S. M. Stirling - Draka 04 - Drakon

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Drakon
S. M. Stirling
Copyright © 1996 by S.M. Stirling
ISBN: 0-671-87711-9
First printing, February 1996
To Jan, with love.
And to Marjorie Stirling . . .
who is, in a sense, responsible
for all this.
Acknowledgements:
My thanks to Susan Schwartz and Dina
Pliotis for invaluable research help.
Tom Lawnsby, for he knows what.
Also to Dennis Moore, great guy
and brother-in-law. Glad you
made it back to the world.
(All errors of fact, taste and
interpretation are mine.)
CHAPTER ONE
DOMINATION TIMELINE
EARTH/1
MAY 21, 442nd YEAR OF THE FINAL SOCIETY
(2442 A.D.)
Gwendolyn Ingolfsson stood naked beside the stream. It was an early spring day in the central
Rockies, chilly and intensely fresh. Wind whispered quietly through the fir trees dotted through the upland
valley, down from the snowpeaks to the west, and fluttered the new leaves of the aspens. It carried the
scent of grass and trees, rock, small burrowing things, more faintly elk and—she inhaled—a grizzly, off a
kilometer or two upwind. For a moment she gave herself to the wind and silence, face turned to the
morning sun, watching a condor sweep its shadow across the flower-starred meadows.
Then she turned back to her camp. The fire was out, her last meal of hand-caught trout and rabbit
scorched scraps in the ashes. Beside it was a tripod of spears, shaped ashwood tipped with chipped flint
heads bound on by rawhide; her obsidian knife and hide bag hung from them. For a moment she considered
taking some of the gear for keepsake, then shook her head. The memory would stay with her, of making
them and using them these past six months; let wood and leather and stone rot and tumble and the land
grow over them. Or let another find and use them; there were two or three species in this reserve with the
hands and the wit, perhaps even feral humans.
She spoke to her transducer: now.
The wait was not long. Her ears pricked forward at the whistle of cloven air. A speck fell out of
the sky, became a matte-gray flattened wedge ten meters long by five wide. It settled to the ground with a
faint sigh and a doorway opened. Gwen sighed herself as she stepped through into the long open room
within, regret mingled with pleasure. Back to civilization.
"Temperature twenty-one," she said aloud.
The air warmed. She ran a palm cleaner over her body—time for the comfort of hot water
later—and dressed in a set of blacks from a container. Another container scanned her before releasing a
leather weapons belt, old but well-kept; she checked the charge on the plasma gun automatically, a
nostalgic feeling. Obsolete, almost as much as the layer knife on the opposite hip, but she'd carried this very
weapon on the last human-hunts here in North America; she was old enough to remember that, the
biobombs and the kill-sweeps. Then she sat in the recliner at the nose of the aircraft.
"Visual, optical, maximum." Three-quarters of the hull disappeared to the eye, leaving only the
power and drive systems in the deck behind her opaque. "Lift, course to Reichart Station, speed . . ." She
considered. "Four hundred kph, height five hundred meters." The craft had orbital capacity, but she wasn't
in a hurry. "Call, to legate Tamirindus Rohm."
The wedge lifted, turning and heading southeast down the valley. A square of space before her
opened and showed quiet moving colors. Then it flashed to display, only the lack of scent and moving air to
distinguish it from a window.
"Service, Tamirindus," Gwen said.
"Glory, Gwen."
The legate was floating in zero gravity—Gwen recognized the background, an office at the GEO
end of the Kenia beanstalk; the blue-and-white shield of Earth covered the window behind her, with the
northeast corner of Africa visible and the long curve of the Stalk vanishing into the distance below.
Duty. The Directorates wouldn't have called her unless something important needed her attention.
The younger woman—she was only a little over two hundred, half Gwen's age—looked enough like
her to be her sister. Hair bright copper rather than mahogany, and a slightly more slender build: apart from
that they had the shared likeness of their respective generations of Homo drakensis. Deepscan would
have shown more differences, of course, despite periodic DNA updates that kept Gwen roughly current,
and she doubted the youngster had ever bothered with the full set of combat biomods. The Draka hadn't
had much use for them in her lifetime.
