Authors: Michael Cobley
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #Space Opera, #General
'You're not exactly a woodsman, Rory.'
'Aye, well, I was never any good at all that creepi about and hidin', Major - canna stand the bugs.' As if to make his point he vigorously waved away a few hovering insects. Theo grinned.
'Let us hope we don't need to head off into the wilds,' he said. 'Anyway, what have you learned?'
'Right, Ah got tae the
Hyperion
early this morning and sure enough, more graffiti. The manager and his boss were practically tearing their hair out so when Ah turn up wi' my handy cleaning sprays and sponges they put me to work straight off.'
Theo frowned. Such vandalism was almost unheard of on Darien, yet since the arrival of the
Heracles
more and more had been cropping up, mainly in Hammergard and nearby towns. Then yesterday, the Knudson Ecumenical Church and the Chernov Brothers distillery had both been defaced shortly before Ambassador Horst was due to arrive, which was why Theo had sent Rory on ahead earlier, pre-equipped.
'What did it say? Any reference to these personal AIs?'
Rory's eyebrows went up. 'Oh aye! Stuff like "Machine-lovers leave Darien", "No Al-slaves here", "The only good AI is a deleted AI", that kinda thing, along with "Darien for Dariens" and FDF logos.'
FDF stood for 'Free Darien Faction', a previously unknown group clearly intent on stirring up resentment and unrest, neither of which Theo was strongly opposed to, provided it was for a good reason. But the FDF was appealing to the baser instincts of parochialism and prejudice, and with yesterday's breaking news about the use of AI implants by the Earthsphere ambassador and others, a dose of fear was stirred into the mix. No doubt Horst's visit to the site of the colonists' triumph over a deadly AI enemy was meant to counter such adverse popular opinion.
He'll never get that imp back in its bottle,
he thought.
The only positive tack he could take is to meet the distrust head-on, but he doesn't seem to have the steel for it. Wonder what advice he's getting from this AI companion of his}
'Okay, Rory,' he said, getting to his feet. 'I have to get along. You be on your way to the Pushkinskog daughter-forest - I've already told Listener Gansua to expect you.'
Rory stood, scratching his sandy hair. 'Whit d'ye think these FDF guys'll do there? - graffiti a tree?'
'God knows. For all we know they may not be willing to involve the Uvovo, but given their lack of respect for certain landmarks I wouldn't bet on it.'
Rory paused, a half-smile on his lips. 'I guess you'll have been asking about the ither colonyships, Major, aye? I heard that they've still no' been found.'
'Still missing, Rory, still a mystery.'
'Right, aye, but it makes ye wonder, ye know . . I mean, there's the old
Hyperion
just up the road,' he said. 'What if the other ship AIs cracked up too, like a design flaw, maybe?'
Theo shrugged. 'I've heard that theory before, and if it is true then perhaps we are the lucky ones to have survived.'
'Call this luck, Major?'
Exchanging waves, they went their separate ways, Theo's smile fading a little, his thoughts growing sombre as he crossed the bridge that led to the outskirts of Membrance Vale.
11
GREG
The reporter Lee Shan scanned the ruins of the site through an opaque oval eyepiece attached to a sleek white headset, its flattened band encircling his bald head and anchored to a second around his neck. An equipment pannier floated quietly nearby on suspensors.
'Very nice, Doctor Cameron, very atmospheric, so what we would like to do is take lots of shots of the ruins - and some of you at work, obviously, especially at the sacrificial altar, then we embed simz of those Uvolos, but that'll be done Earthside, before tiercast...'
Greg stared at the reporter, Lee Shan, with a mixture of annoyance and intent curiosity, wondering who was speaking, the man or the AI implant. He then pointed to the grey stone bowl to which the reporter had been drawn.
'They're called the Uvovo, and that is not a sacrificial altar—'
'I see, I see, so do you know what it is, Doctor?'
'Mr Lee,' he said carefully, 'the Uvovo abandoned these ruins thousands of years ago, after which this entire promontory was covered with jungle. Where we are standing was the roof and this bowl was most probably used for ritual fires, perhaps even cooking.'
'So you're not completely certain what it is?'
'The Uvovo have affirmed that blood sacrifice never played any part in their culture.'
