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“New challenges? Beyond the climate shift?”

“Yes.”

“What are they?”

Aditi did not answer for several heartbeats. At last she said, “You should speak to Adri about that. He’s the expert in that field, not I.”

They had reached the top of the stairs, and Aditi led him through the building’s central corridor to a set of rooms that looked to Jordan like a clinic. The area smelled faintly of antiseptics. People spoke in whispers.

She led him confidently through the warren of hallways to a room that looked to Jordan like a laboratory: the walls were lined with consoles that hummed softly. In the middle of the room stood a tall glass-walled booth. No one else was in the room; they were alone.

Pointing to the booth, Aditi said, “If you’ll step in there, I can scan your body.”

With a slightly mischievous grin, Jordan asked, “Should I take off my clothes?”

She actually blushed. “No, not at all. That won’t be necessary.”

Jordan stepped into the booth.

“Close the door, please,” Aditi said as she walked to the equipment set along the wall.

Jordan pulled the glass door shut.

“Please stand still for a moment.”

He did. He even held his breath. He heard a brief buzz, felt nothing. Aditi had her back to him, studying the gauges and display screens.

“Good,” she said. “You can come out now.”

“That’s it?” he asked.

“That’s it,” she said, still intently peering at the readouts. “We have a complete picture of you, down to the molecular level.”

“That was easy.”

But Aditi said, “The scans show you had a virus in your lower intestinal tract that could potentially be dangerous—even fatal.”

“It’s dormant,” Jordan said. Still, he couldn’t suppress the shudder of fear that went through him.

Then he realized that she’d said “had.”

Before he could ask her, Aditi said, “I eliminated it.”

His knees went weak. Jordan squeaked, “Eliminated it?”

“Actually, the equipment automatically destroyed the virus,” Aditi said. “I should have asked your permission first, I know. I hope you don’t mind.”

Jordan laughed shakily. “I don’t mind. I don’t mind at all.”

History Lesson

She eliminated the virus, Jordan said to himself over and over. Just like that, a tap of the finger and the virus is gone. The idea whirled through his thoughts as Aditi led him up a winding stairway, toward Adri’s office.

“Your technology is quite impressive,” he said, walking alongside her. “Far ahead of ours.”

“In some ways, yes,” Aditi murmured.

“Yet you’ve never developed space flight. I find that rather odd.”

With a sidelong glance, she said, “We develop technology to solve problems. Disease has been a problem for both our peoples. It’s that simple.”

Is it? Jordan wondered silently.

Adri’s office turned out to be a spacious, sunlit, airy room on the top floor of the building, with long windows that looked out on the city’s stone buildings and busy streets. Not a vehicle in sight, Jordan noticed. Pedestrian traffic only. And genetically engineered animals.

Like the building’s corridors, the walls of the office were covered with graceful swirling abstracts. There was no desk, no sign of hierarchy; merely comfortable-looking furniture scattered about the room.

Adri was seated on a long, curving couch when they entered the room. He rose gracefully to his feet and went toward Jordan, arms extended in greeting. In his floor-length robe he seemed to be gliding across the smoothly tiled floor.

“My friend Jordan,” he said, in his thin, whispery voice. “It’s good to see you again.”

“It’s good to see you, too, Adri,” said Jordan.

“I’m glad that Aditi was able to remove a potentially life-threatening virus from your body,” Adri said as he pointed Jordan toward the couch where he’d been sitting.

Jordan turned to Aditi. “How in the world did you—”

Before she could answer Adri said, “The readouts of your medical examination were transmitted to me here automatically. I hope you don’t mind.”

“No, I suppose not.” Jordan looked around the room but he saw no display screens, no communications equipment of any kind.

Gently taking Jordan’s arm with one hand, Adri pointed toward the ceiling with the other. “Holographic projectors,” he explained. “All the hardware is out of sight.”

Jordan allowed the alien to lead him to the couch. He sat on it, and Aditi sat beside him. Adri crooked a finger at a plush armchair and it rolled across the floor to him. He sat in it, facing Jordan.

Suddenly a medical diagnostic console appeared before Jordan’s startled eyes, beeping softly, its screens showing glowing curved lines.

“A hologram,” Adri said, with a nonchalant shrug.

“I see,” said Jordan.

Just as suddenly, the hologram winked out.

“Your people are comfortable in their base camp?” Adri asked.

With a nod, Jordan replied, “Reasonably so. I’m sorry that they seem so…” he searched for a word, “so apprehensive about you. Suspicious.”

“That’s quite natural, I suppose.”

Aditi said, “It’s one of those survival traits that has become countersurvival.”

“Perhaps so,” Jordan granted. “But you must admit, all this is a lot to swallow.”

“Yes, I suppose it is,” Adri said. “What can I do to make the situation better?”

“You can start by telling me more about yourselves. Aditi tells me you’ve existed for millions of years.”

“Our civilization has, yes. Our culture.”

“And you’ve never developed space flight?”

Adri glanced at Aditi, then said, “We live on this planet. We have no need of space flight.”

“Yet you’ve apparently been studying Earth for some time.”

“Many of your centuries.”

“From here, on the ground.”

