Galactic Empires

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Galactic Empires Page 30

by Gardner R. Dozois


  "It is an eerie construct, that Silverman," Elah said. "Look at it, all but faceless, expressionless, walking among us… And if you were going to develop a weapon to penetrate a society like this, an assassin to work in a human environment of rooms and corridors, a human shape is exactly what you would give it. It's not surprising people are wary, especially in a politically underdeveloped society like this one."

  Donn bridled at her casual insults. But the Silvermen were odd. They had only been appearing on the Reef since the arrival of the Coalition, while relationships between the Ghost and human communities on the Reef had steadily deteriorated. They wandered the Reef's corridors and haunted its bars and libraries, theaters and forums, even its churches. They simply looked. They stepped out of the way of humans. They would tolerate being touched, their silver flesh poked by curious children. They would speak if spoken to, answer questions if asked, but only of the most direct sort. But they volunteered nothing.

  The Silvermen were a strange, eerie, uncomfortable presence. And they simply showed up, appearing as suddenly and as randomly as the human abductees disappeared. The Silvermen were antiabductees.

  And they were clearly Ghost artifacts, for that silvery flesh was Ghost hide.

  The Ambassador asked, "What are these people doing?"

  "Maybe this is punishment," said Donn, "for the abductions. People want something to hit back at."

  "They are not harming it."

  "I wouldn't like being trapped like that. Pinned up against a wall, ignored."

  "A human sort of harm, then. To learn such lessons is the Silverman's purpose. So I believe."

  Donn stared at the Ghost. As far as he knew, this was the first time any Ghost had discussed a "purpose" behind the Silverman visitations.

  Elah, naturally, had overheard, too. "It's here to learn, you say?"

  "I speak at second hand," the Ambassador said. "You know that Ghost society is not like yours, not hierarchical. Our society is like our bodies, an embracing of diversity. But I believe that the faction behind the Silvermen intends them as an experiment to learn more of humanity."

  "By sending these homunculi among us as spies," Elah said.

  "Not that. They are all but mindless, intended as passive observers. They simply live a facsimile of a human life, for a period. The way each of us thinks is shaped by how we sense the universe, how we experience it and manipulate it; we are our bodies as well as our minds. We understand what you are doing," it said bluntly to Elah. "Your Coalition and the Expansion it is driving. We do not understand why you do mis. Perhaps your restlessness is something to do with your ape anatomy, your manipulating hands, your heritage of the trees and the savannah."

  Elah laughed. "You insult us without even trying, don't you? So do you think the experiment has worked?"

  The Ghost admitted, "I don't believe we anticipated the hostility they have encountered."

  Donn said, looking over at the Silverman. "It isn't human enough, perhaps."

  Elah said, "In some corners of this Reef, people gang up on the Silvermen and dress them up in clothes! All to reduce that feeling of otherness about them. And in other corners, the Silvermen are insulted, abused by the families of the abducted. There's never been a physical attack before, however." She faced the Ambassador. "If you want us to help you, Ghost, you need to be honest with us. How are these homunculi being planted in the Reef? Is it through some teleportation mechanism? And is it the same mechanism that is used to abduct humans from the Reef?"

  Again that long hesitation. "There is another faction-its motives are noble."

  "Tell us, Ghost!"

  "Yes," it said softly.

  Donn blew out his cheeks. "I never heard it confirmed before, about the abductions."

  Elah said stonily, "Are you disappointed?"

  "Yes. Because it means that all the paranoids were right-all those who swallowed your anti-Ghost propaganda, Commissary."

  "Don't push your luck, boy," she murmured.

  "It does explain what they've done to that wretched Silverman over there," Eve said now. "I've been running some tests." She showed them a slate of results that meant little to Donn.

  Elah nodded. "That collar they stuck on it is full of processors. It's a sentience booster." She smiled at Donn. "Do you see? This lynch mob has made the Silverman smarter. More self-aware."

  Donn frowned. "Is that legal? And, why?"