"Not my idea of a vacation," Tamirindus went on. "Glad the bears didn't eat you."
"Mostly hibernating, in winter," Gwen answered. "I ate one of them. Believe me, you appreciate the
finer things more if you go without for a while. Now, the wild ghouloon packs, they can be really dangerous
. . . and I think I spotted sign of humans, ferals."
Tamirindus's eyebrows went up. "Still?"
"Oh, they're not quite extinct. It's not an elegant species, but it's tough and they breed fast." She
stretched. "Speaking of which, how's the reproduction going?"
"Brooders about ready, doing fine."
"Not using an orthowomb for your eggs?" Gwen made a tsk sound. "And you with the Technical
Directorate."
Tamirindus grinned. "Tradition has its place. Besides, I like to watch them swell and feel the baby
kick in their bellies. The brooder's a pet; the Rohms've used her line since the first century. Her
great-grandmother brooded me."
The aircraft extended a cup of coffee; Gwen took it and sipped with slow pleasure. Conversation
and coffee were things she'd missed in the wilderness too. Shapes drifted outside Tamirindus's office
wall-window, habitats, fabricators, an Earth-orbit to Luna shuttle, the bell-tube-globe shape of an
interplanetary craft. Further away they were bright dots against the black of space and the unwinking glow
of stars, and in the middle distance the huge frame of the next interstellar colony ship under construction.
Gwen's eyes dwelt on that for a moment. Travel from star to star was one-way, and she had never quite
decided it was time to leave the home system. Sol-based instruments were enough to tell if there was a
life-bearing planet, and to learn much of its detail. Uncrewed probes followed for more detailed work, to
see if the prospects were good, and so far five colonizing expeditions had gone out in the probes' wake.
Only information and a few frozen samples ever came back; the ships themselves were part of the
equipment needed by the settlers.
"Well, if I'm free, I'll visit Rohmplace for the naming feast," she promised the other Draka. It was a
while since she'd been to Mars, anyway. "Am I likely to be free?"
"That depends," Tamirindus said. "I may not be able to make it. You know, fifty years ago I almost
decided to emigrate because this job was so boring?"
Gwen nodded. One of the drawbacks of immortality was that promotion became positively glacial,
even with the population decline. On the other hand, it also made it easier to wait. Though that can be a
drawback too. Patience and laziness can be interchangeable. The other woman went on:
"Well, we had another disaster with the space-based molehole platform. Moving it out to the Oort
didn't help at all. This one was bad, heavy casualties. The only consolation is that the weird shit
accompanying the accident proves we're doing something right. We haven't figured out exactly what
happened or what went where, though.
"So, they've tried microgravity; now the neuron-whackers think a stable planetary field might help."
More seriously: "We're trying everything at once, all possible avenues. I've got a dozen teams working on it
now. This is important, Gwen."
It was. For four centuries the Domination and the descendants of the refugees who'd fled to Alpha
Centauri hadn't done much more than glare at each other. By the time the Solar System recovered enough
from the Last War to do anything, Alpha Centauri was too tough a nut to crack. War over interstellar
distances was an absurdity; the energy costs too high, the defender's advantages from being near a sun too
great. Both sides had skirmished a little, traded information a little, and raced to colonize suitable systems
first—the only real clash had occurred when two expeditions arrived nearly simultaneously at one such.
Colonies were autonomous, because interstellar government was even more ridiculous than war.
In theory it was possible to destroy inhabited planets from light-years distant, although not to
conquer them. Nobody had ever thought it worthwhile, when retaliation in kind was just as easy and the
preparations simple to spot. With communications time in years and travel time in decades, even the closest
star was vastly too far to rule. Only the huge resources of entire solar systems made colonization possible
at all; there certainly wasn't any economic payoff.
This project might change all that. And the Samothracians—the descendants of the American
colonists in the Alpha Centauri system—were ahead. They'd always been better physicists, even before the
Last War; the Domination had only started looking into moleholes because espionage indicated the enemy
were.
