Jaar stepped out onto a clear, glassy surface. Poole followed, almost stumbling; in the gentle gravity the clear surface was as slippery as hell. When he was steady on his feet, Poole raised his head.
The earth-craft was hollow.
Poole was at the center of an artificial cave that looked as if it occupied most of the craft’s bulk. Above his head there was a dome of Xeelee dove-gray, about twenty yards tall at its highest point, and below him a sheet of glass that met the dome at a seamless horizon. Beneath the glass was a hexagonal array of blue and pink bars, each cell in the array about a yard wide.
Tubes of glass — hollow shafts, each a yard wide — rained from the roof, terminating six feet above the floor. It made the dome look like some huge, absurd chandelier, Poole thought. A blocky control console was fixed to the floor beneath each tube. Through the holes in the roof Poole could see patches of Jovian cloud-pink. The shafts looked like fairy-land cannon, pointing at Jupiter.
People — young men and women in pink jumpsuits, Wigner’s Friends — moved about the clear surface, talking and carrying the ubiquitous AI slates; the huge, sparkling pillars dangled unnoticed above their heads like trapped sunlight. The Friends moved with the mercury-slow grace Poole associated with inhabitants of low-gravity worlds like Luna. Their voices, low and serious, carried clearly to Poole, and it was as if he were inside some huge building — perhaps a travel terminus.
The diffuse light seemed to come from the domed ceiling itself, with a little blue-pink toning from the array beneath the floor. It was like being inside a huge lightbulb. Or, perhaps, in the imaginary caverns inside the Earth conjured up by one of Poole’s favorite authors, the ancient Verne.
Jaar smiled and bowed slightly. 'So,' he said, 'the guided tour. Over your head we have a dome of Xeelee construction material. In fact the construction material passes under the floor we stand on and under the singularity plane, forming a shell within the craft broken only by the access shafts.'
'Why?'
Jaar shrugged. 'Construction material is impervious to all known radiation.'
'So it protects the passengers from riding so close to the black holes.'
'And it prevented the Qax from detecting our activity and becoming overly suspicious. Yes. In addition, our hyperdrive engine has been incorporated into the fabric of the construction-material shell.'
'How did you build the Xeelee shell?'
Jaar rubbed his nose. 'You don’t ‘build’ construction material. You grow it. It took humans centuries to work out how, from the first discovery of abandoned Xeelee flowers.'
Poole pointed to the floor. 'And under here, the plane of singularities.'
Jaar dropped to one knee; Poole joined him, and they peered through the floor at the enigmatic spokes of blue and pink-violet. Jaar said, 'This surface is not a simple transparent sheet; it is semisentient. What you see here is largely a false-color rendering.
'You have deduced, from your observations of the dimpled gravity field on the surface, that our craft is held together by mini-black hole singularities.' He pointed to a node in the hexagonal array. 'There is one of them. We manufactured and brought about a thousand of the holes with us through time, Michael.'
The holes, the Friend explained, were charged, and were held in place by an electromagnetic lattice. The false colors showed plasma flux lines in the lattice, and high-frequency radiation from infalling matter crushed by the singularities.
Hawking evaporation caused each singularity to glow at a temperature measured in teradegrees. The megawatts generated by the captive, evaporating holes provided the earth-craft’s power — power for the hyperdrive, for example.
The evaporation was whittling away at the mass-energy of each hole, inexorably. But it would take a billion years for the holes to evaporate completely.
Poole peered at the gaudy display somberly; it was difficult to believe that only a few feet beneath him was an object smaller than an electron but with the mass of a city block, a pinpoint flaw in the structure of spacetime itself. And below
Stiffly, he climbed to his feet. 'I’m grateful for what you’ve shown me,' he said.
Jaar studied him, tall, very bald, disturbingly pale. 'And what do you feel you have learned?'
Poole shrugged, deliberately casual. With a wave of his hand he indicated the cavern. 'Nothing new. All this is impressive, but it’s just detail. The singularity array. There is the meat of the mission; there’s what you’ve gone to all this trouble to bring back through time.' He pointed to the shafts that led to the rents in the construction-material dome. 'Those things look like cannon barrels, pointing at Jupiter. I think they
Jaar nodded slowly. 'And then what will we do?'
Poole spread his hands. 'Simply wait…'
He pictured a singularity — a tiny, all but invisible, fierce little knot of gamma radiation — swooping in great, slow ellipses around Jupiter, on each orbit blasting a narrow channel through the thin gases at the roof of the atmosphere. There would be a great deal of drag; plasma bow waves would haul at the singularity as it plunged through the air.
Eventually, like grasping hands, the atmosphere would claim the singularity.
Rapidly spiraling inward, the hole would scythe through Jupiter’s layers of methane and hydrogen, at last plunging into the core of metallic hydrogen. It would come to rest, somewhere close to Jupiter’s gravitational center. And it would start to grow.
