Read Destroyer of Worlds Online
Authors: Larry Niven
Â
Nessus, looking dapper, stepped across the quarter mile of void that separated his ship from
Don Quixote
â
And with that impression, Baedeker finally had to admit the depths of his despair.
Nessus famously considered mane coiffure a pointless ostentation. His mane was earnestly combed straight and worn with only a few jewels. His sash was utilitarian: a way to wear pockets, entirely without adornment.
Dapper? Only by contrast.
For so long, Baedeker had struggled to care whether he bathed or untangled his mane. Too many thingsâthe Gw'oth, the Pak, hyperspace, the absence of other Citizensâhad taken their toll. He straightened out of the slouch become habitual and warbled a two-throated salutation. “Welcome aboard, Nessus.” They brushed heads in greeting.
“Thank you.” Nessus seemed surprised to find Baedeker on a New Terran vessel. Or perhaps the sociable greeting was what startled Nessus. “I see you have become a scout, Baedeker.”
The herd defined sanity, and yet scouts separated themselves from the herd. It mattered not that scouts acted on behalf of all, for the safety of all. Scouts
sought
risks, and that proved them mad. Scouts were (in an English word Baedeker had learned from Sigmund) mavericks. And so the statement was an insult.
Sung by the most experienced of Hearth's few surviving scouts, the notes were praise.
“It feels good truly to speak,” Baedeker said. “English is not very satisfying.”
“Hello, Nessus,” Jeeves sang over the intercom. (The contrapuntal melodies blended precisely, the tones pitch-perfect to the third harmonic, one cycle of vibrato indistinguishable from the next. It was without
rubato, utterly mechanical, and Nessus flashed a sympathetic look.) “Nessus, Baedeker, the others wait in the relax room. Sigmund asks that you join them when you are ready.”
Past differences with Nessus had somehow receded. It was more than the company of another Citizen after so much time among aliens. If anyone among the herd could appreciate the newfound dangers, it would be Nessus. And Nessus had the friendship of the Hindmost.
So where to begin? Baedeker had struggled with that question for days.
“Do you understand me?” Nessus switched to a little-used dialect.
“More or less,” Baedeker answered in the same way. “If Jeeves does, I cannot say.”
The stepping disc that had received Nessus was set in the corridor outside the bridge. Behind Nessus, beyond the open hatch, through the main view port, glittered the Fleet of Worlds. Four planets, blue and white and brown, ringed by necklaces of artificial suns: the nature preserves. And one planet, sunless, ablaze with the lights of its world-spanning city, more beautiful than all the rest. Hearth.
All at risk.
“Come with me,” Baedeker said to Nessus. “Sigmund will explain everything to you. First, though, there are things you must see for yourself.”
Â
WITH A LUMP IN HIS THROAT
, Sigmund prepared to leave
Don Quixote
.
Ol't'ro and Jeeves had already said their good-byes. Voices over the intercom: There was not a lot of emotional content to either. And Baedeker would be joining Sigmund. But as for Eric and Kirsten . . .
Side by side, they stood looking at Sigmund. The three of them had been through a lot in the past eleven months. Sharing the cramped confines of
Don Quixote
was the least of it. It wasn't obvious who moved first, but suddenly Sigmund and Kirsten were hugging. He gave her a final squeeze, let go, and gave Eric a hug, too. That was the male, backslapping kind of clinch, but equally heartfelt.
“Take care, you guys,” Sigmund told them.
Baedeker and Nessus waited nearby, ill at ease. Nessus' arrival had bucked up Baedeker, at least enough that Baedeker had washed up a bit. There was a history of bad blood between the two Puppeteers, and Sigmund was mildly surprised they weren't quarreling.
“Ready when you are,” Nessus hinted gently.
The years had been kind to Nessus. The Puppeteer had gained weight, and his mane was better groomed than Sigmund remembered. By his past standards Nessus had dressed formally. He wore a sash rather than a pocketed belt, and though his ornamentation remained minimalist, the few jewels bespoke high status. Still in Nike's favor, thenâand Nike was now Hindmost.
But some things had not changed. Nessus' mismatched eyes, one red and one yellow, were as jarring as ever. And in favor or not, he was as edgy as always. Maybe the edginess came from being near Sigmund. . ..
“You're sure about this?” Eric said to Sigmund.