"Downlink?" Gwen said. Best to start right away. You could stuff information into your brain via
transducer, but understanding it still took time and effort.
"Not on the Web. Infoplaque by courier; you know, Suicide Before Reading secret. It's waiting for
you, along with your stuff. We need to know if it's worthwhile putting more resources into this subproject;
the energy budget's enough to notice, even these days."
And really large energies were difficult to handle on a planetary surface; that was probably why
the project had been put in sparsely populated North America, just in case. With the Atlantic Ocean to act
as an emergency heat sink.
"Glory."
"Service," Gwen replied in farewell. "I'll have a report for you as soon as I can."
She held the coffee cup out for a refill and frowned as the link disappeared. Tamirindus was
worried, which meant the Technical Directorate was worried. Which means I should be worried.
Something of a novelty; this last century or so had been very peaceful.
"Manual," she said, tossing the cup into the cycler. To her transducer: news.
The aircraft swooped and dove as her hand settled on the joystick it extruded. Mountains gave way
to high rolling plains, green with new grass. Life swarmed, wild horses, antelope, once a herd of bison a
million strong. On the shores of a lake a pack of centaurs surrounded a mammoth, shooting with thick
recurved bows, galloping in to stab with long heavy lances. Bogged in the lakeside mud, the giant reddish
bulk raised its trunk and trumpeted in agony. The females and colts waited at a distance, setting up dome
tents and preparing to butcher the great curltusker. None of the stallions looked up from their task, but the
others pointed in wonder at the low-flying aircraft, the young running in circles and kicking their hind feet up
in sheer glee.
Meanwhile information flowed in; there were a hundred million of her people in the Solar System,
and ten times that number of servus, enough to generate considerable news. Gossip, politics, tournaments,
duels, wingflying in the domed craters of the Moon, a redirected comet streaking through the nearly clear
atmosphere of Venus as the long trouble-plagued terraforming came to an end, sailboats drifting down the
ocean that filled the Valles Marineris on Mars. The Cygnus Nine probe had reported in, and there was not
only a habitable planet, but an intelligent species on it.
That made her flip the aircraft up, let it do the piloting and take notice; that was only the second
race of sophonts found so far, in scores of systems. Planets were the general rule around Sol-type stars, life
more common than not, biochemistries roughly compatible with Earth's rare but not impossibly so. Sapient,
language-using, tool-making species were very uncommon. The previous discovery hadn't been made until
after the colonizing expedition landed, the natives being the equivalent of Homo erectus, very scarce and
not having made much impact on their planet. This new bunch were extremely interesting. Weird-looking,
two big eyes and two little ones near a perforated beaklike projection in the middle of their . . . well,
probably faces. A Bronze Age-equivalent technology, so they wouldn't be any trouble for the colonizing
expedition. A few thunderbolts and the Gods from the Sky would be worshiped with fervor.
Of course, the natives would be wild. It would probably take a while to understand the biology and
produce a proper domesticated strain, but even so it would be useful to have a population in place rather
than breeding from frozen ova alone.
Below, grassland dwindled. Forests appeared along rivers and grew thicker. Fields drew their
swirling lines across the landscape, each clustered around a manor house and its dependencies, the estates
separated by kilometers of wilderness. Settlement faded again east of the Mississippi, until the
Appalachians reared blue and silent, covered with ancient woods of hickory and oak. A thread of smoke
rose from one mountain valley; probably goblins. Gwen grimaced. Loathsome little things. One of the
Conservation Directorate's mistakes, in her opinion—although they did make good, tricky game. The
Adirondacks flashed by, spruce and white pine broken only by the blue eyes of lakes.
A scattering of manors marked the Hudson valley, but nobody had ever bothered to resettle Long
Island or Manhattan. Thus it was free for Technical Directorate use. Beyond, the Atlantic stretched silver
and immense.
"Query," the aircraft said. "Security query from Reichart Station . . . Confirmed access."
Just as well, since the orbital weapons platforms would be tracking her. Back to work.
