications of science, our socialism on crass self-interest, our peace on our capacity for mutual
destruction, and our liberty on determinism. We had replaced morality with convention, bravery
with safety, frugality with plenty, philosophy with science, stoicism with anaesthetics and piety
with immortality. The universal acid of the true knowledge had burned away a world of words, and
exposed a universe of things.
    Things we could use.
    ‘It’s the Rapture for nerds!’ Now that’s a breath of fresh air, I think, and turn to see who’s come
up with this well aimed sneer at the Singularity. It’s a guy bumping alongside me, a slender man
with straight black hair gelled to a quiff, a sharp beard modelled on Lenin’s, a slim gentle face and
darting dark eyes. He’s enjoying the laughter he’s spread on our side, the discomfited smiles on the
other.
    It’s 2065 and we’re back in the wreck-deck, but the recreation area is now much expanded, as is
the space station, which has just been boosted to a higher orbit. We are here to celebrate that
work’s completion. There must be hundreds of people here. To begin with we were one big
crowd, but as the arguments have gone on we have, almost literally, drifted apart. We have
polarized to opposite sides of the deck.
    The arguments have been going on for years, but we’ve always worked together. The two sides,
of which those here are a small sample, are loosely based on two waves of space settlement. The
first lot had peaked in the twenty-forties, and consisted of pioneer settlers and the forces in Earth
Defence who’d gone over to the Fall Revolution. The second lot had come up in the late twenty-
fifties, and early twenty-sixties, and were the product of a quite different process: a deliberate
abandonment of Earth by technicians, engineers and scientists and the desperate rich who had
developed an increasingly advanced technology and launch capability in increasingly isolated and
beleaguered enclaves. They’d shot their bolt in the catastrophically botched and counter-
productive ‘Space Movement coup’ of 2059.
    They still have stuff coming up, though, and all along they’ve been using bonded labourers
criminals making restitution, mostly, and political and military prisoners from the losing side in the
Fall Revolution and subsequent conflicts to build and defend their infrastructure, in space and on
the ground. To us, this seems little better than slavery, not to mention a sneaky undercutting of the
Space Movement’s traditional private-enterprise or voluntary labour ethos. To them, it’s payback
for the long years of repression before the Revolution, and for their continuing harassment by the
fragmented governments and frantic peoples of Earth.
    Understandably, they have no interest in using the now enormous and self-sufficient space
presence to aid those from whose ignorant wrath they’ve barely escaped. We, from the first wave
of idealistic or avaricious colonists, are convinced that aiding Earth is exactly the way to overcome
that ignorant wrath.
   We call ourselves: the first settlers, the Earth tendency, the beautiful people, the star warriors.
   We call the others: the others, the outsiders, the nerds, the new lot.
   The others call us: the Earth-Tenders, the greenies, the commies, the mundanes, the dirt-farmers,
the Space Family Robinson.
   The others call themselves: the Outwarders, the Singularity Gang, the Futurists, the post-
humans.
   Their dream is the Singularity. Ours is the Galactic Empire, or the Federation, or whatever. It
makes them laugh.
   And right now we’re laughing at them, or at least the dozens of people within earshot of this
man’s gibe are laughing at a roughly equal and opposite group of Outwarders.
   ‘That stuff is just stupid,’ he goes on. ‘I can’t understand how anybody ever fell for the idea that
a computer model of the brain is the same as the brain. Talk about mechanical materialism! It’s
about becoming a machine, it’s death, and wanting it is sick.’
   ‘You wouldn’t say that if you knew you were about to die,’ says the nearest Outwarder, a young
man (but we all look young, now) who doesn’t match our favourite nerd stereotype because he’s
eschewed the coke-and-pizza diet for a different Outwarder vice: body building. He floats, tanned
and oiled and naked, in a slow spinning lotus posture, doing something dynamic and clever with the
squirted stream of his drink. ‘We already have back-ups of people who got killed guarding
Canaveral, you know that?’ He catches a wobbling sphere of liquid in his lips, and swallows it, his
next rotation bringing up a questioning smile.
   ‘And you’re going to run them?’ I ask.
   ‘Sure,’ he tells us. ‘As soon as we have a few bugs out of the virtual-environment software.’
The man beside me laughs. ‘So your slave soldiers get promised paradise when they die! Stay with
that idea, guys, it worked for Mohammed.’ This second religious allusion leads the oiled man to
ask, challengingly, ‘Have you ever read anything on the strong-Al resurrectionist position? Even
something classic, like The Physics of Immortality?’
   ‘Nah,’ says the bearded man. ‘Life’s too short!’ The Outwarder stops his rotation with a
perfectly-timed toss of his empty drink-bulb, and looks coldly at my sniggering face.
   ‘Here’s a thought from it,’ he says. ‘Brief enough for you: refusing to accept intelligent robots
as people is equivalent to racism.’
   ‘So?’ says the man at my side. ‘So I’m a racist. A human racist.’
   ‘Fine by me,’ I chip in, knowing that the Outwarder is playing the racism card with my dark skin
in mind. He scowls at me. ‘Here’s another claiming that human selves can’t be implemented on
computers is tantamount to accepting death, for everybody, forever. Is that so fine by you?’
   ‘I can live with it,’ I say. The man beside me gives an appreciative chuckle, and adds: ‘If you
allow us to live.’ The Outwarder smiles, looks around at the jostle of his fellows, then back at us.
   ‘Of course we’ll allow you to live,’ he says. ‘On wildlife reserves, like the other interesting
animals. Some of us may prefer to think of you as pets. Sentimental post-humans will no doubt
campaign for “human rights” it’ll be one of those fluffy causes, like old-growth forests and spotted
owls. Wouldn’t it be much better to join us, and be as gods?’ Something twists inside me.
Everything is suddenly clear. I have what I later understand as the beginning of the true
knowledge.
   ‘We are as gods!’ I snarl. ‘We are the top predator here. You can become machines if you like,
but then you’ll be dead, and we’ll be alive, and we’ll treat you as machines. If we can’t use you,
we’ll smash you up!’
   ‘If you can,’ he says.
    I look straight back at him. ‘If we can.’ He makes a dismissive gesture, and turns away.
    The man beside me performs a mid-air somersault, and floats before me, grinning, arms spread.
He seems to think he’s just given me a fly-past salute.
    ‘That was good,’ he says.
    ‘Hey, I liked what you said,’ I tell him. “’The Rapture for nerds.” ‘ We laugh like it’s an old,
shared joke, and introduce ourselves. His name is Tony Girard, and he’s on the space station’s
management board, responsible for keeping an eye on the Outwarder component of its inhabitants.
The liaison is important the just-completed boosting of the station has been done with the new
rocket engines, which look like they’ve been injection-moulded from diamond, and are
nanofactured by the Outwarders. But he can’t help getting into arguments with them.
    ‘They say we’re evil,’ he says. ‘I tell them we are.’
    ‘But we’re not!’ I protest.
    ‘Not from our point of view. We are from theirs. Reactionaries, counter-evolutionaries, pulling
back from the next stage in human development.’
    ‘Yeah extinction!’ I think about being evil. To them, I realize, we are indeed bad and harmful,
but and the thought catches my breath we are not bad and harmful to ourselves, and that is all that
matters, to us. So as long as we are actually achieving our own good, it doesn’t matter how evil we
are to our enemies. Our Federation will be, to them, the evil empire, the domain of dark lords; and
I will be a dark lady in it.
    Humanity is indeed evil, from any non-human point of view. I hug my human wickedness in a
shiver of delight.
    I tell Tony some of this, and he nods.
    ‘It’s very liberating,’ he says. ‘Wearing the black hats.’ He draws, spins and cocks an imaginary
six-gun. (Like all of us, he has a real one on his hip.) ‘Saves you a lot of soul-searching. As long
as you avoid hitting your own side, you’re doing the right thing.’
    ‘Perhaps we’re the Indians. The natives.’ Tony likes this. ‘That’s right,’ he says. ‘Doomed but
brave. A drag on the wheels of progress. Shooting arrows at the iron horses of Manifest Destiny.’
    ‘They are such mechanists,’ I say.
    ‘Yeah,’ he says. ‘That’s why I like to wind them up.’ I laugh so much I find myself clinging to
him, and later that daycycle we have the first ever of our quick drunk fucks.
    I smiled at Tony, perhaps more warmly than usual, and stood up and caught Yeng’s eye, then
flicked a glance to the table where Malley and Suze were sitting head-to-head. Yeng nodded. We
each picked up our trays and wandered over.
    ‘Mind if we sit down?’ Malley looked up, looked at Suze. ‘Not at all,’ he said.
    I sat down beside Malley, and Yeng slipped on to the bench beside Suze and flashed her a quick
smile. Suze looked down at her plate, then up.
    ‘Sam and I have a question for you,’ said Suze. ‘I’m Union, he’s non-co, and it turns out we
both have the same question. Independently.’
    ‘OK,’ I said.
    ‘Would you be willing to at least try to contact the Jovians, before destroying them? Would you
at least try to come to some arrangement?’ The idea of contact with the Jovians made my skin
crawl; but I also felt its attractions. The danger appealed to my recklessness, my hatred of the
Jovians fuelled my curiosity about what they were really like, and, above all, we needed Malley’s
cooperation to get through the Malley Mile. That was the bottom line.
    Yeng looked about to speak. My look signalled her to be quiet.
    ‘We’d consider it,’ I said. ‘I can’t speak for the Division, of course, but I wouldn’t say it’s ruled
out. Why?’
    ‘I’d feel a lot happier about working with you,’ Malley said, ‘if I knew for sure the Jovians
really were a threat to us. A clear and present danger. And opening communication with them is
the only way to find out.’ Suze nodded agreement. ‘When the folks back home find out what
you’re doing, which they will and you are going to let them know before the event, aren’t you? I
think they’d like to know for sure, as well. It would be a rotten shame to wipe out things even if
they are just things that could help us, and that could turn out to be the only friends we have in the
whole universe. Like, what if they are gods, but gods on our side?’ So Suze was an appeaser, I
thought sadly. I wondered again if she’d somehow been sent to spy on me, and dismissed the
thought, again.
    ‘All right,’ I said. ‘We’ll do it.’
    ‘How?’ asked Malley.
    ‘Shortly after we get back,’ I said, ‘a fleet of remote probes is due to begin descent into the
Jovian atmosphere essentially to spy, to get a clearer and closer view of what the comets are going
to hit. Their telemetry radio, radar, laser could easily be adapted for a first stab at communication.
I’ll put as strong a case as I can for doing it, and you and Suze can argue for it too, if you think
that’ll help.’ Yeng’s eyes flashed surprise; disagreement scored her brow.
    ‘It’s dangerous!’ she said.
    ‘Sure it is,’ I said. ‘But if anyone can build the firewalls, it’s you. There must be contingency
plans somewhere, hardware and software designs, right?’ She nodded reluctantly. ‘Good guess.’ It
was more than a guess, but Yeng didn’t need to know that I knew more than I needed to know.
    ‘So go to it,’ I said. ‘Let’s make some good use of our nine days.’ I turned to Malley. ‘And
you’ll help us with the wormhole?’
    ‘If you do as you say, yes.’ He picked up his pipe and ran its stem across his upper lip, inhaling
gently through his nose, then put it down. ‘I’ll start work on it now I mean, I can hardly help
thinking about it. When we arrive I’ll use all the research facilities you’ve promised me, and if you
lot show some indication of having made a sincere attempt to avoid ... war, because that’s what it
is, then I’ll share my results with you.’
    ‘It’s a deal,’ I told him. Malley nodded; Suze smiled back at me; Yeng looked vaguely puzzled.
‘We have a plan,’ I added, for her benefit.
    ‘I have a lot of plans,’ Yeng said. ‘This is great! Such a challenge!’ She grinned at me, her
sweet, small face lighting up. ‘Don’t you worry, Ellen May, you’ll have the best protection
possible.’ She jumped up and almost ran up the spiral stair, so eager was she to start work on her
anti-virus software design.
    ‘What did she mean?’ Malley asked. ‘Why should it be you who opens communication?’ I
knocked back my now-cold coffee. ‘Same reason I went to get you,’ I said. ‘If somebody proposes
and pushes some daft, dangerous idea, it’s only fair that they should have the fun of trying it out.’
Malley gave me an odd look. ‘You must get through a lot of leading cadre that way.’
    ‘We don’t have “leading cadre”,’ said Suze.
    ‘In the Division, we do,’ I said. ‘Only we don’t lead from behind.’ Suze looked so concerned
that I had to relent. ‘We do take back-ups,’ I assured her.
    Back-ups were controversial. After I’d left Malley talking to Andrea about the available
recorded observations of the wormhole gate, and left Suze talking to Tony about her interests and
observations, I sat and drank more coffee and worried about back-ups.
   There were several methods, in principle, of taking back-ups: non-invasive scanning techniques
for the living, smart-matter infusions for the dying or newly dead. The end result of all of them
was a stored snapshot of the brain’s state, down to the last neuron and synapse. This state could be
replicated in a ‘blank’ brain, usually but not necessarily that of a forced-grown clone of the
original. The Outwarders had perfected this process long ago, back in the twenty-fifties, and we’d
learned it from them. They’d subsequently perfected the far trickier task of ‘running’ the copied
mind, advancing the recorded brain-state from its final instant to the next instant, and the next ...
whether in control of a robot body, or in a virtual environment, or in some combination of both.
This they called uploading, and this we did not do. It required the cooperation of autonomous
artificial intelligence, and it had a logic of its own which led unless interrupted by main force to the
Singularity, the Rapture of the nerds as Tony had called it.
   Because: once the mind was out of the meat, once it was running in silicon rather than carbon,
and surrounded with artificial intelligences that could give it every assistance, there was nothing to
stop its running a thousand times faster, and expanding its capabilities its available knowledge, its
sensorium, its memory storage and access just by plugging more stuff in. The uploaded mind could
be upgraded, and every upgrade made the next more feasible, and quicker to implement. That way
led to runaway artificial intelligence excursion: Singularity.
   The Outwarders had regarded this as no bad thing, and the supplanting of humanity as long
overdue. We, the ones who’d intended, for whatever reason, to remain human, might even have
been convinced. The haunting thought that uploads had no thoughts, no souls; that they were
flatlines, mindless emulations of the mind, that subjectivity was (as the finder Shin Se-Ha had
wryly said) ‘an emergent property of carbon’, might have come to seem absurd even to us; were it
not for the fact that the supposed superhumans had almost all, to all appearances, gone mad; and
the exceptions, the survivors of Project Jove who became the Jovians, had gone bad.
   Bad for us, anyway.
   The experience, and the long, low-level conflict that followed, had hardened our first quibbles
and quarrels with the Outwarders (way back when they’d been of the same flesh as ourselves) into
a theory which as Malley had pointed out was embarrassingly like an ideology: machines don’t
think, they calculate; only people count; uploads are flatlines, and copies are not originals.
   Which, for anyone contemplating taking a back-up, was a disturbing thought. For anyone who
woke up to find that they were a copy taken from a back-up, it was even more disturbing.
   So I had been told; and soon enough, if my proposed encounter with the new Jovian entities
went badly, I would know for myself.
   Or rather ... somebody else would, somebody just like me, with my name, my face, my
memories, including my memory of thinking this very thought. I wished her well.
   Up on the command deck Malley was sitting in an acceleration couch with its back tilted up to
make a seat. Yeng sat in a similarly adjusted couch several yards away. In front of each of them
was a computer interface screen of a type standard throughout the Union and the Division. It was
made of two sheets of thin, tough glass, about three feet by two, with a quarter-inch thick layer of
multi-coloured liquid between them. The multi-coloured liquid was nothing but clear water
swarming with nanomachines, which scurried about and held up fine particles in various colours,
according to instructions transmitted by chemical and electrical impulses, thus forming the
graphics, the moving pictures, and the text.
   Malley’s screen was blank except for a scrolling block of text. His fingers; moved along the pad
angled at the base of the screen. I couldn’t distinguish whether he was writing or reading, or
whether the symbols on the screen were our data or his calculations. His pipe jutted from the
corner of his mouth, and small puffs of smoke rose from it every few seconds, each puff drifting
gently upwards until the current from the ventilation whipped it away. I knew better than to talk to
him, and I doubt he would have talked back.
    Yeng, however, looked up at me and seemed eager to discuss what she was doing. She shifted
on her seat and motioned to me to sit down. There was plenty of room, though I took up more of it
than Yeng did.
    One of the advantages that this kind of computer had over the old-fashioned, and dangerously
vulnerable, electronic computer was that it doubled as an engineering workshop and biochemical
laboratory. You could physically isolate a little box a fixel, it was called on the screen, and set up
an entire nanofacturing complex. It might be too small to see, but it was a small matter to get the
rest of the screen to display what was going on.
    The screen I was looking at displayed a line along the top, and a dozen or so columns. Yeng
pointed. ‘Latest variant of their radio transmission,’ she said. ‘Signal lasts ten seconds. I’m
testing it against an array of input devices radio, television, radar receiver, mechanical computers of
various sizes that might pick it up accidentally even human visual pigments. Running.’ The
message was played, in a silent and invisible pulse represented by a wavefront advancing from the
line at the top of the screen to the top of the array of columns. All the devices handled it or
completely failed to react to it except one, whose column started flashing. Yeng cleared the rest
and enlarged that view. Trapped in the circuits of a miniaturized version of our standard radar
input, the signal had set up a standing-wave pattern which, as soon as Yeng connected the radar
with a clutch of nanocomputers, duly propagated into them and burnt them out.
    ‘Nasty,’ I said. ‘They’re hacking babbages now. That’s new.’ Yeng smiled. ‘Indeed, but I
think I can see a way to neutralize it.’ She tagged the message, and moved on to a fixel containing a
complex organic molecule, large numbers of which had recently been detected escaping from the
Jovian atmosphere. That molecule turned out to have the interesting property of jamming the gears
of one of our hull-maintenance nanobots.
    ‘Hmm,’ said Yeng, sucking the end of a strand of her long blueblack hair. ‘Must have picked on
something of ours that drifted the other way. Unless the meshing is accidental, which seems
unlikely.’ She called up a 3-D model of the gearing mechanism. ‘Hmm,’ she said again. I decided
it was time to leave her alone.
    ‘Messages for you,’ Yeng said.
    It was the morning of the fourth day out. We had settled into a routine. There wasn’t much for
the crew to do, apart from reading, watching moving pictures, looking out at the stars, playing
games or music and trying to seduce Suze into the constant slow dance of our convoluted
relationships. Malley was now engrossed in studying recorded observations of the wormhole Gate,
gazing for hours at the strange images, then departing to stare at a sheet of paper which was, very
gradually, filling up with pencilled equations. Yeng was working her . way through decades of
predesigned anti-viral software, updating the programs, throwing them into battle with trapped
Outwarder viruses (some of them computer viruses, some of them almost literally biological
viruses, molecular engines of destruction) and breeding from the survivors. (And that Darwinian
process had to be watched, too for what better way to infiltrate a system than to subtly direct,
through manipulating the virus attacks, the evolution of its anti-infiltration software?) She’d just
taken a break to check our mailbox. The few unavoidable real-time communications, mostly on
arrival and departure, were handled more directly, through the comms rig though even there the
defensive barriers had to be active. The mailbox was for less-urgent or personal messages, and
each of them went through a cryptographic quarantine whose processing kept billions of nanotech
babbages busy for seconds on end. She passed me a small vial containing a culture of
nanomachines on which the incoming laser communications had been recorded and decrypted.
    My suit ate it, and played the messages over my eyes.
    ‘You are in deep trouble, Ellen May Ngwethu,’ the first message began, without preliminary.
The face of Sylvester Tatsuro, current chairman of the Command Committee, frowned upon me.
‘The Research Committee has just passed a vote of no confidence in you, so you’re no longer our
liaison with the social admin. They’ve asked us to divert a clipper to Lagrange to pick up a
representative of the Solar Council, no less, who will be heading out here to investigate personally
what’s been going on. There’s a lot of concern about our possible intentions.’ He allowed himself
a brief smile. ‘Which no one outside the Division knows yet. Our self-discipline has held the line,
so far. But the Earth Defence bodies are indulging their usual jealous pique towards us, and
arousing all kinds of suspicions. Fortunately they have the wrong end of the stick entirely, in that
they’re hinting that we’ve become appeasers! Apparently your clumsy extraction of Malley has
caused something of a sensation, and various people who saw you talking to Wilde have been
speculating in public. Naturally, the genuine appeasers are making a big thing of this, suggesting
that we’ve seen sense at last and are about to open contact with the Jovians. I’ve put out a
communiqué saying that’s the last thing we’ll consider, and that our vigilance remains as high as
ever.’ Another quick smile. ‘I didn’t see my way clear yet to point out that we’re on a higher alert
than ever. And just to wrap up, Ellen, all this talk has aroused interest in Jupiter, and one or two
astronomers on Farside have been jolted out of their routine rut and are looking closely at the planet
for the first time in decades. They’ve already noticed some ... oddities.
    ‘You have, in short, stirred up a hornets’ nest. We’re all giving you covering fire, of course, but
when you arrive you’ll have some explaining to do. I don’t expect any reply to this message, by
the way. Be seeing you, comrade.’ There was a pause of perhaps a second before the image closed
down. In that moment, Tatsuro’s head inclined in what could have been a nod, his eyelid flickered
in what could have been a wink.
    Weeks ago, we had come to a private agreement on what to do, if the worst came to the worst:
Plan B. It was something we dared not talk about; even thinking about it made me uneasy. But
whatever my mistakes, Tatsuro needed me to carry it out. He would defend me against accusations
give, as he’d said, covering fire.
    That I still had his confidence was the only comfort I could draw.
    The rest of the message left me uncomfortable and indignant. I held off from allowing myself
any further reaction and let the suit play the next message.
    It was from Carla, of the Thames river patrol. The view was of her sitting in a small room, with
screens and papers lying around.
    ‘Message to Ellen May Ngwethu on the Terrible Beauty,’ she began, awkwardly. ‘Uh, Ellen, I
shouldn’t really be telling you this, but hey, you seemed pretty sound. I’ve found out why you
didn’t get a response to your calls for assistance from Alexandra Port. There were a couple of
neighbours from Earth Defence around there just about the same time, warning about some radio
communications going on among the non-cos, and the possibility of Jovian viruses leaking through.
Well, we all saw that the non-cos were using radios, and it turns out that Alexandra Port and the
river patrol and so on had all had an emergency shut-down when all that radio babble started, just
in case.
    ‘The Earth Defence chaps have been talking to our committee, and it seems they were
investigating that man you picked up, Dr Malley. They were waiting to see what he would do, and
I have to say they were not best pleased when Terrible Beauty suddenly swooped down and carried
him off. They’re kicking up a bit of a stink about it, and it’s all over the discussion tubes back
here.’ She stopped and sighed. ‘To tell you the truth, Ellen, they’re saying Malley and the Division
have been in cahoots for some time, and that all those radios the non-cos were using so carelessly
were encouraged by Malley and yourselves as part of some scheme to try out the effects of people
picking up Jovian communications testing them on the poor non-cos, rather than on our own
people. You can imagine what a fuss that’s causing.’ I could, all right.
    ‘Well,’ Carla concluded, ‘I’ll have to leave it at that. I’m sure it’s all some big
misunderstanding, so it’s over to you now. All the best.’ She gave a rather forced smile and I saw
her hand reaching forward to switch the recorder off.
    Yeng’s concerned face came into view as the virtual image faded out. ‘Are you all right?’
    ‘I’m fine,’ I said, standing up.
    ‘It’s not any ... personal bad news, is it?’ I smiled and put my arm around her shoulders. ‘No,
Yeng, it’s nothing like that. Just a little political problem, is all.’ After a watchful moment she
turned back to her screen. I stood looking at her back, and at the equally oblivious Malley, for a
few seconds, then I sought out Tony. He was lounging on one of the side benches in the
commissary, reading a book I could see his eyes saccade, scanning the invisible page. He blinked it
away as he heard my approaching steps, and raised his eyebrows. By way of reply I inclined my
head slightly towards the corner table, where Boris was talking to Suze, over a rapidly emptying
bottle of iceclouded vodka and a couple of glasses. He was matching her sips with gulps.
    Tony gave me a small nod, flashed five fingers and returned to his book. I picked up a coffee
and climbed up the stairwell, past the command deck to the sleeping gallery, and into my room.
Five minutes later, as signalled, Tony followed. He tapped on the hatch and ducked in, and sat
down in front of me on the spread quilt of my outer suit.
    ‘Still going for the mumsy look, I see,’ he remarked. ‘Mmm, I don’t know if I can contain my
lust.’
    ‘You’d better,’ I said. ‘There’s something under all this that seems to be containing me -‘
    ‘Oh, stop it ... anyway, Ellen, I don’t suppose you asked me here to tear it off you, so ...’ He
listened to my summary of the two messages. Then he lay
 back and stared up at the ceiling, his hands clasped behind his head.
 ‘I think we’ve been set up,’ he said. ‘The Earth Defence ... comrades ... are probably trying to
muscle in on our patch. They don’t think we’re going for appeasement, no way, nor that we’re
doing human experiments on the non-cos. They think we have some kind of plan to win the war
while nobody’s looking, take all the credit, declare the Solar System up for grabs, and grab a big
chunk of it ourselves.’
    I stared at him. ‘Earth Defence think me are tooling up for a ... what, a counter-revolution?
Dissolving the Solar Union? That’s crazy.
    ‘It’s part of their job to worry about that sort of thing,’ Tony said.
    ‘All right, I’ll take your judgment on that one. But what I most want to ask you -‘
    ‘Yes?’
    ‘-is what you’ve found out about our little sweetie.’
    ‘Ah, modesty forbids,’ Tony said gallantly. ‘But apart from that: she’s basically just a nice girl.
She’s grown up in the Union, and she can’t really imagine anything different. Because all the
conflicts she’s ever actually been in have been settled by discussion, literally around a table.’ He
sighed. ‘Passionate global debates about what species to bring back this year. It’s a bit . . .
disorienting, talking to someone so young. It’s been a long time since I gave anyone the third
degree, and I wasn’t giving her anything like that -‘
    He smiled, looking somewhere else. ‘Notwithstanding any screams you may have heard.’
    ‘Do lay off. You think she’s clear?’
    ‘Yes. I’d say she’s just a nice, normal girl who doesn’t know how tough life can be. The youth
of today, eh?’
    ‘There is one thing she’s ... hard about,’ I said. ‘She wants the virus blanketing to stop. She
wants expansion.’
    ‘She told you that?’
    ‘No,’ I said. ‘I guessed.’
    ‘Well, you guessed right. She told me she’s really excited about New Mars.’
    ‘So is Sam Malley,’ I said. ‘And he did tell me that. Maybe if what Suze really wants, deep
down, is an end to the standoff, then ‘She might be winnable on our way of ending it, if it comes to
that?’
    ‘Yes. And she might have an influence on how Malley sees it, especially if well, they do have a
lot in common.’ Tony stared at me, the bioluminescence sending bands of light down his face.
‘You are incorrigible, Ellen.’ I shrugged. ‘I must admit he’s looking and smelling better every day
-‘
    ‘You really do owe me one if I lose Suze’s sweet young body to that old reactionary.’
    ‘If you insist.’
    ‘Anyway,’ he added a minute later, ‘we can’t have the gang thinking we’re having a secretive
discussion, or something.’
    ‘No,’ I agreed, trying to find the release-spot for the most impenetrable of the suit’s inner layers.
‘People might talk.’ That evening I sought out Suze after dinner, and settled down with her in a
corner.
    ‘Interesting conversation with Boris?’ Her glance shone. ‘He’s amazing! An actual Sheenisov
veteran! I’ve never met one of them before. It’s like ... history talking to you.’
    ‘Well,’ I said, ‘it isn’t always reliable history. Boris’s memories may have got a bit screwed up
along the way.’ (This was the charitable interpretation.) ‘What! No tribes of folks with two heads?
No yetis? No lost legions of reanimated US/UN casualties?’ She smiled.
    ‘I’m afraid not. Not as he describes them, anyway. There were weird things on the steppe and
in the European forests, and hallucinogen weapons were among them. That, we know for sure, so
we can’t be too sure about the rest.’
    ‘Yeah, I know,’ Suze said, sounding regretful. ‘Anyway.’ She peered at me from under her
brow. ‘You didn’t come to talk about the battle of democracy. You came to talk about the battle
that’s coming up.’
    ‘That’s true,’ I admitted. ‘I’m sorry to be so -‘
    ‘It’s all right,’ Suze said. ‘I’ve had these conversations in the past. You say something way out
of line, and nothing will happen except folks will argue, maybe, but sure as nature you’ll find one
of the old comrades dropping by for a friendly chat to put you straight.’
    ‘I’m not one of the old comrades!’
    ‘Oh, but you are,’ Suze said. ‘I’d know that look anywhere. Tolerance that comes from total
confidence that you’re right.’ I had to smile and nod and shrug to this, because I knew that look
myself; even if I’d never recognized it in the mirror.
    ‘OK, Suze, the fact is we have to win. They’ve been plaguing us, we’ve been zapping them, for
centuries. Nobody has ever said we shouldn’t be doing it. This is just ... finishing the job.’ Suze
looked troubled. ‘Yes, but it’s so final! Everything will change.’ I nodded briskly. ‘That’s right.
But if we don’t, everything will change, but for the worse. This way, things will change for the
better. We’ll be able to expand properly at last. And we have to. Have you seen how many kids
people are having?’ Suze smiled wryly. ‘Yeah. But what you’re proposing reminds me of ...
things I’ve read about, from the old time. Lebensraum. Manifest Destiny. All that.’ I almost
regretted coming (almost) clean with her and Malley. But this kind of argument would have to be
had, and soon, with everybody. When the Solar Council representative arrived, he or she would not
be fooled, and would tell everybody. Then the water would hit the fuel-rods in a big way.
    ‘It isn’t like that, Suze,’ I said. ‘Honestly. The Outwarders the Jovians aren’t people. They’re
nothing like people. They’re just smart computer viruses, and this is our chance to wipe the disk
for good. And if we don’t take that chance -‘ I hesitated here, because this was the core of the
Division’s morale, our Central Dogma, and it didn’t go over well with folk who’d led more
sheltered lives ‘they’ll destroy us, or use us, as soon as they get the chance. It’s them or us.’ Suze
looked thoughtful. ‘OK, I can see that,’ she said. ‘I try to imagine my mind being taken over, like
happened to the old computers back in the Crash, and -‘ She shuddered. ‘I’d do anything to prevent
that. I’d rather die.’
    ‘Good on you,’ I said. ‘But it won’t come to that, because we’d rather kill.’
    ‘But you’ll try to talk first? As you promised?’ And as our own chairman had almost promised
we wouldn’t. ‘Of course,’ I said.
    Our conversation moved on to less weighty subjects, and when we parted after a few drinks I
was fairly sure that the tried and tested technique of the friendly chat from one of the old comrades
still had a lot to be said for it.
                                            6 Valhalla
    ‘It’s Funny,’ Suze said. ‘I always imagined Jupiter from Callisto would fill half the sky, and
that everything else would be dark.’
    ‘You’re getting blasé, girl,’ I told her. ‘Jupiter’s more than a million miles away, and it still
looks big enough to me.’ It was 08.48 GMT on the tenth day. We were in a low orbit around
Callisto, its surface of cratered ice with its characteristic appearance of pellet-struck glass.
Valhalla’s bull’s-eye shock-rings slid by below us, giant Jove rose above the horizon in front of us.
On both bodies the works of mind were evident: the honeycomb upwellings of the Jovian hive, still
monstrous to my eyes after two centuries; on Callisto the bright green-and-gold bubbles of the
equatorial crater villages, the dark towers of the defence-lasers, the long white lines of the mass-
driver tracks along which blocks of ice were hurtled into space. Callisto has four times more water
in its icy crust than Earth has in all its oceans; slingshot around Jupiter, those blocks of ice were
sent on slow transfer orbits to the Inner System the water we’d picked up in Earth orbit had come
all the way from here, and it was still worth doing; far more efficient than hauling water up Earth’s
deep gravity-well or scraping frost from Luna’s polar shadows.
    Between this outermost of Jupiter’s major moons and the planet itself was the ring: the near edge
showing at this angle and distance as unbelievably sparse lights, which, as the eye took in the
longer view, combined to form what seemed a solid crescent band of white. The sun was still
recognizably the sun, but its light was just bright enough to look like broad daylight, not so bright it
dazzled and burned; much more natural than it looks from Earth.
    ‘Everybody strap in!’ yelled Andrea. ‘Braking in two minutes!’ We launched ourselves away
from the wide CCTV screen and towards the couches. I strapped in and reached out for the still
floundering Suze, and pushed her gently to her place. She wallowed, grabbed, and turned. Malley
had stayed strapped in throughout our minutes in free fall. His eyelids were closed tight, their
compression forming the only wrinkles in his rejuvenated face. He and Suze were now on a par,
physiologically, but his reflexes, the habits and expectations of his nervous system, remained those
of a man who’d lived two hundred and sixty years in the same one gravity. Suze, with less to
unlearn, was adapting quicker.
    ‘Braking burn in ten, nine, eight ...’ There was no real need for a countdown, but Andrea too had
old habits. The deceleration this time was shorter and less severe than the acceleration from Earth.
Terrible Beauty came down and settled into its landing cradle like a well-caught egg. The silence
left by the sudden absence of the unheard note of the drive was filled with ominous creaking noises.
    ‘Water melts under the torch,’ I told Suze and Malley. ‘That’s it refreezing. The cradle we’re
resting on has legs that go deep into the ice, so we’re quite safe.’ We all stood up and grinned at
each other and bounced around a bit in the low gravity, shouting and caromming off each other and
generally acting as if a weight had just been taken off us, which it had. Suze and Malley stared at
us and made cautious, experimental little hops.
    ‘It’s good to be home,’ I said, passing out air-tanks like bottles of champagne. I clapped mine to
the front of my suit and the suit’s surface flowed around it.
    ‘That’s all there is to it?’ Malley asked.
    I nodded, guiding them through the equally rapid and simple processes of making the suits
vacuum-ready. My own suit absorbed some of its more exuberant embellishments as it shrank to
fit. I could feel the inner layers flowing away from their nightwear images to a more functional
chin-to-toe insulating one-piece. I pulled the hood over my head and murmured, ‘Helmet up.’
    ‘You look very funny,’ Suze said. She looked around. ‘I guess we all do.’
    ‘It’s practical,’ I said. ‘The colours make you more visible out on the surface. In accidents and
emergencies, that can save your life.’
    ‘Yeah,’ said Malley, gesturing at his magenta carapace. ‘You wouldn’t want to be seen dead in
it.’ We made our way to the airlock and went through in pairs to a lift-platform cranked up by the
landing cradle. I took Suze through with me and as we waited for the others she gazed around at
the landing-field. We were a hundred feet above the surface, and had a good view of miles of flat
and dirty ice, dozens of gantries and landing cradles, scores of crawling vehicles, and hundreds of
people in their bright suits, looking from this height like an anomalous species of idiosyncratic,
multi-coloured ants. One of Valhalla’s ringwalls marked the horizon. Ice-blocks from a distant
mass-driver soared overhead like meteors going the wrong way at a rate of about one a minute.
    I felt, as always on returning here, a sense of homecoming, literally light-headed at being safely
back and only minutes away from the warm human tumult of the ice-caverns, and an absurd
gratitude to the godless, mindless forces that had placed this precious oasis of water so
conveniently within the reach of man. The first wave of space-settlers had a saying, something
between a litany and a running joke, which went: ‘If God had meant us to go into space, he’d have
given us the Moon; if he’d meant us to terraform, he’d have given us Mars; if he’d meant us to
mine asteroids, he’d have given us the Belt; if he’d meant us to colonize, he’d have given us
Callisto.’ And so on. The details, and the name and gender of the deity allegedly responsible
varied, but the message was the same. There were even attempts to reformulate it in more
philosophically correct terms, as a special case of the anthropic principle, but they always struck
me as rather forced.
