аStar
Trek: TNG Dyson Sphere
The Shape of
Heaven
Tonight
CAPTAIN Picard came back again to his mother's old admonition: "Be careful
what you wish for, Jean-Luc. You may get it."
Sitting in
his ready room, he again played the record of the Enterprise's brief
first passage through the Dyson Sphere. He had played it so many times now that
his mind was numbed by it, numbed by what a later computer analysis of that
scan had revealed. He had believed the Sphere's interior to be completely
lifeless, but a detailed examination of the data by newer and more advanced
computers had shown a variety - a nearly infinite variety, Picard supposed-of
plants and vegetation.
But what
they had at first concluded remained true: The Dyson Sphere had seemingly been
abandoned by whatever life forms had constructed it.а The later analysis had reveled no signs of higher life forms, of
intelligent life.
Picard thought he knew every river, every stream,
every wrinkle in the worldТs topography, but he understood that the sphere's
size was as every bit as deceiving as it was overpowering, and that for all he
thought he knew, there was infinitely more he did not know.а The only objects the ships recorders and the
later computer analysis might possibly have missed were a couple of twenty-mile
long elephants.а What had to be a
braided stream was really a river wider that the earth and descending more than
two hundred million kilometers from its head waters; gazing across whole light
minutes of land and sea could draw even the most seasoned explorers into
moments of madness.
Picard
closed the record of the earlier passage through the Dyson Sphere and opened
his captain's log to review the most recent entry.
CAPTAIN'S LOG, STARSHIP
ENTERPRISE
Stardate: 47321.6
More than a
year has passed since we found Montgomery Scott's ship, the Jenolen, crashed on
the outer hull of the Dyson Sphere. More than a year, during which bureaucratic
procedure delayed my plans for a return to the Sphere.
We cannot go
in until I have assembled my team of Federation-qualified archaeologists. I
want scholars who are also efficient excavators-which means calling on the
assistance of Hortas. They can move through rock as effortlessly as a man walks
through air. Unfortunately, they are as stubborn as they are efficient-which
has meant more bureaucratic delays.
Two science
vessels met us at the end of our first encounter, met us near the Great Wall as
we were departing, but the Federation had restricted their exploration of the
Sphere entirely to surface mapping and long-range subspace scans. They were
under orders not even to try entering Dyson.
Our previous
method of entering and exiting the artifact had actually required the
destruction of a vessel. The Jenolen held the door to Dyson open while we, in
the Enterprise, just barely escaped, having no choice but to fire upon and
destroy the vessel blocking our path. We found no obvious way of triggering the
exit lock from the inside, and once triggered from outside, a vessel would be
hauled in by automatic tractor beams, and the door would close.
Picard
closed the log and rubbed at his forehead. He needed a break, a respite from
Dyson's vastness, even if it was only a few minutes' escape to a cup of hot
tea. Picard heard his mother's voice in his mind once more: Be careful what
you wish for, Jean-Luc. You may get it.
He smiled to
himself as he realized be was a latter-day Spyridon Marinatos. The legendary
archaeologist would have appreciated Yvette Picard's warning, when during the
summer of 1967 he tunneled into the lost city of Thera, making the discovery of
his dreams, and realizing in that same instant that more than his entire
lifetime would be required to excavate it. The city was buried under sixty
meters of volcanic tephra, and it spread more than two kilometers wide.
Yet for all
its overwhelming size, and for all of Spyridon Marinatos's dismay, Thera could
easily have been flung into a comer and never found again, had it been situated
near one of the "little" doorways that led into Dyson.
The Sphere
was dead, of course. Every analyst had agreed on that much: Dyson was a ghost
town built to psychopathic proportion, which gave the captain his
long-wished-for kinship with Marinatos. He was, at last, being assigned his own
archaeological expedition; but as he remembered how Marinatos had fretted over
needing more than his own lifetime to discover and catalogue the artifacts of
an extinct civilization, Picard wondered what his Greek predecessor would have
thought of a ruin whose exploration might require more than ten billion lifetimes.
Now, the Enterprise
was approaching "the Great Wall of Dyson," about one hundred light
years distant from the Sphere. It was a wall of stars-an actual wall, beyond
which no stars at all could be found. No planets. No comets. No meteoroids.
Nothing except...
Picard
shivered, recalling his now prevailing, probably correct theory about what had
happened to the hundreds, perhaps thousands of star systems that must once have
existed on the other side of the wall.
Will there
come a time when we know such power? Such arrogance? Picard wondered.
"We
shall pass through the wall in fifteen minutes," Data announced over the
desk screen.
"I'll
meet you on the bridge in five," the captain said and tensed for a moment,
then shut the desk-screen off. He was suddenly and acutely aware that his
fellow officer was, like the Dyson Sphere, but the handiwork of a clever
species, of a momentarily very successful species, that might or might not
become as extinct as the Dyson engineers one day.
Dyson was
already an artifact. Data might yet become one.
Clever
species, Picard thought, then thought again of all those missing stars between
the wall and Dyson, and thought again of power and arrogance.
"What
are we going to do with the universe?" he said to the empty room, and
winced. "Wherefore, what shall we do?"
The universe
was full of belittling timeframes. For the Horta named Dalen, the last third of
her life, all of those years, had passed so quickly that they seemed only a
Vulcan lifespan.
How many
more years lay ahead? the Horta wondered.
Maybe fifty
thousand?
Yes. Fifty
thousand, perhaps, but no more.
This was a
mere chip of time, scaled against the age of her homeworld, Janus VI, whose
oldest rocks had solidified more than seven billion years ago.
"Only the rocks live forever," said the
humans. She could scarcely dream what time must mean to them-to Picard, and to
his predecessor, Captain James Kirk, whom her people would always remember as
one of those who had brought them out of the darkness.
When Dalen's
ancestors already had many millennia of history behind them, there had existed
only a few thousand people on Earth, and they had scarcely begun to wrap their
minds around the concepts of building huts and milking goats. Yet during the lifetimes
of the oldest of the Horta, billions of them had come and gone. Whole empires
had come and gone. And the humans, understanding, now, how to milk power from
antiprotons and subspace, had come to the stars and showed no intention of ever
going away.
And they had
carried with them, in their first deep-range exploratory vessel; the Vulcan
named Spock, who was said now to he approaching the end of his own unimaginably
short lifetime.
Captain
Dalen, for her part, barely perceived the paradox. For her, there was only
satisfaction in the realization that some part of the Vulcan who had saved her
entire species-had managed to live a little while longer, if only in crude
snippets of DNA.
ааааааааааа A
little while longer...
It was more
than a thousand light years, the Horta knew, from her starship, the Darwin, to
the Beta Niche nova. Curiously, that distant sun could still be viewed
starboard and aft, as a dim star circled by a thriving Class M planet.
To the
Horta-turned-Federation archaeologist and starship commander, this was the best
and worst of times. She oscillated wildly between regret at leaving her quiet
life in the caverns of Janus VI, and celebration of escape from her quiet life
in the caverns of Janus V1. She was getting used to discovering strange
paradoxes in every direction, ever since the humans had opened up the universe
to her people. A part of her hated them for this. And a part of her loved them
for the same reason.
The surface
of Captain Dalen's Homeworld had been nothing except the cold vacuum of empty
space, and any who had tunneled straight up and broken through were gushed out,
naked, onto an airless deathscape. For their efforts, they left behind only two
things: a screaming, out gassing tunnel that had to be quickly sealed, and a
very poor inducement for continued space exploration. The theologians and the
philosophers around her had declared that there was nothing on the other side
of the sky. All life, all matter, and time itself ended at a world-encircling
ceiling. And beyond that: nothing. Absolutely nothing.
And then out
of nothing, out of that deep, impersonal nothing, had come the miners and the
explorers and the starships, bringing with them the tools of subspace
communication-which revealed to the Horta a sky that was full of voices. There
had been a time when a nest of newly hatched Hortas had seemed crowded to her,
even intimidating. But nothing, it seemed, was so crowded as cold,
"empty" space.
One of the
most prominent of the latest generation of explorers was, unsurprisingly, also
the newest captain of the Enterprise. This Picard fellow wanted to conduct an
archaeological survey of the Dyson Sphere now, and he wanted the Darwin's Horta
crew on site now. And he had an uncanny way ... of getting his way. Captain
Dalen's shipping orders had come direct from Starfleet and the Federation
Council in San Francisco.
She had no
great desire to actually meet Picard. Clearly the man either didn't know or
didn't care that Hortas always attended to the task immediately at hand before
moving on to the next task, however long it might take. Hortas had the time.
Yet
nonetheless she now found herself, her ship, and her crew speeding through
subspace toward Picard and the Dyson Sphere. And she had the feeling that
whether it took her seconds or centuries to reach her destination two facts
remained constant. One: Many of the Federation's assumptions about the nature
and origin of intelligent life were, to her mind, probably wrong. Two: Many of
the Federation's assumptions about the nature and origin of subspace were
probably wrong.
It was nice
to know that the universe still had secrets to tell, and that the humanoids,
for all their great ships, for all their explored frontiers, were still eager
to learn.
Compulsively
curious species, the Horta thought, and winced. What,
ultimately, were the humanoids going to do with the universe? What would the
universe do with them?
"Captain,"
Data said, "the Darwin's captain in-forms me that she and her ship will be
coming through the Great Wall in three hours."
"It's
about time," Picard said, and lowered a hand to his stomach. This time,
his passage through the wall had produced a queasy feeling. At present, no dust
particles glowed and scratched warp trails on the bridge screen. Ahead of the
prow, the nearest stars were two hundred light years away. This meant that in
the view-forward, at normal magnification, there was absolutely nothing to be
seen.
The captain
had looked out across, and voyaged across, thousands of light years without
this same queasiness. He reminded himself that he had known the stars too long
to be disturbed by dark, empty places, but little banana fingers were curling
around his spine anyway.
This time,
he knew that the emptiness had been engineered.
Last time, there had been nothing ahead except Montgomery
Scott's distress beacon.
This time,
he knew that the most impressive alien artifact ever discovered lay ahead; and
while Dyson was huge by any standard, he knew that more than two hundred
trillion kilometers of total darkness lay between the Enterprise and the
Sphere, and that this, too, belonged to the artifact.
The Sphere
was the only object of its kind in all the known regions of the galaxy,
although Picard doubted that it was unique. It was simply too attractive a
design possibility to have inspired the engineering prowess of only one
intelligent species.
Data had
named the object after the twentieth-century scientist Freeman Dyson, who had
anticipated that some civilization, somewhere, under-standing that most of the
power from its sun was being poured, wastefully, into the unfillable sink of
space, might contrive to enclose the sun.
When he
first considered the idea, Picard had suspected that such a vast construction
would have to be a Dyson Cloud-millions of closely spaced habitats clustered around
the star, and therefore much easier to construct; but the reality had proved to
be a continuous sphere of what seemed to be solid material, imprisoning its sun
with no visible breaks in the outer surface-a delightful feat of engineering,
using an advanced materials technology.
The
artifact, itself two hundred and four million kilometers in diameter, was
located at the center of a cave two hundred light years across. The cave was a
perfect sphere carved out of the galactic cloud of stars, gas, and debris.
There was no doubt in the captain's mind that the combined mass of thousands of
solar systems had been gathered to open this hole in the galactic sea. Ahead,
at the center of a stellar desert, was a vast oasis, watered by the energies of
a once free star. Why then, as nearly as anyone had been able to ascertain, had
the builders abandoned their creation?
With the
wall of stars receding aft, the Enterprise began to cross the final hundred
light years of desert toward the still invisible Sphere, and Picard could only
wonder whether the presumed instability of the central sun was enough to
explain why the builders had abandoned their home; he found it strange that
they could not have stabilized the star before building so much around it. Was
it possible that they had made the Sphere long before they suspected that their
sun might develop problems? He found it difficult to accept that such a labor
and resource intensive project could have been undertaken by beings lacking in
foresight, even though he knew very well that the psychology of intelligent
beings was everywhere flawed. Curiouser and curiouser ... it fueled his
appetite for the mysterious; and between the desert and the central sun of
Dyson, mystery was his only certainty.
He glanced
at Deanna Troi, who was seated at her station to his left. She met his gaze in
silence for a moment, then said, "I can understand your frustration,
Captain. How can we believe that after so much work they simply gave up?"
"Or can
we believe that they simply died before they could leave?" Picard
answered. "Is it possible that they are still somehow here?"
He stood up
and looked around the bridge. His chief medical officer, Beverly Crusher, had
ventured up from sickbay only a few moments ago. She stood near Geordi La
Forge, who had cleared the neutrino telescope display from his screen and was
scrolling through a vast collection of high-resolution scans made during the
Enterprises first, hurried visit into the Sphere. Viewed from a distance of
more than forty million kilometers, there was a small white island on the inner
surface that later analysis by the more advanced Federation computer had
clearly shown to be covered with Dalmatian-like patches of dark coloration. The
patches probably represented forests and near-surface water tables interrupting
what would otherwise have been smooth desert terrain. On Earth, Antarctica was
considered large enough to be a continent. The desert "island" on
Geordi's screen was six times as large, yet here it barely qualified as a beach.
Offshore lay a scatter of microscopic sandbars,
ranging down in size from the British Isles to Manhattan Island. There were too
many of these "true islands" to be easily counted, much less named.
Some were heavily forested, and ground-piercing radar sensors had revealed
narrow lines and rectangular depressions that might have been roads and
building foundations, unrepaired for millennia. Other islands, at the very
limit of resolution, displayed structures that still appeared to be standing
intact, as if inhabited only centuries ago, or decades ago. And all of these
lands were lost in the center of a strange sea, almost perfectly circular, and
as wide as the orbit of Mercury. Geordi had named the sea Great Scott, in
homage to his fellow officer and Starfleet engineer Montgomery Scott, the man
whose crash beacon had first led the Enterprise to the Sphere.
Geordi turned toward Picard. "I'm with you,
Captain," the chief engineer said, "I can't believe that they just
left all of this behind. They built a sea wider than four thousand Earths. What
happened to them? I can't help thinking it must have been a terrible accident
of some kind."
"Hard
radiation could have left the Sphere in-tact," Data said, "while
destroying all life. Maybe their sun flared suddenly, driving the creators out
and producing a barren landscape resembling Earth after the death of the
dinosaurs."
"But
some of the islands appear to be covered with highly evolved forests," La
Forge objected. "To judge from the heights given by radar imagery, we're
talking about trees, big trees, possibly even with animals in them."
"The
forests could have come through a disaster by the dormancy of their
seeds," Data pointed out. "Or they might even have evolved afterward
from mere grasses, or from lichens, and a few other stragglers that managed to
hold on. The situation here may be similar to what a dinosaur would see, if it
could be brought back to Earth today."
Geordi let
out a laugh. "You mean, 'Look what happens: I go away for a few million
years and the rats take over-and they've evolved!"'
"Exactly,"
Data said. "So I would not throw the catastrophe theory overboard quite
yet."
"Perhaps
the Dyson inhabitants were not driven out by anything," Troi suggested.
"Maybe they found something more important to do." More important,
Picard thought, would have to be vastly more important to qualify as a reason
to leave.
"Or
something less appalling to do," said Beverly Crusher. "I find this
place extremely fascinating but still disturbing. To build something on such a
scale eating up whole sun systems in the process. What could have moved them to
do it?"
"That,"
Picard replied, "is one of the things I hope to learn." Disturbing
did not seem an apt characterization of the artifact; neither did bizarre, the
words just weren't big enough. The right words, he decided, simply did not
exist.
"Captain," Geordi said from his station, I
don't think there's been enough time for trees to evolve from grasses. That
would have required millions of years, but if you look at the cave of
stars-"
Geordi
brought the view-aft onto the right side of the bridge screen. "You'll
notice that-" the engineer began.
У-it still
has a clearly defined edge in all directions," Data finished for him.
Data
marveled at the sharp edge revealed by the viewscreen. It was moments like as
this that made the android long to be fully human. While the humans envied his
positronic memory that contained the accumulated knowledge of multiple
civilizations, he was not as skilled as they were at connecting disparate and
seemingly unrelated facts. And he sensed something that might be called envy
for them, envy for their gift of intuition, as he waxed encyclopedic: "Aft
and ventral, Alpha Powell A and Beta Noyes C are moving toward the Great Wall
at 5.3 kilometers per second. The normal motion of stars in the galaxy should
have blurred the wall's edge relatively quickly, in the same way that
constellations will change in the sky of any world in a matter of a few tens of
thousands of years."
"I
see," Picard cut in, "that such blurring is not even visible
here-"
"Yes,
Captain," Data continued. "This cave hewn out of the star field
cannot be much more than a hundred thousand years old, so by association the
Sphere is the same age. As stars measure time, the Dyson Sphere was built only
yesterday."
"Built
by whom?" Picard asked. "That's what troubles me. Is there a race we
know that could trace its ancestry to a people who would scoop out a volume of
space two hundred light years across to complete an engineering project?"
"Captain
. . ." Troi began, her voice laced with hesitation and concern.
"Yes,
Counselor. Think of people with a voracious appetite for power. We must
consider the possibility that this is the archaeology of the Borg."
"A
fascinating hypothesis, Captain," Data said from his station.
"And
like most hot speculations, it's probably wrong," Picard replied.
"But criminal behavior does spring to mind, despite the impressive
display. An inside-out world with more habitable area than a quarter billion
Earths-it makes me think of all the solar systems that will not be here to
develop intelligent life."
Troi said,
"Perhaps it was guilt over that very realization that led to the Sphere's
abandonment. That guilt may have worked on them for a long time."
"I wouldn't count on that," Picard said.
"I wish I could believe that they became, Like the Ionian Greeks, a race
of philosophers and dreamers, and turned their back on instrumentalities."
He shook his head. "Maybe the ultimate consumers went at last to another
extreme, and threw off all material possessions. Maybe, instead of the Borg,
the road to Dyson leads to-"
"No,
not the archaeology of the Q," Troi said.
"A
cosmic joke, either way."
"Captain,"
Data said, "we have few facts from which to reason."
"Quite
right, Data. But the possibilities are finite. We can guess the
answer-but it will only be helpful if we can later prove it true."
"Human
find it helpful to work in that way," Data said, "backward from a
guess. Your great physicist, Richard Feynman, advocated such a procedure."
ааааааааааа "But
you find it ... confusing?"
ааааааааааа "A
leap into the dark, perhaps," Data replied.
By the time
the Sphere became visible as a pale gray dot on the main screen, Commander
William Riker had come onto the bridge. He, Data, and Geordi La Forge
had reviewed all the known facts about the artifact, and had begun to connect
them with incoming information.
Picard leaned forward in his captain's chair,
considering what the three officers had said, fascinated by how the real world
had invaded the realm of possibility and exceeded all expectations.
The trail of
neutrino flux measurements, recorded during the Enterprise's first departure
from the Sphere, out to a distance of one thousand light years, had confirmed
that the star at the Sphere's center was in every way a normal, stable sun of
approximately 0.5 solar masses. That had been true until only a few weeks prior
to the Enterprise's first encounter. Now solar activity was suddenly waning,
bringing on a "Little Ice Age."
"Mr.
Data-what's your diagnosis?" Picard asked.
"Curious,
Captain." Data turned in his seat to face Picard. "There are
indications that energy is being transferred through subspace to the very inner
surface of the Sphere, causing the entire shell to move."
"What?"
Picard asked. "Why would it wish to move?"
"I
doubt that it wishes anything, Captain. It just does. Not only is the Sphere
moving off center of its cave of stars, incoming neutrino scans now revel that
its central sun is also off center."
ааа ааааааа "Yes," La Forge said from his
station, "I see it, too."
ааааааааааа Picard
stood up. "Is the Sphere malfunctioning?" "Perhaps," Data
replied. "Untended automatic systems will probably descend into chaos,
given enough time. And it would seem to me that the Dyson Sphere has had enough
time. There may be nothing at all intentional about what is happening."
Crusher left La Forge's side and came to stand near
the captain, her eyes on the forward viewscreen. Picard suddenly felt that the
vast construct, for all its frightful majesty, for all its obscenity and
beauty, might be doomed; and it disturbed him to think that all they might have
learned from it would be lost. If there was anything more disturbing than
having the Sphere snatched away before his questions could be answered, it was
having the Sphere snatched away before he knew even what questions to ask.
"Captain,"
Data said, "we are registering unusual activity deep inside the cave, at
bearing forty-five mark five. On screen now."
Picard stared into the dark, but all he could see was
a faint, computer-enhanced rippling of otherwise flat spacetime geometry.
"What
is it, Data?"
"One
moment, Captain. I must make certain."
"Very
well, Data, but don't take too long."
"A
wormhole is opening," Data said, "and there is a steep increase in
radiation output."
Picard tensed. "Any signs that it's another
ship?" he asked.
"Mass
registering millions-no, billions of metric tons," Data said, and before
anyone else could react, it rushed through the hole, quaking as it arrived.
"Mass approximately equal to Earth's moon," the android added.
"Diameter why, it is smaller than the Enterprise, Captain."
Picard shook
his head, slowly. "Not a ship, then. Tightly packed neutrons."
"Yes, a
neutron star."
"Velocity,
Data?"
"Approximately
one-third warp speed."
"Heading"
the captain asked, though he already knew the answer.
"Collision
course with the Dyson Sphere."
Picard sat down, stunned by the sheer weight of the
numbers. An amount of
mass small enough to be contained in a teacup, if converted instantaneously
into photons of light, could vaporize a whole city. Even a crate of teacups,
striking Dyson at relativistic speed, would have jarred the structure; but a
whole lunar mass? This was far beyond overkill. In the arena of relativistic
bombardment, a direct hit was as good as a glancing blow. At one-third warp
speed, nearly a quarter of the neutron star's mass would be converted into
energy, and a nearly equal amount of Dyson's mass would be converted. For
several tenths of a second, Dyson would produce more light, and more fast
neutrons, than all the stars in the galaxy combined.
Picard did not want to be anywhere around, on, or especially
in Dyson when that happened.
And it really was going to happen, he realized.
He was
powerless to prevent it. As he looked around the bridge, he could see the
apprehension and frustration on the faces of his fellow officers. Worf, in
particular, wore a grimmer scowl than usual.
"But why?" Riker asked from his station.
"Perhaps someone doesn't approve of Dyson
Spheres," Picard said.
Troi asked,
"Is it possible that the race that built it is now destroying its
work?"
"Perhaps they have enemies-" Worf said, clearly
seeing the neutron star as a weapon being wielded, who will not tolerate such a
display of power and craft encroaching upon their progress."
"Or," Picard began, "they have indeed sent a
neutron star to destroy their own work after abandoning it, because they do not
wish to leave such an artifact to be inherited by others."
"Build your own," Riker added. "Is that what
they're trying to tell us?"
"If I may venture a ... guess, - Data said, in what
seemed an effort to show that his internalization of human ways was improving,
"using even a whole Federation's worth of warp drives, it would be nearly
impossible to push a neutron star up to one-third warp speed. But our sensors
have detected, from a very safe distance, a black hole weighing in at fifty
million solar masses swallowing whole star Systems near the galactic core. As
they fall, they spiral in, and these spirals are very tight, and very
fast."
"Relativistic," Picard said.
"I have clocked neutron stars near the hole at
one-third warp. All you need to do is open up a worm-hole, and point it in the
right direction."
"It acts as a cannon," Worf said, unable to hide
the note of admiration in his voice.
"But that requires going to the galactic core, doesn't
it?" Riker asked.
"I should think that would be child's play for Dyson's
engineers," Picard replied.
"A cute trick," Troi said. She leaned back in her
seat and shook her head. "But isn't it possible that the Sphere was
abandoned to avoid the very danger we're now witnessing? What if it became too
big a cultural target, too large an advertisement of power and ability, and
some other race has decided to destroy this threat to its own existence?"
"I could not have said it better myself, Counselor
Troi," Worf muttered from behind her.
"Pretty bleak," Beverly Crusher said. She turned
toward Picard. "I suppose this can't just be a natural occurrence?"
"It is not likely, Dr. Crusher," Data answered,
"Of that we can be certain. The neutron star is too well aimed, and its
means of arrival too novel, perhaps even too well-timed."
"But what could they have feared from the builders of
the Sphere?" Crusher asked. "Or from us?"
"Perhaps nothing more than that they would be destroyed
if they didn't destroy first," Picard said.
"An old story," Troi added,
CAPTAIN'S
LOG, STAPSHIP ENTERPRISE IMPACT MINUS 13 DAYS EGRESS MINUS 10 DAYS
Who are they? What do they want?
Why are they doing this? I regret that we will probably
never know.
Who would have believed, a year ago, that after tens of
thousands of years of existence, the Dyson Sphere had only a year to live? What
can be said, now, but that the universe has a severe sense of humor?
This time, the Enterprise will not venture inside the
Sphere. A Voyager-class vessel, the Darwin, will join us for the purpose of
exploring seas and continents and ruins, and to find a routine for entry and
exit, but neither ship shall venture close enough to be seized by the lock's
tractor beams until the system is understood.
For all our efforts, these last sixteen months, we have had
only one glimpse of the interior.
But-oh, the things we have seen in that glimpse. Beautiful
things.
Originally,
our forthcoming reconnaissance of the interior was to have lasted six months.
Then the sun turned out to be moving off center and we were
down to perhaps a month of exploration before staying inside ceased to be an
option.
And now-now it's down to days. 13.6 days before the
relativistic cannonball strikes. Al-ready, that is too close for comfort. Long
before that time, we must be out the door, and then we will lose Dyson, and I
am afraid we will never see the like of it again.
2
Horta in
Command
"Captain," DATA SAID, "the Darwin and her
commanding officer, Captain Dalen, are hailing us."
"Open," Picard said.
The image of a Horta seated in the command pit of its
specially adapted starship was at once disconcerting and delightful to Picard:
a rock in a saddle. The Horta community had come a long way since first contact
with the Federation, partly through the efforts of the legendary Spock. Despite
their physical peculiarities, some of the Horta had become explorers.
ааааааааааа Inside
those lumpy, physically rigid shapes lived imaginative, supple minds that also
wondered and were curious about the universe, that gloried in the means
supplied to them by the Federation, and looked
outward from the stony tunnels of their world.
ааааааааааа "Captain
Dalen here," the Horta's electronic voice sang. "Captain Picard, we
must enter the Sphere as soon as possible, if we are to learn anyнthing at all
before it is destroyed."
