my life.
It’s just that when all that Carter stuff came out of the media, well, maybe I went a little crazy. If the world’s going to end anyhow, what’s the point of paying taxes?
That was why I, umm, disappeared.
Anyhow I saw what Malenfant broadcast, the galaxies and the black holes and all. And now I feel different. Who wouldn’t? Now I know my children have a chance to grow old and happy, and
Life is worth living again.
I know there are those who say it doesn’t matter. That if the fu ture is going to be so wonderful anyhow we don’t need to do anything
So I’m coming back to the Mojave. I have clearances from the rehab and detox clinics, as well as from the parole board. I hope you’ll welcome me back.
Your friend,
Damien Krimsky
“Moondancer”:
People have been arguing for months about whether this Carter stuff can be correct. And now they’re arguing about whether the far-future visions are hoaxes.
Of course they can’t both be true.
And it’s amazing that you have stock market crashes and suicide cults and wackos who think they need to rip up the cities because the end of the world is coming, and another bunch of nuts doing exactly the same thing because the end of the world
This is our fate. And it’s fantastic! Wonderful! Don’t you think so?
Have you even thought where you’d like to travel if you had a time machine, and could go anywhere, past or future? Maybe you would go hunt T Rex, or listen to Jesus preach, or sail with Columbus. What do you think? I know what I’d do. I’d ride off to join the black-hole miners in the Incredible Year A.D. Four Hundred Billion. Man, will those guys party.
What? How come I know the future stuff is real? Because I’ve seen it myself. Also, as you probably know, there were secret codes in the
I have a Cap — careful with it! — and when I wear it,
Emma Stoney:
This time the golden beach ball was visible as soon as the firefly emerged from the blue flash of transition. The beach ball was standing on a smooth, featureless plain, square in the middle of the softscreen. An arc of the portal was visible beside the beach ball, a bright blue stripe.
The sky was dark. The black hole rose had disappeared. The only light falling on the beach ball seemed to be the glow of the firefly’s dimming floods. The belt of horizon Emma could see looked like a perfect circular span, unmarked by ridges or craters.
The squid swam through her bubble of water, lethargic.
Emma watched the Cruithne landscape slide past the firefly’s panning camera lens. Its smoothness was unnerving, unnatural. She felt no awe, no wonder, only a vague irritation.
“That damn asteroid has taken a beating,” Malenfant said. “Look at that mother. Smooth as a baby’s butt—”
“You
Malenfant said, “A sphere? How the hell?”
“I thj.nk this is liquefaction. If that’s so, it means that proton decay lifetimes must exceed ten to power sixty-four years — and
“Whoa, whoa.” Malenfant held up his hands.
“No. What is there to heat it up?”
“What, then?”
“Malenfant, over enough time, the most solid matter will behave like a very viscous liquid. All solid objects flow. It is a manifestation of quantum mechanical tunneling that—”
Malenfant said, “I don’t believe it.”
“You’re seeing it,” Cornelius said tightly. “Malenfant, the far future is
Cornelius checked his softscreen. “A minimum of ten to power sixty-five years. Umm, that’s a hundred thousand trillion trillion trillion trillion trillion. Look. Start with a second. Zoom out; factor it up to get the life of the Earth. Zoom out
The camera image swept away from the beach ball, away from the blank liquefied ground, and swept the sky.
Malenfant pointed. “What the hell is
It was a blur of gray-red light in an otherwise empty sky. The firefly switched to infrared, and Cornelius cleaned up the image. Emma saw a rough sphere, a halo of motes of dim light that hovered, motionless, around—
Around what? It was a ball of darkness, somehow darker even than the background sky. It looked about the size of the sun, seen from Earth; the motes were like dimly glowing satellites closely orbiting a black planet.
Cornelius sounded excited. “My God. Look at this.” He magnified the image, picking out a point on the rim of the central ball, enhancing as he went.
Emma saw rings of red light running around the rim, parallel to the surface.
“What is it?”
“Gravitational lensing. Bent light. That means
“This is probably the remnant of a supercluster. Just as what’s left of a Galaxy after star evaporation collapses into the central hole, so galactic clusters will collapse in turn, and then the superclusters.
“That hole might have a mass of anything from a hundred trillion to a hundred
“I don’t understand,” said Emma. “Where did the Galaxy go?”
“Our Galaxy hole was surely carried to the heart of the local galactic cluster black hole, and then the supercluster.”
“And we were dragged along with it.”
“If it’s a hole it has no accretion disc,” Malenfant said.
“Malenfant, this thing is ancient. It ate up everything a hell of a long time ago.”
“So how come those motes haven’t been dragged down?” Malenfant said.
“Life,” Emma said. “Even now. Feeding off the great black holes. Right?”
“Maybe,” Cornelius said, grimly. “Maybe. But if so they aren’t doing enough. Even gravity mines can be exhausted.”
“Hawking radiation,” Malenfant said.
“Yes. Black holes evaporate. The smaller the hole, the faster they decay. Solar mass holes must have vanished already. In their last seconds they become energetic, you know. Go off with a bang, like a nuke.” He smiled, looking tired. “The universe can still produce occasional fireworks, even this far downstream. But ultimately even this, the largest natural black hole, is going to evaporate away. What are the downstreamers going to do then? They should be planning now, working. There will be a race between the gathering and management of energy sources and the dissipative effects of the universe’s general decay.”
Malenfant said, “You’d make one hell of an after-dinner speaker, Cornelius.”
The camera had panned again, and it found the Sheena in her beach ball.
“I think her movements are getting labored,” Emma said.
Cornelius murmured, “There’s nothing we can do. It’s
They watched in silence.
Sheena’s firefly, tethered to the beach ball, jerked into motion. It floated toward Emma’s viewpoint, across the eerily smooth surface of the liquefied asteroid.
It drifted to a halt and reached out with a grabber arm to touch its human-controlled cousin. In the softscreen image, the arm was foreshortened, grotesquely huge.
Then the firefly turned and drifted out of shot, toward the portal, towing the beach ball.
“Onward,” Emma whispered.
Another transition, another blue flash.
The camera performed a panorama, panning through a full three hundred and sixty degrees. The portal, a glaring blue ring still embedded in the asteroid ground, slid silently across the softscreen. There was the Sheena’s bubble, resting on the surface, lit only by the robot’s lights and by the soft blue glow of the portal itself. The Sheena tried to swim, a dim dark ghost behind the gold. But she fell, languidly, limbs drifting.
And then, beneath a black sky, there was only the asteroid surface, smooth: utterly featureless, rubbed flat by time.
“It’s just like the last stop,” Emma said. “As if nothing will ever change again.”
“Not true,” Cornelius said. “But this far downstream, the river of time is flowing broad and smooth—”
“Down to a sunless sea,” Emma said.
“Yes. But there is still change, if only we could perceive it.”
The camera tipped up, away from the asteroid, and the softscreen filled up with black sky. At first Emma saw only darkness, unrelieved. But then she made out the faintest of patterns: charcoal gray on black, almost beyond her ability to resolve, a pattern of neat regular triangles covering the screen.
When she blinked, she lost it. But then she made out the pattern again. Abruptly it blurred, tilted, and panned across the screen.