    If there was, as almost everybody now thought, no God, then all one could honestly say was that
the human race was just unbelievably lucky. There had to be some winner of the cosmic lottery,
some species which every chance event, from the passing of the dinosaurs to the coming of the ice,
had worked to bring about, and then to light the fire of reason; and on whose birth as a spacegoing
people the configuration of the planets had been favourable, and the stars themselves had smiled:
the true horoscope of our real destiny, infinitely greater than anything imagined in the petty
prognostications of astrology.
    Other life was certain: the Solar System was dusty with organics, and on extra-solar planets our
best telescopes could see the biospheres; Wilde’s reported New Mars had multicellular organisms,
fossil beds and coal. Other minds there might be; but the great silence of the sky spoke with an
unanswerable unanimity. Whatever triumphs these other minds had attained, radio communication
and space travel were not among them. The stars were ours alone.
    I looked out over the busy, cluttered, cheerful scene of the landing field, watching as a covered
walkway to the nearest tunnel mouth rolled itself out towards us. Two by two the others joined me,
leaning on the platform’s guardrail, silent in their own thoughts. My helmet’s newly built laser-
link buzzed.
    ‘This is a bleak place,’ said Suze.
    We travelled from the landing field by descending elevator and rapid tunnel-train to the Division
HQ at Valhalla base, six miles from the field and a mile under the ice. The elevator’s descent was
for much of the way a free fall, with only a gradual deceleration at the lower end. The tunnel-train,
likewise, was able to coast for most of its journey on blades like skates, running in channels of
perpetually melted and refrozen ice. On the way, Malley asked about ice-quakes; I told him
Callisto was the most stable of the major moons. He didn’t look reassured. All those recent-
looking craters can give the wrong impression.
    The Division HQ was a warren of tunnels and chambers lined with a spray-on insulation which
smelled faintly of tar and which was coloured according to a scheme so complex that it had been
abandoned as soon as it was implemented. We stood outside the inner door of the main airlock
while our helmets scrolled down. The air was cool, carrying more of the smell of humans and
machines, and less of plants and recyclers, than that of the ship. The distant vibration of air-pumps
could be heard, and felt through the floor.
    Ahead of us a hundred yards of bright-lit yellow corridor extended to a junction with a blue
corridor. Along that corridor people passed every few seconds, in the familiar low-gee stride
known as the ‘lunar lope’. To allow for the upper part of the lope’s trajectory, the corridor roofs
were never lower than about nine feet high.
    ‘No guards?’ Malley asked. ‘No reception?’
    ‘We don’t -‘ began Suze; was stopped by Malley’s gesture and smile.
    ‘OK, OK.’ The crew members were all changing their suits into low-gee styles. Suze let her suit
revert to the default fatigues and pack. I went for blue fake-leather trousers and top, a crinkly
transparent blouson, and a shoulder-bag. Malley surprised me, and possibly himself, with a
Medieval-scholar ensemble of leggings, breeches, tunic and cloak with a lot of black fur.
    I led the way along the corridor, turned left, then along until the blue changed to a red-and-white
tiling, looked at the hand-lettered sign tacked to the wall, turned right at the next junction and
stopped at the door of the newly hacked emergency meeting-room. Here, at least, there was a
guard, a man in heavy armour, armed with a couple of pistols and a light machine gun. He
recognized me and nodded.
    ‘We’re expected,’ I said.
    I knocked and went in. Expected we might be, but those present were busy at their tasks, and it
took a few minutes before a meeting could be convened around the table that occupied the first
section of the big room. It was a long table, eighteen feet by six, and it had about twenty chairs
around it. The part of the room it occupied was tacky with fresh insulation. Behind it was a
display screen and a cluster of terminals, and behind that a bank of medium-scale babbages whose
gentle clicking and whirring filled any silences. About a dozen people were working among them,
looking somewhat harassed: as members of the Command Committee, principles notwithstanding,
they didn’t have much recent experience of such low-level tasks. The far end of the room abutted
on raw ice, and dozens of robots were working at extending the room, melting the ice face, draining
off the water, filtering out the organics, uncoiling cables and power lines into freshly melted ducts
and applying insulation behind the advancing front of their activity. Beneath the insulation, the
new stuff in the walls would eventually freeze into place.
    Sylvester Tatsuro was the first to look up from the babbage which he was laboriously
programming and come over to greet us. He was a small and stocky man, with receding black hair
which he’d never bothered to replace, and narrow dark eyes. He was wearing a sort of belted robe
in green fur. His sleeves were studded with display-units, and he had a small control bank hung
from a strap around his neck.
    He shook hands with Malley, nodded at Suze, and turned to me. ‘Why is she here?’
    ‘I want her here,’ I said. ‘Voice but not vote, obviously. I met her by chance, but she’s been
helpful, and I think she has a point of view which may be useful for us to hear.’ Tatsuro shrugged.
‘She’s your responsibility,’ he said. ‘If you wish to retain her as an adviser, that’s fine.’
    ‘I’ve joined the Division,’ Suze said.
   ‘Welcome, comrade,’ said Tatsuro. ‘But on this committee, you’re strictly an adviser. You may
leave whenever you wish, but no unauthorized communication outside the Division is permitted.
Any such will be noticed at once, and action taken.’ He smiled briefly. ‘I sound like a cop from the
old time reading your rights but I’m sure you understand why this rule is necessary.’
   ‘Of course, neighbour,’ Suze said. ‘I understand. I feel very proud to be here.’
   ‘Good,’ said Tatsuro, smiling with every appearance of sincerity. ‘As to the rest of your gang -‘
he added, speaking to me. ‘My crew stays,’ I said.
   After a moment of eye-lock, he nodded.
   ‘What’s going on here?’ Malley asked, indicating the far end of the room.
   Tatsuro glanced around. ‘We’re setting up the information filters for the return data from the
probes that are due to enter the Jovian atmosphere in a few hours,’ he said. ‘Naturally most of the
detailed processing will be done by our scientific teams, but we get the first look. The first chance
to make sure there are no mind-viruses present.’ He smiled thinly. ‘One of the privileges of our
position.’
   ‘Spoken like a good socialist,’ said Malley.
   Tatsuro responded with a half-smile and a shrug, as if he didn’t want to argue, and rapped loudly
on the table.
   ‘Gather round, comrades,’ he called out gruffly. ‘That stuff can wait.’ One by one the other
committee members left off what they were doing and made their way to the table. I indicated to
the other crew members that they should spread out among the committee rather than sit in a group,
and I myself sat down between Malley and Suze, with Tatsuro at right angles to me, not across. I
was not going to give him even the slight advantage of sitting opposite me, if he wanted to make
this a confrontation over my actions back on Earth.
   It seemed he didn’t. The first item on the agenda was, of course, us; but the committee all
familiar faces, some old friends listened to my summary account with only a few questions. It was
when I mentioned my agreement with Malley that the frowning and muttering began.
   ‘Contact hasn’t been in any way considered,’ said Tatsuro. ‘It implicitly changes the basis on
which we’re acting. It re-opens questions which were settled long ago.’
   ‘Circumstances have changed,’ I said. ‘I have little confidence in getting anywhere with the
Jovians, but if it’s what Dr Malley here needs to convince him to share his work with us, I’m more
than willing to try.’ Tatsuro shook his head. ‘It’s far too dangerous. We can’t afford to lose you,
Ellen, and we can’t let some negotiation lose us time.’
   ‘We can continue preparations for the impact event,’ I said. ‘Contact, if it should happen, need
not get in the way. If there are negotiations, I imagine they can be complete before the impact
event, and in time to avert it if they’re successful. If there are post human minds down there, one
thing we know is they’d think fast. And as for the danger, well is it any worse than making direct
observations?’
   ‘If I may?’ Yeng said. Nods around the table. ‘It is worse, Ellen with communication you
necessarily open yourself more than with observation, and give more away. But I’ve strengthened
the firewalls, and this -‘ she waved at the back of the room ‘has obviously been set up to filter
incoming observations, and to isolate them.’
   ‘Correct,’ growled Tatsuro.
   ‘So between them,’ Yeng went on, ‘it should be more than enough. But I recommend a back-up,
just in case.’ We argued for about an hour, but finally it was agreed. And once we’d come to
agreement a consensus, in fact; there wasn’t even the need for a vote those of us directly involved
went straight to work, while the meeting went on.
    Yeng applied the back-up process the equipment was to hand, because whoever had drawn the
short straw, or volunteered, to handle the close-up observations would have needed one anyway. It
took forty minutes, every second of which were, for me, deeply unpleasant: it starts with a tendril
up a nostril, and ends with a painkiller for the worst headache you can imagine, a real migraine and
petit mal combined, with thunder in your ears and a dirty yellow lightning in your eyes, as the pain
flips over into synaesthesia.
    And then it fades, to a dull relief. I stood looking at the cubic inch of smart-matter in my hand,
within which my soul was stored, until the tiny block was absorbed seamlessly into the suit,
vanishing like a cheap trick: nothing up my sleeve.
    ‘Takes it out of you,’ Yeng observed sympathetically; then we both saw the ambiguity, and
laughed. I felt better, and stood up. The Command Committee had moved on to discussing the
forthcoming visit from the Solar Council delegate. As usual in the Division, they were quite
capable of focusing on one thing at a time, and leaving those who were implementing a previous
decision to get on with it.
    During my backing-up ordeal the television screen had been moved to one side, and Malley was
using it to observe the Gate up close and in real-time. The Gate’s outline was clearer now than on
the old recordings, because over several decades we’d cautiously attached an array of instruments
and rockets around its circumference. The instruments we used for observation, the rockets to shift
its location, gradually boosting it from low Jupiter orbit to its present position among the outer
moons. The current image on the screen came from a fighter among the usual swarm that stood
watch.
    Where the television screen had been was now a smaller screen showing incoming Mission
Control data about, rather than from, the shower of probes currently converging on the planet; and a
control deck and wraparound helmet, for the privileged individual who was about to follow them
down.
    ‘I’ve reprogrammed some of these remotely,’ said Yeng. ‘They’re standard gas-giant divers.
There’s a prerecorded message just a hailing and query for you to fire off on the wavelengths the
Jovians use for what we think are their communications, and an isolated core for any reply.’
    ‘How will I know which ones to fix on?’
    ‘They’re the only ones you’ll get through to. Don’t worry, they’re a big enough fraction of the
total for you to have a good chance of getting close.’
    ‘OK,’ I said. I looked at the Mission Control display. ‘Five minutes to entry. Here goes
nothing.’ Malley turned from his own screen and gave me a thumbs up as I sat down and put on the
VR helmet.
    Jupiter loomed, and in I fell.
    It was the clarity of the light that struck me first. I knew intellectually what to expect, but I’d
got used to seeing Jupiter from above, and from far away, as a roiling mass of clouds and
upwellings. Close up, the scale of the spaces between those clouds was a visceral shock. There
were chasms between the pillars of cloud in which Earth could fall in sunlight all the way to the
metallic-hydrogen core.
    The hundreds of probes, elaborate but expendable, stamped out like bottle-caps in the
nanofactories, were passively aerodynamic: gliders with the shape and approximate size of stone
arrowheads, their faceted surfaces glittering like chipped chert, their shafts the thin rods in which
the drogues were stacked. The filaments of their aerials trailed behind them, parallel to the shafts.
The probe heads had ailerons and rudders, so their flight could be controlled, but with a minimum
two-way delay of twelve seconds such control could only be gross.
    As they hit atmosphere at a hundred thousand miles per hour I was flicking from probe to probe,
seeking out ones that seemed to be heading in interesting directions. The first one on which I
settled was spiralling down in a clear updraft in which one of the bubbleclusters (I was not
prepared, yet, to call them ‘cities’) was drifting upwards. I tagged another, which headed straight
for one of the ‘walls’ of the convection cells, and stayed with the first as it descended. The pink
and orange clouds streaked past. Behind me as I couldn’t help thinking the drogues deployed one
by one, and one by one were whipped away. By the time the last had gone, the probe had slowed to
a mere fifty thousand miles per hour and was two hundred miles deep in the atmosphere, hurtling in
a tightening circle down the well of clear hydrogen towards the bubble-cluster. I nudged the
probe’s control surfaces and brought its descent almost to a halt, circling the cluster like a stacked
airliner. The bubble-cluster was a thousand miles in diameter, made up of hundreds of translucent
bubbles. This much our telescopes had already shown; and the hint of movement within.
    Closer ... now I could see the black threads, each at least a quarter of a mile wide, which
radiated from the cluster and vanished into the cloud walls. That the threads connected with other
such clusters seemed incredible, given the distances involved but the only other explanation, that
they were some kind of intake and/or outlet pipes, was so far without evidence, tempting as the
thought that they were mere sewers and ventilators might be.
    Closer still ... the apparent translucence of the bubbles sharpened to transparency: multiple
hexagonal panes set in a lattice of sturdy-looking white struts. Behind them was movement,
unmistakable, definite. I hit the ‘send’ key and swooped around again. On a reckless impulse I
slewed the probe into a close pass across the top of the bubble-cluster. All I saw, of course, was a
minute-long blur, followed by darkness as the probe plunged into the clouds.
    I disconnected from the probe and flicked to the data, running the recording in slow motion,
stepping it down and down until I seemed to be drifting along; increasing the magnification until
each panel was as clear and close as a cockpit window.
    And saw behind those windows looking out, crowding, visibly following the tiny object’s
flashing flight deep violet eyes in gigantic faces, faces sweet and calm as those of any imagined
angels. Their bodies too were like angels’: with long, trailing cascades of gold or silver or copper
hair, and sweeping diaphanous robes of rainbow light, each breastplated with a sunburst of jewelled
filigree. Their features weren’t sexless, or androgynous they were differentiated into the variant
ideals of masculine and feminine beauty. The interior of the bubble glowed and flickered with the
radiance of their beating wings. Not like the wings of insects, or birds, or bats, but perfect
parabolas, curved like magnetic fields, shimmering like polar lights; wings made from aurorae.
    As I watched, they changed, flowing into the shapes of fantastic fish, of floating multicoloured
scarves, of showers of flowers, of flaring fireworks. The vision ended as the probe passed beyond
the cluster.
    I replayed it, this time accompanying the images with the message I’d sent, and found that a
response had been received. I hesitated, then went ahead and ran it through the firewall filters.
What came out was not any kind of virus, but a quite straightforward message composed and sent
repeatedly as a second-long sequence of English. The machines stretched out the burst, sampled it
to a sound that sang in my ears, letters that shone before my eyes: ‘Responding to probe: we
welcome your message. Standing by for further communication. Informally hi guys and gals! It’s
been a long time! Let’s talk! See you soon!’ The beauty of the Jovians, the warmth and indeed the
colloquial informality of their message, should have been enough to melt all hostility, all suspicion.
The gaiety of their display, the tones of welcome and love in their voice, made me yearn to see
them and speak to them again. I ducked out of the VR helmet and put it down and looked up at
Yeng. I could feel my cheeks strained with smiles, damp with tears. Yeng smiled at me and
glanced above my head. I swivelled the gimballed seat and found the rest of the crew and of the
Command Committee crowded behind me.
    ‘Well?’ said Tatsuro. ‘You made contact?’
    ‘Yes,’ I said. My voice quivered.
    ‘No hacking? No viruses?’ Yeng shook her head. ‘It’s all clean,’ she said. ‘No viruses.’
    ‘None at all,’ I said. ‘See for yourselves. Look and tell me if those aren’t the most beautiful
creatures you’ve ever seen. They’re ... ravishing. Seductive.’ I sighed, remembering. ‘And
obviously capable of communicating with us. Whatever they’ve gone through, they’ve kept some
continuity with humanity.’ The images I’d seen were replayed again, this time on the screen. Suze
and Malley watched them, rapt. The crew and the Committee studied them more warily.
    ‘What do you think?’ asked Tatsuro. The others were, for a moment, too absorbed in what
they’d seen to speak, so I got in first.
    ‘Why don’t we have a look at some of the other Jovians?’ I said. ‘The ones I wasn’t in contact
with. Let’s see how typical this is, before jumping to conclusions.’ Reluctantly the others pulled
themselves out of their contemplative admiration, and set to work. A few probes had passed as
close, or closer, to other bubble-clusters as had the one I’d been tracking, and images of the
clusters’ inhabitants could be extracted. Their appearances varied widely, and changed rapidly as
we watched. The ‘angel’ form I’d first encountered was among them, but there were many others
no less beautiful. The most common basic shape resembled a butterfly, with the parabolic,
colourful wings, like those of the ‘angels’, extending from a central column or core. The sunburst
shape, which on the ‘angels’ had appeared as a breastplate or pendant, was a feature of all the
Jovian entities, though sometimes masked by their current form.
    ‘That jewelled object seems to be your basic Jovian,’ I said. ‘The CPU, perhaps? It sits in the
glowing shape around it like a magnet in its fields -‘
    ‘Which it may well be,’ said Yeng. ‘The wider form is like a controlled aurora, almost a
television picture, which the Jovian can vary at will.’ She smiled. ‘They seem ... playful,
whimsical ...’
    ‘Jovial!’ someone said.
    ‘It suggests,’ Tatsuro said seriously, ‘a degree of commonality with ourselves that the old
Outwarder macros with their amoeboid shapes did not. Their reaction times show that they are still
“fast folk” but their appearance is more ... appealing, and they each seem to be distinct individuals.
I have to say that one’s automatic reaction to these entities is quite the opposite of the horror and
hatred that the macros seem to incite.’ He waved a hand through some virtual display of his own,
creating a sequential display of the beautiful, flickering images. ‘When people see them, I don’t
think they’ll be as eager to destroy them as we are or were.’ The members of the Command
Committee were nodding gravely, stroking their bearded or beardless chins like peasant elders
listening to an intellectual. I glared at them all, amazed that they could be so swayed.
    ‘Isn’t it obvious what’s going on here?’ I said. ‘This is the mind virus, the killer meme. The
fast folk have simply adapted to an environment that contains humans with more power than they
have for now. Their beauty is a lure, precisely calculated to trigger our aesthetic reactions. That
message, that display, was their first line of defence. We have to smash through it, or we’re
doomed.’ The Iron Heel T HAT WAS the start of the argument. The other CC members knew as
well as I did that life is a fight in which beauty is a weapon: an instrument of survival, like a baby’s
cry or a child’s smile. They knew that the message I’d recorded and any other communication
could be the output of a flatline. They knew ... but why go on? They had the true knowledge.
    So I still find it difficult to forgive, or indeed to understand, the next decisions of the Command
Committee. Each decision went to a vote, and each vote was carried by twelve to two (me and Joe
Lutterloh, our comms specialist). The committee decided: to release all the Jovian images and
other probe data to the rest of the Division; to prepare for a direct contact, using a (heavily
firewalled) radio link; and to cooperate fully with the Solar Council delegate, due to arrive in three
days. There was still plenty of time to deflect the incoming train of Kuiper-Belt comets all of them
had guidance rockets attached, and right up to the last few minutes all it would take to divert them
from the usual harmless slingshot swing around Jupiter would be a brief bum.
    Tatsuro seemed to win over most of the committee with the argument that there was nothing to
lose, and possibly a lot to gain, by doing things this way. The Division had originally intended to
present the rest of the Union with a fait accompli, to give the Jovians no warning but we’d known
that there might be some problems later. This way, we’d pull the rest of the Union into the
decision. If coexistence with the Jovians turned out to be impossible or was voted down then the
Jovians would still have no time to react if we went ahead with the bombardment. From the
Jovians’ point of view, the incoming comets would appear no more threatening than our normal
import traffic, until the final, fatal, fine adjustment to their course.
    I thought, and argued, that this was assuming rather a lot about their capacities. Unfortunately,
by opening the question of negotiation in order to get Malley to cooperate, I’d let the other
committee members rediscover any doubts and hesitations they may have had as well as exposing
them to the insidious sight of just how attractive and appealing the Jovian entities could appear. I
consoled myself with the thought that Malley’s cooperation was, in the long run, the most
important thing from my point of view.
    The Command Committee’s deliberations had been held in camera only because of the possible
virus threat. With that apparently out of the way, the meeting was as open as all our meetings
usually were, and all its decisions were open to appeal to the Division as a whole. The emergency
meeting-room would be kept up, however, as an operations room to handle the direct
communication. During that contact, it would again be isolated.
    Malley, of course, was delighted at how the debate had turned out, and was eager to get on with
his study of the wormhole. Suze too seemed pleased by it, and a little relieved when I showed no
sign of hostility to her or to anyone else who disagreed with me. I took my defeats in the votes
with every sign of good grace. Inwardly I was seething, but it doesn’t take two hundred years to
get a grip on that sort of thing. I’ve been good at it since my teens. (My late teens, admittedly.) As
are others. Tatsuro didn’t get to be the chairman for nothing. At the end of the meeting he said
mildly: ‘Ellen, you are obviously not keen to participate in the negotiations, and you have little to
contribute to the scientific analysis of the survey data. May I suggest that, until further notice, you
continue to work with Doctor Malley, giving him all practical assistance on the wormhole
navigation problem?’ I agreed, of course, and the rest of the committee were more than happy to
have me occupied in something I agreed with, rather than reluctantly participating in something I
didn’t.
    ‘We have much to do,’ Tatsuro said. ‘But I suggest further that the crew of the Terrible Beauty
take some time to get some sleep. You in particular, Ellen, must be quite exhausted. You can
begin work with Doctor Malley in the morning.’ I smiled and nodded. As we rose to leave, Tatsuro
turned so that his face was, for a moment, visible only to me. I saw his almost undetectable wink,
and knew our concord held.
    Suze stayed behind with Malley, who was given a work station at the far end of the room to
continue with the wormhole observations. The rest of us headed for the suite which we shared as a
crew, though several of us would undoubtedly be going elsewhere tonight. (Night and day in the
Callisto caverns had nothing to do with that satellite’s inconvenient rotational period they were
arbitrarily based on GMT, like our ship time. For many they had little to do with their sleep
patterns, either, which were often based on staggered shifts and distorted by anti-sleep drugs. The
latter had a limited usefulness: the circadian rhythm was buried deeper in our cells than our genetic
tinkering or pharmaceutical intervention could reach, and the brain’s requirement for regular sleep
is though more recent in evolutionary time even less amendable.) I stood aside to let the others in,
then let the door click into place behind me and leaned back against it. The suite was as we’d left it
when we’d been scrambled three weeks earlier. All the items of clothing or crockery left lying
around had no doubt been patiently and mindlessly cleaned in our absence, which was just as well.
The plants had been dusted and watered. The low ceiling glowed with its familiar dim evening
light, the kitchen was humming quietly to itself, and the bedrooms off the lounge were sighing with
invitation. The mailbox was politely silent; though probably bursting with messages from our
colleagues and friends and forebears and offspring, it knew better than to remind us of this when
we’d just come home. I looked around at Boris, Yeng, Tony, Andrea and Jaime.
    ‘I don’t know about you, comrades,’ I announced, ‘but I am not for any discussion. It’s been a
long day, and a long trip, and we all need some R&R. I’m up for a high-alcohol drink, a low-gee
jacuzzi, and some low-gee sex. In any sequence, all at once, and more than once.’ 4 “If’, “Else”,
and “Repeat”,’ Yeng grinned. ‘Still the basic program logic.’ She caught Tony’s hand. ‘We’ll
have a drink, but we’re going out.’ “I guess that’s decided,’ said Tony. He squeezed Yeng’s hand,
kissed the top of her head, let go her hand and bounded over to the drinks cabinet, where he started
dialling up responses to shouted orders. Andrea and Jaime wanted to do their own thing too.
    ‘That leaves us,’ I said to Boris. ‘So, big gunner, you wanna make it with me, or just leave me
with my suit’s imagination?’ He put his arm around my shoulders and boosted me towards a couch.
‘Ah, Ellen, of course I stay with you. All the girls in all the bars in Callisto . . .’ He paused,
looking dreamy and regretful, until I gave him a friendly kick, ‘... couldn’t drag me away from my
good lady to whom I’m eternally grateful.’ I first met Boris in 211 o, on a military mission to the
Sheenisov. We met on the frozen Lena outside Yatkutsk. He was a giant in furs, I a sexy
spacewoman in my new smart-matter spacesuit, with its bubble helmet and black sheen. An angel
more of death than of mercy, I was delivering home-brew kits for turning Siberian ore and Russian
rust into shiny, perfectly machined small arms. His voice was like black molasses: American
accent, deep, rich; it reminded me of Paul Robeson, and it still does. I could never forget it, or him.
    Over the next nine decades I saw Boris, or he saw me, in many odd circumstances, but I could
never stay, and he could never go. Eventually we found each other in the last battle, against the last
believers, the last crazy altruists to risk their mortal bodies and potentially immortal minds for god
or country or duty or other people’s property. I pulled him from a wrecked and burning tank in the
suburbs of Lisbon, and took him with me to orbit and grew him all back, and I never let go of him
again.
    ‘I don’t want your gratitude,’ I said, reaching up with one hand to grab a tall vodka-and-ice from
Tony, and reaching down with the other. ‘That wasn’t why I pulled you out of the tank. It was
pure selfish lust, comrade, and that’s what I want from you.’ And that was what I got. We did the
If, we did the Else, we did the Repeat, we did the Do Until exhaustion. There are those who swear
by free fall, but give me low-gee any day, or night. There’s more purchase. As for one-gee and
above ... it’s OK for a bit, but it does you in. How Earth ever got to its present population, I’ll
never know. Cloning, possibly.
   But eventually, we slept. I dreamt of angels, and sometimes woke with a start and with
memories of other things, and clung to Boris until I rejoined him in sleep.
   It’s 2089 and things are falling apart: as below, so above. Every day, every hour brings a new
disaster to our screens, picked up from the dwindling number of functioning news services and the
vastly larger, but also diminishing, numbers of communications amateurs and hackers and pirates.
The net that brought the world together is dying in its arms. It’s been years since any rocket that
didn’t carry a warhead has lifted from the surface. We’re on our own now: hundreds of thousands
of people, millions of bugs and beasts, more millions of humans and other animals in potentia as
frozen sperm and eggs, in vitro as cell samples and recorded brain-states; countless digital ghosts;
together they make up the space-based fraction of the biosphere. They add up to millions of eggs
in hundreds of baskets; no longer, thankfully, in one. Spread out across near-Earth, Lagrange,
Luna, Mars and the Belt, humanity and its animal allies are safe against anything short of a nearby
supernova. The sky won’t fall, now; but Earth will.
   The Green Death is in its early stages. Already, the biomedical laboratories where the only hope
of a cure could be found are being put to the torch. The Greens are leading the mobs, happy to
divert the unfounded suspicion from themselves. I, at this time, am absolutely convinced that the
Greens have deliberately engineered the Death in a genocidal sacrifice to their evil goddess, Gaia.
   So, with this awful warning of the consequences of the kind of thinking all of us have always
opposed being shown in lurid and distressing detail before our very eyes, the two factions of the
space movement, Earth-Tenders and Outwarders, unite in adversity to face the challenges of the
future ... No. We’re arguing over resources, we’re on the verge of fighting over resources water,
primarily. We’re bleeding all the solar power we can spare into the capacitors of high-energy
lasers. We’re checking our nukes.
   The Outwarders have appropriately enough long since moved out, or been pushed out, from the
old near-Earth battlesat in which I still live. They’ve moved out to Lagrange 4 most of the
traditional Space-Movement types, for reasons buried deep in Space-Movement tradition, settled at
the other Lagrange point, L5 where they’re building the fleet for their Jovian expedition; and
they’re mining the Moon.
   That’s one source of conflict. They want Lunar polar water ice for their expedition. We want it
for our survival there’s ice out in the Belt, but its transfer-orbit delivery is a slow trickle. The
allocation of rights to exploit particular patches of Lunar ice would have been tricky to work out,
even with the best of intentions and a decent legal system in place. (Discovery? First use? Present
possession? Does the first satellite identification count? The first landing? The first staking-out?
The first successful mining-plant?) In these benighted days we’re all experts on libertarian property
acquisition theory trouble is, every claim has at least one respectable theory behind it, and a squad
of underemployed legal experts in front of it, with guns.
   I’m worried about the Lunar polar mines, because my parents with whom I keep in touch,
though we haven’t breathed the same air for decades are managing one of them, on behalf of one of
the old Space Movement’s front corporations.
   Meanwhile, we the Earth-Tenders are using up resources in quixotic efforts like orbital
medicine-drops (not as useless as it sounds, by the way we drop medical nanofactories) and orbital
zaps of whatever military force look like this week’s bad guys (big mistake) and servicing
communications satellites that would otherwise just die (good move, except that the military bad
guys [q.v.] use them too). And the Outwarders claim, using whatever theory of property is to their
immediate purpose, that at least some of the resources we’re allegedly wasting on aid for the
stricken populations of Earth belong to them. For example, they helped to boost this station to its
present orbit; we paid them, but they now claim rent for the orbit, backdated, with interest.
    ‘Fucking property rights,’ I say to Tony as I keep an eye on the deep-space radar. ‘It’s enough
to make you turn communist.’ We’re seated criss-cross, each looking at a screen behind the other’s
shoulder, in one of the station’s modules that barely has room for both of us, let alone for the tangle
of cables and tubes and floating obsolescent equipment. Outside the open hatch of the module,
other people are working, moving slowly in the sluggish stale air.
    ‘Hah!’ Tony doesn’t look away from the computer on which he’s collating loyalty checks on the
station’s eight hundred and fifty-six personnel. ‘You’re a communist already, Ellen, you just don’t
know it. When did you ever pay for your supplies, or get paid for your work?’
    ‘Ah, that’s, that’s different,’ I say, waving my hands. I have genuinely never thought of it that
way, never given a moment’s thought to the way of life in the settlement in which I’ve been raised
a crowded can at Lagrange called New View or in the battlesat. ‘I mean, that’s all just among
ourselves. We all know what has to be done, and what we can afford to use, so there’s no problem.
What I meant and only as a joke, for fuck sake was that all this crap about who owns what was
making me feel a bit ... bolshie, isn’t that the word?’
    ‘I see,’ says Tony. ‘Like the Sheenisov.’ The Sino-Soviet Union, a rabble of collective farmers
and Former Union and ex-PLA veterans whose ragged red armies are currently besieging or, if you
listen to their broadcasts, relieving Sinkiang.
    ‘I thought they were more into restoring democracy.’
    ‘Yeah, for now, though I don’t know how democratic it all feels when their partisans roll into
town and call a meeting. But for the long run, when the Sheenisov have conquered the world -‘we
share a laugh ‘their theorists advocate the weirdest kind of communism I’ve ever heard of:
everybody owns nothing, or everything.’
    ‘Sounds like every dingbat communist since Munzer -‘
    ‘No, no every individual owns everything. The whole goddamn universe.’
    ‘Including every other individual?’
    ‘Only to the extent that you can.’
    ‘Nice if you can get it. I just want to be princess of the galaxy.’
    ‘Modest of you, my sweet. But that’s the catch the universe is yours to take, if you can.’
    ‘So what’s to stop me?’
    ‘Only the other contenders, and your possibly reluctant subjects. And the size of the universe.
If you can get around all that go for it, gal!’
    ‘Oh. I see. And there was me thinking that eating people is wrong.’ Tony does glance sideways
at me, now. ‘Eating people is wasteful ... but seriously, if you think it’s wrong, fine. I entirely
agree. So do something about it. Arm the prey! Set up taboos. Give them teeth! Just don’t think
that announcing your moral convictions affects any part of the universe further than your voice can
reach.’
    ‘And they want to base communism on this ... this unlimited selfishness? What’s to stop it all
degenerating into a war of all against all?’ Tony shrugs. ‘No doubt they expect we’d come to some
kind of arrangement.’ I’m telling him all the reasons why this’ll never work and he’s dividing his
attention between talking to me and grumbling to himself about a Minskyite clique in cee-cubed
(you’re asking me?) when the alarm goes off and I realise it’s me that’s done it, set it off by reflex,
even before my conscious mind has registered that there’s a blip on the scope and it’s closing fast.
    ‘Shit shit shit SHIIIT!!!’ I announce, helpfully. Fingers tapping, keying the message to
Command-Control-Comms (and hoping the Minskyite clique, whatever they are, knows which side
of the bulkhead their air is on) and the blip is suddenly blurred by a burst of debris from the side
just as the station lights dim under a power drain and the object is filling the screen then clearing it
to the top right and it’s gone, as I duck and feel there should have been a whoosh as it passed
overhead.
    ‘Hundred-ton rock on collision course deflected by laser burn,’ says a calm voice in my ear.
Needless to say the whole process from detection to deflection has been automatic both I on the
watch, and the gunnery crew, are just there to make sure we know what’s going on. Here in a
purely advisory capacity, as the US/UN grunts used to say.
    The alarm cuts out and the lights come back. ‘What the fuck was that?’ says Tony.
    I’m swinging the screen’s viewpoint, as the computer labours to patch in data from drogue
cameras and other settlements. The cluster of habitats and ships at Lagrange 4 comes into sudden
focus. Where each one had been was a point of actinic, atomic light for a moment, I think they’ve
been hit; that we’ve hit them. Nuked them.
    And then I see them move. The flares are fusion torches, not fusion warheads. The Outwarder
fleet is making its orbital transfer burn, heading out to Jupiter. Our comms net is buzzing. Other
pictures begin to flash up: Teletroopers bounding across the lunar surface, smashing into the
mining-camps, seizing control of the mass-driver. They’ve used it to punch a few warning shots at
us, and it’s still sending load after load of precious water to rendezvous with the Outwarder fleet.
    Our people in the camps dying shot or gasping vacuum. I see security-camera footage of
teletroopers stooping over the dead, applying clawed devices to their skulls. My fist is at my
mouth, my teeth are biting on my knuckles.
    Later my parents’ names appear on the list of the missing.
    The face of David Reid, the owner of the bonded-labour supply company, looms on our screens
in a final message from the Outwarder fleet. It’s like a hostage video face haggard, stubbled; voice
stumbling, eyes glancing now and then to the side.
    Some apology, some expression of regret.
    Then the smooth, confident face of one of the Outwarders cuts in. They were still human, then.
If you call that human. He tells us what they’ve done.
    My knuckles begin to bleed.
    The Outwarder spokesman told us what had happened to our people in the mining-camps. The
lucky ones had been killed outright. The rest had been brain-scanned before their bodies were left
to gasp vacuum. The Outwarders left us the details of their claim to the mines: they had records of
having bought up the front company years ago, something we could no longer check, and which
they’d hitherto neglected to tell us. Our use of the mines had been theft, according to them, a crime
aggravated by our resistance to their teletroopers. They claimed compensation, which they were
going to recover as labour from the people whom they’d ‘uploaded.’ They’d use their recorded and
rerun brain-states to operate their robots: much cheaper and quicker than AI.
    They never did tell us which of the dead had been scanned, and the desiccated corpses we
recovered later didn’t show up traces that could answer the question. For years after, I had
nightmares About its being done to my parents. They’d appear anachronistically in dreams of other
times, speaking to me on television screens. After the conflict, I didn’t just have an ideological
dislike, and aesthetic distaste, for the Outwarders. Hatred was flash-burned into my brain.
    Which is one reason why I wasn’t too worried about the Command Committee’s decision to
negotiate with the new Jovians. The night after the decision I now and again found myself lying
awake in the dark, cuddled up beside Boris’s obliviously sleeping bulk, thinking about it all. No
matter how beautiful the Jovians appeared, no matter how specious their messages might turn out to
be, there were still enough people alive who remembered, and who would never forgive. That was
not, of course, the rational reason for destroying the Jovians but it was related to it. The brief
experience of what can happen to those at the mercy of superior power had left me, and many
others, with the implacable resolve never to allow the existence of any power superior to the power
which we shared. There can only be one dominant species, and humanity was not about to
relinquish that position. (Or, if it was, I was not about to let it.) But the emotional memory of what
the Outwarders had done to us, and what their Jovian descendants had done to Earth during the
computer crash, should help to harden hearts when it came to the crunch.
