So now here we are too, living as best we can, off the fish and the black-smoker ecologies.

“But this Ark is only a way station. In the longer term we should follow the life into its deeper retreat. I’m talking about a merger, of human DNA with extremophiles. I’m talking about sending prokaryotic bugs laced with the substance of humanity down into the deep hot biosphere, and maybe even beyond. It will be like the great endosymbiotic mergers of the past, where we took organelles like mitochondria within the substance of our cells. The essence of humanity sinking into the Earth, where a new genesis event will take place, in a hot Eden. At the heart of the Earth is a core of iron the size of the moon. Maybe our descendants will build cities on the surface of that inner world…” He fell silent, his rheumy eyes watering. He dug out a handkerchief, dabbed his eyes, blew his nose, and then coughed, his bulky frame making the wheelchair shudder. “That’s the vision.” He was silent again.

Then he began to snore.

Thandie murmured, “The sub’s ready to take you up, whenever you are.”

“We should wait until grandfather wakes,” Dexter said.

“Yes.” Eddie was falling asleep too. He wriggled on Kelly’s lap, trying to get his head comfortable against her belly. His weight, drawn by the pull of Earth, was huge, precious. “Yes, we’ll wait.”

Kelly wondered where Holle and Wilson and Venus were, right now.

Six

2068–2081

83

May 2068

Steel Antionadi waited for Max Baker by the wet farm in the base of Halivah, as far down-pole as she could get from Wilson and his thugs. Nobody was around. Nothing stirred except the green things growing in their glop tanks.

She looked up along the length of the hull. She could see up-pole all the way to Wilson’s nest in the dome. In the middle of the day it was bright, the arcs glowing warmly, and people came and went, old folk and kids, and babies gurgling in the air. A work party had taken out the equipment racks from Deck Six and was scrubbing the walls in a spiral pattern.

All this was background to Steel. What she looked for was other shippers like her, shipborn, where they clustered in their little territories, marked by scratchy graffiti signatures on the walls. To her they stood out against the hull’s drab background like stars against the black sky. Every so often you would see one of them glare down at you, making eye contact like a zap from a laser beam. There was information in the way they clustered, information in the way they looked and laughed. Nobody much older than Steel even saw any of this going on.

Max Baker came swimming down. Slim and supple, he was good in the air, and he showed off for her, staying away from the guide ropes and handholds, letting the friction of the air slow him down. He was fifteen, she twenty-three. He somersaulted and landed neatly on a T-stool beside her. “Got ’em,” he said without preamble.

She glanced around. Wilson said he had taken out the cameras, but everybody knew there were cameras and spies. But Wilson didn’t watch the wet farm because shippers didn’t work here mostly, and what he liked to watch was shippers, especially the younger ones. Still, she whispered. “The caps. You got enough?”

“Yeah. Exterior store.”

He was talking about explosive charges intended for such uses as blowing hatches in emergency evacuations, or separating the shuttles from the hull’s main body.

“Hid?”

“Yeah.” He glanced up at Wilson’s nest in the dome. “ He won’t see them.”

“You sure you want to do this?”

He looked back at her, thoughtful, conflicting feelings visible in his face. She could see he was trying to big up in front of her. Well, they had had a relationship. There were so few of them on the hull that everybody had done some kind of fooling with everybody else, on a spectrum of warmth all the way from best buddies to moms ’n’ pops. Every gradation of love and friendship had a name. There were even more names for kinds of enemies. With Max she had got as far as feelie-friends before they backed off. He was too young, or she was too old. Being with him reminded her of her time with Wilson, but sort of upside down, for with Max she had been the old one. Anyhow she liked Max, and respected him. She didn’t want him to get himself killed, which was a strong possibility if they went ahead with their plan.

But he shrugged. “He’s got Terese. Wilson. Cold-fucking her. That’s not right.”

She knew that even the shipborn word, cold-fucking, wasn’t appropriate for what Wilson was doing to Max’s twin. He was using Terese just as he had used Steel, before she grew too old for his taste, her bones too long, her breasts too big. It was a word Max was using for comfort, a lie he told to himself. That was Max’s motive. Hers was deeper.

She grabbed his arm. “We’ll do this, end the lies.”

He nodded, anger and fear warring in his expression. “When?” “You’ll know.”

84

June 2068

A single gunshot in the night.

Holle sat bolt upright in her bunk, her blanket floating around her in the dark.

A gunshot. A sharp, percussive crack. It was unmistakable. She’d heard enough gunfire in the final years on Earth, but none since the chaos of the launch itself. She’d always suspected that the weapons confiscated from the illegals all those years ago had ended up cached somewhere. By Wilson, probably; he was the kind who would have thought ahead, even back then.

A gunshot in a pressure hull. She forced herself to stay still, to sniff the air, to pay attention to any popping in her ears, to listen for a breeze-any of the signs of a hull breach, of the loss of the air she and her team kept cycling around the ship all day and every day, every molecule of it having passed through human lungs ten billion times, the air that kept them alive. The inner hull was coated with self-sealing compounds, and ought to be able to withstand a single bullet hole. But how likely was it that only one shot was going to be fired today?

Then she heard shouting, a kind of chanting. “Break-out! Break-out!”

She closed her eyes for one heartbeat.

She had always known this day would come. She was forty-nine years old, and, enfeebled by confinement and zero gravity, felt and probably looked older. She didn’t want to face a revolt of the young, however inevitable it was. Maybe she could just lock herself in here, burrow down under the blankets, listen to her Angel and think about her father, and wait until Wilson and his thugs sorted out the mess.

But she couldn’t hide. Somebody was letting off a gun inside the pressure hull- her hull. It had to be stopped.

She moved, grabbing coverall and boots, dressing quickly. She pulled her Snoopy hat over her head, and tried to make contact with Wilson, Venus, anybody. But there wasn’t even static.

It was Steel Antoniadi who had the gun.

When Helen Gray emerged from her cabin it was 0400. The big arc-light panels glowed a dim orange,

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