ааааааааааа "With
all speed," Picard answered, trying not to smile at the irony of his
colleague's new urgency. Rumor had it, Dalen had previously been irritated by
Picard's eagerness. "Data, what's your latest estimate on the maximum
amount of time we have?"
ааааааааааа "Still
holding at just under two weeks, Captain," Data said from his station,
"including a three day margin for retreat to a safe distance from the
blast."
ааааааааааа Just
days, Picard thought, to study the inner surface of a world whose Great Scott
Sea alone was too large to run a sailing ship across in less than a century,
where populations of tens of billions could conceivably live and never meet.
Here was a vast archaeological universe, one that would haunt exнplorers
for a thousand years to come. How much could really be learned during the
single fortnight remaining?
ааааааааааа "Captain,"
the Horta sang, "do you have any ideas about how to solve the lock
triggering problem?"
ааааааааааа "Mr.
Data," Picard said, "may we have your thoughts?"
ааааааааааа Data
continued to face the forward screen, and said, "Yes, Captain. The
simplest solution to the problem, short of finding and replicating whatever
combination of electromagnetic and or subspace emanations from our ship
activated the lock last time, would be to send either a probe, or one of our
shuttle craft, to trigger the lock, then let it withdraw after the Darwin has
entered. We are already runнning such a frequency search program, but it may be
that a robot probe's mass will not be noticed by the system, and a shuttle will
have to be used. It may also be that there is no combination of frequencies for
triggering the lock, and that the Sphere's systems simply recognize and bring
in vessels of a certain size and configuration, as it did with us on our last
visit."
ааааааааааа Data
paused, then said, "Something is certainly wrong with the Sphere's exit
program. When you see a sun going off center, it is a sure sign that the system
has become unstable. So we must plan as though the doors of Dyson will slam
shut after the Darwin goes in. When the Darwin wishes to come
out, we will again approach with a probe or shuttle and turn the lock."
ааааааааааа "I
wish it were easier," Picard said. "The time allowed us here,"
Captain Dalen said from the screen, "precludes a more elegant way. Going
in poses no great difficulty for us, but coming out dictates in no uncertain
terms that your Enterнprise keeps station outside the Sphere. The only
alternative is to probe the lock itself for a subspace pattern, or a code,
if one exists, that we would use from inside to let ourselves and the Darwin
out."
Picard shook his head. "That may take
longer than the time we have, Captain Dalen."
ааааааааааа Data
turned to face Picard. "I must remind you, Captain, that we cannot use
weaponry to open the lock. The Sphere is sheathed in a membrane of solid
neutronium."
ааааааааааа "But
the neutron star will penetrate it?"
ааааааааааа "Nothing
can stop such an object," Data said.
ааааааааааа "Captain
Dalen," Picard said, "some members of my crew will be aboard your
vessel shortly to assist you."
ааааааааааа "We're
prepared to receive them, Captain Picard. Don't take too long. Darwin out."
The view screen returned to normal.
ааааааааааа Picard
looked around, then stood up from his station. "Time now to decide which
of us will go aboard the Darwin. Conference in five minutes."
ааааааааааа Lieutenant
Worf took a seat at the conference table, then looked around at his fellow
officers, wondering if they truly felt the danger that now faced them. The
frozen smile on Dr. Crusher's face was a sure sign that she was trying to push
that danger to one side of her mind. Worf preferred to confront it.
ааааааааааа Worf
turned toward the head of the table. "Perнmission to speak, sir," the
Klingon said to Captain Picard.
ааааааааааа The
captain nodded in his direction. "Go on." "I do not
believe," Worf continued, "that the Sphere is being targeted by a
weapon. Stimulating as it is to consider such a war technology, I doubt that
the Dyson Sphere merits an attack on this scale." The natural universe, as
every Klingon knew, was itself a fearful antagonist. "So how do you
explain it?" Picard asked. "Perhaps a natural catastrophe at the
center of our galaxy opened this wormhole and brought the neuнtron star here by
chance." "Mr. Data?" Picard asked. "That is possible,
Captain, but not probable. Dyson has been here for as many as a hundred
thousand years. The chances of the spontaneous appearance of neutrons now,
during our visit, is at least as improbable as drawing a straight flush."
ааааааааааа Riker
shook his head. "In hindsight, every hand is equally as improbable as a
straight flush - or, for that matter, a royal flush. Each one of those hundred thousand
years was equally improbable."
ааааааааааа "True,"
Data responded, "but while it may be a mistake to ascribe intent to an
event that happens to concern our interests, in this case the possibility of it
being an unintended event seems unlikely to me. In either case, we cannot
proceed on that assumption." "An accident of nature." Riker sat
back in his chair. "It's just too convenient," he muttered.
ааааааааааа "It
seems convenient," Worf emphasized, "but only the most cowardly
antagonist would hurl so massively destructive a weapon, even after a declaraнtion
of war. There is little glory in such conquests, and no chance for a warrior to
display his bravery." He preferred to believe that what they were facing
was a natural event, not out of any cowardice-he could hardly imagine such a
contemptible feeling- but because standing against an enemy with such
overwhelming technical superiority would require no ingenuity, no brilliant use
of strategy and tactics, only the willingness to die for no end.
ааааааааааа Picard
rested his hands on the tabletop. "I understand your feelings, Mr.
Worf," the captain said, "but this does bear the mark of an intended
act. We cannot conclude, and behave, as if this were a natural occurrence in
the absence of further eviнdence. While it may be difficult, at this point, to
tell an intended attack from an accident of nature, we lessen our risk if we
are prepared for the former and the latter turns out to be true."
ааааааааааа "It
is safer than the other way around," Data said, nodding his agreement.
ааааааааааа The
captain nodded back and said, "Now, Data, how many solar systems do you
suppose existed here before the Sphere was built?"
ааааааааааа "I
estimate between one hundred and forty-six thousand and one hundred and
fifty-two thousand, Captain."
ааааааааааа "As
I see it, that makes about one hundred and fifty thousand possible reasons why
someone might have a grudge against the Dysons. Maybe one of the old evictees,
or survivors, has come back. For all we know, what we're witnessing is one
small battle in a galactic war. I'd hate to learn that the front line is coming
our way."
Riker's eyes went wide with disbelief. He
shook his head in denial. Worf was already wondering what kind of battle they
might face.
ааааааааааа "Be
prepared for surprises, Number One," Picard said. "They're the only
certainty here. In less than two weeks, all hell is going to break loose. And
when it does, hell itself will look like shore leave by comparison."
ааааааааааа Troi's
fingers tightened around her cup of tea. "Or like Dyson but a little
colder," she added.
ааааааааааа "The
front line?" Worf said, wishing that a Klingon vessel were nearby, if only
to gather what information it could about any advanced weaponry.
ааааааааааа Picard
looked grim. "That's one of the things we must determine, if we can, and
if there's time- which brings up the question of who will make up the away team
that is to go in with the Darwin."
ааааааааааа Crusher
and Troi looked at the captain expectantly. La Forge and Data were still, while
Will Riker, with his familiar look of anticipation and restlessнness on his
bearded face, was clearly hoping to command the away team. They all wanted to
go; they would all be thinking of what they might discover inside the Sphere.
Worf was still contemнplating the neutron star that might destroy it.
Picard turned his head
toward Riker. "Number massively destructive a weapon, even after a declaraнtion
of war. There is little glory in such conquests, and no chance for a warrior to
display his bravery." He preferred to believe that what they were facing
was a natural event, not out of any cowardice-he could hardly imagine such a
contemptible feeling- but because standing against an enemy with such
overwhelming technical superiority would require no ingenuity, no brilliant use
of strategy and tactics, only the willingness to die for no end.
Picard rested his hands
on the tabletop. "I understand your feelings, Mr. Worf," the captain
said, "but this does bear the mark of an intended act. We cannot conclude,
and behave, as if this were a natural occurrence in the absence of further eviнdence.
While it may be difficult, at this point, to tell an intended attack from an
accident of nature, we lessen our risk if we are prepared for the former and
the latter turns out to be true."
"It is safer than
the other way around," Data said, nodding his agreement.
The captain nodded back and said, "Now,
Data, how many solar systems do you suppose existed here before the Sphere was
built?"
"I estimate between
one hundred and forty-six thousand and one hundred and fifty-two thousand,
Captain."
"As I see it, that
makes about one hundred and fifty thousand possible reasons why someone might
have a grudge against the Dysons. Maybe one of the
old evictees, or survivors, has come back. For
all we know, what we're witnessing is one small battle in a galactic war. I'd
hate to learn that the front line is coming our way."
Riker's eyes went wide with disbelief. He shook
his head in denial. Worf was already wondering what kind of battle they might
face.
"Be prepared for
surprises, Number One," Picard said. "They're the only certainty
here. In less than two weeks, all hell is going to break loose. And when it
does, hell itself will look like shore leave by comparison."
Troi's fingers tightened
around her cup of tea. "Or like Dyson but a little colder," she
added.
"The front
line?" Worf said, wishing that a Klingнon vessel were nearby, if only to
gather what inforнmation it could about any advanced weaponry.
Picard looked grim.
"That's one of the things we must determine, if we can, and if there's
time- which brings up the question of who will make up the away team that is to
go in with the Darwin."
Crusher and Troi looked
at the captain expectantly. La Forge and Data were still, while Will Riker,
with his familiar look of anticipation and restlessness on his bearded face,
was clearly hoping to command the away team. They all wanted to go; they would
all be thinking of what they might discover inside the Sphere. Worf was still
contemнplating the neutron star that might destroy it.
Picard turned his head
toward Riker. "Number One, normally I would put you in charge of the away
team, but in this case I shall assume that position, and leave you in command
of the Enterprise."
"I expected
that," Commander Riker replied, but he looked disappointed nonetheless.
Worf knew what was
coming next. "And since the neutron star is out here," Picard
continued, "and since the Sphere's interior seems less likely to produce
work for a warrior, Worf will remain outside with you. Data, you will also
stay, and take charge of perfecting our method of entrance and exit from the
Sphere."
"So who else is
going?" Beverly Crusher asked. "You might need another physician
aboard the Darwin."
"If you had
experience treating Hortas as well as humans, I'd agree," Picard said,
"but I'd rather have you aboard the Enterprise for now."
Data said, "Then by
process of elimination, Capнtain, it must be La Forge and Troi who will accomнpany
you."
"Yes."
Worf heard the
excitement in the captain's voice, and noticed that Troi was looking at him as
if to ask how he felt.
"I'm fine,"
Picard said, as if anticipating her question. "Just had a physical last
week." He glanced at Crusher, who nodded. "I must admit that I am
excited by the prospect of exploring the Sphere. Thrilled, if I may say so. I
wish our circumstances were less apocalyptic, but this is the hand we've been
dealt, and there is no reason not to play it out. Does anyone disagree?"
Once again, Worf knew
why he liked to serve with Picard. The man was not a coward; cautious only to
the point where less caution would make him foolнhardy; brave even to death if
that were the right course.
"Well, then,"
Picard said as he stood up. "It's time to kick the door open. Data?"
"Yes, Captain. I
shall make it so."
WorfТs eyes narrowed in
admiration. Once Picard had glimpsed the interior of Dyson, even with a
relativistic shotgun aimed at his head, it was inconнceivable that he should
not go inside again and take a closer look.
"There is gold
scattered under our beds," wrote T. E. Lawrence of his archaeological
villa in Babylon. Picard knew this particular tale of Earthly archaeology well,
and was reminded of it as he materialized aboard the Darwin. Thomas
Lawrence and Leonard Woolley had provisioned their villa with a huge fireplace,
ankle-deep sheepskin rugs, coffee tables with ancient Babylonian sphinxes for
legs, and a huge bathtub with beaten copper trim. They ate dates from a golden
dish found in the tomb of Shubad Khan, and drank tea from Hittite clay goblets.
When a visitor asked them if they were worried about dropping and breaking the
treasures, Lawrence (who happened, at the time, to be wearing a Babylonian
king's robe of gold and silver thread) replied, "If we drop them, the
British Museum will be glad to have the pieces."
That was about five
years before World War I. Picard could get extremely depressed thinking about
the archaeological treasures that had vanished durнing Earth's world wars. Much
about the science of archaeology had changed since Lawrence's time, except for
occasional intrusions of warfare into one's research-and, of course, the
villas. They were, compared to the tents that botanists and paleontologists
traditionally camped in, luxurious.
Picard nodded at the Horta positioned behind the
lowset transporter console as he followed another Horta out of the transporter
room, trailed by Troi and La Forge. The science starship Darwin, in a
tradition dating back to Lawrence and Woolley, had been spared no expense. She
was a giant, roving archaeological villa with warp engines and a pair of new,
oversized shuttles attached to her belly. The shuttles, christened the Balboa
and the Engford, gave the outside of the Voyager-class vessel, to
Picard's mind, a curiously pregnant appearance.
Inside, as he had been informed, all of the
decks, save for the engineering sector and a few dozen cubic meters of hastily
furnished "humanoid quarters," were a maze of tunnels and bare
chambers hewn out of what appeared to be solid rock. Picard, lengthenнing his
stride to keep up with his Horta guide, felt almost as though he were moving
through a mineshaft. But it only appeared so.
"To the
bridge," the Horta said when they came to the lift. Picard entered with
his two officers; the door slid shut behind them. In a few moments, the door in
front of them whisked open.
The Darwin's bridge,
even with its rocklike floor, stations with saddles instead of chairs, and
consoles and display screens closer to the floor than usual, was not unlike the
bridge of the Enterprise. The distant, only dimly lit Dyson Sphere had
grown to cover the entire forward view of the wall screen. Dead center, a
subspace beacon dropped by the Sagan's captain called attention to the
only truly useful point of reference on Dyson's otherwise craterless, colorless
surface. When Montgomery Scott's ship, the Jenolen, crash landed on the
Sphere, it had produced a thirty kilometer-long stain, or skid mark. This was
the only sign of anything like a meteorite impact in all of Dyson's history.
Even at the screen's highest possible magnification, there was no evidence that
the crash had done the slightest damage to Dyson's shell. What appeared to be
twin furrows of plowed-up debris had come, all of it, from the sandpapering the
Jenolen's underside had received; but the skid mark provided an unmistakaнble
reference for orientation, making "Scott Base" the declared South
Pole of Dyson. True as a compass needle, the skid pointed the way to the lock
that Picard had opened once before. Captain Dalen tilted the view upward from
Scott Base. Upward and upward, revealing a landscape that, though he had seen
it before, still seemed impossible to Picard.
The Darwin was a
half million kilometers above Scott Base, approximately the height of the Moon
over Earth. Dyson's horizon was many millions of kilometers away; yet the
surface, which Picard knew was curved, seemed as level as the Utah salt flats
viewed from the height of a footstool.
Picard walked toward the
Horta captain's comнmand pit, with Troi and La Forge just behind him,
descending a rocky ramp to the captain's side. He straightened his tunic and
said, more stiffly than he hoped, "Captain Dalen, on behalf of myself and
my team, we are honored to be aboard your ship."
"Thank you,"
the Horta's amplified voice replied. "Together, we shall prevail in our
mission. Please sit down, if you wish."
"Oh, I don't mind
standing," Picard said. Except for the floor, the only other unoccupied
and availнable seating at the moment was an empty saddle to the right of
Captain Dalen.
"Enterprise to Darwin. Data
here."
"Yes, Data,"
Picard replied.
"We are almost
within sight of the lock entrance," Data's voice continued. "I think
we can open it by tuning its subspace frequencies. I have now run through just
over ninety trillion new subspace sequences. Statistically, we should be able
to hit the right one by the time we face the lock."
"Continue,"
Picard said, knowing that what "should be" and what "would
be" could be galaxies apart. "We can't let the system lead us in
until we know you'll be able to open it later."
The lock was now visible
on the screen, unнchanged from the day Picard had last seen it. The Darwin and
Enterprise both came to a stop and kept station with the lock's
position. Both ships were well removed from the triggering point, where tractor
beams would reach out and bring them inside.
Picard waited for Data
to call. A minute went by, then another.
At last Data said,
"It is taking longer than exнpected, Captain. Unlike our 'real' universe,
subspace is not limited to just one electromagnetic spectrum. We have known of
a hundred twenty-seven possible microverses. Here, I am beginning to suspect
more."
The Horta captain shifted uneasily in her
saddle. "How many more?" she asked.
"I'm seeing traces
of thousands," Data said. "Multiple thousands."
Picard wondered if,
after all their patience and planning, they would be unable to get inside. The
neutronium membrane could, in theory, be pierced, perhaps even peeled back; but
the damage would be horrendous. Although this would be nothing comнpared to the
damage the neutron star was about to inflict, there were certain aspects of the
Sphere's present instability that, at least on a subconscious and purely
instinctive level, gave him the feeling Dyson was in some manner responding to
the atнtack.
On the heels of this thought
came an even more disturbing one: Might the previous instability have occurred
in anticipation of the star's arrival? This meant that the presumably
abandoned system was acting out of a sense of self-preservation, as he or Data
would under similar circumstances. Increasнingly, Picard was getting the
impression that what he was really attempting was to enter a living
organism-which meant that the Darwin and the Enterprise were, by
comparison to the Sphere, a pair of invading virus particles. Viruses could
survive well enough inside a human body, so long as they did not step out of
line, vandalize any cells, and trigger an immune response. But-
No, Picard thought.
Using the Darwin's weaponry on the membrane would not work. The subtle
apнproach, namely lock picking, would have to serve; although he had to admit
that a meeting with Dyson's antibodies, if such existed, would certainly be
interesting. He did not expect, however, that he would survive the encounter
for more than a few milliseconds.
No, he reminded himself; we must be subtle.
"Darwin must be subtle,"
the Horta said suddenly, as if reading Picard's thoughts. "Then again, I
wonder if our tunneling enzymes could eat through neutronium."
Picard was startled by the suggestion, but then
realized that the Horta was not serious.
Captain Dalen was joking.
Picard let out a laugh,
for polite show.
"The Sphere, the
Sphere," Captain Dalen inнtoned. "Here is a question. How many Horta
would it have taken to hollow it out?"
"How many?"
Picard asked, knowing that he was being set up.
"One big
Horta!" shouted Captain Dalen.
Picard laughed a little
more loudly. Not half bad, he thought. Much better than "Horta
Culture" jokes involving rock gardens.
"Captain
Picard," Data's voice cut in, "I believe we have a subspace lock
combination. It is spread across three hundred different subspace
spectra."
"So it is an
expanded microverse," Picard replied.
"Yes. It appears
everything we thought we knew about subspace and superstrings will have to be
rethought. The microstructure of spacetime is more tangled here than any place
else in the known universe."
"The Sarpeidon
Nebula," the Horta said, deadнpan. "There is one other place. The
Sarpeidon Nebula. We had an extended research mission there a little while
ago."
"The now destroyed
home system of a vanished race that built time portals," Data shot back,
obviнously having made the connection in an instant. "And you say subspace
is just as tangled there?"
Captain Dalen moved the
entire forward portion of her body, approximating, in accordance with human
custom, what Picard recognized as a nod.
"Are you
suggesting," Picard said, "that the Dyнsons disappeared into time the
way the Sarpeidans did?"
Captain Dalen shook her
"head." "Unknown. We found that the tangle-well, sort of unravels
about one hundred thousand years ago, as if it suddenly came into existence out
of nowhere. I've been makнing modifications on the Darwin's subspace
sensors ever since, and so I've now had an opportunity to probe backward
through subspace all the way from Sarpeidon to here. And do you know what I've
found?"
"Let me
guess," Picard said. "The Dyson tangle unravels near 100,000 b.c., which is about the time the
Sphere was built."
"Correct."
"So, the Dysons,
and someone on Sarpeidon, may have re-engineered the fabric of spacetime.
Rebuilt it to their own design."
"Not just here and
at Sarpeidon," the Horta replied. "All of the normal subspace
dimensions between here and Sarpeidon have something in common with Sarpeidon
and Dyson."
"You're
joking," Picard said.
"Not this time.
It's only a theory, of course, but Sarpeidon and Dyson-although the subspace
that surrounds them appears to have been more intensely reworked than
elsewhere-may not be merely the exceptions that prove the rule. They appear to
be the actual rule. Probe back just a little way beyond them and all of
subspace-all of subspace-breaks down into only the four most basic dimensions
of space-time. I believe that someone, somewhere, rewove the entire fabric of
the universe, and what's hapнpened here is that you, and all the other young
civilizations-maybe even the Dysons and the Sarpeidans-simply stumbled upon the
bales of fabric someone else left behind, and learned how to wrap warp engines,
transporters, and subspace comнmunicators around them."
Picard looked at the
Horta with astonishment and admiration, and more with admiration than astonнishment.
He let out a long sigh and said, "So, what you're suggesting is that
subspace may itself be an archaeological artifact."
"May be," the
Horta sang, and laughed.
"So then the
question is, why would they build subspace so much deeper here?"
"There are many
possible reasons," Data sugнgested. "One obvious advantage is that it
greatly multiplies the odds against someone just cruising up to the front door
and being able to find the right lock sequence."
"An added layer of
immune defense," Picard added, "probably against unwanted visitors,
and unwanted infection."
"Meaning us,"
said Captain Dalen.
Picard grinned, in the
manner that Sejanus, the Roman conspirator, might have grinned when he realized
that the Emperor Tiberius had clothes after all, and brains, and teeth.
"Data," he said, "try the lock twice. I'd like to know we have a
good chance of making it work on our way out."
"I was thinking of
trying it three times, Captain."
"Three, then."
"Signal sent."
The door to Dyson began to open, and Picard
recalled that it was not the usual kind of airlock, since there was no
atmosphere that could escape during the entrance or exit of vehicles. Dyson's
atmosphere clung to the vast inner landscape, held in place by a field of
pseudo gravity whose grip weakened so rapidly with increasing height that at an
altitude of only fifty kilometers, it exerted no measurable influence at all.
The doorway had a field of its own: a force wall standing thirty kilometers
high and completely rimming its eight corners. Against that wall, the
atmosphere piled up, as if it were merely water pressing against the sides of a
fish tank.
The artificial gravity
was not generated by centrifнugal spin. It was created by gravitic generators,
according to scans obtained during the first encounter. Much like the synthetic
gravitational fields inнside the Darwin and the Enterprise, they
acted with little regard for the inertial effects of acceleration and
deceleration-another fact made possible only by the miracle of subspace. This
held true, of course, only for objects, or gases, or people standing within the
field, which explained, without a doubt, the world's increasingly off-center
sun.
"Lock closing, now,"
Data called from the Enterнprise's comlink.
Picard was looking
straight ahead into brilliant sunlight, looking across tens of millions of
kilomeнters of empty, airless space between Dyson's shell and a sun that, had
turned inexplicably treasonous. The door's levers began to eclipse it, like the
lids of a giant eye slowly shutting. And then the light went out, went out
utterly, because the nearest star shinнing down upon Dyson's outer shell was
one hundred light years away.
The darkness did not
last very long. The Darwin's photo multipliers were capable of looking
down from the surface of Earth's moon and discerning the glow of a firefly in
the Australian outback. They came on instantly, and the flattest plain in all
the known universe was visible again. As Data double-checked and
quadruple-checked his figures, calling out the results of his calculations from
moment to moment, Picard looked forward to being on the underside of that
plain. The Darwin's time here would be too short, but he wondered if
some bit of knowledge might be gained to prevent the coming destruction. It
seemed unlikely, but he could hope.
"Lock opening
again," Data announced.
After a second closing,
and then a third, the Horta captain said, "Open again, Data. We'll take
the Darwin in and try opening the lock from inside with the
combination."
"You have it now,
Captain Dalen," Data said.
As the lock opened, the
Horta ordered half-ahead on impulse power. The Darwin eased forward, and
entered the Sphere. As the ship continued forward and came around to exit,
large land masses and bodies of water swept across the screen, spread across
the incurving surface in full daylight. The lock was closing again as the Darwin
came to face it.
Picard tensed,
remembering the catastrophic exit of last time, when the Enterprise had
fired upon the Jenolen as it held the lock open, beamed Montgomнery
Scott and Geordi La Forge out only a moment ahead of the ship's destruction,
and then slipped through the closing lock at the last instant. That had been
too close a call.
"Opening signal
sent," Captain Dalen announced.
Picard took a deep breath in the seconds before
the lock responded, then breathed more easily. As the Darwin came out,
Riker said from the Enterнprise, "Now I'm sure you'll stay to the
last minute, or you wouldn't have made so certain of your exit.Ф If it works
four times," Picard replied, "it should work when we need it."
"Not necessarily
true, Captain," Data said, "but very likely. Inductive reasoning is
always a gamble, logically speaking, however small."
Riker said, "Inductive reasoning is often
throwing your hat over the cliff and jumping after it."
"One more try,
then," Picard said, "but this time we're going in for the
duration."
Riker was becoming uneasy, increasingly so, as
the others aboard the Enterprise wished the Darwin "good
luck" or "Godspeed" and a "safe return." He did not
like such farewells; they sounded like a challenge to fate. They made him think
of others who had said the same timeworn phrases to people they would never see
again.
At last, thinking of the Great Scott Sea, and
all the other bodies of water inside Dyson, Riker recalled another kind of good
luck message.
He leaned over his
console. "Don't get your feet wet," he said to Picard and the others
aboard the Darwin.
Transit of Darwin
the
sphere's lock, closed again. Geordi, sitting aft of Captain Dalen on the bridge,
monitored from an engineer's station as the Darwin went forward. His
console and display screen were nearly identical to his bridge station aboard
the Enterprise, except for being closer to the floor so as to be more
easily accessible to a Horta. He was sitting on one of the Horta saddles, which
had turned out to be more comfortable than he had expected; at his right,
Lieutenant Kar, one of the engineering officers, sat in front of another
console.
Slowly the lock opened,
and the ship entered the great lighted space.
"Darwin to Enterprise," Captain
Dalen said over the subspace link. "We are safely inside and proceeding
sunward."
"Reading you
clearly," Data's voice replied.
"Captain
Picard," Geordi said, "we've just picked up an anomalous gamma ray
flare, but it's not from the sun. One Gev, preciselyЧmeaning proton-anti-proton
annihilation. I'm seeing an apparent antimatter engine burn near an Earthlike
planet orbiting some seventy million kilometers from the sunЧ planetary period,
some two hundred and twenty-five days. And there's something else, Captain. A
moon, thirty-three hundred kilometers across, coming around the far side of the
planet."