  "I don't think the law matters much here. And as to why-isn't it obvious? Yelling at those other dim homunculi was no longer enough to get rid of the rage. They made this creature smart enough to understand what it was suffering, what its perceived crime was. And who knows what they have planned for it once this long vigil is done? Can't you see the logic, Donn Wyman?"

  At the sound of his name, the Silverman turned. It was the first movement it had made since Donn and the others had walked into the bar. "You are Donn Wyman?"

  "Yes," said Donn uncertainly.

  The Silverman walked straight toward Donn. It pushed through the barrier of drinkers, knocking a couple of men aside. Some of them got to their feet. "Don't you take another step, you Ghost monster."

  But Elah raised her hand, a halting motion. The Reefborn had learned to recognize the authority of a Commissary.

  The Silverman stood before Donn. It came up to his chest, like a boy dipped in silver. Even its eyeballs were silvered. "We need your help." Its voice was identical to the Ambassador's.

  The Ambassador said, "This is why I asked you here, Donn Wyman. It has been asking for you, specifically. It's not very articulate, but it does seem to know what it wants."

  "Sorry," said the homunculus.

  "For what?"

  "For this." The Silverman reached up and wrapped its arms around Donn's waist, a powerful, cold, unbreakable hug.

  And the bar, the Commissary, the Ghost-all vanished.

  * * *

  No air.

  His chest felt as if it would explode.

  A raw sky, star-littered. Ice under his feet, hard, sucking the heat out through his thin boots. The Silverman's face before him, filling his vision, chromed eyes frosting over.

  No air! He opened his mouth. Air gushed from his lungs, a shower of crystals. But when he tried to breathe in, there was nothing, no air. He was drowning in vacuum. His eyes filmed over. He could not blink. Pain stabbed in his ears.

  Still the Silverman held him.

  Machinery flashed, a blade, spinning in vacuum silence. The Silverman fell away.

  Somebody stood before him. Short, slim, a girl perhaps, wrapped in a silver suit, her visor translucent. She held a weapon and a mass of silver cloth. She threw the cloth at him. It closed up around him, shutting out the stars.

  Air flooded into his lungs. He gasped, and nearly fell. The silver material was squirming around his body, sealing itself up, forming sleeves and leggings. A panel before his face began to clear.

  The woman's face hovered before him. "If you want to live, run." Her voice whispered in Donn's ears. She turned away.

  He ran. But even as he staggered over the ice, utterly bewildered, the face of the girl stayed in his mind, delicate, beautiful, twisted in a snarl of anger.

  * * *

  His first few steps were like trying to walk in a deflating balloon. But gradually, step by step, it got easier, because the blanket itself was knitting itself up around him, the seams becoming finer around his limbs, the joints at his hips, knees, shoulders, elbows becoming more flexible. It was unlike any human engineering, silvered on the outside and oddly skinlike on the inside where it was in contact with his clothes, his flesh.

  He knew what this was, what it must be. It was the hide of a Silver Ghost. And if he now possessed this hide, then surely there was a Ghost somewhere that lacked it.

  He ran on, stumbling.

  Wherever he was, gravity was high, a bit higher than the Earth standard maintained by the Reef's inertial fields. The sky above was black, littered with stars. Most of the light c
ame from one brilliant star directly above his head, a bright pinpoint source. Surely that was the Boss; surely he was still in the Association. It seemed brighter than he remembered, and he thought he saw a splinter of light coming from it, some immense flare. Perhaps he had come closer to the Boss then, deeper into the Association. But other than that—

  He tripped on something, a ledge sticking out of the ice, and fell flat. He lay there, bewildered, winded.

  He lifted his head. Where the girl ran, vapor exploded upward, a sparkling fountain with every footfall. "Wait," he called. "Please."

  She ignored him.

  He had no choice. He dragged himself to his feet. His chest where he had hit the ground felt like one vast bruise.

  He came to structures, just bits of stone wall sticking out above the ice. The remains of a city? There was nothing like a human geometry here, no right angles among these bits of straight line.

  He ran through a patch of some softer frost, lying over the water ice, that gathered in the lee of the low walls. It sparkled around his footfalls, evidently vaporized by waste heat. When he looked back, he saw traces of green in the boot prints that faded as suddenly as they had come.