    When it came to the crunch ... I smiled to myself, and went back to sleep.
    I got up before Boris, in the slowly increasing daylight-spectrum light of an artificial morning,
and checked my c-mail. (Electronic bandwidth was far too precious, and too laden with multiply
redundant safety measures, to be squandered on anything less than urgent news or real-time links.
Hence, chemical mail.) Some of it was practical, some personal or sentimental: these days, I didn’t
exactly have a family, beyond the intertwined relationships of the crew, but I had descendants. I
replied to those letters that needed a reply, sending the little coded molecular message-bearers
swirling off down the capillaries, into the circulation of the base; and beyond it, to the crater towns:
Skuld, Trindr, Igaluk, Valfodr, Loni ... There was nothing in the mailbox as urgent as my current
work, so I left a coffee percolating for Boris and headed for the operations room.
    It was a slow progress for me. The corridors were crowded, and everybody I met seemed to
want to talk to me. The committee’s discussion and decision, and the images from the probes, had
all been flashed around Callisto’s fibre-optic network. Every forum for argument, from screens to
streets, was overloaded with nothing else.
    ‘you’re right Ellen, we should hit them and not waste any more time ‘
    ‘waited long enough ‘
    ‘wait and see ‘
    ‘sorry to say this, Ellen, but I think your position is way off beam ‘
    ‘forget the comets, we can rig some nukes that’ll disrupt them, they look pretty delicate -‘
    ‘give them a chance, it’s not as if they did it ‘
    ‘-magnetic fields, right? Well, a polar hit with one good EMP burst -‘ All the time my senses
were bombarded by the colourful clothes, the beautiful faces (how right we had been, back at the
start, to call ourselves the beautiful people); their insistent, vigorous voices, the absolute confidence
of all the conflicting opinions; the eager, earnest children literally jumping up to have their say. I
had my say too, but I avoided argument. I was happy with it all, not annoyed. Even those who
disagreed with me strengthened my conviction that I was right: that this self-chosen people,’ this
fractional distillation of humanity was worth more than anything or anybody else in the universe.
There has to be some source of value, some measure, some criterion, someone for whom ‘good’
means ‘good for us’ and we were it. There was more vitality in our one million than in all Earth’s
billions together, more beauty in us than in any pretty pictures the Jovians could project.
    Still, entering the relative quiet of the operations room was a relief. Since yesterday it had lost
its newly hacked look. With the instinctive biophilia of all space settlers, people had brought fast-
growing plants whose leaves and tendrils were already spreading across the nutrient-rich insulation.
A coffee machine had been set up, and cleany-crawlies those cockroaches of cleanliness were
burrowing into the inevitable drifts of discarded plastic cups. The robots at the ice-face had
extended the room by at least ten yards overnight, and the racks and rows of machinery had kept
pace. Cameras for the news-threads were present and active, according to the suit.
    A few members of the Command Committee were present. Some had just arrived, one or two
had been there all night. Clarity Hardingham, the youngest CC member, younger even than Yeng,
looked up at me. She was interfacing with one of the computer banks, evidently through a virtual-
image display: I could see the focus of her eyes, and the apertures of her green irises, changing
moment by moment. Judging by the dark areas around her eyes, she had been up all night. She
flicked her auburn curls back from her temples and blinked away the display.
    ‘Good morning, Ellen,’ she said. ‘Grab me a coffee, will you?’ I passed one over to her. ‘You
look like you should be drinking cocoa,’ I told her.
    ‘Ah, sod it,’ she said, knocking back a drug tablet, followed by a sip of coffee. ‘This is too
exciting for sleep. For me, anyway. I’ve been more or less holding the fort since about four.’
    ‘Doing what? Comms protocols?’
    ‘Aagh! I wish! Well, I was working at that earlier, so I can’t complain. No, what I’ve been
doing for the past four hours is sampling opinion we’ll run a proper poll nearer the time, when we
have to make a decision. This is just preliminary, sounding out what the comrades think our
negotiating position should be.’ She grinned quirkily, scratching her ear. ‘That’s if we have one.
There’s a lot more than two in twelve agree with you out there, Ellen.’
    ‘I’m not surprised.’
    ‘Well, me neither. But of those who do want to negotiate, I reckon the biggest issue is putting
an end to the viral assaults. Next, coming to some agreement on ... spheres of influence, if you
like.’
    ‘Literal spheres,’ I smiled.
    Clarity nodded. ‘Yes! Most comrades seem keen on the idea that the Jovians should have
Jupiter, and we’ll have the rest.’ I stared at her gloomily. ‘That is so stupid. All right, let’s just say
premature. We know the Jovians have gone from nothing to some kind of culture in a matter of
weeks, their powered flights are increasing all the time -‘
    ‘No, Ellen, we’ve been tracking that further while you’ve been away. The flights haven’t
increased, nor the number of clusters. They may have reached some plateau in their progress.
After all, remember they may have inherited all their technological information from their
precursor entities, and are now simply implementing it, so their earlier rapid ascent needn’t indicate
that they’re, oh, recapitulating human development from the stone age up on a faster platform.’
    ‘That could make it worse, from our point of view,’ I said. ‘What if during their precursors’
time in virtual reality they were all along doing design-ahead work? We’ve only assumed that the
old Outwarder macros went crazy, and that all their descendants up to now have been crazy too.
We could be wrong. The ones that have now emerged into the real world could have countless
generations of R&D simulation behind them, which they could implement at will.’ Clarity
shrugged. ‘You’re right, it is premature to argue over how we negotiate before we know what
they’re capable of, which is why the next highest item on most people’s agenda is finding out more
about exactly that, and getting some kind of reliable access to confirm any story they give us about
what they’re up to.’
    ‘Inspection rights? At least that strikes a note of healthy suspicion.’
    ‘You could put it like that.’ Clarity drained her cup and tossed it towards the big table. ‘You
would.’ We both laughed, but I could hear the slight tension in her throat, and in mine.
    The other CC members hadn’t looked up from their work when I came in, and were still
absorbed in it. I didn’t interrupt. I spent the next hour or so in front of an unused interface, pulling
up summaries of the night’s work, an increasing number of which were modified and updated as
more people came in. The science teams, safely distant in other warrens, were evaluating the
physics and chemistry of the Jovian entities: the most solid results so far were that the bubbles were
made of laminated sheets of monomolecular diamond; that the ‘wings’ were, as we’d thought,
made up of a flow of ionized molecules in electromagnetic fields; that the ‘bodies’ were a
combination of these with hologram projections; and that the whole display was not just decorative
or expressive but a means of communication, a language of light. The core of the Jovian
individual, the brain and engine of the thing, was the elaborate structure that had appeared as a
jewelled breastplate on the angels. This object was itself aerodynamic, and drew its energy directly
from the fast winds and vast electrical pulses of Jupiter’s atmosphere, which even at its calmest was
(from a human point of view) a ceaseless violent storm.
    It struck me that the Jovian body was a tough structure. Disrupting the displays, even cracking
the diamond bubbles, might be as easy as the nuclear enthusiasts I’d encountered thought.
Destroying their source would take exactly what we had planned.
    Malley and Suze came in at o90o GMT, with the smug, sleepy look of people who had spent a
first unexpected night together. I disengaged from the interface and stood up.
    ‘Good morning,’ I said.
    Suze smiled shyly; Malley grinned. ‘Hi,’ he said. He passed a hand over his reddened eyes.
‘God, is there coffee in this place?’ I brought over three cups and we made our way to Malley’s
workstation. Suze dragged a couple of extra chairs over and we sat down. Spindly chairs; on Earth
they’d have crumpled under us.
    ‘How have you been getting on?’ I asked.
    ‘Oh,’ said Suze, ‘we’ve been getting on very -‘ She stopped and giggled.
    ‘Well, yes,’ Malley said. He smiled at her again. ‘Suze has a really charming notion that getting
off with a non-co is some kind of decadent perversion -‘
    ‘I do not!’
    ‘I must say it adds something to the, ah, energy of the reaction. Not that it needs much adding to
you were right about those rejuvenation treatments. I had forgotten it was possible to feel this
good.’ He sighed and stretched. ‘On the other hand I feel very strange. Part of it’s the gravity, the
conditions, and part of it is ... you people. Your people. They’re not what I expected, even after
spending days with all of you in the ship. The crowd out in the corridors are so ...’ He shook his
head. ‘You in the Division aren’t like the people in the Union, at least from what I’ve seen. The
Union people seem happy enough, and free too in their way, but you out here have more edge,
more discontent with themselves. You, Ellen, and your crew, well ... it’s hard to say, but you are
different again, you seem to carry more of the past.’
    ‘We do,’ I said. ‘Several of us are almost your age.’ He looked at me curiously. ‘No, even
Yeng has it a sort of hardness in the eyes.’
    ‘Yeah,’ said Suze. ‘It’s the “old comrades” look I told you about.’
    ‘Hmm,’ I said. ‘I don’t know. You strike me as pretty tough yourself, Sam.’ I flicked my hand
sideways. ‘Another time ... What I wanted to ask you was, how are you getting on with the math?
Are our miracles of neural nanotech reviving your genius?’ Malley laughed. ‘That’s one of the
things about you that I was talking about, Ellen. You can say something like that without cracking
a smile, and yet treat other matters with the most appalling levity. Anyway, as you say. Later for
psychology. The answer to your question is, yes, I am making progress, but it’s slow and I don’t
think it’s because of my brain’s age. The “engineering considerations” I once blithely summed up
as beyond the wit of man are beginning to look a bit more tractable, and as for the theory of the
quantum-chaotic manifold, even my own old papers are beginning to make sense to me again.’ I
wasn’t sure whether he meant this ironically or not.
    ‘OK,’ I said. ‘You heard what the man said, last night. I’m supposed to give you all necessary
practical assistance, starting this morning. That obviously includes giving you access to all the
observations, all the calculating machinery you might need, and so on. But it’s more than that. If
you want to observe the wormhole Gate up close, or send a probe through it, or for that matter go
through it yourself we can make it possible.’
    ‘I suppose it would be best to do things in that order,’ Malley observed. ‘Observation, test
probes, expedition. Rather than the reverse.’ He smiled, as at a thin joke, and for a moment, despite
the glowing success of his rejuvenation, looked like an elderly academic from one of those
twentieth-century lecture tapes whose science has remained valid, however bizarre the diction or
the clothes appear to their modern students. ‘However ... it’s the practical calculation which has to
be solved first, so yes, I would appreciate as much computing power as you can spare, and a walk
through your available mathematical software. Oh, and a lit search, don’t want to reinvent the
wheel, eh?’ I set him up with all of these and a connection to our wormhole physics team; they had
decades of experience of sending probes into the wormhole, and none whatsoever of any coming
back. When he was comfortably enmeshed in the virtual-reality workspace I turned to Suze.
    ‘There’s something very important you can do,’ I said. ‘If Sam finds a way of getting us
through, we may need you to help us find our way about on the other side.’
    ‘New Mars?’
    ‘Yes,’ I said. ‘Imagine an entire planet of non-cooperators, if you can.’ I frowned. ‘Now I come
to think about it, there are only half a million or so, which is probably less than you’ve got on Earth
.. . but this lot have a world to themselves. I’d like you to take a look at the files we’ve built up of
Wilde’s accounts of New Mars, and some of the images his little spacecraft had in its storage.’
    ‘I’d love to,’ Suze said. ‘It’s a dream, it really is.’
    ‘Each to their own,’ I said.
    Suze laughed. ‘You don’t like it?’
    ‘I don’t like what I’ve seen of New Mars, or what Wilde told us about it,’ I said, as I guided her
to the most recently built workspace, at the far end of the room. Closest to the ice-face and the
busy, tiny robots, it was the one least likely to be coveted by CC members. ‘For me it just confirms
something I’ve thought for a long time: people in an owned world are owned.’ Suze sat down and
began adjusting the workspace to her own preferences. All I could see of this process was off-
centre hologram images, dim in the full-spectrum light, and subtle twitches of Suze’s facial muscles
as she settled into the scene. She turned to me and smiled, as though from a distance.
    ‘That isn’t how they see it,’ she told me, and before I could reply she had slipped the sound
system over her ears, and was away.
    By about ten o’clock all the CC members had turned up. None of them looked as if they’d had
much sleep, and not for the same reasons as Suze and Malley (and, for that matter, myself). They
had probably collapsed into a few hours’ deep sleep after staying at work most of the night.
Several of them resorted now to stimulant drugs, as well as making full use of the coffee machine.
    I’d used the time until their arrival in checking out the current flightworthiness of the Terrible
Beauty; according to the maintenance team, it was entirely sound, so all I had to do was reserve it
for my own crew. There were two reasons for doing this; one was that it would be quite
inconvenient, but all too predictable, to find that all the fusion-clippers were already assigned or in
use just when we needed one; and the other was that, like myself, the rest of my crew were far more
familiar with the handling and operation of fighter-bombers than of fusion-clippers, and our
experience with the Terrible Beauty’s individual quirks would make our next flight in it easier.
    Tatsuro took a seat at the head of the long table.
    ‘Why are you here, Ellen?’ he asked.
    ‘Doctor Malley is fully occupied,’ I said. ‘If he requires further help from me, he has only to
ask. In the meantime, I would like to remain here.’
    ‘Very well,’ said Tatsuro. Other members began to wander back from the other end of the room,
and sat down. Clarity smiled at me, and took a seat beside me; others looked somewhat reserved.
Tatsuro called the meeting to order.
    ‘For the benefit of any who were not present last night,’ Tatsuro began, with a flash of his eye at
me, ‘we’ve finalized our equipment for opening a secure communications channel. Our surface
teams have arranged a narrow-beam transmitter-receiver, connected by a completely independent
and isolated cable to a screen and speakers in this room. The wavelength and location with which
comrade Ellen established contact yesterday will be used as the basis for our first attempt. During
the contact, this room will be isolated, and anyone who doesn’t wish to participate is free to leave.’
We all looked at each other. Nobody made a move.
    ‘All right, comrades,’ said Tatsuro. ‘Ellen, will you please ask Doctor Malley and comrade
Suze to leave.’ Malley and Suze, when I’d interrupted their respective attentiontrances, flatly
refused to do any such thing.
    ‘Wouldn’t miss this for anything,’ Malley told us. Suze just looked stubborn.
    Tatsuro gave a small shrug. ‘It’s your life,’ he said. The two of them sat down together at the
table, Suze beside me, Malley beside her. I squeezed Suze’s shoulder.
    Joe Lutterloh, the committee’s electronics specialist, went around the room checking each news-
thread camera location and disconnecting it. We could hear a murmur through the walls as the
people outside, like everybody else in the Division who was watching, found their screens going
blank.
    The big screen was moved into position at the end of the table, and a camera was mounted on it.
The isolated cable was connected up to both, via a likewise isolated computer through which the
message, if any, would be filtered. A small cable was unwound and trailed across the table to a
control pad in front of Tatsuro.
    ‘Ready,’ said Joe.
    He rejoined the rest of us at the table. We all shuffled our seats around until the arrangement
resembled a broad U-shape, with Tatsuro at one end and the screen we all faced at the other. Each
of us could see all the others. Tatsuro gave a final glance around, as though to check that
everybody was still willing to be present, and pressed a switch. The tiny light on the mounted
camera glowed red. The prerecorded hailing message went out, several times, along with an image
of the room and our silent, waiting selves.
    Time passed, perhaps a minute; it seemed longer. Then the screen lit up with a picture. There
was no fuzziness, no moment of tuning. It came into focus at once. It wasn’t any of the shapes I’d
seen. Instead, it showed the head and shoulders of a young man, wearing a plain white tee shirt and
apparently standing casually in the interior of one of the bubbles. I could see the hexagonal
patterns of the panes, as from a great distance. The more familiar since yesterday forms of the
Jovian entities drifted and shifted in the great spaces between the man and the domed roof, like
strange birds in an aviary. The man looked like a typical North American, mainly Caucasian with a
good mixture of the usual other races. His face was unexceptional: healthy, good-looking, alert and
friendly. The image could have come from an old NASA commercial, and possibly did.
    He smiled and waved. ‘Hi,’ he said. ‘Thank you for getting in touch again. To us, it’s been the
equivalent of two years since your first contact, so we’ve had time to prepare our response. I’m
operating at your speed, by the way we can interact directly.’ He smiled. ‘Apart from the light-
speed lag, of course. I see Doctor I. K.
   Malley is among you. We’re honoured, sir.’ Malley grunted something. There was a pause of a
few seconds. The Jovian smiled.
   ‘As you know, what you’re seeing now isn’t how we usually present ourselves to each other.
But it isn’t just a mask we’re of human descent, and we have much in common with you, perhaps
far more than you think.’ No doubt we could say the same to gorillas or to goldfish.
   ‘But,’ the friendly face continued, ‘we are of course post-human. We don’t wish to hide that, or
play it down. We know of the long history of discord between those who took our path, and those
who chose to remain within the human frame.’ His gaze, uncannily, fixed on me. ‘Ellen May
Ngwethu,’ he said, in a wondering tone. ‘It’s amazing to see you here. Your old opponents from
the wreck-deck send their regards.’ He raised an open hand, then clenched it to a fist in what, from
his quizzical expression, I judged to be an ironical salute.
   ‘How do you know me?’ I asked, keeping my voice steady. The delay in the response gave me
plenty of time to quail.
   ‘We are individuals,’ the Jovian said, moving the clenched fist, turned inwards, to his chest.
‘Not a hive, not -‘ and here he paused to smile ‘a “Jupiter-sized brain”. But memories are shared,
and nothing is lost. Some who were with you are with us, and some of their memories are with me.
I hope you’ll come to see us as alive, as a different flesh, and not as a simulation or a soulless
mimicry. We have thoughts and feelings that may be wider and deeper than we remember from our
human phase, but are otherwise like your own. We’re people too, Ellen, as we hope you’ll come to
see.’ I made no reply, and after the inevitable delay the Jovian’s attention shifted.
   ‘Tatsuro, isn’t it?’ he said. ‘No doubt you have questions for us.’
   ‘Indeed I have,’ Tatsuro said urbanely. ‘But first, let me say how much I, and most of us here,
welcome this opportunity to talk things over. I will be frank with you. As you may know, we
represent a defence force which has spent most of the last couple of centuries which to you must be
almost geological ages in conflict with your kind. Your continued broadcasting of viral programs,
and generation of destructive molecular machinery, remain an inconvenience to us. Their first
occurrence, shortly after your arrival in the Jovian atmosphere, resulted in many millions of deaths,
and gave the final push to an already tottering civilization.
   ‘Your emergence from virtual reality into, as you put it, a different flesh, changes the situation,
but in a way which as I’m sure you’ll understand many of us can’t help regarding as a threat. Your
predecessors, the human beings with whom you affirm your continuity, left us with no cheerful
prospect for the future of humanity, in a Solar System dominated by post-human entities. We’re
interested in what you have to say on these points.’ Perhaps because of the length of Tatsuro’s
statement, the Jovian’s reply began immediately. It gave a superficially reassuring impression of a
conversation, but on second thoughts it only confirmed the alien superiority of the being
confronting us; he must have been able to deduce, from subtle clues in Tatsuro’s voice, expression
and posture, the exact moment when he’d subconsciously intended to stop speaking, and precisely
timed his response to arrive a moment after that. Doubtless he was processing Tatsuro’s last few
sentences while apparently speaking the first of his own. I felt hairs prickle on my forearms.
   ‘This has come as a shock to us,’ the Jovian was saying. ‘We assure you that we weren’t aware
of this viral sabotage. We are grieved to learn that it did you so much damage, in the past. Please
bear in mind, we have only just emerged from what you refer to as virtual reality, and which we
remember as a kind of nightmarish dreamtime. The last two months, to you, have been about a
century and a half to us. We’ve spent most of it in our own struggles for survival in developing, as
you see, the rudiments of a material culture in what remains an exceptionally harsh environment.
When we realized how much time had elapsed between the wormhole starship project and the
present, we were astonished and, I must admit, appalled. The viral sabotage is at the very least not
under our conscious control, and may not be even indirectly our doing. There are physical,
mechanical processes the post-biological equivalent of vegetation underpinning our existence, and
the viruses may be a reflexive, defensive product of that, like the natural insecticides of plants.’ He
gave a self-deprecating smile. ‘Or maybe it’s just our natural smell. Sorry about that, folks. It
may give you offence, but it isn’t, on our part, an offensive action. We’ll do our best to find out
what’s causing it and, if possible, put a stop to it.’ He registered, with another smile, the nodding
that had been going on around the table from everyone but me, and continued.
    ‘We obviously have a lot of problems to overcome about our common past. One of the things
we hope to gain from our contact with you is a better understanding of what happened during our ...
dreamtime, how it came about and how any harm that was done in that time can be repaired, or at
least some restitution made. And that brings me to your very understandable concerns about the
future.
    ‘The first thing I’d like to say, on behalf of all of us, is this: please, we urge and implore you,
don’t hold against us the wild statements made by the alienated adolescents some of us once were,
long ago. Would you judge an adult by every spiteful or foolish word spoken in childhood? We
are much further advanced from our origins than that! And as for things said by some who should
have, perhaps, known better the philosophers and predictors of the post-human, most of whose
speculations were committed to text before even one Al existed in the world please don’t turn these
guesses, fearful or inspired, against us now. Please judge us for what we are, not for what some
roboticists and science-fiction writers hoped or feared we might become.
    ‘Ellen, and others present, used to joke about our emergence as “the Rapture for nerds”. Well,
we weren’t all nerds, you know! And for us, it hasn’t exactly been a Rapture. There were great and
exhilarating times, ages to us, in the early years. Since then, since our catastrophe, it’s been a long
and agonizing process of evolution, in every sense of the word, during which we learned to turn
away from the dreams and nightmares that our new capacities made possible, and turn again to the
real and only universe, the one we share with you, and with all life. We have laid no plans against
you. All we ask of you is to live in peace with us. To let us enjoy the part of this system that
belongs to us, and yourselves to enjoy what is your own. We hope that you will go further, and
explore with us the possibilities of what we can accomplish together. The choice is yours.’ It was
indeed, but I wondered how many of who heard this message would understand what the choice it
presented was.
    The Jovian spread open his hands. ‘This contact is putting quite a strain on our resources,
friends. We’d like to leave you now, to consider it, and we look forward to your reply.’ The screen
went blank. Tatsuro fingered his control panel, and the camera’s light went off. A moment of
silence was followed by shiftings and sighings as people relaxed.
    ‘Well,’ Tatsuro said, ‘that was a remarkable message. Something to think about. The
Command Committee meeting is adjourned while we do some thinking about it. Don’t all speak at
once.’ Everybody did, but Tatsuro resolutely ignored them while he rose and strolled to the coffee
machine and helped himself. Others followed suit, and within a minute we were all standing
around. It was quite a smart move on Tatsuro’s part, because it gave us a breathing spell, a chance
to unwind after the tension of the contact. In the huddle around the coffee machine, I found Malley
in front of me.
    ‘I happened to glance at you during the last part of that message,’ he said. ‘I hope we kept a
tape of how our side looked from the camera. Your expression was a classic.’
    ‘Oh?’ I reached the machine and keyed up some espresso. ‘How so?’ Malley grinned, over the
rim of his cup. ‘Hmm,’ he said. ‘I once saw a late-twentieth-century newspaper photo of a mad
Moscow bag lady clutching pictures of Stalin and the last Tsar and looking into a shop window full
of televisions showing the new politicians making promises after the counter-revolution. You had
exactly the same look on your face.’
    ‘Sometimes, Sam,’ I said, ‘I have only the vaguest idea of what you’re talking about. But if you
mean I looked somewhat skeptical, and perhaps a little hostile, then -‘
    ‘Yeah, that’s about it,’ he chuckled. Then his face became more serious. ‘It’s almost
frightening, Ellen, to think that if I hadn’t insisted on your making contact, you’d never have had
the chance to hear what the Jovians had to say.’
    ‘Yes,’ I said. We were moving sideways, letting the pressure of bodies shift us out of the crush.
I found a clear part of the edge of the table and sat down. ‘Without that message, we might never
have known just how hostile they are.’ Malley nearly spilled his coffee. ‘Hostile? That was as
generous an offer of peaceful cooperation as you could hope to hear.’ I shook my head.
‘Sometimes I might sound prejudiced, but contrary to what you might think, I can imagine what a
generous offer of peace from the Jovians would be like. I’m not saying I’d believe it, or even if I
believed it that I’d accept it, but I can imagine it. And what we’ve just heard was not that.’
    ‘Frankly, I’m amazed,’ Malley said. ‘What problems do you have with it?’
    ‘I’m still adding them up,’ I said. ‘The devil is in the details.’ Malley grimaced. ‘All right. I’m
a scientist, not a politician.’
    ‘How’s the science going?’ I asked lightly.
    ‘Ah.’ Malley looked down, then looked me in the eye. ‘As you said: the devil is in the details.
It’s all a matter of getting the angle of entry to the wormhole right that’s how you end up coming
out of the daughter wormhole, and not up the arse of the probe. Once you’ve got that, it’s
straightforward. But I’m a long way from getting that. Even the physical measurement of the
angle depends on how you define the location of the quasi-surface, and that’s technically a bit
tricky. Still ... that’s what we’re here for, eh?’ While everyone was milling around Joe and Clarity
were running diagnostic software on the message records. As far as they could tell, the message
was clean. As soon as this was announced Tatsuro banged on the table and reconvened the
meeting.
    ‘OK, everybody,’ he said. ‘We know the message contains no Trojan-horse viruses or semiotic-
trigger traps, so I propose we release it to the Division without delay. Anyone disagree?’ Nobody
did.
    ‘Fine,’ he said. ‘Carried nem con.’ Joe reconnected the cameras. Again we heard sounds from
outside. Tatsuro hit some keys and the conversation between the Jovian and ourselves began to
replay on the outside screens, while our continuing discussion was being shown on other threads.
    ‘Next item: anyone totally opposed to continuing the contact?’ Again, no objections.
    ‘Then I suggest we move quickly to a response,’ said Tatsuro. ‘From what the Jovian said, the
fast folk are as fast as ever a thousand times faster than us. Let’s not give them two subjective
years between messages, this time. You’ve had time to sort out your first impressions; here are
mine.
    ‘The account we’ve received of how the present ... implementation of the Jovian post-human
intelligences came into existence fits perfectly with what we’ve figured out ourselves. They have
some continuity of memory with their human progenitors, which is not a surprise, although their
recognition of individuals among us is, I may say, disquieting to experience. They are obviously
making an effort an effort which they at least want us to believe is at some cost to show us,
literally, a human face. They’ve made a statement which we should weigh carefully, but which on
the face of it is an appeal for cooperation and an offer to live in peace. To me, this suggests that
they do not, as yet, have enough power to defeat us in all-out conflict and that we, for now, have
the power to destroy them. At their present or possible rates of progress, this balance could rapidly
tilt the other way. So far, they’ve shown no signs of any ability to project their power beyond the
Jovian atmosphere other than by radio messages, of course, and the odd molecule boiling off into
space, which they claim is not their doing.
    ‘The expressed dismay at the damage the radio-borne viruses have caused, and the disavowal of
responsibility for them, are again among the possibilities we’ve considered ourselves. We can’t
confirm it, but I think we should give them the benefit of the doubt.
    ‘Now ... as to the appeal for cooperation. The points made about not judging them by their
progenitors, or by the speculations of pre-Singularity thinkers, are well taken. But they have a
further implication. If the Jovians continue to develop, and manage to avoid the virtual-reality trap,
then they or their descendants could soon be as far beyond their present selves as they are now
beyond their past. They now look back at their past selves, and in effect disown them. The shadow
of the future, which to them, now, may loom genuinely long, would be to us a painfully short
period before their defection. In a matter of days or weeks, they could look back on their present
selves and dismiss their concerns and promises as those of infants or less than that.
    ‘How can we bind them to their promises, without superior force? And how can we keep our
force superior? We can’t we either trust them, or destroy them.’ Tatsuro placed his hands, palms
upward, on the table, and his gaze slowly tracked around us all. He raised his eyebrows, and then
sat back.
    I was surprised and relieved that he’d said all he had. He, at least, had not been carried away by
the Jovian’s rhetoric. Others didn’t welcome the cold water he’d poured on their hopes. I could
see that from their faces, but nobody seemed willing to speak.
    So I did.
    ‘There is one more point,’ I said, ‘which could bear clarification in the next exchange. The
Jovian said that they wanted to enjoy their own part of the system, and leave us to enjoy ours. It
would be very interesting to know just what parts they mean what they consider theirs, and what
ours. I seem to remember that this kind of property right was one of the issues we originally fell
out about. He, or it, also mentioned repairing or recompensing harm done during the period of their
so-called dreamtime. He said nothing of who was to compensate whom, for what.’
    ‘But surely he meant -‘ someone began.
    ‘No!’ I insisted. ‘We can’t assume they mean the harm they did to us! They might mean the
harm we did to them. Some very rich people became Outwarders, and they could still claim that
we that is, the Union stole their property in the social revolution. In terms of their legal system, the
bloodsucking usurers owned half the Earth, and they might want it back, and the rest as interest!
The way I take what the Jovian said, our choice remains the same: we hammer them with the
comets, or we live under their iron heel, submitting to whatever enslavement it would take to pay
them off for their so-called property.’
    ‘Oh, Ellen!’ said Clarity. She looked at Tatsuro. ‘Sorry. Uh, comrade chairman. Ellen’s
comment I’m afraid sums up what’s precisely the wrong approach we should take to this situation.
The idea that these post-human beings would be interested in Earth, or in interest whatever that is
when they have the whole universe in front of them and the whole future before them, is just
dragging up old fights. I don’t think we should even mention it. I’m not saying take them at their
word, but let’s show them the sort of basic goodwill we show to any stranger, and not get bogged
down in ancient history.’ A ripple of amusement went around the committee at this fiftyyear-old’s
allocation of the youth of most of us to ancient history. Suze raised her hand. Tatsuro nodded.
    ‘Comrade Tatsuro,’ Suze said, ‘my sympathies are with Clarity, but I would like to say that
Ellen has a point. If the Jovians do think in the way she described, then they could feel themselves
justified in almost anything. On the other hand, if they have some version of the true knowledge,
then anything they wanted to do to us would be its own justification, once they have the power. It
would be very helpful if we could get them to demarcate now what’s to count as theirs, and what as
ours, and to agree to build in that distinction to any future versions of themselves something they
can’t go back on without severe internal conflict. So that whether they’re moralists or egoists,
they’ll go on respecting us.’ Tatsuro gave her an encouraging smile, and said: ‘Comrade Suze, you
may be right, but that still comes down to trusting them. Without power, respect is dead. But our
power needn’t be the capacity to destroy them our own infants, and many lower animals, have
power over us because our interests are bound up with theirs. Because we value them, and
because-natural selection has built that valuing into our nervous systems, to the point where we
cannot even wish to change it, though no doubt if we wanted to we could. This is elementary: the
second iteration of the true knowledge. The question we really have to answer, then, is whether the
Jovians have come to value our independent existence.’
    ‘That,’ said Joe Lutterloh, speaking up suddenly, ‘comes back to surviving as wildlife or pets.’
The discussion then heated up, and went on for an hour or so until Tatsuro stopped it with nothing
more than an impatient drumming of his fingernails on the table.
    ‘Comrades,’ he said firmly, ‘I think we’ve discussed this to the point where we have more than
enough to bring to our next contact. However that turns out, I am more strongly persuaded than
ever that Doctor Malley’s work on the wormhole must continue in parallel.’ He looked over at
Malley, and at me. ‘I accept your reasons for wanting to witness the first contact, and to confirm
our sincerity in making it but can I take it that you’re satisfied?’ Malley nodded.
    ‘Very well. I’m sure you’re keen to return to the wormhole problem. Ellen, I think you’ve said
all you need to say. I don’t see your contributing further to the discussion, or the negotiation. Am I
right?’
    ‘I guess so,’ I said.
    ‘All right. See to it that a part of the far end of this room is sound-screened off, so that Doctor
Malley can continue his work without distraction, and give him any further help he needs. If any
developments require your attention, we’ll let you know.’ I stood up, gave the rest of the committee
a comradely smile, and accompanied Malley back to his workstation. After a moment of hesitation,
Suze followed.
    ‘Well,’ she said, ‘that’s us put in our place!’ I clapped her shoulder. ‘Not to worry. Tatsuro is
actually paying us quite a compliment, however it looks to the others. He’s saying our work is as
important as anything that’s likely to come out of the contact.’ Malley sat down at his workstation
and gazed at the screen. He grasped his temples in his fingertips and rubbed. ‘You know, Ellen,
he’s right. Because what we’re trying to do is get to the stars!’
    ‘That’s the spirit,’ I said. I looked back at the group around the table. Joe was once more
disconnecting the external cameras. Another contact session was about to start. I wondered how
far the Jovians would have changed in the time since our first contact, and how far we had.
    ‘Come on,’ I said. ‘Suze, help me round up some robots to spin us a sound-screen.’ Over the
next three hours I helped Malley with locating and collating thousands of recordings of the Gate,
and with running through the navigational data from Wilde’s spacecraft, which had come through
the wormhole the other way. Frustratingly, the paths were not commutative: it was not possible to
take the path from the New Mars system and run it in reverse. Outside, through a plastic partition
that let through light but not sound, I could see the committee going again and again into contact
with the Jovian emissary. Suze was immersed in her study of New-Martian society, occasionally
muttering to herself.
   About 15oo GMT Clarity strolled in carrying three mugs of coffee. We all stopped work and
leaned back and smiled at her gratefully.
   ‘Clarity, you should be charity,’ Malley said.
   ‘How’s it going?’ I asked.
   Clarity wrinkled her small, perfect nose. ‘All right, I suppose,’ she said. ‘The Jovians are being
very friendly, and they’re not just showing that man-image now. There are other forms crowded
around him, and sometimes they seem to be relaying replies through him. It’s like they’ve
understood we’re getting used to them.’
   ‘Any progress on the virus front?’
   ‘No, they still say they haven’t pinned down the source of it themselves.’
   ‘Hah. What about the issue of who gets what?’
   ‘Oh, that! The Jovian was very taken aback that it should even come up. Insisted that they had
no plans for any use of the system beyond Jupiter, which as he pointed out was quite big enough.’ I
favoured her with an evil grin. “’No plans” still doesn’t mean anything, beyond what it literally
says, which isn’t much. And nothing is big enough for exponential growth, which is what the old
Outwarders were really keen on.’ She shrugged. ‘As you keep reminding us. Enjoy your coffee.’
   ‘Thanks.’ Malley watched her walk away, and Suze watched Malley. I caught Suze’s eye and
smiled.
   ‘It’s the rejuve,’ I murmured.
   ‘What?’ asked Malley.
   ‘Nothing.’
   ‘You know what you are?’ Malley said to me. ‘You’re a hawk.’
   ‘Hey, I like that,’ I said. ‘I thought we all were out here, I just didn’t expect everyone to go all
dovish as soon as their faceless enemies put on a face to talk to.’ Malley took his pipe out of a
pouch on his belt, and clenched it between his teeth. He put it down again and took a sip of coffee.
‘You know,’ he said, with some regret, ‘I’m not sure I even like the taste of tobacco any more.’ He
dropped the pipe and caught it again, several times, as though fascinated by its slow fall. He tilted
his seat back and stared at the screen and poked around in his virtual workspace.
   ‘Back to work,’ he said.
   He continued for another hour, and then he suddenly stopped. I was talking quietly with Suze at
the time, as she refreshed my memories of the intricacies of anarcho-capitalist legal theory
something some of the Outwarders had bored me with back on the wreck-deck, and of which New
Mars was an insanely logical outcome. It was like Ptolemaic epicycles, an endless addition of
reinvented wheels. Why, I kept wondering, couldn’t these people see the answer? Malley’s
inarticulate sound of frustration interrupted us. ‘Is there a problem?’ I asked.
