It had been an eerie journey, fleeing upwind on foot across the ancient moraine of Greenland, with magma heat at their backs, bereft of every crutch or comfort of civilized society save one — the portable receiver that let them listen to the world’s agony in stereophonic sound and real time. So it was that Stan Goldman and the others recognized what confronted them as they slumped together in sooty exhaustion, watching a shimmering fold in space migrate toward them, apparently sensing new victims to reap.
Strangely, Stan felt calm as the thing moved placidly their way. Instead of staring at it like some transfixed bird hypnotized by a snake, he purposely turned away to take one last look out across the bay, where fleet white forms could be seen nearby, streaking underwater then rising briefly to exhale jets of spray.
Beluga whales, he thought, recognizing the sleek shapes. They were cetaceans with smiles even more winning than their dolphin cousins’. To him they suddenly seemed symbols of primordial innocence, untainted by all the crimes committed by Adam and Adam’s get since man’s fall from grace.
It was good to know the creatures were immune to the approaching horror. That much was clear from the muddled jabber coming over the Net. Except for chimpanzees and a few other species, most animals were left untouched.
Good, Stan thought. Someone else deserved a second chance.
But humankind had already used up number two. After all, hadn’t God already let us off once before with a warning? Remember Noah? Stan smiled as he saw the perfect irony. For there, stretching across the western horizon, was a rainbow — the Almighty’s sign to humankind after the Flood. His promise never again to end the world by drowning.
We might go by fire of course, or famine, or by our own stupidity. Not much of a promise, actually, when you get right down to it. But when dealing with wrathful deities I suppose you take what you can get.
And as promises go, it is an awfully pretty one.
One of the women squeezed his hand fiercely, and Stan knew it was time to face the terrible, vengeful spirit he’d unwittingly helped create. So he turned. It was near, approaching too quickly to flee.
Oh, they could scatter. Delay it a bit. But somehow it seemed better to confront the deadly thing here, now, together. They all gathered close, holding each other. Hakol havel, Stan thought. All is vanity. At the end of all struggles, there comes a time to let go and accept.
And so, with a certain serenity, he faced death’s angel.
Though Stan knew it had to be an illusion, the lethal space-folding actually seemed to slow as it neared. Was it capable of savoring cornered prey, then? He wondered about the strange sensation he was feeling while watching it waver and then come to a stop. It was an odd sort of empathic communion that conveyed… confusion? uncertainty?
The deadly thing hovered only meters from the humans. They already felt the draw of its ferocious, devouring tides.
What’s happening? Stan wondered. Why doesn’t it get on with it?
The terrible refraction jigged toward them, hesitated, drew back a little. Then it shivered, as if letting out a sigh — or shaking off a dream.
That was when Stan heard the words.
His head rocked back. Several of the others fell to their knees. The voice reverberated within them, gently. Not apologetically, but with a soothing kindness.
To their amazement, the shimmering shape changed before their eyes. Squinting, Stan saw a shift in its topology, like an origami monster folding away its claws, retracting and transforming its cutting scythe and then dimpling outward in a myriad of multihued, translucent petals.
Stan inhaled a sudden fragrance. The aroma was heady, all-pervading, full of hope and promise. It lingered in the air even as the transformed angel seemed to bow in benediction. Then it drifted off across suddenly serene waters.
Together, he and the others watched as it greeted the joyful, splashing whales and passed on. Even after it disappeared beyond the far headlands, they all knew somehow it would be back… that it would be with them always.
And in its presence, they would never again know fear.
PART XI
PLANET
In a large enough universe,
even unlikely things can happen.
As unlikely as a tiny ball of star-soot
taking upon itself, one day,
to say aloud,
to one and all,
“I am.”
□ Hello. Hello? This circuit appears to be working. The top sub and reference hyper levels seem okay, though there’s no twodee or holo yet. Looks like it’ll have to be crude voice and text for a while…
I’m going to take a chance, since a lot of other groups seem to be reactivating too. Well, here goes—
Worldwide Long Range Solutions Special Interest Group [□ SIG AeR.WLRS 253787890.546]…
This is SIG vice-chair Beatrice ter Huygens. In response to the U.N. plea for help in restoring order, we invite all members who haven’t other responsibilities to log in and…
And what? This SIG doesn’t exactly specialize in disaster relief. Our members are best at speculation and creating what-ifs. So I thought we might start by sieve-searching through our huge library of “solutions” scenarios. In the past these often seemed like pie-in-the-sky or doom-and-gloom self-diddles, but now some may even prove useful in this new world.
In particular might we come up with an explanation for what has happened to the Net? Amid all the death and destruction, changes have been taking place minute by minute. Nobody in government can seem to grok it, but maybe someone in our group can come up with a notion outlandish enough to be true.
But first, though I dread the bad news, I guess a head count is in order. On my mark, please send your acknowledgment chops to nexus 486 in our administrative…
Just a nano. Ah! Holo’s coming back! Good pigment, too. Maybe we’ll be able to use spread-spec access after all.
Now back to that head count…
• BIOSPHERE
From the topmost tier of the life ark, Nelson watched Earth turn slowly against the Milky Way. It was the only splash of real color in a drab cosmos, and at this distance one might never imagine what chaos had just reigned on that peaceful-looking globe. Even the continent long palls cast by still-smoldering volcanoes weren’t visible to the naked eye from here — though scientists were already predicting a rough winter ahead.
Until recently, Nelson had been too busy just keeping himself and the majority of his charges alive. Now, though, as the ark settled gradually toward a dusty, gray-brown plain, he could at last spare a moment to look up in wonder at the ocean-planet, swathed on its sunlit side with streamers of cottony clouds. Leftward, on its night side, city lights testified to humanity’s narrow escape — though gaping dark patches also showed what a terrible price had been paid in mankind’s final war.