The Revelation Space Collection

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The Revelation Space Collection Page 433

by Alastair Reynolds


  ‘I don’t care who wants justice, Sparv. It’s a thing unto itself, irrespective of the moral worth of the wronged party. The Clockmaker may have committed atrocities, but it was still wronged. I’ll do what I can to put that right.’

  ‘And then what?’

  Dreyfus grimaced as a spike of pain shot up his leg. ‘Then I’ll go after the Clockmaker, of course. Just because it was wronged doesn’t mean it gets an exemption.’

  ‘Presupposing, of course, that this minor business with Aurora blows over. Or had that slipped your mind?’

  ‘I’m not too worried about Aurora any more.’

  ‘Maybe you should be. The last time I checked, we were getting a whipping up there.’

  ‘The Clockmaker interrogated me,’ Dreyfus said. ‘It grilled me on her capabilities, her nature. It wanted to know exactly what she was. Then it escaped. Doesn’t that tell you something?’

  ‘It’s going after her.’

  ‘It’s at least as smart as she is, Sparv. Maybe smarter. And it has a very good reason to take her out of the picture.’

  ‘At which point we’ll be left with the Clockmaker to deal with, instead of Aurora. Is that really an improvement?’

  ‘It wants vengeance, not genocide. I’m not saying any of us are going to sleep easy with that thing out there, but at least we’ll be sleeping. That wouldn’t have been an option under Aurora.’

  Dreyfus and Sparver completed the last stage of their ascent. They passed through the collapsed remains of a subterranean landing area where Saavedra’s cutter was still parked and waiting. A ceiling spar from the sliding weather cover that concealed the landing deck had pinned the ship to the ground. Sparver went aboard and tried to communicate with Panoply, but the cutter was dead.

  ‘Don’t worry,’ Dreyfus said. ‘They’ll come for us.’

  By the time they arrived on the surface, the storm had abated. The starless sky was a moving vault of poisonous black, but according to Sparver it had nothing of the howling ferocity of earlier. Unafraid now to stand on high ground, Dreyfus activated his helmet lamp and surveyed the fractured dark landscape, picking out suggestive details that made him flinch until he saw that they were merely conjunctions of ice and rock, light and shade, rather than the furtive presence of the Clockmaker. He sensed that it had left this place, putting as much distance as it could between itself and the magnetic prison of the tokamak.

  ‘It must still be out there somewhere,’ Sparver commented.

  ‘I don’t know about that.’

  ‘It can’t have left the planet. It’s a machine, not a ship.’

  ‘It can take whatever form it wants to,’ Dreyfus replied. ‘What’s to say it can’t change itself into anything it needs to be? I watched it manipulate its form right in front of me. Now that it’s free of the cage, I wonder if there’s anything it can’t do.’

  ‘It’s still a thing. It can be tracked, located, recaptured.’

  ‘Maybe.’

  ‘What are you thinking?’ Sparver asked.

  ‘Maybe it will have taken a leaf out of Aurora’s book. An alpha-level intelligence is easy to contain if it confines itself to a single machine, a single platform. But it doesn’t have to be like that. Aurora worked out how to move herself around, to embody herself wherever it suited her needs. What’s to say the Clockmaker won’t do likewise?’

  ‘To meet her on her own terms, you mean?’

  ‘If I was it, and I thought she wanted to kill me, that’s what I’d do.’

  ‘That would also make it more difficult for us to kill it, wouldn’t it?’

  ‘There’d be that as well,’ Dreyfus admitted.

  They stood in silence, waiting for something to come out of the sky and rescue them. Occasionally a strobing flash pushed through the darkness: evidence of lightning or - perhaps - something taking orbit around Yellowstone, something that had nothing to do with weather.

  After a long while, Dreyfus started speaking again. ‘I had a simple choice, Sparv. The nukes were available and ready to go. They’d have destroyed SIAM and taken out the Clockmaker. We’d already got Jane out, so we knew what it was capable of. We knew the things it could do to people even if it didn’t kill them. And we knew there were still survivors inside that structure, people it hadn’t got to yet. Including Valery.’

  ‘You don’t have to talk about this now, Boss. It can wait.’

  ‘It’s waited eleven years,’ Dreyfus said. ‘I think that’s long enough, don’t you?’