'You’ll send in more and more,' Poole said. 'Soon there will be a swarm of singularities, orbiting each other like insects inside the solid heart of the planet. And all growing inexorably, absorbing more and more of Jupiter’s substance. Eventually some of the holes will collide and merge, I guess, sending out gravitational waves that will disrupt the outer layers of the planet even more.' Maybe, Poole speculated, the Friends could even control the merging of the holes — direct the pulsed gravity waves to sculpt the collapse of the planet.
Eventually, like a cancer, the holes would destroy Jupiter.
As the core was consumed the structure would implode, like a failing balloon; Poole guessed the planet would heat up and there would be pockets of disruption and instability — explosions that would blast away much of the substance of the atmosphere. Tidal effects would scatter the moons, or send them into elliptical orbits; obviously the human inhabitants of the region would have to evacuate. Maybe some of the moons would even be destroyed, by tidal stresses and gravitational waves.
'At last,' Poole said, 'there will be a single, massive singularity. There will be a wide accretion disk composed of what’s left of the Jovian atmosphere and bits of smashed satellites; and the rest of the moons will loop around the debris like lost birds.'
Jaar’s silence was as bland as Xeelee construction material.
Poole frowned. 'Of course a single singularity would be enough to collapse Jupiter, if that’s all you want to do. So why have you brought this great flock of the things?'
'No doubt you’ve figured that out too,' Jaar said dryly.
'Indeed. I think you’re trying to control the size of the final singularity,' Poole said. 'Aren’t you? The multiple ‘seed’ singularities will cause the loss of a fraction of the mass of the planet… I think you’ve
'Why should we do that?'
'I’m still working on that,' Poole said grimly. 'But the time scales… This could take centuries. I understand a great deal, Jaar, but I don’t understand how you can think in those terms, without AS.'
'A man may plan for events beyond his own lifetime,' Jaar said, young and certain.
'Maybe. But what happens when you’ve shot off the last of your singularities? The earth-craft is going to break up. Even if the inner shell of construction material keeps its integrity, the exterior — the soil, the grass, the very air — is going to drift away as the source of your gravity field is shot away into space.'
He imagined the menhirs lifting from the grass like the limbs of giants, sailing off into Jovian space; it would be a strange end for the ancient henge, far stranger than could have been imagined by those who had carved the stones.
'And what will become of you? You seem determined to refuse any help from us. You must die… perhaps within a few months from now. And certainly long before you see your Project come to fruition, with the collapse of Jupiter.'
Jaar’s face was calm, smooth, characterless. 'We will not be the first to sacrifice our lives for a greater good.'
'And the repulse of the Qax is a greater good? Perhaps it is. But—' Poole stared into the Friend’s wide brown eyes. 'But I don’t think a noble self-sacrifice is all that’s happening here. Is it, Jaar? You show no interest in our offers of AS technology. And you could be evacuated before the end. There isn’t really any need for your sacrifice, is there? But you don’t fear death at all. Death is simply… irrelevant.'
Jaar did not reply.
Poole took a step back. 'You people frighten me,' he said frankly. 'And you anger me. You rip Stonehenge out of the ground. Stonehenge, for Christ’s sake! Then you have the audacity to come back in time and start the destruction of a planet… the gravitational collapse of most of the System’s usable mass. Jaar, I’m not afraid to face the consequences of my own actions. After all I was the man who built the time machine that brought you here. But I don’t understand how you have the audacity to do this, Jaar — to use up, destroy, so much of humanity’s common heritage.'
'Michael, you must not grow agitated over this. I’m sure Shira told you the same thing. In the end, none of this' — he indicated the cavern—'none of us — will matter.
Poole thrust his face into the young man’s. 'How dare you make such claims, lay such plans?' he hissed. 'Damn it, man, you can’t be more than twenty-five years old. The Qax are a terrible burden for mankind. I’ve seen and heard enough to be convinced of that. But I suspect your Project is more, is bigger, is vaster than any threat posed by a simple oppressor like the Qax. Jaar, I think you are trying to change history. But you are no God! I think you may be more dangerous than the Qax.'
Jaar flinched briefly from Poole’s anger, but soon the bland assurance returned.
Poole kept the boy in the cavern for some time, arguing, demanding, threatening. But he learned nothing new.
At last he allowed Jaar to return him to the outer surface. On the way up Poole tried to work the elevator controls, as he’d watched the Friend do earlier. Jaar didn’t stop him. Of course, the controls did not respond.
When they returned to the grassy plain Poole stalked away to his ship, his head full of anger and fear.
Chapter 10
'Michael.' Harry Poole’s voice was soft but insistent. 'Michael, wake up. It’s started.'