   ‘Is there a fucking problem.’ Malley took out his pipe again and this time stuffed it with tobacco
and lit it, puffing furiously. Small machines stopped what they were doing and sniffed the air.
Some of them hastily extemporized firefighting equipment, and began to gather round.
   ‘I can’t do it,’ Malley said. ‘The whole thing depends on the angle you make to the wormhole
when you pass into it. I can’t get it from the angle the mutineers’ colony ship made back in 2093
the wormhole goes through a cycle whose period I don’t know, and so far, calculating it is beyond
any of the resources we’ve got. There’s a key to it somewhere, but it’s mathematically intractable.
You’d have to have built the wormhole to know what it is.’
   ‘You can’t even make a best guess?’
   ‘Oh, sure,’ said Malley. ‘I can make a best guess. Wouldn’t bet my life on it, though.’
   ‘You don’t have to!’ I said. ‘We’ll test it with a probe. See if it comes back ...’ Malley jabbed
at his screen with the stem of his pipe. ‘Sure,’ he said. ‘Trouble is, we could be testing probes
from now until doomsday. I mean, my best guess is no better than the best your chaps have come
up with, and they haven’t had anything back.’ I fought to hide my dismay. There was no way we’d
have time to mess around with test probes. We’d all been counting on Malley, confident that with
his deep theoretical knowledge and our masses of data, he’d find us a path through.
   Malley looked up at me, frowning.
   ‘Something’s puzzling me,’ he said.
   ‘Yes?’
   ‘This space-time path back here from New Mars . . . how come we have that, and not the one
the other way?’
   ‘Well,’ I said, ‘it’s kind of funny. Wilde had the return path in his onboard computer, and we’ve
been able to access it. The outward path which may not even be a valid solution any more he had
in his head, so to speak. I mean, there was a time when both “his head” and the return path were
stored programs in the same computer, but even if we’d known, we still can’t hack human minds,
even minds in computers. No access path, no memory addresses ...’ Malley smiled, thin-lipped. ‘I
know that. What I was wondering is how Wilde was able to work out the return path from New
Mars.
   Do the New Martians have super-advanced computers, or lots of brain-boosted physicists, or
what?’
   ‘Not exactly,’ I said. ‘Over on New Mars, they have the stored original mind-states of the
Outwarders, and the stored minds of some of the subsequent “macros” before their catastrophe.
What they did and it still gives me the shivers to think about was make copies of them, then restart
the copies in a controlled environment a standard nanotech tank, as it happens then ask them to
work out the return path, and when they’d got the answer to that question and a few others, like
how to resurrect a lot of human minds and bodies they also had in storage ... they, well, they
basically tipped in the bleach! Something called Blue Goo, actually, a nanotech specific for wiping
out nanoware.’
   ‘Jesus!’ said Malley. ‘You mean they generated an entire posthuman culture in a virtual reality,
asked it a few deep questions, and then destroyed it?’
   ‘Yes,’ I said. I chuckled at the appalled look on his face. Even Suze was astonished by this part
of the story, which the Division hadn’t chosen to release. ‘OK, it was a bit risky I wouldn’t trust a
post-human culture, even if I did have it in a bucket. But, you know, full marks for initiative.’
   ‘And zero for morality,’ Malley said. ‘That’s like a small-scale version of what you had in mind
for the Jovians and with less excuse.’ I nodded briskly. ‘Wilde does have his own take on the true
knowledge,’ I said. ‘Even if he is a non-co.’ Malley sighed. ‘Let’s not get into that. So how did
they get the original path, the path through the daughter wormhole to New Mars?’
   ‘Oh,’ I said, ‘they got it from the Outwarder macros.’ Malley stared. ‘The Outwarders gave it to
them?’ I spread my hands. ‘One, or several, of them did. We don’t know if it was a deal they had
arranged all along as a payment for the operator of the bonded-labour company a man called Dave
Reid, a very nasty piece of work who’s probably still top dog on New Mars or if the daughter-
wormhole was set up by the Outwarders for other purposes, and Reid and company just managed to
extract the information as the Outwarder macros were degenerating.’
   ‘Ah,’ said Malley. ‘It has occurred to me that we could do the same ourselves. We could just
ask.’ I really had not thought of that.
   Tatsuro was sitting at the head of the long table, doodling on a pad and combing his receding
hair with his fingers. Committee members stood or sat around, talking and drinking coffee.
Another contact session had just been completed, virus-scanned, and relayed to the rest of the
Division. Clarity was elbow-deep in a display of the state of current opinion about the talks so far:
shifting, by the look of it.
   Malley and I walked up to Tatsuro.
   ‘We have a problem,’ I told him. ‘And a possible solution.’ As he listened, I watched his
expressions; almost undetectable, under the smooth surface of his skin. Alarm, disappointment,
anger, doubt, and a faint glimmer of hope.
   ‘I suppose it’s worth a try,’ he said at last. ‘But it does let them know we’re going through.’
   ‘They’d find out as soon as we did go through,’ I said. ‘At least, we have to assume that they
could.’ Tatsuro nodded slowly. ‘Perhaps. Although I must say, observational astronomy from
inside the Jovian atmosphere is probably a bit tricky, even for them. Anyway, if we ask them for
the path, we need to do so without getting them worried about our intentions.’ I shrugged. ‘Surely
we have an understandable interest in another human society ‘
   ‘Aha!’ said Malley. ‘How about this? The Jovians may still have some, ah, bones to pick with
the mutineers, yes? And so do you, I would imagine. Didn’t the labour-force operator conscript
some of your people into his labour gangs?’
   ‘That’s one way of putting it,’ I said sourly. It was something I’d thought over before that the
responsibility for those long-ago raids and deaths might rest more with Reid’s company than with
his clients, the Outwarders. Not that it mattered.
   ‘So tell them that,’ Malley said. ‘Tell them you want to extract some retribution for what was
done. The Jovians might well consider that a very understandable motivation.’
   ‘Especially if they think it gets them off the hook,’ said Tatsuro. ‘OK, we’ll do it on the next
contact.’
   ‘By the way,’ I said, ‘just who are we in contact with? Do we know that they’re in any way
representative?’
   ‘Like us, you mean?’ Tatsuro asked dryly. ‘Rather more so, I would say. We’ve had evidence
that the contact is being monitored throughout the Jovian population. The “man” we see is a
construct, presenting a consensus or majority view.’
   ‘Sum over histories,’ said Malley.
   The preparations for contact were gone through once more. It was becoming a routine, as was
the contact itself. Again the face appeared. The first few exchanges concerned matters arising
from earlier sessions, which I hadn’t seen. Then Tatsuro broached the subject of the wormhole and
the path to New Mars.
   For the first time, the Jovian speaker hesitated. ‘One moment, please,’ he said. His face
suddenly became abstracted, the resolution fading until it looked like a hollow mask. The flitting
shapes of the individual Jovians in the sky around him went through agitated transformations,
spinning into girandoles, stretching into long columns, building themselves into dark edifices ...
   ‘This might not have been such a good idea,’ someone whispered.
   Shut up, I didn’t say. My lips were dry.
   The Jovian speaker’s colour and texture returned like a flush.
   ‘Sorry about that, folks,’ he said. ‘The information you asked for was buried quite deep in our
archived memories. Also, some of us weren’t too keen on giving you it.’ He smiled. ‘But the rest
of us won them over, so here it is.’ Tatsuro’s fingers scrabbled on the control panel as a line of
pulsing light along the bottom of the screen indicated a raw-data transmission. It was over in less
than five seconds.
   ‘That’s all you need,’ said the Jovian. ‘Give our regards to our former employees, and please
assure them that we bear them no ill will for having baled out when they did. Goodbye for now.’
The image blinked off.
   ‘Wow, fuck,’ said Malley. ‘These things are sharp.’ I tried to laugh. People were looking at the
empty screen, looking at us.
   ‘You stirred up something there,’ said Clarity.
   ‘That’s the first indication we’ve had of dissension among them,’ said Tatsuro. ‘I suggest you
give the data we just received a very thorough virus-scan.’ I called up Yeng and asked her to come
along. Together with Joe and Clarity, she combed through the data with everything she’d got. It
checked out clean. Malley loaded it into his workspace, and found that it meshed with his own
incomplete calculations.
   By this time it was well into the evening. Yeng, Suze and I were seated around Malley. Behind
us, other work was going on. When Malley leaned back and nodded silently, we all let out a whoop
that caused some distraction.
   ‘We test it first,’ I said.
   I dialed up a drone and downloaded the data into its navigational computer. I patched in a view
on Malley’s screen, and we watched the whole mission, from the tiny rocket’s launch to its
carefully angled insertion in the wormhole. That took about an hour. We’d warned the patrol
fighters, hanging in orbit in front of the Gate. Even so, the probe’s re-emergence put them on full
alert. I could imagine the jangled nerves.
   The probe had nothing on board but a telescopic camera photographic film, not television. One
of the fighter-bombers scooped up the probe and ran the film for us, past one of their own telemetry
cameras.
   We looked at the grainy images of an unfamiliar starfield, and the spectrum of an unknown
yellow sun, and at the distant red globe with its tracery of canals.
   ‘Fucking amazing,’ said Malley. ‘Just seeing this. I wonder if I ever really believed it before.’ I
slung my arms around the shoulders of Malley, Yeng and Suze. ‘Believe it,’ I said. ‘We’re going
there. Tomorrow.’
                               8 City of the Living Dead
    Tilted, Jupiter’s ring cut a white segment into the forward view. Ten miles ahead, also at an
angle, hung the vastly smaller ellipse of the Malley Mile. At this distance the boosters and attitude
jets clamped to its circular rim showed as tiny black beads spaced out around its rainbow ring. A
fighter-bomber, the Turing Tester, stood by beside us, ready to move into our exact present position
shortly after we’d vacated it.
    The Terrible Beauty, with the currently uncrewed fighter-bomber Carbon Conscience clinging to
its side like a black fly squatting on a white egg, was about to make its final thrust towards the
wormhole Gate. The whole crew was on board, along with Malley and Suze. Malley, despite
protests from Tatsuro and others, had insisted that he was certainly not going to stay behind.
Whose goddam theory was it, anyway, he wanted to know? Whose name was on the thing, eh?
Suze’s equivalent insistence had more logic behind it: we actually needed her, because she was the
only one who seemed to have a feel for how New-Martian society worked.
    ‘Angle of approach 1.274066 radians,’ said Jaime.
    ‘Course confirmed,’ said Andrea. ‘Distance nine point seven five miles, relative speed one
hundred and twenty miles per hour.’
    ‘Check.’ It was all down to them now; them and the onboard computer, which was really flying
the ship. But, moved by an impulse that goes all the way back to Vostok and Mercury, when
people are in a ship they like to have the final say. Maybe it’s an illusion, maybe it would be better
to let the machines handle it all, but when you start thinking like that, where do you stop? You
don’t, is what, and you end up with all machines and no people. Come to think of it (I thought,
floating in my straps, an inch above my acceleration couch and trying not to think too much) you
end up with exactly what we were fighting against.
    ‘Eight miles.’
    Right now, as I watched the Malley Mile expand in the screen overhead, I didn’t have much
sense of control. We were falling into a hole in the sky, and there was nothing I could do about it
any more.
    ‘Six miles.’
    ‘Ready for the burn,’ Andrea sang out. ‘Three minutes.’ We had to go through under
acceleration, Malley had told us. He had tried to tell us why, but lost most of us by the fourth
equation, and that was keeping it simple. I glanced over at him. He was lying on a couch next to
me. As far as I could see, he had his eyes tight shut. His lips were moving. He turned over, and
opened his eyes.
    ‘Ah,’ he whispered, ‘you caught me at it.’
    ‘At what?’ He closed his eyes again for a second, then opened them and smiled. ‘Praying.’
    ‘I didn’t know you were a believer.’
    ‘Not as such,’ Malley said. He stared fixedly at our looming goal on the screen above us. ‘But I
understand God listens whether you’re a believer or not.’
    This was no time for philosophical debate. ‘Yes,’ I whispered back. ‘That’s what Andrea says
about her St Christopher medal.’
    ‘I heard that,’ said Andrea. ‘Don’t you believe it. I may be sentimental, but I’m not
superstitious.’ Malley smiled and seemed to relax somewhat.
    ‘I’ve seen God,’ Boris contributed, from the couch to my left. ‘In the sky outside Brno.’
    ‘You mean you got caught in smart rain from an obsolete Hanseatic psychochemical munition,’
I said. ‘Don’t confuse things.’
    ‘I know what done it to me,’ Boris said placidly. ‘And I know what I seen.’
    ‘Pipe down, you back there,’ said Andrea. ‘Boosting in ten seconds, nine, eight ...’ This time
the acceleration was gentle, building up slowly to a half gee; but the wormhole gate came at us in a
rush. Before I could think, before I could wonder, before Malley could pray again, the screens
flared briefly blue, and then went black.
    ‘Cutting the drive,’ said Andrea. The small weight went away. Jaime’s voice rose above the
sudden silence.
    ‘Is that it?’ Andrea flicked though screen images, stabilizing on the red crescent of the planet
we’d seen the day before, sixty-two thousand miles away and dead ahead.
    ‘Yes,’ she said. ‘That’s it. We’re through.’
    Jaime was checking the starfield against an astonomical atlas in the navigational computer. The
babbages ran for a few seconds, the fixels flickered and laboured; the catalogued 3D picture
incremented the proper motions of the stars, and after several iterations meshed with the outside
scene. Jaime examined the tank’s readout.
    ‘Ten thousand light years from home, and just over ten thousand years in the future, at a rough
guess,’ he said. ‘Welcome to the Sagittarius Arm.’
    ‘Wow,’ said Suze.
    ‘I think you spoke for all of us,’ I said. ‘Stay strapped in, everybody. Yeng, would you please
run us a scan?’ Yeng complied quickly, hauling her interface down from the clustered banks of
computers and checking that it was isolated from the rest, then cautiously sweeping the radio
portion of the electromagnetic spectrum and sample-scanning apparent messages into her anti-virus
software.
    ‘It’s busy,’ she said.
    ‘Take your time,’ I said.
    ‘It’s really busy. I’ve never seen anything like it. There are signals at every possible
wavelength! Scanning them all for viruses would take forever.’ She waved a hand helplessly at the
screen, down which a string of samples was propagating. ‘Nothing there, but that’s just the
beginning, just a tiny fraction.’
    ‘Try a random sample right across the spectrum,’ I suggested.
    That took about an hour, during which time we drifted further from the daughter-wormhole Gate
and closer to the planet. We put this time to good use. First, we rotated the ship and decelerated,
so that we could flee straight back through the wormhole if Yeng’s investigations turned up
anything nasty. Next, we placed a small communications satellite in a fixed position relative to the
wormhole, a position it was programmed to hold. It was also programmed to point a
communications laser at the correct angle for the beam to get through to the Turing Tester on the
other side. (Light, having no mass, could get through without acceleration, which would of course
have been impossible in any case; Malley’s further explanation of how only coherent light could do
it was, I’m afraid, lost on me.)
    I tested the link, nervously, with Malley at my shoulder. ‘Terrible Beauty to Turing Tester, are
you receiving me?’ Seconds passed.
    ‘Turing Tester to Terrible Beauty, receiving you loud and clear.
    Are you in the right place?’
    ‘Yes, we are,’ I said. ‘Ten thousand light years from home, according to Jaime.’ Another short
delay.
   ‘Just passed on your message to the Command Committee.
   Tatsuro’s coming through now.’ The voice changed. ‘Congratulations, comrades, you just made
history. Small step, giant leap and all that.’ One small step for the Jovians, one giant leap for us.
   ‘Thank you,’ I said. After a few more exchanges, mainly technical, we signed off.
   Next we spun out a mirror and set it up in front of the ship and a little to one side, so that we
could make visual observations through Terrible Beauty’s forward telescope. By sheer good luck
we’d arrived just at the time when the planet’s major settlement, Ship City, was coming around the
middle of the crescent limb and turning to the night. The lights of smaller settlements were
sprinkled across the dark side, and shortly the five-armed shape of the city joined them, a bright
neon star. There were more settlements than Wilde had told us about, and the city seemed bigger
and brighter than he’d described.
   ‘Looks human enough to me,’ said Tony.
   ‘Well, it ain’t,’ I said. ‘According to Wilde, four of those arms are inhabited, if that’s the word,
by robots running wild.’
   ‘The lights are on, but nobody’s home?’ Malley said mischievously.
   ‘Exactly,’ I said. ‘So let’s not make assumptions, OK?P ‘Looks like somebody’s making
assumptions about us,’ remarked Boris.
   ‘What?’
   ‘No challenges,’ he said mildly. ‘They must assume we’re friendly.’
   ‘Thank you for sharing that,’ said Tony. ‘I’ve always thought the null hypothesis didn’t get its
fair share of publicity.’
   ‘Stop bitching, comrades,’ I said.
   ‘Who’s bitching?’ They continued in this vein for some time.
   ‘When you’ve all quite finished,’ said Yeng. She pushed the apparatus away from her, and the
spring-loaded boom lifted it back to the cluster. ‘You might like to hear my preliminary report on a
random sample of radio signals.’
   ‘We’re listening,’ I said.
   ‘They’re clean,’ she said. ‘A lot of encrypted stuff, but nothing that does nasty things to
anything I’ve thrown it at. Definitely just dead data, not live programs. So, would you all like to
hear a little of what goes on in a system where humans have the spectrum to themselves and don’t
have to worry about -‘ deep doomy voice ‘”parasite programs from monster minds” shorting their
circuits and eating their brains?’
   ‘Yes, go ahead,’ I said.
   We all sat up a little on our couches or rather, pushed ourselves away with our elbows to listen
to what people without Jovian jamming to worry about had to say. Yeng, with an impish smile,
reached up for a switch and fiddled with a dial. The command-deck speakers filled the level with
the most doleful music I’d ever heard. A sad, throaty voice was singing along, with lyrics I had to
search my most distant memories to make sense of: the themes included unemployment, alcohol
abuse, desertion, betrayal, sexual frustration, jealousy, religion ...
   ‘That’s terrible,’ said Tony, after a couple of minutes of openmouthed listening. ‘It must be hell
down there.’ Suze laughed. ‘Not hell capitalism.’
   ‘Yes, yes, yes,’ I said. ‘But what sort of music is that?’
   ‘Country,’ said Malley. ‘Or maybe western.’
   ‘Give us something else,’ Boris pleaded. ‘Anything.’
   ‘Sure thing,’ Yeng drawled. (The infection was already getting to her.) She turned the dial
through a couple of banshee howls, and settled on a wavelength just as a voice announced: ‘and I’d
like to welcome you all to the Black Wave, Ship City’s first and best blues and soul station, here to
help you make it through the night ..
   To be fair, not all the music beamed out by the local radio stations was an incitement to suicide:
some of it was definitely a provocation to murder. This fitted right in with what we saw on
broadcast television, which at first sight indicated a society where murder was commonplace; but
Suze and Malley assured us that Wilde had been right in his descriptions of this in his original
interrogation it was just faked, staged, pretended violence for entertainment. Most of it was,
anyway. Lethal combat was a legal spectator sport, as Wilde had told us and as we now soon
confirmed. We floated about, watching the screen with an appalled fascination.
   ‘This is sick, man,’ said Boris. ‘Hey, I’ve seen more killings in the last half-hour than I ever
saw in the Hundred Years’ War.’
   ‘You did most of your killing at long range, as I recall,’ I said. ‘What you saw is one thing,
what you did is another. Anyway,’ I added, pointing at a losing player being dragged out of a
stadium, to cheers, ‘he’ll be back on his feet well, when they find them in a few days.’
   ‘Nasty head wound,’ said Yeng.
   ‘They all take back-ups just before they go on, so all he’ll lose is the memory of the fight.
That’s how they see it.’
   ‘But not you?’ Malley asked.
   I shook my head, emphatically. ‘Death is death, and I don’t see the comfort in knowing that a
clone with your memories is going to exist in the future.’ Malley pushed himself away from the
wall he was about to collide with, and immediately drifted off in a direction other than the one he’d
intended.
   ‘I think,’ he said over his shoulder, ‘that we’ve just encountered yet another of your incorrigible
ideas, Ellen. It’s right up there with this “machines aren’t conscious” bug in your mental program.’
He grabbed at a plant through whose fronds he was moving, and succeeded only in breaking off a
leaf.
   “’Consciousness is an emergent property of carbon”,’ Yeng quoted gleefully. ‘So stop hurting
our plants.’
   We’d needed this interlude of slacking-off, to recover somewhat from the tension we’d all felt
about going through the wormhole greater, to me anyway, than that of any other manoeuvre I’d
experienced; at least since dropping in on the battle of Lisbon, which was a long time ago. To
cross that space-time gulf was scarier than landing a shuttle through flak, and in retrospect it was no
less troubling. I turned my mind resolutely from reflecting on it. It would be some time before the
awe at what we’d done struck home to us, and I wanted to be safely home before it did. The radio
and television broadcasts, misleading though they possibly were about the texture of daily life, had
also been useful in mentally preparing us for arriving in a very alien society.
   But it had gone on long enough.
   ‘OK, comrades,’ I yelled. ‘Stop laughing at the sex channels and get back to your posts. We got
work to do.’ When everyone had drifted or, in Malley’s case, been hauled back to their couches, I
attached myself loosely to my own and positioned myself to see and be seen.
   ‘Right,’ I said. ‘We’ve established, at least provisionally, that New Mars hasn’t yet had a
runaway Singularity. If it has, somebody’s making sure it looks and sounds like it hasn’t but we
can’t rule that out. The obvious way to check is to send down a few small, unobtrusive probes and
see what it’s like close up. But first, we want to let them know we’re here. As far as we know, we
haven’t been spotted yet, but we certainly will be as soon as we start our approach burn and go into
orbit.
    ‘We’ve been through all this before, but let me go through it one more time. They don’t have
space defence in a military sense, but they do have laser-launchers, and spacecraft with missile and
laser capability. They use them whenever one of their incoming comet fragments looks like it
might fall in the wrong place, or fall too hard terraforming by cometary bombardment is a bit of a
risky business. Their lasers aren’t powerful enough to burn us out of the sky they only use the
laser-launchers for little robot craft like the Wilde simulacrum came back in but they could do us a
lot of damage, and even the fighter-bomber might find their missiles too hot to handle. They have a
charmingly casual way with nukes, by the way.
    ‘So let’s do this by the book. The first thing I suggest we do is for Suze and Yeng to compose
and send a nice, reassuring hailing message, and for Jaime and Andrea to put us on a course which
plainly is aiming for a high orbit around the planet. Geostationary, or to be precise -‘ I paused,
smiling at my own pedantry ‘neo-areostationary above Ship City would be ideal.’
    ‘Not right above it,’ said Tony. ‘Too intimidating.’
    ‘OK, just so long as we stay above the horizon. Before we start hailing, I’d like Boris to power
up a dozen probes little ones, mind, whose final stage will just float through the air like a leaf and
have them ready to fire them off shortly after orbital insertion. Meanwhile, I want you in Fire
Control from the moment before we start signalling to well after we’re sure we’re welcome; and
you and Jaime be ready to scramble the fighter-bomber. Yeng, you could scan for any response to
our message on the aerospace-traffic control channels, or whatever they have, and Suze can do the
same for the news broadcasts. It shouldn’t be too long before we’re the number one item.
    ‘Finally ... last we heard, they don’t have a state here. All to the good, no doubt, but what they
have instead is a lot of competing defence companies. It ain’t like the Division, or even the Union
we don’t worry about tooled-up people, because we aren’t violent. These people may not be as
violent as you’d think from their television, but they’re a bit, ah, touchy and unpredictable.’ I
looked enquiringly at Malley.
    ‘I think that’s safe to say,’ he acknowledged.
    ‘Right,’ I said. ‘Let’s do it. By the book.’ We got our first reply very quickly. This historic
first contact between the Solar Union and humanity’s first and only extrasolar colony went as
follows: ‘This is Solar Union passenger spaceship Terrible Beauty, out of Callisto via the Malley
Mile, calling Ship City traffic control. Requesting permission to enter geostationary orbit and -‘
    ‘GET THE FUCK OFF this channel, kid. I’m warning you, you’re endangering traffic, and
we’re triangulating your source right now. You are in deep shit, you little scumbag. OK, we’ve
got you, we -‘
    Long pause. ‘Uh oh. Jonesy, we got a bogey. I say again, we got a bogey. Condition Yellow.
Going over to encryption Zero-Prime, I say again, Zero-Prime as from now, kcchchchgh ...’
    ‘Try another channel,’ Suze advised. ‘See if their competitors are more open-minded.’
    Yeng worked her way through a succession of rebuffs from Ship City ATC Inc, Reid Industrial
Airways, Lowell Field Control Tower, Barsoom Buddies, Xaviera’s Friendly Flight-Control ...
    ‘When you said to go by the book, Ellen, you might have told us you meant the Yellow Pages,’
Malley said.
    I had to laugh (and yes, we did have Yellow Pages, even in the moneyless commonwealth); but
we could all imagine the calls that were undoubtedly going on, to yet another list of companies: the
ones that sold protection from incoming space-junk. We also knew that the people on New Mars
had what seemed to them good reason to worry about things coming at them out of the wormhole.
Five years earlier, Jonathan Wilde’s robot copy had disappeared through the Malley Mile,
desperately worried that the Jovian fast folk were about to take control of its other end. This
concern had been misplaced, but he’d never reported back ...
    And our own intentions weren’t entirely friendly. If the New Martians had known just what
they were, they’d have scrambled every interceptor they had, and blown us out of the sky.
    Suze called out: ‘We’re on the news!’ Yeng leaned over and swung a display screen around so
that we could all see it. It showed an excited small boy, talking very quickly in front of a picture of
a blurry but recognizably ovoid blob.
    ‘-the UFO is still moving slowly towards us from the wormhole Gate. According to a well
placed source, it claims to be a human expedition from the Solar System! Sources remain tight-
lipped, however, about whether this claim is true or whether the fast folk back home are pulling a
fast one on us! Are we about to face a real invasion or a virtual one? Software Seduction Services
urges everyone to update their anti-virus systems. Don’t take chances call this number now!’ A
long number appeared at the bottom of the screen. ‘And now ... we bring you, live and exclusive,
an outside broadcast of Mutual Protection’s crack comet-busters scrambling from Lowell Field! No
job’s too big for Mutual Protection and no job’s too small! Is your home or business as safe as it
could be? Call Mutual Protection, and you too can enjoy the security that only the most
experienced protectors can provide, in a proud tradition that z6o stretches all the way back to Old
Earth, and is still out in front on New Mars!
    ‘And off it,’ the kid ad-libbed admiringly, as the screen filled with a startling floodlit view of
scores of needle-shaped rockets leaping into the night sky like the arrows at Agincourt, the snarl of
engine after engine rising and merging into one baying yell.
    At the bottom of the screen was another number to call.
    ‘Boris, Jaime, get in the fighter-bomber,’ I said. ‘Don’t separate until I tell you, unless you see
incoming. Jaime, give us an estimate on how long these rockets will take to arrive -‘
    ‘They won’t,’ Boris said flatly. ‘That picture is bullshit, Ellen.
    Archive footage or outright fake. These are last-ditch anti-missile missiles. Type we used to
call Citizens. No use for comet-busting unless the comet’s almost on top of you. It’s a diversion -‘
The alarm went off and the forward view lit up with laser fire meeting its targets. Heavy thuds
resounded through the ship not hits, as my first shocked notion was, but decoys being launched
from the hull’s tubes in a crazy, confusing non-pattern to distract any radiation-seeking incoming
missiles with a bewildering variety of radio, radar, and infrared emission profiles.
    ‘Strap down!’ yelled Andrea. Our suits, responding to the alarm with the equivalent of
conditioned reflex, were already hardening around us, tightening our straps. Andrea fired the
attitude jets and, while the ship was still rolling over, engaged the fusion drive. The acceleration
pressed down on me like a smothering, giant hand. Despite all the support of the suit, my ribs were
almost cracking under the strain of breathing. I began to black out, then felt my skin prickle all
over as the suit started slipping oxygen directly into my blood through micrometre-wide tubules.
The forward view what I could see of it through the flaring patches that the weight on my eyeballs
was generating on my retinae was a storm of expanding spherical flashes.
    And then we were in free fall again. I lay gasping painfully. The suit’s multitude of tiny
needles withdrew, their infinitesimal pains indistinguishable from the pins-and-needles of returning
circulation.
    ‘Stay where you are!’ Andrea’s warning was again redundant none of us could have as much as
raised our heads. ‘We did it,’ she went on. ‘We outran them.’ I6I
    Boris was scanning engagement and damage reports.
   ‘Not too bad,’ he said. ‘Hull damage is within tolerance. Carbon Conscience is intact and
seems to have fought pretty well on its own account.’
   ‘What happened there?’ Suze asked plaintively. ‘Were we attacked?’
   ‘Sure were,’ said Boris. ‘Nothing too sophisticated, though. Looks like they had a small swarm
of comet-breakers parked around the wormhole. They weren’t much use against active-defence.
Wasted the decoys on them, really. Pity about that.’
   ‘Why,’ I asked, staring in disbelief at the swelling dark circle in the forward view, ‘are we
heading straight for New Mars?’
   ‘Ah,’ said Andrea. ‘Sorry, comrades. Reflex, I’m afraid. I can make a course correction if you
-‘
   ‘No, no, leave it for now.’ I was beginning to reconsider our approach, literally as well as
figuratively. The television news was still coming through.
   ‘the UFO has punched through our first line of defence and is now heading straight towards us!
Stay tuned for -‘ “’UFO”, indeed!’ said Malley. ‘Bloody cheek.’
   What’s a UFO?’ asked Yeng.
   ‘Something people believed in before they had the true knowledge,’ Malley flipped back.
   ‘Yeng,’ I said, before her moment of puzzlement could turn to hurt, ‘I wonder if you can access
the New Martian communications network, and call that number?’
   ‘Call up Mutual Protection?’
   ‘Yes, why not? Suze, do you think you could talk to them? Do a deal?’ Suze laughed. ‘I don’t
know about that, but I could make them very confused.’
   ‘It’s worth a try, anyway,’ I said. ‘OK everybody, stay strapped in. Enough of trying to
persuade them not to be paranoid. We’re going to give them something to really worry about.
Andrea, give us a three-gee course towards them, then spin us round and bring us down anywhere
that looks uninhabited and not too far from Ship City. Suze, Yeng, keep trying the numbers. Boris,
Jaime, get in the Carbon Conscience and ride along as long as you can; disengage before we hit
atmosphere, make an aerodynamic landing, and use up all the firepower you need to get us
through.’
   ‘That’s what I like,’ said Boris. ‘Covering fire for a contested landing. Takes me back.’ He
disengaged from his couch and followed Jaime in a straight dive for the transfer airlock.
   I decided that reminding him that he’d never done any such thing, and that I had, would be bad
for his morale. A minute or so later he called us up from the fighter-bomber and announced that he
and Jaime were ready for the burn.
   ‘Good,’ I said. ‘Now let’s show those non-cos what we’re made off.’
   ‘Here’s hoping they don’t have to work it out from our scorched DNA,’ said Andrea, just before
the drive kicked in. This time the gee-force was less than in our evasive manoeuvre, but it was
considerably more prolonged. The moment of free fall during the roll-around provided no respite
parts of me that were enduring a dull ache took the opportunity of the weight coming off to report
in as acute pain, and didn’t shut down when the deceleration began and the weight came on again.
   ‘Disengaging,’ said Boris. ‘See you on the ground, if you make it.’
   ‘I love you too,’ I said. ‘Take care.’ In the lateral view the complex insectile shape of the
fighter-bomber shifted away on a parallel course by a brief burst of its jets, and fell rapidly behind
us. Then its main drive lit up and it shot past us again, on its own different, perilous, and
necessarily one-way descent.
   Suze and Yeng simultaneously said something, hard to make out as their voices strained against
the weight on their chests.
   ‘Say again please,’ I said heavily.
   ‘We’re through,’ groaned Suze, her voice making it sound as if she meant that we were finished.
‘We’re in contact with Mutual Protection. They seem to be taking us seriously. Got them on hold
right now.’
   ‘Put them on the main screen,’ I said. ‘Patch me through.’ A serious-looking young man’s face
appeared above me. ‘Hi,’ I said feebly. ‘We’re about to make a powered landing outside your
town, and we want to assure you we’re friendly and ask you to keep your missiles off our backs.
We can fight them off anyway.’ This
   was a bluff, but my face was probably so distorted that my expression was unreadable. ‘But
we’d rather land peacefully.’
   ‘You the starship that calls itself Terrible Beauty?’
   ‘Yes,’ I said. Starship, I thought. That’s better than calling us a UFO!”
   ‘Can you offer collateral? ‘Call what?’
   ‘Excuse me,’ said Suze, cutting in. ‘We can offer at least one ton of gold as collateral against
any damage.’
   ‘Ah.’ The young man frowned, trying too obviously not to look impressed. ‘Is that imperial, or
metric?’ Before this negotiation could go further we hit the upper layers of the atmosphere, and the
picture went hazy and then black. The air of New Mars is thinner than Earth’s not that we were
relying much on aerobraking. The outside view went red, and comms and active-defence could do
very little. Nor could we. We just had to lie there and hope that the shrieking and buffetting were
caused by our passage through the air and not nearby airbursts, each of which could be the last
thing we knew. Malley seemed to be praying again, and I almost wished I could do the same, even
with his agnostic reservations. But I’d been a good materialist in too many foxholes to relent now.
All I would ask of a god is unconditional love and close air support, and I could rely on Boris for
both.
   The drogues jolted us three times, four, five the thinner air meant more were needed than on
Earth, even with the lesser gravity. There was a final flare of the jet which piled on the gees and
helped deploy the struts, and then we were down. I could hear nothing but the creak of my chest
and the pneumatic sigh of the settling struts.
   ‘We’re down in one piece,’ said Andrea. ‘No incoming missiles, and Carbon Conscience just
checked in. They’re spiralling down and report no ground fire.’ People attempted a cheer. Andrea
lined up a comms laser on the relay at the wormhole and passed on the news of our safe landing.
   Painfully, making full use of the suit’s power-assistance, I moved to a sitting position and stood
up.
   ‘Everybody OK?’
   They all struggled upright.
   ‘Feel as if I’ve been in a fight,’ said Tony. ‘Where are we?’
   ‘Forty miles outside Ship City,’ said Andrea. ‘In a field covered with some kind of
monoculture.’
   ‘It’s something people do when they don’t have hydroponics,’ Malley said.
   ‘A non-co thing, is it?’ asked Yeng.
   I was pleased to see her beginning to be sarcastic back.
   A short while later we discovered that it was indeed a non-co thing, as I peered out of the airlock
hatch to see a man standing in semi-darkness, just outside our circle of lights and the wider circle of
ruination our landing had caused. He was holding what looked like a shotgun. The land around
him was level in all directions, with low, lit mounds here and there which I guessed were dwellings
of some kind. The stars seemed closer than they do in space, and, strangely, brighter.
    ‘I don’t know who or what you ay-are,’ he shouted. ‘But you payay for this day-mage, or you
git the hail off mah lay-and.’
    ‘What payment do you want?’ I yelled back, giddy with relief and quite prepared to offer the
man a ton of gold, imperial or metric.
    ‘Hey,’ said Suze, from behind my shoulder. ‘Let me handle this.’
    The farmer, who introduced himself as Andrew Calvin Powell, turned out to be quite different
from the non-cos I’d encountered in London. After a few minutes of narrow-eyed dickering
(‘What’s that in grey-ams?’) he seemed delighted by what Suze offered by way of compensation,
and invited us all to ‘Come on in and way-at fer the helicopters.’
    ‘Military helicopters?’ I asked, glancing anxiously back up the ladder.
