Yes! Yes!
He was rising, lifting, ascending—
Flying!
He was flying!
He rose higher and higher, the ground receding beneath him. He could see the savanah grasses far below, the giant, sprawling Acacia trees diminishing to nothing.
He kept flapping the wings, although he could feel that his face was already slick with sweat and he was gulping in air as fast as he could. His arms were aching, but he continued to move them up and down, his body rising farther and farther. He’d always known the faint lines crisscrossing the dome were actually thick cords, as big around as his own waist, for he had seen them where they touched the mountains that encircled the world. And now he was getting up far enough that he could see that thickness, see the pinpoints of light at each of their intersections resolving themselves into glowing disks, and—
Pain!
A spasm along his right arm.
A great ache in his left wrist.
A seizing of his back muscles, a throbbing in his shoulders.
So near, so close, and yet—
And yet he could go no higher. He wasn’t strong enough.
Sadly, Prasp held his arms out straight, keeping the wings flat. He began the slow, long glide down to the grasses, far, far below.
It took a long time for him to come down. As he got closer to the ground, he became aware that a crowd of people had assembled, all of them looking up at him, many of them pointing. As he descended further he could make out their expressions—awe on some the faces; fear on a few of them.
Prasp skidded along the grasses until he was able to stop himself. Kari came running over to him, arriving before the others. She helped him remove the wings, and, once he was free of them, she hugged him tightly. Prasp could feel that her heart was pounding almost as hard as his own; she’d clearly been terrified for him.
Others of the tribe soon arrived. Prasp wasn’t sure how they were going to react to his flight; had he committed a sacrilege? Balant, the tribe’s greatest hunter, was among those who’d been watching. He looked at Prasp for a time, then held a clenched fist high over his head, and gave a great whoop—the tribe’s custom when one of its members had made a spectacular kill during the hunt. The others soon followed Balant’s lead, whooping with excitement as well.
Prasp was relieved that they’d accepted his flying, but he couldn’t join in the shouts of joy.
He had failed.
We, The Uploaded, had no way to monitor what was going on beneath the roof over Copernicus, but we could guess. We knew that the artificial lamps on the underside of the roof would have started at low power during that fateful night, collectively providing no more illumination than the full moon as seen from Earth. But we also knew that they were controlled by a separate computer, and so presumably weren’t affected by whatever had caused Copernicus’s sky to remain perpetually opaque. Those lamps should still flare with light rivaling Sol’s own for sixteen hours per Earth-day day during the lunar night. Our simulations of the ecosystem suggested that some of the plant species under the roof would have died off, unable to get used to fourteen Earth-days of dim light, followed by fourteen more of two-thirds bright light and one-third dimness. But many other kinds of plants, most of the animals, and, yes, the humans, should have adapted without too much trouble.
But as to what those humans might be doing, we had no idea.
Prasp left his wings near his hut. There were some, he knew, who privately ridiculed his attempts at flying, although none would publicly contradict Balant. And certainly none of them would damage the wings. Prasp was known for his cleverness—and that cleverness often yielded extra meat while hunting, meat he shared freely with others. No one would risk being cut off from Prasp’s bounty by wrecking his wings, or allowing their children to do so.
There were people in Prasp’s tribe who had run the entire diameter of the circular valley that was their world, staying directly beneath one of the thin lines that crossed through the center of the roof. Although it was easier to run in the cool semi-darkness of night rather than the heat of day, most people had done it during the day, to avoid hyenas and other nocturnal hunters.
But Prasp had to do the run both day and night—he couldn’t let fourteen sleeping periods go by without repeating the course, for he wasn’t doing this just once to impress a woman or gain status among the men. He wanted to do it over and over and over, back and forth, crossing the valley again and again.
This wasn’t a stunt, after all.
This was training.
One day, as he was about to embark on his run, Prasp found Dalba, one of the tribe’s elders, waiting for him—and that was usually a sign of trouble.
“I saw you fly,” she said.
Prasp nodded.
“And I hear you intend to fly again.”
“Yes.”
“But why?” asked Dalba. “Why do you fly?”
Prasp looked at her as if he couldn’t believe the question. “To find a way out.”
“Out? Out to where?”
“To whatever is beyond this valley.”
“Do you not know the story of Hoktan?” asked Dalba.
Prasp shook his head.
“Hoktan was a foolish man who lived generations ago. He talked as you are now talking—as if one could leave this place. He tried another method, though: he dug and dug and dug, day after day, trying to make a tunnel out through the mountains that encircle our world.”
“And?” said Prasp.
“And one day the gods used wind against him, pulling him out through his tunnel.”
“Where is this tunnel?” asked Prasp. “I would love to see it!”
“The tunnel collapsed, the wind ceased—and Hoktan was never seen again.”
“Well, I do not plan to dig through the roof—but I do hope to find a passage to whatever is beyond it.”
Dalba shook her wizened head. “There’s nothing beyond the roof, child.”
“There must be. Legend says we came from the Old Place, and—”
Dalba laughed. “Yes, Kata Bindu. But it’s not somewhere you can go back to. The trip here is a one-way journey.”
“Why?” asked Prasp. “Why should it be that way?”
“The name of where we came from,” said the elder. “Surely you understand the name?”
Prasp frowned. He’d only ever heard it called Kata Bindu, the Old Place; did it have another name? No, no—that was all it was ever called. But …
“Oh,” said Prasp, feeling foolish. He was a hunter, of course, and a gatherer, too—and this place, this territory, this land that his people knew so well, that fed them and sustained them, was Bindu, the term in their language for place, for territory, for home—but Bindu was also the word for life, the thing the land gave. Kata Bindu wasn’t the Old Place; it was the Old Life.
And this—
“This is heaven,” said the Dalba, simply. “You can’t go back to the Old Life.”
“But if it’s heaven,” said Prasp, “then where are the Gods ?”
“They’re here,” said the Dalba, tipping her head up at the sky. “They’re watching us. Can’t you feel that in your heart?”