We have to stop meeting in Cargo/Rec. It's gotten too small. The grandchildren are growing up.
Cavorite was just across the Road.
Jeremy stood rapt, until he realized that they were trying to help him sit down on a bench. Lloyd said, “We'll get a bus pretty soon.”
“It's only eight blocks? Let's try it.” Jeremy turned away and began his swinging progress. Crutches then foot. Crutches, foot.
Harlow said dubiously, “If it starts to hurt-”
“What's it like?” Jeremy asked.
“Cavorite?”
“Yes.”
“Two stories tall, and you bump your head a lot, Daddy. Everything's near the base,” Brenda said. “Rooms, cargo, motors and pumps and cooling, even the system that makes fuel and air. Everything that has any mass. The upper part is all hydrogen tank.”
“They build the new shuttles the same,” Harlow said.
''I know.”
You want every part of a spacecraft as light as you can make it, see? Tanks you can make into frothy-walled balloons. Motors, you can't lighten those much ~f you want to run them afew hundred times, and motors have to be at the aft end. Now, the cargo, one trip you leave it in orbit, the next you're bringing it back for repair. You never know where your center of mass will becoming home, so you don't know how the shz~ willfly unless you put the cargo hold where the motors are. Now most of your mass is at the tail. It's going to fly butt first coming back, so you beef up the tail against reentry, and you might as well pile all the rest of the mass there too.
“Mustafa had a test coming up,” Jeremy said. “We all had to hear him lecture.”
And the new shuttles aren 'tfusion, they run on kerosene and liquid oxygen, so they have to be really light. They come home like a silver birthday balloon weighted at one end. So even ~f the motors don't light at the last second, it doesn't crash, see, Daddy?
He and Mustafa never said stepfather, stepson to each other. He'd learned more about the shuttles before Mustafa's tests.... They fueled the shuttle right on the beach, electrolyzing seawater then liquefying the hydrogen and oxygen (those rounded structures!); then ran it up those tracks.
The fur hat blazed ahead of him, brighter than Quicksilver or any moon. Crutches, foot, crutches, foot. A pit chef developed massive arms. Jeremy was in the swing of it and outrunning the others by the time they reached Romanoff's.
He stopped, blinking in the hatlight at a flight of stairs. “This I'll have to take slow.”
“No, Daddy, they've got a lift.”
Romanoff's dining hall was an awesome sight, ablaze with holograms of chandeliers, the kind that had candles in them. The headwaiter moved them through the crowd with some care. The restaurant was laid out in levels, with steps up or down every few meters. Jeremy was watching his feet and the crutches. He didn't get a chance to gawk until they were seated.
Tables of half a dozen were common. Families shared dishes around, just like Spiral Town families. A young couple turned out, at second glance, to be a stunning young woman and a creaky older man with a startling young face of superskin.
Harlow asked, “How's Karen?”
“Hanging on. Dr. Nogales has her on Novabliss for pain. And she wanted Karen's life story.”
“What's she say?”
No birdfucking allowed. Something about Romanoff's made it impossible even to whisper that. “She didn't make any promises. Brenda, you sent me to the library-“
The waiter came. Jeremy asked him about some menu items and the man got bogged down in questions. He went to get the chef.
Several minutes of shoptalk ensued, much to his family's amusement. The cuisine sounded like Spiral Town, but Chef Simonsen knew pit cooking. He had been a merchant on Hearst wagon.
Jeremy realized, barely in time, that Jeremy Hearst had not! ThatJeremy, raised in Destiny Town, had learned pit cuisine from a Spadoni wagon merchant and from lessons filed under CUISINE*BARBECUE. ThatJeremy was an apprentice learning from a master.
His family listened to this line of fiction with much interest. Simonsen went back to his kitchen. Harlow had ordered drinks, and Jeremy sipped something fruity and alcoholic. Brenda asked, “About the library-”
“I spent the whole day there. We were never taught that our ancestors were mindless idiots for eleven months! More than a Destiny year!”
Brenda began to turn pink. Harlow asked, “Shake you up?” She was not quite amused, and not shocked.
“You knew.”
“Every child learns that.”
“Brenda? You? The other kids too?”
“You all got well. Daddy, you haven't changed.”
But Jeremy Winslow's children knew him as a Crab shy who worked the pit at Wave Rider. The wonder was that they gave their father any respect at all.
“You'd have died without us,” Lloyd said casually.
“Sure, we owe you. My ancestors owe yours. But I think they robbed us too.”
“Robbed-?”
Dinner came: communal dishes, separate plates. Lloyd waited until they had served themselves. Then he repeated, “Robbed you?”