"Full impulse ahead,"
Captain Dalen said.
Geordi looked up from
his equipment, realizing suddenly that he had been addressing Captain Picard
and not the Darwin's captain; but he saw from the expression on Picard's
faceЧa slight flush in infraredЧthat he should let the error go this time. He
nodded back, then turned again to the instruments.
As the distance to the
planet diminished, and the gamma ray source swelled on the Darwin's view-screen,
Geordi noticed from the readings on his console that there was something
familiar about the continents and oceans on this star's only natural satellite,
and suddenly he understood what he was looking at
"Captain
Picard," he said excitedly, and then,Ф Captain Dalen, the surface features
of the planet ahead are the same as those on the inside of the Sphere! The
builders apparently projected large the features of their own world." He
put the forward screen into a quick three hundred and sixty degree sweep to
illustrate the fact.
On the world below, and
in the sky above, the Great Scott Sea was unmistakableЧcircular and huge, as
one might imagine the eye of God. Geordi supposed that it must originally have
been an asterнoid crater, bigger than Earth's so-called dinosaur killer, bigger
than the Great Hudson Bay. Flooded for more than a billion years, it bad held
sway as the homeworld's most dominant geologic feature, until its offspring
projected it onto a surface larger than some planetary orbits.
"Further
evidence?" Picard asked.
"Further evidence
that the Dysons did indeed enclose their original sun when they built the
Sphere," Geordi replied.
"And they kept
their homeworld," Captain Dalen added.
"Perhaps out of
aesthetic, or even sentimental reasons," Troi said; she was seated on a
cushion at the Horta captain's right.
"Yes, very
likely," Picard said from his seat near the Horta helmsman, "since to
keep the world meant setting aside materials that would have conнtributed to
the building of the Sphere. It was a deliberate choice not to use up their
original world. Do you hear that, Data?"
"I agree,
Captain," Data answered on the sub-space link.
"I assume that you
would wish to take up an orbit around the planet?" Captain Dalen asked.
A surprising reading suddenly came up on
Geordi's scans. "Captain . . . Dalen," he said, "that world's
moon: It's mass is much too small for a solid body. It has to be hollow. Has
to be."
"Lay course for the
satellite," Captain Dalen ordered.
"Aye,
Captain," the Horta helmsman answered.
Far astern of the Darwin,
Data tested the lock again, flooding the bridge of the Enterprise with
the sapphire-orange glow of a low mass flare star. He adjusted the lighting,
now that he knew precisely where to look. The off-center sun and the double
world that orbited it were blue-shifting slowly but ominously toward him. Wheels
within wheels. Data thought, recalling the words of the ancient Earth
prophet Daniel. And here he was, looking upon a hollow sphere, orbiting a
sphere, within a hollow sphere.
By his command, the
giant levers began to close again; and before the doors shut out the light comнpletely,
his screens pinpointed and enhanced the signature of the Darwin's impulse
engines. When he knew where to look, and how to look, the engine burn was just
barely visible, scratching a thin veil of antimatter flame and subspace
distortion across the face of the sun. He watched proton-antiproton exhaust
eclipse fusion; he watched the starship Darwin in transit of Dyson's
star, and in his head he recorded itЧall of itЧand at that moment he had an odd
sensation, a sudden conviction that he might be seeing the Darwin for
the last time, that like the Flying Dutchman and the Mary Celeste, the
Challenger and the Intrepid, no ship would ever again bear the
name Darwin.
A strange group of
associations, Data thought. This was what human beings meant when they talked
of feelings of foreboding, or of being "spooked."
Data wondered why. Perhaps it was the very
vastness of the Sphere, into which a tiny speck like the DarwinЧor the EnterpriseЧcould
so easily disappear and end up traveling for eons, like a ghost ship,
without ever finding its way out again. Cerнtainly, the loss of any ship was
one of many possibiliнties, nothing more, but it seemed, at that moment, that
he was watching the last of her.
As the Darwin settled
into orbit around the alien moon, Picard saw on the forward viewscreen that its
surface was a smooth eggshell finish. There were "dust" particles
clinging to the shellЧbundles of heavy helium clumped together with carbon
isotopes and other residua of the solar wind. No signs of cratering, however.
No meteoritic debris of any sort. Of course not. Every chip of ice, every interнplanetary
pebble, had been swept up in a cyclopean construction project.
"No sign of an
entrance," Geordi said from his bridge station aft.
"What did they do,
seal it up?" Picard asked.
"It seems that
way."
"Or the entrance is
expertly hidden," Picard sugнgested.
"We may not have
time to find it," Captain Dalen said.
Picard nodded agreement, and said, "Then we
should take one of your shuttles down to the surface and see if we can break
in."
"Ah," Captain
Dalen said. "After a few weeks of ceramic foam and false granite, my crew
will be more than ready for a new flavor."
"It may be a
surface that even a Horta can't eat through," Picard cautioned.
"We will see if
that is true. Horta can synthesize what may be needed, and walk through."
It still startled him,
from time to time, to think that Hortas thought of "walking through"
solid objects. It was their physical heritage, of course, but something in the
way Captain Dalen had spoken made him think that she was also trying to make
another obscure Horta joke.Ф I know you're sorry not to be going with us,"
Picard was saying to Troi, "but I should leave one member of my crew here,
and you are the obvious choice."
"Of course,"
Troi said. She knew why; more time spent with other members of Captain Dalen's
crew would give her more familiarity with their emotions, with what was normal
for them. Neither protocol nor standard procedure required her to accompany
Picard and La Forge to the shuttle entrance, but she had been picking up some
disquieting sensations from Captain Dalen. That was yet another reason for
comparing with other members of her crew what she sensed inside the Horta
commander.
The shuttle hatch was
already open, and Troi noticed that the interior of the shuttlecraft Balboa had
seats suitable for humanoids as well as saddles for Hortas. Captain Dalen's
pilots were already aboard the shuttlecraft. For her away team, the captain had
brought along Lieutenant Jee, introнduced earlier to the Enterprise officers
as a "young archaeologist." Two other Horta officers, Lieutenant
Sherd and Ensign Kodo, completed the team. Picard and La Forge greeted the
Hortas, then followed them into the shuttlecraft.
Troi stepped back as the
Balboa's hatch door slid shut. She had picked up that same disturbing
sensaнtion again, and from all of the Hortas present this time. Anticipation,
curiosityЧthose expected feelнings were there, but she could also sense them in
Captain Picard, in Geordi, inside herself. Something else tinged the feelings
she was picking up from Dalen and the other Hortas, a kind of reckless ecstacy,
almost a mania, a lust to embrace the unknown.
The feeling faded. Troi
told herself not to jump to conclusions about a species she had encountered for
the first time so recently. But what she had felt suggested that the Hortas
might be too quick to rush into dangerous situations in order to satisfy their
powerful curiosity, and that, she knew, could endanнger this missionЧand all of
their lives.
Moments later, the
shuttlecraft Balboa was skimнming low over the alien moon.
"Still no sign of
an entrance," Geordi observed. Indeed, his surface scans had failed to
reveal a seam small enough even for a virus to squeeze through. "It really
does look as if they deliberately sealed it off."
"Were they trying
to hide something?" Picard mused.
Data called out over the link: "It is
always perilous to ascribe motives to an alien species, Captain."
"Quite right, Data.
So we've little choice but to go in, assuming we're all curious enough."
"Oh, I think we're
curious enough," Captain Dalen said.
"I certainly
am," Geordi added, wanting to exнplore as much of this engineering
marvel's interior as possible.Ф Set us down, then, Mr. La Forge," Picard
orнdered, then glanced with obvious amusement at the Horta archaeologist
saddled beside him, like a royal rock on display in a museum.
Their first landfall in
the Dyson Sphere seemed straightforward enough. The Balboa's docking
tube would form an air-filled path to the moon's surface, and Captain Dalen's
four-Horta away team would simply "walk through" the crust
underneath, thus causing the least possible amount of damage to the structure,
and Geordi hoped, setting off no alarms. On the other side of the shell, there
was atmosphere, cold but breathable. Geordi had dropped two walnut-sized probes
on the surface. The Hortas would survive inside, he knew. The sensor readings
told him so.
He swept the Balboa into
a graceful arc, as if it were a helicopter, then slowed to a hover, flashed his
molecular strobes, and landed so gently on the moon's equator as to leave its
thin veneer of helium-three "dust" undisturbed.
"Start
drilling," Picard said. Geordi began to hope that Horta saliva would be
enough; this sphere was not sheathed in carbon neutronium, which gave him a
clue as to why it was here, and why it was sealed up.
"We're
attached," Geordi said. "Horta entrance now open, and something like
bedrock is below us, at least thirty meters of it, then topsoil. That's what my
readings say.Ф Lieutenant Jee said, "I will walk through first." Her
amplified voice was slightly higher than that of Captain Dalen.
Jee and the Horta
captain, followed by Sherd and Kodo, slid ahead of Picard and Geordi into the
shuttle's service bay, where a double-sized manhole led down to the moon's
surface. Jee and Dalen sank away the moment they touched the ground. The other
two team members fell in quickly behind, examining the shaft as they descended,
shoring up the walls wherever it seemed necessary. Alice's fall down the rabbit
hole had been much easier, Geordi thought, but the Horta captain seemed to
think nothing of it.
After a few minutes,
Geordi saw a circle of red light wink on at the bottom of the well. It winked
out just as suddenly, and he realized that Lieutenant Jee was coming back up.
As she neared the exit,
the Horta cried out, "ConfirmedЧhuman suitable atmosphere inside! But
dark. Red dark."
"So how was
it?" Picard asked, and the Horta's answering shudder reminded Geordi of a
shrug.
"It was
delicious!"
Contagion
the
horta had made
their first landfall thirty minutes before. Now they stood, hard as it was for
Captain Dalen fully to accept the reality, on the inside of a sphereЧtopsy-turvyЧinside
another sphereЧtopsy-turvy. The world within the world reflected only
the longer, redder wavelengths of light. The weak red light was overpowered by
black shadows; and, although she could not see them, vibrations in the ground
permitted her and her team to feel strange shapes trying to move secretly forнward
and back in the dark. So far, they seemed to be keeping their distance; but
until Picard arrived with reinforcements, Dalen had decided that she and her
Hortas should cluster together, hold their ground and, as the humans would put
it, be steady as a rock. There were no life forms here other than plants. So
the scans had shown. Dalen did not want to remind herself that, before they had
been run through that new Federation computer, the first scans of the inside of
the Dyson Sphere had revealed no life signs at all.
"Curiouser and
curiouser," as the captain of the Enterprise was so fond of saying.
Does he really understand how much curiouser this gets? Dalen thought, and
should I tell him?
To begin with, there was
the problem of similarity versus identically. In spite of the Sarpeidan and
Dyson quantum spacetime anomalies, as near as Dalen's crew could tell, every
electron and proton in Dyson's hull was identical to every electron and proton
everywhere else in Dyson, and everywhere else in the universe. In physics, the
sameness of the individual bends in spacetime that built quarks and gluons and
beget protons was absolute sameness, a sameness very unlike Data and his
"identical" twin brother, unlike any two of the insulin molecules that
ran through Picard's veins. Though similar, it was impossible to make any two
androids or insulins absolutely identical.
And why is this? Dalen
thought. "Why," she said aloud, "are all protons, for all their
infinite opporнtunities for uniqueness, exactly the same? Why all electrons?
And neutrons?"
The other Horta seemed
unsurprised by her sudden questions, but then they were all undoubtedly brooding
upon the same matters as she was.
A long time before, as
Picard and his species measured time, the human physicists John Wheeler and
Richard Feynman had theorized that every proton was identical to every other
proton because there was really only one proton in the entire uniнverse. In
this case, it simply raced back and forth in time, again, and again, and
againЧappearing to show up everywhere at once. Starting off from the Big Bang,
it would be shooting through Dalen's present, where she might catch a glimpse
of it in Data's fingernails, or in Picard's insulin, or in Dyson's rivers,
before it bounced back from the remote future and reappeared in her present as
a proton moving backward in time, where some distant corнner of the universe,
or the antimatter pods of the Darwin and the Enterprise, would
perceive it as a forward moving antiproton, before it reversed course, again,
from the Big Bang. This being true, the same would hold for all the
anti-electrons coursнing through Data's positronic brain.
Wheeler and Feynman had
buried their theory, or so those human physicists had thought. And then the
discovery of subspace had made spacetime itself a cosmic free-fire zone. And
now the discovery of subspace anomalies, Dalen mused, had made all things
possible.
Was it possible, now,
she asked herself, that a proton bouncing back from the future could dictate
the present?
Yes.
Was it possible, then,
that the present could dicнtate the past?
Oh, yes.
"I can picture it,
now," Dalen said, suddenly wanting to share her insight with her sisters
and comrades, "one antiproton and one positron in all the universe,
running head-on into the proton and the electron at the bridge of time, at the
moment we call the Big Bang, thereby guaranteeing that the universe will be
created."
Sherd, Jee, and Kodo
were silent for several moнments. Then Sherd said, "Is it possible, then,
that whoever created subspace planned it that wayЧ perhaps even tampered with
the manner in which the Big Bang would occur, reshaped the cauldron of
creation?"
"Yes," Dalen
answered. "I believe there has been a great deal of tampering; more than
any of us may ever realize.
CAPTAIN'S LOG, STARSHIP ENTERPRISE IMPACT
MINUS 12.5 DAYS EGRESS MINUS 9.5 DAYS
Dalen Base was
established only twenty minutes ago. My chief engineer has confirmed for
Captain Dalen that the moon has its own subspace anomalyЧwhich acts
as a defensive barrier against our transporters. The Dysons made sure to
button this place up tightly. Luckily for us, they did not anticipate
Hortas. Captain Dalen's away team has saved us hours, perhaps a full day
of work. Still, we may have to move even faster than I had hoped.
Data tells me that the
larger Sphere is accelerнating, and if one watches very carefully, one can
actually see the Great Scott Sea moving percepнtibly nearer. On the Sphere's
walls, we cannot discern any inertial effects whatsoever arising from the acceleration.
On the wall opposite
Great Scott, however, on the side moving away from us, the sacrifice to inertia
is already horribly apparent The land-masses there are turning white under the retreatнing daylight
Probably for the first time in Dyson's history, water is crystallizing
out of the atmosphere. If the retreat continues, the air itself may eventually
flow liquid, then turn to sand.
How strange that the first snowfall
should come to Dyson, now that it is so close to the neutron
flame.
Not much time left
The hole in the moon had
been cut at a forty-five degree angle, so it was possible to slide part of the
way, in the direction that a sixth gravity would present as "down."
But after a point, the gravitic direction reversed to "up," and
Picard knew that he would emerge onto the inner surface of the sphere at
four-fifths Earth gravity. Both he and Geordi were wearing traction soles and
gloves, in case it became necessary to brake or climb.
"Ready?"
Picard asked.
"Lead the way,
Captain," La Forge replied.
Picard went in head
first, and saw at once that the slide was slow enough to make braking
unnecessary. He slid along slowly, feeling his way down toward the dim red
light, and the opening grew larger. After twenty seconds he stopped, feeling
the increased gravity in his heavier limbs.
"Mr. La
Forge?" he asked.
"I'm right behind
you, Captain."
Picard started to pull
himself forward with his hands, then pushed with his feet. He was now climbing.
He pulled himself along for what he estiнmated were about three minutes until
he was at the opening. Grasping the edge with both hands, and pushing with his
feet, he climbed out of the hole, sat down on the edge, and rolled away to one
side.
He stood up and surveyed
a dull red landscape. It was rocky and barren, save for a small stand of trees
and bushes nearby, and similarly colored patches on the up curved horizon. The
trees were bareЧdead, apparently. Geordi climbed out and stood next to him, and
they looked up at a miniature red sun, radiating its pitiable energy into the
hollow.
The Horta away team was
waiting for them. "Air seems dusty," Picard said, and exhaled a cough
that, in the surrounding atmosphere, became a breath of warm condensation.
"Low oxygen, too.Ф This was deliberately sealed up," La Forge
said. "The Dysons must have seen this place as a failure."
"That sun,"
Picard said. 'I'll bet it's artificial, and they couldn't get it to work, so
they continued by enclosing their natural sun."
"No," said
Captain Dalen. "I think this was all a test. A practice sphere, if you
will."
"Could be,"
Geordi acknowledged. "It strikes me that they were looking far ahead. When
this moon was constructed, all those missing stars and planets were probably
still visible in the homeworld's night skies."
As Picard's eyes
adjusted, he started to see by the red light. The curve of the inner land swept
away from them in all directions, revealing a craggy, pitted, desert
interrupted by distant oases of oddly shaped trees. More than a thousand
kilometers away, lay the nearer shore of a circular sea whose center was
located almost on the far side of the sun. It was the same continental and
oceanic contour he had seen on the two worlds outside. It was the Great Scott
Sea writ small.
Peering upward and
seaward, Picard became aware of a sharp clicking noise, then noticed that some
five hundred meters away, the rocks seemed to rise and move forward.
"Do you see
that?" La Forge whispered in the redness that seemed to belong to some
hell at the end of time. Then he began to scan with his tricorder.
"Yes," Picard replied.
"Definitely
biological, with no implant modificaнtions." The engineer turned in a
circle, penetrating the gloom with his visor. "They shouldn't be there,
but they are."
"Biological life
forms," Dalen said. "I was afraid of that. The Federation had better
think about upgrading all of its scanning equipment."
"They're moving
toward us in a circle," Geordi said.
Picard and La Forge
stood back to back. Slowly, Picard began to see the creatures: tall,
long-legged bipeds that reminded him of stick figure marionнettes. They moved
slowly in the red wilderness, reminding Picard of ancient wooden plows strugнgling
to furrow the ground.
"I don't think
we're going to communicate with them," Captain Dalen said.
The clicking sounds grew louder and sharper.
"It's not a
language," Geordi said, examining his tricorder. "At least nothing we
can translate."
"SignalsЧvery
simple, primitive signals," obнserved Picard.
"Yes," said
the Horta archaeologist Sherd. "We've got a partial interpretation:
something like, 'The hunger, the hunger,' over and over. That's as close as we
can come."
"It would be a
hard, restricted life in this sphere," Picard said. "This may be
what. . . devolved . ..from the life forms that stayed inside. A very small
population."
"And apparently a
very hungry population," Capнtain Dalen said emphatically. "And not
necessarily small. We happened upon them in the very first place we popped up,
and they could be spread over an area as large as North America. And I'll give
you a fair bet it's not rocks they hunger after."
Geordi increased the
range on his tricorder and shook his head. "Too right, Captain Dalen. I'm
beginning to worry that charcoal broiled humanity may be the flavor of
choice."
"Then you should
leave?"
"I think we'd
better. Good safety tip."
"We'll come after
you," Captain Dalen said. "If these creatures don't regard us as
tasty, better to have us between them and you."
A dusty wind came up as
Picard followed Geordi toward the opening in the ground. The marionettes
stopped, and seemed to sway slightly. Then, as suddenly as it had come, the
wind was gone.
The clicking resumed.
Picard and Geordi
reached the opening and looked down. A faint light showed from the bay of the
shuttle.
"You first,"
Picard said.
La Forge nodded, sat down
on the edge, and slid away.
Picard waited, then took
a last look at the desolate landscape beneath the red dwarf. Here all hope, it
seemed, had ended, and these poor devils had someнhow survived to pay the price
of the experiment in Dyson Sphere construction. Why had this been permitted?
Why had no one thought to sweep the surface clean before abandoning it... ?
It occurred to him then
that if these life forms had survived here, however wretchedly, then there
might be others lost inside the vastness of the Dyson Sphere. He could not
assume that any other beings would be any more friendly than theseЧand others
might have some of the resources of the Sphere's builders at their command.
The circle of stick
figures was closing now, like a noose.
A sudden gust of wind
caught his cheek, scraping it with a burst of dust. Picard touched his face,
and saw blood on his fingers.
"Hurry!"
Captain Dalen called out. "They look as though they might be considering
the virtues of a silicon-based diet."
Captain Picard sat down
on the edge of the opening and readied to slide down, then took a last look at
the dwarf sun. Something black was moving across its surface, in a fast, close
orbit as he watched; it reached the rim and disappeared
He was out of time. The
alien figures were only a few tens of meters away. He let go and slid, feet
first, into the opening. At first it was quick, then "down" became up
and Picard realized that he would have to turn around to climb. He managed it
after two tries, and in a few minutes was ascending through low gravity, into
the brightly lit shuttle compartment.
"There's something
else in there," he announced, thinking again of the catastrophe that was
coming, and how little time there was to explore. A decade might not be enough
merely to visit all the imporнtant places on the inner surface of the sphere he
had just exited, and no one would give him decades, unless somehow the Dyson
Sphere could be saved. "It's in close orbit around the red dwarf. Might be
a vessel." And now he had another problemЧthe presence of biological life
forms that might be a danger to him and the crew of the Darwin.
"But we'd have to
get the shuttle inside," Geordi said, "which means a bigger hole. Or
find another way in."
"We have to
decide," Picard said, "whether to continue here or to spend our time
elsewhere."
"What did it look
like?" Geordi asked. "Do you suppose it was an old starship that
found its way in and got stranded? Or just something the Dysons left
behind?"
"Difficult to say
whether it was a vessel, a small moon, or ... or, who knows what?"
"Mostly who knows
what," said Captain Dalen, as she hauled herself out of the pit. "I
saw it, too. It's another sphere, Captain. About thirty-three kilomeнters
across."
Picard frowned. "A prototype of the
prototype?" he asked.
"A sphere, within a
sphere, within a sphere," sang the Horta as Lieutenant Jee emerged from
the tunnel. "And who knows? Is yet a smaller prototype hidden within the
prototype's prototype?"
"Or another within
that?" Picard wondered aloud. "And another, and another, each with
its own dwarf sun and a replica of the Great Scott Sea? If we can find the
first prototype, and if it is small enough to be contained in the shuttle bay
of the Enterprise, the information we could take with us would be
priceless."
"Those are very big
ifs, Captain," La Forge said.
"Beautiful ifs,
Geordi."
Sherd and Kodo were now
exiting the tunnel. "Riker to Picard," a voice called.
"Picard here."
"Captain, we've
just sighted a ship coming around the far side of the homeworld. It's in orbit,
and not putting out many signs of power. But it is equipped with cryocontrolled
antimatter pods. I presume it's the source of those gamma flares you detected.
No signs of a subspace cooling system. It uses space itself as a dump for
engine heat."
"A real museum
piece, then."
"Yet brand new, in
working order," Riker said, with what sounded like admiration. "The
ship's almost all engine. Payload capacity: no more than two dozen people,
living in very cramped quarters."
"Can you see
them?"
"The Darwin's scans
do confirm life forms, Capнtain."
Picard considered this
for a moment, realizing that he was now faced with the fact of intelligent,
space faring life that would die in the next two weeks. He wondered if they
could be aware of the coming destruction. To hide from them would protect the Darwin;
to keep at a distance from them would eliminate the risk of both conflict
and cultural contamination. In the vastness of the Dyson Sphere, the life forms
aboard that alien ship might simply assume that the Darwin and its crew
were only yet more denizens of Dyson that they had not yet encountered.
But he knew that he and
his human and Horta colleagues could not try to evade the unknown beings. There
was too much to learn, and possibly even a chance to aid them if they were
friendly. Still, he and Captain Dalen would have to be cautious.
"Picard to
Riker," he said, "we're coming back to the Darwin immediately."
"Understood."
He looked at the
tunnelЧwhich had to be plugged before the Balboa pulled away, lest they
create a geyser on the moon's surface and kill, a little sooner, whatever still
lived near the entrance. He wished he could learn more about the troglodytes in
the red wildernessЧfor he could not shake the nagging feeling that his and
Captain Dalen's first impression of them had been as far off the mark as
Captain Kirk's first impression of the Horta and their world. And what about
the mini-spheres, if such existed? He wished he could think of his departure
from the moon as temporary, but he knew with reasonable certainty, as the
entrance was sealed and the airlock detached, that he would never set foot here
again. Yet he allowed himself to risk thinkingЧto risk wishingЧthat Dyson's
peculiar movements were an awakening, of sorts, and that the Sphere might somehow
protect itself from the coming onslaught. If that was what was happening, then
Dyson was at best putting up an imperfect defense, but Picard allowed himself
the little victory of hoping in the persistence of a will to live.
Where there was life,
there was hope, even if certainty was an elusive gift.
"What do you make
of it?" Picard asked from the bridge of the Darwin.
"My guess is
they've been hiding from us," Riker said from the Enterprise, "but
have now decided to come out and show themselves."
"Or it's chance,
and they can't help being seen."
"That seems most
likely," Data said over the link. "We have had no indication of an
overall command structure in the Dyson Sphere, no general awareness in any
center of what is happening to it."
The ship on the screen
was indeed all engine: two magnetic rings separated by several kilometers of
tether, reminding Picard of a flying spider's web.
Suddenly faces appeared
on the screen, as if someone had assembled them for a group photoнgraph. As
Picard gazed into a half dozen pairs of alien eyes, he tried to make out the
nature of the staring expressions. The eyes were humanoid, set in a humanoid
face that seemed vaguely feline, but with only a hint of fuzz on almond-colored
skin. There was no hair, only black fuzz, neatly shaved into a skullcap, it
seemed. The ears were round.
Picard asked,
"Troi, can you pick up anything from them?"
"Very little,
Captain, but I don't think they're either a predecessor or offshoot of the
Borg."
Picard said, "I am
Captain Jean-Luc Picard of the Federation starship Enterprise. Can you
understand me?"
The faces on the screen
seemed to smile, as if expecting that their picture would finally be taken. The
face closest to the screen seemed confused by his words, then said, "Do
you . . . know . . . our speech?"
Picard waited a moment,
then said, "No, we are using a translator device. The translation may not
be perfect." He identified himself again.Ф It is working," Troi said,
"which means the language must have some far-back link with others in the
translator."
The translator rarely failed to work, Picard reнminded
himself, but one day it was likely to encounнter a race whose language was
inaccessible.
"Captain,"
Data said, "I see from your scans that these people carry no implants or
other technologiнcal variations in their physiology. They are purely
biological."
"Unusual,"
Riker added, "for a species with that much command of technology."
