were anyway generally inextricably bound up with patently paranoid ravings which served only to devalue the small amounts of sense and pertinence with which they were associated.
Next, the
Towards the end of the process, one message popped up from the rest, flagged as interesting by a name- recognising sub-routine. That single signal was followed by and linked to a whole series, all from the same ship; the Limited Systems Vehicle
Regarding Gravious, was the first line.
The
And discovered a conspiracy.
It read the exchanges between the
The ship turned its attention back out to the Excession's implacable advance, thinking, So
The
VII
'I'm sorry,' the avatar said to the two women and the man. 'It will probably become necessary to shunt us into a simulation, if you agree.'
They all stared at it.
'Why?' Ulver asked, throwing her arms wide.
'The Excession has begun expanding,' Amorphia told them. It quickly outlined the situation.
'You mean we're going to
'I have to confess it is a possibility,' the avatar said, sounding apologetic.
'How long have we got?' Genar-Hofoen asked.
'No more than two minutes from now. Then, entering simulation mode will become advisable,' Amorphia told them. 'Entering it before then might be a sensible precaution, given the unpredictable nature of the present situation.' It glanced round at them each in turn. 'I should also point out that of course you don't all have to enter the simulation at the same time.'
Ulver's eyes narrowed. 'Wait a second; this isn't some wheeze to concentrate everybody's mind is it? Because if it-'
'It is not,' Amorphia assured her. 'Would you like to take a look?'
'Yes,' Ulver said, and an instant later her neural lace had plunged her senses into the awareness of the
She gazed into the depths of space outside space. The Excession was a vast bisected wall of fiery chaos sprinting out towards her, breathtakingly fast; a consuming conflagration of unremitting, undissipating power. She could have believed, in that instant, that her heart stopped with the shock of it. To share the senses of a ship in such a manner was inevitably to comprehend something of its knowledge as well, to see beyond the mere appearance of what you were looking at to the reality behind it, to the evaluations it was incumbent upon a sentient space craft to make as it gathered data in the raw, to the comparisons that could be drawn and the implications that followed on such a phenomenon, and even as Ulver's senses reeled with the impact of what she was watching, another part of her mind was becoming aware of the nature and the power of the sight she was witnessing. As a thermonuclear fireball was to a log burning in a grate, so this ravening cloud of destruction was to a fusion explosion. What she was now witnessing was something even the GSV was undeniably impressed with, not to mention mortally threatened by.
Ulver saw how to click out of the experience, and did so.
She'd been in for less than two seconds. In that time her heart had started racing, her breathing had become fast and laboured and a cold sweat had broken on her skin.
Genar-Hofoen and Dajeil Gelian were staring at her. She suspected she hardly needed to say anything, but swallowed and said, 'I don't think it's kidding.'
She quizzed her neural lace. Twenty-two seconds had elapsed since the avatar had given them its two- minute deadline.
Dajeil turned to the avatar. 'Is there anything we can
Amorphia spread its hands. 'You can tell me whether you each wish your mind-state to enter the simulation,' it said. 'It will be a precursor to transmitting the mind-states beyond this immediate vicinity to other Mind matrices. But in any event it is up to you.'
'Well, yes,' Ulver said. 'Snap me in there when the two minutes are up.'
Thirty-three seconds elapsed.
Genar-Hofoen and Dajeil were looking at each other.
'What about the child?' the woman asked, touching the bulge of her swollen belly.
'The mind-state of the fetus can be read too, of course,' the avatar said. 'I believe that historical precedent would indicate it would become independent of you following such transferal. In that sense, it would no longer be part of you.'
'I see,' the woman said. She was still gazing at the man. 'So it would be born,' she said quietly.
'In a sense,' the avatar agreed.
'Could it be taken into the simulation without me?' she asked, still watching Byr's face. He was frowning now, looking sad and concerned and shaking his head.
'Yes, it could,' Amorphia said.
'And if,' Dajeil said, 'I chose that neither of us went?'
The avatar sounded apologetic again; 'The ship would almost certainly read its mind-state anyway.'
Dajeil turned her gaze to the avatar. 'Well, would it or wouldn't it?' she asked. 'You are the ship; you tell me.'
Amorphia shook its head once. 'I don't represent the whole consciousness of the
Dajeil studied the avatar a moment longer, then looked back at Genar-Hofoen. 'And what about you, Byr?' she asked. 'What would you do?'
He shook his head. 'You know,' he said.
'Still the same?' she asked, a small smile on her face.
He nodded. His expression was similar to hers.
Ulver was looking from one to the other, brows creased, desperately trying to work out what was going on. Finally, when they still just sat there on opposite sides of the table giving each other this knowing grin, she threw