“We have optical and radio telescopes. We’ve listened to your radio and watched your television broadcasts. We’ve tapped into your digital webs. We’ve mapped and measured your planet. You exist in a very rich solar system: it’s filled with planets of astounding variety. And moons, asteroids, comets. No wonder you went into space. We have nothing here but our one lonely world.”

“But if you have telescopes of such sensitivity, why didn’t you try to contact us? Why didn’t you tell us you’re here?”

“Fear,” said Adri, quite flatly.

“Fear?”

“Your people are still decidedly aggressive. And xenophobic. You still have racial tensions among your own kind. The sudden announcement of an equally intelligent species would create severe problems for you.”

“So you waited for us to find you.”

“Yes, we did.”

Jordan shook his head. “That must have taken enormous patience. How long have you known of our existence?”

“We observed your cities and the pollution you poured into your atmosphere. We heard your earliest radio transmissions.”

“And all that time you waited.”

Aditi said, “We waited in hope that you would find us and reach out to us.”

“Which you have done,” said Adri. “And we have welcomed you.”

“Yes,” said Jordan. “The question now is, where do we go from here?”

Motivations

Without an instant’s hesitation, Adri replied, “Why, we try to help one another, of course.”

“Help? In what way?”

Aditi said, “We can offer you medical technology that is far advanced over your own.”

“And the energy shields,” Adri added.

“Yes, they would both be welcomed. But what can we offer you?”

“Understanding,” said Adri.

Jordan felt puzzled. “Understanding?”

Adri nodded. “Yours is a large, aggressive species. How many people are there on Earth now?”

“Something like twenty billion. The recent spate of flooding has apparently killed a good many, of course, but the latest census figures I remember put the total in the twenty billion range.”

“Twenty billion,” Adri murmured.

“We are only a few thousand,” said Aditi.

“Thousand?”

“Yes,” Adri said. “Our numbers are very small. Frankly, we’ve been afraid of you. You could swallow us up in one gulp.”

“That’s why you haven’t contacted us,” Jordan realized.

“Your history is filled with the unfortunate consequences of contact between one group of people and another. The Neanderthals, for example. The Native Americans.”

Jordan suddenly understood Paul Longyear’s hard-eyed suspicions.

“So you waited until we reached out to you.”

“It seemed the best course of action for us,” Adri said. “Now that we have made contact, our future is in your hands.”

“Yet you could have remained hidden,” Jordan said. “You shielded your city from our ship’s sensors. We had no idea you were here.”

“If we had stayed hidden, what would have happened?” Adri asked. “You would have landed and started to explore this planet. Sooner or later you would have stumbled upon us.”

“And destroyed us,” Aditi said glumly.

“No! Why would we do that? How could we do it?”

Smiling gently, Adri said, “Friend Jordan, not every human being is as civilized as you. Twenty billion of you! How many would come here, to this world? How quickly would they turn it into a replica of the disaster they have created on their own home world?”

“We would be wiped out,” Aditi repeated.

Jordan said nothing for a moment, his thoughts spinning. Then, “And now that we’ve found you, that danger exists.”

“It does indeed,” said Adri.

“What are you going to do about it?” Aditi asked.

Her face was unutterably sad, Jordan saw. As if I’ve just condemned her entire race to extinction.

“What can I do about it?” he wondered aloud.

Adri said, “That is one of the problems that face us.”

“One of the problems? There are others?”

“Oh, yes. But let us deal with this first problem first.”

“You are a test case for us,” Aditi said. “If we can make you understand, then perhaps there is a chance that contact between our two peoples can be beneficial.”

“And if not?”

Adri sighed heavily. “You are slightly more than eight light-years from Earth. Your transmissions of information back to your home world will take eight-some years to reach their destination.”

Jordan nodded.

Looking slightly guilty, Adri said, “Your messages to Earth are not getting through. I’m afraid we’ve blocked your transmissions.”

“Blocked them? How?”

“It’s only temporarily, until we decide whether we should proceed with you.”

“And if you decide not to proceed?”

“Then your messages back to Earth will be permanently blocked. Earth will decide that your mission somehow met with disaster.”

“They’ll think we’re all dead,” Jordan realized.

“You will not be allowed to return,” said Adri. “You will have to stay here.”

“With us,” Aditi said.

Jordan sat there for long, silent moments, trying to digest it all. If we don’t measure up to Adri’s standards we won’t be allowed to return to Earth. The people back home will think we’ve been killed.

Yet he found himself thinking, Well, would that be so terrible? He looked at Aditi’s young, lovely face: so earnest, so caring. And he thought, Earth’s a madhouse, filled with self-seeking egoists who’ve wrecked the planet. What do I owe them? They killed my wife. They did nothing while the global climate spiraled out of control. Why not stay here and live with these people? With Aditi.

At last he rose from the couch. Aditi stood up beside him.

“I’ll have to talk this over with the others. They’ve got to know what’s at stake.”

Adri slowly, stiffly got to his feet. “By all means. Tell them that we would be happy to have them stay here and join us.”

Jordan smiled bleakly. “You would be happy, I can believe that. But they won’t be.”