Jack McDevitt - Good Intentions

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2024-11-24 0 0 52.54KB 27 页 5.9玖币
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JACK McDEVITT and STANLEY SCHMIDT
GOOD INTENTIONS
"DO YOU BELIEVE IN UFOS?"
No, dammit. I don't believe in anything that hasn't been parked in my driveway
so I could kick the tires and check the gearshift. So don't ask again. Just
because I'm a science fiction writer doesn't mean I'm demented. I have no time
for crop circles, telepathy, alien abductions, power centers, spontaneous
combustion, or ancient astronauts. Loch Ness is empty, Atlantis is bunk, and
I'll sleep in any haunted house in the world for five hundred bucks plus
expenses. Okay?
I mention this up front because I attended a seminar this past summer during
which I may have touched the infinite. And I know how that sounds. But I want to
avoid your saying well, after all this is Jake Cobblemere, he writes all those
stories about nine travelers and rubber dimensions, so what do you expect? If
you want to believe I've lost it, that's okay; but don't conclude all this just
bubbled up out of my workday habits. Because that isn't what happened.
Not at all.
Last spring I got a call from Sam Wynn inviting me to participate as an advisor
at the Baranov Seminar, which is conducted annually at the Skyhawk Conference
Center in upstate New York. You might have heard of it. The participants refer
to themselves as Baranovians. They're science fiction enthusiasts who meet for a
few days every summer to renew old acquaintances and do the SF equivalent of a
mystery weekend. They bring in a writer and maybe an outside expert to put
together a simulation for them. The previous summer, for example, they converted
Skyhawk into Moonbase and staged a murder. One of the guests was the New York
City medical examiner. (The murderer, by the way, turned out to be the computer,
a la Hal.)
The seminars have been running since 1971, when Abraham Baranov personally
launched them, discovered how engaging they were, and stayed with them until his
death. It was, I need not tell you, a signal honor to be asked to step briefly
into the great man's shoes.
"This year they want to do a Martian dig," Sam told me. He explained that the
group decides each summer what sort of program they'll do the following year.
"We've got Marsbase up and running. We've been there for a while, taking soil
samples and whatnot, and we discover some artifacts."
"Artifacts?" I said. "What sort of artifacts!"
"That's up to you, Jake."
"But Mars is dead. Has been for a couple of billion years, except maybe for the
microbes. How could there be artifacts?"
"Your problem, Jake. Come up with something. And listen, we're giving you a
professional archaeologist to work with."
"Okay," I said, warming to the idea. "Does the archaeologist write science
fiction?"
"She doesn't like science fiction. But she's a friend of mine, she's available,
and she offered to come no charge."
"What am I supposed to do with an archaeologist?"
"They want to do an actual dig. She knows how."
"I thought this would be a simulation."
"Oh, no. There'll be a real dig site. We've set aside some ground. You're going
to bury the artifacts, and the team will dig them up and try to solve the
mystery."
"What mystery?"
"Invent one."
The archaeologist was Maureen Coverdale. She worked out of Penn, and I lived in
Indianapolis, so we did all the planning on-line. She surprised me. I guess I'd
expected that she would treat the whole thing more or less as an excuse to get a
free vacation, but she took it all very seriously. She kept after me, pointing
out that Martian artifacts could not be produced at the last minute, and that we
had a clear obligation to make sure the Baranovians got their money's worth.
She turned out to be twenty years younger than I'd expected, darkeyed, trim, a
woman who looked as if she'd be more at home among soft blue lights than digging
up broken pots. But I dreamed up a story line and we agreed on what we needed to
do. She took charge of manufacturing the stuff we needed. She showed up two days
before the program was to start, supervised the Skyhawk earthmover, buried
everything, and was waiting (with Sam Wynn) to shake my hand when I arrived
late, having underestimated the driving time on a series of winding roads.
We retired to The Hawk's Nest and reviewed our plans over rum and Coke. Then we
walked out to the dig site, which was located about a quarter mile from Harper
Hall. (Harper would serve as the team's mobile field station.) The site was
about sixteen feet on a side, shielded by a canvas awning.
"Are the Baranovians here yet?" I asked.
"Some are," said Sam. "Most of them will straggle in during the night." He
consulted a clipboard. "Altogether, we'll have twenty-four."
Skyhawk is located in deep forest on the shores of a glacial lake.
Green-carpeted mountains rise on all sides. On that first night there was a
brilliant full moon, the wind was loud in the spruce, and the woods smelled of
mint and cold water. A half-dozen lights lined the far shore. Nothing could have
been farther from Mars.
Warren Hatch was glad to get off his hands and knees, and give his place to Judy
Conroy. "I never knew archaeology was so mind-numbing," he told Maureen. A dozen
or so members of the team were working meticulously over the site, removing the
crumbly Martian soil a half-inch at a time, brushing it off rocks, turning it
over to others who strained it to ensure nothing was being overlooked. "Whatever
happened to Indiana Jones?" he asked. "To buried temples? Secret doors? That
sort of thing?"
Maureen smiled. "Real archaeology would make a slow movie," she said.
Warren looked out past the dig site, through the plasteel shell that shielded
them from the near-vacuum. Low red hills rose in the north, and he could see a
dune buggy moving across the horizon.
"Got something here." Patti Kubik's voice. She brushed the object and held it
up. It was a knife. Long and slightly curved, it had a metal blade and handle,
and was still in good condition.
"No telling how old it is," said Cobblemere. "It could have been in the ground
for centuries without showing any real deterioration."
They noted where the knife had been found, recorded the coordinates on a chart,
and placed it beside the two urns they'd recovered earlier.
"Here. Look at this." Eddie Edwards, short, squat, barrel-shaped, bent close to
the ground. He was on his knees, rear end stuck up, face red with effort,
working with brush and fingers to clear a rectangular tablet about the size of a
dinner plate. "It's got a picture on it," he said. That brought a crowd.
The tablet depicted a vaguely reptilian-looking creature with long teeth and
crocodilian eyes. The stuff of bad science fiction films. For all that, it
maintained an aspect that seemed almost pious. It wore a robe, and it seemed to
have just dropped an object that might have been a stone or a crumpled piece of
paper. A jagged line resembling a lightning bolt was drawn through the dropped
object. A string of exotic characters lined the top and right side of the
tablet.
"This can't be right," said Jason Kelly, the team's senior member in terms of
age and service. Kelly was almost seventy, but he was a physical fitness freak
and he could probably have run most of his associates into the ground. He
claimed to be the world's lone exobiologist. "It's a hoax. Has to be."
"Why?" asked Warren.
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分类:外语学习 价格:5.9玖币 属性:27 页 大小:52.54KB 格式:PDF 时间:2024-11-24

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