“I see. Very well. Give me override.”
“That is permitted.”
Final authority for pod operations was turned over to Drake.
He switched off all systems; was erased; became nothing.
Chapter 22
It wasn’t working. Drake decided that a smarter man than he would have realized the truth long ago. With all their efforts, they had learned very little.
The most tangible piece of information had been provided by Mel Bradley: the rate of spread of the Shiva zone of influence was between one-half and three kilometers a second. In other words, the Shiva domain expanded across one light-year of space in between one hundred thousand and six hundred thousand Earth years. That had its own implications. The firebreak that Mel had made with the help of the caesuras was forty light-years thick. It had taken four million years before a world was lost on the “safe” side of it; twenty-five million years later, every world along the whole great arc of the firebreak was gone.
The other thing, pointed out by Cass Leemu, was more peculiar: the Shiva apparently spread
And that was it; the sum total of what they had learned, in fifty million years of effort and millions of star systems lost. The good news, if that was the word for it, was that it would take a few billion more years before the entire galaxy became part of the Silent Zone.
Drake wondered what to suggest next to the composites. That humanity, in all its forms, should flee to another galaxy?
Universal flight didn’t seem feasible, even if it was psychologically acceptable.
He turned his total attention to a single question: Was there anything, anything at all, that they had not tried? He could think of just one thing. They had sent specially trained colonies to worlds that in the next centuries or millennia were candidates to fall to the Shiva. It had been done with single organic entities, with inorganics, and with composites, and always with the same results: the colonies reported that everything was all right, that they were doing fine, no problems. Then one day they fell silent.
But here was the oddity:
That prompted another thought: Could it be that they were not going
catch because they had not lived long enough on the planet.
What sort of indicators were plausible? He couldn’t say. Ice ages, variation in length of seasons, movement of polar caps, polarity reversal of magnetic fields, earthquakes, modified physiology of individuals at the cell level, homeostatic shift — it could be any or all of them. Despite all his studies, he was not, and would never be, a scientist.
But he could think of a way to test his idea. Embody someone in a long-lived form. Make thousands of copies of him, organic or inorganic. Send a copy to each world, long before the Shiva were expected there. Ask each one to wait, observe, and prepare. Tell him to be patient. Tell him to report back any anomaly, no matter how small.
Drake reached one more conclusion. He had been thinking “him,” and it was not hard to see why. How could he ask anyone else to endure an interminable wait, especially one likely to end with final extinction?
It was not some indefinite “him.” It was
It could be Drake and only Drake. He had to be the one. He would prepare, and he would send copies of himself. He would also be at headquarters and monitor every incoming message. And one day, before the whole galaxy was silenced, perhaps the Drake-that-goes and the Drake-that-stays would learn something useful.
And one other thing must be done. A certain crucial piece of information must be withheld from any copy of Drake who descended to each planet.
He would consult Cass to find out just how to do that.
Drake splayed his feet on the marshy surface and stared up for a last sight of the spacecraft. It was difficult, not only because the ship was dwindling in apparent size, but because as it rose higher the rate of motion across the sky decreased. Drake was embodied in a native form known as a mander. Its eyes were like a frog’s eyes, good at seeing rapidly moving objects, less effective on anything that stayed in one position.
One final glimpse, and then the ship was gone. Human vision might follow it still, but Drake could not. It did not matter. He knew where it was and where it would remain, far beyond the atmosphere in a polar observation orbit.
He looked around. This planet, Lukoris, was his new home. He had better get used to it, because he was going to be here for a long time. Half a million years did not sound like much — if you said it fast. From three to five hundred thousand years were likely to elapse before the Shiva arrived. Half a million years of waiting, before this world became part of the expanding Silent Zone.
The first thing was to understand and feel at home in his own body. He had been animated less than ten minutes ago, as the ship was preparing to leave. Drake examined the mander’s physiology with a fair amount of curiosity. He was supposed to live like this, awake or dormant, for a thousand human lifetimes. According to the composites this body would never age or wear out. Even if he were to remain continuously conscious, which was not his plan, the mander would be as healthy and limber in a million years as it was that day.
How could that be? But perhaps a better question was, why not? Why did organisms age at all?
The answer had been discovered, long, long ago, and soon followed by the longevity protocols. Death by aging was a far-off anachronism. But none of that explained, in a way that Drake could understand,
It was like much of science: important, useful, and totally mysterious.
Drake returned to the inspection of his body. This was, according to alien specialist Milton, the closest form to human on the whole planet. It was hard to believe.
Drake examined the mander’s feet. They were large and webbed. The legs above them were long and powerfully muscled, ideal for long balanced leaps. If it swims like a frog, and jumps like a frog, and sees like a frog…
He stuck out one of his two tongues. It was short and not sticky or club ended. He had already known that, intellectually, but he wanted reassurance.
In other respects the mander body was not at all froglike. His skin was dry and soft to the touch, covered with material like feathery mole fur. His two mouths were not in his head, where the sense organs were clustered, but one on each side of the torso beneath the breathing apertures. His brain was centered between them, deep in the interior of his chest and protected by rings of bony plates. Nothing could reach it that would not kill him first.
His embodiment was not, according to Milton, the most intelligent life-form on the planet Lukoris. That position was claimed by a monstrous flying predator known as a sphexbat, a creature that bordered on self- awareness and rode the permanent thermals around Lukoris’s crags and vertical precipices, landing neither to feed nor breed. The sphexbat’s young developed within the body cavity of the parent until one day they were ejected, to