It took two more nights to copy the entire message and confirm she had it right, an exercise in patience unlike any Maia had known since she and Leie worked to solve the secret gate in Lamatia’s wine cellar. Taking the time was necessary, though. Only on the third day did Maia feel ready to load the entire code string onto the Game of Life board.
She began by making sure the board was set up with the same special rules as before, when it had played that “message in a bottle.” The little window said RVRSBL CA 897W. Maia hoped the program would make sense of the clicks in the night. As before, the game area contracted to a square just fifty-nine units on a side, surrounded by a complex border.
Exhausted, she was relieved to hear the rattle of keys at the door. Maia covered the game board, though it probably made no difference if the Guels saw. Her muscles and joints hurt from spending so much time bent over the machine.
The answer was obvious.
The guards took away her tray and slid the bolt. Breathlessly, Maia got back to the game board and double-checked her transcription. She crossed her arms and tugged both earlobes for luck, then pressed the start button.
Swirling cyclones of pulsing Life forms instantly told her she was right. The nightly clickings
CY, TELL GRVS IMAT
49° 16' 67° 54'
NO DEAL W/ ODO!
LV IF NEC
Once more, the message began dissolving almost as soon as it took form. Maia hurriedly scribbled it down before it vanished, along with all other “living” remnants on the board. Soon the board lay pale and empty before her. She stared at the copied version of the four-line missive, reading it over and over again.
Clearly, it hadn’t been meant for her, after all. Several of her favorite fantasies evaporated. No matter. There was more than enough here to keep her speculating about the sender’s intent.
The last, self-sacrificial phrase in the message, demanding to be abandoned, if necessary, bespoke somber stuff. Or was she wrong assuming that it meant “Leave if necessary”?
Could it have to do with the drug that makes men rut in winter?
Possibly the other prisoner was no more virtuous than Tizbe or the Joplands, merely a competitor. That hardly mattered at this point. Right now Maia couldn’t be choosy about her allies.
The strangest thing about this eavesdropped message, as opposed to the one Maia had read earlier, was that it seemed directed not at some random person who might later pick it up, as she had picked up the game board, but at a specific individual. Using resold games to send notes “in a bottle” could have been but a side venture. A backup plan. These nightly clicking episodes seemed aimed at something more immediate, as if the prisoner intended her messages to get through much sooner and more directly.
Maia recalled the metal plate in the wall. Sparks in the night.
The place must be wired for telephone, or some low-level commlink, Maia speculated. Having never been in a sanctuary before, she had no reason to be surprised by this, yet she was.
Whatever the cable’s original purpose, the other prisoner was clearly using it for something… sending electrical pulses. But to where? As far as Maia could figure, the wires weren’t attached to anything.
A possibility struck her.
Maia recalled the evening in Lanargh, when she and Leie had watched the news broadcast, and heard the mysterious offer of a “reward for information.” Maybe it was about this!
She decided.
There was no question of doing it the way the savant had, by coding starting conditions the Game of Life rules would turn into written words after a thousand complex gyrations. And with a little contemplation, Maia realized she didn’t have to. After all, the trick of sending a message in a bottle, or a message by radio, involved coding it so that, hopefully, only the right recipient would decipher it. But Maia wasn’t trying to communicate with anyone beyond these sanctuary walls. She could send regular block letters!
With the stylus, she blackened squares on the game board until it read
FELLOW PRISONER!
HEARD CLICKS IN WIRE
MY NAME IS MAIA
Regarding what she’d written, she reconsidered. The first line was obvious. As for the second, perhaps the savant didn’t know she was making noise elsewhere in the citadel, each time she transmitted, but it would be apparent once Maia’s reply got through.
There was another reason to simplify. She must translate her message into rows of dots and dashes, unraveling the words like peeling layers off a cake. Three lines of letters took twenty-one rows of game squares to produce, each fifty-nine squares wide, she calculated a total of 1,239 intersections that had to be labeled black or white with an on or off pulse. Over a thousand! True, the other prisoner had sent even more, but not with such long pauses as Maia’s approach called for. Extend a pause for five beats or more and the recipient will surely lose count. Finally, she settled on a much simpler first effort.