  ‘I’m just saying . . . I pushed you earlier. But I had no idea what I was doing.’

  ‘There was something else, of course. We still needed to know what we’d been dealing with. If we nuked SIAM without gaining any further intelligence on the Clockmaker, we’d never know what to do to stop something like it happening again. That was vital, Sparv. As a prefect, I couldn’t ignore my responsibility to the future security of the Glitter Band.’

  ‘So what happened?’

  ‘From the technical data we’d already recovered, and Jane’s testimony, we knew that the Clockmaker was susceptible to intense magnetic fields. Nothing else - no physical barrier or conventional weapon - seemed able to stop or slow it. I realised that if we could pin the Clockmaker down, if we could freeze it, we could get the surviving citizens out alive. That’s when I knew we had to power up the Atalanta.’

  ‘The Atalanta,’ Sparver echoed.

  ‘It was a ship designed to undercut the Conjoiners in the starship-building business. Thing is, although it worked, it never worked well enough to make it economical. So they mothballed it, left it in orbit around Yellowstone while they worked out what to do with it. It’d been there for decades but was still perfectly intact, exactly the way it had been when it was last powered down.’

  ‘What was so special about this ship?’

  ‘It was a ramscoop,’ Dreyfus said. ‘A starship built around a single massive engine designed to suck in interstellar hydrogen and use it for reaction mass. Because it didn’t have to carry its own fuel around, it could go almost as fast as it liked, right up to the edge of light-speed. That was the idea, anyway. But the drive system was cumbersome, and the intake field generated so much friction that the ship was never as fast as its designers had hoped. But that didn’t matter to me. I didn’t want the ship to move. I just wanted its intake. The scoop generator was fifteen kilometres across, Sparv: a swallowing mouth wide enough to encompass SIAM in its entirety.’

  ‘A magnetic field,’ Sparver said.

  ‘I sent a Heavy Technical Squad aboard the Atalanta. We attached high-burn tugs to shift its orbit, to bring it close to SIAM. We couldn’t get its reactors back on line fast enough, so we jump-started the ramscoop using the engines on our corvettes. In an hour the field was building strength. In two we had it positioned around SIAM.’ Dreyfus paused, the words suddenly drying up in his mouth. ‘We knew there was a risk. The human survivors in SIAM were going to be exposed to that same magnetic field. There was no telling what it would do to their nervous systems, let alone the implants most of them were carrying. The best we could do was to try to focus the field on the area where we’d last pinpointed the Clockmaker, and try to hold the field strength as low as possible elsewhere.’

  ‘It was better than just nuking. At least you gave them a chance.’

  ‘Yes,’ Dreyfus said.

  ‘You said they survived. When you told me about it earlier.’

  ‘They did. But the effects of the field had been . . . worse than we feared. We froze the Clockmaker, recovered its relics, studied it as best we could and then retreated with the survivors. That took the rest of the six hours. Then we nuked. We thought we’d destroyed the Clockmaker, of course. In truth, it’d had packed itself down into one of the relics, waiting to be reopened like a jack-in-the-box. ’

  ‘And the survivors?’ Sparver asked eventually.

  It took Dreyfus an equally long time to answer. ‘They were all taken care of. Including Valery.’

&
nbsp; ‘They’re still alive?’

  ‘All of them. In Hospice Idlewild. The Mendicants were asked to look after a consignment of brain-damaged sleepers. They were never told where those people really came from.’

  ‘Valery’s with them, isn’t she?’

  Dreyfus’s eyes were beginning to sting. ‘I visited her once, Sparv. Just after the crisis, when it had all blown over. I thought I could live with what she’d become. But when I saw her, when I saw how little of my wife was left, I knew I couldn’t. She was tending the gardens, kneeling in soil. She had flowers in her hand. When she looked at me, she smiled. But she didn’t really know who I was.’

  ‘I’m sorry.’

  ‘That was when I went back to Jane. I told her I couldn’t live with what I’d done to them. So she authorised the memory block.’

  ‘And Valery?’

  ‘I never went back to see her. Not in eleven years.’