***
Reichart Station's surface was a village set in parkland, amid oak and maple forest growing over
what closer inspection would show to be ruins. Here and there a giant stub of crumbled building showed,
what had survived the airblasts and half a millennium of weather and roots. Several hundred acres were
surrounded by the inconspicuous fence-rods of a sonic barrier to keep animals and wild sapients out.
Tile-roofed cottages stood among gardens, around a few larger buildings in the same whitewashed style;
lawns and brick paths linked them, centered on a square with an ornamental pond. The settlement was
three and a half centuries old, at first a biohazards research institute, later branching into physics. Tied into
the Web, there wasn't much need for extensive physical plant, and what there was could be put
underground, A heavy power receptor showed in the distance, new construction; superconducting cable
would be run underground to the centrum.
The whole population was turned out to greet her, nearly a thousand all told. A visit from a
drakensis in person would be rare here, entry being restricted. A bow like a ripple went over them as she
stepped down from the aircraft.
Gwen's nostrils flared slightly, taking their scent. Clean, slightly salty, seasoned with curiosity,
excitement, awe, a touch of fear, a complex hormonal stew that signaled submission. The scent of Homo
servus, comforting and pleasant; it brought a warm pleasurable feeling, a desire to protect and guide.
Their type was more diverse in looks than her own, closer to the ancestral Homo sapiens
sapiens; this particular group tended to light-brown skins and fair hair, and a height about half a head below
her hundred and seventy-six centimeters. There were children among the crowd. Reichart Station would be
a community of its own, with its own customs and folkways, by now. The group standing to meet her were
middle-aged or older, although they showed few signs of it; they'd been designed to remain vigorous into
their ninth or tenth decade before a brief senescence and an easy death.
"Greetings," Gwen said.
"We live to serve," they replied.
The awe-fear scent grew stronger as they reacted to the subliminal stimulus of her pheromones.
She throttled back consciously. No sense in spooking them—the long wilderness vacation had made her a
little sloppy.
"I'm Glenr Hoben," the servus said. "Administrator. This is Tolya Mkenni, my lifepartner and head
of research on the Project." She could hear the capitalization on the name.
Tolya gave a half-bow; she smelled a little nervous, and her pupils were slightly dilated. "We've
been achieving interesting results, overlord, but it's an intricate question. We're thankful for one of the Race
to direct us."
Gwen smiled and shook her head. She'd been a scientist of various types—she'd started in
planetography, back around the time of the Final War—but was mainly a troubleshooter these days.
"I'm here primarily to assess and report," she said. "If things look promising, more personnel will be
assigned."
Introductions followed. A pair of adolescents bowed and presented her with flowers, some type she
wasn't familiar with, probably a local bioproduct. The blossoms had a heady scent, rather like plum brandy
with a hint of cinnamon. The two who presented them were pretty as well, a boy and girl of about sixteen in
white tunics.
"What pleasant youngsters," she said.
"Mine and Tolya's," said Glenr with quiet pride. "Tomin is already studying research infosystems,
and Mala quantum-gravitational dynamics. They'll serve the Race well."
"I'm sure they will," Gwen said sincerely. Servus were short-lived and meek and biddable, but the
best of them were just as intelligent as her kind, and possibly more creative. "I'll spend the rest of this
evening and tomorrow resting and assimilating data."
***
Gwen knew the courier's presence in the villa marked for her use before she saw him. Slightly to
her surprise, it was a Draka like herself; she could tell that from the scent, sharper and harder than a
servus's. A youngish man—no more than sixty or so, she judged—in War Directorate uniform. The
Directorates were taking this matter seriously. He rose with the leopard gracefulness of the Race and
extended the infoplaque. It was about the size of her thumbnail; far larger than necessary to carry the data,
but more convenient for handling.
"Service," she said.
"Glory," he replied, dropping the plaque into her palm.
"Received," she said, and touched the corder fastened to his wrist. "I'd better get right on to it."
The man nodded grimly; his control was excellent for someone so young, but she could sense
tightly-held fright.
"I was with the salvage crew that worked over the platform out in the Oort," he said. "Believe me,
we're dealing with the unknown here. And I'm not entirely sure that the enemy haven't been meddling."