"I would like to
ask a question," Picard said to the assembly on the screen. "Would
you tell us some of your history?"
"History . . .
?"
"Your time before
this," Picard explained, "what has happened to your people. Who are
you?"
A look of what seemed to
be understanding crossed the alien's face. "We call ourselves the
Dooglasse," he said.
"Tell us of your ...
times," Picard said.
"We ... of the
Dooglasse . . . stand alone," the alien speaker began. "That is our
way . . . whenever too many Dooglasse, some must leave . . ."
Picard realized that
this meant migration to other parts of the Sphere's surface.
"Did you build your
ship?" Picard asked.
"Build?"
"Where did you get
the ship?" Picard asked, guessing the truth. The history of this race was
lost to them. Far in the past, they had probably turned away from the great
technology of the sphere, to live much like the marionettes of the red
wilderness: as (presumed) troglodytes, squatters on the inner surнface. But the
Dooglasse inhabited a much larger surface area. Whenever populations expanded,
fell into disagreement, or threatened one another with war, there would be
virtually unlimited territories into which the dissidents would migrate. They
had more than a couple hundred million Earth-sized territories from which to
choose.
"We ... repaired
the ship," the alien speaker conнtinued, "to go... home."
This was a reasonably
articulate group, Picard concluded, possibly among the youngest of the dissiнdent
lineages inside Dyson. They seemed to have recently rediscovered antimatter
propulsion within the great open space of the Sphere.
"Home?" Picard
asked.
The alien pointed down.
"This world... we circle ... we believe to have been our home ... not the
great curving surface. We have been mapping that... whence on the great surface
have you come?"
Picard realized that
they believed him to belong to another group from the inner surface. The Darwin,
the Enterprise, and the neutron star had arrived in time for a Dyson
Renaissance of sorts, a new beginning among some of those who had come out of
the Sphere's historical amnesia.
It would be best not to
volunteer too much information about himself and his crewmates, for the moment.
He looked back to the friendly Dooglasse on the screen and said, "We wish
to meet with you ... in a short time ... and tell you about ourнselves."
The Dooglasse speaker
nodded. "Yes, perhaps on the world below. We may explore together?"
"We will hail you
again in a short time," Picard said, knowing that he needed some
discussion with his officers. He found himself liking the Dooglasse speaker on
the screen, and it was difficult for him to believe that this life form might
be one of the unchanged ancestors of the Borg. Again, the coming destruction of
the sphere elicited pity in him for the races that would perishЧraces that no
one would ever know had perished.
Q, he recalled, had once
warned humanity that the universe was not for the timid, for it came with no
guarantee that it would always be fair. A few years earlier in Q and Horta
years, the Book of Job had warned humanity that the universe was not for the
timid, for it came with no guarantee that it would ever make sense.
He raised his hand in
farewell and the screen blanked; and he reminded himself again: Where there is
life, there is hopeЧnot as something that followed inevitably from the mere
fact of life, but strongly from life's refusal to "go gently into that
good night," as the poet said. It just wouldn't go, wherever it could. In
whatever way possible it filled the niches of nature, lit up with intelligent
self-awareness, and reached out to create its own niches. Life prevailed.
"As we Horta have
learned," Captain Dalen said in the Darwin's small conference pit,
"the prevaнlence of genetically compatible humanoid life in the galaxyЧat
least in our experience of it so farЧis strong evidence that indeed one
ancestral race arose, then dispersed, leaving countless colonies and cenнters
of intelligent life behind in various solar systems . . ."
The face of Data
appeared on Dalen's screen. "Perhaps it was that very dispersal,"
Data said over the link, "that precipitated the decline. Vulcan, Klingon,
humanЧtheir cultures all seem to have cultivated an amnesia about their common
origin."
"Except perhaps for
a hint, here and there, in ancient religious texts," said Captain Dalen.
She was about to say something else, but instead she cut the thought short, shifted
her weight on the floor, and gazed at Captain Picard, who was seated on a
cushion across from her. The Horta had no need of chairs or saddles for
themselves in this conference room, but Picard and his two humanoid officers
looked comfortable enough on their cushions. Conference screens jutted out from
the floor in front of all of them. Troi, the female humanoid, leaned toward her
small screen.
The captain of the Enterprise
looked at the Horta strangely, as if he were about to shiver. He gave the
image of .the android on his own conference screen the same look.
"Maybe we should
not think of it as a decline," Picard said. "Perhaps they thought it
best to spread themselves thinly, to insure a long-term run of diversity. One
might see that the peoples of the Sphere are also spread thin, in a smaller but
not as beneficial version of our humanoid galactic Diaspora."
"Or," Riker
said from the bridge of the Enterprise, "maybe the galactic
dispersal was an attempt to flee something, an old enemy. It may be that this
Sphere is the first and last of its kind, coming into existence right at the
time of a dispersal of races, perhaps even precipitating it."
Above the conference
pit, a viewscreen showed the neutron star, wrapped in slowed time. It was so
massive that a teaspoon of it outweighed the Darwin and the Enterprise
put together, yet it was wider than most starships, and, as it spun at
thousands of revolutions per second, it appeared to drag little frames of time
and space after itself with the same ease that tornadoes swept up pebbles and
grass.
Captain Dalen had
learned that all humanoid species, at some point in their history, had come to
believe in a Great Father, or a Great Mother, who had created the universe and
watched over it. She had come to regard this as a quirk unique to warm blooded,
placenta! species; but as she watched the screen, she observed that on opposite
sides of the neutron star, identical pairs of simultaneously creнated gamma
photons, racing away from one another at light speed, somehow "knew"
what each was doing and simultaneously did likewise.
Captain Dalen believed
in time-dragging and sub-space. To believe that Troi was a psychic or that
Jerusalem was a place of miracles made her feel timidly agnostic by comparison.
And to believe that someone had created a world so vast that there was no hope
of discovering it whollyЧwhat did that make her? And to believe that a man had
created Data in the image of man?
The Horta nodded
excitedly and called across subspace to the Enterprise: "You and I
and the Sphere, DataЧwe have more in common than the fact that, at one time or
another, we have all seemed to be the last of our kind."
"We have all been
molded from silicon," Data called back, having obviously made the
connection in a microsecond. "And we were all fashioned, I presume, by
carbon-based species. And, Captain Dalen, are you suggesting what I believe you
are suggesting, namely that we are artifacts, all three of us?" Picard
shook his head. "Is there nothing in heaven and Earth that is not archaeology
anymore?"
"Probably
not," said Captain Dalen. "My theory of Horta evolution is that we
originated as self-replicating mining machines.-Like Data, we became
self-aware. Like the Sphere, we were either abanнdoned by our creators, or we
outlived them."
Or killed them, Dalen thought to herself,
deciding not to say that aloud.
"And who might our
neutron star thrower be?" Picard said. "Some fossil remnant of the
Borg collective?"
"Perhaps something
more alien than the Borg," Troi offered, "intelligence vastly
different from the run of humanoid life. It might have seen the prolifeнration
of humanoid genotypes and decided to preнvent it."
"As you would
say," Data replied from the screen, "the horse is long out of the
barn, with humanoid life very widely dispersed, but this Sphere is still an
eminently vulnerable target. It may also be that the old enemy no longer
exists, or has vastly changed its ways, and that this is an old vengeance
weapon, still working one last time."
"And who would have
destroyed the old enemy?" Riker asked.
Picard had an answer at once. "Why, the
Sphere-builders, I would think. The early Borg."
"So," Riker
said softly, "we may have something to thank them for after all."
Dalen let out her equivalent of a sigh. "I wouldn't be so sure of
that," the Horta captain said.
Captain Dalen had been
called to the bridge, apparently on a routine matter. Troi and La Forge
followed her from the conference pit. Picard reнmained on his cushion, staring
at that part of the wall screen display showing the relativistic cannon-ball
still on course; and he watched Dyson's latest spurt of acceleration, clearly a
defensive maneuver.
I wouldn't be so sure of
that, the
Horta had warned.
I guess we'll know soon
enough, Picard told himнself. Two enemies, one ancient and seemingly extinct,
the other so long gone that it was archaeologically invisible, were coming
suddenly to life.
An archaeologist's worst nightmare, Picard knew, was to come back from the wilderness with no results. Here, he did not worry about bringing back too few results. No. His concern here was over too great a feast of them.
Songe DТautumn
CAPTAIN'S LOG, STARSHIP DARWIN
IMPACT MINUS 12 DAYS EGRESS MINUS
9 DAYS
During my encounters
with various human beнings, I have learned that a number of them harbor a very
deep fear of transporter technoloнgy, a fear not so much of death as of being
left alive in a hopelessly jumbled state. Data calls it bad programming; but we
of Janus VI all share the same fear. Nevertheless, Federation regulaнtions
dictated that our ship be equipped with the infernal devices.
I'm glad for that now.
An hour ago, Geordi La
Forge modified a new V.R. Visor to fit my head, and transported a large probeЧabout the size of a
walnutЧsome three hundred kilometers above the sphere wall. It was, for
me, like materializing in a spacesuit above the inner surface of DysonЧabove
that impossibly flat surface. Even from three hundred kilometers away, even
through the eyes of a pebble that was speeding over deserts and rainнforests
at ten kilometers per second, I could see a road passing below, and a city with
ship wakes going out from its harbor, and what had to be the vapor
trails of high altitude, hypersonic jets. And how many more cities lie
undiscovered in this country? I want to land there myself, on the great
incurving yet impossibly level wall. But Captain Picard has other plans.
picard
sat on a
cushion in the Darwin's small ready room, an odd, granite chamber in the
Horta hiveЧwhich had graciously been provided to him by Captain Dalen. A slab
of rock, something like a table top without legs, sat on the floor to hold the
small screens and controls.
It was ironic, Picard thought, that after
progressнing beyond the abuses of market economies, Earth's clever and humane
Federation should find among the stars the ultimate corporate nightmare, the
Borg, who literally incorporated anything that moved and had something to
offer, and destroyed anything that did not. The Borg appreciated any good thing
they encountered. He had to give them credit for that.
Presently, as he turned
his attention away from the killing star to the world beneath the false moon,
as he looked at the deep scans of a hauntingly beautiful city dating back more
than a thousand centuries and entombed beneath a hundred meters of volcanic
ash, he wondered if this was really one of the Borg's beginnings.
A full day was gone from
the available thirteen before the neutron star struck, and with every passнing
hour decisions would be made about what should be explored, what data gathered,
before his group had to abandon the Sphere. Now that they had made contact with
the Dooglasse, they would also have to consider the possibility that other
biological life forms still lived here, and be on guard against any that might
be hostile.
Anything that could be
added to the Federation's knowledge of the Borg was important enough to
override other avenues of exploration. As Rome had wished to add to its
knowledge of its chief rival, the north African city of Carthage, so the
Federation had to expand its knowledge of the Borg, with however small
increments. Clues to their ancestry, and to the ancestry of all humanoid
species, might arise from the Dyson homeworld below, or they might lie
somewhere in the language of the Dooнglasse, buried as deeply as any physical
remains.
An electronic beep at
his ready room door interнrupted his reverie.
"Come," Picard
said.
The door opened and Troi
entered. "One of the Dooglasse has offered to go down with us to the
city," she said. "It's certainly worth a few hours. It's probably the
oldest city in all of Dyson, and it's remarkably intact. No other area has
turned up from our scans to offer any greater interest."
"Then we're
going," Picard replied. "If we have time enough to explore only one
square block of the homeworld, especially with the help of one of the
Douglasse, this should be it."
"We have so little
time here," Troi said, stating the obvious, "that one really wonders
what to see first."
"One place after
the other, until the little time we have runs out. Our decisions are limited,
and some of them are going to be very hard."
"I know," Troi
said. "What can possibly become of the Dooglasse? What can we tell them,
Captain, if anything? How do you tell an entire race that they're doomed?"
Picard left his painful answer
unspoken: You save them, or else you tell them nothing.
Forty Hortas were now on and inside the Dyson
homeworld. Picard listened as Jee and Sherd reнported that the city appeared to
have been unнearthed and reconstructed by no fewer than three successive
civilizationsЧeach, in its own turn, enнtombed by the same volcano. The
youngest of those civilizations pre-dated the false moon (and by impliнcation
the Sphere itself) by more than a thousand years. It had left behind what
appeared to be restaurant, on whose flatware a set of oily finger smudges
looked as if they had been placed there by a Dyson homeworld only yesterday,
although the utensils had to be at least several millennia old.
Each hour, Picard called
down the same question: "And how does the excavation go now?" And
always Captain Dalen gave the same reply: "Delicious. Delicious."
Picard was anxious to
stand by the Horta's side. He felt as if he were being held captive aboard the Darwin,
confined to looking out on the universe of Dyson only through large bridge
screens or the ready room's desk screens, while discussing emerging logisнtics
problems with Data.
According to the
android, Dyson's peculiar moнtion and the relativistic gunshot were probably
the birth cries of open warfare. Warfare between titans. Data believed that the
two starships might soon get caught in the crossfire and be forced at a
moment's notice to ride the shockwave.
Yet because of the great
distances involved, it was a shockwave that moved, from a human perspective, in
slow motion. The neutron star fell toward Dyson like the minute hand of an
enormous clock, though it, covered more than seven Earth diameters every
second. There was actually time to sightsee. Or so it seemed. Or so Picard
hoped.
"We'll stay as long
as we can," he said, finally. 'Im going down to the surface."
"That may not be
wise," Data said from the Enterprise. "We may have to leave
quickly, now that Dyson has become unpredictable."
"Dyson has always
been unpredictable," said Pi-card, "by sheer definition."
"But never so
unpredictable as right now."
Data was correct, Picard
had to admit. Under more ordinary conditions, he would have been willнing to
exercise more caution. Now, howeverЧ"The clock is ticking, Data, and
knowledge has to be collected quickly, or not at all."
Putting either a real
trace of anxiety in his voice, or a very good imitation of it, Data now said,
"I have studied your map scans of the buried city, Captain, and find that
we can resolve objects as small as coins scattered on the floor of a still-unexcavated
meat market."
On Picard's screen, an aerial view of the Cousteau
and the Engford appeared, parked beside what apнpeared to be an open
pit mine. "Captain Dalen's away team has exposed a town square," Data
continнued, "and a number of the streets are accessible as tunnels, and
are quite safe. Of course, I think the Hortas and our scans will give us all we
need to know..."
"We want to see it
for ourselves," Picard replied before Data could renew his recommendation
against a physical visit.
Troi glanced at her
captain, and Picard knew what she was thinking: You want to see it with your
own eyes, feel the ancient dust with your own two hands, incorrigible amateur
archaeologist that you are. Troi did not have to say it. They both knew that
she was right. The amateur's love was too often absent from the professional
mind, and the hope of discovery that Picard knew within himself was one of the
great pleasures of his life, to be neglected only at great peril to his mental
health.
"Would you like to
see this, Mr. Data?" Picard asked.
"Unnecessary,
Captain. I have already gained all that I can from the scans. My interest is as
great as yours, but without the feelings. I will study the scans for hidden
relationships in the information." Troi said, "We should plan for a
limited visit." "Quite right, Counselor. SayЧtwo hours?"
"I think we can
stretch it to four, Captain." Picard frowned, thinking of the Dooglasse,
and how he and his crew and the Hortas might be the only ones to remember them
and to record what they could of their civilization. "But where there is
life ..." he told himself.
As the dead city faded
into view around him, Picard saw that he was materializing in a large square
that had been swept, or devoured clean, of volcanic ash. Troi and La Forge
stood near him, already surveying the alien site.
The Minoan-style houses
stood like squat sentries, at the bottom of a freshly hewn crater. The Horta
were efficient miners; and according to Captain Dalen's theory, her people had
been built that way. On every side, tunnels plunged into the walls of the pit,
and on the land above, smoke from a dozen chimneys stained the otherwise clear
blue evening sky. Picard realized that the Horta did not, as he had long
believed, devour all the rock through which they passed. In their mining mode,
much of itЧno, most of itЧwas either being pressed into the tunnel
walls, or vaporized and vented.
"No short-lived
nuclides in the ash at all," Geordi said as he made a scan of a
half-buried building. "And I'm confirming Captain Dalen's deнpressed radio
argon levelsЧwith near-zero on the carbon-14 scale. I'd say it's every bit as
old as she says it is, but it looks like it was buried here only last
week."
Picard glanced up at a
row of circular windows with their wood and bronze frames still in place. They
reminded him of the eyeless sockets of a skull; and he supposed that he might
be standing in the square at Thera, ancient Atlantis itself, on the day
Marinates found it lying in state in its pumice shroud, and lifted the shroud,
and looked underнneath.
"Captain,"
Data called down from the Enterprise.
"Picard here."
"One of the
Dooglasse is ready to join you. Shall I have the Darwin beam him
down?"
"By all means,
Data.Ф As Picard watched, a figure materialized some meters away. It was the
Dooglasse who called himнself Jani, the smiling spokesman. He was about five
feet tall, but seemed taller. He came forward now, extending a hand.
"Captain
Picard," he said, "thank you lettingЧ join."
Was there a trace of irony in the alien's voice?
This was, after all, his world, what was left of it, and he needed no
permission to visit it.
"Transporter,"
Jani said, "Чah!"
"I'm glad you liked
it."
"Liked? Yes!"
The mind behind the pidgin speech was much
sharper than it was letting on, Picard reminded himself.
"Look around?"
Jani asked, gesturing.
"Of course,"
Picard said, "by all means."
Jani turned abruptly and
headed for a group of buildings in the southern part of the square.
"I wonder what he's
looking for," Geordi said.
"Troi?" Picard
asked.
"My feeling,"
she said, "is that he is looking for something he expects to find here,
yet he feels out of place, alienated. I don't get the sense that the Dooнglasse
are searching for anything specific. They're just hoping to find something that
will tell them who they were."
They're wandering around
in the remains of their history, Picard thought, trying to imagineЧalmost as if
it might be possible to rememberЧwho they might have been. How many other races
lived in the same predicament on the inner surface of this sphere? Thousands,
perhaps millions, and with enough room to be unable ever to meet and compare
notes. And how much of the same might be said of humankind and the Federation?
How much was hidden or hopelessly lost about human, and human-old, galactic
origins?
"Captain,"
Geordi said, "I'd like to take some readings in those houses to the
north." He motioned toward a multi-storied building whose door, still on
its hinges, seemed to have been thrown invitingly open. "Captain Dalen
reports that she will have the ground floor propped up and excavated in two
minutes."
"I'll go with
you," Troi said.
Picard nodded. The two
officers moved away, leaving Picard with the Dooglasse.
It was getting on toward
sunset. Picard glanced down at the Dooglasse officer standing next to him. The
alien smiled up at him uncertainly, and Picard felt even more deeply now for
Jani's plight of unknowing. He could not help but feel more deeply, for there
was something disturbing, on a deep inнstinctive level, about buildings that
looked brand new, yet had last seen the light of Dyson's sun more than a tenth
of a million years ago. Their vacant windows put him face to face with the
fundamental triumph and tragedy of the Dyson Sphere. There was no escaping it,
once he had stood under the dome of the sky and felt the ash crunching under
his own feet.
Up ahead, a puff of
vapor emerged through the doorway, just as Geordi and Troi reached it. There
also emerged a muffled shoutЧas spine chilling as it was shrillЧlike Horta
laughter mingled with a scream.
It took Picard a full
fifteen minutes to calm the Dooglasse down.
Geordi came to the open doorway and stopped;
Troi halted beside him. The scream had ceased abruptly, as if cut off by the
fall of a heavy blade. There was nothing to see inside, for a continuous stream
of dry, dust-laden air was jetting through the entrance into Geordi's face. The
blast told him that Captain Dalen must still be aliveЧmust, in fact, still be
chewing happily away.
"Captain
Dalen!" Troi shouted into the dust. "Is everything all right?"
For a long time, no one
answered from inside. Then the dust storm abated unexpectedly and the Horta
shrieked, "Look at it! Look at it!"
"Picard here,"
the captain chimed in. "What do you see?"
Geordi peered inside.
The Horta-flung dust was warm, thwarting his infrared sensors. He had to wait
for the cloud to settle, letting daylight in through the open windows.Ф ItТs
all right, Captain," Geordi said. "I suppose we've just learned that
Hortas can't speak and dig at the same time."
Shadows materialized out
of the settling dust, becoming less misty and less vague with each passнing
second. Geordi stepped inside. And then he saw.
Columns of compressed
rock supported the weight of the upper floors. Like everything else in the
room, the Horta had restored them with astonishing rapidity, yet with seemingly
impossible attention to detail. Had the owner of this house returned today, he
would have found his chair and his table, and his single glass upon the table,
exactly where he had left them a hundred thousand years ago.
But what impressed
Geordi the most about the room, and made him sigh with surprise and a deep
aesthetic pleasure, was his first glimpse of the fresнcoes on its walls. As
with everything else in the city, time had stolen their beauty hardly at all,
and the sudden vision of very humanlike figures, arm in arm before a great
ocean, took his breath away.
"Sublime,"
Troi said.
Captain Dalen motioned
toward a pair of body-like mounds, heaped in a corner. Scanning, Geordi saw
that they were indeed what they looked like: the remains of living humanoids.
He scanned for more detail and was surprised to find, in arrays of hydroнgen
atoms, the intact skeletons of blood proteins remarkably similar to his own.
The history written on the Homeworld' goblin genes was more huнman than the
Dooglasse.
"Look at
this," he said, showing his recordings to Troi.
She leaned forward.
"Provocative," she said. "It may be that the Dooglasse diverged
further from our ancestral type than we did."
"Mitochondrial
Eve," Picard murmured.
Captain Dalen directed
them toward a back door that opened into a Horta tunnel. Geordi saw a narrow
cobblestone road, leading downward. It formed the tunnel floor, and on either
side, ancient kiln-fired brick formed the tunnel walls. Geordi followed Dalen
and Troi along the alleyway and came to what seemed to be a dry canal bed.
Moving to the edge of the stone dock, the three looked down and saw the
perfectly preserved remains of a wooden ship, its keel pitched up to face the
tunnel roof.
La Forge was delighted
by what his scan revealed: "Buried in its holdЧwhat's left of a
mechanically operated analogue computer! Gears. And multiple gear shifts."
"For
navigation," Troi said.
"Yes!" Geordi
said excitedly.
It was easy to forget,
in this portal to Dyson's Bronze Age, that in the world outside, an navigable
sea wider than Mercury's orbit was rising on the eastern horizon, and that the
land on its northern shore curved upward and upward over Dyson's homeworld, and
actually formed the homeworld's sky.
Nightfall came on with
all the suddenness of a thunderbolt. But it was not so much a true nightfall as
it was a change of lighting. Picard stood with Troi, La Forge, and the
Dooglasse officer in the middle of the square and watched the strange twilight
that now came to the planet. There would be no stars, Picard knew.
A very wide searchlight
beam seemed to be trackнing slowly down the western rim of the excavation, as
if a second sun were rising in the east. At first, the light startled Picard.
It was not a sister star. He knew this in a second; and a second later he
wondered if something else was coming to life here, and anнnouncing its
presence. And a second later he realized that it was the brilliant reflection
of the sun off the at once flat yet parabolic surface of the Great Scott Sea.
None of the Sphere's inhabitants could have ever
known a night sky of stars, or even a deep night. Their mythologies, Picard
surmised, might speak of lights in the sky beyond the wall of heaven, and
perhaps of a blackness. Having never seen the uniнverse for themselves, they
might have speculated about whether the inner surface went on forever or
whether there was something beyond, another space containing their spherical
space, and then perhaps yet another...
Now, as this side of
Homeworld turned away from the sun, the sky was filling up from horizon
to horizon with the incurving wall of the Sphere. In the west, the atmospheric
glare of sunset was replaced by the wall behind the sun, shining with the misty
whiteness of a thousand full moons. In that direcнtion, Picard knew, lay the
coming Ice Age. Directly overhead, according to details revealed on telescopic
scans, a river wider than the Nile was long flowed all the way down the dome of
heaven, yet it was completely invisible to the captain's unaided eyes, across a
span of light minutes. All of the canals Data had been mapping, even an island
wider than China and Europe put together, were equally invisible. A hurricane
the size of the planet Jupiter, if anything like it could form up there, might
go completely unnoticed on the floor of Homeworld.
Jani, the Dooglasse
officer, touched Picard's hand. Picard looked down, as if at a curious child.
"You?" the
Dooglasse asked. "You .. . from outнside?"
"Yes," Picard
said.
'Tell. .." said the
Dooglasse.
Picard did not answer at
once, realizing that it would be against Federation regulations, and against
the Prime Directive, to tell the Dooglasse, or any other pre-warp technology
species, about the Sphere's coming end.
There could be multiple
billionsЧno, worse: mulнtiple trillions of people as yet undiscovered. Even
without a Directive restricting Picard's role to that of a "watcher,"
it was beyond his powers to evacuate even the tiniest fraction of those
trillions aboard Enterprise and Darwin.
He felt torn, and
overwhelmed.
What if there was a way
to save the Sphere? He had no idea how. But what if?
What, then, of the Prime
Directive?
What, then, of
regulations?
But this group had a
vessel; sub-warp, to be sureЧ still. . . they might conceivably survive on
their own. Perhaps there were others like the inquisitive Dooglasse who
deserved to know as much about their world as they could absorb.
"Later,"
Picard said, taking in the view, "when I can speak to your whole
group."
Jani seemed to accept
his answer. Then, as they watched in silent wonder, a lake of amber on the
distant inner surface caught the rays of the setting sun like a bronze shield,
and threw the light back into space. The lake must have been wider than forty
Jupiters, to blaze into such beauty. It was gone in a moment, as the angle of
incident reflection with their eyes was lost.
Gone in a moment, Picard emphasized for
himнself. What point would there be in telling even this one Dooglasse about
the universe outside? What would be accomplished? What would be saved? More
puffs of smoke jetted from the old, multi-storied buildingЧfrom the upper
floors, this time. Captain Dalen was busy and seemingly happy. The Horta, too,
had once been pre-warp. She, too, had once lived unaware of the universe
outside. But the starship captain remembered and so honored by her people hadЧ
Had what?
Broken the chain of
command? Done the right thing for the wrong reason? Or done the wrong thing for
the right reason?
What would you do, old
Captain Kirk? Picard asked himself. And he knew the answer at once; and Troi
put a hand gently upon his arm, and a look of startled surprise crossed her
face.
