The small probe ship came out of the void with the keys to Heaven, Hell, and perhaps someplace in
between; it brought with it evidence of fabulous riches and perhaps more, but what it didn’t bring back was
a road map to the stars.
Along with the spiritual part of humanity, the legends, both good and bad, had also survived, particularly
amongst the few who still knew of or could follow the patterns of the scouts to the stars. Fear, doubt, and
death were out there, it was true, but perhaps not only that. Somewhere out there, in stories and songs and
legends from forgotten origins, were the Three Kings.
Every civilization had at least one; every faith as well. It might be the Kingdom of Prester John, or the
fabled El Dorado, or, on a more ethereal plain, it might be called Paradise, Heaven, or a state of Nirvana.
On a more secular level, it was the big one, the find of a lifetime, the jackpot, the ultimate strike. Nobody
really knew what it looked like, but everyone had their own vision, their own dream, and their own deep
down conviction that, sooner or later, they would find it.
The major difference between all of those and the Three Kings was that almost everyone was convinced
that the Three Kings existed, and there was in fact physical evidence of it. The trouble was, its location was
as mysterious and mystical as any of the others.
Ishmael Hand was one of the breed of loners the church called Prophets and everybody else called scouts.
Half human, half machine, merged into a cybernetic ship that was almost an organism in and of itself, able
to build, or perhaps grow would be a better word, the probes and contact devices it required, these
volunteers to go forever into the eternal void in search of the unknown had a million motives. Hand was a
mystic, and not alone in that category of scout; he had turned himself into the ultimate pilgrim, searching
among the stars, praying, meditating when in between, looking for something that may be out there, may
actually be within his own mind, or might not exist at all. To those who sent them out, the motive didn’t
matter, so long as the supply of volunteers continued.
It was initially done entirely by machines; smart machines, machines that were every bit the observer and
evaluator, but those machines proved lacking in several ways. They had never been living beings, born and
raised in organic environments, feeling what organic sentient beings feel, understanding in non-academic
ways what organic sentient beings really wanted or needed. They could only send back samples and
reports; they could never send back impressions that others might understand and interpret. They could
quantify, but they could not dream.
Sentient beings like the human Ishmael Hand, however, also had their limits, not just physical but mental
and emotional as well, and they didn’t live long enough for some of these distances, nor did they have the
precision and detail that cybernetic equipment could bring to a job. The marriage of creature and machine
was, after much trial and error, found to be the perfect vehicle.
Within, of course, limits.
For if they were not a little bit mad when they left, they certainly were after decades of roaming the
vastness of the universe, yet their machine sides were precise and detailed. As time went on, it often
became difficult to interpret all the data properly. . . .
Once an uncharted system was sighted, scouted, and thoroughly investigated, the procedure was simple.
The ships themselves were almost organic; they could take in debris, dust, rock, whatever was out there and
convert it to what they needed, just as their external scoops turned some of it into the interstellar fuels that
ran them. From this material they grew small probes according to designs within their complex memory
banks, and sent them everywhere in the system. Every type of analysis was performed, every part of
everything evaluated. The most dead of worlds could contain something of great or unique value.
Premiums, of course, were first and foremost lost colonies; then solid planets within the life zone that
could be the source of new life or, if not of anything particularly interesting, turned with minimal cost or
effort into new colonies. Beyond that, they looked for things they had never seen before, beautiful and
unique creations, knowledge.
There was a lot of life in the galaxy; that was well known. The trouble was, only a miniscule portion of it
had any brains at all, and of the handful of races bumped into by expanding humanity none had been
anything but primitive.
Ishmael Hand had recognized what he’d stumbled on almost immediately. Long before the Great Silence
there were half-whispered tales of them, but never, until now, solid physical evidence of their existence.
Three planets in the life zone that had not gone bad over the eons was just about unheard of; even two was
almost never seen. That was why, Hand speculated, nobody had really found the Three Kings since the
ancient and messed-up machine-only scouts had first reported them.