Joe Haldeman - Camouflage

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Camouflage
Joe Haldeman
An Ace Book
Published by The Berkley Publishing Group
A division of Penguin Group (USA) Inc.
375 Hudson Street
New York, New York 10014
This book is an original publication of The Berkley Publishing Group.
This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are
the product of the authors imagination or are used fictitiously, and any
resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, business establishments,
events, or locales is entirely coincidental.
CAMOUFLAGE
Copyright © 2004 by Joe Haldeman.
Text design by Tiffany Estreicher.
All rights reserved.
This book, or parts thereof, may not be reproduced in any form without permission.
The scanning, uploading, and distribution of this book via the Internet or via any
other means without the permission of the publisher is illegal and punishable by
law. Please purchase only authorized electronic editions, and do not participate
in or encourage electronic piracy of copyrighted materials. Your support of
the author's rights is appreciated. ACE and the "A" design are
trademarks belonging to Penguin Group (USA) Inc.
First edition: August 2004
ISBN: 0-441-01161-6
This title has been registered with the Library of Congress.
PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
10 9876 54321
For Ralph Vicinanza, faithful navigator
The author gratefully acknowledges the help of Chris
Nelson, our guide through the alien world of Samoa, and
Cordelia Willis, for her knowledge of forensic technology
and DNA matters.
prologue
The monster came from a swarm of stars that humans call
Messier 22, a globular cluster ten thousand light-years distant. A
million stars with ten million planets—all but one of them devoid
of significant life.
It's not a part of space where life could flourish. All of those
planets are in unstable orbits, the stars swinging so close to one
another that they steal planets, or pass them around, or eat them.
This makes for ferocious geological and climatic changes; most
of the planets are sterile billiard balls or massive Jovian gasbags.
But on the one world where life has managed a toehold, that life is
tough.
And adaptable. What kind of organisms can live on a world as
hot as Mercury, which then is suddenly as distant from its sun as
Pluto within the course of a few years?
Most of that life survives by simplicity—lying dormant until
the proper conditions return. The dominant form of life, though,
thrives on change. It's a creature that can force its own evolution—
not by natural selection, but by unnatural mutation, changing itself
as conditions vary. It becomes whatever it needs to be—and after
millions of swifter and swifter changes, it becomes something that
can never die.
The price of eternal life had been a life with no meaning
beyond simple existence. With its planet swinging wildly through
the cluster, the creatures' days were spent crawling through deserts
gnawing on rocks, scrabbling across ice, or diving into muck—in
search of any food that couldn't get away.
The world spun this way and that, until random forces finally
tossed it to the edge of the cluster, away from the constant glare of
a million suns—into a stable orbit: a world that was only half day
and half night; a world where clement seas welcomed diversity.
Dozens of species became millions, and animals crawled up from
the warm sea onto land grown green, buzzing with life.
The immortal creatures relaxed, life suddenly easy. They
looked up at night, and saw stars.
They developed curiosity, then philosophy, and then science.
During the day, they would squint into a sky with a thousand
sparks of sun. In the night's dark, across an ocean of space, the cool
billowing oval of our Milky Way Galaxy beckoned.
Some of them built vessels, and hurled themselves into the
night. It would be a voyage of a million years, but they'd lived
longer than that, and had patience.
A million years before man is born and its story begins, one
such vessel splashes into the Pacific Ocean. It goes deep, following
an instinct to hide. The creature that it carried to Earth emerges,
assesses the situation, and becomes something appropriate for
survival.
For a long time it lives on the dark bottom, under miles of
water, large and invincible, studying its situation. Eventually, it
abandons its anaerobic hugeness and takes the form of a great
white shark, the top of the food chain, and goes exploring, while
most of its essence stays safe inside the vessel.
For a long time, it remembers where the vessel is, and
remembers where it came from, and why. As centuries go by,
though, it remembers less. After dozens of millennia, it simply
lives, and observes, and changes.
It encounters humanity and notes their acquired superiority—
their placement, however temporary, at the top of every food chain.
It becomes a killer whale, and then a porpoise, and then a
swimmer, and wades ashore naked and ignorant.
But eager to learn.
-1-
Baja California, 2019
Russell Sutton had done his stint with the U.S. government
around the turn of the century, a frustrating middle-management
job in two Mars exploration programs. When the second one
crashed, he had said good-bye to Uncle Sam and space in general,
returning to his first love, marine biology.
He was still a manager and still an engineer, heading up the
small firm Poseidon Projects. He had twelve employees, half of
them Ph.D.s. They only worked on two or three projects at a time,
esoteric engineering problems in marine resource management and
exploration. They had a reputation for being wizards, and for
keeping both promises and secrets. They could turn down most
contracts—anything not sufficiently interesting; anything from the
government.
So Russ was not excited when the door to his office eased open