"The Prime
Directive?" she asked.
"I believe that I'm
about to interpret our orders . . . creatively, Counselor," he replied.
The Furnace Below, The Firmament Above
when
picard had completed
his presentation, the Dooglasse sitting in front of him in the Darwin's large
conference room were so silent that he could hear the gentle rasping sound of
their breathing. It was done; he had told them everything. Now, the Dooglasse
knew that their homeworld and their star, and the Sphere that contained them,
were mere specks in a galaxy one hundred and fifty thousand light years wide,
containing six hundred million stars, in a universe containing at least as many
galaxies.
Picard glanced at
Captain Dalen, who sat on the floor at his side. It had been necessary to tell
the Dooglasse everything, even if that meant shattering all of their myths and
misconceptions about the ceiling at the end of their universe. They had seemed
so eager to break out of their ignoranceЧor their innocenceЧand they possessed
the means to at least leave the Sphere before the neutron star arrived.
"You are,"
Picard said to Jani, "already somewhat acclimated to the idea of
'outside.'"
"Yes," Jani
replied, "I see it, I think of outside, butЧ"
"What can be
outside the universe?" another of the Dooglasse asked.
"Are you saying
that the heavens are no more thanЧ"
"I see a sky, and
you show that I am inside a ball?"
The Dooglasse were all
chattering at once; he could no longer make out their questions.
"Stop,"
Captain Dalen said suddenly. The Dooнglasse abruptly stopped talking and leaned
toward the Horta officer hi unison.
"I have lived
through the paradox of the outside," Dalen went on. "I myself come
from a race who once lived beneath the surface of our world, believing that
there could be nothing beyond it. Space was someнthing we created as we made
our tunnels and pasнsages, not something vast outside our world that was filled
with stars and galaxies. Had the human beingsЧthe ones like this PicardЧnot
come to my planet, we would be burrowing still and creating space and running
out of space to create."
Jani made a motion with
one of his arms. To Picard, it looked as if the Dooglasse was telling Dalen to
continue.
"The real
universe," the Horta said, "is a finite yet unbounded sphere whose
center is everywhere and whose edge is nowhere. "You can move outside your
Sphere, you can step outside it and view it. But no one can step outside of the
much greater sphere that we call the universe."
Dalen continued to
speak, telling the Dooglasse of the stars and galaxies and the true scale of
what lay outside the universe of their Sphere. Even through the alien
expressions, Picard could easily recognize both understanding and disbelief in
their faces and subtly alien body language, convincing him even more that
humankind indeed shared a distant huнman kinship with the Dooglasse.
Captain Dalen paused.
Picard watched the audiнence of Dooglasse. The look that came into Jani's face,
and into the faces of some of the others, was that of children who had heard a
most horrific story but still wished for the story to continue. He and Dalen,
Picard thought, had read to them from the true Book of Revelations, with the
worst still to come.
He waited until he felt
they were ready to hear the rest, until all of them were looking expectantly at
him. "There is more," Picard murmured. "This is very hard for me
to say, and it will be much harder for you to hear. You will have to leave the
Sphere you have always thought of as your universe. "You will have to
travel outside of it if you are to save yourselves, because your giant
SphereЧyour universeЧwill be destroyed in.eleven of our days."
They were silent for so
long that he wondered if they had understood him, and then they began to talk
among themselves, clearly distressed, and a mournful, keening sound came into
their voices. First, they had been faced with what could only be called
metaphysical dislocation, and now they had to deal with the terror of doom.
But they would be able
to leave, Picard reminded himself1. He had told them so, they were
accepting it, and now he and Dalen would have to start working them up to
constructive action as quickly as posнsible.
CAPTAIN'S LOG, STARSHIP ENTERPRISE
IMPACT MINUS 11 DAYS EGRESS MINUS 8,5
DAYS
There is a question that
resists resolution, yet refuses to go away: How many other races are there
inside the Sphere, the uncounted thouнsands of them?
And on the heels of this
question: How many, among those thousands, would react as well as the Dooglasse
have? And-is it possible to warn them all? Or even to find them?
As for the Dooglasse: in
their ship and in their bodies they carry all the evidence that is likely to be
found in the time remaining of their kinship with the galaxy's humanoid
past. What good this might do in humanity's future dealings with the Borg is
questionable, but it is not a matter to be decided here and now.
"Enterprise to Darwin," Data
said over the subspace link.
Picard, sitting forward
of Captain Dalen's bridge command station in one of the Horta saddles, anнswered
the call. "Picard here." The captain of the Enterprise was
holding the helmsman's position as the call came in, remembering his younger
days.
"Captain, I have
concluded from precise measureнments of the Sphere's motion and position that,
as we have suspected, it is indeed capable of dodging the neutron star."
Picard frowned. Good news, to be sure, but he could
swear he heard some reservations in Data's voice.
"Now give me the
bad news, Mr. Data," he said.
"In a word,
Captain: inertia. As you know, clouds and oceans are held in place on
the walls of the Sphere by independently generated subspace fields that, even
during spurts of acceleration, defeat inerнtia and maintain the illusion of
normal gravity. But the fields dissipate rapidly beyond a radius of thirty
kilometers above the inner surface; and beyond that radius, inertia is winning.
"Picard glanced aft at Geordi La Forge and Lieuнtenant Kar, who were both
at the engineering staнtion. Geordi nodded at him, as if agreeing with Data.
Kar made a shivering motion that seemed to be the Horta equivalent of a nod.
Picard said, "Odd,
thenЧthat the Sphere would have the ability to move, yet be filled with fields
never intended to operate outside of continental and oceanic boundaries."
"Or, at least,
filled with fields that are failing to do so, Captain. Nevertheless, something
is attempting to make do, trying to keep the sun in its central position as the
Sphere moves, by using all the grappler beams from the portals to move the
Sphere without leaving behind the sun and planetary bodies."
"Will this
succeed?" Picard asked.
"Briefly, and to a
very small degree, it will. There may be a few days' respite, but I doubt it
will matter. As the Sphere dodges the neutron star, the central sun and its
planet are accumulating an inertia! lag and will eventually strike the inner
surface of the sphere. There simply does not seem to be enough energy, at least
in the way it is being used, to prevent it Of course, I am projecting from
current use."
"Might not the
energy output increase?" Picard asked.
"Unknown, Captain.
If this is an automatic sysнtem at work, it may be defective. If intelligence
of some kind is at work, it may be working to correct the problem."
Utterly fantastic,
Picard thought. Astrobiologists and astrophysicists, working solely from data
obнtained during the first encounter with the Sphere, had concluded that Dyson
was the fossil remnant of an extinct culture. Now it was living and breathing
and doing the impossible: It was moving the equivaнlent mass of two hundred
light years of stars, howнever failingly, out of harm's way.
Dead world indeed! The
captain told himself again.
And what was it that
Data had suggested about intelligence of some kind at work, trying
perhaps to fine-tune the grappler beams, trying to drag the sun and the
homeworld along? Was it machine intelliнgence? Or was some distant descendant
of the Dysons taking control? And if so, where might he hope to find them, in
any of possible dozens of millions of tiny city-states strewn across Dyson's
walls?
"Where do you think
the control center for all this might be?" Picard asked. "Perhaps we
could make . . . adjustments, or lend our assistance."
"Of course, it is
doubtful we will have time to find it," Data said, and Picard nodded in
agreement. If only it had been possible to bring the Enterprise inside,
to add its great scanning power to the Darнwin's; but the risk was
unwarranted. The Enterprise had to stay outside; even if the lock system
could be made to work, too much would be at stake to risk trusting
the gate while both ships were inside. So little time to do anything, Picard
thought. If the neutron star did not destroy the sphere, its own sun would tear
it apart from within. It seemed to Picard that two very old giants had come
awake and reнsumed a family feud. And the starships, a pair of fleas crawling
around on and in one of the giants, were not smart enough to leap away.
And it gets worse,
Picard told himself: Imagine that they're feuding in a lake of gasoline, and
each holds a loaded flare gunЧwormhole technology would serve this analogy
wellЧand then imagine that at least one of the giants is senile.
"Just a moment,
Captain," Data said, "some new information is coming in. Yes, I think
I know where an inertial control system for the sun might be, and it is in the
logical placeЧorbiting the sun, very close in, three clearly artificial objects."
"Prepare to depart
orbit," the Horta captain was already saying behind Picard. "Make
course."
"Aye, Captain
Dalen," Picard answered, setting coordinate scans for the position Data
had proнvided. "Away team! Prepare to depart in the next five minutes.
We're readying to leave orbit."
"Captain
Picard," the Horta said from her comнmand station, "shall we
transport the Dooglasse from their ship back to ours once more and take them
all with us?"
The question took Picard
back for a moment, and he considered. There was no telling what state their ship was
in. It might not have what would be required to exit the Sphere at the crucial
hour.
The Darwin cruised
sunward, laying down a wake of micro-ripples through otherwise fiat spacetime
as heat from the cauldron of protons striking antiprotons was dumped
effortlessly into subspace. Any large, thick-walled ship not equipped with
subspace heat dumps would have been reduced to an expandнing ball of plasma the
moment its captain ordered up impulse power.
Following slowly in the Darwin's
wake, falling light minutes behind, the Dooglasse engineers did not know
subspace, so their ship was little more than a web of ultra light tethers,
magnetic field lines, and minute shadow shields. Their matter-antimatter reнaction
zone burned in open space, meaning that its gamma flare was dumped effortlessly
into space itself by a ship that was never intended to intercept and absorb the
raysЧa fact that had rendered the Dooglasse engine easily detectable on the Darwin's
sensors.
Jani, to Picard's mind,
still seemed to be strugнgling with the idea that there could be something
"outside" capable of destroying his entire known universe. He had
turned down Picard's offer to beam his crew aboard the Darwin, explaining
that they must travel in their own ship, which had been so long in becoming as
serviceable as it was. When Picard offered to send in a team to check out and
perhaps improve the ancient systems, Jani reнsponded with apparent gratitude,
but again asked that his group be left to its own resources. Picard understood
their pride, and Troi had pointed out that this was a necessary form of self
reliance, still growing, which the Dooglasse would need after the Sphere was
gone.
Recording every
neutrino, quantum fluctuation, string gyration, photon, and electron in its
path, the Darwin detected the presence of three small objects, each
about six meters across, orbiting so close to the sun that they occasionally
dipped below its upper atmosphere.
Picard watched them on
the viewscreen for a while. "What do you make of these . . . sun
divers?" he finally asked Data over the link.
"Whiskers,"
Data replied. "They have tendrils no wider than a cat's whiskers; but
kilometers long. Subspace mapping suggests that they are acting as transmission
lines between the tractor beams and a whole array of whiskered objects circling
the sun's core. I would approach cautiously, Captain."
"Understood,"
replied Captain Dalen from her station.
One of the objects
became visible on the screen. It seemed an ancient armored thing, vaguely resemнbling
a silvered version of the fossil cephalopod whose coiled, pearly white shell
was among the few Earthly reminders Picard had chosen to decorate the Enterprise's
ready room. The "whiskers" emerged from the place where the
cephalopod's head and tentacles ought to have been; and as Picard watched, they
flashed out across two hundred and twenty subspace dimensions.
"Data?" the
captain asked from his helmsman's station.
"I would say this
is one of the control devices from which the attempt to steer the Sphere is
coming," Data's voice replied. "Also, an attempt to drag the central
sun's core along, and hence the sun itself, and its orbiting homeworld."
"And the energy to
do this is being drawn from the star," Picard ventured; then, as if on
cue, the whiskнers gleamed even brighter through subspace. Simulнtaneously, the
Sphere's wall added another spurt of acceleration, and the solar luminosity
dimmed by one half of one percent. The screen showed five grapplers coming
suddenly to life on the distant, snow-covered side of the Sphere; they
flickered weakly, unable to get a firm grip on the objectsЧthe hundreds of
themЧthat formed a necklace around the sun's core. As they watched, the
distance beнtween the furnace and the snow widened.
Another grappler came
on.
And another.
And another.
And solar luminosity
dropped another quarter of one percent. Then another. And another.
"If I may posit a
theory," Data said, "if the instability observed in this star when we
discovered Montgomery Scott's ship had only very recently begunЧ"
"Yes," Picard
interrupted, "I was coming to that conclusion myself."
"Then the star must
not really have been dead when we found itЧor even dying, but merely awakнening."
"Transmitting power
to the Sphere walls?" Picard asked. "Even before we found Montgomery
Scott?"
"Powering up for
the dodge maneuver?"
"Perhaps so,"
said Picard. "In which case, Dyson truly was anticipating, somehow, the
arrival of the neutron star. It knew it was about to be attacked."
"Well, there's
something you don't see every day," said Captain Dalen. "Your
archaeological site comes alive and starts fighting with another archaeological
site."
Picard glanced back at
the Horta. "But right now," he said, "the question is: Do you
think we should try to approach the whiskers and correct the system's
defects?"
"That might save
the Sphere," Data replied, "asнsuming we can ever learn how the
transmitters work."
Picard nodded his head,
very slowly. "I know, Data. So many unheard of quantum spatial dimenнsions.
It may take a hundred years of learning."
"Or a
thousand," Captain Dalen said matter-of-factly.
"Yes," Picard
said. "And in the meantime, I feel like a Neanderthal walking into a
modern day enнgine room, trying to pry loose its secrets with a stone axe. A
hopeless venture."
"And quite
dangerous," Data reminded.
"But
warranted," Captain Dalen decided, "even if the risk to the Darwin
is large and the chance at saving the Sphere small."
"Yes,
Captain," said Captain Picard.
And as the Dooglasse
dropped behind, the off-center star swelled to a screen scape of fiery promiнnences
and magnetic trenches. One of the whiskered cephalopods was crossing the sun's
face, and it seemed for a moment that it was a black opening in the star,
revealing the space beyond, except that no stars shone in the deep well.
"Slow ahead,"
Captain Dalen said. "Make paralнlel orbit to the station."
"Aye," Picard
replied, pressing another panel on his console.
Deep within the solar
corona, and down to a velocity of five hundred kilometers per second, the Darwin
matched speed with the station, about ten kilometers off. One of its
whiskers drifted a hundred meters to starboard, another approached a hundred
meters to port, then held position.
"Data," Picard
said to the Enterprise, "is it safe to let those whiskers get any
closer?"
"The subspace
distortions do not rise beyond a radius of two millimeters from the whiskers,
unless you happen to be standing where a whisker is pointing."
"Otherwise, it
should be safe," the Horta captain announced, "so long as we do not
get brushed by the whiskers themselves."
"Then we'll stay.
Nothing is more important, at least for the next day, than the possibility that
we can adjust the inertial controls and prevent the sun from crashing through
the Sphere wall."
"Kar!" Captain
Dalen called. "La Forge! Are we positioned for gamma ray CAT scan?"
Lieutenant Kar shifted her body in her saddle.
"I've already begun, Captain," the Horta engineer said.
"The subject is
passing directly between us and the sun," Geordi added. "Sorry, Captain.
It isn't working. The sun's rays just aren't strong enough for even a few of
them to get through the shell. The station is either absorbing themЧall of
themЧor deflecting them. Impossible to tell. It's all just one big data
drop-out."
Picard turned and looked
at Troi, who had just come onto the bridge and was now seated on the Horta
captain's right.
"I had hoped we
could probe it passively," Picard said, "without it detecting that it
was being probed."
Troi nodded her
agreement with his first plan, although it seemed to him that she might have
wanted to suggest that they refrain from plans to beam Geordi's so-called
"walnuts," or anything else onto or worse yet, beneath the
transmitter's shell.
The Horta captain let
out what seemed a deep growl. "Whiskers coming at us. All shields up
full!" she shouted.
At his helmsman's
position, Picard focused on the screenЧgone to maximum, now, at the first sign
of something approaching from outside. He plunged Darwin's prow straight
down; but as the whiskers on starboard and port closed above, three more
whipped up from below, brushing gently past the vessel's stern, missing the
hull by mere centiнmetersЧperhaps as much for their own protection as for
ours, Picard thought.
He had just been
scanned, thoroughly scanned; he was convinced of it. This ship, and his whole
body.
He knew it.
He felt it in the skip
of his artificial heart.
The alien station
continued its traversal of the solar face.
It suddenly went black,
then flashed out blindingly whiteЧblinding even against the brilliance of the
sun. For three unendurably long seconds the Darwin shook from stem to
stern, shook so violently that her subspace gravitic fields could not
completely overнcome inertia. Picard managed to look aft and saw that even
Dalen was finding it impossible to steady herself in the saddle.
He saw the screen
readings drop below ten percent power as a solar flare, pointing at him like
a giant accusing finger, struck the Darwin with planet-cracking force.
That was deliberate, Picard told himself. No
doubt of it: Dyson's off-center star was the center of its immune system, and
it was responding to an irritant.
"All decks!"
Captain Dalen called out. "Damage reports."
Picard listened to the
answers. Damage was miniнmal, but the impulse engines were laboring, and
seemingly ineffectively. That accusing finger had flicked the Darwin out
of solar orbit as if it were a gnat... or a microbe . . . All controls seemed
locked, unable to slow or maneuver.
Picard brought up the
view-forward. It showed the inner surface, more than sixty million kilometers
ahead, and he realized that if the Darwin failed to slow, it would
strike what now seemed only a distant lake, but was in reality a vast ocean
some one hundred million kilometers across from shore to shore, and now only
light minutes away.
Picard knew only too
well that without full imнpulse power, the Darwin would reach that ocean
in less than five hours.
"Can we slow?"
Picard asked.
"We took a heavy
blow, with thwarted force screens," Captain Dalen replied. "Repairs
are proнceeding, but our direction and velocity seem locked. It may be beyond
repair in the time we have." Picard heard no emotion in the Horta's voice.
"RikerЧData!"
Picard called out. "Did you get that?"
"Yes,
Captain," Riker said.
"Data?"
"Downrange distance
thirteen light seconds," Data replied. "You may have to abandon the Darwin."
"No!" cried
the Horta. "We will make repairs, no matter what it takes."
"There may be no
time," Picard said.
"We will make
time!" Captain Dalen cried out, and for an instant Picard believed, though
impact on the Great Scott Sea seemed a mathematical certainнty, that the Horta
would indeed gain time and save the Darwin. She would not allow herself
to doubt that until she had no alternative.
"Jee!" the
Horta captain continued. "Sherd! To the engine room on the double!"
The Interrupted Journey
the
great scott sea grew balefully on the Darwin's bridge screen, sweeping up
ahead like the galaxy's largest flyswatter. On the eastern shore, vast
stretches of alternating desert and forest blended undetectably into a uniform
greenish-brown. Picard saw that they were breaking up into tiny speckles, now.
Deserts as wide as the Earth's moon were becoming visible: white dots against a
background of green.
"Impact in sixteen
minutes ten seconds," Data called from the Enterprise, and the
eastern shore drifted slowly aft. "Sixteen minutes ..."
"Slowing our
descent," Captain Dalen announced from her station, "but we will not
be able to slow it enough to turn away."
Beeps sounded on the
bridge. Lights flashed on the panels in front of Picard. One Horta officer on
the port side of the bridge slid off her saddle at one station, making a soft
scraping sound as she moved across the floor, then quickly pulled herself into
another saddle.
The hit from the alien
sun station, Picard saw from the readings on his console, had thrown whole
sectors of the Darwin's control systems into chaos. Even though
resetting and repairs were now comнmencing, they were still a labor intensive,
interminaнble series of diagnostics, commands, and physical restructurings. The
Darwin's engineer, Kosh, had come to the bridge; she sat at the
engineering station, murmuring instructions to the ship's comнputer. La Forge
and Kar had rushed down to the engine room, to aid the crew there.
Full control, Picard
realized, might come only within that last second separating the ship from the
sea; or it might come a second too late.
As islands and great
streamers of cloud cover expanded to fill the entire forward view, Picard faced
up again to Data's supposition that the Darwin might well have to be
abandoned. Anywhere near this velocity, their first contact with Dyson's atmoнsphere
would leave no time to call out to the Enterнprise for help. They would
be dead even before they knew they were about to die. Yet he hesitated to bring
the Enterprise in or to give the captain of the Darwin a direct
order to prepare for beam-out. As leader of the expedition to the Dyson
Sphere, he had the final word, but he hesitated nonetheless. His instincts were
telling him to ride this one out, to trust in Dalen and her ship.
"We're
decelerating," Captain Dalen said, "but we still cannot steer."
On the screen, the Great
Scott Sea was now a perfectly flat wall of water. Instruments gave the
distance, but to the eye all comparisons were lost. A new chain of islands came
into view and began to grow, and for a moment Picard's perspective shifted.
Was there still time, he
wondered, to bring the Enterprise in, even if he wanted to?
"Still no
steering," Captain Dalen announced, "but still decelerating."
"Check all
shields!" Lieutenant Jee called out to the crew in Main Engineering. Four
Horta engineers sat in pits around the engine room's master systems display
console, occasionally poking at a button or panel with a rocky extrusion, as
they struggled to regain control of their ship.
Geordi glanced at the wall, where lights flashed
on the master situation monitor. They were in big trouble, he realized; the
diagram of the Darwin was lit up like a Christmas tree. The steering was
still out, the shields failing.
Geordi bent over the console in front of him.
The impulse engines were faltering. An alarm suddenly sounded, indicating that
the Darwin's matter-antimatter reaction core chamber was close to a
plasma breach.
He was about to warn Jee
of the danger when the Horta commanded, "Lower first section isolation
door!" Main Engineering was safe for now; Geordi hoped that they would not
have to activate the containment force fields to protect this station, which would
drain even more power. They needed time; they could regain control only if they
had a little more time to make repairs.
But there wasn't any time left. It looked as if
the ship was indeed falling a second too far.
Picard asked himself if
Captain Dalen was capaнble of taking the ship to its destruction, leaving no
time for the crew to escape. The Darwin, an exploraнtory vessel, carried
two smaller craft, but they were as large as small ships and carried equipment
far in excess of standard shuttles. They would be enough to carry away the crew
into the great space of the Sphere, and reach the lock, which would then be
triggered; and the Enterprise would collect the emerging orphans.
Picard turned in his
saddle. "Captain Dalen," he said, knowing that the shuttles had also
been disaнbled by the attack, "repairs on the Balboa and the Engford?"
Troi had sensed a
recklessness in Captain Dalen and the other Hortas, a willingnessЧalmost an
eagernessЧto take risks. Now, sitting on the bridge, watching them monitor
readings and whisper orders to one another, she sensed determination in the Darwin's
captain and her crew, but not fear, not even a trace of fear.
Were these beings
completely fearless? she wonнdered. Perhaps their silicon carapaces and their
long lives made them think that they were invulnerable.
Suddenly she felt
something else from Captain Dalen. There was a longing inside the Horta, a
longing forЧwhat? Vivid, intense experiences to fill the rest of her extremely
long life? A desire to feel the danger she faced fully, so that if she
survived, the memory of her close encounter with death would make her savor the
remaining centuries of her life all the more? Troi sensed all of that, and
more, inside Captain Dalen, but there were still no traces of dread, and the
counselor feared what might happen next.
The Darwin was
falling toward the upper cloud decks now, still decelerating, but glowing
cherry-red, as Picard and the others on the bridge waited for word from
engineering.
"Engineering?"
Captain Dalen asked, her voice sharp. "We must have navigational control
in the next three minutes!"
"Doing our
best," Lieutenant Commander Kosh said from her station, a tone of
resignation in her amplified voice.
"We're working on
it," Geordi's voice added from Main Engineering.
"Will we have
it?" sang Captain Dalen.
"If it's
possible," Kosh replied in almost a whisper.
As they waited in
silence, a horizon-spanning streamer of clouds leapt up at them, boomed ions,
then parted; and suddenly the ocean burst into view below.
"Twenty percent of
navigational control reнstored!" the voice of a Horta sang out from Main
Engineering.
It was not enough, but
Picard suddenly knew what Dalen was going to do with it. As deceleration
continued, she brought the full twenty percent of navigational power into play,
raising the Darwin's prow as much as possible.
Nothing happened for a
moment; then a pocket of hypersonic air caught the ship from below and her hull
began to quake and roar. Picard hung on to his console as his saddle shook
under him; he heard a sound like that of a stone chipping against stone as a
Horta on his left fell from her saddle and hit the floor. Slowly the Darwin levelled
off some one thouнsand meters above the water and rode over it, still
decelerating. Picard realized that no more repairs could be counted on in the
next two minutes. Atmospheric drag and lift, together with deceleraнtion, would
have to serve.
"Picard to
Riker."
"Riker here."
"We're going into
the water."
"At what
speed?"
"As slowly as
possible. There's no other way to stop and make repairs."
On the forward view the
ocean was rushing beнneath the Darwin like a sheet of blue light, more
quickly on the human scale than the unperceived swiftness of passage between
the stars. The human eye liked comparisons, and did not believe in moнtion
without them.
"More effort into
navigation and deceleration," shouted Captain Dalen.
"Negative," a
voice from Main Engineering said. "This is as slow and controlled as we'll
get."
"Set us down,"
Captain Dalen said. "The water will slow us, if we land gently
enough."
Picard braced himself, since the crew could not
rely on the ship's usual inertial controlЧЧAnd the Darwin touched, and
skipped, and touched again, shooting forward but slowing.
Picard's body wanted to continue forward in
time-honored Newtonian fashion, but he had never been a man for fashion. He
held himself in his saddle, knowing full well that momentum could easily be
stronger than a man's grip on a physical object; but he heldЧЧAnd the ship
slowed to a strong plowing motion across the water, stopped, and started to
sink.
Picard knew that the
vessel was not taking water, but a starship was not a submarine. It would sink
until it reached equilibrium with the sea and could sink no more.
Troi hurried toward the
Horta officer who had fallen to the floor, but that Horta was moving now,
apparently unharmed. Captain Dalen was already getting reports from sick bay
about injuries aboard ship.
"Captain
Picard," Data said from the Enterprise, as if Darwin's safe
landing had never been in doubt.
"Picard here."
"The Sphere's
attempts to avoid the neutron star continue badly. The central sun is failing
to be pulled along by the grapplers, and is drifting toward your position,
relatively speaking. If no corrections are made, and if the Sphere continues
with its fits and starts of acceleration, the sun will strike the Great Scott
Sea in approximately six days ..."
"Where, exactly,
will the sun set?" Picard asked.