  Presently Dreyfus became aware of a rising sound, louder than the wind. He looked up in time to see a large ship come slamming through the clouds, its hull still glowing from a high-speed re-entry. He recognised it immediately as a deep-system cruiser, although he could not identify the ship itself. It circled overhead, landing gear clawing down from its reptile-smooth belly, weapons erupting through the hull as if they were the retractile spines of some poisonous fish. The pilot selected a patch of level ground large enough to accommodate the ninety-metre-long vehicle and descended slowly, using brief coughs of steering thrust to manage the descent.

  Dreyfus and Sparver raised their hands in salute and started walking towards the parked ship, Dreyfus’s stiff right leg dragging in the ice. A ramp lowered from the belly. Almost immediately, a suited figure began walking down it, picking its way cautiously down the cleated surface. The figure’s small stature, the way she walked, told Dreyfus exactly who she was.

  ‘Thalia,’ he called out, delighted. ‘It is you, isn’t it?’

  She answered on the suit-to-suit channel. ‘Are you okay, sir?’

  ‘I’ll mend, thanks to Sparver. What are you doing here?’

  ‘As soon as Prefect Gaffney got to you, we knew there was no point in concealing this location from Aurora. We would have come sooner, but we’ve been tied up with evacuees.’

  ‘I understand completely. You came quickly enough as it is.’

  Thalia walked across the rough ground until they were only a few metres from each other. ‘I’m sorry about what happened, sir.’

  ‘Sorry about what?’

  ‘I screwed up, sir. The upgrades . . . I was unprepared.’

  ‘It wasn’t your fault.’

  ‘But maybe if I hadn’t gone in alone, if I’d had a back-up squad with me . . . things might have been different.’

  ‘I very much doubt it. Aurora had already considered every possible eventuality. She’d have found a way through no matter what precautions you took. It might have taken longer, but it would still have happened. Don’t cut yourself up about it, Deputy.’ Dreyfus extended a hand, inviting her closer. She crossed the remaining ground and let her suit touch his. Dreyfus held one of her arms, Sparver the other. ‘I’m glad I got you back in one piece,’ he said.

  ‘I wish I could have done something for all the other people.’

  ‘You saved some. And you got word back to us that Aurora had no intention of keeping anyone alive once she was in control. You did good, Thalia. I’m not displeased.’

  ‘That’s praise,’ Sparver said. ‘I’d take it if I were you.’

  ‘What about Gaffney, sir?’

  ‘Gaffney’s gone,’ Dreyfus answered.

  ‘And the rest of Firebrand? The Clockmaker?’

  ‘You’ve been well briefed, I see. I thought you’d have wanted to rest.’

  ‘Well, sir?’

  ‘Veitch and Saavedra are dead. The Clockmaker escaped.’

  Behind her faceplate, Thalia nodded. ‘We did wonder, sir.’

  ‘Why?’

  ‘Something’s happening. We could only assume it had some connection with the Clockmaker, that you’d managed to persuade it to act against Aurora.’

  ‘I wouldn’t exactly say I persuaded it.’ But Dreyfus was encouraged by this information. ‘What’s been happening, Thalia?’

  ‘We’re not really sure. The good news is that the Ultras have been contributing to the evacuation effort and helping with the destruction of contaminated habitats. Overnight we’ve cleared and evacuated another six along Aurora’s expansion front.’

  ‘Total evacuations?’ Dreyfus probed.

  ‘No, sir,’ she said, hesitantly. ‘Some people were still left aboard at the end. But a lot less than before.’

  ‘I guess we can’t expect miracles.’

  ‘Sir, there’s something else. A couple of hours ago, weevil flows reached two habitats before we were in place with nukes or lighthuggers. We’d got most of the citizenry out, but local constables were still assisting with the evacuation when the weevils broke through.’

  ‘Go on,’ he pushed.

  ‘The constables started encountering the expected weevil resistance. They were doing their best to slow the weevils as they worked their way to the polling core, but they were taking heavy casualties. Then the weevils started behaving strangely. They became uncoordinated, erratic. They stopped their advance. The surviving constables managed to deploy heavy guns and started inflicting losses on the weevils.’

  ‘But there’d still have been millions more in the flow, even if there was a local malfunction at the head of the assault.’