“Yes,” Sigmund answered firmly. “You have your orders.”
Kirsten and Eric exchanged looks, and Kirsten sighed. “Yes,” she said. “Return the Gw'oth to the ice moon and then go home.”
“And give Sabrina a full report,” Sigmund added, lest
home
seem at all ambiguous.
Eric nodded. “We know what to do, Sigmund.”
“See you soon, guys.” Sigmund turned to the Puppeteers. “Nessus? After you.”
Nessus vanished, and then Baedeker. Sigmund smiled one last time at his friends, before stepping across to Nessus' waiting vessel,
Aegis
.
Eric and Kirsten knew what to do, all right. Their orders did not involve a return home.
Â
From the copilot's seat, tanjedly uncomfortable, Sigmund monitored the final approach. The Y-shaped, padded bench he sat astraddle was never meant for a human, but his many aches soon receded into the background. This would be his first time on Hearth, and the scale ofâwell, everythingâwas beyond his wildest imagining.
Aegis
descended into the perpetual night of the Puppeteer home world. No artificial suns orbited this world, where the industry and the body heat of a trillion Puppeteers generated all the energy the ecosystem could absorb. More than a thousand miles away, a vast, glowing grid became visible to the naked eye. Down they went, until the grid resolved into artificially lit streets and expanses of buildings that spanned entire continents.
Down they flew until city stretched from horizon to horizon. A landing field came into sight, and on it rows of ships like so many grapes. Finally Sigmund had a frame of reference.
Each little ball was a spaceship in a General Products #4 hull. A GP #4 hull was a sphere roughly a thousand feet in diameterâand here one looked
tiny
. With the enormous ships for comparison, Sigmund truly grasped the sheer scale of the buildings. The smallest were cubes more than a mile across, each a city in its own right.
A few of those vessels must be grain ships from New Terra. A wave of homesickness washed over Sigmund. He tamped it down. This wasn't the time.
Nessus set down
Aegis
without as much as a bump. “Welcome to Hearth,” he announced.
All communication with traffic control had been computer-to-computer. Lest Sigmund overhear any codes or procedures, he assumed. With a New Terran so distrusted, small wonder Nessus vetoed bringing down Thssthfok and a few of the Gw'oth. (Not that Sigmund, as his planning had
evolved, intended the others to land with him. He had only proposed to bring them knowing Nessus would never accept.)
Baedeker emerged from elsewhere in the ship and the three of them disembarked.
Sigmund
wasn't
whisked instantly to a meeting with the Hindmost. Eric had warned him to expect a tour, first. Puppeteers had long practice, from colonial days, at awing mere humans.
That was fine by Sigmund. He wanted intel.
Stepping disc by stepping disc, following Nessus, Sigmund toured a world. Vast plazas delimited by factories and arcologies whose tops were often lost in cloud. Where day reigned, the sides of buildings shone almost as brightly as a sun. Wherever convention declared the night, similar panels became gigantic entertainment screens. Along some unnamed shore, fusion plants larger even than the arcologies beamed unimaginable energies to enterprises Nessus declined to describe.
Streets and concourses teemed, the Puppeteers packed together like herds of cattle. Their crooning and keening blended into a deafening roar. Like Nessus and Baedeker, the average Puppeteer on the street wore only a belt or sash, but the variety of ribbons, jewels, and emblems seemed unending.
How
could
Puppeteers wear clothes? Everywhere Sigmund went the air was like a sauna. Hearth must be like this pole to pole, a trillion Puppeteers stewing in their own heat.
The farming worlds of the Fleet hung overhead. Walking across a park, the blue-green meadowplant as lush and close-cropped as grass on a putting green, the not-quite trees as manicured as topiary, Sigmund found his eyes drawn irresistibly to the nearest of the farm worlds. Sigmund had studied them all, and continental outlines revealed this one as Nature Preserve Five. (A wayward synapse fired, a melancholy face: the Man in the Moon.)
NP5 was in full phase, its necklaces of artificial suns running from pole to pole, its turquoise-blue oceans sparkling. White cloud dotted land and sea alike. A cyclone swirled. Except for the shapes of continents, that world could have been New Terra.
Sigmund tamped down his resurgent longing. Penny needed him to be strong and suspicious, not sentimental.