Jeremy pointed up at the hologram chandeliers. “Settler magic all around us. Megas of electric power-“
“That's from Quicksilver,” Lloyd said.
Jeremy said, “That's power beamed from Quicksilver to relay satellites to guide spots all over Destiny Town and way beyond. They could be sending power to Spiral Town too, couldn't they?”
“We could reset them,” Harlow admitted.
“I see a lot of tugs-”
“There's just one factory, Jeremy.”
“Lloyd, it's nearly the same design as the power plants on Quicksilver, or a Begley cloth weaver unit seen under a microscope, or Destiny Town's Varmint Killer. It's unmistakable. Your tug factory was designed in Sol system. More to the point, it will accept a signal to reproduce itself.”
“I don't actually know that.”
“Cavorite made a lot of trips in eleven months. Speckles to Spiral Town, home with a loaded cargo hold every time, right?”
His family was embarrassed. Jeremy kept his voice down. “I can see it. Your ancestors stripped us. There's nothing of settler magic left in Spiral Town but,” now he came to think of it, “a handful of computers, a paint machine, thousands of electric lights, the Road, Varmint Killer, and a cave in a hillside where Begley cloth comes from,” and he couldn't suppress the smile.
Lloyd smiled back. “Quite a lot.”
“Well, that cave was just too big to steal, I guess, and the rest isn't valuable enough.”
Harlow said, “Jeremy, suppose you're right, suppose Cavorite carried some communal supplies away from Base One. You did survive.”
“So far. Harlow, they took too much. Everything's wearing out.”
“Mmm.”
Was he annoying his family without reason? It wasn't as if he'd evolved any kind of answer. He turned his attention to dinner.
The food resembled Spiral Town cuisine, with an emphasis on sauces and potatoes and a variety of salads, light on the speckles. Hey, this wasn't a potato. Shreds of black in the pork-and-broccoli, yellow-green in the duck dish, were certainly Destiny spices. There were spiky yellow-green disks in a brown sauce: more Destiny plants, and his family was careful cutting off the rind.
Jeremy's taste and belly and intellect feasted all together. Whatfiavors has Simonsen matched here?
It became a lively family discussion. He's done something to these almonds. How can our kitchen do this? and this?
He could see their relief. Jeremy was being difficult, but we got him to change the subject.
But who else could he ask?
He had questions. His family had pieces of answers, if there were answers. His family would protect him, knowing that Jeremy Winslow was fiction.
“Otterfolk,” he said. “They drove Cavorite's crew crazy. Leaving Haunted Bay kills them. Here's an intelligent species that can't explore. What's intelligence for if not for seeking knowledge?”
“They're happy,” Brenda said.
“Jeremy, we all read those old records,” Harlow said. “One point
Daryl Twerdahl made. The Otterfolk knew some of them were dying, but they kept coming back for more. The ones who lived had tales to tell... however they tell tales.”
“So they'd die to learn more, but they can't,” Jeremy said.
“Daddy, they've got us. We can show them things.”
“Here's my point. Feeling the way they did about the Otterfolk, and knowing what Argos had done to them, how could Cavorite's people take away our access to space and leave us marooned?”
Lloyd said, “We had Cavorite. You had Columbiad.”
Jeremy thought it over... and Lloyd was right.
He said little after that. He listened to in-group chat from his family, and a few tantalizing snatches of conversation from tables nearby.
Dessert was a mountain of fruit and sorbets. Chef Simonsen brought over a bottle of a sweet wine and poured them thimble-sized glasses. “Tasting wine isn't one of my skills,” Jeremy admitted.
“You should start,” the chef said severely.
Jeremy heard a big bell's bong before they had finished. “Ten minutes to bus time,” Harlow told him.
He paid the bill just like a citizen, by speaking his name and a number to their waiter. Then he tried to get up. No birdfucking- Forgot. They had to help him to his feet, hut he was all right with crutches under him. He wondered if a tablespoon of wine (and a fortified fruit drink) could have thrown his balance off so badly.
In the morning the house was empty. But Jeremy remembered Harlow standing over his futon, looking down at him from what seemed a vast distance.
“Tomorrow, look up hydraulic empire,” she'd said.
Karen turned just her head with a delighted smile. “Hi!”
'Hi. Did Nogales take you off the Novabliss?” She seemed far more alert than she had yesterday.
“Don't know. Nogales ... Rita? My doctor? She says I've got to stay out of the sun for a while. And the water. Till autumn!”
“Long time.”
Karen said, “It means I can't help you with the pit.”
