Now, at last, their travails seemed about to end. Teresa peered through the sighting periscope at the winking lights outlining the European space station just ahead. “Bearing six zero degrees azimuth,” she said into her chin mike. “Vector angle seventeen degrees, relative. Speed point eight four—”
“Okay, I’ve got it, Rip,” Alex’s voice crackled from the makeshift intercom. “Hang on, we’re heading in.”
It was hard getting used to this new mode of space travel. Using the puff-puff rockets of old, you had to calculate each rendezvous burn with a kind of skewed logic. To catch up with an object in orbit ahead of you, first you had to decelerate, which dropped you in altitude, which sped you up until you passed below your objective. Then you’d fire an acceleration burn to rise again, which slowed you down…
It was an art few would have much use for in the future. No more delicate, penny-pinching negotiation with Newton’s laws. All Teresa had to do now was tell Alex where to look and what to look for, and he took it from there. His magic sphere transmitted requests deep into the Earth, which elicited precise, powerful waves of gravity to propel them along. It made space travel almost as simple as pointing and saying, “Take me there!”
That was what made this the greatest spaceship ever, able to fly rings around anything else. And so it would remain for the next ten minutes or so, until they docked. Then arrangements would be made to transfer Alex and his gear to a modern craft, and poor old Atlantis would become another museum piece in orbit.
That’s all right, baby. She thought, patting the scratched, peeling console. Better this way, after one last wild ride, than sitting down there letting sea gulls crap all over you.
Now and then she still closed her eyes, remembering that hurtling launch — climbing just ahead of a pillar of volcanic flame as they were scooped into the sky by something greater than any rocket. Perhaps Jason had found it even more vivid and exalting as he bolted toward the stars. She hoped so. It felt fitting to think of him that way as she was finally able to say adieu.
Anyway, there were busy times ahead. After spending the better part of a week in hurried rescue missions, helping clean up the mess left in orbit by the war, she and Alex were about to take leading roles in the new international space plan. With Lustig-style resonators about to be mass produced, soon even skyscrapers and ocean liners might take to the sky. Within a year, there could be thousands living and working out here and on the moon. At least that seemed to be the general idea, though people still scratched their heads over how this had been agreed to so quickly.
In spite of having been close to the center of great events, Teresa admitted being as confused as anyone about what — or who — was in charge now. The “presence” that had been born out of recent chaos wasn’t wielding a heavy hand, which made it hard to really pin down or define.
Was it an independent entity with its own agenda to impose on subordinate humanity? Or should it be looked on as little more than a new layer of consensus overlaying human affairs, a personification of some global zeitgeist? Just one more step in a progression of such worldview revolutions — so-called renaissances — when the process of thinking itself changed.
Philosophers typed earnest queries into the special channels where the Presence seemed most intense. But even when there was a reply, it often came back as another question.
“WHAT AM I? YOU TELL ME I’M OPEN TO SUGGESTIONS…”
That attitude, plus an impression of incredible, overpowering patience, sent some mystics and theologians into frenzies of hair pulling. But to the rest of humanity it brought something like-relief. For the foreseeable future, most decisions would be left to familiar institutions — the governments and international bodies and private organizations that existed before everything went spinning off to hell and back again. Only in matters of basic priority had the Law been laid down, in tones that left no doubt in anybody’s mind.
Gravity resonators, for instance,- they could be constructed by anyone who had the means — but not all “requests” made through them would be granted. Earth’s interior was no longer vulnerable to intrusion. The new, delicate webbery of superconducting circuits and “neuronal pathways” that now interlaced smoothly with humanity’s electronic Net had made itself impervious to further meddling.
It also became clear why the nations were expected to commence major space enterprises. Henceforth, the raw materials for industrial civilization were to be taken from
Earth’s lifeless sisters, not the mother world. All mines currently being gouged through Terra’s crust were to be phased out within a generation and no new ones started. Henceforth, Earth must be preserved for the real treasures — its species — and man would have to look elsewhere for mere baubles like gold or platinum or iron.
That was the pattern of it. Certain forests must be saved at once. Certain offensive industrial activities had to stop. Beyond that, details were left to be worked out by bickering, debating, disputatious humankind itself.
With one additional, glaring exception, which had caused quite an impression. Perhaps to show the limits of its patience, the Earth-mind had gone out of its way, a few days ago, to set a particularly pointed example.
Since the “transformation of the angels,” when the horror had suddenly ceased worldwide, there had nevertheless been confirmed cases — no more than a few hundred total — of people being ripped to shreds by sudden deadly force, without warning or mercy. In each case, investigating reporters found evidence appearing on their screens as if by magic, proving the victims to be among the worst, most shameless polluters, conspirators, liars…
Clearly, some “cells” were just too sick — or cancerous — to be kept around, even by a “body” that proclaimed itself tolerant of diversity.
“death is still part of the process…”
That was the coda spread across newspaper displays. Strangely, the warning caused little comment, which in itself seemed to say a lot about consensus. The cases of “surgical removal” ceased, and that appeared to be that.
Teresa wondered at her own reaction to all this. It surprised her that she felt so little rebelliousness at the thought of some “planetary overmind” taking charge. Perhaps it was because the entity seemed so vague. Or that it appeared uninterested in meddling in life at a personal level. Or that humans, after all, seemed to be the mind’s cortex, its frontal lobes.
Or perhaps it was just the utter futility of rebellion. Certainly the presence didn’t seem to mind as certain individuals and groups schemed in anger to topple it. There were even channels on the Net set aside especially for those calling for resistance! After listening in a while, Teresa likened those strident calls to the vengeful, cathartic daydreams any normal person has from time to time… vivid thought-experiments a sane person can contemplate without ever coming close to carrying them out. They’d probably boil and simmer a while, and then, like the more outrageous passions of puberty, evaporate of their own heat and impracticality.
“Captain Tikhana,” a voice called from behind, stirring her contemplations. “As long as we’re almost there, may I please stop kicking pipes and rest a while?”