The President laid his big hand on the priest’s small shoulder.
“Father, you should go home. Get some rest.”
The priest looked up, his eyes swimming with tears. “But the Mondoshawans… I am their contact on Earth! They will come for me.”
“Father,” the President said sternly. “This is government business now. I will keep you informed.”
He motioned to two guards, who came and helped the old man to his feet.
They escorted him out of the office, and the novice, David, followed.
The door had barely slid shut behind them before it glided open again.
A captain entered.
“Sir, the rescue team has reported from the Mondoshawan crash site.”
“Any survivors?”
“Technically speaking,” said the captain, “yes.”
8
“AN ARM?”
General Munro followed the surgical cart down the hallway of the Neurological Center.
He was struggling to keep up with Dr. Mactilburgh, the white-coated scientist who was pushing the cart.
On the surgical cart was an arm, still in its long metal glove. The hand was holding a broken handle.
“That’s all that survived?” Munro asked.
“A few cells are still alive,” said Dr. Mactilburgh. “It’s more than I need.”
General Munro studied the glove with its long tapering fingers. It looked almost human. It was certainly not as gross as he had expected it to be.
“It doesn’t exactly look Mondoshawan,” he said. “Have you identified it?”
“We tried,” said Mactilburgh, pushing the cart through one set of swinging doors, then another,
then another. “But the computer went off the charts.”
“Charts?” asked Munro, struggling to keep up. “You see―” explained Mactilburgh, lowering his voice but not slowing “―Normal human beings have forty DNA memo groups, which is more than enough for any species to perpetuate itself. But this…”
He burst through yet another door, and Munro scurried to keep up.
“…this has two hundred thousand DNA memo groups!”
“Sounds like―a freak—of nature—to me”” panted Munro, out of breath.
“Yes,” said Mactilburgh. He stopped in front of the last barrier, a frosted glass sliding door marked CENTRAL LAB NEUROLOGICAL CENTER —and flashed the general a thin smile. “I can’t wait to meet him.”
The Central Lab looked more like an engine room than a laboratory. It was a place for achievements, not experiments—a monument to practical rather than visionary science.
In the center of the room, a huge glass turbine hummed softly. It was filled with a clear liquid which boiled and bubbled. Floating in the liquid was the arm, still in its metallic glove.
The fingers were curved slightly. It looked like the last gesture of a drowning race—or the first hello of a race being bom.
(Both of which it was, as Munro and Mactilburgh were about to discover.)
Mactilburgh was studying the read-out on a computer terminal. To Munro, who stood at his side, it was just a long list of numbers. To Mactilburgh it was a window into a genetic code.
A genetic code unlike any he had ever seen,
“The compositional elements of his DNA chain are the same as ours. There are simply more of them—tightly packed with infinite genetic knowledge. Almost as if this being were— engineered.”
General Munro, the warrior, took the warrior’s view. “Is there any danger?”
Mactilburgh, the scientist, interpreted it as a health question. “We put it through the cellular hygiene detector. The cell is, for lack of a better word, perfect.”
“Okay,” said Munro. He had been sent by the President to monitor this experiment, and he knew his duty.
Using the key that had been provided to him by the Academy of Military and Cultural Sciences, he opened the self-destruct box.
“Go ahead,” he said. He put his finger over the flashing red button. “But Mr. Perfect had better be polite. Otherwise, I turn him into cat food.”
Mactilburgh nodded and pulled the switch that began the DNA reconstruction.
As the two men watched, the liquid in the circular center generator began to swirl. It began to boil. It began to bubble.
The meter on the side of the turbine showed 7, then 8, as the turbine’s hum built to a high whine, then passed out of the range of human hearing. But the steady vibration of the floor and the walls continued to increase.
“Look!” said Mactilburgh excitedly.
The meter was at 9.
Tiny specks were appearing in the swiftly moving fluid. They came seemingly out of nowhere, like snowflakes in headlights; they danced and spun like sparks from an unseen fire; they glittered and glowed like stars, forming a new universe and gathering into galaxies.
The shower of sparks flowed downward in spiral like a galaxy; then, as the two men watched, amazed, the spiral began to form into the outline of a human body.
The meter hit 10
What had been all light and motion began to collect into form and substance. First the white of bone, and then the red of blood and flesh wrapping itself around the bone. Veins drew themselves in, and nerves snapped into place. Sinews criss-crossed the form, pulling and tugging it into a the familiar shape of a human body.
It was like watching the opposite of decay―the composition of corporeal life.
“I had no idea the process was so―beautiful!” said Mactilburgh as he stood transfixed in front of the glass.
General Munro held back, one hand hovering over the destruct button.
The meter was bouncing off the peg at 11.
“Three seconds to ultraviolet protection,” said Mactilburgh’s white-coated assistant from a control station across the lab.
A semi-opaque shield dropped down inside the chamber, hiding the reconstructing body from view.
“What’s happening?” asked Munro.
“This is the crucial phase,” said Mactilburgh. “The cells are bombarded with slightly greasy solar atoms, which force the body to react.”
“React?”
“Protect itself,” said Mactilburgh. “That means growing skin! Clever huh?”
“Wonderful,” said Munro. But he kept his hand poised, just in case.
The meter began to drop.
10.
9.
The process was slowing.
Dr. Mactilburgh looked at his assistant across the lab and nodded.
The young man in the white coat spoke softly into his voice-activated terminal.
“Reconstruction complete. Engage reanimation.”
There was a WHHOOOOSSHHH! of air from the turbine chamber.
Munro’s hand moved back into place above the flashing red self-destruct button. One push and the lab would no longer exist.
A form was barely visible through the shield. The bubbling liquid was turning to smoke, as it sublimated from a liquid into a gas.
“Activate life-support system,” said Mactilburgh.
His assistant pushed a button.
CRACKKK! CRACKKK!
Lightning strikes formed in and around the chamber, causing the few strands of hair on Mactilburgh’s head to dance, like wallflowers hoping to be invited onto the floor.
“Life-support system activated,” said the assistant.
A sound like giant footsteps came over the loud-speaker:
BOOM! BOOM! BOOM!
“The heartbeat, amplified!” said Mactilburgh, turning down the volume.
boom pitpat boom pitpat boom
The form inside the chamber jerked.
Once, twice.
It could barely be seen through the semi-opaque shield, but it was moving as it emerged from the darkness of non-existence, into the light of creation. It was beginning to twist and writhe (or was it a dance?) in a sinuous and graceful movement.