“What the hell is that?” Donovan demanded, brow wrinkling.
Dryke walked forward a step and studied the face. “Not what, Mr. Donovan. Who.”
“And who is—”
“Jeremiah.”
Recovering quickly from his surprise, Donovan scrutinized the display. “Any chance that’s what he really looks like?”
“Not much.”
“I thought not,” Donovan said, then looked quizzically at Dryke. “Ah—shouldn’t you be doing something?”
Dryke shook his head. “It’s being done.”
There was confusion in the outer room. The monitor at hand still showed Sasaki’s face, but Minor was on his feet and demanding explanations for something he had heard through his earpiece.
“Are we on or off? Off? How—then give it to me here, goddammit, so I can see what’s going on.”
The image of a gentle-eyed bearded man replaced Sasaki’s puzzled expression on the monitor.
“Sound,” barked Minor. “I want sound.”
“—it
“Jammed? From where? Are you sure this isn’t their doing?” Minor demanded. “No—who? Are you sure?” He stared at the monitor. “Jesus,” he said, turning to his crew. “Let’s go back live.”
“Nothing’s getting through,” the engineer protested.
“Do it,” Minor snarled.
“—what do they want? More, always more. For those who are empty inside, there is no such word as enough. Never enough power, never enough wealth—”
The engineer shrugged. “On three. But you’re talking to yourself. Three—two—one—”
Minor looked into the lens. “Jeremiah? Jeremiah, this is Julian Minor of
“—never enough to satisfy the unsatisfiable need.” Then he paused. “Yes, Julian,” he said. “I can hear you.”
“You’re Jeremiah, leader of the Homeworld?”
“I am Jeremiah,” said the pirate.
“Would you answer a few questions?”
The bearded man nodded. “Ask your questions.”
“Some have called you the John Muir of the Earth. You use an Old Testament prophet’s name—a reluctant prophet with a flair for theater and an uncompromising message of danger and destruction. Do you see yourself as an oracle for the twenty-first century—”
“I am not important. Ask another question.”
Minor blinked in surprise. “Very well. Jeremiah, why do you oppose the Diaspora?”
“It is those who support it, not those who oppose it, who must explain themselves,” said Jeremiah. “Ask Hiroko Sasaki to explain. Explain by what right you squander your inheritance, the Earth. Explain what you have bought at such a dear price. The choking summers. The burning forests. The rising oceans. The killing rays of the Sun. You have trampled the Earth underfoot in your headlong rush to the stars.”
Sasaki held her head high as she answered. “We are all collaborators in that crime. Not Hiroko Sasaki alone. Not Allied Transcon. But I, and you, Jeremiah, and you, Julian Minor, and each of those listening, and ten generations dead and departed. The Amazon forest was burning, the river poisoned by mercury, long before Allied began to build at Prainha. The Earth was warming, the ozone vanishing, when starships were only engineers’ dreams.”
The Starlink technician was shaking his head. “No,” he said. “It’s not going through.”
“What?”
“He doesn’t want an answer,” Sasaki said quitely. “He only wants an audience.”
“Jeremiah, this is Julian Minor again. I still have Director Sasaki here, on camera just as I am. Are you stopping her answers from being heard? Are you afraid of what she might say?”
“Hiroko Sasaki is programmed with lies,” said Jeremiah. “She is abducting ten thousand of our brightest and best to send on a modern Children’s Crusade. What can she say that we can believe?”
Minor looked to Sasaki. “What about that, Director? Have you taken a look at what the effects of giving up that many people of that quality might be? From a human resources standpoint, it seems that Jeremiah has a reasonable case.”
“Jeremiah controls the airwaves. What point is there in answering?”
“We’re recording here,” Minor said. “If we have to, we’ll put it together and rebroadcast it later. Director Sasaki, one way or another, I promise you that your answers will be heard.”
She frowned, looked to the floor as she marshaled her thoughts, then up at the camera. “The pioneers are a select group of very special people,” she said. “They have to be, to face and triumph over the challenges ahead. But they’ve chosen this for themselves, earned it for themselves. No one is being abducted. Thousands more would join them if there was only room.
“Even so,
Minor turned back to his camera. “Jeremiah, you can’t dispute the fact that millions worldwide bought options for the Diaspora Project. The pioneers are volunteers, the lucky few. Why not let them go? Why is it important to you to stop them?”
“It is important to all of us,” Jeremiah said. “We need what they represent. We need their will and energy here. There is so much work left to do, so much damage to repair. We need to focus on stewardship, not starships. Otherwise this endless expansionism will exhaust us and leave us empty. We have a choice between living in the Sun and dying in the dark. We must raise our voices. We must reclaim the choice from the corporations and their collaborators. It is
“Director Sasaki—” Minor began.
“Gone,” said the Skylink operator, shaking his head. “Nothing up or down.”
Minor looked helplessly at Sasaki. “Director, believe me when I say that we had nothing to do with any of this.”
“I do believe you,” she said, rising.
“I can give you a chance to make a closing statement.”
“Thank you. It’s not necessary,” Sasaki said.
“You’re going to give him the last word? This story’s going to be in the A queue for the rest of the week.”
She turned and met his perplexed look with a gentle smile.
“My mission is not to win converts. My mandate is to build starships.”
“Mandate?”
“Have you ever tried to push a string, Mr. Minor?”
“I’m afraid you’ve lost me.”
“Do you think that the Diaspora Project is something that was created from the top down?” she asked chidingly. “This is not something that we are doing to the Earth. This is something I do
When Sasaki rejoined Dryke and Donovan in the inner office, the latter greeted her with a disapproving look.
“I should have been told,” Donovan grumped. “The board should have been told.”
“Told what, Mr. Donovan?” All sixteen cells of the display were occupied, and she began to scan them.