think much of all this fancy, expensive hardware, whatever its purpose.
“I know the sail can reconfigure to be a primary mirror, Courier. In fact, we can tell that it has already started doing so.” Lacey’s voice seemed tinny from size and scale effects. “What confuses me is the design of the array behind us! An imaging telescope would need just
Professor Noozone, now dressed oddly in formal white evening wear, looked up from an instrument. “I-mon can now tell you some-t’ing just plain obeah weird… dat just
“De
“Flat disc? But to what purpose?” Lacey scratched her head, as if it were made of real flesh. “The only use I can think of would be to block or occult the sun. But why do that?”
She waved her hand at the schematic.
“What the heck
Hamish had nothing to contribute. And if there was one thing he hated in the universe, it was having nothing to say.
So… it came with distinctly-dramatic pleasure when he noticed something to comment on. Something happening far below in the magic-laden mists of the probe’s interior.
“Hold on everybody,” he announced, staring past Lacy into the depths. “I think we’re about to have a visitor.”
They all made out a humanoid figure climbing from the inner reaches, starting minuscule but growing rapidly. At first, Hamish reckoned it to be a downloaded person, one of the other AUP passengers. Only this shape appeared simpler, almost two dimensional. It swept higher, rising without effort or any pretense at “walking.”
He felt Lacey and Profnoo rejoin this higher level, while Birdwoman seemed content to stay just below, dancing among her numbers.
The approaching cartoony shape lacked texture or feigned reality.
“Gerald!”
The figure braked to a halt, floating next to their thought-flattened platform. A simplified version of the famed astronaut explorer, not a full-scale virtual entity. A recording then, with some ai thrown in.
Hamish couldn’t-he just couldn’t-help himself. It simply came out and he vowed never to apologize for it.
“Dr. Livingstone, I presume?”
The discoverer of the first recovered fomite-artifact hovered near the group, granting Hamish a slight nod.
Lacey stepped back a bit, her hand over her breast.
“Then civilization hasn’t forgotten or abandoned us? Or blown itself up?”
The figure shook its head, conveying ruefulness.
Gerald Livingstone’s aivatar spread its hands in an open gesture.
Oldest Member stepped up to confront the message simulacrum.
“Then why did the laser stop firing? Has it malfunctioned? We are moving only at one hundredth of the planned and necessary departing velocity! When will repairs be completed, and more launch lasers built? If this delay lasts much longer, our rendezvous at the target system will have to be recalculated.”
Gerald the herald held up a single finger.
Om howled. “That is absurd! At this rate, none of the probes will ever leave the solar system at all!”
The answer he got next failed to please the most ancient known member of a viral chain. The astronaut’s voice had a faint, sardonic edge.
Hamish saw the rotund artilen glower in what had to be simmering anger. The next words to puff from those waving vent tubes came as individual snorts.
“And… what… faulty… assumption… is that?”
The simulated image of Gerald Livingstone paused, as it must have aboard many millions of other crystal vessels at the same point, upon delivering similar news. Even caught up in his own state of shock, Hamish appreciated the dramatic effect.
Emily Tang took a step toward her old comrade and lover. “Then our destination…?”
The simulated astronaut’s affectionate smile made him seem almost as real as she was.
97.
“Five hundred and fifty astronomical units from the sun. We’re beyond Neptune, Pluto, and the Kuiper Belt. Way outside the heliopause, where the solar wind stops and interstellar vacuum officially begins,” Lacey explained to the others. “But that’s still only
“When will that happen?” Emily asked.
Birdwoman squawked, providing the answer. Abruptly Hamish realized, he could now translate her message without the fiction of tru-vu goggles.