"Right where you
are standing," came the reply.
"And that will be
bad, right?" the Horta captain sang.
". .. Yes,"
Data said hesitantly, as if confused by the black humor of the situation.
"If you had managed to establish a link with one of the control stations,
we might have made it possible to keep the sun out of the water."
Riker said, "I'm
sending in a shuttle with Crusher, Worf, and Guinan, to give you a hand. I know
you may not need it, but I want to feel better about that lock opening
reliably, so here's a chance to test it again. Guinan, by the way, insisted on
going, and I have a feeling she might be of use there."
"We're caring for
our injured, Commander Riker," Captain Dalen replied. "Mostly mild
conнcussions and the odd exoskeletal chip, but nothing life-threatening."
"What about your
ship?"
"We're afloat now,
half down in the water. I think we can make repairs and be able to lift
off."
"How soon?"
Riker asked.
"As soon as our
programs can be rebuilt."
"You may have to
leave in your shuttles," Riker said, "if the ship ..."
"Shuttles and
ship," Captain Dalen said, "are in the same state of jumbled control
programs. They will be repaired at the same time. Besides, abandonнing the Darwin
is not a good idea."
"Compared to
what?" Troi muttered under her breath as she returned to her station near
Dalen.
"Captain
Picard," Riker said, "if the Darwin or your shuttles can't
lift, we'll have to shuttle you out."
Picard hesitated.
"A day will tell what we can repair," he said, knowing full well that
in the last possible resort the Enterprise herself would have to enter
the Sphere to effect rescues. It could be done, he supposed, with shuttles
standing outside to trigнger the lock if necessary. He had to think ahead, to
all possible outcomes, whatever the actual outcome. And Captain Dalen, he was
certain, was thinking in the same way. The Horta had seen more than a few
strange outcomes in her long life.
Voices From the Past
the
shuttlecraft nosed down toward a chain of little white clouds and islands sprinkled over a
sea that was flat and blue-green and impossibly vast. Beverly Crusher gazed at
the small viewscreen near her as the specks slowly swelled in size. There was
the hiss of increasingly dense air against the hull, and a perceptible shudder
in the floor panels. The prow nosed down another five degrees and Beverly,
tensing herself, glanced to her right, where Worf sat at the Feynman's controls.
"We will be at the Darwin's
side in two minutes," he announced.
For Riker to send Worf
to help the Darwin made sense; the Klingon's courage could be trusted in
any crisis. For her part, Crusher was sure that her medical skills would be
useful, even if treating Horta patients might require as much knowledge of maнsonry
as of surgery. But Guinan's reasons for wantнing to come along with them were a
mystery. There was, Crusher thought, no real reason for Guinan to be here.
She turned toward the
bartender, who was seated on her left. Guinan wore her usual serene,
Buddha-like smile; she glanced at Crusher and nodded, as if to reassure her.
"This is truly
something to see," Guinan murнmured. "I didn't want to miss a chance
to explore even a little bit of it," but then her eyes clouded, as if she
were thinking of something else. Crusher reнcalled the crew's earlier
speculations about the oriнgins of the Sphere. She had dismissed the notion
that ancestors of the Borg might be its builders, but now, with Guinan at her
side, that possibility nagged at Crusher again.
Could that be what had
driven Guinan to insist on coming with them? Maybe she was convinced that the
people who had all but exterminated her species were indeed the creators of
this wonder. Was she here to admire the artifact, Crusher wondered, or to
rejoice in its devastation?
The Darwin was
not quite a submarine, Picard reminded himself as he emerged through a manual
service hatch and stood on top of the vessel under a cloudy sky. Engineering
had finally killed all forward propulsion, so the ship was not even much of an
ocean-going vessel. Standing on the hull was difficult, at best. Under the
influence of the internal subspace fields, all the decks had seemed perfectly
level; it was not until he actually climbed outside that Picard realized Darwin
was angled down by the bows, nearly twenty degrees.
They were adrift near a
group of islands, awaiting repairs and waiting also for Beverly Crusher, Worf,
and Guinan to arrive. The sea was as calm as a quarry pool, and there was not
the whisper of a breeze. But this would change, Picard knew. Bathy-metric scans
had shown that the sea surface was getting hotter already, progressively
hotter. Unless someone, or something, in Dyson took control, the progression
would continue until atoms of hydrogen and oxygen, dissociated from water,
raced away from this place hotter than live steam, hotter than molten glass,
hotter than aluminum composite emerging white from a furnace.
There was a clap of
thunder overhead, the sonic boom of the Feynman as it slowed to subsonic
flight. Picard watched the shuttlecraft drop through the clouds and approach
his position, then gave a wave and touched his communicator.
"It is good to see
you, Captain," Worf said over the comm.
"Sorry we can't let
you into the shuttle bay," Picard replied, "but I think there's room
to anchor up top."
"Yes, Captain, I
have already programmed the landing parameters. We will just fit behind
you."
Picard flagged the
shuttlecraft in for final apнproach to the Darwin's stern, and the Feynman
crossed a small opening in the clouds, through which the vastness of the
Dyson Sphere's far inner surface was partly visibleЧa sky of land beyond the
sky, covering the sky of stars below itselfЧand he thought of Dylan Thomas's
lines of poetry: "They shall have stars at elbow and foot. . . And death
shall have no dominion." Except that death was coming to this great inward
shore, threatening with two starsЧthe interior sun, almost at elbow, now, and
the onrushing neutron star, at foot.
The shuttlecraft swooped
in and hovered over the impulse engines, then settled onto the flat plain just
aft of the bridge. Picard breathed deeply of the Sphere's ancient air, and went
forward to greet his crewmembers.
Beverly Crusher came out
first, followed by Worf and Guinan. "Captain," the physician said,
moving past him toward an open hatch, "looks like I'll be getting some
experience with Horta physiology after allЧ" and then, looking around, she
added, "but, damn it all, Jean-Luc; do you always have to cut these things
so close?"
"Close, Beverly? We
had whole seconds to spare."
"Captain
Picard," Worf said, "the Dyson Sphere is going from bad to worse. I
think we should leave as soon as the Darwin is fit again, while we can do
so without great difficulty."
"You may be
right," Picard said, suddenly gazing past Worf to the islands in the
distance, clearly visible with absolutely no fall-off beyond the horiнzon. This
was a feature distinctive of the flattest place in the universe. But he was
forced to remind himself that it was only an apparent flatness, born of the
widest curved space ever built. Einstein had been forced to struggle with a
similar problem while attempting to probe the even more exotic concept of
spacetime curvatureЧmeaning, the entire universe: "Most people are
confused by curved space," the physicist had declared, "even those
who must live in curved spaces."
Confusion. This artifact
has the power to overнwhelm, Picard warned himself. I must be careful.
Confusion . . .
It seemed that a strange
singing sound was coming from the islands, as if something were vibrating just
beyond the range of his hearing ...
He broke the spell and
noticed that Guinan was watching him carefully. She walked down the slantнing
hull and stood beside him, and he wondered what she was thinking.
He said, "Those
islands are only a random sample of what this world has to offer, by way of
secrets, and probably the last such sample we'll ever have."
"We have time to see
them," Guinan said softly, as if she knew something or someone there.
She seemed to be straining to listen.
"I will come along,
Captain," Worf said, and Picard could not help but hear his security
officer's unspoken words: "The captain of the Enterprise should not
put himself in danger." Except that this mission was intended to involve
the captain from the start, and there was nothing Worf could do except to be
present and protective.
As the Klingon climbed
into the cockpit of the Feynman, something on "those islands"
beckoned to Picard, like the Sirens of Greek mythology. The still air brought
strangeness, and he thought of how death had been prophesied to
OdysseusЧ"It shall come to you out of the sea, death in his gentlest
guise."
"Troi to
Picard."
He touched his
communicator. "Picard here."
"Dr. Crusher is
assisting with the injuredЧ mostly concussions," Troi's voice continued.
"Reнpairs should be complete in about twelve hours, Captain Dalen
estimates."
"Then we do have
time to see the islands," Picard said. "Maybe we even have time
enough to take another stab at the sunЧfrom afar, next try, and maybeЧjust
maybe we can changeЧ"
Guinan put a hand to the
side of his face, and something infinitely joyful yet shocking ran through him
like lightning through salt water. "You will change nothing," she
whispered, "except your own decided course."
"What?"
"Nothing lasts
forever, Jean-Luc; not our great machines, and least of all us. Time will have
its say. It always does."
"My decided
course?" he said.
"Remember, they say
timeЧ"
"ЧIs the fire in
which we burn," he finished for her, and she took her hand away from his
face.
"Remember,"
she said again. "Remember."
Picard could not
remember when he had seen a sea so calm. Worf, at the controls, skimmed the Feynman
like a hypersonic stealth fighter over the island group, making a proud,
wide arc at treetop level, then stopping abruptly in midair and climbing.
Viewed from on high, the
islands were a chain of circular green patches, floating like waterlilies on a
vast pond. The first island was the largest, and it now revealed a startling
sight: a circle-within-circles strewn field of broken porcelain tiles,
criss-crossed by bridge supports and canals. Picard checked his panel sensors
and knew that his ears had been right: A high-pitched sound was rising from the
ruins.
"Beautiful,"
Guinan said. "Like Plato's descripнtion of lost Atlantis."
"Do you somehow
know this place?" Picard asked, wondering.
"No, Captain,"
she said, smiling. "I haven't been here before."
"Then why did you
ask to come?" he said, thinkнing again of the intricacies of their
relationship. It was one he did not fully understand; but he also felt that he
did not have to understand it, now, soon, or ever. Like the Horta, Guinan could
look back across centuries of life, lovers, children, and hurtsЧher
civilization had been erased by the BorgЧand yet still she looked forward with
the constructive efforts that she had brought to the Enterprise.
"I have come," she
said at last, "to help as much as I can."
As Worf set the shuttle
down in a perfectly white square, Picard thought of the fragility of porcelain,
and reminded himself that once shattered by the moving sun, the Sphere could
not be mended. GuinanТs words therefore puzzled him, because she would know better
than anyone that not very much could be done for the inhabitants of Dyson. Yet
she was not here simply to explore.
"I came to
help," Guinan continued, "that's all."
The clouds parted when
they came out of the shuttle, revealing a blazing sun and a white-surfaced city
of collapsed porcelain towers and terraced pools. A breeze rose suddenly from
the sea and screamed thinly through the ruins. The sun had stopped in the sky,
much as the Bible said it once stopped for Joshua; and because of that
miraculous paradox, that miraculous inertia, it was going to actually
setЧin a manner of speaking.
How to turn back the
miracle?
That was the question.
Picard and Guinan came
to the edge of a canal, then gazed down into water that was as blue as a steel
mirror. Guinan took his arm and pulled him back from the edge. He glanced at
her questioningly, then looked back in time to see a large squid-like creature
rising from the smooth surface. It put out tentacles onto the white walkway,
pulled itself halfнway out of the water, and seemed to wait.
"Intelligent
beings," Guinan said. "I felt their presence from the shuttlecraft
when we were inside the Sphere."
Picard saw others
darting underneath the water, some moving so swiftly that he could barely
glimpse them. Calmly, he asked, "How many of these people do you suppose
live here?"
"Around only these
islands?"
Picard nodded.
"I don't have to
suppose. I am picking it up now. Thousands. Five or six thousand."
Picard felt the muscles
of his face tighten. "And how many moreЧacross the expanse of this entire
sea?"
"Billions."
"Nooo. . ."
"And that's just
one race."
"I don't think the
authors of the Prime Directive visualized this situation, do you?"
Guinan said nothing. This time she did not even
shake her head. Like a skilled bartender, she seemed to realize that her role
was to be part philosopher, part psychiatrist, and part psychic.
"I wonder if they
know what will happen," Picard said.
Guinan gazed intently at
the creature for a few moments. Its tentacles were moving in what looked like
signals of some kind. "They know," she said, "that a great
danger is coming. My sense of them is that they know something is wrong, and
has been wrong for a very long time. They have been dying off for millennia.
When I tell you there are a few billion of them, I'm telling you that their
numbers are down to billions."
Picard's communicator
chimed and he tapped it. Worf, calling from his post at the Feynman, said,
"Captain, Commander Riker says we have to get the Darwin out of
here in the next ten hours. If we cannot, he will send in more shuttlecraft, or
else come in himself."
"There's still
time," Picard said, feeling the sun against his face. It felt stronger
than it had only a few minutes ago; but surely he was only imagining this, he
decided, as the sea breeze strengthened and the clouds closed off the sun, and
then the temperature dropped suddenly, soothingly. A moment later, he forgot
the heat.
Next to him, Guinan was
silent and seemingly preoccupied with the alien squid.
"Guinan?"
Picard asked.
She raised a hand for
silence. He waited. Finally she looked at him and said, "I've been
listening to some of their stories. They have a lot to tell."
"If they can't
survive," Guinan said, "it is their hope to be remembered. I'll
remember them."
This then was why Guinan
had come in with the Feynman, to remember any beings whom she found
here. Nothing more, nothing less than this. It was a piece of nobility to be
savored.
To Dream in the Sea of Sorrows
picard
stood near guinan on the south bank of the canal. The first alien squid had swum
away, but another had come to rest alongside the bank and gaze up at them with
its large eyes as it weaved signs with its tentacles. Guinan knelt on the bank,
folding her legs under herself, never looking away from the alien.
Picard suspected that
the squid was communicatнing with Guinan both with its tentacles and with some
sort of telepathy. He could not tell if she was replying to the alien somehow
or simply listening to what it had to tell her.
Two other squid darted
toward them, then fled. "They had a dream," Guinan said softly,
"or perнhaps I should call it a hope."
"And what was this
hope?" Picard asked.
"Space travel. It's
an ancient dream for them, Jean-Luc, because they are a very ancient people, so
old that their own origins are only distant shadows lost in the past. They were
old when your species was young, when my people were young. They do not even
have names for themselves, or for their race."
Their silent alien
companion slipped under the water and vanished. "Sea swifts," Picard
said. Something about these beings reminded him of the small birds he used to
see swooping over his family's vineyards in the summers. "We'll make a
name of our own for them. I'll call them the sea swifts."
What they really were,
and where they came from, he thought, was anybody's guess. It seemed highly
doubtful that they could have evolved from the Great Scott Sea all by
themselves over the course of a hundred thousand years.
"This Dyson
Sphere," he said to Guinan, "is becoming more and more of a
puzzle."
"Yes," she
said.
"Here's one
possibility. This world inside Dyson is some sort of vast cosmic zoo assembled
by acciнdent, and our sea swifts are a mere remnantЧ maybe petsЧfrom one of the
lost civilizations that have presumably been blundering into the Sphere ever
since it was abandoned, getting trapped inside with their ships, with no way to
get back out again, and therefore continuing, as it were, this great
experiment."
"Pets,
Jean-Luc?" Guinan asked, with a tone of amusement in her voice.
Picard smiled gently but
did not reply.
Suddenly, in the
distance, about twenty kilomeнters away, something bright and shiny broke the
surface of the sea. Picard watched as the glittering object grew, swelling
until it had become a new island in the chain, an island larger than the Darwin.
He narrowed his eyes and
saw then that the new island was only the tip of the alien artifact that had so
suddenly appeared. Behind its transparent walls, he could glimpse figures
moving.
Guinan got to her feet
and hurried toward theЧ should he call it a ship? Picard asked himself. He
hastened after her, abruptly realizing that all of his smug assumptions about
the squid people, the sea swifts, had been entirely mistaken.
CAPTAIN'S LOG, STARSHIP ENTERPRISE
IMPACT MINUS: NO LONGER
APPLICABLE SUNSET MINUS: 1-3 DAYS EGRESS: AS SOON AS POSSIBLE
The sea swifts have made
an ark for themнselves. That was what I saw when their ship rose from the
water. They have loaded thousands of their kind inside, along with thousands of
exotic animals, two-by-two, inside.
Inside of what?
The . . . "ship" was glittering
and transparent and made out of glass. No. Not made out of glass,
Guinan pointed out Grown out of glass.
It had been built in the shape of a giant starfish with five thick, finger-like
legs. No. Not built, Guinan reminded me. It had been grown. Like the
glass spicules of certain sponges back home on Earth, or the shell of a
nautilus, it had been grown. The inhabitants of the Great Scott Sea were
planning their escape inside the skeleton of a giant sea creature.
Guinan was right. They
knew a great danger was coming, and had been planning, with great care, a
possible escape route for at least some small number of their kind. But it
became equally clear to us that their plan could not possibly work. No matter
how clever their deнsign, no matter how much thought they applied to the
problem, chemical propellants just weren't powerful enough. The starfish would
burn nearly a quarter of its fuel during the first fifteen seconds of flight,
and though it might by that time be accelerating toward Mach-one, it would also
be flying barely thirty meters above the ocean surface. A minute later
(assuming it held together that long) we'd be watching its death throes, about
ten kilometers overhead.
We had to tell them that
their practical engiнneering could not overcome mathematical cerнtainties. We
had no choice. We had to.
From now on, through
lift-off, Captain Dalen had decided, all of her crew and all of the personnel
with Picard would stay close to the Darwin and on full alert status. By
her decree, there would be no further exploration of the islands. She was
taking no chances, with billions of desperate, rocket-capable creatures
somewhere underfoot and apparently on the move.
The last of the repairs
on the Darwin and its shuttles were completed just ahead of the 1700
dinner break, nearly three hours early. More cauнtious commanders, Dalen
supposed as she ate her way through a mass of Federation ceramic foam flavored
with a few nuggets of sand and quartz, would have applied those extra hours to
an early liftнoff and a windfall against the margin of error. But Picard's
android officer Data and his first officer Riker had a plan for beaming
clusters of pulse engines into the holds of the shuttles Calypso and Nadir,
strapping tractor devices to their hulls, and sending them into Dyson
uncrewed. The shuttles had become strap-on, robotic engines, hastily modiнfied
to give the starfish the added push it so desperнately needed.
Captain Dalen, meanwhile, had ordered the Darнwin's
two lowermost decks to be eaten completely hollow and flooded, providing
room for no fewer than two hundred additional refugees. The upper decks would
therefore become even more cramped and the water would render the ship as sluggish
as an asteroid; but Captain Picard had agreed with Dalen that it was a good
plan. Unfortunately, it was impossible to know what Dyson would produce
tomorrow, or even during the next hour. Here, Dalen thought as she
finished her meal and emerged into one of the ship's recreation areas, a good
idea could easily be ruined by surprises that made it impossible to think the
whole plan through in adнvance. Here, she mused as she turned around to look at
the new passage she had created, even the best of plans had a way of failing
spectacularly.
Within an hour, aliens were filing through a subнmerged
gangway doorЧtwo hundred and fifteen of them, filing through in utter silence.
Picard and Guinan
watched from the roof of the Darwin, as if they were standing on a
beach. "Look there, Jean-Luc," she whispered. "Do you seeЧ
circling beneath the squid?"
He followed her gaze,
and alarm ran through him like shock from an overloaded phaser.
"It'sЧ"
"It's
harmless," she assured. "It won't hurt them."
But it was a dark, ominous
shapeЧhuge and winged. It crossed Darwin's prow, seemingly indifнferent
to both the squid and the starship.
"Intelligent?"
the captain asked.
"In a manner of
speaking," said Guinan.
"Which means it
understands the danger."
"In a manner of
speaking," came the reply.
Its head was at once
eaglelike and serpentlike when it broke surface, not more than fifty meters
away. Then a neck, more than five meters long, followed it out of the water.
The skin, gleaming and dripping, was at once like the skin of a dolphin and
like the skin of a machine. Then a pair of wings followed the neck out of the
water, flapping fiercely.
At first sight, Picard
was certain he was viewing an animal. Then the neck had made him wonder if it
might be a machine; but once its body was comнpletely out of the water, he knew
it was an animal... he knew this even after a jet engine roared to life under
each wing and, stiffening its spine and sucking in air, the creature overflew
the porcelain city, then shot through the sound barrier.
Two kilometers away, six
more flying fishЧhe could think of no better name for themЧrose from the Great
Scott Sea, gathered themselves into naнture's rendition of the missing man
formation, and winged off in the same direction the first flier had gone.
"You were
right," Guinan said. "Evolution has taken some strange turns
here."
"Impossible
turns," Picard said, and reminded himself again that Great Scott was only
a random sample of Dyson, and probably not even the most interesting place in
the Sphere.
He shook his head. Even at supersonic speed, the
fish had no hope of flying to safety across light minutes of ocean, even if
months remained before the sun fell out of the sky. If only he could save just
one of those miraculous creatures, he thought.
"It's all degenerating
into chaos and blunders," he lamented. "Perhaps the
biggest blunders of all time."
"If it helps you at
all," Guinan said, "there will be almost no one to judge our actions;
and even if there were, they would conclude that there is not much we can do
with a structure of this size. We have not caused this situation."
"I wonder,"
Picard said, knowing that she lived as one of the last witnesses who could
judge the Borg for the crime perpetrated against her people, and he wondered if
justice might one day flow from her memory of what had happened. He wanted to
voice, again, his suspicions about why an all-consuming neutron star should
appear, just as the warp ships arrived from Federation space. Was it time for
them to keep a new civilization from making use of the artifact? Or was it
simply time to destroy a past they had outgrown?
"You judge yourself
too harshly," said Guinan. "I've watched your so-called blunder
through Dyson, andЧ"
"And there's
nothing for me to do."
"Except what you've
already been doing."
"Which is?"
"Shine a little
light, Jean-Luc. Save whatever you can. Any step up from nothing is vast."
"Riker here. Are you just about ready to
get the Darwin aloft?" Number One, Picard thought, sounded nervous, worried,
and impatient. Riker's vocabulary always became more varied and colorful when
he was worried. In extreme cases it became bureaucratic, as if he were falling
back on his Academy training jargon. He was not there yet, Picard realized, so
in Riker's judgment the situation was still potentially manageable.
The glass starfish had
sailed, driven by the boosters Geordi and Riker had cobbled together from three
of the Enterprise's shuttles. In acнcordance with their instructions,
the Feynman, stripped of life support and crammed with spare parts from
the Darwin, was now strapped to the backs of Nadir and Calypso,
providing just enough kick, according to Riker, to guarantee that the
water-laden vessel could be maneuvered to a safer locationЧwherever that magic
place, safer, might be.
CAPTAIN'S LOG, STARSHIP DARWIN
SUNSET MINUS: 2а OR 3а
DAYS,а PROBнABLY LESS EGRESS:
ASAP
It was Commander Riker
who came up with the idea of flooding the Darwin's lower decks, to provide us
with additional space for evacuation of the "squid people." It seemed
a good idea, but I had my doubts about Riker.
"You can trust your
life to him," Picard assured me. "He's one of the best officers in
Starfleet."
"He is?" I
wondered aloud. "I must confess that I've had some doubts about his
judgment, having heard that he plays poker with an empath and a card-counting
android."
"Precisely my
point," the captain said. "They usually lose."
when
she joined Picard
on the bridge, Captain Dalen had to force herself to believe what the screens
showed. Up there in the far sky, on the Dyson homeworld, a remote probe
shivered vioнlently from side to side as a stiff breeze came up, then weakened
for a moment, then came on again even more strongly. Its source was the
southeast. The open pit mine, with its fractured homes and storefronts, resisted
the assault of air and dust... for a minute or two ... for mere minutes, and no
more.
From the summit of the
western wall, the probe broadcast a shivering, panoramic view through
sub-space: a horizon on which an ember from the moon became first a brilliant
meteor, and then a fiery sword whose blade reached all the way up to the
skyЧand whence the ember had come ... a moon-rise unlike any other in Captain
Dalen's experience, or in anyone else's.
On the far side,
completely out of view, the erratically accelerating inner surface of Dyson had
crept up and bitten a piece out of its own prototype.
The lesser Dyson never
even touched the ground, never did more than dip into the greater Dyson's
stratosphere.. ..but at thirty-two times the speed of sound, a mere dip was
enough. The world let wobнbled and cracked, smoldered and dragged in its orbit.
After more than two hours, it was still flinging sparks and hot coals from the
wound. Captain Dalen's probe showed the hull of the moon clearнing the
Homeworld's horizon .. . and then stopнping . .. and then ... instead of rising
farther . .. it came forward and sat down on a sea located halfway between the
Bronze Age city and its antipode.
Picard, seated on a
saddle to the left of Captain Dalen's station, gazed at the bridge viewscreen,
transfixed. The most astonishing part was the slownessЧthe stateliness,
evenЧwith which things were unfolding. The moon was collapsing into the world
at a steady twenty kilometers per secondЧ and it took more than a minute and a
half for it to disappear. There went the spheres within the sphere, within the
Sphere. There went carbon and phosнphorus and sulfur: the most abundant
substances in the universe realized finally as the pain and promise of living.
There went the marionette people. There went spirit.
Meteors.
Meteors and shockwaves
everywhere.
And a third part of the
city was uprooted, and hurled into the sea. And the waters boiled, and turned
to blood. And the city was not.
The Dooglasse ship was
more than two light minutes away when the moon collapsed. The aliens were
flying with a Federation comlink, but without benefit of their own subspace
probes. They were therefore completely mystified by the real-time transmissions
between the Enterprise and the Darнwin. Though the alien called
Captain Dalen was describing for the alien voice named Riker a moon that had
crashed and exploded, Jani's telescope revealed a moon still hovering above its
world.
Then, as the seconds
passed, the Dooglasse saw it, too. The horror developed exactly as the Horta
alien had said it would, as if foretold by the gift of prophetic vision.
"Riker to
Picard."
"Picard here,"
the captain said. He had moved to a station on the port side of the Horta's
command pit. Troi, sitting near him, was tense with worry.
"Are you lofting
yet?" Riker asked.
"Not quite ready,
Number One," Picard replied. "Did you record what just
happened?"
"Yes, Captain. I
advise that you leave while the entrance lock is still intact. I assume it is
still functioning."
"We'll know when we
get there," said Picard, and he realized that by then the steadily rising
tide of chaos might already have ruined the lock mechaнnism; and there was no
other way out of the Sphere. Inertia still held sway over the sun and the
Home-world, as another surge forward brought the inner surface closer to each.