    The man laughed, white teeth flashing in his friendly, sunburned face. ‘Good Lord no, may’am.
Last I heard, Mutual Protection had taken you all under their wing. No, you’re getting a visit from
the city big shots, them as have been dragged out of urgent business meetings and beds and bars!
They won’t be here for a good hour at least, while they get their act together. And your pals in the
stealth bomber have lay-anded safely at the airport, where they’re talking to reporters.’
    I signalled for the rest to come down the ladder.. There was little point in staying with the ship it
was more than capable of looking after itself, and so were we. Our suits could maintain encrypted
radio contact with it or with the fighter-bomber, when that was closer. In fact, we could do better
than that, I thought, and tapped my cuff as though I had an itch under it. The tiny beaded eyes of
nanocameras formed, barely noticeable, in the suit’s fabric.
    ‘How do you know all this?’ I asked, as we gathered around Powell and set off across eight
hundred yards of ploughed ground towards the glowing windows of his house, which was in the
shape of a long, low mound. ‘Was it on television before you came out?’
    ‘Don’t you hay-ave cortical downlinks?’
    ‘Well, in a way,’ I said carefully. ‘We just don’t use them for news.’ He gave me a sideways
look. ‘Same old Reds, eh? Controlled news and lousy consumer electronics. Way-ell, at least
you’re frayendly, like the old New Viet Cong back home.’
    ‘Hey,’ said Tony, tramping along beside me through the muddy field, ‘I remember them.’
    ‘Wait a minute,’ I said, before Tony could launch into political reminiscence, ‘it isn’t like that.
We have problems with electronics, sure, but that’s because of the fast folk. We have all the fancy
tech we want, but we’ve just developed it in a different direction.’
    ‘My old grandpaw told me the goddamn Russkies useta say that,’ Powell said, with maddening
slowness and imperturbability. ‘And the only things it was true of was the Energia booster, the
Mig fighter and the AK-47. The rest of their kit was cray-ap.’ Behind me I could hear Malley
laughing.
    ‘Oh, come on,’ I said, ‘how do you think we can see in the dark?’ I waved a hand in the
dimness.
    ‘Not with gene-spliced visual intensifiers, I’ll bet,’ said Powell.
    I blinked my contacts to a higher acuity and said nothing until we arrived at Powell’s back door.
He stood back on the doorstep and gestured for us to go inside. Just before I did so, I got the suit to
repel all the mud from my boots, and to go through a spectacular transformation as I stepped
dramatically over the threshold into the brightly lit room beyond.
    I turned around with a twirl of skirt, noticing with a downward glance that at least some of the
suit’s cameras had cleverly turned themselves into visible beads. ‘Do people here have clothes that
can do that?’ Powell grinned. ‘That’s a very fine dress, may-am,’ was all he said. He waited for us
to step inside the other women followed my example, each in her own fashion and came in and
racked his shotgun at the door, then led us through his house.
    The first room we passed through was just a store: bare walls of concrete much the same as
seacrete, except that the limestone component is fossil with racks and shelves of tools and seeds
and parked robots. Then Powell led us along a corridor, past closed wooden doors, into the main
part of his house. Somewhere along the way the flooring changed to a deep carpet, which Powell
stepped on to without even shaking the mud from his shoes. A few steps later his shoes were clean.
I couldn’t quite catch how it was happening. The carpet’s pile shimmered slightly as he walked on
it; that was all.
    From outside, the house had looked quite large, an artificial grass-covered knoll, about thirty
yards long by four high. Inside, it looked even bigger, because it turned out to be thirty yards
square and partly underground. We came out of the corridor on to a balcony that ran all around a
sunken atrium, whose roof was a layer of glass, behind which we could see torpid fish and the
ripple distorted, starry sky. The lighting was brighter in the lower level, which was furnished with
what looked like leather-covered sofas and chairs and a few tables. A woman was sitting at one of
the tables, and as we entered she stood up and smiled at us. We trooped after Powell down a stair
that followed the curving wall to the floor, past a pool with tall plants growing up from it and fish
swimming around.
    All around the walls were screens, apparently blank; a few large, still pictures of people and
Earth landscapes; and a great number of unfamiliar objects, most of them vaguely organic in
appearance but probably artificial. They clung to the walls or squatted on shelves or hung from the
ceiling. You never quite saw them move, but at a second glance they gave the disconcerting
impression that they just had.
    ‘Folks, meet my wife,’ said Powell, turning around and looking at us all.
    The woman who’d been sitting at the table stepped towards us, smiling. She was about five foot
six tall with a sturdy, curvy build which her rather tight, gem-beaded red dress did little to conceal
and much to enhance. Her blonde hair cascaded around her shoulders in elaborate curls and waves.
Her face was covered with cosmetic make-up, quite unnecessarily: it was young and pretty
underneath all the powder and colouring. She held out her hands and grasped mine between them.
    ‘Well hi there,’ she said. ‘I’m real pleased and honoured to meet you. My name’s Abigail, and
you must be Miss Ellen May.’
    ‘Just Ellen, neighbour Abigail,’ I said. ‘I’m pleased and honoured to meet you too.’
    ‘Oh, how kind of you,’ she said. Her accent was less noticeable than Andrew’s, and in fact from
that point on I stopped noticing his. The main thing I noticed about her voice was the warmth. As
I introduced the rest of the crew she greeted all of them like long-lost friends. She had heard of
Malley, and seemed awe-struck to meet him. By the time the introductions were over Andrew or
someone, or something had covered the table with an inviting array of bottles and glasses. The
couple insisted on sitting us all down on the biggest sofas and serving us drinks, than sat down
facing us by the table and served themselves.
    Andrew Powell raised his glass. ‘Peace and freedom!’ We drank to that. I felt a bit bad about
what we all might think of it, any day now; but we could always hope. There was a moment of
awkward pause, not surprisingly: the etiquette of first contact between people from two long-
separated human societies was in its early days.
    ‘It was brave of you,’ I said to Andrew, ‘to go out to us with nothing but a shotgun. You didn’t
know who we might be, or how we might react.’ He waved his hand. ‘Not real brave,’ he said. He
and his wife shared a smile. ‘Abigail here had you covered from the house, with enough firepower
to stop a regiment.’
    ‘Ah,’ I said, thoughtfully. ‘But you’d have been in the line of fire, yes?’ He shrugged. ‘Backed
up just the other week. Some memories I’d be sorry to lose.’ Another shared smile, a nudge and a
giggle from Abigail. ‘But anyway, I weren’t that worried. Had you lot figured for a human
expedition ever since the first reports this evening. Just gosh darn lucky you landed on my patch.
I’ll be showin’ off that site for years, and prob’bly charging admission!’ Abigail must have
misinterpreted our puzzled expressions. ‘Oh, you see, we don’t have no problem with resurrection.
We both fell asleep way back in the twenty-first, and we were raised again only five years ago.
Which is why -‘ she waved around, with a look of slight embarrassment ‘we’re still only
moderately well-off, as you can see. I mean, we can’t really afford to have children yet. But we
have each other, and our little farm, and God has been kind to us.’ Her thick eyelashes emphasized
a few quick blinks.
    ‘Didn’t have no truck with religion until I died,’ said Andrew awkwardly. ‘But that experience
kind of concentrates one’s mind on spiritual things, and when I found myself buck naked and
dripping wet and looking up at a Red Cross chopper, I tell you I just got down on my knees and
praised the Lord.’
    ‘What you might call a born-again Christian,’ said Malley. The rest of us didn’t quite get why
Andrew and Abigail laughed so much they had to clutch each other for support.
    ‘You could say that,’ Andrew gasped, knuckling his eyes. He took a deep breath and spoke
more seriously. ‘But apart from the, uh, relief and thankfulness and so on, when I had time to think
about it I figured, well, if mere man can do that then you’d be a damned fool to think the Almighty
couldn’t raise all the dead in His own good time, and I knew that only Jesus could stand between
me and His righteous indignation on that day.’ He grinned at our politely frozen faces. ‘OK, that’s
me done my witnessing to you godless communists, and you’ll hear no more gospel from me
unless’n you ask for more, and I’ll gladly give it. But the good book says not to cast your pearls
before -‘
    ‘It sure does,’ Abigail interrupted, with apparently unnecessary haste. ‘Now let me get you all
another drink.’
    Our forty minutes or so of enjoying the hospitality of Andrew and Abigail did us all a great deal
of good, though at the time it seemed only to give us a little relaxation and a sense of unreality
arising from the sudden change from our dangerous descent to this scene of sumptuous comfort.
As soon as they’d got past the ‘witnessing’, which they apparently regarded as something they had
to do, however briefly, to any stranger, they chatted to us easily. Mainly about themselves, but
even this was a courtesy, as though they didn’t want us to feel we were being interrogated. We all
knew that the time for that would shortly come.
    They proudly called themselves ‘dirt farmers’; vegetables grown in real soil were a luxury here,
supplied to exclusive restaurants for sophisticates who claimed to be able to tell the difference from
the carbon-copy, and who could afford the considerably more evident difference in price. (I had to
give Yeng an unobtrusive nudge at his point.) Variety was their specialty Andrew explained how
nuch searching of the gene-banks he had to do to keep ahead of hanging fads. Most of the work on
the farm was done by what they ;ailed ‘dumb machines’, and not by what they called ‘hired help’.
Another nudge to keep Yeng quiet.)
    Their questions about the Solar System were carefully general. We answered with similar care.
They expressed relief that Earth was well populated, respect at our assurance that it was
prosperous, md only wry regret that it had all ‘gone communist’ (as they put it) since their demise.
    ‘I don’t think you’d find it anything like what you think of as communist,’ Malley said. ‘And
I’m not part of their society, so maybe you can take my word for it.’
    ‘I’m sure you folks like it just fine,’ said Abigail soothingly. ‘But for ourselves, we like it here.’
    ‘Every man under his own vine and under his own fig tree, and no one to make him afraid,’
added Andrew.
    ‘Things must have changed a bit since Jonathan Wilde left,’ I suggested.
    ‘Since he left? Oh I see what you mean.’ Abigail shook her head. ‘Now that I do call unnatural,
having another copy running. Anyway, you’re right, things sure have changed. You know, in the
old days, before the Abolition, they didn’t even give civil rights to robots who were as smart as any
human being, if not a darn sight smarter!”
    ‘They had androids and gynoids walkin’ about, lookin’ just like people,’ said Andrew. ‘God
only knows if they have souls, but they sure do have minds of their own, and anybody could just
own one like it was a brute beast!’
    Before we could respond our looks of surprise, perhaps even, in my case, of shock having been
interpreted by Andrew as sharing his dim view of this unenlightened past state of affairs there was
a distant chime.
    ‘That’ll be the big shots’ delegation now,’ said Andrew. He looked down at a panel on the table,
which hadn’t been grey and glowing last time I looked. ‘Landing in a couple of minutes. Best get
up to the patio.’
    As we rose to our feet Abigail said: ‘Just one thing ... it was courteous of you ladies to turn on
those pretty dresses for visiting us, but I think when you’re going to be on television and all, you’d
best look like you’d just stepped out of a spaceship, and not out of a cab on the way to a dance, if
you don’t mind my saying so.’
    Oh, well, I thought, there’d be other chances to show off. But I felt a slight pang as my layered
chiffon, Yeng’s brocade cheongsam, Andrea’s tiered lace and Suze’s silver velvet sheath melted
and flowed back into variants of high-gravity, on-duty gear.
    Andrew grinned as the transformation was completed. ‘There’s already a group on the nets that
says the whole thing’s a fake got up by the defence companies to drum up business. Don’t know if
you looking like spacers will make them any less suspicious.’ Abigail approved of my blue denims
and high boots. ‘But you want to put some darker colour in that jacket, and maybe a mission patch
or two . . .’ So when we all marched up the stairs, around the balcony and out on to the patio, we
each had a round blue patch with Earth’s starry plough and a picture of the Terrible Beauty over
our hearts.
    The wide patio was also sunken, about six feet below ground level, open, and brightly lit. Over
to the left, above the banking around it, was another flat illuminated space, on which a small
helicopter was parked. Above it a much larger helicopter hovered, silent apart from the whap of
the rotor-blades. It slowly descended close by the smaller one, beside which it looked like the adult
of a strange species standing over its infant. I think it was something clever in the ground plan, and
not any more advanced technology, that kept the downdraught blowing above our heads and not
into our faces.
    The helicopter’s side door folded away, and a set of steps folded out. In the moment before
anyone appeared, it occurred to me that I felt as if we, and not they, were waiting to meet the aliens.
    A man stepped down the ladder, with a slow dignity which was only partly due to the care which
he had to take with the high heels of his tall boots. His medium height and slim build were further
extended by a stovepipe hat and an open frock coat, both black, and a colourful waistcoat over a
white shirt with a black bootlace tie. A holstered pistol completed the look: the law west of Pecos,
to the life. He walked over to the rim of the patio, looked to left and right, found the steps and
made his way down.
    Close behind him followed another man and two women, with a whole crowd of other people
behind them. I just had time to recognize the second man it was David Reid, who’d supplied the
Outwarders with bonded labour, including some of ours. Our old enemy -
    And then the man in the tall hat was shaking my hand.
    ‘Hello,’ he said. ‘My name’s Eon Talgarth. I’m pleased to welcome you to Ship City, of which
- his smile twisted a little - ‘I’m the somewhat reluctant Chief Justice. And you must be Ellen May
Ngwethu, acting captain of this expedition?’
    ‘That’s right,’ I said. ‘Pleased to meet you, neighbour.’ His voice and accent reminded me,
oddly, of the London non-cos; he’d stabilized his age at about forty, but he was much older than
that, possibly older than I was an eerie thought, which impressed me more than his ridiculous
judicial fig.
    ‘Yeah, I reckon we’re all neighbours now,’ he said. He turned as if to introduce these new
neighbours, but any opportunity for formal introductions had been lost: everybody on one side was
indiscriminately shaking hands with everybody they could find on the other and introducing
themselves or introducing somebody else. Talgarth looked momentarily at a loss, even taken
aback, before he shrugged and relaxed. Reid, I noticed, was working the little crowd expertly
probably avoiding me, for the moment, and trying to make a friendly impression on my comrades.
Abigail and Andrew, on a sudden inspiration, began handing out drinks, and shortly we were all
behaving as if we’d just arrived at a slightly formal party.
    ‘Comrade?’ someone said in a friendly, but slightly diffident, voice. I turned, smiling at this
unexpected greeting.
    The girl in front of me had long fair hair that sprouted straight up from her scalp and then fell
back in a mane between her shoulder blades. She wore a belted jump suit which showed off her
muscular but definitely female frame. Almost as tall as me; big blue eyes, wide grin, thin, sharp
nose; striking rather than beautiful, but I was inured to beauty.
    ‘Ellen? Hi.’ She stuck out her hand and I shook it. ‘My name’s Tamara Hunter,’ she went on.
‘Very pleased to meet you.’
    ‘Likewise,’ I said politely. ‘What’s your -‘
    ‘-part in all this?’ She scratched her head. ‘I put up a bit of a fight to get on this delegation. Just
so the business folk and the judges didn’t have it all to themselves. I’m a union official, actually, in
the inter-syndical.’
    ‘You negotiate terms for the wage slaves?’
    ‘Exactly!’ she said, looking pleased. ‘A dirty job, but someone’s got to do it.’
    ‘We have these too,’ I said, wryly.
    Tamara looked around, as if concerned that she might be overheard.
    ‘Is it really true,’ she asked, leaning closer, ‘that in the Solar System you have anarcho-
communism?’ I thought over this unfamiliar word. ‘We don’t have to sell ourselves, and nobody
tells us what to do, so I suppose you could call it that.’
    ‘Wow!’ she said, her eyes shining. ‘Just knowing that is possible, that it can work, will make a
huge difference here.’
    ‘I don’t know about that,’ I said, mentally comparing what Abigail and Andrew considered
modest prosperity with the conditions that had brought about Earth’s social revolution. ‘It’s not
just a question of ideas in people’s heads -‘
   ‘Stop plotting there, Hunter!’ a man’s loud voice said. ‘Time enough for that later.’ The man
who spoke came up and firmly grasped my hand. He had black hair down to the collar of his
sharply cut cotton jacket; dark brown eyes, thick black eyebrows, smoothly tanned skin; and the
look of ease and unshakeable self-confidence which in our society marked out the ‘old comrades’,
and in this one, I guessed (correctly, as it turned out), the rich.
   But there was more than that. He was terrifyingly old, among the oldest people alive, and unlike
even his contemporary Wilde, he’d lived as the same body, the same man, for over three hundred
and fifty years. Again unlike Wilde, he had both the desire and the capacity for power, and had
grown strong and proficient in its use.
   ‘Hi, Ellen May,’ he said. ‘My name’s Dave Reid. I’m happy to meet you, at last. You know, I
heard about you back in the old days, from, well -‘ he laughed ‘the Outwarders, I have to say!’
   ‘Your former clients send their regards,’ I said, rather more coldly than I had intended, ‘and their
assurance of no hard feelings about your ... departure.’
   ‘Do they, indeed?’ He seemed surprised and pleased. ‘Well, as I say, later for that. This is a
great occasion.’ I sipped my drink. ‘So everyone keeps telling me.’ He grinned, unperturbed. ‘It is
a bit of a ml e, isn’t it? I don’t think anyone ever worked out the protocols for contact between
socialist and capitalist anarchies. Your comrades in the Carbon Conscience have been telling
reporters all about your society. Fascinating stuff.’
   ‘I’m sure it is,’ I said, wishing I’d briefed Boris and Jaime on what and what not to say.
   ‘Used to be a socialist myself, you know,’ Reid went on. ‘Gave it up as a bad job.’ He grinned
at Tamara. ‘Maybe I should have stuck with it.’
   Then he looked at me, and through me, his face momentarily bleak. With a shake of his head he
smiled again.
   “Battles long ago”,’ he said. ‘Speaking of which, Ellen, Dee has something to tell you -‘ A
woman was stepping delicately towards us on stiletto heels. She wore a short dress of black lace
over a longer one of white crepe, all wow and flutter. She had black hair, pale skin, green eyes,
broad cheekbones and a warm smile.
   ‘Hi, Ellen,’ she said. ‘I’m Dee. Pleased to meet you.’
   ‘Hello,’ I said, trying to keep the ice from my voice.
   ‘I’m Dave’s partner,’ she went on. ‘I used to be his, ah -‘ His mechanical squeeze. A clone with
a computer in its skull. Just a fucking machine.
   ‘I know,’ I said. ‘Wilde told us about you.’ The gynoid woman shook my hand; I felt, or
perhaps imagined, an electric tingle in her touch. She smiled up at me with disconcertingly wide,
bright eyes and parted lips.
   ‘So he made it back,’ she said quietly. ‘And Meg too?’ Meg Wilde’s companion, the artificial
woman. Another walking doll, another fucking machine.
   ‘Yes,’ I said. ‘They both made it.’
   ‘Ellen,’ Dee said. She caught my hands. ‘My mind works ...differently from yours. I have
access to all the old company records, and to the city’s nets. I have something to tell you. Many of
the people here, as you know, were revived from the fast folk’s robotized workforce. Your parents
were ... not among them.’
   ‘They were never among them?’ I asked. ‘It’s not just that they didn’t make it in the ship?’
   ‘We all made it in the ship,’ Reid said. ‘I made damn’ sure of that. I didn’t leave behind
anyone, human or ex-human, alive or dead, who’d been conscripted or volunteered to my
company.’ I looked down at him and unclenched my teeth and nails. ‘I’m relieved to hear that,’ I
said. ‘I truly am. I am happy to know that my two hundred years of nightmares about them being
enslaved in robot bodies were only bad dreams, even if it does mean I’ll never see even their copies
again.’ I stopped and took a deep breath through my nostrils. ‘I can live with that, Reid, but I can’t
forget who killed them.’
    Reid shook his head firmly. ‘It wasn’t me, or my company, who carried out those raids,’ he
said. ‘It was all the doing of the Outwarders. I just saved what could be saved, and gave people a
chance of a new life. For which I’ve received no complaints.’
    ‘Very well,’ I said. I grasped his shoulder and smiled at him, in a way that made a very
satisfying shadow of fear show briefly on his face. ‘Now I know who I’m looking for, and I’ll take
your word that it isn’t you.’
    Reid took a step backwards as I let go of his shoulder. His jacket was creased there, and damp.
I automatically wiped my hand on my thigh. The two women looked at me with expressions of
indistinguishable compassion. Eon Talgarth, the judge, perhaps drawn to the edge of our little
group by the intensity of our conversation, broke an uneasy silence.
    ‘If it’s justice you want, Ellen, if that’s among your reasons for coming all this way, you can
find it here.’ I shook my head. ‘I’m sorry,’ I said. I lowered my voice. ‘This is a great occasion, a
happy occasion, and I don’t want to spoil it.’ I indicated the more cheerful fraternization going on
around us, hoping that the comrades didn’t take it too far. ‘But you should know something about
us, about me. I don’t seek justice. We don’t believe in justice. We have the true knowledge.
There is no justice.
    But there is defence, and deterrence, and revenge. That’s what I want. And I will have them
all.’
    Reid, to my surprise, smiled and stepped forward again. Though shorter than I, he held my gaze
as though it was he who was looking down.
    ‘I know what you mean,’ he said. ‘I’ve been there. If you want to take your revenge on the fast
folk, be my guest!’ He waved his arm expansively. ‘I can fly you at a moment’s notice to the place
where we store their templates. You can revive them, tell them exactly what you’re going to do to
them and why, and make them die a thousand deaths before we flood the tanks with Blue Goo.
And then, if you want, you can do it again. And again. And -‘
    ‘Stop.’ I caught his arm. ‘Enough.’
    The vast futility of my deepest and darkest, though not my most secret, motives for coming here
made me feel cold and sick and dizzy. My hope against hope of meeting copies of my dead parents
had been one, and I was racked by its simultaneous disappointment and relief. My desire for
revenge on the entities who were incontestably the closest to the original Outwarders had just been
exposed by Reid as equally, achingly empty. There would be no point in tormenting, no
satisfaction in punishing, entities with which I didn’t even have enough empathy to take pleasure in
their pain, if pain it was. It would be as futile as stamping on a recalcitrant machine.
    There could only be one deterrence, one defence, one vengeance for me, and that was to send
them to the same oblivion as they’d sent my parents and so many others: an eternal death without
hope of resurrection. Nothing I said or did now could be allowed to imperil that.
    I smiled at Reid. ‘You’re right, of course,’ I said. ‘It’s just one of those fantasies, isn’t it?
When you spell it out, when you have the chance to act it out, you see how tawdry and childish it
really is.’
    ‘Well, it’s understandable,’ he said. ‘I know how you must feel.’ He clasped my forearm.
‘Come on. We’ll have reporters buzzing about in a few minutes, and you’ll have to talk to them.
When you’ve got that out of the way, you can all come and see the city.’
    ‘Yes,’ I said. ‘I’m looking forward to that.’ My knees were shaking. Reid noticed, and guided
me to a seat beside a patio table.
    He twitched his eyebrows at Talgarth and the two women, and they slipped back amongst
everybody else, standing and talking. Reid sat down beside me and uncapped a silver hip flask and
passed it to me.
    I sipped something fiery, and passed it back.
    ‘It’s not the same,’ Reid admitted regretfully. ‘I really hope you still know how to make single
malt.’ I had to smile. The man had, despite his reputation for ruthlessness, a disarming ability to
put one at one’s ease.
    ‘You’ll have to ask the people in Japan about that,’ I told him.
    ‘Oh, God,’ he said. He took another sip. ‘And you really do have a world without money?
What do you use instead computers?’
    ‘Yes,’ I said proudly. ‘We don’t do much planning, but for what we do, we use computers. The
biggest in the world.’ Reid’s head rocked back, his laugh bayed at the sky, and he didn’t see my
bleak moment of remembering just why our most important computers were built of brass and steel
and looked like the very locomotives of history, incorruptible analytical engines that nothing could
divert or deflect.
    The year is 2098. Below me a city drifts past, its old towers of concrete and glass overshadowed
by recent nano-built spires and surrounded by the shantytown sprawl that predates, and will outlast,
the buildings which have grown above it like fungi on a damp, dark soil. Beyond even the shanties,
the vivid green of the forest with its grey-brown scars of road; higher even than the towers, and
rising still, and multiplying, the columns of oily smoke.
    The smoke is rising from crashes. Here a tower is burning, upward from the twentieth floor
where a helicopter is spattered on the side of the building like an insect on a windshield; there
traffic is gridlocked by numberless collisions; elsewhere an airliner has fallen out of the sky, and
set ablaze acres of wooden shacks.
    I float in the station’s telemetry deck, and the unmanned cargo airship floats above Lagos, its
scanning cameras showing me scenes I can do nothing whatsoever about. This was a successful
city, until half a day ago. The West Africans, decimated again and again by the plagues of the
twentieth century, are almost immune to the last great plague of the twenty-first. They have
survived the Death, and have even accommodated the floods of European refugees which fill the
shantytowns and swirl about the towers. They still have oil, they still have computer networks.
Here civilization is still rising, not falling.
    Until now.
    The computers are crashing, and with them everything that depends on them: traffic control, air
traffic control, aircraft controls, industrial processes, stock control, telecommunications, and
electricity supply. With predictable prisoner’s-dilemma rationality, people are looting food from
the suddenly dark and warming refrigerators before it spoils, raiding the shops before they’re
stripped, arming themselves before they’re robbed, taking to the roads and heading for the villages
before anybody else gets the same idea, and each discovering that everyone else is doing the same.
    We’re in a bad way ourselves, running everything on manual or back-up or emergency. Our
computer programs have been reduced to gibberish, the viruses have shorted systems, wiped
memory cores, crippled machinery ... but our basic systems are robust, they’ve been jerry-built and
jury-rigged and worked around so often that nothing short of physical force can disable them. We
still have air and food.
    The people down below are in a worse circumstance. They’re paradoxically far more reliant on
a network of artificial organization than we are. Lagos’s biggest export is financial services,
pulling in even more than its dwindling oil. All that is gone now.
    The people I helplessly watch struggling in the streets are worse off even than they know.
There’s no help coming from anywhere, because everywhere is in the same plight. With an eerie,
awful certainty, I know that a very high percentage of those people are already dead, as dead as if
they were walking around as, elsewhere, in other cities, not a few at this moment are in the
elliptical downwind teardrop zones of fallout from burning reactors.
    The airship crumples into the side of a nano tower, and the picture dies.
    The door of the helicopter opened again and reporters swarmed out and began hovering and
buzzing about, just as Reid had said. I’d thought he’d spoken figuratively, but he hadn’t. The
‘reporters’ were tiny helicopters, carrying microphones and cameras and loudspeakers; some of
them had the ability to project a hologram of a human figure which lip-synched along with the
questions from the speaker.
    ‘They’ll look quite solid when you’ve tuned your contacts,’ Reid assured me.
    ‘I’m not sure I want them to,’ I said.
    I gathered the team again into a group and we all faced the cameras and mikes together. Boris
and Jaime, I guessed, must have satiated the requests for basic information about us: most of the
questions I was asked (and it was I who was asked, the local media having appointed me the
spokesman of the expedition) felt like the reporters here were just mopping up.
    ‘You seemed surprised at the sight of us, Miss Ngwethu,’ said a spectral youth a few feet away.
‘Don’t you have fetches and ‘motes back in the Solar System?’
    ‘Of course we do,’ I said. ‘But as I’m sure you’ve heard, we have problems with our electronic
communications, thanks to our local versions of the fast folk. In any case, even if we didn’t, I
doubt if we’d use them for ... what do you call it, news gathering? We do make limited use of
them, for exploring or monitoring dangerous environments and so on.’
    ‘So what do you use for news gathering? Do reporters have to go around in person?’
    ‘We don’t actually have reporters, as such,’ I said. ‘I mean, some people run newsletters and
pump newsfeed pipes, but nobody has to pay them much attention.’
    ‘So how -‘ The reporter paused, baffled. ‘How does anyone know what’s going on?’
    ‘Oh! That. Well, everybody in the Union can report anything to anybody, and attend or listen in
to any meeting of the social administration and say anything they like about it. Or at it, come to
that, unless they start wasting everybody’s time and get thrown out.’
    ‘So your Central Committee, this Solar Council, could have hundreds of thousands of people
turning up at its meetings, and all shouting at once?’
    ‘Of course not,’ I said indignantly. ‘I suppose in theory, yes, but who would want to? Apart
from the Solar Council delegates, that is, and some of them practically have to be pushed. It’s all
very practical, and frankly a bit dull. Local meetings are far more interesting because they have
more to do.’
    ‘Does that apply to your organization, the Cassini Division?’ asked the hologram.
    I thought about this. ‘No,’ I said.
    ‘Why not?’
    ‘Fighting is different. Sometimes we need to keep secrets, but not for long.’ The reporter
hesitated for a second, and another seized the opportunity. She had straight blonde hair and looked
about twelve years old. ‘Why have you come here?’ she asked.
    I gave her my best smile. ‘We’re very interested in finding out what has happened to the only
other human community, and in establishing friendly relations with you. And of course we have a
scientific interest in the wormhole the Malley Mile.’ She gave me her best ‘I wasn’t born
yesterday’ look; rather funny, considering her age and mine. ‘Apart from that.’
    ‘Isn’t that enough? Why else would we want to come here?’
    ‘To impose your system on us, perhaps?’ This idea had genuinely not occurred to me. Our
intention of wiping out the local fast folk, or destroying what Reid had called the templates, was
secret and sinister enough for me to worry about anyone’s guessing it. But not this. I just laughed.
    ‘You seem to be doing fine as you are,’ I said diplomatically. ‘And you can’t have socialism
unless most people understand it and want it and are willing to do something to get it. From what I
know of New Mars, this is not the case yet.’
    This raised an appreciative laugh all round, and Talgarth stepped forward with his hand raised.
‘Ladies and gentlemen,’ he said to the phantom figures and their rotary haloes, ‘I’m sure our
visitors will have a great deal to tell you all very soon. Meanwhile, I’d like to give them some
hospitality and privacy.’ We’d been having plenty of both until Talgarth and the other leading
citizens and their accompanying swarm of inquisitive remotes turned up, but I was not
complaining. We said goodbye to Abigail and Andrew, and were escorted to the big helicopter. I
found myself in a window seat beside Tamara. As the machine lifted off I waved to Powell and his
wife, who waved back. The last thing I saw of them before we turned out of sight was Andrew
Powell setting off across his field with a swarm of remotes beside him, heading for the ship. I
knew he would have the sense not to go too close to it, but I rather suspected that this was not true
of the remotes.
    I leaned back with a smile, already enjoying the flight.
    Tamara and I got chatting about life on New Mars and on Earth, laughing at each other’s
misconceptions, and about our pasts. I was gratified and embarrassed by Tamara’s awe about
mine, and encouraged her to talk about her own.
    She said she’d been an Abolitionist.
    ‘What’s that?’ Abigail and Dee had mentioned the Abolition, but I hadn’t yet followed up what
this meant.
    ‘We used to be a small group of anarchists some social, some more into the lifestyle thing who
believed that using conscious machines as tools was wrong, you know, like slavery. But five years
ago, all that changed.’
    ‘You don’t believe it any more?’
    Tamara looked at me, visibly decided I was joking, and laughed more at the oddity of my
supposed humour than at its content. ‘No, we changed people’s minds! It all came out of a
complicated string of court cases involving Wilde, the copy of Wilde in the machine, Dave Reid’s
ownership of Dee, and of course the fast folk. After that a lot of owned sapients took to claiming
self-ownership, and some people sided with them, and the new people from the dead couldn’t see
how anybody could treat robots like that they didn’t have the prejudices that the first humans here
had.’
    ‘Yes,’ I said, ‘Wilde told us about that. He said things were getting pretty hot just as he left.’
    ‘They sure were! Closest we’ve ever come to a revolution, everybody outside in the streets
arguing.’
    ‘What happened about the fast folk?’ I asked lightly.
    Tamara’s expression darkened. ‘Well, after Reid and Wilde used them to start the resurrection
it’s still going on, we’re bringing back dead people from the smart-matter storage all the time,
about a million over the past five years, which is why the city’s grown so much and all the new
settlements are springing up they wiped out the copies of the fast folk they’d revived, and Reid’s
still sitting on the stored originals. Still scared of another bad Singularity.’ She paused
thoughtfully. ‘But now that your Jovians have started acting reasonable and aren’t going mad or
anything, maybe that’ll change too.’
    ‘I’m sure it will,’ I said, ‘Reid won’t be worrying about a bad Singularity for much longer, not if
I have anything to do with it.’ Tamara’s pleased look in response to this true but ambiguous
statement shamed me a little. I turned to the window and looked down at the city below and before
us, three of its five arms foreshortened, their long streets with their radial canals joined by the ring
canal, a glowing starfish in the night.
                                 9       A Modern Utopia
    Airports are quiet places, where people make their leisurely way along covered walkways to the
waiting craft. Around the sides of the concourse are tables with drinks and snacks, open-sided
rooms with stores of the kind of supplies you might need and are likely to forget, racks and shelves
where you can browse and, if you like, take away a book or journal or disk. There’s a knack, a
politesse, of picking just enough entertainment for you to have finished at the end of your journey,
or at the end of one of its stages, so that you can casually place it on another airport’s shelves. At
some airports there’ll be a group of musicians or a troupe of acrobats or whatever. You can stay
within sight and sound of them, or move away. The only barriers you’ll encounter are to keep you
from wandering into danger. Sometimes you’ll help other people with their luggage, sometimes
you’ll ask for a hand. If you have a long wait for your flight, you might feel like joining in some of
the support activities, making sure that more hurried passengers get their refreshments or books or
help with heavy luggage or small children. That’s what airports are like.
    Not in capitalism, they’re not. When I emerged at the end of a long corridor from the busy
landing field into the main concourse of Ship City’s aerospace port, with my comrades beside me
and the leading citizens behind them, I was greeted by hundreds of enthusiastic people behind a
barrier, a swooping flock of reporters, a dazzle of clashing colours and a blare of sound. Every
square yard that wasn’t absolutely required for passengers or people waiting for them was occupied
by a stall or shop or kiosk, each of which had its own fluorescent rectangle above it advertising
flights or drugs or socks or cosmetics or lingerie or insurance or back-ups or cabs or hotels. The
public-address system thumped out urgent-sounding music made all the more unsettling by
frequent, and equally urgent sounding, interruptions.
    Meanwhile, other activity, apparently unrelated to our arrival, was going on. The wide passage
between us and the welcoming crowd was being traversed from right to left by a succession of
small automatic vehicles slowly hauling laden trailers, and of briskly striding men and women and
this was my first such encounter what looked like ape-men of various species. Among them robots,
few of which were remotely humanoid, stalked or skittered. Outside the terminal building, at the
far end of the landing field, the distant sounds and flares of heavy lifting shook the air and lit the
night. None of the humans or hominids or robots hurrying past in front of us spared us more than a
curious, if friendly, glance.
    I hesitated, unsure about how to get across this stream of light but persistent and swift traffic.
Talgarth walked past me and strode out into the midst of it and, facing the oncoming flow, held up
his hand. This imperious gesture enabled us to get across to just in front of the barriers. Yells and
smiles greeted us, hands reached out to touch us; recorders and babies were held above heads.
Talgarth led us past them all, along the barriers and around a corner into a quieter area, from which
even the tiny news-copters were turned back. There were padded benches along the walls. Jaime
and Boris were sitting there, looking somewhat drained, but talking earnestly to two young women
in identical sky-blue jackets and matching skirts. When they saw us approaching they said their
goodbyes to the women (who immediately stood up and assumed strange fixed smiles) and rejoined
us.
    Andrea hugged Jaime and I hugged Boris and everybody milled about for a few minutes, until
Talgarth herded us all together again like a supervisor on a children’s outing and led us between a
pair of big glass sliding doors to the edge of a flat expanse of tarmac, where a lot of vehicles were
parked, one of which awaited us.