  Thalia shook her head urgently. ‘It wasn’t a local malfunction, sir. It’s started happening everywhere, wherever there are weevils. They have a degree of autonomous programming, like any servitor, but whatever controlling influence was guiding them appears to be absent, or at least distracted.’

  ‘As if Aurora’s mind’s on other things.’

  ‘That’s what it looks like. Which is why we assumed you must have had some success with the Clockmaker.’

  ‘It’s already engaged her,’ Dreyfus said marvellingly, as if he’d just witnessed some staggering phenomenon of nature. ‘It knew it couldn’t afford to wait very long. Even though Gaffney hadn’t succeeded, Aurora would have found another way to destroy this facility. It had to leave.’

  ‘We should probably be leaving as well,’ Thalia said. ‘Unless you still want to admire the scenery, that is.’

  ‘I’ve had enough scenery,’ Dreyfus replied. ‘I’m not really a planet person.’

  ‘Me neither, sir.’

  ‘Thalia,’ he said gently. ‘There’s something else you need to know. It’s about your father.’

  ‘Sir?’ she asked, cautiously.

  ‘It’s good news,’ Dreyfus said.

  When Dreyfus returned to Panoply, even before Mercier had attended to his injuries, his first port of call was the tactical room. There he found Clearmountain and Baudry engrossed in study of the Solid Orrery, running it back and forth through time under different assumptions. As the outcomes of their simulations varied, so did the number and distribution of the red points of light in the emerald swirl of the Glitter Band. Sometimes there were dozens of red glints, but never the hundreds or thousands that had figured in the earlier forecasts, when Aurora’s expansion had appeared unstoppable.

  ‘Dreyfus,’ Clearmountain purred. ‘Welcome back to Panoply. I understand you now have senior status?’

  ‘That’s what it said on the Manticore booster. You’ll have to talk to Jane to see whether it’s a permanent status change.’

  ‘You received the message, I take it?’ Baudry asked him sharply. ‘Demikhov went ahead with Zulu.’

  ‘I heard.’

  ‘There were . . . complications, but when I last spoke to him, Demikhov was optimistic that Jane will make a complete recovery.’ She shot an awkward glance at Clearmountain. ‘There’ll be no reason for her not to resume her duties.’

  ‘After she’s had a long rest,’ Dreyfus said for
cefully. ‘She deserves that, no matter what she says.’

  ‘Yes. No one would begrudge her that,’ Baudry replied.

  ‘I lost the Clockmaker.’

  Clearmountain nodded at Dreyfus. ‘From what we heard, it was tactically unavoidable. We could have nuked Ops Nine, but then we’d still be fighting Aurora on our own. You did well, Senior Dreyfus.’

  ‘Thank you.’ Dreyfus rubbed at the sore spot on his arm. ‘Concerning Aurora . . . I heard from Thalia that there’ve been some changes. Is this correct?’

  Baudry answered him. ‘The picture still isn’t completely clear. All we know is that weevil activity has now become much less organised, much less systematic. We’re still not able to seriously affect the flows before they reach target habitats, even with the assistance of the Ultras. But constables and field prefects are making real strides in preventing the weevils from reaching the cores once they achieve habitat penetration.’

  ‘Enough to mean you don’t need to nuke any more?’

  ‘That’s a possibility. For now, it should at least give us time to complete the evacuations before we sterilise. In the longer term, once the current flows are exhausted, we should see a total cessation of all weevil activity. We’ll have halted Aurora.’

  ‘She may just have stalled, not gone away for good.’

  ‘We’re mindful of that,’ Baudry said. ‘We’ll continue evacuating well beyond her current expansion front, even if it means emptying fifty or a hundred habitats. We’ll have nukes and lighthuggers in place to incinerate those habitats if we see renewed weevil activity.’ She laced her fingers together. ‘It should be enough, Senior. The emergency could be over in two to three days.’

  ‘How many habitats will we have sacrificed by then?’

  ‘Forty-five, most likely,’ Baudry answered automatically. ‘Twenty-five in the best-case scenario, more than a hundred and twenty in the worst.’

  ‘Civilian losses?’

  ‘Assuming that we can move to complete evacuation for the remaining occupied habitats within twenty-six hours, we’d be looking at total casualties in the range of two to three million citizens.’

 

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