'A useful testimony, I am sure, Doctor, but after several millennia how can
they
be sure?'
Lee Shan smiled. In the background his aircams darted around just above head height, scanning everything in sight and unintentionally providing great amusement for the Uvovo scholars. The reporter's small, neat smile, however, served only to aggravate Greg beyond the already strained limits of his courtesy. He knew that he should ignore the man's arrogance, but the situation was like a door through which he could not help but walk.
He matched the reporter's smile with one of his own.
'You know, Mr Lee, perhaps you've got a point. Perhaps we're not being imaginative enough in our hypotheses. How about this - we could suggest that the ancient Uvovo sacrificed criminals and prisoners to, let's say, giant alligator creatures from the sea, and that these blood-soaked ceremonies took place at night because the alligator-things only came up to the beach after dark. It may be that those sea-borne predators who failed to consume any of the sacrificial carrion were themselves killed and eaten by the Uvovo ancestors ...'
'Doctor, do you have any proof for any of this?'
'Not a scrap but it's such fun, don't you think? And
and
to demonstrate these hypotheses I might be able to persuade our Uvovo scholars to dress up in furs and ritual paint then hold a re-enactment for you and the cameras after nightfall, complete with torches, drums and barefoot dancing. Perhaps some of my Norj and Dansk colleagues might come in horned helmets and I'll wear my kilt. What d'ye say?'
There was an awestruck silence, and the sense of breaths being held by the Uvovo scholars and Rus researchers, who had all paused to stare at the confrontation. Anger smouldered in the reporter's eyes, but his voice remained level and unhurried.
'I do not take kindly to those who impede my pursuit of the facts, Doctor.'
'Well, perhaps you made the mistake of ignoring the facts you didn't like and making up ones that you did.' He lowered his voice. 'You also made the mistake of thinking that we're all gullible yokels eager for your godlike wisdom. Or perhaps you were badly advised - I understand that these personal AIs aren't quite infallible.'
Lee Shan's gaze was all icy calm.
'So I am to be shown the way out?'
'Sadly no, Mr Lee, since you undoubtedly have written permission from the Institute to be here, which means that you are at liberty to record whatever you please. However, I insist that you do not interfere with any excavation or exposed relics, nor interrupt any of my staff while engaged in their work. As for background detail, you have a copy of the site's tourist dossier - I suggest that you read it.'
For a moment Lee Shan said nothing, then gave an acquiescing bow of the head and turned away to his pannier. Greg breathed in deeply and hurried back to the small hut where he had been categorising finds before the reporter's arrival. He knew that his treatment of the man had gone beyond rebuke into public humiliation, which a media celebrity like Lee Shan was not likely to forgive or forget. And yet it had been so satisfying, a guilty pleasure.
It took about fifteen minutes and a fresh cup of kaffe, but eventually he settled back into the familiar rhythm of his work, sorting, image-tabbing and storing. Before him was a shallow box full of cloth sample bags containing shards of pottery and other vessels removed from a recently discovered midden in the northern corner of the Giant's Shoulder site. Similar finds had been made ever since the colonists began building or tilling the land along the coast. Whatever the location, unearthed pottery fragments showed a fondness for bulbous, organic shapes fabulously adorned with flora and fauna. But those found on Giant's Shoulder were more plainly decorated with curious symbols like raindrops or stylised flames, usually drawn around small bumps and nubs in the glazed surface. Oddly, most Uvovo Greg spoke to expressed uncertainty about their meaning, claiming that such symbols were not used on Nivyesta, under the spreading canopies of Segrana.
So now the scholars and researchers had found a new source of remains, either a pile of discards or a store that had been wrecked in the cataclysm event that struck Darien ten millennia ago. Greg was just starting on the last bag of finds when there was a knock at the door. A glance at the clock on the shelf made him realise how long he had been working, and out loud he said,'(!oi le in.'
The door opened and a middle-aged man in an Earthsphere olive-and-maroon uniform entered. 'Doctor Cameron?'
'Indeed I am, and you must be Sub-Lieutenant Lavelle,' he said, rising to shake hands. 'Good to know that the
Heracles
can do without its junior officers - we must be living in a state of impeccable safety and security!'
'Certainly feels that way, sir,' said the officer with a smile. Then he saw what Greg was working on. 'If you're busy I can come back another time.'