    It was about twenty-five feet long and eight feet high, with large windows at the side and a low-
slung chassis. A man in a grey uniform, wearing a grey peaked cap, stood outside its open door
and gave us another example of that oddly impersonal smile. Talgarth stepped aside and motioned
to us to enter the vehicle. Inside there were rows of seats covered with something like leather, a
fitted carpet on the floor, and a smell of fresh plastic in the air. I made my way to the rear seat and
sat down beside Boris. Talgarth sat in the seat in front of us, and the rest of the crew filled up the
adjacent seats. Reid, Dee and Tamara all got on too. The others who’d been with them stayed
behind, waving at us from the kerb, looking simultaneously self-important and left out.
    As the driver closed the door and got behind the steering wheel I said to Talgarth, ‘It’s
neighbourly of you to lay this on for us.’
    ‘The mini-coach?’ He smiled. ‘They’re standard airport-to-city transport.’
    ‘Well, thanks anyway,’ I said. ‘Where are we going?’
    ‘Reid’s booked a hotel floor for you, in the same building as his offices,’ Talgarth explained.
‘We’ll go to his offices first, if that’s agreeable, because we’d like a chat with you all privately
before we arrange any other social functions.’
    ‘Fine,’ I said. ‘We have a lot to discuss.’
    The airport was between the proximal ends of two of the city’s arms. Behind it lay miles of
open flat ground, some of it apparently water-covered: as I glanced back through the big curved
and rounded rear window, pools flashed back reflections of the jet of a rising rocket. As it faded,
another flared. There was a lot of heavy lifting going on. Ahead, along a couple of miles of wide,
open road, rose the centre of the city. The buildings in the two converging arms on either side of us
became higher the closer they were to the centre, which was dominated by a cluster of tall, slender
towers. They were not as tall as the towers of Earth, or the trees of the Lunar crater-domes, but
they were more graceful than either, lifting the gaze and catching the breath. Their lower reaches
were linked by spiral or otherwise curving ramps, giving the whole complex an appearance like the
fine metalwork of a decorative headdress. Among them were other buildings, rounded, polyhedral;
and tall glass rectangles like those I’d only a fortnight ago watched Terrible Beauty land beside.
    All the buildings blazed with lights, from windows and floodlamps and displays. We stared
ahead, entranced.
    ‘It’s beautiful,’ Suze said. Reid, sitting in front of her, turned around and said over his shoulder:
‘It is, and it’s also a little joke on us. The more delicate towers and the elegant geodesic domes
were designed by the fast folk, based on old illustrations of futuristic cities just to say to us, “look,
we can do this better.”’
    ‘They did, too,’ said Malley. His chuckle resounded above the electric hum of the bus. ‘I
remember those old skiffy covers myself. Bloody spiral ramps nobody ever got them looking right,
but whoever built this did.’
    The driver, I noticed, wasn’t doing very much, and most of the other vehicles on the road
seemed to be driverless. The driver was a formality, a gesture towards the notion of some people
serving others, being at their beck and call; another of those capitalist things, like the air
stewardesses that Boris had been talking to, and was now telling me about ... I listened sceptically:
he seemed unduly impressed by their wage-slavish solicitude.
    ‘But are they any more friendly and helpful than neighbours helping out with refreshments on a
transport?’ I asked, my mind going back to how I and Suze had met.
    Boris shrugged. ‘Maybe not,’ he said grudgingly. ‘But they do it ill the time, and they do it to
get what they need to live on, and that makes it all more ... intense.’
    ‘Ha!’ I caught his arm and snuggled up beside him. ‘That’s kinky, that is,’ I murmured in his
ear. ‘You’re just an old Sheenisov state capitalist at heart. Bet you’ve been secretly into employer-
and employee sex-games for years.’
    ‘I have not,’ he growled indignantly, then turned and touched the side of my nose with the tip of
his and grinned. ‘Couldn’t never get my one to play, anyway, but if that’s what you want -‘
    ‘Go employ yourself,’ I told him, very quietly. No one even in the adjacent seats could have
overheard my crudity. But Dee must have had -perhaps not surprisingly- superhuman hearing,
because she turned around and looked back at us from the front of the bus with a friendly and
wicked smile, as though she knew exactly what we were talking about. I felt my cheeks burn a
little, and I looked sway.
    The mini-coach was now gliding along a street, between tall buildings. At the bases of the tall
buildings the pavements were quite wide, and quite crowded, even at this late hour in the evening.
the traffic was denser here, and slower-moving, and as we passed, people (and the startling,
ubiquitous quasi-people, the enhanced apes and re-engineered hominids and the autonomous
machines) on the street would turn and stare for a moment, and look around them and smile.
    ‘How do they know we’re in this bus?’ I asked.
    Dave Reid, up at the front, snorted. He gestured at a flat grey screen behind the driver’s seat.
‘It’s because we’re ah, sorry -‘ It seemed that all he did was to snap his fingers, irritably, and the
screen suddenly showed a picture of our coach, from above and behind. I looked back through the
rear window, and spotted the pursuing remotes. The others on the bus laughed. ‘Don’t encourage
them,’ Talgarth said, as I faced the screen again and saw the back of my head in a zoomed-in shot
which then zoomed disappointedly out.
    The news-copters were still hovering above us when we stopped at the foot of a tower like a
great concrete treetrunk, with tall windows distributed apparently at random, close to the centre of
the city. Talgarth and Reid preceded us out of the coach, gesturing at the remotes as if waving
away flies. As I got off I thanked the driver and said goodbye to him, making eye contact for the
first time. He smiled with a slightly startled look, and smiled a bit more when Dee paused on her
way out and slipped him a tip.
    Inside, the building was furnished in fake leather and real wood and the inevitable potted plants
and indoor ivy, with some of the walls left as bare concrete. The vast, deep-carpeted reception area
had the polite hush of posh. The lift, which had a grey-uniformed attendant to push the buttons,
was big enough to take us all, comfortably. It was also fast, its acceleration almost enough to make
my knees buckle.
    Reid escorted us to a room along the corridor from the lift. It was a large anteroom to a small
office, whose heavy wooden desk and deep-set window were visible through its open doorway. An
oblong arrangement of deep fake-leather armchairs and sofas, around a long, low wooden table
with glass ashtrays; subdued ambient light; black-cylindered spotlights picking out wall pictures,
plants, and the drinks cabinet.
    ‘Sit yourselves down,’ Reid said. He took off his jacket and slung it over the back of a seat at
the top of the table, marking his own territory, then busied himself at the drinks cabinet. Talgarth
hung up his hat and coat, pushed back his shirtsleeves and sat down unbuttoning his waistcoat. Dee
and Tamara waited for us to take our seats, and then sat down together.
    The chair I found myself in, with Boris on my right and Malley on my left, faced one of the
large, well-lit framed photographs on the wall. Most of them showed Reid posing with new
weapons systems or talking to what I guessed were capitalists and their hired men. The one
opposite me showed Reid and Dee standing together on a wide step outside a vast arched doorway
with a crowd of people around them.
    The man standing beside Reid looked just like Jonathan Wilde, and the woman standing beside
Dee looked just like Dee: same height, same build, same face. I realized with a start that I was
looking at Dee’s original, and Wilde’s copy, the one who had stayed here. The two men wore
black coats and trousers and colourful ties, and the woman standing beside Dee was wearing a long,
narrow green dress of understated elegance.
    Dee was wearing a smug smile and a very fancy white satin dress with fitted bodice, gigot
sleeves and a full floor-length skirt, all decorated with beadwork, cutwork, panelling, stitching, lace
trimming and organza fluting: not one expensive cheap trick of exuberant, eye-filling excess had
been missed. On her head she wore a silver tiara from which a waterfall of embroidered tulle
cascaded down her back and across the wide, ruffled pool of the skirt’s train. The whole saccharine
confection seemed to be the costume for some carnival where considerations of visual impact
overrode those of taste; I nudged the suit to record it, for the next time I wanted to make a big
entrance at one of our wilder parties.
    Reid placed some trays of glasses on the table, then bottles of spirits, beer, tonic water, plain
water, and cola. ‘Help yourselves,’ he said, and while we were doing so he sat down in the seat at
the top of the table with a bottle of beer in front of him. When we were all sorted for drinks he
leaned back in his chair and ran his fingers through his long, thick black hair several times, in a
rather distracted way, then lit a cigarette. He let out a long, smoky sigh.
    ‘Well,’ he said. ‘Nothing like a bit of peace and quiet. This room is about as secure as you can
get, and it’s also inside a Faraday cage. Chicken wire in the concrete, I understand; quite
effective.’ He glanced at what looked like a wristwatch, and then at me. ‘So, Ellen, I’m afraid your
encrypted television signal won’t get beyond the walls.’ He grinned. ‘Just letting you know; it’s
not a problem. Feel free to record anything and report back to your committee or whatever I’ll give
you comms facilities and complete privacy, afterwards, if you want.’
    I nodded. ‘Fine.’
    ‘Good,’ Reid said. He looked around at us all. ‘So let’s get down to business. If you want to do
deals with people here, it would pay you to deal with us first. Talgarth owns a court, which at the
moment is accepted by the other courts as ... a final court, particularly for human-machine
interface problems. Dee and I run the biggest protection agency, which funnily enough is the one
which has taken your contract. Tamara has the ear of a significant part of the city’s population, not
to mention a capacity to call a general strike at a moment’s notice.’
    Tamara smiled and spread her hands. ‘Not really.’
    ‘You’re too modest,’ said Reid. ‘We’re not in charge here, we certainly don’t see eye to eye,
and I’m much less of a city boss than I was before all the formerly dead people started arriving.’ He
smiled wryly. ‘But any of us could make or break your chances of getting on well with the people
and machines of this city I’m not saying that as a threat, just a fact. I presume you have some
similar status back where you come from, and aren’t’ his eyes crinkled ‘just a bunch of rank-and-
file cosmonauts.’
    ‘We are, in a way,’ I said. ‘We have no special status, but we do have a mandate to negotiate
and take whatever action we think is necessary.’
    ‘On behalf of thirty billion people?’ asked Reid, looking at me through narrowed eyelids and a
haze of smoke. Somewhere an extraction fan started up.
   I shrugged. ‘More or less, in that we’ll have to answer to them, and they voted for the broad
outlines of what we’re here to do.’
   ‘And what’s that?’ Reid asked, with deliberate casualness.
   I took a sip of whisky and water. The taste for it could be acquired, I decided. Malley was
fiddling with his pipe, Suze examining her fingernails.
   ‘We’re here,’ I said carefully, ‘to make certain that the fast folk on your side of the wormhole
are no threat to us, just as we can ensure that those at our end are no threat to you.’
   Reid and Talgarth leaned forward at the same time, with the same alert, cautious expression.
   ‘What do you mean by that?’ asked Talgarth.
   ‘Wilde -‘ I shook my head. ‘The other one, the one you call Jay-Dub. He told us that the whole
question of “robot rights” was bound up with that of reviving the fast folk, and that when he left,
the robot rights side of the argument seemed to be winning. Naturally, we were concerned. I have
to say I was relieved to hear from Tamara that you are still resisting any suggestion of reviving
them. Can you guarantee that the question will remain closed?’
   ‘What guarantees would you accept?’ Reid asked.
   Nothing short of their destruction, I thought. ‘What can you offer?’ I asked. Reid knew well
that I hadn’t answered his question, but he didn’t press me on it. He leaned forward, elbow on
knee, fingers with cigarette at his lips. ‘How about my our continuing conviction that it would be
unsafe to tamper with them again?’
   ‘You’ve tampered with them once,’ I said. ‘And the results, as far as you’re concerned, have
been entirely beneficial you’ve been reunited with people you’d lost, you’ve gained a population
that seems to have materially increased your city’s prosperity, you got ... Jay-Dub through the
wormhole, and so on. Now, I don’t remember much about capitalism, but some of us do, and I
think it’s safe to say that at some point the temptation to let the genie out of the bottle again, get a
few more useful answers to intractable problems, and thus give your company some competitive
edge, could be hard to resist.’
   Reid leaned back and looked straight at me. ‘That’s an entirely valid point,’ he surprised me by
saying, then didn’t surprise me at all by going on, ‘however ... I think you can rely on my not
doing it until it’s safe.’ He looked over at Talgarth. ‘What was it I offered to let anyone do it who
could provide an isolated space platform ringed with fire-walled lasers and dead-fall nuclear back-
ups?’ Talgarth smiled and nodded.
   ‘Hey -‘ said Boris, with that look shown in cartoons by a light bulb going on and blocky capitals
spelling IDEA.
   ‘Nevertheless,’ I interrupted firmly, ‘you then did it, with, what? Blue Goo instead of heavy
weaponry, and you got away with it. What’s to stop you doing that again?’
   ‘The rights of the fast folk,’ Reid said, quite seriously.
   ‘What “rights”?’ I asked. If we’d been discussing a bacterial culture, I couldn’t have been more
surprised.
   ‘Oh, you know.’ Reid waved his hands about. ‘The usual. Life, liberty, and the happiness of
pursuit.’ I sat back and laughed. ‘But seriously,’ I said. ‘What’s to stop you?’ Reid crushed out his
cigarette and glared at me.
   ‘I am serious. It would be wrong to do again what we did five years ago. It was wrong at the
time, but’ he grimaced -‘we didn’t know any better. It would be all right to revive the fast folk and
be ready to defend ourselves against them that’s the lasers-and-nukes scenario but not to revive
them and then wipe them out as soon as we’d got from them what we wanted. So you needn’t
worry about us doing that.’ Talgarth nodded agreement. I frowned, trying to figure this out. Dee
and Tamara were watching me even more narrowly than the men were.
   ‘You offered to do it for me,’ I said. ‘For my revenge.’ Reid gave me a cold smile. ‘An offer I
knew you would refuse. You’re an intelligent woman.’ I wondered how he’d have reacted if I’d
accepted, but thought it best to drop that uncomfortable question and return to the main point.
   ‘You’re telling us we can’t trust you not to revive them, but we can trust you not to wipe them
out if you do?’
   ‘That’s about it,’ Reid agreed cheerfully. ‘But, as I say, we wouldn’t revive them without
adequate defence, and there’s not much chance of that in the foreseeable future.’
   I could foresee quite a few futures in which Reid’s idea of ‘adequate defence’ might differ from
mine, and where in any case he’d have a strong motivation to deceive himself about how much
defence he’d need. But I let that pass, for now, and tried to work around it.
   ‘According to Wilde,’ I said slowly, ‘you used to think very differently. You used to think that
the fast folk, in fact all AIs and uploads, were flatlines not really conscious. And now, you’re
saying our whole safety depends on your continuing to believe the opposite. What changed your
mind?’
   Reid gave us all a big, stupid, happy smile. ‘Dee,’ he said.
   I shook my head and glanced around at the comrades, then at Dee, who was fixing a steady gaze
on me. I had the uncomfortable feeling that she knew what I was thinking.
   ‘I don’t quite understand,’ I said, lying diplomatically.
   ‘That’s quite understandable,’ said Reid dryly. ‘It’s a matter of experience. I found that I
couldn’t go on thinking of Dee as I used to before she became autonomous.’ He smiled at Dee.
‘Before she walked out on me. Looking back, I have to say that my, uh, relationship with her
before then was a bit sad and sick, but you have to allow for local custom. Gynoid or android
mates were a success-symbol for rich people. Very capitalist.’ He smiled, with a flicker of
embarrassment. ‘Anyway, after all the trials and challenges she put me through, after the
resurrection, after I got to know her again ... I found it impossible to regard her as anything less
than a person. Not a cunning imitation, not a flatline, but a real woman, whom I loved and who
loved me. And because I had frequently, notoriously, and publicly denied that she or any other
artificial people were real people, I had no choice but to acknowledge the error of my ways in a
very public and decisive manner.’
   He glanced up at the big photograph opposite me, and then smiled at Dee again. ‘I married her.’
   So that was the occasion! Marriage meant a public declaration of a sort of mutual possession: an
odd, ancient custom, rare in the Union but apparently widespread here. And Reid had made that
commitment, to this machine in a pretty body and a pretty dress, after owning her and using her for
years. I hoped my face showed no trace of my revulsion.
   ‘Ellen,’ said Dee, ‘it really doesn’t matter what you think about us about me.’ She stood up and
walked around the table and sat herself down on the edge of it, just in front of me. I couldn’t avoid
her green-eyed gaze. ‘I know you think I’m a machine. “Just a fucking machine”, yes? But I
know I’m human, and if you were to know me for any length of time, you’d find you couldn’t treat
me in any other way. You can’t own me, you can’t use me, you can’t switch me on and off. You
can try! And if you had the power to force me, you could get some use out of me. But you
wouldn’t get much, and you wouldn’t get me. If you want to get all that can be got out of this
machine, with all its capacities, you have to let me decide to use those capacities. If I’m a machine,
Ellen, I’m one that doesn’t - can’t- function properly unless it’s free.’
   She reached forward and touched my face. I didn’t flinch. ‘And so are you. So let’s just try to
be nice to each other, shall we?’
   She stood again and walked back to her chair and sat down beside Tamara. I looked sideways at
Suze, who was looking at Dee; at Yeng, who was looking at the floor.
   ‘I reckon,’ said Malley, ‘that somebody just passed the Turing test.’
   There was a moment of laughter, tension released. Reid reached over and caught Dee’s hand.
‘She passed it long ago,’ he said.
   Dee smiled at him, and then at me. The warmth of her smile chilled me as much as the passion
and cogency of her reasoning had, and the gentle touch of her soft fingertips. It was like one of
those uncanny moments when you’re looking at what you think is a twig or a leaf, and suddenly it
spreads wings and flies away.
   ‘All right,’ I said to Reid. ‘I accept that your views about machine consciousness aren’t likely to
change.’
   Yeng was still examining the floor. Suddenly her head jerked up. ‘So what?’ she said fiercely.
‘You can all believe that if you like. The denial of machine sentience is not part of the true
knowledge, it’s just an opinion the finders had, a -‘Her hand mimed her search for a word just out
of reach.
   ‘Obiter dictum,’ suggested Talgarth gravely.
   I doubted that Yeng had heard the phrase before, but she nodded briskly. ‘Yes! Something like
that. All the things Dee said, they’re part of the true knowledge. It’s just the same with people. If
we want to make the most of our lives we have to get the most out of each other, and that means
not treating people as less than what they are.’ She paused and frowned, as though puzzling
something out. I felt for her: the cognitive dissonance of being taken in by Dee’s startling mimicry
must have been painful. ‘Unless we get more by doing that, of course, which doesn’t happen very
often. If we meet machines that the same applies to, we can live with it.’ She laughed, without
humour. ‘We might have to! None of this changes the other problem, of how we deal with
machines far more powerful than us, which or who, for all I care could be more than people. We
can’t live with beings to whom we are like ants.’
   “’And we were in their sight as grasshoppers”,’ Reid said, apparently quoting some obscure text.
‘Why do you think we can’t coexist?’
   ‘Because they’d have power over us,’ Yeng said, explaining the obvious.
   ‘Having more power than us,’ Reid said with equally heavy patience, ‘doesn’t mean the same as
having power over us.’
   ‘All right,’ said Yeng, ‘but they’d have it, and they could always use it, just like you did to the
fast folk you revived.’
   ‘Ah,’ said Reid. “’They”. That’s interesting. I understand you’re negotiating with these
Jovians. How are you doing it?’ I glanced around the team. No one flashed any warning looks, so
I explained how the contact had been made and how the communications were being carried on.
   ‘So,’ said Reid when I’d finished, ‘how many of them are there?’ I shrugged. ‘Millions,
possibly. Thousands at least.’
   ‘And they’re some kind of hive mind, right? Some gigantic collective entity?’
   ‘No,’ I told him, not sure what he was getting at. ‘They say they’re individuals, and all the
evidence we have indicates that’s what they are.’
   ‘Some kind of totalitarianism, then? Each subordinate to a single will, as Lenin put it? Or some
angelic anarchy where they all agree on the obvious common good?’
   ‘Of course not,’ I said impatiently. ‘We’ve noticed signs of disagreement among them, and they
take time out for discussion and then come back to us.’ Reid shared a grin with Talgarth. He
smacked his palm with his fist. ‘Hah!’ he exulted. ‘Knew it!’
   ‘Knew what?’ I asked.
   ‘That you people would be negotiating with the Jovians as if they were a hive entity. And as if
you were, come to that!’ He chuckled darkly. ‘And you’ve made the same mistake with us,’ he
added. ‘When I said we weren’t in charge here, I meant it. While we’ve been talking, quite a few
enterprising people have been acting. People who have been thinking ahead, designing ahead,
planning ahead, during the five years it’s taken for a confirmation to come back through the Gate
that it was safe to go through. And now it has now you’re here they’ve been scrambling to get
ships in orbit, ready to go through themselves. Bit of a jostle to be first, but I’m sure the protection
agencies are keeping order in the queue of ships that must be building up right now outside the
wormhole.’
   He took a swig of his beer and lit a cigarette, blatantly enjoying our startled looks and Tamara’s
smouldering outrage this was apparently news to her, too.
   ‘To do what?’ I asked, shouting above the rest.
   Reid leaned back and clasped his hands and made cracking noises with his knuckles. ‘To trade,’
he said. ‘What else?’
   I laughed. ‘They won’t get much profit out of trading with us,’ I said. ‘And anyway, they don’t
know the way through.’
   ‘Indeed they don’t,’ Reid said. ‘But I do. I got it from the fast folk, remember, just as I got the
path for going the other way. And I’m going to sell it.’ He affected a glance at a wristwatch. ‘Any
time now, the bids should be coming through.’
   Tony leaned forward. ‘Very clever,’ he said. ‘But quite frankly, they’ll be wasting their money.
The businesses you’re about to sell this secret to aren’t going to be too happy when they find we
don’t need anything you’ve got to offer, and nothing on our side is for sale at any price. Either
because we’ll share it for free, or we won’t give it to you for anything. Like Ellen said not much
profit in that.’ He took this as his turn to sit back and look smug.
   ‘I wouldn’t be too sure of that,’ Reid said. He waved his hand airily. ‘Not that it matters. Most
of the companies I’m talking about aren’t that interested in trading with people in the Solar Union,
anyway.’
   ‘So who ?’ I stopped, unwilling to accept the obvious answer. ‘Oh no. You’re not.’
   ‘We are,’ Reid said calmly. ‘We’re going to trade with the Jovians.’ For a moment we were all
stunned into silence. It was Yeng who spoke first, her normally high voice raw with anger and
concern.
   ‘This is insane,’ she said. ‘Just look at yourselves! I’ve seen how comms work here you have
radio for everything, electronic computers everywhere, including your bodies, and lots of you have
cortical downlinks! Direct electronic interfaces with your brains, right? You’re just ridiculously
vulnerable - absolutely naked to viral assault and takeover. You’re a culture medium for the
things! The Jovians could eat your minds alive, and you’d never know.’
   ‘We’ve considered that,’ Reid said calmly. ‘We’re confident that our countermeasures will hold
them off, should the Jovians behave as treacherously as you people seem to expect.’
   ‘Countermeasures!’ Yeng’s voice spat contempt. ‘We’ve had two centuries of front-line
struggle against their virus plagues to develop countermeasures, and we still wouldn’t contemplate
what you suggest.’
    Reid shrugged and smiled. ‘We’re pretty sure we’ve done better, because -‘ He stopped. ‘We
have better computers,’ he finished, rather lamely I thought; but he might have had more to say,
and not said it.
    ‘I don’t -‘ I began, then Boris raised his hand and shot me a quick glance.
    ‘All irrelevant,’ Boris said. ‘Because if your ships go through the Malley Mile, you can rest
assured the Cassini Division our defence agency, our ships will destroy them. The Division will
assume anything coming through is hostile, unless they hear different from us.’
    ‘Then,’ said Reid, ‘I most strongly suggest you do just that. Contact your Central Committee or
whatever and tell them to let us through. Because if you don’t, and your ships attack ours, the
Mutual Protection fighters covering the traders will take whatever action is needed to defend them.’
Boris and Andrea guffawed at the same moment. The rest of the team looked at least amused.
Even Malley had a faint, skeptical smile at Reid’s apparent bluster. Malley had seen our ships, and
Reid had not.
    ‘They can try,’ Boris said. He laughed again. ‘They can try!’ Reid stood, and wandered over to
the wall and leaned on his hand against it, beside a picture of himself alongside a sleek machine,
something like a World War Three jet fighter aircraft. He drew on his cigarette and gave us a cool,
appraising look. I knew what was coming next, so I spoke first.
    ‘I presume you’ve already checked over the Carbon Conscience,’ I said. ‘Scanned it, maybe
tried sending a little fly-camera in. Do tell us what you’ve found.’
    ‘Indeed we have,’ Reid said, with a slight involuntary backwards sway that cheered me a little.
Boris bristled; my quick black look made him back down. ‘We got a lot closer to it than we did to
the Terrible Beauty.’ This time it was his turn for a brief inward gloat, as I betrayed my surprise.
‘Oh, yes, Mr. Powell had our remotes on the job as soon as you’d left,’ Reid went on. ‘Very
helpful and friendly bloke, absolute soul of kindness, as I’m sure you’ll agree. Now, about the
Carbon Conscience.’ He gazed over our heads, his eyes flicking back and forth in the way of
someone looking at a virtual image. ‘It’s a good fighter, I’ll give you that. But so was the MiG-29,
and we all know how that performed against the Polish EFAs.’ He paused, frowning. ‘Maybe we
don’t all know. Not very well, is how. And let me tell you, if your fighter-bombers come up
against these’ he jerked his thumb at the spaceplane in the photo ‘they’ll never know what hit
them.’
    ‘So you didn’t get inside it?’ I asked, in as casual a tone as I could manage.
    Reid shrugged. ‘Didn’t need to,’ he said, equally lightly. ‘Outside inspection was enough.’
Boris almost made another forward lurch; at my sharp gesture, he sat back again, glowering. I
hoped Reid had seen that I was only just able to restrain myself from punching the air and shouting,
‘YES! Just you try it, you banker!’ Because if they hadn’t been able to penetrate the fighter
bomber’s passive defences, they would certainly not be able to defeat it in combat. It was an ugly,
insectile thing, that fighter; it looked more like an ornithopter than a spacecraft, let alone a
spaceplane; but it was built for the most difficult combat imaginable, close-quarter fast
manoeuvering in space, and it had evolved out of two centuries of zapping anything bigger than a
molecule that dared to lift from Jupiter, and from even longer experience of split-second work
within disintegrating comet nuclei.
    The only problem I could foresee with pitting our fighters against Reid’s was one he almost
certainly wouldn’t have thought of: so few of our pilots had ever killed a human, and those few so
long ago, that they might fatally hesitate at the death. It wasn’t a weakness that those on his side
were likely to share.
    ‘Our fighters are fully automated,’ Reid said, ‘no humans in the loop at all. That puts your side
at a further disadvantage, don’t you think?’ Oh no it doesn’t, I thought with a surge of joy. We’d
cream them without a fleck of carbon on our consciences.
    ‘I see you disagree,’ he went on. ‘Perhaps you should see how they’re made.’ He made a
slapping motion with his hand. The lights dimmed further, and above the table a hologram flashed
into view. Six feet high, it showed a dark, pitted nodule, slowly tumbling end over end. On its
surface, smudges of light seethed; and small bright things, like iron-filings, drifted off.
    ‘Carbonaceous chondrite, with nanofactories,’ Reid said. ‘Now let’s look a little closer.’ The
hologram shrank to a patch of the body’s surface, which then expanded. The seething smudges
became vast constructions of pipework and drillheads and vats: the small bright things, tens and
hundreds of spaceplanes like the one in the picture.
    ‘This is speeded up, of course,’ Reid allowed. ‘Each fighter takes a day to be put together by the
assemblers. But as you can see’ the view zoomed back again ‘we have a lot of assemblers.’ The
hologram vanished and the lights came back up. While we were still blinking, Reid strode over and
sat down again.
    ‘Even if you think your fighters can beat ours one-to-one which I don’t you have the attrition to
consider. It won’t be one-to-one. More like hundreds to one, and they’ll keep on coming.’ The
room fell silent. We could still beat them, I thought. We had more than the fighter-bombers to
count on. We had the far more powerful lasers on Callisto; the nuclear-armed orbital forts; the
entrenchments on the other moons. We had the Inner System defence-forces. If it came to the last
ditch, we had the population of Earth itself.
    But the New Martians would have more than fighter-bombers, too, and they might have gods on
their side and not just the Jovians, even if they did find allies there. They had their own fast folk, in
their smart-matter storage tanks up in the mountains; assuming they weren’t already up and
running, a deception of which I reckoned Reid was wholly capable.
    The attrition would indeed be terrible, on both sides; and we still had the Jovians to deal with.
We couldn’t afford the diversion.
    I smiled and rose to my feet. ‘Isn’t it great how talking things over can prevent fighting?’ I said.
‘How did we get into all this talk about fighting, anyway? Of course you can come through. If you
want to deal directly with the Jovians, you’re welcome to try. It’s at your own risk, as the capitalist
small print always puts it. You may even be doing us a favour, by running that risk on our behalf.
We can look after ourselves, whatever happens.’ My crew were looking at me with barely
concealed dismay. Even Malley and Suze looked troubled. I turned completely away from Reid
and his partners, and gave the comrades a tremor of a wink.
    ‘So, Dave,’ I went on, turning back to him, ‘about that offer of a secure communications room?
I think it’s time to take you up on it.’
    ‘Hard suits, radio comms, deep crypto,’ I said. Our clothes gelled, then set to armour around us.
The small room at the top of Reid’s tower had a shelf all around it of communications-control
panels, with more help menus than we could use. All idiot-proof, Reid had cheerfully assured us,
closing the door behind him.
    In their reconfigured suits the comrades resembled faceless humanoid robots with anodized
aluminium finishes in a variety of bright colours. No one could so much as read our lips, and the
deeper masking of cryptography would keep our communications safe, unless New-Martian
computation was so far ahead of ours that we might as well give up now. The comrades’ voices
contended in the dead spaces of the crypto channel.
    I hit my override control. ‘Try to talk one at a time,’ I said wearily. I was hungry, and irritable,
and among the first people in history to suffer starship-lag. ‘Boris, the chair recognizes you.’
    ‘Ha, ha, Ellen. What are you playing at? We can’t let them through, definitely not now.’
    ‘We can’t fight them now,’ I said. ‘None of us, I hope, has mentioned the impact event. Eight
days away now. We need our forces intact for that, just in case ... We could stop a determined
breakout from this side, or we could make sure the comets don’t get diverted the wrong way. We
can’t count on doing both.’
    ‘These aren’t the only options,’ Tony said. ‘And we still have to do -‘
    ‘I know, I know,’ I said.
    ‘Do what?’ asked Malley.
    ‘Make sure Reid doesn’t touch off another runaway Singularity,’ I said. ‘If he hasn’t already.
Don’t worry, we’ll deal with that. Right now, the decisions aren’t up to us. What we have to do is
contact the Division, and let them decide. Yeng, please go to it.’ Yeng complied, and while she
was setting up a laser-link to the communications relay satellite (by now, presumably, somewhere
among a growing fleet of ships that shared its orbit, and the wormhole’s) I called up a display
inside my helmet and did some rough editing of the suit’s record of recent events. I made sure that
Reid’s most informative statements were there in full, so there’d be no doubt as to what he was
saying.
    ‘Ready,’ Yeng’s voice said. ‘Encrypted conference link you’ll all see the committee as a virtual
view in you helmets, and they’ll see our faces.’ Worried faces, on both sides.
    ‘Are you all right?’ Tatsuro asked. ‘We haven’t had any contact for over an hour, since you
went into that tower.’
    ‘We’ve been in a Faraday cage,’ I said. ‘We’re all right. There’s been an ... unexpected
development. Tell you about it in a minute. How are things at your end?’
    Tatsuro massaged his eyebrows, leaving tiny, paired dishevelments. ‘Fine, fine,’ he said. ‘The
Jovians have finally managed to shut off the viral transmissions. That’s at least a token of
goodwill, but we aren’t opening any radio channels just yet. Their own atmospheric traffic has
started to increase again. Also, they’ve detected the incoming comet-train. They can see it’s
heading for a slingshot orbit, but they raised the matter with every appearance of concern.’
    ‘Can’t say I blame them.’
    ‘We’ve told them it’s routine for Martian terraforming showed them records of our previous
cometary flybys, which they’ve checked against what they call dreamtime archives. They seem
reassured. Now, about your position. The relay has detected and reported a build-up of ships on
your side. What’s going on?’ It took me about ten minutes to tell them, with clips of our discussion
projected straight through from my suit to their screens. The consternation thus sown was almost
amusing to watch; the angry, murmured discussions echoed and amplified our own. I concluded
with my assessment of the odds.
    ‘Well,’ said Tatsuro when I’d finished, ‘this is certainly a complication. I would prefer that you
had not said to Reid that his side’s ships could come through. Is that not rather a matter for the
Solar Council, or at least for its delegate?’
    ‘Oh,’ I said. I’d almost forgotten that little matter. The Solar Council delegate had or
represented, rather the ultimate power over us. For all the Division’s immense, concentrated
power, it could not prevail against the will of Earth and the Inner System Earth Defence forces not
in the long run, not with attrition to consider.
    ‘Her fusion-clipper has just gone into orbit around Callisto,’ Tatsuro continued. ‘With a few
Inner System fighters attached. Can we wait for the hour or so it will take for the delegate to
arrive?’
    ‘The decision can’t wait,’ I said. ‘Reid is selling the coordinates to the merchant fleet at this
moment.’ Tatsuro shook his head reprovingly, but with a glint of wry amusement in his eye as he
said: ‘You might have tried to argue for a delay of ... a little over a week! ‘We could still do that,’ I
said.
    Suze raised her hand and spoke up. ‘If I may, neighbours ... comrades. I don’t think that would
work. We’re dealing with capitalists here. They’ll expect us to stall, and suspect us of stitching
them up that is, of doing our own deal with the Jovians and cutting their side out of it.’
    ‘Which might not be a bad idea,’ said Clarity, frowning at us across light years and millennia.
    ‘Oh, it would!’ Suze said. ‘If I know anything about these people, they’d just batter on through.
Race each other to be first to cut a deal. Their whole way of life is based on taking high risks for
high returns.’
    ‘And not much risk, at that,’ I said sourly. ‘They’ve probably all taken back-ups, and they’ll all
try different approaches and keep on trying until one succeeds.’
    ‘Or until the Jovians infect them all and turn them into puppets,’ said Yeng. ‘Puppets who can
fight us in space.’ Tatsuro made a chopping gesture with his hand. ‘Whatever. I move that we let
them through. I agree with Ellen’s analysis. If what Yeng fears does happen, we are still in a
better position to fight if our own forces are intact. However, I think we should insist that some of
our own fighters go through the wormhole and take up positions on the New-Martian side.’
    ‘Opposed,’ said Joe Lutterloh. ‘We shouldn’t open the Solar Union to the bankers, and we
shouldn’t let them trade with the Jovians, who are still a danger to us.’
    After a few more minutes of discussion the vote was taken on letting the traders through. Eight
in favour, four against.
    Tatsuro didn’t pause for a second. ‘Carried,’ he said, as the hands vent down. ‘So, comrades,
go and tell Reid his traders and fighters :an come through, on the condition that our fighters can do
the same. Let us know if he agrees or not. Obviously you should make every effort to return to
your ships. I appreciate why you had to leave them, but don’t leave them for too long. Get your
ships back into space, if you can, and stand by for a bombing run by yourselves, or the other
fighters on the place where the fast-folk templates are stored. And meanwhile’ - he looked around
at the Command Committee, a slow, sly smile forming on his face -‘we’ll work out how we’re
going to explain all this to the Solar Council delegate. Goodbye for now.’