Gwen nodded. Contamination of infosystems was a perpetual threat, one of the few forms of
military action that could be carried out over light-years. There was always some traffic in information
between the systems, mostly scientific. The Samothracians had always been better at infosystems, just as
the Race did more with biologicals—but the InfoWeb was the skeleton of modern civilization. The
unspoken threat of retaliation with biosabotage, or simply with asteroids punched up to relativistic speeds,
had kept anything too obvious from happening. The potential of the molehole projects . . . was that worth
the risk of direct action to the enemy?
Certainly. A functioning macrocosmic molehole would break the long stalemate. The Final War
might well turn out to be less final than they'd thought.
"Service to the State," she said, in the old formal mode.
He saluted, fist to chest. "Glory to the Race."
Silence fell on the villa, unbroken save for the breathing of her ghouloon in its quarters at the back;
the courier must have brought it in. The transgene was asleep, but its senses were just as keen as hers, and
it would wake in the extremely unlikely event of intruders. Gwen slipped the plaque into the receptor of a
pocket reader; it extended a thin diadem that she dropped over her head to rest on her brows. She lay down
on a couch in the lounging room and thought at her transducer:
begin.
***
She came aware and blinked, lifting the circlet from her brow. The data was there, downlinked in
instants; the hours since had been spent organizing and assimilating it. The process was far from complete,
but well begun. Hunger and stiffness had roused her, and the sound of the ghouloon padding in. Her mind
felt overcrammed and bloated, like a stomach after a too-heavy meal.
The room was not dark to Gwen, not to eyes that could rival a cat's, and see into the infrared as
well. The guardbeast rose from all fours, one hand pointing to the door; somebody was approaching. A
silent snarl lifted teeth from its muzzle. Ghouloons were an early experiment, the first of the sentient
transgenes. Basically a giant Gelada baboon, with material from certain breeds of dog, from the hunting
cats, and from human stock for intelligence, vocal cords, and a fully opposable thumb. They made superb
guardians and hunt-servants, although not bright enough to operate any but the simplest machines. Crude
work by current standards, but still occasionally useful.
She listened herself, drew air through her nostrils, stretched. "No, I think I know who that is,
Wulka," she said quietly. "Go back to your room."
Gwen slipped out of the blacks and underclothes and walked to the door. The villa lights came up
around her automatically. The door was carved wood on hinges, local handicrafts. Tomin and Mala stood
outside, bearing a bottle of wine and a hamper that smelled of food. The adolescents were wearing flower
wreaths in their pale hair, and nothing else.
"We—" they began.
"I know," Gwen said, laying a finger across each pair of lips.
She savored their scent, a slight tang of apprehension and a rising involuntary excitement as they
responded to her pheromones. Those strengthened in their turn as she relaxed conscious control and let her
arousal blossom. Her hands trailed down to rest over their hearts, a pleasant contrast of hard curve and
soft, with the same quickening beat beneath both. Their flushed and bright-eyed smiles answered her
heavy-lidded one. It was a feedback cycle, self-reinforcing for all three. This should be a rare and
memorable experience for them—the pleasure would be as intense as they could bear—and an enjoyable
one for her after six months alone in the wilderness.
"A charming gesture," she said. And just what she needed to relax. "Do come in."
***
Tolya gestured at the holographic image that hung over the table and it rotated through a
figure-eight.
"This is a three-dimensional representation," the physicist said. It showed something rather like an
hourglass shape. "We take a molehole from the quantum foam, pump in energy to enlarge it, and stretch the
ends apart. Both ends always remain fully congruent in spacetime. It's a closed timelike loop."