On Earth, Picard's ancestors had witnessed explosions of lava and steam
powerful enough to open cracks forty kilometers long. He knew of a man in the
Jordan Valley who, long before the first book of the Bible was written, had
seen a mountain pitched on its side, then swallowed whole by a fissure wide
enough to accommodate all the tribes of Israel. He had actually seen the man's
bones where construction workers had found them, still splayed out in the
disquieting pose of startled surprise. He knew of an island that had
disappeared in a searing red glareЧdisappeared so suddenly that men and ships
were converted to gas and the waters of the Mediterranean stood up like a wall.
.. stood up, in places, higher than the pyramids; and he knew that these
manifestations were of but trifling magniнtude by comparison to the quakings
and burnings that were about to burst upon Dyson.
Selah ... Selah .
riker
had ordered Data
and the pilot on duty to bring the Enterprise nearly close enough to
trigger the lock's external grapplers . . . almost, but not quite close enough.
Closing the distance gave him seconds more of breathing space, and he supposed
that seconds would make all the difference in the world, if it became necessary
for him to repeat the Jenolen maneuver with the Darwin, the
Dooglasse ship, and the starfish.
The starfish? Riker
wondered. We're going to be cramped. It's likely to get awfully cramped in here
before this is all settled.
The Darwin had
beamed two probes to the Dyson Homeworld. The first, which dived headlong into
the atmosphere, revealed nothing on the Enterprise's bridge screen,
nothing except wind-driven dust illuнminated by such incessant lightnings that
they blended undetectably into a continuous yellow glare.
The view from space was
no more revealing. The blue-green dot, with its miniature version of the Great
Scott Sea, was now a ghostly dark sphere. As Riker watched from the captain's
command station, no snow-capped mountain, no patch of blue ocean, shone through
anywhere. The bridge was silent except for the intermittent beeps of their
equipment; all of the officers on duty were staring at the view-screen. Riker
knew that everyone on the bridge was now feeling inertia's threat more keenly
than any screen or sensor could convey. It hung in their minds's sky like a
hammer readying to shatter a history.
"Selah," the
voice of Captain Dalen intoned. ". . . Will not we fear, though the
mountains be carried into the midst of the sea; though the waters thereof roar
and be troubled, though the mountains shake with the swelling thereof. Selah .
. . the world melted . . . Selah."
The Horta captain, Riker
realized, was recalling the Forty-sixth Psalm. He caught a look of dismay on
the face of an officer at his left, then shrugged. An alien archaeologist
quoting the Book of Psalms? Well, and why not? Nothing else on this mission had
gone as expected.
He feared the possibility of having to bring the
Enterprise inside the Sphere; yet he knew that he would do so if the
lives of Picard and those with him were endangered . . . and yet he also knew
that if going inside meant certain destruction for the ship and its crew, he
would pull away and live with the decision as best he could. He was not a
stranger to difficult decisions, even where Picard's life was inнvolved.
On the right side of
Riker's bridge screen, no voice outfeeds came from the cockpit of the Balboa;
but he could see that Worf was double-checking and triple-checking the
shuttle's controls, ready to turn the Balboa into a lifeboat if the Darwin
itself failed. He knew how his old friend would take the decision that he,
himself, now considered and dreaded.
The Klingon did not look up.
Worf knew that more
could go wrong in this operation than could be foreseen. Even the indefatiнgable
Data had given no new warnings. He could guess what the android was doing in
this dark field tonight: running increasingly intractable probability curves,
trying to predict scenarios for failure, trying to predict the unpredictable.
The central disaster was beyond the resources of Klingon, or human, or
human-appearing android to prevent, even if given every manner of brute
strength already known to them; and the Klingon doubted that there was any
technology accessible inside the Sphere that could be brought
into play in time. He wondered if this time the Enterprise would be
forced simply to stand aside and watch what happened, and his warrior's will
rebelled against the thought, even as his intellect went on bended knee before
the realities.
"Captain
Picard," Data called across subspace, "you really should be airborne
by now."
"What is it?"
Picard replied from the bridge of the Darwin. "Has Great Scott
lurched again toward the sun?"
"That too,"
Data's voice replied, "and something else, far less predictable. The sun
is fading toward the red dwarf state. It appears to be dying, sir."
And how will Dyson's sun
die? Picard
thought.
"Have you been able
to beam in the additional observation probes?" Data asked.
"Especially the solar probes?"
"They were not a
priority," Picard explained. "We've only just now gotten them away.
Can you see yet?" He waited for the android's answer.
Data glanced at the
forward screen and saw nothнing except his own, Enterprise-eye view of
the Sphere's outer surface: a level, airless plain that seemed endless. For an
instant, he admired the complete lack of wear and tear on Dyson's skin, then
cut short the amount of time devoted to the irreleнvant. Sometimes, his human
tendencies seemed annoying; but to be annoyed was also a human tendency. A
rational being would never have even made the irrelevant observation.
"Riker to
Picard," the commander said from the captain's station. "No downlink
yet from your sun probe. It isЧplease stand by, sir."
Data watched the screen
image brighten to reveal a strange star rushing up from below. Indeed, through
the probe's eyes, it now ceased even to resemble a star. No longer
sapphire-orange or even sapphire-pink, it glowed with the red of a ruby. Yellow
spines sprang out of the corona, appallingly large, and made of plasma. The
impression Data received was of a fiery sea urchin dangling in space.
"Got it!"
Riker shouted from behind him.
Data checked his display
and saw at once, based upon triangulations among four different probes, exactly
how far off-center the central sun had been shifted; or more accurately, how
much the Sphere had moved, leaving the star in place. This told him more
precisely when the sun would reach the Great Scott Sea. It was
"falling" faster than he had anticiнpated.
"Captain,"
Riker said, "we're getting readings that just don't make sense. The sun is
transmitting enormous amounts of energy directly into the Sphere's
surface." His voice was more high-pitched than usual, full of what Data
recognized as urgency. "I'm looking at a scan of the grapplers, opposite
the Great Scott Sea, on the ice fields. The power surges are off
the grid. They've got to be fully charged by now. More than fully
charged. But they're not doing anything!"
Riker's face was
impassive, Troi noted, in the moment before he passed on a probe image to Darwin's
bridge screen. She saw a necklace of computer-enhanced grappler fire,
burning brightly, accomplishing nothing. From their mountings atop the Darwin's
hull, the ship's own probes revealed nothing of the calamity happening in
the world above. The sun was completely obscured by a warm haze, and because
the screen automatically adjusted the lighting to changing conditions, keeping
its level of illumination constant, it was only when Troi looked at the meter
and scanner readings that she knew that daylight had increased its brilliance
threeнfold. And Data had said that the sun was shrinking, fading. . .
One of the probes panned
across the face of the sun. On its surface, a yellow-white fountain apнpeared,
a new urchin spine, a blaze that streamed out higher than the distance
separating Earth from the moon. It hovered for a moment, then came out
againЧhigher, heading purposefully toward the probe. Without any fuss at all,
the probe died. Then another probe winked out. Then another.
"That's it,"
Picard said grimly next to her. "No hope of correcting Dyson's problem. No
hope of getting anywhere near that star again."
"That is not
entirely true," Data said from the Enterprise. "You are
already too close to the star for safety."
"Warning
appreciated," the Horta said, with what seemed to Troi to be deep feeling.
She sensed no recklessness or fatalism in Dalen now, only grim determination.
From a great distance, a
surviving probe near the Dyson Homeworld showed urchin spines flaring
erratically, as if the star were signaling to any interlopers:
I KNOW WHAT I'M DOING. STAY AWAY.
Troi wondered if one or
more of the civilizations infesting Dyson's walls had managed to wrest conнtrol
of ancient machinery and create, by accident or by design, the illusion that
Dyson and its star were alive, and suffering, and aware. Biological overtones.
Superorganism. Troi could not shake off the imнpressionЧthe stubborn
illusionЧthat Dyson was alive.
As she watched, the
probe panned down and across the Dyson Homeworld . . . down and across the
inner membrane of Dyson. It was impossible not to look, and just as impossible
not to respond irrationally to what the eyes saw. Even Data's raнtionality, she
knew, was being assaulted and slowed. Logic dropped dead for them, dropped dead
for all of them, as the sun carried the old world toward the hull.
The planet was ready, in
its orbit, to be rolled onto the surface of the Sphere, Picard thought. One
side of his mind warred with the other, wanting to drag him away from this
place. The other side held him spellbound, for there was something
fascinatingly violent and dreadfully beautiful in Dyson's agonies. The place
was uplifting and utterly humiliating, horrifying and deliciously obscene. He
freed himself by breaking the scene down into mathematics and physics. A mental
gag order, self-imposed. It was the only way.
"Will the planet
actually roll?" he asked Data. "Or do you suppose it will go through
the Sphere? Can you predict what will happen?"
"I am already
running simulations, Captain, but I am certain that inertia will continue to
hold sway. The planet may not roll easily on the land mass."
Another view came
on-screen. Racing ahead of the old world, glancing back over its shoulder as it
retreated, one of the Darwin's probes showed the first collisions of
atmosphere against atmosphere, water against water. Here and there, microscopic
shock bubbles focused hydrogen upon hydrogen and blazed forth as fusionЧa
billion twinkling points of fusion. Had the computer not automatically filtered
out the glare, no one would have been able to see, much less understand, what
happened next.
First on the upper
hemisphere, then all across the old Homeworld, the atmosphere was lifted and
slung forward, meaning that the planet itself was being slowed by friction,
meaning that anything not solidly nailed down, including air and water and
perhaps a continent or two, was being uprooted by the law of inertia, and would
continue forward.
"It will
roll," Data said, knowing this for a cerнtainty now. From his station on
the Enterprise's bridge, he saw that the Sphere was holding up well
against the old world as it scraped across desert, and forest, and lake. On the
outer shell, a fierce lightning storm followed the scrape, a migrating spider's
web of bolts spreading out over thousands of kilometers, and capable of
electrocuting whole worlds full of people. They were the only outwardly visible
sign of the impact. The concussions of light grew succesнsively brighter as
Data watched, and their westward migration slowed perceptibly.
The view from the Darwin's
fleeing probe conнfirmed for Picard that the Homeworld was indeed lagging
behind, requiring the probe to depend more and more upon telescopically
enhanced views, with a correspondingly decreasing resolution. But even as the
view began to blur, there was much to seeЧ almost too much to take in all at
once.
As the Homeworld grazed
a lake, its lower hemiнsphere, more and more of it, was disappearing. And ahead
of that hemisphere, Picard knew, no living creatures stirred upon the lake. The
forward-flung atmosphere had piled up ahead of the planet and was
crashing down upon the sea, setting the very air afire. The shock front of
ejected air, and water, and continental dust rolled ashore and kept on rolling
toward the eyes of the probe, deforesting a super continent before it, too,
began losing speed... and then the Homeworld itself came ashore. Into space was
lifted a mighty whirl of fragmenting, liquefying land. From the place where Picard
and Jani had viewed an alien Bronze Age city, gigatons of up-thrown rock were
being converted into beads of glass. They scattered across the sky like
billions of glittering diamonds.
And there were diamonds
in the sky, Picard realized. The timbers of the old boat at the bottom of the
Horta tunnel, the bones in the old houseЧ they were microdiamonds, now. And as
he watched, he knew that the diamonds themselves must presнently be bursting
into flame and vanishing in puffs of carbon dioxide.
And he beheld a crack in
the planet, a crack that ran from the lower hemisphere's contact point with
Dyson's inner hull, all the way to the roof of the Homeworld's upper
hemisphere. More cracks apнpeared as he watched. They spread out from the
center of the nearer hemisphere, yawning wide and filling with fire, and
appearing with such suddenness that Picard wondered if it was possible for
shock-waves traveling through rock to cover so much ground so quickly.
It did not seem
possible; but the old Homeworld did not know any better, so the cracks spread
and multiplied anyway, and then the very hemisphere bulged and stretched, tried
to roll, and stretched again before his eyes.
"Selah . . ."
Captain Dalen sang.
She called that one
right, Picard told himself. Moses' miracle of the waters, Plato's lost
Atlantis, John's RevelationЧeven these wonders were reнduced to minutiae by the
approach of Dyson's Homeworld. Its mantle seemed to be parting and peeling away
like the skin of an orange, but it only seemed so. For it was stony and
brittle. It was actually an ejecta blanket of dust and red sparks and steam.
Beneath the spreading blanket, something globular and huge fell out of the
world, registering, as it fell, barely perceptible but distinctive Doppler
shifts on the probe's sensors.
"It is definitely
rolling," Data called out from the Enterprise.
"What is?"
Picard asked. "What's left to roll?"
"What falls away,
Captain. Scans indicate a ball of nickel and iron."
"Then the world has
spilled its core," Captain Dalen observed.
"Yes," said
Data. "Just as the mantle shook off its atmosphere and continents, the
core has now shed its mantle."
The maddening scale of
events and the relentless, slow motion pace with which events seemed to be
unfolding, had a hypnotic quality, even, Data admitнted to himself, for him.
The fleeing probe was still outpacing the globe by a wide margin. Its sensors
were still piercing smoke and lava and steam, reconнstructing, on the Enterprise's
bridge screen, a bright orange globe so vast and so real that Data could
almost reach out and touch it. The metal core did not shatter as it stretched
toward him across the sky. It rolled. He no longer needed the Doppler readouts
to tell him this: The globe was definitely rollingЧ and it seemed that it would
roll through the screen and crush everyone on the bridge.
With the old Homeworld
down, "sunset" was not far behind. Captain Picard was all too aware
of that. For him and his Horta colleague Dalen, only considнerations of
survival remainedЧfor their crew, and for the the sea swifts on E-Deck aft, who
were now pulling the hatch closed behind themselves and saying good-bye to
fathers and mothers and siblings and comrades for the last time.
There was no stopping
the sun. All the courage and wisdom accumulated during the course of Pi-card's
lifetime were being challenged by the onrush-ing mass. It humbled him with no
effort at all. In the end, Picard knew, only the Darwin, the Dooglasse
ship, and the starfish would be his concern; nothing else was possible.
After "sunset"
would come Dyson's long nightЧa sunless abyss filled with ice. A great nobility
was dying all around him, even if it had been sculpted by the ancestral Borg in
the remote past; and the great tragedy within the larger tragedy was that the
expeнdition would return home with little more than scraps of knowledge by
which to read the story of Dyson's many lost worldsЧif, in fact, they ever
returned home.
SecondsЧminutes after
they should have left by Picard's reckoning, Captain Dalen ordered one of the
surviving probes to gather the last of its power into one intensely focused
scan. A fragment of planetary crust, no wider than the city of San Francisco,
was tumbling end over end through void. The probe peered through rafts of
molten black glass that had, only minutes before, been layers of sediнmentary
rock. Like blades of grass preserved in amber, the glass enclosed long, long
girders: segнments of a monorail system. The train was nowhere to be seen, but
at one end of the system, a labyrinth of iron bars glowed white-hot.
"Jail cells?"
Troi said in wonderment.
"No," said
Picard, "a zoo!" And for a moment, and then for another, the captain
of the Enterprise began to understand the Horta captain's need to finish
the task at hand, to solve one puzzle before moving onto the next. The screens
showed a sudden movement forward and starboard. As far as the eye could see, a
thick white vapor was rising off the sea, rising only waist-high. In the
direction of the islands, the vapor rose skyward in a dozen whirlwinds, and
the black clouds gathering on the horizon
provided a stark contrast for them. The sky, in that direction, appeared to be
full of ghostly white worms.
"Now would be a
good time to leave?" said the Horta.
"Another good
safety tip," said Picard, as five kilometers off the starboard bow a
waterspout twisted sideways and tore a hole in the canopy of cloud cover,
letting brilliant red sunlight shine down, ever so briefly, on the porcelain
city. It was the last these islands would ever see of the sun, until the moment
it climbed down through the stratoнsphere and sat upon them.
The Fallen Sky
it
was hot. Picard
could almost feel the sun pressing in on him. It was an illusion, of course.
Knowledge of the conditions outside the Darwin gave his imagiнnation
leave to insist that it was hot hereЧagainst the reality of the ship's
climate-controlled bridge.
He leaned forward in his
saddle at the Operations station as the Horta pilot at his right moved her
fingerlike rocky extrusions over her console. As the vessel finally lifted from
the ocean, kindling temperнature was reached, at which point waterspouts grew
into actual tornadoes and heavy swells began to form.
"Picard to
Riker," Picard murmured.
"Riker here."
"We are fully
operational, and rising through the atmosphere."
"Glad to hear it,
Captain."
From an altitude of ten
thousand kilometers, the world below became a flat white plain. Picard realнized
that he was staring at streamers of warm mist rising over millions of square
kilometers of ocean, pushing gentlyЧever so gently, at firstЧoutward and
outward from the place he had just left. A hundred thousand kilometers higher,
Picard thought he could distinguish the outline of the Great Scott Sea's nearer
shore.
Far up the inner hull,
just barely visible, was a thin scratch marking the path taken by the old world
across a lake and a forest. At least, he thought it was visible, without the
aid of magnification; but the longer he looked, the harder it was to see, and
he began to wonder if the destruction he had witnessed in real time, through
subspace channels, might not yet be visible without the probe because the light
now reaching the Darwin from the inner surface was still several minutes
old. A quick mental calculation told him that more than enough time had passed,
that the scratch should be visible to him; but like so much else in Dyson, it
was swallowed by Dyson's immensity.
He called up a
telescopic view and ... and there it was: The core had stretched like an egg
and broken, leaving behind a yolk of gold and liquid platinum
the size of Lake Superior. Behind the core, vast splashes of atmosphere were
crashing back again upon the land, cooking deposits of colorless methane into
clouds of black sugar. The sky, in that direction, rained caramel and
microdiamonds.
Guinan had come to the
bridge. She left the lift, came to his side, and stood there gazing at the
viewscreen; her usual contemplative expression was replaced now by awe.
"The question," she said, as if reading his thoughts, "comes
down to the old sin of pride."
Picard looked at her
quizzically.
"You wanted to
believe we could save Dyson, that we could change its course," Guinan
continued, "but that belief, no matter how well-intentioned, turns out to
have been rooted in the old conceits of pride and hope. You were right to think
of the Darwin as little more than an intruding virus here. We are
saviors of nothing. The Dyson Sphere was not built for us, does not operate by
our standards of right and wrong, and so long as we stay out of the way and do
not become an irritating little virus, Dyson does not give a damn about
us."
"I guess that shows
us all where we stand," said Captain Dalen from her command station.
Picard gave net an icv
stare and said, "A. little to one side, I presume."
They were two million
kilometers high and the bridge screen's main view was panning sideways across
the sun. It does look like a sea urchin! Picard thought; and Captain
Dalen, apparently taking GuinanТs reprimand at face valueЧdo not become an
irritating little virusЧordered the pilot to give the sun a wide berth with
the Darwin.
Aboard the Enterprise,
sitting at the command station, Riker uplinked a viewfeed from the Darнwin's
main telescope. The officers on the bridge's port side cupped their hands
over their eyes as bright light suddenly suffused the area.
Riker squinted at the
viewscreen. The grapplersЧ or, rather, what he had assumed all along to have
been grapplersЧwere still drawing energy from the sun. By now they glowed so
fiercely that it was hard to imagine why they had not turned whole oceans into
scalding vapor; yet the machines remained surrounded by tropical islands and
rainforests that were slowly disappearing under sheets of ice and snow.
"Why is that?"
Riker exclaimed. No one on the bridge, not even Data, had an answer for him.
No, he told himself
silently, the figures the ship's computer was now showing him on one of his
station's small screens could not be true. A deep scan of an ice bound grappler
revealed what had to be thousands of new holes opening into subspace. As he
watched, their number doubled, then doubled again. Dimensional folding? Was
that possible? Apparently so, he thought, shaking his head in disbelief as he
bade farewell to the universe of Einstein, Hawking, and Cochrane.
A glance around the
bridge at the other officers told him that all of them had drawn the same
conclusions. A couple were gaping at the screen; others shook their heads at
what the sensor readings on their consoles were telling them.
"Captain,"
Riker called out, "Dyson is rewriting the laws of physics before our very
eyes. I suggest you come to the exit lock right away."
"Understood,"
said Captain Dalen. "We're comнing as fast as we can."
"Where's the
Dooglasse ship?" asked Picard.
"They're ahead of
us," the Horta replied, "and already approaching the lock."
"And the
starfish?"
"About a half light
minute behind the Dooglasse."
"Good. NowЧ"
"The lock has its
own set of grapplers," Riker called excitedly, feeling simultaneously awed
and defeated. "They're behaving just as strangely as the ones on the snowfield,
drawing tremendous amounts of energy from the sun and . . . CaptainЧthe view
aftЧlook at the sun!"
Picard found a strange and terrible beauty in
the horror. The light inside Dyson was fading fast. The sun, as it shrank,
flickered between red and gold, as if the Sphere were drinking in the sun's
power, drinking it to extinction.
"I see, Commander
Riker," Captain Dalen said from her station. "Now about the
lock?"
Riker's voice replied, "The Dooglasse ship
is close enough to trigger it at any moment. . ."
Troi, standing near
Guinan, was watching the viewscreen intently. Picard waited with Captain Dalen
and the rest of the Darwin's bridge personnel for Riker's confirmation
that the lock was opening; but the word did not come.
"Well, Number
One?" Picard asked, keeping his voice steady.
"Negative, Captain.
We have to try opening it from the outside."
On the Enterprise's bridge
screen, the Darwin's telescope showed the Dooglasse gamma flare coming
into view like a false star, eclipsing the lock. Up ahead, on the ground,
perhaps six Earth diameters from the lock, another star winked on.
Grappler flare, Riker
thoughtЧor "apparent" grappler flare. It was joined, a minute later,
by a whole constellation of false stars, and the sun, in response, seemed to
tremble.
"It's no use!"
Riker called out with dismay. "We can't get you out."
Picard was trying to
think of what to do next. "It could be worse, Number One," he heard
himself say, surprised at how calm his voice sounded even to him.
"It's difficult to
imagine how," Captain Dalen said.
"No?" He
turned in his saddle to look back at the Horta captain. "Just imagine that
we are still back there, amongst those islands." Picard mused on that for
a moment; an idea was coming to him. "But the more I think about it, Dalen,
that could turn out to be exactly where we want to be."
"Are you mad?"
the Horta captain said, her voice rising as she drew herself up in her saddle.
"Are you completely out of your mind?"
Picard ignored the
accusation, turning back to the viewscreen. "We must go out behind that
star! We can follow the sun into the sea. It's the only way you can save your
ship."
There was a pause and
then finally Dalen said, "Then maybe it's time for us to be bold,
Jean-Luc. I can't think of anything better to do, and I am now beginning to see
the reason in your madness, so I am going to follow your advice. In fact, the
more I think about it, the sorrier I am that I didn't think of your idea
myself."
"Riker?"
Picard asked. "Did you get that?"
"Yes, Captain, and
so did the other two ships . . ." Riker fell silent.
"What is it, Number
One?" Picard asked, sweepнing his gaze toward the bottom of the great bowl
in which a chain of islands was obscured now, before even the most powerful of
the Darwin's magnifiers, behind a veil of mist and storm, and the glare
of a cherry-red sun, down there in the bottom.
The voice of Data came
back to him: "We are calculating the time remaining until 'sunset,' and
trying to take into account new surges of subspace activity."
"Where?"
Picard asked.
"Everywhere,"
Riker's voice said. "Mostly the surges are concentrated around grappler
pointsЧ and in a huge rim forming beneath the Great Scott Sea. But they're
spreading everywhere, Captain.'**
"Geometric or
arithmetic?"
"Geometric, I'm
afraid."
"I see," said
Picard, realizing that whatever would happen, would happen soon. It seemed to
him that Dyson was bracing itself for the impact, preparing for the sun to go
through.
But if such abilities existed, why not use them
to prevent the sun from going through? It made no sense to him, and yet
at the same time it made all the sense in the world: The efficiencies of man
were not the efficiencies of Dyson.
"Data?" Picard
asked.
"It seems, Captain,
that you will have to follow the sun too closely for comfort."
"But can it be
done?" Picard demanded.
"YesЧwith full
shields up."
"And the Dooglasse
ship? And the starfish?"
"They will have to
be towed behind you."
"That doesn't leave
a great deal of power for shields," Riker added.
"Close,"
Picard said. "It's going to be close." He knew how small the chances
were that his desperate plan would succeed.
"Make course!"
Captain Dalen shouted, her meнchanical voice filled with the glee of a child.
A very determined child,
Picard thought.
"I sense
them," Troi said as she listened to the alien cries. "I sense the sea
swiftsЧtrapped." Her hands clenched into fists, but there was no one to
strike at, no one from whom a price might be exacted for all this suffering.
The cries came from the Darwin's
communicaнtors, filling the bridge with the sound of rasping, of whistling,
of voices rising to a high pitch and then falling again. A comlink was picking
up the calls of the sea swifts who had remained behind in the Great Scott Sea.
To Troi, they sounded like the whale songs of Earth, the calls of the sea
dragons of Betazed, and the songs of birds; and yet there was an undertone in
their sounds that she had never heard before. She did not know what they were
saying, but the emoнtion in their cries was both understandable and unbearable.
"As the sun begins
to plunge down," Guinan said, "Mothers are crying out to their
children . . ."
Troi thought she
glimpsed tears in Guinan's dark eyes.
"What are they
saying?" Captain Picard asked.
Troi knew the answer to
his question before Guinan replied, "I hear mother crying to child, child
crying out for father, grandfather to grandchild. I hear people crying, 'I love
you.'"
The cries rose sharply
in pitch, then ceased abruptly. Without any warning or fuss, they simply went
out, like the shutting off of a lamp.
As the details of the
coming sunstrike became more clearly visible, it was hard for Picard to imagine
how the Darwin, or anything else, would survive. Where the porcelain
city had been, scalding steam was now blowing to all points of the compass,
forming huge streamers. Where the streamers grazed each other at varying
speeds, eddies broke off into strings of hurricanes, each wider than the
Atlantic Ocean, yet microscopic at Dyson's hyperplanetary scale. The streamers
themselves resembled come-tary veilsЧwhich, in fact, they were. At the center
of the comet, Picard knew, the porcelain towers were being roasted like dishes
left too long in an oven. On distant shores, if shores still existed,
torrential rains would be falling out of the veils, as if making an effort to
lessen the sun's heat.
In the Balboa's cockpit,
Worf waited for word from the bridge, while far below, great distance and great
size made the falling sun appear to be hovering over the sea, as if reluctant
to make the fearsome contact. Everything in him was tense, ready for battleЧor
for a rapid retreat.