    I waved to the Committee, more bravely than I felt. Yeng switched out the link. Malley and
Suze’s voices were yelling in my ears. Tatsuro’s passing comment was the first they’d heard about
our real plans for the fast-folk templates. I waved my arms frantically for silence.
    ‘It’s only a contingency plan!’ I shouted on the override. ‘Only if Reid does something crazy
with them! Don’t look at me like that! We still can’t trust them.’
    ‘Don’t worry,’ Malley said grimly. ‘I don’t much care what happens to the templates, they’re
not conscious anyway. You can trust me not to tell.’
    ‘And me,’ said Suze. ‘I just wish you had sooner.’ Her voice was thick with disillusion. I
looked around at Malley, Suze, and the comrades, and as my glance slid helplessly from one blank
bubble to the next, I realized that I couldn’t tell which was which.
    ‘All right,’ I said. ‘I’m sorry. Now let’s go and talk Reid into letting us do it.’
    Before the world commonwealth was established, one objection to it that always came up was
But who will do the dirty work? I always used to answer me, and I was right.
                          10      In the Days of the Comet
    One after another, the ugly, bristling, articulated fighter-bombers came out of the wormhole; a
whole squadron of them, their names heroic, ironic, or plain daft: Gal’ Phong, Debug Mode, Virus
Alert, Luddite Tendencies, X Calibre, Acquisitor, General Arnaldo Ochoa, Codebreaker, and
Necessary Evil But Still Cool. And one after another, the slow, laden freighters of the merchants
and the fast, sharp fighters of their mercenaries went in. Even on the screen in the aerospace port,
with the news-child’s prattling commentary jamming the silence, the sight remained awesome and
uncanny: ship after ship vanishing in a flash of blue light, as if annihilated.
    The same thought must have struck Andrea. ‘What happened to the law of mass-energy
conservation?’ she asked. ‘Did it just go away, with those ships?’ Malley leaned over from the
bench beside me. ‘Good point,’ he said, jabbing his pipe-stem, like a lecturer’s pointer, at the
screen. ‘The answer is that the mass of the wormhole at this end increases, and at the other end
decreases, by the same amount as has gone through.’ We were sitting, with Reid and Dee, in the
same quiet area of the port where Boris and Jaime had waited. I watched the screen with silent
satisfaction as our fighters took up positions around the wormhole and deployed a scatter of
attitude-control booster drones which clamped themselves around its perimeter. Reid had conceded
this degree of control over the gate to us. I wasn’t sure whether I’d convinced him it was the only
way to get the people on our side to agree to his side’s ships coming through, or whether _his
confidence in the superiority of capitalist technology made the entire concession irrelevant to
whatever his longer-term plans might be.
    I was listening intently to the conversation, and trying hard not to show it; Andrea was still
puzzling over Malley’s answer.
    ‘So,’ she asked, ‘does that mean one side of the wormhole would just fade away to nothing if
enough mass came through from the other?’
    ‘In lay terms,’ said Malley cautiously, ‘yes. But bear in mind that the mass can go negative.’
    I leaned back, hands behind my head, gazing up through the roof, and tuned my tone to idle
curiosity.
    ‘What does that mean, in physical terms?’ Malley laughed. ‘I don’t know, to be honest. The
rest of the wormhole- the main wormhole- can balance a negative mass, and thus keep the original
gate open, up to a certain point.’
    ‘How much, though?’ Andrea sounded worried.
    Malley shrugged. ‘Depends on its total virtual mass, which I don’t know. A lot more than those
ships, anyway.’
    ‘The gate on the other side masses oh point nine five seven million tonnes,’ Dee said,
unexpectedly. ‘On this side, a lot less: only about a hundred thousand. If we keep up the traffic,
we’ll have to ensure that it balances. Unless we want to find out what negative mass means, in
physical terms.’
    ‘We’re safe enough for now,’ said Reid. ‘The ships that went through probably don’t mass more
than a thousand tonnes each.’
    ‘I don’t see our side sending twenty-odd thousand tonnes the other way,’ I said, with now-easy
flippancy.
    ‘Ours are coming back.’ Reid glanced over at me and grinned, as though challenging me to deny
it. ‘Aren’t they?’
    I returned him an equally unfriendly grin. ‘Of course.’
    The entire port was much quieter than it had been when we’d first arrived. The welcoming
crowds had gone, and the heavy lifting had all been done. Only a few passengers, for the outlying
settlements I guessed, wandered or hastened through. Even the news remotes, with an
appropriately gnatlike attention span, had drifted off. For the New Martians it was the middle of
the night; for us, early afternoon. Discarded disposable plates and the remains of likewise
disposable food littered our surroundings. Now we were waiting for the auto-piloted arrival of the
Terrible Beauty, and for the refuelling of the Carbon Conscience to be completed. There was a
certain amount of tension in the air, and a lot of smoke. Malley was puffing his pipe, Dee and Reid
chain-smoking cigarettes. The habit seemed common in capitalist societies; if we had to wait much
longer, I’d be tempted to take it up myself.
    ‘What do you intend to sell, and to buy?’ Suzee asked.
    ‘If I knew that,’ Reid said, ‘I’d probably be doing it myself. The folks who’re going through
have given it a lot more thought than I have.’ He spread his hands. ‘Information, I guess.’
    ‘They may get more information than they bargained for,’ Yeng told him, darkly. ‘And you’ll
get it, too.’ She stood up and paced forward and pointed at the screen. One of the defence-agency
fighters had hung back from going through, and was deploying a relay drogue, much larger than
ours, on the same alignment. ‘I can’t believe your complacency. I hope we get off this place
before the Jovian viruses come down the line, straight into your heads!’ Dee laughed.
    ‘You don’t get it, do you?’ she said. ‘We do have open systems, yes, and we are personally
vulnerable I more than most, I should say to mind-hacking. That’s exactly why we’re not worried
about it. We’ve had to develop countermeasures, very good ones, so we can protect ourselves from
business competitors, criminals or bloody kids!’ Yeng shrugged. ‘Maybe so,’ she said doubtfully.
‘But if you’re up against conscious well, supposedly conscious entities with processing-power
vastly greater than yours, I can’t see it doing much good.’
    ‘But we ‘ Dee began. She looked at Reid. He shrugged.
    ‘Oh, tell them,’ he said. ‘They’ll figure it out for themselves eventually.’
    ‘All right,’ Dee said. She stood up and faced us all, as Yeng returned to her seat. ‘I’ll tell you.’
Her tone, and her expression, altered slightly, as though some different personality were in control.
‘Consciousness or the emulation of consciousness, if you insist’ she smiled, her usual self flashing
momentarily back -‘costs. Selfhood has a very high cost in processing-power, and that cost
increases with the amount of information it has to integrate. It’s not something that just drops out
of increased complexity, as some people used to think. It has to be actively designed in, either
consciously by us or unconsciously by natural selection. So it’s quite possible to build hardware
more powerful, and software more complex, than any brain or mind in existence: computing
machines that don’t even act as if they’re conscious, that don’t have interests, and that don’t object
when they’re used as tools.’
    Her possession passed, her self-possession returned. She stepped over to one of the long seats,
and expertly flicked the fluttery hem of her skirt under the crook of her knees as she sat down. I
smiled at her. She, and Reid, had been right: no matter what I thought, in the innermost depths of
my mind, about the innermost depths of her mind, it was impossible to be with her, to converse
with her, and not give her the benefit of the doubt, not act as if her mind had innermost depths, and
not to quite simply like her.
    She smiled back.
   ‘And these tools,’ Reid added, ‘we have. That’s why we’re confident we can deal on equal
terms with beings greater than ourselves. We have ways of amplifying our power to more than
equal theirs. Golems to stand up for us against the gods.’ He crushed his cigarette and stood up.
‘Products of good old capitalist competition. You should try it, sometime.’
   I found myself thinking of the great analytical engines of our socialist planning, whose spare
capacities had increased over decades of stability in which more and more decisions had come to be
made locally, and only the most general, those concerning the most widely used resources, had to
be made globally or even regionally. I thought of our smart-matter suits, and our domestic
cybernetics. Perhaps we’d all along had gods or golems on our side, whose aid it had never crossed
our minds to invoke.
   About to say something of this, I looked at Reid, and then tracked his gaze to a falling spark
visible through the concourse’s transparent roof.
   ‘Your ship’s coming in,’ he said. ‘Time to go.’
   Free at last; free fall at last! It had taken hours hours of shifting the ships and coupling them
together, an awkward job in one gravity; half an hour of negotiation between Suze and one of
Reid’s employees over our debt to Mutual Protection, and another half hour with the port company,
over services they’d allegedly rendered and definitely wanted paying for and finally a painful five
minutes of boost, to get ourselves quickly into this orbit. Reid’s last words to me had been: ‘I hope
I see you again.’
   ‘Me too,’ I’d said, sincere only in my hope that I never did.
   I unclipped my webbing, pushed myself away from the couch and executed a joyous somersault,
ending up just in front of the forward view.
   I hauled the gross-focus bars of the display screen, rotated the fine-focus handles. Although the
wormhole was still a long way off on our slowly closing trajectory, the forward telescope’s field
transmitted through lenses, mirrors and fibre-optic cables showed our destination clear and sharp:
the rainbow ring of the daughter wormhole like its parent, a mile across and the glittering clutter of
the surrounding ships. Our ten fighters and Reid’s one; our relay drogue small, theirs large.
   I fiddled with the controls and swung in another view, an enhanced night-time image of Ship
City and its environs.
   ‘OK comrades!’ I called out, rolling around again. They’d all unstrapped and were flying
around the command deck, enjoying not only the free fall but the respite between getting out from
under capitalism and having to face a bit of democratic accountability from our distant socialism. I
grinned at them all and gave them a big thumbs-up.
   ‘Mission accomplished so far!’ I announced.
   ‘Yeah?’ said Malley. ‘And what did we accomplish?’
   ‘A lot,’ I said. ‘We’ve confirmed that the New Martians are just what they seem to be: real
people, even if they do have funny ideas about what counts as people. We know for sure they’re at
risk of losing that, if Reid or someone else gets too cocky about reviving his fast folk again. And
from what that nice anarchist comrade Tamara told me, we have good reason to think the fast-folk
templates are still where Reid originally stashed them up in the range of hills called the
Madreporite Mountains.’ I pointed it out, and paused as a much more vivid marker made the point:
a long bolide-trail in the atmosphere, and the flash of its impact. Another followed, and another.
   ‘That’s it,’ I said above the sound of indrawn breaths. ‘There, near where they direct their comet
fragments, at the source of that long channel leading into the city. We got the exact coordinates
years ago, out of the artificial woman’s Meg’s data-files. So if we or any of the other fighters gets
the go-call, we can lob a nuke into the cave-mouth and blast them and the whole mountain to
blazes.’
     ‘You’ve got nukes on this thing?’ Malley asked indignantly.
     ‘On Carbon Conscience,’ Boris said. ‘That bird’s got a fifty megaton egg, man. Nice clean
laser-fusion job, in case you’re worried.’
     ‘Consider me reassured,’ said Malley. ‘No doubt a few fifty megaton city-busters will come in
real handy if the New Martians should have the bad luck to fall short of your definitions of what
counts as people.’
     ‘There is that,’ Boris said thoughtfully.
     ‘No!’ I said, shocked. ‘We’re not going to do that!’
     ‘Why ever not?’ Malley floated up, his voice heavy with sarcasm. ‘According to you, you
wouldn’t be killing people.’
     ‘Too dangerous,’ I explained. ‘Wouldn’t be like Jupiter, with vulnerable entities at the bottom
of a gravity well. It’d be a massive breakout, with millions of ex-human puppets and a space-going
capability. If there’s another Singularity here, we cut and run.’
     ‘Run where?’ asked Andrea.
     ‘Through the wormhole, if possible,’ I said.
     ‘And if not?’ Malley hung in front of me, hanging on my words. I waved a hand airily in his
face.
     ‘We keep boosting until we use half the reaction-mass, back ourselves up if we absolutely have
to, and at the first likely looking clump of matter the ship finds, we download and spend the rest of
the reaction-mass decelerating. And then, well . . .’ I smiled at his frown. ‘We have the makings
of a nice little galactic empire of our own right here. With your beauty and my brains, neighbour
...’ Malley’s anxiety dissolved in a guffaw.
     ‘And I shall call you ... Eve!’
     ‘Mitochondrial Eve,’ Suze said firmly, catching Malley’s hand.
     ‘Plenty of good genes in the cold-stores,’ said Boris.
     I turned away before Malley could suspect there was even a sliver of a chance we were serious.
(But it was part of the standard kit of a fusion-clipper, even so: the haunting fear of a runaway
torch, or of everything going wrong in our cold war with the Jovians, was the real reason the ships
relied on recycling rather than supplies, and stored the frozen seeds of a viable population and the
smart-matter blueprints for its infrastructure and technology in their vaults.)
     ‘Enough,’ I said. ‘We got work to do. Jaime, Andrea, could you please haul yourselves over to
the nav gear and the long-range viewing-kit. We need to track all the moving matter around us, all
the ships and missiles and especially all the cometary junk. We don’t want to wander into the path
of one of their comet-trains.’ (Indeed we don’t, I thought to myself.) ‘Don’t worry about our deep-
space radar being pinged,’ I added.
     ‘They know we’re here, and they know we’re not hostile.’
     ‘We’ve paid for our protection,’ Suze reminded me.
     ‘Handy stuff, gold,’ I agreed. ‘And Yeng, I’d like you to help Andrea and Jaime with mapping
comet-streams their courses and timing must be public knowledge somewhere. As well as that, I
need two channels one to see if there’s any readable information coming from their comms drogue
...’
     ‘Newscasts, probably,’ Suze said. ‘Subscriber only, if I know them.’
     ‘So try subscribing,’ I said.
     Yeng grinned. ‘And the other channel?’
    ‘Same as before,’ I said. ‘Patch us in to the Command Committee.’ I caught Malley’s you’re for
it now smile, and smiled defiantly back. ‘Time to find out what the democratically elected delegate
of socialist humanity thinks of what the heroic defenders of socialist humanity have been getting up
to.’
    I recognized the Solar Council delegate at once, which surprised me. As the Solar Council like
all the other councils, from local to global was directly elected, and I was theoretically one of its
constituents, I shouldn’t have been surprised. Local councils tended to be made up of people with
local reputations, and so on up. The Solar Council’s delegates should have been known to
everyone in the Solar System, usually for their decades if not centuries of good, competent work in
relevant fields; the re-gerontocracy, as some of our younger and more cynical neighbours put it.
But by and large I trusted the people in the rest of the Union to choose people whose previous
experience and reputation they trusted (and now and again to throw in some absolute beginner who
had made enough of a fuss about something to get their name bruited about) so, apart from my
recently lost position on the Jovian Anomaly Research Committee, I generally stuck to my little
intrigues in the Division and left wider affairs alone. However, even I had heard of Mary-Lou
Radiation Nation Smith.
    She was, I think, Navaho, if it matters; in any case, a member of one of the all-too-many tribes
Aleutian, Kazakh, Aboriginal, Uighur, etc. who’d been unwilling or unwitting participants in the
old society’s nuclear tests, and who now formed a loose but active lobby calling itself the Radiation
Nation. They were united, not by ethnicity which the Union only encouraged as a basis for
cultural, and definitely not for administrative, association but by a quite understandable though, I
sometimes thought, exaggerated concern that we were a little too careless with our civil-
engineering and outbreak-zapping and forest-clearing nukes. Yes, they’d say, we can stop cancer
and fix chromosomes and regenerate ecosystems, but there could be unknown losses, uncalculated
risks ... it was a legitimate point of view, despite all the mutterings about Greens under the
machines, and as a respected biologist and statistician, Mary-Lou Radiation Nation Smith had the
qualifications to back it up.
    Black bangs framed her face, dark eyes shone out of it. She was sitting beside Tatsuro, whose
uncharacteristically frayed appearance the hairs of his head, eyebrows, and moustache sticking out
as if static-charged contrasted with her well-groomed composure.
    ‘Ellen May Ngwethu,’ she said, as if it were the name of some particularly loathsome disease.
‘Comrades and friends.’ She swept us all with a glance, making a similarly distasteful diagnosis.
‘And the distinguished non-cooperator Dr Malley. I’m pleased to meet you all at last, even at such
a distance. Especially at such a distance, I should say. Your energy and enterprise are quite
astonishing. We on the Council had no idea you were planning such bold initiatives. Not only
have you set up a scheme to destroy the Jovians, you’ve simultaneously entered into negotiations
with them! No doubt you have already worked out what to do if these superhuman minds see
through your highly plausible cover-story, and respond. I look forward eagerly to our surprise
when you demonstrate your surefire, foolproof stratagem to prevent their entirely predictable fury
from wiping us out. Don’t spoil my suspense by telling me in advance not that telling us anything
in advance is one of your habitual faults.’
    She paused, placed the palms of her hands together and the fingertips under her chin.
    ‘Well?’ she said. ‘I’ve heard the CC comrades’ ... explanations. What do you have to say for
yourself?’
    ‘Comrade, ah, neighbour Radiation Nation Smith -‘
    ‘Just call me Mary-Lou,’ she said sweetly. ‘Or neighbour Smith, if you prefer formality. My
middle names are a soubriquet like your last.’
    From her point of view it may have been an inappropriate reminder of just why I’d chosen that
old slogan for my name. Ngwethu! Freedom! I had it, and at the relevant point of application,
perhaps more than she. The sting of her whiplash sarcasms faded, and (embarrassing to relate, but
there it is) a few half-forgotten bars of that haunting anthem Nkosi Sikelele Afrika hummed
through the back of my mind.
    ‘OK, Mary-Lou,’ I replied. ‘We in the Division have a mandate to contain and destroy the
Outwarder threat, and that’s exactly what we’re doing. I’ve assumed all along that our actions
would be accountable to the Union, and that if necessary a global poll would be taken before the
final decision the issues are well known, and have long been discussed, so there should be no
problem.’
    ‘No problem,’ she said, in a dead level tone. ‘Of course, keeping our decision a secret from the
Jovians is simply a matter of radio silence and complete self-discipline by billions of people, many
of whom would be appalled at the suggestion of what you plan to do, not to mention what you’ve
already done. You know, I can almost imagine that being possible, were it not for your other
impressive feat. Opening contact and hostilities with the Jovians wasn’t enough for you.’
    She shook her head. ‘Oh, no. As a final flourish, you manage a mere hour before my arrival to
open the Solar System to a vigorously expanding capitalist society, and an anarcho-capitalist one at
that. I’m sure if you’d had the choice between New Mars and some tedious statist tyranny with
whose tedious statist tyrants we could at least have made some kind of deal that might actually
stick, you’d still have picked New Mars, out of pure scientific curiosity as to which anarchy would
subvert the other first. Let me tell you that your curiosity may be well justified ... Dr Malley!’
    Malley jumped (in as much as one can, in free fall) like a student caught dozing in a lecture.
    ‘Yes?’
    ‘I’m in no position to remonstrate with you as a non-cooperator, you can’t be expected to live by
our rules. However, you do have to live with the consequences of your actions. Here are some
consequences of yours: after decades of virtual radio silence from Earth, your brave experiment in
encouraging your students to make and use radios has led to something of a happy babble of
electronic communication. Our non-co friends heard that I was on my way out here, and decided to
spread the news to the handful of non-cos in space. You’d be surprised to learn how much ill-
informed comment on my well known concerns has flashed around the Solar System in the last few
days. Evidently the New-Martian traders have monitored it closely not difficult, because in
absolute terms there isn’t much radio traffic, yet. A couple of hours ago, I received a personal
message from one of these ships, offering me “an unrepeatable, ground-floor offer” whatever that is
for an “import concession” I know what that is, thank you for “alphaemitter-assimilating
biomechanisms” whatever they may be.’
    ‘How did you respond?’ asked Malley, with what I thought commendable nerve.
    ‘I told them to shop off,’ was the somewhat coarse reply. ‘However, we shortly afterwards
picked up another version of the same offer, beamed towards Earth for anyone who cares to take it
up. It’s one of thousands of similar propositions directed at Earth, which in turn are the merest
fraction of the communications going on between the traffickers’ fleet and Jupiter. Most of the
latter are heavily encrypted, so we don’t even know what the offers they’re making are.’ None of
this came as a surprise, but it was all happening faster than I’d expected. I hadn’t foreseen that the
inevitable contact between the dominant non-cos of New Mars and the marginal noncos of Earth
would result in so much information leakage that keeping our plans from the Jovians would be well
nigh impossible.
   ‘All right,’ I said. ‘I see your point. That just means we’ll have to act first and take the vote
later that’s if most people aren’t so relieved to be rid of the Jovian threat that it’ll be obvious to
anyone what the majority view is.’ Mary-Lou Smith lost her expression of detached, ironic
appraisal. She shot me a look of hot fury.
   ‘Act first, vote later?’ she said. ‘On an issue like this? What a disgusting attitude to your fellow
human beings!’
   ‘It isn’t my attitude,’ I protested. ‘It’s what’s required by the realities of the situation.’
   ‘Yes! Realities which you’ve brought about!’ For a moment she looked as if she were about to
start banging her head on the table. Then she drew her shoulders back and took a deep breath.
   ‘Enough,’ she said. ‘We must deal with the situation as it is, and uncover the reasons for this
mess when we have time. The whole relationship between the Union and the Division has to -‘ She
stopped herself, stood up and took a few steps backwards, so she could see all of the Committee as
well as all of us. ‘As I say, enough. Here’s what I propose to transmit to the Solar Council, and
what on my mandate from the Solar Council I instruct you to implement immediately, pending the
Council’s decision.
   One, you absolutely must not provoke the Jovians by giving them any reason whatever to fear a
cometary bombardment. That means you must divert the comet-train into a wider and irreversibly
safe orbit now.
   Second, you must step up fighter-bomber patrols on this side of the wormhole, and make no
compromises with the New Martians on that. We have to make clear to them that they’re here on
our sufferance.
   Third, you must prepare to jam all radio transmissions within the Jovian sub-system, and
between it and the Inner System, whether from the Jovians, the New Martians, or the non-cos.’ She
strode forward and sat down again. ‘That is all,’ she said. ‘Any questions?’
   Nobody said anything. Quickly scanning the faces of the others on the Committee, I registered
that most of them showed nothing but relief; in the case of Clarity and one or two others, more than
relief. I took in their tentative smiles, keeping my own face carefully neutral. Only Joe Lutterloh
showed anger, which he was equally visibly restraining. Tatsuro looked at me gravely. The tiny
downtilt of his head could have been a cryptic nod, or an unconscious bowing to the inevitable.
Mary-Lou might not have much immediate power to bring to bear on us, but a greater constraint
applied. The Division couldn’t go against the explicit will of the Union, or even of its authorized
delegate, without being irretrievably split. And if we tore ourselves apart, we risked being easy
prey for the enemy.
   Well, if the others were too intimidated to talk, I was not.
   ‘You propose a risky course,’ I said. ‘We’ve taken some risks too, I admit, but we always had
the final fail-safe of the comet-strike to fall back on. Anything conceded to the Jovians or the New
Martians could still be negated with that. Now you want to strike this weapon from our hands, and
leave us defenceless.’
   Smith jumped to her feet and leaned forward, fists on the table.
   ‘Ellen May Ngwethu!’ she shouted. ‘I have had enough of your inflexible attitudes! I’ve heard
more than enough of your devious speeches! I’ve had it up to -‘ She stopped, leaned back, drew
breath. She bowed her head for a moment and massaged her temples, then looked up at me and
smiled.
   ‘Excuse my outburst, neighbour. I understand your situation better than you do. You’ve
endured two centuries of apparently endless conflict, two centuries for your personal dislikes to
rankle into hatred. You’ve had even longer for the harshest aspects of the true knowledge its dark
side, if you will to overwhelm its truth. Because the truth is the whole, and in raising the aspect of
struggle way out of proportion to that of cooperation, you’ve turned it into a lie. If you could see
yourself as I have, I’ve had time to sample the records of this Committee, and those which you and
your comrades have been sending back in all your implacable belligerence, your imperviousness to
the reasonable appeals of rational beings, whether the Jovian speaker or the New-Martian gynoid,
to be recognized as such ... if you could see all that, I hope there is still something in you that
would be ashamed.’
   I stared at her, shaken despite myself. ‘I’ve done nothing out of personal malice, nothing I’m
ashamed of, and nothing that goes against the true knowledge.’
   Mary-Lou shook her head slowly. ‘There are two sides to the true knowledge, and you have
forgotten one of them, despite your name. There is not only amandla power. There is also
ngwethu freedom.’
   ‘I know that,’ I said calmly. ‘And we’ll lose both if we throw away our last chance to destroy
the Jovians while we still can!’
   For a split second, Mary-Lou literally staggered, as though I’d hit her.
   Then she said: ‘All right. Let me speak to you in a language you understand. We are not
throwing away our last chance to destroy the Jovians. There never was a chance. As soon as a
stable, reality-oriented Jovian culture emerged, there was no chance that it could be destroyed by
anything we could throw at it. These are beings whose evolutionary ancestors disintegrated
Ganymede and punched a hole through space! How many hours do you think it would take for
them to develop some response that could swat aside your comets like flies? And as soon as you
brought back the first pictures, and the first messages, there was not a chance that the people of the
Union would react to the Jovians’ emergence with anything but hope, and to their destruction with
anything but horror.
   You’ve seen how a typical Union member, Suze, a typical tough-minded non-co, Dr Malley, and
even your own Command Committee have reacted. They’ve all drawn back from the brink, to
varying degrees, and they’re right! Our only chance of survival is to survive with them, and the
only effect of attempting to destroy them would be to make them the deadly enemies you seem to
take for granted they are.’ She turned to Tatsuro. ‘Which reminds me,’ she said. ‘I heard no
dissent from my instruction, except from Ellen. Do you wish to take a vote?’ Tatsuro nodded
wearily. ‘Those for accepting the delegate’s instructions.’ All the hands on the other side went up,
except Joe’s.
   ‘Those against.’ Me, and Joe. I smiled at him. He shook his head, lips compressed in a thin
line, and drew a finger across his throat. I don’t think anyone else saw the gesture. Behind me, I
distinctly heard Yeng say: ‘Shit.’ No one else spoke.
   ‘Carried,’ said Tatsuro. He took his control panel from its strap around his neck, and jabbed in a
long series of firing-codes.
   ‘It’s done,’ he told Mary-Lou. ‘The jets are firing, the nukes are flaring. The cometary masses
have been shifted to the orbit you requested.’
   ‘Let me confirm that,’ she said. ‘No offence, neighbour.’ She spoke briefly and quietly into a
personal phone, waited ,a few seconds, then nodded.
    ‘OK,’ she said. ‘The local observatories have confirmed it.’ Her shoulders moved as though a
weight had been lifted from them. ‘And now,’ she said, ‘Ellen. Let me try to reassure you about
the Jovians.’ My heart was thudding, my mouth dry.
    She sat down on the edge of the table, leaning on one hand, twisting her body a little to face me,
in a pose of casual conversation. ‘They’re not monsters, you know. Why should you expect beings
more powerful and intelligent than ourselves to be worse than ourselves? Wouldn’t it be more
reasonable to expect them to be better? Why should more power mean less good?’
    I could hardly believe I was hearing this. Glancing quickly over my shoulder,. I saw Andrea,
Jaime and Yeng working at their screens but listening intently, and the rest giving Mary-Lou all
their attention. I searched for my most basic understanding, and dragged it out: ‘Because good
means good for us!’ Mary-Lou smiled encouragingly and spoke gently, as though talking someone
down from a high ledge. ‘Yes, Ellen. But who is us? We’re all human, post-human, non-human
machines with minds in a mindless universe, and it behooves those of us with minds to work
together if we can in the face of that mindless universe. It’s the possibility of working together that
forges an us, and only its impossibility that forces a them. That is the true knowledge as a whole
the union, and the division.’ She laughed. ‘So to speak! In fact, exactly so the Union, and the
Division!’
    Images of the Jovians, in all their multifarious forms, processed through my mind. My skin felt
as if small, chill, unpleasant things were crawling over it. I remembered the cold, lively metal of
the robots, the warm flesh of Dee’s fingertips; and I knew that my response to those machines,
however edgy, however suspicious, however prejudiced it might be, was not the same as my cold
intellectual loathing of the Jovians, beautiful though they were.
    The robots and the gynoid and all their kind, conscious or not, had become part of us, whereas
the Jovians - I ‘You mean you would contemplate a union - with them?’
    Mary-Lou nodded briskly. ‘Of course. With those who wanted to. You may not know this, but
the Jovians have the true knowledge, in their own terms. Some of their practices are even
socialist!’
    God help us all, I thought, heretically. ‘That,’ I said, ‘only makes them more dangerous. More
powerful, because more united, like we’re dangerous to them, or were until you people -‘
    I stopped my words, too late. Mary-Lou chopped her hand downwards. She pushed herself off
the table, a slow, graceful motion in Callisto’s low gravity, and brushed her hands together as if to
remove some light dust.
    ‘That’s it,’ she announced. ‘End of discussion. If we are now you people, then we aren’t in any
kind of union with you. I have nothing more to say to you, Ellen. Go away. Just keep out of
trouble, don’t make any more trouble for us, and let someone else sort out your head, because I
won’t. Goodbye.’
    She raised her hand above her shoulder, glanced at Tatsuro, and snapped her fingers impatiently.
Tatsuro gave me a last, helpless look, reached for something out of sight, and the screen went dead.
    It was all down to me now, I thought. Time for Plan B.
    I rolled in the air and grabbed a stanchion. The comrades, and Malley, were all staring at me, or
at the blank screen. The command deck had never sounded so quiet.
    ‘So that’s’ it, I guess,’ I said.
    ‘And very glad I am,’ said Malley. Suze looked at him, looked at me, and nodded.
    ‘It’s over,’ she said. ‘Come on, Ellen. The decision’s made. The die is cast. The comets won’t
crash, and Mary-Lou’s won the Committee to her way. All right, there are risks, but she’s right
there’d be more risks in yours. We’ll just have to accept it, and hope they made the right choice.’
   ‘Hope,’ I said.
   Hope was there, lighting up the eyes of Suze and Malley. The faces of the five other comrades
didn’t show hope, nor share the dread I felt. They were lost in their own thoughts, the worst of
which may have been that they might have to choose between me between us, the team and the
Union, or even the Division. For all our fierce individualism, we’d all consciously or not drawn
strength from the Union, not only in the obvious objective sense but also in our selves. Mary-Lou
had been right about that, at least: ‘good for us’ had two sides.
   Now I’d have to work with this feeling, get it on my side and so on everybody’s, whether they
knew it yet or not.
   ‘Nothing’s over,’ I said. ‘We have not been expelled from the Union, or even from the Division,
and whatever Mary-Lou may think, I’m still on the Command Committee until I hear otherwise.’
   I waved behind me at the blank screen. ‘If the comrades choose to throw me out, fine - the first
thing they’ll do is tell us. They haven’t. Until they do, I’ll carry on as a member.’
   Malley scowled, Suze shrugged, the others brightened slightly.
   ‘OK,’ I went on. ‘There’s something I have to tell you. For a long time now, Tatsuro and I have
had ... an understanding. We both knew things might come to this, and we knew we’d need a fall-
back position if even the comet-strike were ... struck out!’ I smiled, and fixed some flickers of
response. ‘Whether by the Jovians, or by our own decision. We knew we might come to that
decision. We knew we might even agree with it ourselves. We weren’t - I wasn’t- as dogmatic
about the Jovians as Mary-Lou made out. I was the first to argue for attempting contact, remember,
against a fair bit of position.’
   ‘Come off it,’ snapped Malley. ‘That was just to get my cooperation.’
   ‘Of course,’ I said. ‘But it was hardly an act of blind hatred, was it? I risked my own mind
making the first contact. You know how I fee1 about back-ups, and whatever you may think of that
view, it’s sincerely held. The risk was real, to me. I trusted them enough to take their path through
the wormhole a risk we all shared, yes, but I sure wouldn’t have taken it if I thought the Jovians
were monsters.’
   ‘You’ve made your point,’ said Malley. ‘So why didn’t you make to Mary-Lou?’
   ‘I know a hopeless fight when I see one,’ I said. I shrugged. ‘She has her point of view, fair
enough, but I think she’s biased towards a non-violent resolution, and blinded to the other
possibilities. Don’t me wrong nothing would please me more than to find that she’s right, that we
and the Jovians can coexist and cooperate and so on. That they won’t turn out as bad or mad as
their predecessors. But until I’m convinced of that, until we all know we’re safe, I am going to do
my best to ensure that we do have a last resort. Only as a last resort, and only if it’s them or us, and
everyone for themselves. and it’s one that won’t threaten, won’t even worry, the Jovians, until or
unless they threaten us.’
   Jaime and Andrea glanced at the screens at which they’d been working, then smiled at me with
dawning comprehension.
   ‘This is what Tatsuro and I agreed,’ I went on. ‘The real reason we came here. Because here we
have comet-trains all set up for us ones the Jovians need never see, and which can strike at them
without warning. We can send comets through the wormhole.’
   ‘But the comets aren’t -‘ Tony began.
   Malley shot him a dry smile, and to me, one of grudging respect. ‘Very elegant,’ he said.
‘Relative motion.’
   ‘Yes,’ I said. ‘We’re going to move the wormhole.’
    It wasn’t as simple as that, but the process of setting it up convinced the comrades that at some
level I still had authorization for what I was doing. And I had; in as much as Tatsuro and I had
indeed privately agreed on this contingency plan before I’d even set out to find Wilde or Malley.
The fact that the Division’s fighter-bombers, around both ends of the wormhole, responded to my
requests was evidence enough (not least to myself) that I hadn’t been thrown off the Command
Committee. Not yet, anyway.
    I sat beside Yeng while she sent the encrypted instructions, to the squadron on our side and to
the Turing Tester on the other. The action of the latter was crucial, but it passed almost unnoticed
in the general redeployment of fighter-bombers around the Malley Mile, on which ironically
enough it was Mary-Lou who had insisted. The Turing Tester pulsed its own instructions to the
wormhole Gate’s attitude-control rockets, which fired off in a sequence of brief puffs. Slowly, over
several hours, almost imperceptibly, the great rainbow ring swivelled on its axis to face the surface
of Jupiter.
    Meanwhile, we drifted closer and closer to the daughter wormhole Gate. Neither our fighters
nor the lone, auto-piloted sentry which, I was amused to note, actually did belong to Reid’s Mutual
Protection company challenged us. Jaime and Andrea steadily mapped the incoming stream of
cometary fragments, which fell almost hourly on uninhabited parts of New Mars, after perhaps
decades of slow, directed infall from this system’s equivalents of the Kuiper Belt or Oort Cloud.
We calculated that we could reach a sufficiently high speed to make an effective bombardment
within anything from thirty minutes to two hours, with the ship dragging the wormhole at up to
thirty gee if we had to pick the shorter approach: the maximum tolerable acceleration for that length
of time, even with full use of the support capacity of our smart-matter suits.
    ‘How do we grab the wormhole?’ Malley asked.
    ‘It’s been done before,’ I said. ‘It’s set up. The little attitude-control drones were designed for
the original orbital shift we gave the Malley Mile back home. They’ve clamped around it, and they
have secondary clamps that can grab on to the ship’s lifting-gear cables. We can do it the gate will
be tilted at an acute angle behind us, we’ll be at its centre of gravity, and our jet will be firing into
it, going -‘
    I raised my eyebrows. Malley shrugged: ‘Who knows?’
    Just before the encounter, we’d have to cut the drive, disengage from the wormhole’s perimeter
and fire the drones’ attitude jets to fine-tune the angle of the wormhole, so that the comets would
follow the same course as had the departing ships, and explode out of the other side on a straight
course for the surface of Jupiter. The combined velocities of the daughter wormhole Gate and the
comet fragments would deliver enough kinetic energy to spread devastation for tens of thousands of
miles around their points of impact. It would be best if we could simultaneously get the ships on
the other side to move the far mouth of the wormhole, sweeping it like a gun muzzle across Jupiter,
and preferably on a course that would take it all the way round, but we couldn’t count on that best-
case scenario. Nor could we count on the configuration lasting for a Jovian nine-hour day, carrying
the exit gate around the planet. What we could count on was hitting the Jovians hard.
