Odyssey

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Odyssey Page 42

by Jack McDevitt


  Biolog Quarterly Up 36%

  THREE DEAD IN BOATING ACCIDENT ON LAKE SUPERIOR

  Collision in Clear Weather a Mystery

  MANHATTAN VAMPIRE OPENS TO RECORD CROWDS

  Latest Cole Thriller Sucks Up Millions on First Weekend

  CARMEN, QUIGLEY TO MARRY

  Couple Reveals Betrothal at Press Conference

  Caribbean Honeymoon Planned

  LOTTERY WINNER WILL NOT QUIT JOB

  Highway Artist Feels Need to Create

  CORRUPTION CHARGES IN SAN DIEGO

  Hackel, Coleman Indicted

  Judges, Police Also Believed Under Investigation

  TEEN KILLS GIRLFRIEND’S PARENTS WITH AX

  “Quiet Boy,” Say Neighbors

  “Hard to Believe It Could Happen Here”

  TORNADOES WIN SEVENTH STRAIGHT

  Kim Huang Homers in Tenth

  chapter 45

  It is not faith per se that creates the problem; it is conviction, the notion that one cannot be wrong, that opposing views are necessarily invalid and may even be intolerable.

  —Gregory MacAllister, “Downhill All the Way”

  The judge in the hellfire trial had not struck MacAllister as the kind of person who would have been prepared to take a stand against the popular will. He also had not looked particularly imaginative. Glock had reported that he was a Presbyterian, an occasional churchgoer, a family man with three kids. His actual religious beliefs were not on record.

  Maximum George was a small, round man, balding, with black hair and enormous eyebrows. His expression had revealed nothing during the course of the trial.

  MacAllister watched from his study while he entered the crowded courtroom, which immediately went dead quiet. He needlessly rapped the gavel a couple of times, did some preliminary business, then announced he was ready to deliver a verdict in the case of the City of Derby vs. Henry Beemer. “The accused,” he said, “will rise and face the bench.”

  Beemer and Glock stood together.

  “Mr. Beemer,” he continued, “you have, it seems to me, just cause to be resentful about your early schooling. Young minds are open during those years, imaginations are especially fertile, and we trust adults to tell us what is demonstrably true. What is put into our minds at that period is not easily removed or modified. I hope that the Reverend Pullman will, despite the obvious strength of his religious convictions, take these matters into account when he enters his classroom in the future.

  “That said, I cannot find that the Reverend Pullman has violated any law, and even if he had, the attack on him would have been itself unlawful. Therefore, Mr. Beemer, I pronounce you guilty, and sentence you to three days in the county jail. I hope, sir, not to see you before me again.”

  GLOCK CALLED LATER.

  “You didn’t appeal,” said MacAllister.

  “It’s a minimum sentence, Mac. That’s as good as we’re going to get.”

  MacAllister sighed. “It’s a pity. The attack was justified.”

  “Maybe,” said Glock. “But you can’t write the laws that way.”

  LIBRARY ARCHIVE

  So long as men and women are free, no one is safe. People will be in danger because others can’t operate vehicles responsibly or shoot straight. Because physicians are sometimes incompetent and lawyers dishonest. But most of all they will be in danger from ideas. It is the price we willingly pay to be free. Nor would we have it any other way.

  —Maria DiSalvo, Lost in Paradise, 2214

  epilogue

  There is no justice. There are occasional acts of vengeance, or regret, but there’s no real justice. In the natural scheme of things, it is not possible.

  —Gregory MacAllister, “Valentina”

  Dryden and six others, from Orion, Kosmik, MicroTech, and Monogram, were convicted of conspiracy to defraud the government. They received substantial fines and were restricted indefinitely to their homes, with limited use of telecommunications equipment. Shandra Kolchevska and Miriam Klymer, both of whom had been at the corporate meeting in Asquith’s office, were among them. Monogram’s Arnold Prescott escaped conviction through a technicality.

  Asquith resigned. Hutch was wrong in her assumption that rumors of a scandal would ruin him. He was, after all, a politician. As this is written, he is serving as the president’s senior science advisor. Dryden never mentioned his name in the courtroom, leading to her suspicion there’d been a payoff somewhere. MacAllister declined to tell what he knew about the Terranova incident, as did Hutch. So Valya came out of it with her reputation intact. The world, MacAllister has written somewhere, needs all the heroes it can get.

  The various corporations involved in the hoax are all prospering. The World Council learned a lesson, although there are some who say it was the wrong one. They are in the process of arming government vessels. For the first time in more than a century, research into advanced weaponry is moving ahead. The first warships will be coming online by the time this is published.

  Moonrider sightings have declined precipitously, and none that could be substantiated have occurred in recent months. Sources high in the World Council promise that, when the aliens return, we’ll be ready for them.

  Today, Valentina Kouros stands with George Hackett and Preacher Brawley and the other heroes of the Great Expansion, the people who have given their lives in the cause of furthering human knowledge. High schools and libraries in a dozen countries have been named for her, including one in Athens. Hutch, MacAllister, and Amy attended the dedication. As did four of the persons who’d escaped on the WhiteStar.

  Another one for Amy to model herself after.

  And maybe there should be some recognition as well for Vannie Trotter. Vannie is the woman who provided support for Amy at the museum. The two have since become close friends.

  A FEW DAYS after the ceremony, Hutch resigned from the Academy. Have to take care of my daughter, she told the acting commissioner. And there’s a son on the way. When Tor asked about the real reasons, she couldn’t tell him. Didn’t really know herself. Except that she couldn’t go back to the office she’d occupied when she sent that last message to Valya. Anyhow, maybe being a mother was the real reason.

  Eric Samuels remains at his post as public relations director. Those who work for him say he’s a different man from the one they knew. One of them told Hutch he’s learned how to be a good boss.

  Senator Taylor has given up trying to cut off Academy funds. With the appearance of the moonriders, he lost his enthusiasm for the effort. “The world out there,” he told The New York Times, “just doesn’t seem as safe as it used to.”

  No one has yet been able to explain the phenomenon that has come to be known as Amy’s Vision. No known method will project holographic images through a steel hull. That seems to imply some sort of telepathic capability. That possibility is reinforced by the fact that the moonriders were able to trigger memories of Priscilla Hutchins. But again, no method of thought transference is known, either.

  Equally puzzling: Why did the aliens choose an adolescent to carry the warning when they had a major journalist and a ranking Academy official available? The best answer must be that their methodology would not have worked with the other two. Some experts have suggested that a young person would have a more open, and hence accessible, mind. MacAllister has reacted on several occasions by branding the idea preposterous.

  The senator still hopes his daughter will come to her senses and develop an interest in law school. At the moment, it looks unlikely.

  Regarding the attack at Origins, it does seem that somebody, somewhere, got the point. There was at first an outcry to begin rebuilding the hypercollider, at an increased pace. To show the moonriders they couldn’t bully us. But there’s been no concerted effort by the world’s physicists to get it done. Some have even been quoted to the effect that we might have had a narrow escape.

  MacAllister remains at the helm of The National. He still has dinner periodically with Hutch and her fami
ly.

  The struggle against the Greenhouse Effect goes on. Democratic leaders everywhere are reluctant to raise taxes to pay for what needs to be done. MacAllister commented recently that Plato was right, that democracy is mob rule, that the voters can be counted on consistently to find the candidate with the fewest scruples and put him in office. Friends and acquaintances have noticed he makes more Greek references than he used to.

  * This is incorrect, of course. The first life discovered outside the solar system was on Genesis, a world orbiting Alpha Cephei. Because life there however is microscopic, it tends to get overlooked.

 

 

 


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