His aft screen showed the two refugee ships,
secured by invisible magnetic "tow lines."
Back there, in the Darwin's
shadow, the ship of the sea swifts was a little white star sinking toward
what was formerly a large turquoise blotch, long known to its inhabitants, as,
simply, "the sea." A mosaic of glassy tilesЧeach so foamy and so
light that, left alone in a field, it would have blown away on a gentle
breezeЧgave the ark's skin a sinister, reptilian aspect. Burned indelibly into
the scales, on both her starboard and port sides, the ship displayed her name
in bold red scriptЧswept astern to give the illusion of speed. As the wind from
the sun increased a hundred fold, something shivered inside the ship, and her
arms flexed back, like the wings of a bird of prey descending upon an unwary
target.
It was designed to do
that! Worf
realized, and something in him warmed at a sight that reminded him a little of
the movements of those most admiraнble and beautiful examples of Earth's avian
species, the hawks and falcons and eagles. At first glance, the thing they had
called a "starfish" looked nothing at all like a spaceworthy
vehicleЧyet there it was, transformed into an alien raptor worthy of space.
A beep from a console
near his arm warned him that the solar wind, as it hissed past the Darwin's magnetic
field envelope, was increasing another hunнdred fold. On the descending
sun, three brilliant white fountainsЧsea urchin spinesЧhad swung suddenly in
the same direction. They were pointing directly at him, like searchlight beams
converging.
Suddenly Worf was aware
that someone was enterнing the shuttlecraft from behind him. His hand
reflexively darted toward his phaser as he swung around in his seat.
Deanna Troi had come
aboard the Balboa. "It's seen us," Troi said as she came
toward him, followed by Guinan. Beverly Crusher and Geordi La Forge were behind
them, climbing down from the Darwin into the Balboa's hold.
"What are you doing
here?" the Klingon deнmanded.
"Captains Dalen and
Picard ordered us to go below," said Troi. "Just in case," she
added abнsently.
Worf noticed that they
were all transfixedЧTroi, Guinan, Crusher, and GeordiЧall held captive by the
sun's approach to the Sphere's inner surface. He turned back to his screen. On
the Darwin-facing hemisphere of the solar urchin, a dozen more spines
were moving slowly into position, sweeping their gaze toward Darwin, like
the eyes of Argus come awake.
On the bridge, Picard
understood that the sun stations, when they had swatted at the Darwin once
before, must have retained a memory of the ship's configuration, much as human
blood cells retain a memory of every new virus's configuration, in case they
should encounter it again.
It recognizes us! he thought, just before
the force of the blast turned the aft wall suddenly into the floor; and the
floor and ceiling into walls.
Captain Dalen struck the
aft "floor" with a sickenнing thud, and Picard pounded down with a
wet snap that told him his wrist was fractured. As he struggled to his feet and
stood on the wall, the Darwin's computer realigned the gravitic field
with such lightнning efficiency that Picard immediately fell upon his face,
coming down hard enough to break his nose.
It could easily have
been a lot worse, he realized. The Horta crewmember near him had just missed
his head by a margin measurable in gnat's breaths.
"Out of here!"
Dalen called. "Everybody out of here!"
There followed a
confusion of shuffling Horta bodies, some obeying and leaving, others coming
forward.
On the screen, more
sun-fountains were taking aim. Many more. Yet Picard did not move. Would not
move.
"Abandon ship,
Jean-Luc," the Horta captain said. "That's an order."
"You, too,"
Picard demanded.
"No. You wouldn't
abandon your ship, would you? I won't abandon mine. I am not finished,
here."
"Nor I."
"Yes, you
are!" the Horta shouted, and the bridge screen began to fill the room with
a yellow-white glow. "I know you," she continued in a softer tone,
"and you have another destiny. Now leave."
Dalen was right. This
was her ship and her comнmand; he had done everything he could to help her, and
would only be another problem distracting her if he remained aboard. Now his
duty was to his own ship and crew.
"You gave us a plan
that just might work," Dalen went on. "In fact, I'm betting that it
will. Time for you and your people to get out of here and give us a chance to
put it to the test."
"Bonne chance, Captain Dalen,"
Picard said as he moved past her toward the lift.
A lifetime later, the shuttlecraft Balboa, in
accordнance with both Captain Dalen's and Captain Pi-card's orders, was away,
with Worf as pilot. A second later, the EngfordЧfilled with water and
piloted by refugeesЧdetached from the Darwin; but when Pi-card looked
back, he saw that the second shuttle was staying too close to the Horta ship,
like a faithful pet that refused to leave.
It was all part of some
great ballet being put on by Dyson's impresariosЧexcept that no one had
told anyone who was to dance and who was to be the audience. Anyone could be
forced to watch or dance at a moment's notice as the great pas de deux of
sun and inner surface threatened.
"Darwin to Engford," Captain
Dalen called, pressнing herself against the saddle at her captain's station,
"away all boats! Impulse power! Engford, you are
She never finished the
order. The ships were ripped from their paths, and seared, and strewn about in
a concussion of heat and light; and the Darwin was in the center of the
concussion.
The Horta saw something
and tried to speak; but then, of course, she could not, and her ship was
falling. ..
Falling...
Falling. . .
The starfish had been
flung ahead of the Balboa, to judge from the views being transmitted on
the comlinks. Picard, watching the images, could see that its captain was
alternately thrusting forward and braking, trying to gain control of the ark.
Oddly, it became a graceful motion to watch. The ocean, some two million
kilometers below the starfish, was vaporizing in apparent silence. Nearer the
red star, far away to starboard, both atmosphere and water had been
hurled away completely. The porcelain city and the archipelagos, what was left
of them, stood now in a vacuum on bare ocean bottom. They stood deep within the
corona of Dyson's sun.
Riker listened to the
voices from the captain's command station on the bridge of the Enterprise.
"Darwin!" the Enterprise called
across the void. "Captain Dalen, can you hear us?"
"Balboa to Darwin!" Picard
called. "Captain Daнlen. Please respond."
"This is Jani. We
are moving through the position last occupied by your vessel called the Darwin.
There is no sign, we regret to tell."
The comlink from the
Dooglasse ship showed the sun lashing out at a distant target, producing anothнer
concussion of light.
"I think that was
Captain Dalen's ship," Picard said.
"I'm afraid
so," said Riker, and then, on the Sphere below him, a bright spot
appeared. There was hardly time for Riker to take note of it, the event
happened so fast. All in one part of a second, a small piece of Dyson's shell
glowed, then the glow exнpanded, became deep red at first, then yellower, then
whiter, and then faded again to deep red, still within that part of a second.
The sun burned through
with a flash.
It never actually
touched the Sphere. Dyson's shell merely liquefied, then vaporized, then parted
and blew away.
Someone behind Riker let
out a cry. Riker sat stunned, unable for a moment to think or feel.
"Impossible!"
one of the officers at the bridge engineering station aft was saying.
"Just imposнsible!"
But there it was, on
Riker's own forward view-screen. The only view more incredible than the sun
eating its way into space was the scene coming to him from the starfish.
As if somehow
parachuting down through the vacuum, the still-out-of-control ark was hovering,
at what appeared to be merely mountaintop altitude, over a storm that reached
from flat horizon to flat horizon. Millions of kilometers ahead, where the sun
had set, a pillar of fire rose from the maelstrom and pointed straight into the
sky.
This was no ordinary
fire, Riker knew. It was air and water falling through the hole, first yanked
irresistibly after the sinking sun's gravity, then blasted back inside the
Sphere. Sheets of cooling steam and ionized gas and glittering flakes of snow
caught the last rays of the fallen star and threw them to the walls of Dyson,
which were bright enough to navigate by. The starfish-eye-view showed rips in
the cloud cover, through which whitecaps a hundred times higher than Everest
shoneЧno, not whitecaps, Riker realized: rapids. Everything in the Great
Scott SeaЧwater, air, and over there a whole islandЧwas being drawn toward the
crater.
The starfish, though
high above what passed for Dyson's ionosphere, was also being dragged slowly
sunward. During the final moments before burn-through, a thin canopy of ionized
gas had been hurled into space, hurled at an impossible angle, high over the
shores of the Great Scott Sea. Now the starfish, its engines apparently under
only partial control, was being carried down by streamers of sunward-bound gas,
as a balloon is carried by the jet stream.
Riker feared that it
would end for them soon, with their ark dashed upon the rapids. As the seconds
passed into minutes, he knew it would end that way, and then Data turned
toward him for a moment.
"The rapids
themselves appear to be dying, sir" Data said to him before turning back
to the screen.
Riker saw that something
was rising in the ark's path, rising higher than the water, higher than the
air.
"Impossible!"
Riker said, echoing the engineering officer.
"Apparently
so," Data said from his station, "but nonetheless it is
happening."
"Enterprise to Balboa, what
do you see?" Riker asked. At Worf s bidding the shuttle showed him a
different perspective from the starfish: higher and looking straight down on
the hole's west rim.
Worf had caught sight of
the Dooglasse ship caught in a swirl of crystallizing vapor, struggling to
maneuver through a snowstorm in space, but it was now shielded within the Balboa's
force field and magnetic cocoon. "Dyson's Spear," as he was alнready
calling that comet in his mind, pointed back through the disintegrating
waterfalls, back through the hole in the Sphere, with the cocoon of two ships
buried in its tail. Hydrogen, oxygen, silicon, and carbon, stripped of their
electrons, swept past Balнboa's bow at a significant fraction of
lightspeed. The ship's magnetic field envelope shunted the charged nuclei and
electrons to either side, much as the prow of a boat shunts water to port and
starboard.
Worf knew that he was unlikely
to see such a sight ever again; yet even the cometary spear was a mere detail
in Dyson's vast and violent war dance.
"Riker to
Picard," Riker's voice said. "Please report."
La Forge glanced at
Picard, sitting next to him in the Cousteau.
"We're seeing teeth
down there," Troi answered for the captain. "A whole mountain range,
rising like teeth out of the sea floor .. . thirty kilometers high, now. It's
damming the rapids."
Mountains? Geordi
wondered, peering at his inнstruments. How? Dyson's powers-that-be had failed
to move their sun. How, then, had they managed to plow so much mass into
mountain ranges so quickly? And then he guessed that force fields covнered with
mud and water would look much like mountains.
Hollow mountains.
It seemed as good an
explanation as any, except that his instruments were showingЧwhat had Data
called it? Dimensional folding?
Whatever it was, it was
now manifesting along the entire hull of Dyson. Geordi could no longer be
certain of what his scans were showing, because the multiple thousands of
subspace microverses maniнfesting up, down, starboard, port, forward, and aft
were beyond measure. Soon, Dyson would be comнpletely invisible to his scans.
From his engineer's perspective, the Sphere was about to drop out of the universe.
He was beginning to
suspect that Dyson's powers-that-be were quite insane. He glanced at Worf next
to him, but the Klingon was a stone figure.
"Picard to
Riker!" Picard's voice said.
"Riker here,
Captain."
"Where is the
neutron star? Still on the same course, I presume?"
"Still on
trajectory, Captain," Riker said, soundнing, to himself, less awed than he
felt. Then, after a long silence, he added, "As last predicted, it has
missed the Sphere."
Yet another miracle, he
thought, in a string of miracle-moments that numbed the mind's ability to
absorb. Riker wondered then if the Dyson Sphere had altered his capacity to
ever be surprised by anything again.
The neutron star missed?
Impossible, Picard thought. Like everything else about Dyson, it seemed impossible:
For all the effort on the part of those who had sent it, they had missed! The
images transmitted from the Enterprise showed the neutron star moving
away, clearly unable to compensate for the Sphere's last-minute maneuvering.
Ahead of the Balboa, cometary
streamers were still gushing up through the hole. Picard stared at a bright
foaming mass of what looked like waves breaking at the foothills of a mountain
range. The breakers had to be utterly huge to be seen across the gulf that
separated him from the shore, and yet the distance was shrinking before impulse
velocity. He swung one of the Balboa's scopes aft, toward the Dooglasse
ship, where Jani and his crew would be looking around in bewilderment, and
perhaps in terror, at a world that was darkening rapidly. Night was falling for
the first time in their history, but no stars were coming out to light the
darkness, except for the grappler flares, visible only in computer-enhanced
green, and now becoming invisible altoнgether.
Geordi saw that the
starfish's engines, too, were becoming invisible, though the ark appeared to be
gaining control now, as it made headway against the ionosphere's current. His
scans from the Balboa showed the starfish descending toward an old river
delta before its engine signature gave himЧfor want of a better explanationЧthe
illusion of folding into subspace and winking out.
The engineer was certain
that a sufficiently powerнful telescopic view would allow him to see the
starfish, still out there somewhere, still in the visible wavelengths of light,
still moving under its own powerЧbut there was no time for collecting more
pieces of the Dyson jigsaw. The wide course correcнtion Worf was making to
avoid an uprushing snowstormЧone of Dyson's reefsЧtook all of Geordi's
attention from the starfish, and suddenly the edge of the mountain range was
flying toward him, threatening to swallow the Balboa. The rim seemed
closer than it ought to have been, given Worf s piloting skills. It was as
if... as if the opening were contracting.
Geordi tore his gaze away from the mountainsЧ on
one side the night surf, on the other side a deep well with a comet stuck in
itЧlong enough to take a glance at his altimeter. It showed nothingЧnothing
sensible, at least. According to Balboa's instrumenнtation, Dyson no
longer existed.
The instrumentation of
his own senses and his own common sense told him otherwise, of course, as the Balboa
and its cocoon plunged through the ionosphere and the view in all
directions was diminнished by a yellow glare.
The ring of hollow
mountains looked real enough, even through the glare of ions against the Balboa's
shields; real enough, and spine chillingly close.
Worf was thrusting hard
to starboard, swinging the sun directly into the Balboa's path, and
still the cliffs looked as if they were about to scrape the port side. They
were covered in a glaze of ice chips and accelerated hydrogen, and the Balboa
shot by too quickly to record even a single snapshot of the black shapes
that struggled on a crack in the glaze. They were the size of elephants, the
shape of dust mites, faster than cheetahs, and smarter than Data. Like an army
of corpuscles gathered at a flesh wound, they spun a fibrous scab that was
partly webbing and partly their own bodies. Of this army, only one member recorded
the passage of the cocoon. It took notice that the two ships inside appeared to
be growing, filed this fact away for future reference, and returned its
attention to more important conнcerns.
Two-tenths of a second
later, Worf was piloting in open daylight. In another six-tenths of a second he
had swung the Balboa ninety degrees to port and, while preserving all of
his forward momentum, was vectoring away from the sun as hard as he could
without wrenching the towed Dooglasse ship apart.
Twelve seconds after
that he looked around and saw the outer shell of Dyson, as clear and bright as
high noon. He breathed a sigh of satisfaction, feeling as gratified as if he
had defeated an enemy in hand-to-hand combat, just as Data said from the Enterнprise,
"The Sphere is slowing."
"Slowing?"
Picard asked.
"It has
stopped," Data added.
Worf gazed at the
horizon in awe, thinking of the control of mass and inertia involved in
stopping such a large object.
"It is now
reversing its motion," Data's voice said without emphasis.
Worf muttered a curse
and vectored the engines elsewhere, lest the horizon rush up to meet him.
Caught between the sun
and the groundЧagain; but vectoring, this time, far beyond the reach of the
urchin spines, the Balboa flew onward. Picard shook his head in wonder
and exhaustion and sat back at his station, feeling suddenly unnecessary and
insigнnificant. Down there, on the other side of the shell, most of an ocean
had been lost... and a world as old as Earth . . . and its moon . . . and
whatever lands they had bowled across . . . and no fewer than two races had
probably perished.
He had tried to prevent
this damage, but to the Dyson Sphere, it all added up to barely more than a bad
scrape. The superplanet, having bled a little, was bandaging up now and moving
on at its own super-planetary scale.
Hortas. Sea swifts.
Marionettes.
Try as he might, what
Picard was certain he would never forget, what he would never escape, was the
realization that Dyson took no notice of them.
Dyson's Web
"riker
to dalen, please
come in."
"Darwin, this is Balboa.
Darwin, Darwin, we have made safe exit. Repeat, this is the Balboa, answer
if you can hear me."
Captain Dalen heard the
bailings from the Enterнprise and the Balboa, but she did not
respond. She had sent her last message just a few moments ago.
The message was:
"Thanks for the good advice, Jean-Luc."
No Federation hereЧnot
now, not everЧforever. No one was going to assign her to a new site before her
exploration here was complete. The Darwin had come down on waterЧagain;
And this time she was down for the long haul. This time, the sun had seen to it
that her ship would never fly again.
All well and fine, the
Horta captain decided. It would take forever to visit all of Dyson's unexplored
shores; and by practical human standards, she and her crew really did have
forever.
AndЧoh, the wonders that lay ahead!
"It's very close
now, Captain." Lieutenant Jee was speaking, who was at present assisting
three other squid with the lashing of the shuttlecraft Engford to the Darwin's
starboard hull. One of the Great Scott Sea survivors had taken Jee's name,
and another had taken Ensign Lenn's, and another Lieutenant Veere's, presumably
as a sign of gratitude for their help.
Before the lines between
the Engford and the Darwin were secured, sunrise erupted through
the same well the sun had dug and fallen into more than a hundred million
kilometers downstream. The star rose swiftly, returning in triumph to flood
with light the vast realm it had so recently abandoned. In only two minutes, it
was clear of the well, lofting like a brilliant balloon, its dawn banishing the
cometary veils. Twenty minutes later, it might have been mid-morning. Two hours
after that, it might have been noon.
Captain Dalen was nagged
by an impression, for no reason that she was logically or rationally aware,
that the changes occurring outside were even more dramatic. She feltЧshe knewЧthat
the humans would be shut off from her till the end of time; and she found
herself thinking that all the universe was shifting . . . swelling ... all of
it except right here!
Nightfall had come again
to the Dooglasse, whose ship was now joined to the Balboa, inside the Enterprise's
protective cocoon.
"It's still
shrinking," Riker called excitedly.
As indeed it was, Picard
saw as the Enterprise stood off and watched. For the first time, the
Dyson Sphere really did look like a planet. It was as small as Earth now, and
growing smaller with each passing second. The instruments suggested that it did
not exist at all, except visually and as faint distortions in the geometry of
spacetime.
Riker shook his head.
"Captain, it should have more gravitational compaction than a neutron star
by now."
"I know,"
Picard said, "and by the time it's down to the Enterprise's size,
whole Earth masses will be compressed into spaces smaller than golf balls. It
should be a black hole, by then."
"But I'll wager it
won't be," Riker said with a faint smile.
Picard nodded. "I
begin to think we've been oversimplifying things here, don't you?"
Riker shrugged.
"What else can we say? Everyнthing we know tells us there's a whole sun
down there, whole star systems full of suns if we count all the mass from which
they built itЧand yet at Dyson's surface I'm registering less than one-sixth
Earth gravity. The only rational explanation is that Dyson doesn't quite exist
in our universe any more. And that isn't quite rational."
"Yet it is
extraordinary," Picard muttered under his breath, as a fuller realization
of what had hapнpened came into his mind.
But Data was ahead of
him. "Captain," the anнdroid said, "did we wake the Sphere's
artifical intelligence to all this action?"
For once, Picard knew
that he was ahead of Data. "We might have been entirely superfluous. In
fact, we might even have been a slight impediment."
"Do you think so,
Captain?" asked Data.
"It's entirely
likely," Picard said.
"Entirely likely
means yes, does it not, since the word 'entirely' takes all doubt away from the
word 'likely.'"
"Quite right,"
Picard said, gazing at the telescopic view of Dyson's shrinking disk.
"Then are you
suggesting that we should have stayed away, since we were not needed?"
Picard rebelled at the
thought and said, "Data, I wouldn't have missed this for anything."
"Thanks for the
good advice, Jean-Luc." He thought again of Captain Dalen's last
message, and wondered if this universe would ever see her and her crew again.
The Sphere was a distant
gray bead now, contractнing faster and faster through that ghostly hole it had
dug in the cosmosЧand preparing, no doubt, to pull the hole in after itself. No
doubt, it would also pull a part of Picard down with it, as it folded into
microverses and tapped energies .that could only be guessed at.
"Be careful what
you wish for . . ." his mother had warned.
Well, he had gotten more
than he wished for, as he hoped and yet he also dreaded that he would ever
again find something as mysterious and horrifying, as wonderful and as
belittling as the Dyson Sphere. This seemed to him so entirely unlikely that he
returned the hope and the dread, for now, to that place of dearest wishes that
waited in his archaeoloнgist's heart. He would visit those wishes again, as
surely as his blood visited the ventricles of his engineered heart.
"It has gone
quantum," Data announced. "Dyson's gravitational field is... virtually
nonнexistent."
Quantum. Smaller than
any of the blood cells that flowed in his veins. . . smaller than a virus
particleЧDyson, the whole thing . . . smaller than the diameter of a proton.
Picard hunched slightly forward in his station, with his arms folded across his
chest, as if he were trying to keep warm. And there was a coldness in him, a
chill born of the realization that the greatest object ever constructed had
just sunk from view, leaving him adrift in unfulfilled expectations. Adrift,
alone, abandoned?
No, he told himself. He was
adrift, but not alone. Something was out there, and it was coming his way.
And it knew his name.
Locutus. . .
"Data?"
"Captain, there is
a Borg vessel at the limits of our sensor range."
So, it was not over yet.
"What's it
doing?" Picard asked.
"Nothing at all,
Captain."
Picard sat back and
considered, then gazed at Riker. Number One was wearing his cautious, anнnoyed
look. "Perhaps all of our assumptions were not wrong after all,"
Riker said.
Picard found himself
agreeing, in a way: "Relativiнty and dimensional folding aside, I'd say
even a clock that isn't running would have to be right twice a day."
Riker shook his head.
"Thanks, Captain."
Picard watched Data put
an enhanced view on the screen, showing an ever so faint optical distortion in
the place where Dyson's center had been.
"I'm thinking about
the assumption we came to when the neutron star first appeared," Riker
continнued, "about how some distant remnant of the Dyson engineersЧperhaps
the BorgЧmight have been tryнing to destroy something in its past that could be
of benefit to us. Something in the Sphere."
"Whatever it
was," Picard said, "we didn't find it."
As he spoke, the Borg
cube disappeared in a wash of subspace distortion. Either it had been destroyed
somehow, or it had sped off in a hurry, fleeing faster than any Borg ship had
hitherto been clocked. Simultaneously, the tiny distortion on Data's disнplay
finally pulled the hole in behind itself. The Sphere had left no footprints,
quantum or otherwise; but Picard could not shake the feeling, the deep
instinctive knowing, that the Borg had disturbed a sleeping tiger . . . and it
was now following them.
It might very well be
very far from over, he thought. But of one thing he was certain: The Sphere's
exampleЧits future significance for Fedeнration thinkingЧwould not be easily
exhausted. It represented what was "merely" an early, perhaps even
sinful attempt at cosmic engineering, an extravнagant effort by an intelligent
species to change the face of the cosmos. The human mind, so recently out of
its cradle, still boggled at the idea of remaking a galaxy, or an entire
universe, nearer to its heart's desire. Against human wishes, the universe
might very well be a "sorry scheme," as the poet said; but human
desires were still too vague to know what to want. Knowledge, love, a graceful
life? But when the day of self-knowledge arrived . . . what then?
And for a moment Picard
feared the wishes that waited to conflict with those of humankind.
Epilogue
The Fabulous Riverboat
captain
dalen opened the
aft hatch and tractored onto the roof of the Darwin. A dozen of her crew
had gone out ahead of her. They stared at the Engford, the sky, the sea,
the beings the humans had named the sea swifts. They let the sun warm their hard
backs. They breathed deep of Dyson's air.
The air ... the water .
. . the Horta captain tried to form for herself an estimate of how many days,
or weeks, the shockwaves from the old world and the Great Scott Sea would take
to reach her from various distances in the Sphere, and whether or not they
would have, by that time, diminished to little more than loud bangs.
She stiffened, reluctant
to dwell on the question,
but drawn irresistibly to finishing the calculation,
once she had begun it.
Then into her icy black
veins flowed blood. She had arrived at an answer the blast from the Great Scott
Sea, dissipating across a radius of more than one hundred million
kilometersЧmore than five minutes away at the speed of light, vastly longer at
the mere speed of soundЧwould arrive as a long, rumbling roar, bringing winds
gusting up to ninety kilometers per hour. They would gust for six days; but the
Darwin had already endured far worse, she told herself. // means that
we will live!
"What lake is
this?" asked Lieutenant Jee. "What sea?"
"No lake, no sea," Captain Dalen said thoughtнfully.
"It's a river whose west bank lies more than fifteen hundred kilometers to
starboard, and whose delta is a hundred million klicks astern. You'll find its
source another hundred million in the opposite direction."
"Then, it could take lifetimes to find all the hidden coasts, all
the people."
"Horta lifetimes," the
captain said, and felt the warmth within her that was the Horta equivalent of a
smile. She looked downstream, down a stream longer than the distance between
most planets, and she contemplated the feeling that the universe outнside had
been swelling, just before the Balboa and the Enterprise disappeared.
She wondered what "quantum dimensional folds" and "baby
universes" really meant, and
realized that she already knew. She and everything around her was smaller than
a virus, smaller than a proton, and more ghostly than a neutrino . . . from a
certain point of view . . .
"So much to see," she continued. "So much to do."
"I want to see the place where the old world rolled," Jee sang
excitedly. "What must the land look like there?"
"I believe we will be able to find out," said Captain Dalen.
"I have been reviewing the maps, and I have found that one of this river's
tributaries feeds from the lake over which the planet slid."
"And the hole in the Great Scott Sea?" Jee asked. "What
must it look like, up close?"
"We have no choice but to find out," the captain said.
"We seem to have inherited the Enterprise's mission, whether we
like it or not. We've got this ship, and we've got unexplored light minutes
through which to creep, and we've got a faith to keep."
"A faith? With whom? With the Federation?"
"Yes, and with ourselvesЧand with . . ." She swept her gaze up
the sky, againЧup the river in the skyЧagain. She turned her back on her
lieutenant and slid uphill, toward the bridge.
"With whom?" Jee called after her. "With whom?" she
insisted.
"Let's go somewhere," Captain Dalen replied to her shipmate. "Thataway."