NP5 was the world spotted in flight, so long ago, by the crew of
Long Pass
. A curse, that world. Sigmund used the anger to keep his focus. He
had to see everything, retain everything. Because
anything
could prove useful.
Like those colossal wall displays. Something about them bothered him. Finally he put his finger on it. “Where are the windows?” he asked Nessus. “I don't see any windows.”
High/low, low/high, high/low, Nessus' heads bobbed in alternation. He looked like a Whac-A-Mole, but the gesture meant agreement. “You are very observant, Sigmund. Very few living quarters have windows. Most units are in the interior, of course, and
cannot
have windows.”
Sigmund had imagined great atria and mile-tall interior shafts to ventilate those interior unitsâbut he had not noticed anything like that from above. The arcology roofs had been solid. “So endless halls of apartments,” he mused aloud. “Windowless boxes.”
“Not quite,” Baedeker said. “No hallways, because hallways waste space, nor elevators, nor ventilation shafts. Like the tenants themselves, the oxygen they breathe and the carbon dioxide they exhale is moved by stepping discs.”
The weight of a trillion Puppeteers pressed down on Sigmund. And yet, that utter dependence on stepping discs, the ubiquity of stepping discs, was encouraging. At least if things did not go well at the meeting.
And why would the meeting go well? Nothing else had.
Â
ONCE SIGMUND AND BAEDEKER DEPARTED
for Hearth, Eric and Kirsten found ways to use their newfound privacy.
Ol't'ro did, too. They spent much of their time poring over observations gathered throughout the long voyage. Hyperdrive was wondrously fastâwhen
Don Quixote
used it. So why was hyperdrive not always used?
Flight by flight, Ol't'ro reviewed their travels. When hyperdrive was first activated. When hyperdrive use ended, as
Don Quixote
neared its destination. They saw no pattern.
Perhaps the explanation lay in pilot discretion, not technical factors. Ol't'ro tried to correlate hyperdrive usage to the urgency of their missions. And failed. Perhaps the subjectivity of urgency did not communicate well across species.
Ol't'ro's thorough review had recently come to the trips immediately after Thssthfok's capture. First,
Don Quixote
had crept to the outer solar system for reasons no one would discuss. Then the ship retraced its course
to harvest tree-of-life roots. Only after creeping back to the solar-system fringes had Kirsten finally engaged
Don Quixote
's hyperdrive.
It would have been interesting to know how far
Don Quixote
had traveled in each instance. Ol't'ro could not calculate the ship's progress directly, since artificial gravity obscured the ship's actual acceleration. They had learned to infer the strength of artificial gravity from the drain on a nearby ship's power circuits. Alas, unrelated drains on the ship's power made such estimates very crude.
So they had built their own, independent astronomical sensors. Those, too, offered only vague answers. Probing through habitat walls, interior ship partitions, and hull limited the instruments' sensitivity.
And then
Don Quixote
came to the Fleet of Worlds.
Despite the ambiguity and many approximations in Ol't'ro's calculations, clearly Kirsten had used hyperdrive much closer to this destination than to any other. What differed about this place? The obvious difference: These worlds lacked a star.
A star is
massive
.
And so Ol't'ro's thoughts turned to abstruse physical theory and arcane scenarios. Perhaps hyperdrive was somehow constrained to nearly flat regions of space-time. To regions far from any gravitational singularity. Far from the type of worlds on which Gw'oth, humans, Citizens, or Drar could liveâor, at least, from the suns that warmed those worlds. Far from anywhere a world-evolved species ever thought to experiment with a long-range drive.
Until now.
Â
At a discreet trill, Nessus dipped one head into a pocket of his sash. The few murmurs Sigmund could hear suggested wind chimes.
Nessus' head reappeared. “The Hindmost will meet with us now. Come with me.”
Sigmund was more than ready. He followed Nessus onto yet another stepping disc, emerging into a cylinder bathed in blue light. The wall was transparent.
Nessus waited outside among armed Puppeteer guards, looking in.
Sigmund rapped gently on the wall. As he suspected: General Products hull material. GP hulls were transparent to visible light, and Sigmund presumed the overhead illumination could be raised to lethal levels. There weren't any doors. The only way in or out of this antechamber was by stepping disc. He vacated the disc; a moment later, Baedeker arrived. Inside, with Sigmund.