gathered. Ariel stepped up again, and Hans transferred the unresisting arm to her hands, as if passing a dog’s leash. “Feed her and clean her up. She’s confined to quarters. Jeanette, guard her door and make sure she doesn’t come out.”
“I should be telling stories later today,” Rosa said meekly. “That’s why I came back.”
“You won’t talk to anybody,” Hans said. He brushed past them all, ridding himself of the mess with a backward wave of his hands.
Martin followed him from the schoolroom, anger piercing his gloom. “She’s sick,” he told Hans. “She’s not responsible.”
“I’m sick, too,” Hans said. “We’re all sick. But she’s slicking
Martin said, “We’ve fallen into a hole.”
“Then let’s climb out of it, by God!”
“There is no god. I hope. No one listening to us.”
Hans gave him a withering, pitying glare. “Rosa would disagree,” he said sharply. “I’ll bet she has God’s business card in her overalls right now. Wherever her overalls are.” Hans shook his head vigorously. “Of all the women on this ship,
Martin had not moved, wrapped in a wonderfully thick and protective melancholy, feeling very little beyond the fixed anger at Hans.
Hans turned, frowning. “You say we’re in a hole. We’re losing it, aren’t we?” he asked. “By
Martin shivered as if with cold. He returned to the schoolroom. Rosa talked freely with the five who remained. Ariel had brought her a pair of overalls that did not fit. She looked ridiculous but she did not care.
“I’m sorry,” she said. “I apologize for my condition. I couldn’t even think. I was wired to a big generator. I wasn’t human. My body didn’t matter.” She faced Martin, large powerful arms held out as if she might try to fly. “I felt so ugly before this. Now it just isn’t important.” The light went suddenly from her eyes and she seemed to collapse a couple of inches. “I’m really tired,” she whispered, chin dropping to her chest. “Jeanette, please take me to my room. Hans is right. Don’t let me out for a while, and don’t let anybody but you—or Ariel—in to see me.” She raised a hand and pointed at the three, including Martin. “You are my friends,” she said.
“It’s a very weak signal,” Hakim said. He unveiled the analysis for Hans, Harpal, and Martin, all gathered in the
“All right,” Hans said impatiently. “It’s a ship. It’s close to us. How close?”
“Four hundred billion kilometers. If we do not alter course, we will pass within a hundred billion kilometers. It is following a course similar to our own, but traveling much more slowly. It is not accelerating.”
Hans said. “It seems odd to find such a needle in the haystack. Why is it close to our course?”
Hakim ventured no guesses.
“Maybe it’s a reasonable course between the two stars,” Harpal suggested. “Give or take a few hundred billion kilometers…”
“Bolsh,” Hans said. “They could have swung wide either way. We came up out of the poles… a reasonable course would have been to use least-energy vectors between the planes of the ecliptic. What’s our relative velocity?”
Hakim highlighted the figure on the chart: the difference in their velocities amounted to one quarter c, about seventy-five thousand kilometers per second.
“Even if we could change course, we wouldn’t want to shed that much speed to rendezvous… We’ll just have to pass in the night. You’re sure it’s a ship?”
“The dimensions are appropriate. It is less than a kilometer long. We were fortunate enough to get a star occultation.”
Hans hummed faintly and rubbed his cheeks with his palms. “Why send out a signal? Why not just hide and get your work done? Whatever the work is…”
Nobody had an answer.
“Can we interpret the signal?”
“It is not language of a spoken variety. That much we know. It may be a series of numbers, perhaps coordinates.”
“You mean, telling rescuers where it is?”
“I think not. If these pulses are numbers, they are repetitive… There are about a hundred such groups of numbers, assuming that a long pause—a few microseconds—means a new group. Giacomo and Jennifer are working on the possibilities now.”
“What kind of coordinates?” Hans asked.
“Jennifer thinks they may describe a two-dimensional image.”
“You mean, television?”
“Digital, not analog—not modulated.”
“A crude picture,” Martin suggested.
“Perhaps only a few dozen pictures in sequence,” Hakim said. “We just can’t be sure yet.”
“Call me when you are,” Hans said.
Jennifer entered the nose and stood for a moment, blinking at them, grinning with canines prominent: Jennifer’s wolfish expression of intellect triumphant. Giacomo came in behind her. She lifted her wand and said, “We’ve got it. Too simple to see, actually. Polar coordinates, not rectangular, spiral within a circle, a sweep point, angle theta, radius measured from the center, groups of numbers in sequence: theta, radius, gray-scale value. Theta changes every one hundred and twenty numbers. The gray-scale value gives about thirty shades. The signals translate to about a hundred graphic images before it starts to repeat. It’s clumsy but simple enough for almost anyone to decode.”
“Want to see?” Giacomo said.
Hans patted his arm with strained gentleness, impatient. “Show us.”
Jennifer lifted her wand.
The first picture was difficult to make out, a series of blurs and blocks of shadow. Harpal pointed to a mottled oval white blur and said, “That’s a face, I think. It’s very low resolution, isn’t it?”
“We can interpolate, do some so-called Laplace enhancements,” Giacomo said. “But I thought we should see the original images first.”
“Enhance. We’ll worry about distortions later,” Martin suggested.
Giacomo picked out simple enhancements, stabbing with his finger expertly at a menu of selections only he could see. The picture became at once more contrasting and easier to perceive, but reduced to blacks and whites with few shades of gray. “Five faces, I think,” Harpal said, pointing them out slowly. Martin nodded; Hans simply looked with hands folded, frowning.
“They’re not human, but they’re bilaterally symmetric,” Harpal said.
“I think there are more faces, but they’re too blurred to make out,” Giacomo said.
“Eyes,” Jennifer said. “A mouth perhaps.”
“I don’t give a slick what they look like,” Hans said, scowl deepening. “What do they
“Maybe these are the crew of the…” Jennifer said, and stopped.
“The crew of the other Ship of the Law. Our future comrades,” Martin finished for her.
“If they are, they’re awfully stupid, radiating a signal like this for anybody to pick up.”
“This could be more of a last testament,” Hakim said. “A dying ship, channeling power to send out a weak but detectable signal… Someone who no longer cares about being found.”
“The moms would tell us at least that much—whether they’re still dead, or alive. Wouldn’t they?” Harpal asked.