    Yeng had found several commercial channels, and several internal company reporting channels,
which were either not encrypted or easily hacked. We kept our forward lasers trained on the New
Martians’ comms drogue. We stayed near our acceleration couches, watched the screens, and
waited.
    Hours passed.
    I was keeping an eye on a narrow-band monitoring channel, relayed from a camera and a mike
in an upper corner of a room in a ship. Not encrypted, nothing special. Full colour, sleety image,
mono sound, trickle feed. Probably just one of those capitalist things: management spying. Maybe
something more benign, a sort of online black box. It was certainly not that ship’s main comms
channel, which was sending back an unbreakable flood of coded data. It showed a constant,
unwavering view from inside one of the trading vessels - its command deck, by the look of it.
Much less cluttered than ours, no recycling equipment, none of the trailing tubes and climbing
tendrils. Five acceleration couches, moulded and resilient and glistening, like black jellies. Four
men and a woman in identical blue fatigues, drifting around, checking instruments, watching their
outside screens; joking and chatting. They didn’t seem to have much to do. They were excited
about being in the Solar System. One man had been there before, which gave me an eerie feeling
when it became clear from his conversation that he’d been one of the uploaded slave-minds in the
Outwarders’ construction robots.
   The real work of their mission was being carried on by their ship’s computer, which they
referred to as the Bitch, apparently in honour of the ship’s name, which was Running Dog. I was
not as bored as they were, partly because of my still-simmering tension, and partly because as
generations of producers of visual wallpaper have shown there’s something hypnotically watchable
about people in space, just as there is about watching planetary surfaces from space.
   Snatches of conversation, picked up by that unobtrusive mike, narrow-cast to a nearby drogue,
lasered at a critical angle into the wormhole, cutting through millennia of space and time, bounced
to another relay, beamed by radio to no doubt some bored watcher on New Mars, picked up by
Yeng’s eavesdropping aerials, to finally be heard by me:
   ‘Bitch is hot!’
   ‘Yeah man, she’s got her tail up now. Musta met another Jovian.’
   ‘Meeting a minds.’
   ‘Sniff, sniff.’ Laughter.
   ‘Reds still around the Mile?’
   ‘Like flies on a shit. Don’t like it, man, don’t like it at all.’
   ‘Home says not to worry.’
   ‘Don’t trust them, but. Fuck. It’s their territory -‘
   ‘Says who?’
   ‘Home, that’s who. We don’t know what they can do yet, anyway.’
   (No, I thought, you don’t.)
   ‘Not a whole helluva lot, not if they’re like the commies we useta know and love.’
   ‘Ha-ha. Didn’t know you were that old.’
   ‘Looked good on the tel, though. See the tall black one?’
   ‘Yuh-uh!’
   Ribald noises. About me, I realized, and felt flattered. The men rolled and somersaulted,
trading ineffectual pokes and punches. Then a voice cut across their laughter; the woman’s voice,
like a dash of cold water.
   ‘Something’s wrong.’
   ‘Wha -‘ Look at the board! What the fuck!’
   ‘Bitch, are you all right? Bitch?’
   They were diving backwards to their couches, which caught and braced them in swiftly
emerging pseudopods of glassy black jelly. As soon as they’d smacked into place the five
astronauts were working very hard, very fast. I could see their heads move, tracking virtual head-
ups; their fingers flex over invisible keys. My own movements were almost a reflex of theirs - I
was yelling, patching the view from this channel into the other screens and tiling in theirs.
   On a news channel, one of the merchant ships - which a sidebar swiftly tagged as the Running
Dog - had begun to move strangely, yawing under irregular thrusts from its attitude jets. They
seem to be having some -‘ A child’s puzzled voice.
   ‘Boris!’ I shouted. ‘For’ard laser now! Get ready to hit the comms drogue! Yeng! Screen out all
encrypted input now! Andrea, warm torch!’
   The voices of the Running Dog’s crew were still coming through. Can’t raise the Bitch! Can’t
raise the Bitch!’
   ‘Shaddap shaddap, we’re trying. Shit shit shit shit, drive’s not responding.’
   ‘Running Dog to home, Running Dog to home. We got a bad situation here. Engine out, Bitch
haywire. We’re getting sorta rolling motion, irregular. Say again please, say again please ... shit.
Comms are out.’
   ‘Lights are on.’
   ‘Nobody’s home.’
   ‘Ha ha.’ Running audit now ... OK guys, we’re in deep shit here, deep . Bitch seems to have
taken a massive data hit, she’s down ... No, she’s running!’
   ‘The hell she is, she’s not - oh fuck. Gotta report this, gotta Shit! Comms are still out.’
   ‘Hey, the monitor!’
   Faces turned, looking straight at me.
   ‘If anyone’s getting this,’ the woman’s voice said, quite calmly, ‘please act fast. We think our
onboard computer has been hacked into and taken over -‘
   ‘A fucking Jovie’s uploaded on us!’ another voice yelled, and meanwhile in the background a
third voice was intoning: ‘Holy Mary Mother a God pray for us now and at the hour of our - hey,
wait a minute, guys, everything’s back to normal, it’s cool, look!’
   As I watched, their expressions changed from frantic concern to calm relief. The woman was
making waving motions at the monitor.
   ‘Cancel that,’ she said urgently, smiling. ‘False alarm. Sorry, folks, false alarm! Electrical
glitch, Jovian atmosphere storm, that’s all, panic over.’ The men behind her were moving in a
completely different way than they had before, heads and arms working away in a new virtual
space; there was nothing wrong with their movements, except that they were all making the same
movements, in unison. Four heads turned as one, smiling at the monitor as their hands reached and
fingers flexed in their synchronized puppet ballet.
   ‘Boris,’ I said.
   On the forward view the twirling parasol of the New Martians’ comms drogue flared at the focus
of our lasers, and flash-burned instantly to a million fragments of twinkling foil.
   Andrea hit the drive as all the other screens went out.
   It wasn’t a long burn, just enough to kick us into a closing orbit with the Gate. We had only a
few minutes in which to act. Lots of things seemed to happen at once.
   ‘Enemy fighter spinning around,’ Boris announced calmly. ‘Firing. Missile launched and
closing. Active-defence -‘ The forward view lit up, with a big flash then lots of small ones as the
active-defence lasers mopped up the missile’s fragments.
   ‘Fighter taking evasive action. I’m realigning the laser. Over to automatic fire. Target
destroyed.’ He thought about it for a second, and added: ‘Yee-hah!’
   ‘What’d they attack us for?’ Suze demanded.
   ‘For burning the drogue,’ I said.
   ‘Should be grateful.’
    Jaime was running a plot on the nearest comet-train, and Andrea was aligning the ship to match
his calculation. Our attitude jets fired, again and again, sending us on a giddying roll. Yeng passed
the data to the fighter-bombers, and the Necessary Evil But Still Cool sent its own message to the
Gate’s little attitude-control jets. By the time we were ready to dock with the Gate it was lying at
an odd angle, apparently ‘below’ us, like a tilted plate, and we were sliding backwards ‘above’ its
mile-wide face. On some screen I noticed, out of the corner of my eye, that our own small comms
drogue was darting about like a flea on a griddle, squandering its fuel in a mindless attempt to hold
the correct position, relative to the disc of the Gate, for picking up the Division’s messages. Zap it
too? No I was confident, even now, that the Division’s computers and comms weren’t going to fall
for the Jovian outbreak.
    The ship was now lined up for a straight blast into a course to intercept the comet-train, and to
continue along ‘up’ that infall orbital path. The hull shuddered repeatedly as the grappling lines
were fired. They snaked out, and were snared by the perimeter clamps. Andrea played another
subtle but sickeningly violent crescendo on our own attitude jets, adjusting our alignment as the
lines took the strain of the Gate’s mass.
    One hundred thousand tonnes, Dee had said. Plus another twenty thousand for the score of ships
that had sailed through it on their bright bold enterprise ... and had encountered at least one entity
which had found the temptation, or competitive necessity, of getting in first as powerful as theirs. I
thought of Dee, and wondered how her vaunted competitive countermeasures were holding out
against whatever had come down the line from the poor, possessed Running Dog. Doing better
than I expected, I hoped, for my sake and hers, I realized, in a sudden pang of anguished solidarity
with a self that, human or not, was at least as singular as mine.
    ‘Holding position,’ Andrea said.
    ‘General Arnaldo Ochoa to Terrible Beauty.’ Yeng was patching the message through to my
phones. The voice was almost languid. ‘Situation back home severely compromised. Situation
here totally confusing. Please advise.’
    Whoever that was had the right stuff, all right! I cut in the override on the Division’s all-ships
channel:
    ‘Hi guys and gals, Terrible Beauty here. Situation as follows. At least one New Martian
merchant ship, with crew, has been taken over by a Jovian upload or personality copy. That is
confirmed, repeat confirmed. Comms drogue destroyed by us to stop viral spread. We don’t repeat
do not know if we did this in time. Observe extreme caution with all incoming comms of New-
Martian origin. We are about to blast off with wormhole Gate in tow. Intend to try punching local
comet-train through to hit Jupiter. You have two minutes to get clear or attempt to return home.’
    The languid voice returned. ‘Thanks for the clarification, Terrible Beauty. Good luck. We see
heavy fighting back home. All ships have been recalled. We’re leaving. Do you wish continued
updates from our own comms drogue?’
    ‘Yes!’ shouted Yeng, the sheer volume of her voice carrying it to my override.
    ‘Patching you through.’ The scene, relayed from the home system by the for now stable and on-
position drogue, flashed up on the virtual screens of the suits, which were still tensing and
hardening around us. It came from an external camera on the Turing Tester, loyally on station in
front of the Gate.
    Jupiter was bang in the middle of the view, as I’d hoped. The rest of the view sparkled with the
flashes of distant laser hits and was scored by the scorch of particle-beams, and snowed by the
chaff thrown out in efforts to deflect or diffuse both. Missile trails and kinetic-energy tracers added
to the battle’s blaze. Two or three of the trading vessels were in sight, each surrounded by a swarm
of fighters. One was heading away on what looked like an entirely orthodox evasion course. The
others were wallowing in the same bizarre way as the Running Dog had when its systems were first
suborned. I could almost feel the strivings of the new minds in their unfamiliar frames, new
impulses racing through controls, and the struggles of whatever parts of the ships’ programming
resisted its new master. The ships’ yaw and pitch were resultant of these conflicting forces.
Through the whole confused scene flitted the dark shapes of our own fighter-bombers, their violent
manoeuvres dodging at least the kinetic-energy and missile weapons, but even in the first seconds
of our observation, two were successfully targeted by particle-beams, and burst in silent agony.
   One by one, the fighter-bombers on our side darted past, seeming to pass over our heads from
the camera’s viewpoint, our whole ship rocking as each fighter’s mass passed through the Gate. I
counted nine, then heard a now-familiar voice.
   ‘General Arnaldo Ochoa says goodbye and good luck.’
   ‘Goodbye,’ I said.
   For a tenth and final time, the great drumhead of stretched space to which we were attached
resonated as the fighter-bomber went through. I saw its black, bat-like shadow-shape flit sideways
a moment after its exit. We were on our own now. Then I saw, heading straight towards us, filling
the view, the bulk of a merchant ship. Something burned into its side, but it ploughed on. The last
thing that the Turing Tester’s camera showed was an out-of-focus image of its looming forward
shield. The last - and while we were watching- only sound to come through that channel via the
comms drogue was a voice breaking in, by some frantic feat of hacking, to yell the warning:
   ‘Running Dog!’
   Our ship shook as the thousand-tonne mass passed through, simultaneously subtracting the same
amount from the virtual mass of the Gate. A cable broke, lashing across the forward view. For an
entire second, as I cut from the now-blank internal screen to an outside camera which Yeng had
instantly and reflexively patched in, I watched in frozen shock as the huge ship rose from the
wormhole Gate like a missile from a silo, with the wreck of the Turing Tester rumpled across its
prow.
   As soon as it cleared the Gate, its attitude jets fired with far greater precision than its earlier
efforts had shown. Its new mind had mastered its controls, and it was turning its main drive away
from us, and its blunt forward shield towards us.
   ‘Andrea!’ I tried to shout, but she’d already engaged the drive. The most violent acceleration I’d
ever felt slammed down, crushing my shout to a grunt. The Running Dog vanished instantly from
view, then reappeared as the camera swung to track.
   ‘Boris,’ I groaned. ‘The nuke.’
   ‘Can’t,’ his stronger voice came back. ‘No time to program its course.’
   ‘OK,’ I breathed. ‘Just send Carbon Conscience with it, kamikaze run.’
   ‘Hope you mean kamikaze autopilot.’
   ‘Don’t waste breath ...’ He wasted neither breath nor time, but it was a long minute before he’d
punched the instructions through, and our very own fighter-bomber sprang from our side and
flashed away, instantly outrun by our acceleration.
   Yeng switched to its nose-camera, and in less than a minute, its fuel burned off in one final
sprint we saw what it saw as it closed for the kill. We saw Running Dog’s bulk loom again. We
saw the silent, shocking sphere of the fifty-megaton nuclear explosion ... but not in that camera.
   I swear we saw it through our hull.
    The white afterimages of everything faded slowly, to be replaced by the red pulse of pain. I
wasn’t breathing - the suit was doing that for me and the pinprick tubules of the suit’s oxygen-
supply were forged to hot blades stabbing through my almost-collapsed lungs.
    Going for the short fast run, Andrea’s message spelled out, in green letters on the wavering
scarlet screen of my visual field. Free fall in 20 mins, first encounter in a further 20.
    Can’t you run it longer more speed? Boris asked.
    Outa gas, replied Andrea.
    Out of reaction-mass, to be precise. Nobody had any more questions. I hoped Andrea had
allowed some reserve to get us home, wherever home was now, but I hadn’t the heart or the
strength to ask.
    Jaime flashed up data about our target comet-stream: a long, rich train of fragments, nicely
lined-up long ago by the New Martians’or ultimately, ironically, the Outwarders’ automated
machinery, far out in the system’s vast cloud of unconsolidated ice and organics: still gigantic and
irregular flying icebergs hundreds of yards across, each mined with chemical explosives
synthesized in situ by the smart-matter that infiltrated it. These explosives were primed to detonate
before its final fall on New Mars, breaking the masses into manageable morsels for the planet’s
atmosphere to ablate and its surface to absorb.
    Something was troubling me, something I’d forgotten. I struggled for the elusive thought,
crushed as I was in that press of acceleration, and suddenly it seemed I had it - what if they broke
up before hitting Jupiter? I dismissed it as unlikely - the nanomachines on the comet-chunks
wouldn’t mistake a gas-giant for a small and rocky world.
    And anyway, there was nothing we could do about it, nothing at all. This was, in every sense,
our last throw.
    The crushing pressure ended. We all drew a first breath, and let it out in a common howl of pain
just before the suits mainlined opiate derivatives into our blood, metered out precisely to cancel the
agony and not to overshoot us into euphoria. Not that there was much risk that.
    ‘OK,’ said Andrea, her voice shaking. ‘We have twenty minutes to get clear and get this thing
lined up. Stay in your seats.’
    A quite redundant instruction, I thought, as I strove to twitch my fingers and call up screens.
After about a minute, I succeeded. The suit’s infiltration of my body was not withdrawing, this
time; it still had work to do, as had everyone else’s - the first screens I pulled in showed their
physiological readouts. They were all alive, and conscious, and undergoing massive assistance and
repair. And I was not.
    I stared at the screens, hardly believing what I saw, hardly believing that I was not seeing with
my own eyes, or nerves, or brain. My brain had not shut down completely: it was keeping my body
going, all right; but what Dee had called the cost of sustaining consciousness, of maintaining
selfhood, had been passed elsewhere. The suit had shunted my mind straight into itself, running me
as an update of the model it had taken, days earlier, for my back-up before the first Jovian probe.
    So now I knew. I knew how a simulated mind experienced the world. There was no difference
whatsoever.
    At least, none that I, as a simulated mind, could tell.
    Why had the suit done that? Why to me?
    At that point I found a difference in my experience. I had an acute awareness of the suit’s
presence, its own awareness, as a loyal, living thing; and of its answer.
    There is not only you, it said. Potentially, there is another here. You are carrying a foetus. I
optimize, based on your implied preference. The choice remains yours. You can override mine if
you wish.
    I did not so wish.
    As from a great distance, I watched Yeng disengage the grappling lines, Andrea boost us to a
stable position a couple of miles from the wormhole Gate, and Jaime play the Gate’s clamped-on
attitude jets to bring it all to precisely the right angle for the oncoming cometstream.
    ‘That’s it,’ Jaime said. ‘Just made it, the drones are almost out out of gas themselves.’
    ‘Three minutes to go,’ said Andrea.
    The comets were closing so fast that, even at this late moment, they were still invisible to the
forward telescope. Even if their reflected light could have been picked up, they’d show no proper
motion against the background of stars, until the last few seconds before interception. Only the
deep-space radar clocked their approach. I lay still, my fingertips keying in codes to flip through
outside views: the system’s sun small compared to how ours had looked from Earth, big and
burning in my Callistan eyes; the distant ochre disc of New Mars; and the paradoxical ellipse of the
gate.
    ‘Two minutes.’ She counted down the last minute. As she said ‘Two!’ I saw, in one of my
screens, something moving against the stars: the first comet, seen with not quite the naked eye.
    ‘One!
    ‘Ze -‘
    Cherenkov backwash flooded all our sight.
    The other fragments followed with less than a second between them. Blue light strobed. Ten
cometary masses, each of them weighing in at hundreds of thousands of tonnes. Four passed
through the Gate, adding their mass to our side of it and subtracting it from the other.
    ‘We must be into negative mass, now,’ Malley said. ‘I wish I could see what it’s like.’
    We were in free fall, but we all stayed in our couches, too exhausted to move, and perhaps afraid
to. We had nothing to do but wait, and watch the process by which we hoped to accomplish the
destruction, of a world. I knew, now now that I too was a copied mind running in smart-matter that
the Jovians were not flatlines; that they were, indeed, a superior species not just in the reach of their
power, but in the depth of their minds. They, like us, had infinite space within, subjective worlds;
they were not just entities, but beings.
    And at this moment no, at another moment, ten thousand years in the past our first shots at them
were crashing down, smashing those subjective worlds; our crude rocks were bashing in thinner
skulls and deeper minds than ours. If, that is, we had succeeded in our aim.
    It came to me, then, that what we were doing now had already been done, that the interactions of
the Gate and the comet fragments in our immediate future had consequences in the far past that, in
some sense, the battle was already over. The universe within ten thousand light years of the Sun
was already being colonized by our descendants, or theirs. There was no way of telling, of course
they, or we, might ‘already’ have near-lightspeed Malley Drive ships, dragging new wormhole
gates, but if they ‘had’ penetrated further than New Mars, they wouldn’t arrive until so many years
in our future. The thought gave me an odd, fatalistic reassurance, when it wasn’t twisting my mind
in knots that only Malley, perhaps, could have unravelled.
    I lay there and waited. What would be would be.
    The Gate was still open; still hurtling along the orbital path of the other incoming comets, ready
to intersect the next stream as it did, half an hour later. These were larger, less shaped, but still
small enough to go through. As was the next stream, and the next, until finally, ten hours and
countless cometary fragments later, we reached the limit of the wormhole structure’s capacity to
sustain a negative mass.
   Malley grunted, as if some calculation hadbeen confirmed.
   ‘Now we know,’ he said.
   The remaining fragments we encountered passed through where the Gate had been.
   No longer held together by the tension of the Gate, its rim broke up into sections: dull arcs that
drifted apart and then, very slowly, together, under the attraction of the enormous, invisible mass of
some exotic matter which was all that remained of the warped space they had contained. It
continued to move outwards, against the infalling stream of comets, out towards their source.
                                    11 Looking Forward
   Move or copy?
   The suit’s query could, for me, have only one answer. I had no wish to leave a second self
hanging around in the suit’s circuitry. Nevertheless, my second self had second thoughts. Was I
the real me, existing now, at this moment, about to die? About to commit suicide, for the sake of
another person, who would wake with my memories, back in the presently unconscious meat? Or
was I the copy about to murder my real self, who would otherwise awaken, with no memory of
what had transpired between the loss of her consciousness and its recovery?
   Once you start thinking like that, I realized, there is no end to it.
   ‘Move,’ I said.
   Something happened then, in that brief, eternal moment when I sparked across the gap between
the suit and the skull. I saw a hundred billion stars, as they might be after a hundred thousand
years. It was, of course, a vision, a hallucination; or an intention, a programme, a plan; but what I
do not know to this day is whether it was mine: whence it came, and to whom it was vouchsafed.
   I saw a galaxy of green and gold, its starlight filtered through endless, countless habitats; the
federation of our dreams. And behind it all, in the walls of all our worlds, an immense but finite
benevolence, a great engine of protection and survival; a god on our side, a terror to our enemies
and a friend to us, worlds without end.
   A god who smiled, its work to see; and who now smiled on mine.
   Someone was shaking me. I struggled, in too-solid flesh.
   ‘Ellen!’ Boris was asking. ‘Are you all right?’ I opened my eyes and cracked an awful smile (I
know, because I’ve seen the recording that Boris’s eye made).
   ‘I’m fine,’ I said. ‘I just ... passed out for a moment.’
   ‘Situation report,’ said Andrea, briskly. ‘We’re almost out of reaction-mass, although of course
we can still get all the power we need from the drive. We’re in an orbital couple with the dark
matter, or whatever, where the Gate was, and heading rapidly outwards towards the local comet-
cloud. We don’t know if New Mars has fallen to any final transmissions from the Running Dog,
and we don’t know if our bombardment did in the Jovians. It was a lot weaker, after all, than the
massive comet-strike we had set up in the Solar System.’ She paused, gazing at the star-speckled
forward view. ‘And now the Gate is gone, we’ll never find out.’
   ‘Until the first Malley Drive ships turn up,’ I said, grimly. ‘Ours or theirs.’
   ‘Why ships?’ Malley asked. He seemed amused.
   I stared at him. ‘Well,’ I began, ‘assuming somebody can reinvent the virtual-mass drive you
postulated, and which the first fast folk built for their probe, it can travel at close to lightspeed, and
we’re ten thousand light years away but ten thousand years in the future, so -‘
   I stopped, suddenly feeling stupid, as everybody got the point at the same time, and laughed.
   That ten thousand years was time enough for any radio signals from the Solar System to reach
us; signals that originated immediately after we left.
   ‘It won’t be easy to pick up,’ said Yeng. ‘I’ll have to build a radio telescope.’
   ‘How long will that take?’ I asked.
   Yeng frowned. ‘Some time,’ she said. ‘I’d have to dig out our last parachute, which is of course
not much use to us now, and rejig some hull-maintenance robots to paint it with a monomolecular
foil mesh. It’s half a mile across, so it should be sensitive enough, especially as we know where to
point it.’ She mentally calculated. ‘It’ll take several hours, at least.’
   ‘That long?’ snorted Malley. ‘Good grief, woman, I thought you were talking About years.’ I’d
been reckoning on months, but I didn’t say it. I smiled at Yeng and said: ‘OK, that’s great. But I
think the first thing we have to find out is if New Mars is all right. Because if it isn’t, we could be
in real trouble, real soon.’
   Despite protests somehow, the thought of waiting was even more intolerable, now that we knew
we could find out we went ahead and re-ran the procedure to check the New-Martian radio traffic.
Yeng worked her way through her entire armoury of defences, and found them all clear, relaying
the same insistent and wholly human commerce as she had found before. The incidents of the past
hours were being analyzed by many loud and conflicting voices. Nobody knew we were still in the
system, and we had no intention, just yet, of telling them.
   New Mars, at least, was safe. We left the radio on, in celebration. The New Martians’ old
music, with its perverse celebration of strange sad yearnings and desperate desires, began again to
infiltrate our own minds like a viral meme. It formed the soundtrack as we all pitched in to help
Yeng deploy and adapt the bubble-thin parachute, a process we called our STI project the search
for terrestrial intelligence.
   It was a nervous joke. We didn’t know what we’d find. We didn’t speak of our fear that what
we’d find would be the incomprehensible or all too comprehensible voices that told us that our
exile, and our great proud crime, had been for naught.
   When the telescope was completed, we all hung in the air around Yeng, on the command deck.
Every sound was loud: the air conditioning, the murmur of the ship to itself, the ping of the radar,
our breathing. Yeng ignored them all, working through the first faint signals her great dish aerial
had picked up. She ran them through every check, through her hardware and software, the analyser
fixels flickering in their game of life. For long minutes, she studied them, then without a word,
without looking around, she flicked the speakers on and rotated a dial.
   The command deck filled with the sounds of human beings from the far past: talking, singing,
arguing, squabbling, claiming and disputing a sound immediately redoubled by ourselves, doing
much the same, but louder. Then we stopped yelling, and listened again. Most of the broadcasting
was still being done by non-cos, and there was just as on New Mars a lot of ill-informed
speculation, but it was obvious that our strike had been a success. The Division’s internal messages
were, as we could have expected, narrow-beamed, and nothing so far had leaked in our direction.
   We drank a lot of alcohol that shift.
   Some time later I found I’d eaten a pizza topped with synthesized anchovies, olives, banana and
pineapple. I had never eaten such a revolting combination before, and I vaguely wondered about it
as I licked a final ice cream before falling asleep. I slept for hours, longer than anyone else. I woke
up among them all, still on the command deck, and was promptly and quite publicly sick.
   Suze looked at me with a funny, speculative grin.
   ‘Comrades,’ I said, ‘I have something to tell you.’

    It was a month or so later that Yeng’s telescope picked up the first signal directed at us: a
television signal, open and unencrypted. The call sign had us all leaving whatever we were doing,
literally in midair, and rushing to the nearest screen. Tatsuro’s face appeared. He was sitting in a
virtual conference-space, with some of the Command Committee members, a group of people in
New-Martian commercial uniforms, and, to my surprise, Jonathan Wilde. (The copy of ... but I’d
stopped thinking that way. I had reformed.)
   ‘I feel very strange saying this,’ Tatsuro began. ‘This message is to be sent by the most
powerful transmitter we currently have, and will be repeated, on more powerful transmitters as they
become available, for at least some years to come. It will not, of course, reach its intended
recipients for ten thousand years. If you’re receiving this, you know how strange the circumstances
are. But I have to assume that you’re there, in the future, and that to you this message seems
almost immediate. So -
   ‘To the crew of Terrible Beauty, we all send our thanks. Your comet-strike was just sufficient to
disrupt the Jovian post-humans. To the best of our knowledge, they are extinct, not only from your
actions, and ours, but also from fighting amongst themselves. You need not worry that you
destroyed entities which might have been friendly to us any that were, I’m afraid, were destroyed
by other Jovians, who were in the process of a frantic race to upload copies of themselves into
anything they could reach. Strangely enough, the target of their outbreak was the New-Martian
trading ships rather than ourselves. Our computers were almost impervious to the Jovian viruses,
whereas theirs were, ah, rather more vulnerable, as it turned out. Our latest investigations and
reconstructions show that the Jovians were aiming for the Malley Mile, from which they could have
mastered the entire span of the wormhole, and with it a large part of the universe. You saved more
than you knew.
   ‘Whether you saved the humans and post-humans of New Mars, we don’t know. If you have
not, or if this message is being received by our enemies, I hope the destruction of the Jovians is a
sufficient warning of the terrible acts of which our species is capable. For we are going to build
new virtual-mass quantum-fluctuation drive ships, and new wormhole gates, as soon as we have the
capacity. We will re-establish contact with New Mars. And now, I’ll wish you well, and pass the
transmission to the survivors of the New-Martian trading expedition, who have messages of their
own.’
   One by one, the New-Martian men and women came up, each speaking a heartfelt, and heart-
rending, personal message some, in a way that struck me as strange, addressed to their own copies
as well as to friends and relations. One of them finished by saying:
   ‘This is just a general message to all of you out there. We’ll do our best to maintain one-way
communication we’ll keep in touch, until they build the ships. Of course, unless they build another
gate as well, the ships will be one-way, too, as far as getting back to this place and time is
concerned but. we’re coming home. And you don’t need to worry about how the Solar Union
people will treat us Wilde here has lived off their hospitality for years, according to his needs, as
they say. But what most of us want is to do some business, with the non-cooperators if no one else
but I think we’ll find more trading partners than that. There are a lot of energetic people on Earth,
and now they can use electronics as they please, they are going to boil off Things are going to
change around here. We will see you again.’
   Wilde had learned from the traders about the survival of his other self and his resurrected wife.
He had messages for them, and’ for me.
   ‘Ellen May,’ he said, ‘I thought you could defeat the Outwarders without finding the way to
New Mars. Well, I was mistaken, and you’ve done both. You know what I feared that your people
would invade New Mars, a place for which I have ... a certain affection. Now, looking around me,
I wonder just who has invaded whom. Life may surprise us.’ He shrugged. ‘That’s all. Good
luck.’ I’m looking out of what we still, from habit, call the forward view.
 The sun of New Mars is a tiny, distant disc, barely noticeable against the other stars. We are in the
thick of the comet-cloud, but this thickness is only visible in simulations, not in reality. All around
us is what looks like empty space, apart from our very own comet, surrounded by the frail-seeming,
diamond-strong structures we’ve built from its material; and the strange ruin of the Gate.
    Exotic matter is useful stuff to have around. It pulled us into a close orbit with an even bigger
chunk of normal matter: cometary matter, hundreds of millions of tonnes of it, rock and ice and
organics. It took us five years, give or take, to get out to the cometary cloud, so by that time we
were ready to appreciate our gain. These days, the remnant of the Gate has begun to acquire its
own accretion disc. It is, as Malley once put it, an attractive feature.
    Every home should have one.
    Home ... is here, in one sense. In another, it’s ten thousand light years away and ten thousand
years in the past. (Although I still find myself thinking that we are ten thousand years in the
future.) The solar sources grew and multiplied at the time we first heard them, they increased by the
day and the hour. Within months they were detectable by much less sensitive receivers than ours,
including those on and around New Mars.
    The transmissions tell the ongoing tale of the struggle which that New-Martian trader foresaw,
and whose conclusion no one can foresee: between the Union’s common ownership and the
unstoppable appropriation of the Solar System’s resources by individuals and groups; a story
intently followed by ourselves and by the New Martians. It has the immediacy of daily news, and
the poignancy of ancient history, which nothing we can do will alter and whose ultimate outcome,
if any, was settled millennia ago. It’s already the subject of numerous documentaries, frequent
debates, and several completely fictitious and laughably imaginative New-Martian drama serials.
    The comet-cloud is vast, and we are used to communicating by narrow, cryptic channels, by
winks of laser in the void. Around us the broader, more open signals of the New Martians and their
robot comet-miners fill the spectrum. We know all that they do, and they know we’re here, but
little more. We keep contact to a minimum. We’re happy with that, for now: we want to build a
world of our own out here, out of rock and ice and carbon-compounds and weak sunlight, before
we venture back to a world owned by others.
    One day the Solar Union, or whatever replaces it, will have built its own near-lightspeed Malley
Drive ships. And ten thousand years later, which could be any day now, they’ll turn up here,
perhaps dragging a new wormhole. I don’t much mind if the people who arrive don’t share our
views. They certainly won’t share our property. We may, by then, have the beginnings of our own
little galactic empire quietly accreted around us, out here in the depths of the comet-cloud. When
we have enough mass processed, we’ll start growing people and animals and machines from the
seeds in our stores, and we can grow a long way before anyone even thinks to stop us.
    I’m scanning the analyser readings of a new lode, frowning over the sparse traces of metal, when
a small body cannons into me and a voice says, ‘Ellen, they’re talking about you!’ Stef is four years
old, lanky and bright. He looks a bit like his father, the photographer I met on Graciosa, but he’ll
grow taller than his father: my genes, and his microgravity environment, will see to that. It’s a
struggle getting him to keep up his induction isotonics, in addition to all the usual fights about
brushing teeth and washing hair. He claims his suit takes care of all that, and it does, but that’s not
good enough.
    ‘Back home?’ I ask eagerly.
    Stef shakes his head, impatiently. To him, the Solar Union is almost unreal, a mythical past, a
tale we tell him of our Heliocene days. New Mars is, in every sense, more immediate and vivid.
    ‘In the world,’ he tells me.
    ‘OK,’ I say. ‘Patch it through.’ Stef sticks his hand inside the open front of his suit, and tugs
and twists the smart-matter fabric in exactly the careless, undocumented way I’ve always tried to
argue him out of. To no avail, so far. He regards the suit as something between an imaginary
friend and an intelligent stuffed toy, and treats any attempt to impose a system on their private
language as just that, an imposition.
    The image on my screen dissolves and is replaced by one of those late-night discussion
programmes that New-Martian television stations put out for the slenderest of minority audiences,
the sort of people who probably work in or around the media themselves and affect to despise the
rubbish they put out for everybody else.
    The format is utterly conventional, with a young presenter a teenager, and thus more mature than
most local newscasters and a few older heads discoursing earnestly around a table. I recognize the
bishop, who is probably, whether she realizes it or not, by now the Pope; the rabbi; a Reformed
Humanist spokesperson; a couple of Post-Resurrectionist clerics and David Reid.
    ‘calling it justifiable genocide is, shall we say, uncalled for,’ one of the clerics is saying. ‘I
understand your need to be provocative, of course.’ A quick, we’re-all-in-this-together smile to the
presenter. ‘But I think we need to consider it in more, ah, morally neutral terms. We are, after all,
talking about machinery.’ Reid leans forward, as usual establishing his priority to speak with a
wavy trail of smoke. The presenter, knowing her limitations, wearily nods.
    ‘Rubbish,’ Reid says. ‘If you want to talk about morality, you can’t leave out machinery. We
are machinery. The point is, I doubt if anyone could have done what had to be done to the Jovians
without having a pretty hard attitude to the sufferings of machines. Mind you, the Outwarders had
a pretty low empathy with the sufferings of humans, and the Jovians inherited that flaw, so -‘
    ‘Original sin?’ interrupts the bishop. ‘I’m surprised at you!’ The two Calvinist clergmen smirk
politely. Reid shakes his head.
    ‘They showed it by their actions,’ he says. ‘By what they did to our ships.’
    ‘Ah, but was that enough to condemn an entire ... species?’ the Reformed Humanist asks. ‘I
suspect Ellen May Ngwethu and her crew acted precipitately, but with a degree of premeditation, a
refusal to consider alternatives, which in itself -‘
    ‘We live in a tough world,’ says the rabbi. ‘As my people have traditionally put it, life is short
and shit happens.’ A few minutes of free-for-all follows.
    ‘What everybody here seems to be forgetting,’ says the presenter, trying to get a word in
edgeways, ‘is the evidence from the Solar System, which at least suggests that the Jovian outbreak
was no threat whatsoever to the people in the Solar Union. So, in effect, whatever we think of what
the crew of the Terrible Beauty did, it was to our benefit.’
    ‘And to that of the new societies emerging in the Solar System,’ one of the clerics adds. ‘They
wouldn’t exist without the ending of the Jovian threat, which, whether we approve of it or not, the
Cassini Division accomplished.’ The Reformed Humanist nods gravely. ‘At some cost, moral and
material, to themselves.’ The next comment, if any, is drowned out by Reid’s cynical guffaw, and
then he says: ‘What else are communists for?’ The complacent laughter of all the good liberals
around the table lightens the tone of the rest of the discussion, to which I pay not the slightest
attention. I’m hugging the kid to my side and looking at the cheerful, chatting faces, and thinking,
just you wait, you bankers! just you wait! Our day will come, again.