Her hands were still bound but her shoulders moved restlessly. Karen still looked patchy. Better along her ribs and hip, but her shoulder and breast were worst. One big grayish patch of skin had sloughed off her shoulder onto the sheet. Jeremy wondered if he should remove it, or put it back. What was underneath was puffy and red touched with purple.
He said, “You can't talk to the Otterfolk either, and that's the fun part. I should have my knee back before the next caravan. I want to try some things in the kitchen. If any of it works out, we'll be working there instead of the pit-”
“Ah-hah! Brenda got you to Romanoff's!”
“Lucky guess.”
“Yeah?”
“Brenda and Lloyd and Harlow took me last night. We're all staying at Harlow's-“ except that Lloyd and Brenda went back this morning, and he chose not to tell his wife that.
“We had a good life, didn't we?”
What? Where did that comefrom?"So far so good,” he said cautiously. And every bit of it stolen. He could put off telling her that for a little while yet.
“I used to wonder. Did you and Harlow?”
He didn't ask, Did we what? He spoke the truth while he had the chance. “Yes, while you were carrying Mustafa. We were careful. Your father never caught us.”
“Mmm.”
“But never after we were married, Karen.”
“Good.” She shifted a little. “It itches.” She shifted again. “Burns. What did you call it? Novabliss? If you run across Dr. Nogales, I need some.”
He found someone with a label and told him that Karen needed a doctor. That might get something done, but Rita Nogales should see her.
He looked into some rooms. He stopped at Reception and spoke with Lisa Schiavo. Then he went to the library, the obvious place to wait for a doctor.
CARAVAN
Again, a multitude of entries.
CAP~AVAN*MAP
Three klicks of the Neck and a twelve-klick stretch of land between the Road and the ocean were all shaded in tan. Call it twenty square klicks: all property of the caravans. A scatter of rectangles and a sprinkling of square dots just the far side of the spaceport (yellow), and another scattering just short of the Neck, and no other buildings in between.
To the west the Road ran off the map, and Jeremy wondered- WINDFARM*IVIAP restricted material. Access code?
WIND FARM restricted material. Access code?
DESTINY TOWN
That was well mapped, with a zoom feature. He could sketch the details of Jeremy Hearst's life onto this. He should! But it felt too much like work, and there was something he wanted more.
CARAVAN *CARGO
Nothing. Wrong word?
CARAVAN*EXPORT
Nope.
If he knew exactly what wagons carried and what they needed, he'd know how to deal for it. Try:
CARAVAN*2739*REPLACEMENTS
Bandages. Whiskey considered as medicine. Paint from Spiral Town, oil from Twerdahi Town, silver fern tea from the Shire. Did the caravans carry high-tech medicine? It wasn't listed, and he'd never seen such. Not for yutzes, at least.
Ammunition, guns, gun oil and cloth, the cylinder on the little reboring thing in Tucker wagon... shark guns and tools to maintain them. Nothing about Spadoni or... he didn't know a proper name for “prole guns.”
Better not try CARAVAN*SPADONI*SUPPLIES. A computer might be told to alert somebody. Try
CARAVAN*2739*SALE S
This year's outgoing. Speckles and spices. Basic farming and clothmaking tools, and some half familiar terms that were also tools. Cookware: not the magical stuff nothing sticks to. Toys and shells and other luxury goods. Preserved meat, root vegetables, spices, some of which had been sold to Wave Rider. Nothing much to learn.
CARAVAN*2739*PURCHAS E
This year returning: clocks and paint and Begley cloth. Spices again, and salt. Shire tea. Smoked fish from Haven. Whiskey, liqueurs, and cheeses. Wave Rider kept some of these in stock.
For twenty-seven years he'd watched and eavesdropped on caravan merchants, merchants from Terminus and Destiny Town, and the Winslow clan. He had a very good idea what passed along the Road, and Wave Rider was involved in all of this. Except- Prole guns. Replacement, purchase, maintenance: nothing at all. And speckles. If the route involved middlemen, he'd have seen something. The sterilized seeds must go straight from the Windfarm to wherever along the Road they did their loading.
He went back to CARAVAN and opened
ORIGIN*CARAVAN
In Will Coffey's vision, now more than two centuries old, caravans were not for commerce, not for making wealth. They were a way to deliver speckles to Spiral Town. The impression would be that Spiral Town was the peak of civilization on Destiny; that sophistication dwindled with distance down the Road.
We've been swindled. The greed of merchants, is that a lie too? or a game the merchants play to entertain themselves?
A later entry: The caravans are worleing! They serve as recreation for some, for some a way 0f life, a forum for courtship for some, but for all a hedge against the danger 0f inbreeding. They allow us to learn more about the only other sapient species ever found. They maintain the stability 0f our control experiment.