  He came to a hole in the ground, a well, ragged and dark. The girl waited. "You've seen the flowers."

  "What flowers?"

  "Look at this." She lifted something up. It was like a human arm, small, like a child's, with a perfectly formed hand. Done in silver, it was like a bit of a broken statue.

  "It's the arm of a Silverman," he said.

  "Correct. The one that carried you over. The little bastard got away, but I hurt him. Watch this." She took a knife from her belt and stabbed the arm, slitting its silver skin from the base of the wrist up through the pit of the elbow to where it had been severed. Then she hauled at the skin, briskly peeling it off. What was exposed was bloody and steaming. Without the containing skin it fell apart into individual creatures, bloodred and wormlike, some of which wriggled feebly, still alive, even as they froze. The girl dropped all of this on the ground. A cloud of vapor rose up, quickly freezing back to ice and falling back.

  And all around the bloody mess, green things blossomed, a kind of moss, what looked like shoots of grass, even a kind of flower that fired off seeds like a miniature cannon. But the heat was evanescent, and the living things quickly shriveled and died.

  "They wait for a bit of heat. Billions of years if they have to. And when it comes, they take their chances. The story of all life, isn't it?"

  "Who are you?"

  "I don't have a name."

  He did not recognize her accent. It was flat, toneless. "Everybody has a name. My name is Donn Wyman."

  "I only have the number the fatballs gave me. I am Sample 5A43 Stroke 7J7 Stroke."

  "We call her Five," came a male voice, perhaps somebody down in the pit. "Quit showing off, Five, and get down here."

  Five grinned at Donn. "All right, Hama." She kicked apart the bloody mess on the ground and made for the hole, climbing down easily.

  Donn saw that there were handholds cut into the water ice. He followed with more difficulty, not trusting the grip of his Ghost-hide gloves, which continued to mold themselves around his fingers. He came to a membrane, stretched across the well. The girl had just dropped through this, so he followed. The membrane opened up around him, clinging closely like the meniscus of some high-surface-tension fluid; it was a tight band passing up the length of his body.

  Beneath the membrane, he reached the bottom of the well. He was in a kind of cellar, walled by rock-or maybe it was a natural feature, a cave. He had never visited a planet and knew nothing about rock formations. The walls were draped with silvery blankets, what looked like more Ghost hide. On some of them, tetrahedrons had been crudely scribbled, the sigil of free mankind. The light came from lengths of silvery, shining cable that had been draped over the walls, crudely nailed into place: Ghost technology. He saw low corridors cut into the rock leading off into the dark. Evidently this was a complex, down here under the ruins of an alien city.

  And there were people here—not many, maybe a dozen. Some wore suits of Ghost hide, their hoods back. Others went naked. They sat in small groups, eating from silvered bowls, or they slept on ledges. One woman nursed an infant at her breast. They were all ages, from the infant up through adulthood to old age. Some glanced incuriously at Donn, standing there in his Ghost-hide suit; others didn't bother looking around at all.

  The girl, Five, stood before him. She had pulled back the hood of her own suit. She rapped at his translucent visor with her fingernail. "It's safe to come out of there. We have warmth and air, thanks to the fatball hide panels."

  "I don't know how."

  "You just pull." She took hold of the hide over his cheeks, and hauled. His hood split open easily, sundering right down the middle of his visor. Warm, fuggy air washed over him; he smelled farts and sweat and piss, and a food smell, something like boiled cabbage. "Welcome to the rat hole," Five said.

  With her help, he pulled the rest of his suit away. When he was done, standing there in the clothes he had worn in Minda's Savior, a man approached him. He was already naked, and Five was stripping down, too. The man was short, his head shaved, and his body was scrawny, his ribs showing. He was a typical earthworm, Donn thought.

  "I am Hama Belk," he said. It was a Coalition accent. "You can see we go naked in here."

  "I think I'll keep my clothes on, for now."

  Five shrugged. "Suit yourself. We don't wear clothes because the fatballs don't bother with clothes for their Samples, so there's none to steal. Unless you feel like robbing a virgin Sample. That's known." Her face was as hard as her language.

