The next meaning when Nicole opened her eyes, Richard was standing over her holding two full backpacks. “We’re going to explore and look for octospiders,” he said excitedly, “behind the black screen. I’ve left enough food and water to last Tammy and Timmy for two days and I’ve programmed Joan and Eleanor to find us if there is an emergency.”
Nicole watched her husband closely while she was eating her breakfast. His eyes were full of energy and life. This is the Richard I remember the best, Nicole said to herself happily.
“I’ve been back here twice,” Richard said as soon as they had ducked under the raised screen. “But I’ve never reached the end of this first passageway.”
The screen had closed behind them, leaving Richard and Nicole in the dark. “There’s no problem with being trapped here on this side, is there?” Nicole asked while they both checked their flashlights.
“Not at all,” Richard replied. “The screen will not raise or lower more often than once every minute or so. But if anyone or anything is still in this general area a minute from now, the screen will automatically lift again.”
“Now, I should warn you before we start walking,” he continued a few seconds later, “this is a very long passageway. I have followed it before, for at least a kilometer, and I have never found anything. Not even a turnoff. And there is absolutely no fight. So the first part will be very boring-but it must eventually lead to something, for the biots bringing our supplies must be coming along this path.”
Nicole took his hand in hers. “Just remember, Richard,” she said easily. “We’re not as young as we once were.”
Richard shone his flashlight first on Nicole’s hair, which was now completely gray, and then on his own gray beard. “We are a couple of old farts, aren’t we?” he said gaily.
“Speak for yourself,” Nicole rejoined, squeezing his hand.
The passageway was much longer than a kilometer. As Richard and Nicole trudged along, they talked mostly about his astonishing experiences in the second habitat. “I was absolutely terrified when the elevator door opened and I saw the myrmicats for the first time,” Richard said.
He had already finished describing to Nicole his stay with the avians and had just reached the point in his chronology where he had descended to the bottom of the cylinder. “I was literally frozen with fear. They were only three or four meters away. Both of them were staring at me. The creamy fluid in their huge oval lower eyes was moving from side to side, and the pairs of eyes up on the stalks were bending around to see me from another point of view.” Richard shuddered. “I will never forget that moment.”
“Now, let me make certain I have the biology straight,” Nicole said a few minutes later, as they approached what appeared to be a branching in the underground corridor. “The myrmicats develop in the manna melons, live fairly short but highly active lives, and then die inside a sessile, where their entire life experiences, you theorize, are somehow added to the neural net’s base of knowledge. The life cycle completes when new manna melons grow in the interior of the sessiles. These fledgling creatures are then harvested at the appropriate time by the active myrmicat population.”
Richard nodded. “That may not be exactly right,” he said, “but it must be close.”
“So what we’re missing is only the necessary set of conditions for the manna melons to begin the germination process?”
“I was hoping you would help me with that puzzle,” Richard said. “After all, Doctor, you are the only one of us with any formal biological training.”
The corridor became a Y, each of the two continuations making a forty-five-degree angle with the long, straight passageway from their lair. “Which way, Cosmonaut des Jardins?” Richard asked with a smile, shining his flashlight in both directions. Neither of the two tunnels had a single distinguishing characteristic.
“Let’s go to the left first,” Nicole said a few seconds later after Richard had created an outline map in his portable computer. The left pathway started to change after only a few hundred meters. The corridor widened into a descending ramp that wound around an extremely thick pole and dropped at least a hundred meters deeper into the shell of Rama. As they climbed down, Richard and Nicole could see lights below them. At the bottom, they encountered a long, wide canal with broad, flat banks. To their left, they saw a pair of crab biots scuttling away from them on the opposite side of the canal, as well as a bridge in the distance, beyond the biots. To then- right, a barge was moving down the canal, carrying a full load of diverse but unknown objects, gray and black and white in color, to some ultimate destination in the underground world,
Richard and Nicole surveyed the scene around them and then looked at each other. “We’re back in wonderland, Alice,” Richard said with a short laugh. “Why don’t we have a snack white I enter all this real estate in my trusty computer?”
While they were eating, a centipede biot approached on their side of the canal, stopped briefly as if to study them, and then passed on by. It climbed the ramp Richard and Nicole had just descended. “Did you see any crab or centipede biots in the second habitat?” Nicole asked.
“No,” said Richard.
“And we purposely designed them out of the plans for New Eden, didn’t we?”
Richard laughed. “Indeed we did. You convinced both the Eagle and me that ordinary humans would not be able to deal easily with them.”
“So does their presence here imply the existence of a third habitat?” Nicole asked.
“Possibly. After all, we have no idea what’s now in the Southern Hemicylinder. We have not seen it since Rama was refurbished. But there’s another explanation as well. Suppose the crabs, centipedes, and other Raman biots just go with the territory, if you know what I mean. Maybe they are functioning in all parts of Rama, on all voyages, unless specifically proscribed by a given spacefarer.”
As Richard and Nicole finished lunch, another barge came into view on their left. Like its predecessor, it was loaded with stacks of white, black, and gray objects. “These are different from the first ones,” Nicole remarked. ‘These piles remind me of the spare centipede biot parts that were stored in my pit.”
“You could be right,” Richard said, standing up. “Let’s follow the canal and see where it leads us.” He glanced around, first at the arched ceiling ten meters above their heads and then back at the ramp behind them. “Unless I have made an error in my computations, or the Cylindrical Sea is much deeper than I think, this canal runs from south to north under the sea itself.”
“So following the barge will take us back under the Northern Hemicylinder?” Nicole asked.
“I believe so,” Richard replied.
They followed the canal for more than two hours. Except for three spider biots, moving quickly as a team along the opposite bank, Richard and Nicole did not see anything else that was new. Two more barges passed them, carrying the same general kind of load downstream, and they intermittently encountered both centipede and crab biots without any interactions. They walked by one more bridge over the canal.
Richard and Nicole rested twice, drinking water or eating a snack while they talked. At the second rest stop Nicole suggested that perhaps they should turn back. Richard checked his watch. “Let’s give it another hour,” he said. “If my sense of position is correct, we should be under the Northern Hemicylinder already. Sooner or later we must find where the barges are taking all that stuff.”
He was right. After another kilometer of hiking along the canal, Richard and Nicole saw a large pentagonal structure in the distance. As they drew closer, they could see that the canal flowed directly into the center of the pentagon. The building itself, which straddled the canal, was six meters tall. It had a flat roof, no windows, and a creamy white exterior. Each of its five sections or wings extended out twenty or thirty meters from the center of the structure.
The walkway along the canal ended in some stairs that rose to a perimeter lane that ran around the entire pentagon. There was a similar configuration on the other side of the canal; a centipede biot was at that moment using the perimeter lane as a bridge to change from one side of the canal to the other.
“Where do you suppose it’s going?” Nicole asked as the two of them stood aside to permit the biot to trundle by.
“Maybe to New York,” Richard answered. “On my long walks before the avians hatched I sometimes saw one of them in the distance.”
They paused together outside the only door to the pentagon that was on the canal side of the building. “I guess we’re going in?” Nicole said.