The alien was silent for a while.
“Your fight men make ready,” he said. He pointed to the soldiers. He made zooming movements with his spread hands. “Fight in the sky. Drop hurt on you and them roosts. We say no.”
“We make ready to fight men from the sky,” said Markhan. “Ground is ours.”
The alien squatted down. His hands touched the ground. “Ground is yours,” he said. “We men from the sky will not fight you. Ground is yours.”
“Good,” said Markhan. “Then we will not fight you men from the sky. But other men come from the sky. We make ready for them.”
The alien rotated his head from side to side. “No, no,” he said. “No other men come from sky. Only us men from sky.”
“We hear other voices from the sky,” said Markhan. “Not only your voice.”
“Ah!” said the alien. He looked about for a moment, then pointed to the sky in the east. “Green suns are our roost. You hear voices from green suns.”
“No,” said Markhan. He glanced over his shoulder and beckoned to Nollan, then pointed west and then north. “We hear a voice from a white sun, and from a yellow sun.”
The alien rocked back on his heels. “What?” he said.
Interlude: White Air
Synchronic stood in the garden for the last time, and looked out over a drab and depleted landscape. The only living thing in sight was grass. The trees had been felled or dug up. The lakes and rivers had been drained. The animals had been slaughtered or herded indoors. The grass itself was torn or stamped by the tracks and treads of the huge machines that now stalked across the devasted scene like alien invaders. Domes had replaced many buildings, or covered those of special significance. Other buildings had sprouted new equipment: aerials and defence batteries, solar-power collectors, long tubular connecting corridors, closed-system recycling plant. Windows had been sealed, roofs diamond-plated, doors replaced by airlocks. The whole terrible process followed a standard schematic, for preparing the habitat for an almost unthinkable combination of drive failure and unavoidable collision. It had taken four months.
The warning sirens echoed through the now barren habitat like a shout inside an empty drum. Synchronic sighed and walked back to the house. The airlock closed behind her. She entered one of the rooms where the children watched from behind the reinforced windows and moved to spread reassurance, picking up one child after another, touching heads and shoulders.
“It’s going to be exciting,” she said. “You’ll never have seen it so dark. I’ll keep the lights off in here, so we can see out. We’ll see all the lights of the towns.”
“Why does the sunline have to go out?”
“We need the power plants to keep us warm and well,” said Synchronic. “And to take us to our new homes. We’ll have light and heat from the real sun there.”
“I’m scared.”
“There’s nothing to be scared of. Here, let me hold you up so you can watch it all.”
The sirens sounded again. Outside nothing moved except the great machines and tiny space-suited figures.
The sunline went out. The children gasped. Some of them cried. Despite herself Synchronic shivered.
As their retinae adjusted, she and the children saw that the darkness of the cylinder was not complete. Clusters of light were sprinkled across its whole interior.
“Look at all the towns!” Synchronic said. “Let’s put the lights on, and everyone will be able to see us too, and they’ll know we’re all right.”
Weeks later she stood again, this time alone, before the window and watched the air fall like snow. As more and more molecules crystallised out, their fall met less and less resistance, until the last specks hurtled down through vacuum. In time the entire internal atmosphere of the cylinder lay over everything like a thin layer of frost.
Across that chill scene the space-suited colonists swarmed in the tens of thousands, the machines in the hundreds. They still had much work to do.
Later: “Look, we’re all getting lighter.”
Later stilclass="underline" “We’re all floating! Isn’t this fun! Oh, let me help you clean that up.”
Then: “Look! The sun!”
The ends of the cylinder drifted away. The cylinder itself broke up into a thousand pieces, each an independent habitat, moving slowly apart. As their transfer orbit took them to the rich resources of the asteroids, the frozen air warmed up and streamed out behind them, to form the tails of a thousand comets, and the banners of a coming conquest.
21 — But the Sky, My Lady! The Sky!
14 376:10:21 12:17
Is this thing live?
14 376:10:21 12:18
I see it is. How embarrassing. But I suppose it does none of us any harm to be reminded of our adolescent stumblings and fumblings. And I have to add, the person I was ten years ago got some things right. For the rest, well, my plea to the reader is to remember: people change. We grow up.
I don’t think, though, that I’ll add more entries to this long-neglected biolog. It seems fair to sum up, and to close it. I don’t flatter myself that everybody who reads this will know what has become of me and the people I mentioned, or even, perhaps — for not everything is recorded, and not all who remember are willing to recount — the early history of our settlement around the Destiny Star. If you, dear reader, are looking at this across some great gulf of time and increase of knowledge, spare me your condescension. You too were young once, and ignorant once, and from a future standpoint — perhaps your own — you are young and ignorant still.
A case in point. Two years ago, the first installment of a continuing stream of advice arrived from the Red Sun system. The burden of their frantic admonition was to avoid all contact with the indigenes, to stealth all our activities, to — as it were — act natural, in the hope that observers on the planet would mistake our arrival for some unusual but nonsentient phenomenon. The reason given, with frantic insistence, was that awareness of a vastly superior intelligence might cause the aliens’ culture to collapse from a sheer sense of futility.
Ha ha ha. A few days before Red Sun’s advice arrived, a clunky robot probe from Destiny II came snooping by.
The bat people want nothing from us. After they found that they had discovered two more radio sources, from hundreds of light-years away, that we had not so much as thought to look for, they held us not in awe. In their eyes we became, I suspect, merely the closest of the aliens that they had discovered. Our standing with them dropped even further when our own conflicts with each other became impossible to conceal. We assure them that the really violent episodes are few, and that only machines and resources are harmed and consumed in them, but they’re understandably not impressed.
I still blame Synchronic, frankly. It was her idea to steal a march on us while we were preoccupied with the contact. The resentments from that will take a long time to cool. Writs, claims, and counterclaims fly across the system to this day, and every so often some more tangible exchanges take place. It’s all very embarrassing, like a fight in front of the children.
But then — who are the children here? We were so certain that the aliens were about to plunge into conflict, between their powers and with the trudges. Our arguments were over whether and how to step in and sort it out. Yet as soon as they became aware of us and thought we were a threat to them all, they united — grudgingly and with mutual suspicion, it’s true — and as soon as they found rational beings emerging among the trudges, they treated them as equals. Well, perhaps not quite equals, but at least as rational beings like themselves.
In a sense, it’s we who are learning from them. The genetic machinery for transmitters still functions along with that for speech, and we can enter the virtualities at any time. I used to do that a lot, though not for some time now. As the translation software came to have more and more to work on, as the emancipated trudges began to take a full part in society, so the translation became more colloquial and precise. It created a sense of familiarity with the bat people’s institutions and ways that may be in part illusory. Are these teetering towers of logs and branches, mats and screens, within which alembics and astrolabes are plied, and little beasts cut up, and curious devices of glass and wire devised, really universities? Are these vast caverns of chirping, fluttering, sometimes brawling crowds really parliaments and councils of the realm? Or is that just another kind of translation, in which some subtlety — and indeed crudity — is lost? I know that when the verbal translation is off, I see things differently — what I’d seen as a nod or a smile becomes a twitch or a grimace; what had seemed a comfortable and well-appointed dwelling becomes a reeking hut on stilts; what had looked like an appetising meal a revolting carcass and a heap of rotting fruit.