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“Spinner-of-Rope saved us,” Mark said simply. “She opened up the discontinuity drive and took us away from there at half lightspeed — and in just the right direction. See?” Mark pointed. “She pulled the ship backwards, and away from the string.”

She looked into his familiar, tired eyes, and wished she could hug him to her. “It was Spinner-of-Rope. You’re right. It must have been. But the voice link to Spinner was one of the first things we lost. And we certainly didn’t have time to work up routines for the waldoes.”

“In fact, we’re still out of touch with Spinner,” Mark said.

“So how did she know?” Louise studied the scarred Virtual lifedome. “The trajectory she chose to get us out of this was almost perfect, Mark. How did she know?”

Spinner-of-Rope buried her faceplate in her gloves; within her environment suit she trembled, uncontrollably.

It’s over, Spinner. You did well. It’s time to look ahead.

“No,” she said. “The string hit the ship. The deaths, the injuries — ”

Don’t dwell on it. You did all you could.

“Really? And did you, Michael Poole?” she spat.

What do you mean?

“Couldn’t you have helped us more? Couldn’t you have warned us that the thing was coming?”

He laughed, softly and sadly. I’m sorry, Spinner. I’m not superhuman. I didn’t have any more warning than your people. I’m pretty much bound by the laws of physics, just as you are…

She dropped her hands and thumped the side of the couch. There was still no link — voice or data — to Louise, and the rest of the crew. She was isolated out here — stuck in the pilot’s cage of an alien ship, with only a five-million year-old ghost for company.

She felt a swelling of laughter, inside her chest; she bit it back.

Spinner-of-Rope?

“I’m scared, Michael Poole. I’m even scared of you.”

I don’t blame you. I’m scared of me.

“I don’t know what to do. What if Louise can’t get back in touch?”

He was silent for a moment. Then: Look, Spinner, your people can’t stay here. In this time frame, I mean.

“Why not?”

Because there’s nothing for you here. The Ring — which you came to find — is ruined. This rubble of string fragments can’t offer you anything.

“Then what?”

You have to move on, Spinner. You have to take your people to where they can find shelter and escape. His hands, warm and firm, closed invisibly over hers once more. I’ll show you. Will you trust me?

“Where are we going?”

In search of the Ring.

“But — but the Ring is here. And it’s destroyed. You said so yourself.”

Yes, he said patiently. But it wasn’t always so…

30

The ’bot rolled fussily across the floor, its fat wheels crunching over the dust it had brought in from the surface of the neutron star planet. It held a bundle of sensors out before it on a flexible arm. Light, brilliant white, glared from the sensor arm. The way the ’bot held out its sensor pack was rather prissy, Lieserl thought, as if the ’bot didn’t quite approve of what it was being forced to inspect in here.

The ’bot rolled up to one of the four chairs and sniffed at it cautiously.

“There’s exotic matter here,” Mark said suddenly.

“What?”

“The ’bot has found exotic matter,” Mark repeated evenly. “Somewhere inside the building.”

Uvarov growled from the pod, “But we’ve seen no evidence of wormhole construction here. And that structure is too small to house a wormhole Interface.”

“I’m just reporting what the ’bot’s telling me,” Mark snapped, letting his irritation show. “Maybe we should gather a few more facts before wasting our time speculating, Uvarov.”

The ’bot was still lingering close to one of the chairs — the second from the left of the row of four, Lieserl noted irrelevantly. As she watched, the ’bot extended more arms, unfolded more packages of sensor equipment; it loomed over the chair menacingly, like some mechanical spider.

Mark walked up to the ’bot, his face expressionless. “It’s somewhere inside the chair. The exoticity…”

“Inside the chair?” Lieserl felt like laughing, almost hysterically. “What happened, did someone drop exotic matter down behind the cushion while watching a Virtual show?”

He glared at her. “Come on, Lieserl. There is a construct of exotic matter embedded in this chair. It’s tiny — only a few fractions of an inch across — but it’s there.” He turned to the ’bot. “Maybe we can cook up some kind of magnified Virtual image…”

Pixels swirled before Lieserl’s face, brushing her cheeks intangibly; she stepped back.

The pixels coalesced into a crude sketch, suspended in the air. It looked like a jewel — clear, complete and seamless hanging before her. There were hints of further structure inside, not yet resolved by the ’bot’s imaging systems.

She recognized the form.

“Lethe. Another tetrahedron,” she said.

“Yes. Another tetrahedron… The form seems to have become a badge of humanity, doesn’t it? But this one is barely a sixteenth of an inch across.”

Pixels of all colors hailed through the interior of the little tetrahedron, as if scrambling for coherence. Lieserl caught elusive, tantalizing hints of structure. At one point it seemed that she could see another, smaller tetrahedron forming, nested inside the first — just as this construct was nested inside the tetrahedral form of the base as a whole. She wondered if the whole of this structure was like a Russian doll, with a series of tetrahedra snuggled neatly inside each other…

The magnified image was rather pleasing, she thought. It reminded her of the toy she’d had during her lightning-brief childhood: a tiny village immersed in a globe of water, with frozen people and plastic snowflakes… Thinking that, she felt a brief, incongruous pang of regret that her childhood, even as unsatisfactory as it had been, was now so remote.

“Well, my exotic matter grain is in there somewhere,” Mark said. “But the ’bot is having trouble getting any further resolution.” He looked confused. “Lieserl, there’s something very strange inside that little tetrahedral box.”

She kept her face expressionless; at times it was quite convenient to be a Virtual — it gave her such control. Strange. Right. But what could be stranger than to be here: on the planet of a neutron star hurtling at lightspeed across the battlefield at the end of time? What can make things stranger than that?

“There’s a droplet of neutron superfluid in there,” Mark said. He peered into the formless interior of the tetrahedron, as if by sheer willpower he might force it to give up its secrets. “Highly dense, at enormous temperatures and pressures… Lieserl, the tetrahedron contains matter at conditions you’d expect to find deep in the interior of a neutron star — in a region beneath the solid crust, called the mantle. That’s what the ’bot is trying to see into.”

Lieserl stared at the swirling mists inside the tetrahedron. She knew that a neutron star had the mass of a normal star, but compressed into a globe only a few miles in diameter. The matter was so dense that electrons and protons were forced together into neutrons; this superfluid of neutrons was a hundred billion billion times as dense as water.