and the man who rapped his knuckles on the jamb was wearing an
admiral's uniform. His first thought was that they really could
afford a receptionist; his second was how to frame a refusal so that
the guy would just leave, and not take up any more of his morning.
"Dr. Sutton, I'm Jack Halliburton."
That was interesting. "I read your book in graduate school.
Didn't know you were in the military." The man's face was vaguely
familiar from his memory of the picture on the back of Bathyspheric
Measurements and Computation; no beard now, and a little less hair.
He still looked like Don Quixote on a diet.
"Have a seat." Russ waved at the only chair not supporting
stacks of paper and books. "But let me tell you right off that we
don't do government work."
"I know that." He eased himself into the chair and set his hat on
the floor. "That's one reason I'm here." He unzipped a blue portfolio
and took out a sealed plastic folder. He turned it sideways and
pressed his thumb to the corner; it read his print and popped open.
He tossed it onto Russell's desk.
The first page had no title but top secret—for your eyes only, in
red block letters.
"I can't open this. And as I said—"
"It's not really classified, not yet. No one in the government,
outside of my small research group, even knows it exists."
"But you're here as a representative of the government, no? I
assume you do own some clothes without stars on the shoulders."
"Protective coloration. I'll explain. Just look at it."
Russ hesitated, then opened the folder. The first page was a
picture of a vague cigar shape looming out of a rectangle of gray
smears.
"That's the discovery picture. We were doing a positron radar
map of the Tonga-Kermadec Trench—"
"Why on earth?"
"That part is classified. And irrelevant."
Russ had the Tooling that his life was on a cusp, and he didn't
like it. Ho spun around slowly in his chair, taking in the
comfortable clutter, the pictures and the charts on the wall. The
picture window looking down on the Sea of Cortez, currently calm.
With his back to Halliburton, he said, "I don't suppose this is
something we could do from here."
"No. We've chosen a place in Samoa."
"Now, that's attractive. Heat and humidity and lousy food."
"I tend to think pretty girls and no winter." He pushed his
glasses back on his nose. "Food's not bad if you don't mind
American."
Russ turned back around and studied the picture. "You have to
tell me something about why you were there. Did the Navy lose
something?"
"Yes."
"Did it have people in it?"
"I can't answer that."
"You just did." He turned to the second page. It was a sharper
view of the object. "This isn't from positrons."
"Well, it is. But it's a composite from various angles, noise
removed."
Good job, he thought. "How far down is this thing?"
"The trench is seven miles deep there. The artifact is under
another forty feet of sand."
"Earthquake?"
He nodded. "A quarter of a million years ago."
Russ stared at him for a long moment. "Didn't I read about this
in an old Stephen King novel?"
"Look at the next page."
It was a regular color photograph. The object lay at the bottom
of a deep hole. Russ thought about the size of that digging job; the
expense of it. "The Navy doesn't know about this?"
"No. We did use their equipment, of course."
"You found the thing they lost?"
"We will next week." He stared out the window. "I'll have to
trust you."
"I won't turn you in to the Navy."
He nodded slowly and chose his words. "The submarine that
was lost is in the trench, too. Not thirty miles from this ... object."
"You didn't report it. Because?"
"I've been in the Navy for almost twenty years. Twenty years
next month. I was going to retire anyhow."
"Disillusioned?"
"I never was 'illusioned.' Twenty years ago, I wanted to leave
academia, and the Navy made me an interesting offer. It has been a
fascinating second career. But it hasn't led me to trust the military,
or the government.
"Over the past decade I've assembled a crew of like-minded
men and women. I was going to take some of them with me when I
retired— to set up an outfit like yours, frankly."
Russ went to the coffee machine and refreshed his cup. He
offered one to Halliburton, who declined.
"I think I see what you're getting at."
"Tell me."
"You want to retire with your group and set up shop. But if you
suddenly 'discover' this thing, the government might notice the
coincidence."
"That's a good approximation. Take a look at the next page."
It was a close-up of the thing. Its curved surface mirrored
perfectly the probe that was taking its picture.
"We tried to get a sample of the metal for analysis. It broke
every drill bit we tried on it."
"Diamond?"
"It's harder than diamond. And massive. We can't estimate its
density, because we haven't been able to budge it, let alone lift it."
"Good God."
"If it were an atomic submarine, we could have hauled it up.
It's not even a tenth that size.
"If it were made of lead, we could have raised it. If it were solid
uranium. It's denser than that."
"I see," Russ said. "Because we raised the Titanic...."
"May I be blunt?"
"Always."
"We could bring it up with some version of your flotation
techniques. And keep all the profit, which may be considerable. But
there would be hell to pay when the Navy connection was made."
"So what's your plan?"
"Simple." He took a chart out of his portfolio and rolled it out
on Russ's desk. It snapped flat. "You're going to be doing a job in
Samoa...."
摘要:

CamouflageJoeHaldemanAnAceBookPublishedbyTheBerkleyPublishingGroupAdivisionofPenguinGroup(USA)Inc.375HudsonStreetNewYork,NewYork10014ThisbookisanoriginalpublicationofTheBerkleyPublishingGroup.Thisisaworkoffiction.Names,characters,places,andincidentseitheraretheproductoftheauthorsimaginationorareused...

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