  She had short-cropped blond hair. She was slim, her body wiry and supple; it was hard to tell how old she was-no more than eighteen or nineteen, surely. She had obviously been badly damaged in her short life. Donn felt sorry for her-a ridiculous reaction in the circumstances.

  He said, "Steal? Rob? Is that how you live?"

  "This is Ghostworld. We are all escaped Samples." She gestured at the nursing mother. "Or the children of Samples. We came here with nothing. All we have, we steal from the fatballs."

  "Including their hides."

  Five snapped, "We have a way of things here, virgin. You were saved by a Ghost hide. Now you must save in turn. You must kill a fatball and strip it of its hide, when you get the chance. Carry it with you, and save another if you can."

  He recoiled. "I work with Ghosts. Look, my name is Donn Wyman. I work as a factor on the Reef-that is, I develop trading relationships with the Ghosts. Perhaps I-"

  "I don't care what you do, or did. None of that matters now, your old life. You've died and been reborn. Now you're just another Sample, like us. You don't even have a number, as I do, since you weren't processed by the Ghosts before you were liberated."

  "Samples. Numbers." Donn saw it now. "This, wherever I am, is where you go when you're abducted."

  "You've got it," Hama Belk said. "Just as the snatching is random, so is the depositing. Usually you end up in a processing chamber, surrounded by a thousand Ghosts. That's what happened to me before the rats busted me out. Others end up on the surface, exposed—evidently the transfer isn't a hundred percent reliable. There are places where the strays end up, and we wait for them, with blankets; that's how Five found you."

  "How does it work, this transfer, the snatching?"

  "Well, we don't know," Hama said. "Does it matter?"

  "And those exposed on the surface?"

  "They die, if they aren't found in a heartbeat by Ghost patrols, or by us rats."

  "Rats?"

  "Us," said Five. "Wild humans, living in the cracks. Though I personally have never seen a rat, I understand the concept."

  "How come you haven't seen a rat? Never mind. Have you heard of Benj Wyman? My brother. He was abducted only hours before I-"

  "No," Five said bluntly.

  "Look," Donn said, "you can see there's
been some kind of mix-up. I'm not an abductee, a Sample as you call them. I came here with a Silverman. You saw it. You cut its arm off! Maybe if you hadn't chased it off—if I could talk to it—"

  Five laughed in his face. "Every virgin Sample says the same thing. 'I'm not supposed to be here. I'm special, I'm a mother or a father, I have this or that back home.' "

  "How do I get back?"

  She just laughed at him again. She walked away, and knelt down by the nursing mother.

  All at once, the hardness of her manner, the shock of all his experiences today, hit Donn. He staggered, and stumbled back against the wall.

  Hama grabbed his arm. "Here. Sit down. Look, there's a ledge." He handed Donn a silver bowl. "Try to eat some of this. It'll warm you up."

  "It's just so sudden." He looked at Hama. "I hadn't even taken in my own brother's abduction. And now-"

  "Well, you've plenty of time to get used to it. Take the broth." It contained a brownish sludge, like a thick soup.

  "More Ghost technology." Donn dipped a cautious finger in the bowl and tasted the gloop. It was lukewarm and tasted faintly of mushrooms.

  "Yes. We just scrape up the green shit from our footsteps outside and drop it in. This is how they feed the Samples. Here, your ears are bleeding." He handed Donn a scrap of cloth.

  Donn dabbed at his ears; the cloth came away bloody. "I don't even know where I am."

  Hama shrugged. "None of us do. We're obviously still in the Association. And this is obviously a rogue planet, far from any sun. But aside from that, we can't tell. After all, as Five said, nobody's ever been back to tell the tale. We just call it Ghostworld."

  Donn nodded. "It seems like a typical Ghost colony world, from what I know of them."

  "Yes. We were taught all about Ghosts in our training, on the way here in the Spline ships."

  The Ghosts' world was once Earth-like: blue skies, a yellow sun. But as the Ghosts climbed to awareness their sun evaporated, killed by a companion pulsar. The oceans froze and life huddled inward; there was frantic evolutionary pressure to find ways to keep warm.

 

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