All that vastness of stars staring down at us, and it's just us and the Otterfolk? But Argos might have heard more from Earth by now.
- Control experiment?
Base One, now Spiral Town, was to retain technology that was too heavy or fragile to transport. Visiting caravans would purchase the use of what they hadn't already stolen: paint and clocks and Begley cloth and, in later years, handcrafted work...
A generation later they teased the paintmaker system into duplicating itself. On their next circuit they bought the duplicate from puzzled Spirals.
They didn't bother with the clock factory, but they tried it again with the Begley cloth weavers.
Jeremy read the results in bitter amusement. The little mechanical spiders in the walls and roof of the Apollo Caverns could be snatched by handfuls. Spirals never interfered. But they wouldn't dig anywhere else! Of course it was a safety measure, a part of their program. One wouldn't want mechanical vermin eating caverns into every hill and mountain on Destiny. But where was the damn code? Stored in the teaching tapes? Or lost with Argos?
CARAVAN*GENEOLOGY
A handful of listings.
CARAVAN*GENEOLOGY* Shire restricted material. Access code?
CARAVAN*GENEOLOGY*Twerdahl T0~~ restricted material. Access code?
CARAVAN*GENEOLOGY*Tail Town restricted material. Access code?
Somebody somewhere was keeping genealogical records, and keeping them hidden.
He'd seen an ominous degree of continuity in the families that held the wagons. He remembered three generations in ibn-Rushd wagon. Outsiders not welcome? How could he learn?
AVALON restricted material. Access code?
SPACE*SHUTTLE
Designs, vidtapes, test results, wow!
Six crashes in fifty-one years. No deaths mentioned. A vivid description of the tenth flight by the first humans to orbit. Say what?
He'd read it and failed to believe it. He had to go back for it- The shuttle didn't have a pilot on board.
It was flown by onboard programs and a pilot on the ground. A box of varied design but rigidly exact size fit into the shuttle's rectangular cargo space. One such box was a cabin for two passengers and an array of tools.
Passengers had flown twice. That first pair of women went up to repair a satellite. The second pair... something political.
Jeremy felt massive disappointment. Had Mustafa ever said that he'd gone into space personally? He couldn't remember. But he'd daydreamed, from time to time, of persuading Mustafa to help him stow away aboard a shuttle. The space wasn't even there.
Harlow's words didn't make sense together. Maybe he'd remembered wrong. Try it anyway:
HYDRAULIC*EMPIRF
A political entity that controls its citizens h~ controlling the flow 0f wafer.
'Tuck my bird.'
“What?”
“Sorry.”
It was no trivial thing. Thousands of years of Eastern despotisms had been of that nature. Water was life. Dig a canal system, guard the canals. If a town opposes the government, block the canals, dam or pollute the river, confiscate the wheat or rice.
Two towns in a drought? Strip one of food, send it all to the second. Gain the second town's support; make deadly enemies of the first, but it won't matter, they will die.
Hydraulic empires never died. No matter how far they slid into decadence, they lived on until destroyed by barbarians beyond the border.
Hydraulic empires grew with the rising level of communications and transport. On Earth a moment came at which one government could rule the world, forever. Afterward the United Nations controlled not just water, but communications via comsats, electric power from sunpower satellites, and every resource that could be labeled “lim ited.” The United Nations in its last days had launched the Avalon expedition- Last days?
He skimmed, picking it up little by little.
Ah. They'd grown their own barbarians. They'd been brought down by a coalition of populations throughout the solar system, each as great or greater than the population of Destiny. There followed two hundred years of stagnation before one civilization stretched from Sol to the far comets, one empire with a stranglehold on... what?
Reading between the lines- Everything. The Web controlled everything that flowed. Water, hydrogen, information, diet supplements, placement of orbitting habitats, and kinetic energy. Especially kinetic energy. What moved through interplanetary space averaged twenty klicks per second. Fusion explosions were nothing compared to that. Every habitat in motion within Sol system was assigned its orbit. Keep to it or be treated as a meteor.
In a spasm of creativity the Web had launched Argos and a third expedition- restricted material. Access code?
The thrust of the lecture was that Sol system had become one vast resource-control empire, sluggish, but able to make long plans. There weren't any barbarians because there was no outside. A million years from now it would still he in place.
Outsiders and their barbaric ideas would not be welcome in Sol system.
There was no home to return to.
'Jeremy.”
He looked up. “Rita! Karen's itching like crazy. Did you take her off Novabliss?'
“I cut the dose as per your suggestion.”
'Right, and it's great to hear her making plans again, but now she's itching-“
“I'll go see her. Come along.'