That was the theory, at least. You could anchor one end and whip the other out like a bead on the
end of an elastic string. Something sent through one end emerged from the other without subjective
duration. The side-effects were extremely odd; if one end were traveling at relativistic speeds, you got the
time-dilation effect reversibly. Observed from the outside, it would take the mobile end 4.2-odd years to
reach say, Alpha Centauri. But from the fixed end back at Sol, it would be a matter of weeks until the
moving exit reached across the light-years. Stepping in would move you 4.2 light-years in space, and 4.2
years in time. So far that was only a weird amplification of ordinary high-tau interstellar travel. Seriously
strange was the fact that you could step back through the molehole and through time; and if you sent the
mobile end on a round-trip journey to the Centauri system and returned, you'd have two gates right next to
each other, separated by more than eight years in time.
FTL always was considered equivalent to time-travel, Gwen mused. The surprising thing was
that both seemed to be possible.
"Of course, as an object passes through, the molehole tries to pinch out—you have to feed in heavy
energy to keep it from closing, a virtual-matter ring. We've achieved consistent results using slightly
enlarged ones and passing subatomic particles through, down on a single-atom scale. Proof of concept; it
definitely works, overlord."
"But."
The servus scientist sighed and ran a hand through her graying hair. "Yes. There seems to be some
sort of asymptotic phenomenon that takes over when we enlarge. The energy inputs give extremely
variable results, and the variability increases exponentially as size goes up. It's a chaotic effect, somehow.
The theory we have says that once stabilized the molehole shouldn't do that, but obviously the theory's not
everything we could wish. At a guess, I'd say that there's some sort of . . . inherent linkage to the quantum
foam. There could even be advantages to that, eventually, but it's not a completely understood phenomenon.
In fact, overlord, it's not even partly understood."
"What are you trying?"
"Well, we're running a series of tests; enlarging the captive molehole without separating the ends
spatially. That ought to be easier under a relatively heavy and uniform gravitational field. We'll bring it up in
size before manipulating it; still very small compared to the eventual macrocosmic applications, you
understand. About on the scale of a medium-sized molecule. If we can do that, then we might be able to
separate the ends later. Here's the math."
Figures replaced the holograph. Gwen let her transducer take them in, running a mental comparison
with the previous attempts.
"These functions—what're you assuming?" she said after a moment, calling up a sequence of
equations. "Where did you get these quantities?"
Tolya shrugged and spread her hands, "We're guessing. The experimental results should give us an
order-of-magnitude answer on how wrong we are, and then we can try again. It isn't quick, I'm afraid,
overlord, but—"
"—elegance buys no yams, yes," she replied, nodding approval. "Good solid rule-of-thumb work.
More productive than any simulations, when the basic metrics aren't fully known. The space-based team
tried to go too far too fast, in my opinion."
A heavy wash of flattered pleasure at her words scented the air; she could feel the enthusiasm like
a glow around the long plain table. Her own answered it. These were obviously a first-class group.
Progress. Back in the times of the Old Domination, when the Draka and their subjects had both
been archaic-human, it had been impossible to entrust work like this to the underclasses. She had seen the
last of that herself, being the first generation of the New Race.
"We're running the first series now, overlord," Tolya said. "You could monitor from here."
"No, I'll come down," she said thoughtfully.
Not that looking at the casings of the machinery would give her more information than she could
get here, but you never knew what prompted an intuitive leap. They crowded into the elevator, a bit of a
tight press with Wulka in one corner. The servus crowded away from the transgene's fur, squeezing
together to avoid transgressing Gwen's sphere of social space. She kept her dominance pheromones
throttled down to the minimum in the crowded quarters, but it was a relief when the doors hissed open.
They were a long way underground here. The shaft opened directly onto the centrum, with another display
monitor in the center of the circular room. Around it were consoles with recliners for the attendants. They
sat silently, seldom moving, controlling their instruments through transducers and the relay-circlets around
their temples.
"Ready to run," one of them said aloud.
Gwen stepped to the display table. It was physically over the facility, more for symmetry's sake
than anything else. Right now the graph-holos were showing standby power only. The molehole was
represented by a line of white light. Her transducer was Draka class, and she slipped effortlessly into
communion with the machines and their operators. It was not quite like artificial telepathy, but nearly. Tolya
was directing them with crisp efficiency:
bringing it up. skip level four in thirty seconds, power on. mark.
this is the level the platform had trouble with? Gwen asked.
yes, overlord, but we've reached it before without a problem.