'Just now is fine, Mr Lavelle,' he said. 'Since our exchange of messages yesterday, I've been looking forward to showing a real xeno-specialist round the place. I'm almost finished here anyway, so if you would follow me ...'
'Please, call me Marcus.'
'Okay, you be Marcus and I'll be Greg,' he said as they stepped outside.
Despite his composed air, Greg was truly excited at being able to show off the site to a visitor from Earth. The vee and the papers were full of profiles of nonHuman races, although the focus had settled on upright bipeds like the Sendruka, the Henkaya and the Gomedra. He was eager to find out how the temple site and other Uvovo remains rated in the Human experience of other worlds and civilisations.
Briskly, he led the xeno-specialist Lavelle across the flagstoned centre of the excavation, explaining on the way that this was the roof of a large central structure and that in all probability an ancient Uvovo complex lay directly beneath their feet.
'Houses, rooms, galleries, outbuildings,' Greg said. 'Who knows what might be down there, carved out of the rock? All we have to do is dig out ten thousand years' worth of compacted biomass soil and countless root networks. Just think of all the spades we'll go through.'
They came to a halt before a tall wooden scaffolding lashed here and there to a sheer stone wall covered with relief carvings. The action of rainwater and plant growth over the centuries had left veinlike grooves in the stone as well as cracked and blank areas, but what remained was breathtaking. An intricate intertwining of images, trees, creatures and the Uvovo themselves filled the lower part of the wall, while above the carven jungle, hanging amid a starry sky, were several geometric shapes from which spine- and hook-like objects rained down. Yet from the jungle mass thin shafts lanced upwards, spearing through some of the invaders which were depicted in pieces. Greg pointed out the details as they climbed the scaffold.
'War in the heavens, Marcus,' he said. 'Uvovo legend calls it the War of the Long Night, an epic struggle between two groups of transcendent beings, the Dreamless, cold and pitiless, and the benevolent, compassionate Ghost Gods on whose side the Uvovo, or rather their protector Segrana, fought. Which is how their sagas tell it.'
Lavelle nodded. 'Segrana, the living forest - is it true that they believe it to be a conscious entity?'
'Yes, they do. Segrana is part of the web of life, opposed to an antilife principle occasionally referred to as the Unmaker . .. did you access the university files as I suggested?'
'Yes, I did - your notes on the Uvovo sites are quite extensive but I managed to pick up the main points before leaving for Darien.'
'I see,' Greg said, feeling slightly nonplussed. 'Well, I'll spare you the basic spiel then . . . oh, you know about Ferguson's maps of Nivyesta and the first shuttle missions?'
Lavelle nodded and took out a small flat grey unit and patted it. 'I went over a summary of the colony's history on my way down. You followed a very interesting path to get where you are today.'
Greg laughed. 'You mean we were a capricious, squabbling rabble!'
'Well, divergent and competitive,' Lavelle said with a half-smile.
'Wouldn't you say that Earth's history since the Swarm War has been at least as interesting?' Greg said. 'Explorers on other colony worlds must have uncovered the remains of vanished civilisations as well as discovering existing ones.'
'There are more historical parallels than you might think,' Lavelle said. 'About sixty years ago we and some of our allies joined the Sendruka Hegemony in their interdiction against the Jesme Aggregation because one of their planet-clans was supporting insurgents within Brolturan territory. Anyway, almost half of the Human colonies were so opposed to it that they resigned from the Earthplus Council, cut off all ties with the homeworld, and started calling themselves the Vox Humana League. When the campaign ended a few years later, some ties were restored but certain embargoes - on weapons for example - remain in force to this day.'
Greg nodded. 'We've had our schisms as well. During the New Town Secession, the Scots, Rus and Norj allies formed armed camps against one another which caused a lot of bitterness considering all the intermarriage and cross-community links.'
'Yes, and the bitterness still affects policy decisions decades later. The Vox Humana rebels continue to defy Earthsphere sovereignty and refuse to play their part in the Security Net, while malcontents on Earth and other worlds launch public attacks on our coalition with the Hegemony. But the fact is that it's a dangerous galaxy out there and we have to stand by our true friends in the face of the threat to our shared values. Anti-Sendrukans I've got no time for.'