Rita's tendency was to outrun him, and what the hell, he knew the way. But she glanced back and then waited. “How's the leg?”
“I did eight blocks last night.”
“I guess we can take the cast off after we see Karen.”
“I've been reading about hydraulic empires.”
Silence: she was fishing through her head. “Sol system? That old tenthyear lecture? It's a reason why we can't go back, but that's just mind games, Jeremy. Anyone can think of reasons why we shouldn't do what we can't do anyway.”
“Suppose a government didn't control water. Just speckles.”
A disgusted look; then Rita Nogales walked away from him. She held the lift. They descended in silence. She walked away from him again, outside, in, another lift, and he reached Karen's room a good ten minutes behind her.
It was too active. Something was wrong. Four doctors crowded the room, and one left at a half-run. Jeremy backed against the corridor wall and, resting on his crutches, waited.
Rita Nogales noticed him and came out. “Jeremy, did Karen have trouble controlling her weight?”
“No.~~
“Damn.”
“After all, we live at Wave Rider. She just eats a lot of Destiny sea life if she needs to lose a few kilos. So do I.”
“Was she doing that a week ago?”
“I don't know.''
“All right. Right now Karen's getting all the attention she can stand, right? The whole damn hospital's worrying about her. They don't need a twitchy husband on crutches getting in their way,” she said, and walked away fast. Over her shoulder she added, “Go eat. Go home. Go read, but don't block any doctors.”
Now there were two doctors in there with Karen. One saw Jeremy still there, and came out. His label said Malcolm Evans. He was having trouble keeping his smile on.
“Don't let all this ... activity worry you,” he said. “Karen is rejecting superskin, that's all, but it's not supposed to happen. Maybe this batch threw off a sport. Clinics keep batches of superskin all over Destiny Town and on up the Road. Nogales is off to get a different batch for, uh, Karen, and Waither is phoning patients who got superskin from Batch One, so you can s-“ Evans caught a gesture from the other doctor and turned away without finishing the sentence.
CONTROL*EXPERIMENT
Jeremy couldn't concentrate. He had to read it twice, though the idea wasn't complicated.
A population to be experimented upon would be split. The control experiment was the group to which nobody did anything. These were the rats that didn't ingest carcinogens, didn't have to run mazes with traps in them, weren't bothered by flashing lights or loud noises. The patients who got placebos instead of medicine. You watched for differences between the control group and the experimental group.
CONTROL*EXPERIMENT*Base One
The lives we're trying to carve from th~5 wilderness would be a risk even ~f Argos had not deserted us!
Base One is thriving, they tell us. They're living according to the guidelines laid down for Argos Project in S~l system. Isolated on a peninsula with the Neck blocked, they're safe from whatever Destiny life might throw at them, with one horrifying exception.
Fatum mortem parnelli is our prison. We must live within range 0f the planet's only known potassium source, inside a maze 0f twisty little Destiny ecologies, all different. Granted that nothing has come after us yet: the lesson 0f Avalon seems clear enough. Trust nothing in an unfamiliar environment.
I propose to designate Base One as a control experiment, where the primary experiment is Terminus. Establish an Overview Bureau. Give it authority over the Crab: Base One and Haunted Bay and whatever communities arise elsewhere. Whatever risks we take here, the larger population will survive provided that we can secure the Crab's speckles supply...
-w~1l Coffey, Hydroponics
Idiot. How could he conceivably expect to do that? The caravan system-Coffey's proposal-was only as good as the Windfarm and Terminus. If either failed- Terminus hadn't failed; it had fissioned. Destiny Town was thriving. But what of Spiral Town?
A couple of generations of a control experiment might have made sense. Two and a half centuries later, why on Earth would they still need a control experiment?
He'd come to the library looking for distraction and found this!
OVERVIEW BUREAU
-was two doors up from Medical. They still had charge of the Crab, Spiral Town, the Road towns, Haunted Bay and Otterfolk and all. He could walk there, but why bother?
A government bureau was not likely to give up its authority over anything. From Destiny Town's viewpoint, bringing Spiral Town into civilization would only risk the flow of Begley cloth, clocks, and handicrafts down the Road.
Destiny Town hadn't failed. The Windfarm would!
Twenty-seven years ago Andrew Dowd would have killed all the prisoners and left nobody to harvest the speckles. Dolores Nogales had wanted to shoot up the toolshed. There would be other revolts, other escapes
When the speckles flow stopped, it wouldn't be Destiny Town that went speckles-shy.
Jeremy made his way to Karen's room.
Only Rita Nogales was on duty. Karen was asleep. Her burns were covered with new patches of superskin.
Jeremy took the bus back to Harlow's.