Gwen nodded, proceed, cautiously.
Seems steady enough, the physicist thought. one more level and then stabilize and monitor.
A technicians thought. power overage.
Odd. Tolya hesitated, cut energy input, 10%. To Gwen: overlord, it ought to collapse in a
gravity field if we take it down, pity to lose the molehole, but—
Power overage. It's not contracting. A pause. Loss of symmetry, the metric is varying.
Gwen cut in. put it on auto and evacuate. She looked up. Tolya was staring at the console,
wide-eyed.
overlord, we'll lose the facility!
Gwen spoke aloud. "Uplink the data, realtime." Crucial to get something of value out of this.
"Evacuate the settlement. And get out!"
Her voice took on the whipcrack of command. The others obeyed instantly, all but Tolya. The chief
physicist halted for an instant in the shaft door.
"Overlord—"
"Go."
Her mind grappled with the machines. Get the data out. The control systems were trying to shove
the molehole back down into the quantum foam where it belonged, and failing. The danger was sudden,
shocking, as unexpected as a grizzly heaving itself out of hibernation beneath her feet. It focused her, as
nothing else had in generations. Get the scientists out; right now, they were more valuable to the Race than
she was. Save the facility if she could. That's not working. The machines were trying to starve the
molehole, but obviously the power input was coming from somewhere else. Once it rose over a tripping
threshold it started expanding on its own, exponentially. Vacuum energy, perhaps.
All right, we'll try the other way. She rapped out through her transducer: maximize containment
fields. If she couldn't starve it, see if it choked.
There was an almost-audible hum from beneath her feet. Several alarm systems began to indicate
physical breaches in components; all this was taking place in a space smaller than her fist, ten meters or so
below.
Well, that didn't work either. Fear now, harsh and unaccustomed. The facility was lost, and her
with it if she didn't get out in time.
"Out!" she rasped, and began the leap backward that would take her into the elevator shaft.
The ghouloon reacted with an equal, animal swiftness, reaching out to grab her and add the
momentum of its arm to her bound.
Blackness.
***
"Damnation!"
Alarms flexed through the detection instruments of the USSNF President Douglas. The cruiser
was waiting on minimal-power standby, most of the crew in stasis units, everything heavily stealthed. The
passive sensors were fully active, however.
Captain Marjorie Starns, United States of Samothrace Naval Forces, looked down at the screen
again; the implants gave her the same information, with the mathematical overtones. The images of others
of the active crew appeared in front of her: her executive officer, Lyle Asmundsen, and the Strategic
Studies Institute honcho, Menendez.
She called up data; Earth spun before them, as if the ship were orbiting the planet, rather than
nearly a tenth of a light-year beyond Pluto. A grid lay across it, and a point flashed.
"Eastern coast of North America," she said.
"Certain it was a molehole?" The spook, George Menendez.
"Nothing else produces an event wave like that," she said. "Very brief; it cycled through its stability
point, grew and collapsed. They're still working on the control—but they're getting closer. That one nearly
worked. Of course, they evidently don't know what happens when you open one through a sharply-flexed
spacetime matrix, but this'll give them an idea. They're not what you'd call really sharp theoretical
physicists, but once you know something's possible . . ."
The intelligence agent started to shrug, then stopped and crossed himself. "Jesus," he whispered.
"That's another Earth they broke through to."
The captain nodded jerkily. "We've got a responsibility here," she said. "Samothrace is always
uninhabited, to a very high order of probability. But any other Earth . . ."
"What was the degree of displacement?" Asmundsen said.
She consulted the machines; the theoretical breakthroughs behind them were recent, but capacity
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[frontblurb][VersionHistory]DrakonS.M.StirlingCopyright©1996byS.M.StirlingISBN:0-671-87711-9Firstprinting,February1996ToJan,withlove.AndtoMarjorieStirling...whois,inasense,responsibleforallthis.Acknowledgements:MythankstoSusanSchwartzandDinaPliotisforinvaluableresearchhelp.TomLawnsby,forheknowswhat....

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