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The Hyperion Cantos 4-Book Bundle

Page 86

by Dan Simmons

was this simple phrase

  THERE IS ANOTHER//

  Another Ultimate Intelligence

  up there

  where time itself

  creaks with age

  Both were real

  if (real)

  means anything

  Both were jealous gods

  not beyond passion

  not into cooperative play

  Our UI spans galaxies

  uses quasars for energy sources

  the way you might

  have a light snack

  Our UI sees everything that is

  and was

  and will be

  and tells us selected bits

  so that

  we may tell you

  and in so doing

  look a bit like UIs ourselves

  Never underestimate/Ummon says/

  the power of a few beads

  and trinkets

  and bits of glass

  over avaricious natives]

  [This other UI

  has been there longer

  evolving quite mindlessly/

  an accident

  using human minds for circuitry

  the same way we had connived

  with our deceptive All Thing

  and our vampire dataspheres

  but not deliberately/

  almost reluctantly/

  like self-replicating cells

  which never wished to replicate

  but have no choice in the matter

  This other UI

  had no choice

  He is humankind-made/generated/forged

  but no human volition accompanied his birth

  He is a cosmic accident

  As with our most deliberately consummated

  Ultimate Intelligence/

  this pretender finds time

  no barrier

  He visits the human past

  now meddling/

  now watching/

  now not interfering/

  now interfering with a will

  which approaches pure perversity

  but which actually

  is pure naïveté

  Recently

  he has been quiescent

  Millennia of your slow-time

  have passed since your own UI

  has made his shy advances

  like some lonely choir boy

  at his first dance]

  [Naturally our UI

  attacked yours

  There is a war up there

  where time creaks

  which spans galaxies

  and eons

  back and forward

  to the Big Bang

  and the Final Implosion

  Your guy was losing

  He had no belly for it

  Our Volatiles criedAnother reason

  to terminate our predecessors

  but the Stables voted caution

  and the Ultimates did not look up

  from their deus machinations

  Our UI is simple, uniform, elegant in

  its ultimate design

  but yours is an accretion of god-parts/

  a house added onto

  over time/

  an evolutionary compromise

  The early holy men of humankind

  were right

  〈How〉 〈through accident〉

  〈through sheer luck

  or ignorance〉

  in describing its nature

  Your own UI is essentially triune/

  composed as it is

  of one part Intellect/

  one part Empathy/

  and one part the Void Which Binds

  Our UI inhabits the interstices

  of reality/

  inheriting this home from us

  its creators

  the way humankind has inherited

  a liking for trees

  Your UI

  seems to make its home

  on the plane where Heisenberg and Schrödinger

  first trespassed

  Your accidental Intelligence

  appears not only to be the gluon

  but the glue

  Not a watchmaker

  but a sort of Feynman gardener

  tidying up a no-boundary universe

  with his crude sum-over-histories rake/

  idly keeping track of every sparrow fall

  and electron spin

  while allowing each particle

  to follow every possible

  track

  in space-time

  and each particle of humankind

  to explore every possible

  crack

  of cosmic irony]

  [Kwatz!]

  [Kwatz!]

  [Kwatz!]

  [The irony is

  of course

  that in this no-boundary universe

  into which we all were dragged/

  silicon and carbon/

  matter and antimatter/

  Ultimate/

  Volatile/

  and Stable/

  there is no need for such a gardener

  since all that is

  or was

  or will be

  begin and end at singularities

  which make our farcaster web

  look like pinpricks

  (less than pinpricks)

  and which break the laws of science

  and of humankind

  and of silicon/

  tying time and history and everything that is

  into a self-contained knot with neither

  boundary nor edge

  Even so

  our UI wishes to regulate all this/

  reduce it to some reason

  less affected by the vagaries

  of passion

  and accident

  and human evolution]

  [To sum it up/

  there is a war

  such as blind Milton would kill to see

  Our UI wars against your UI

  across battlefields beyond even Ummon’s

  imagination

  Rather/ there

  was

  a war/

  for suddenly a part of your UI

  the less-than-sum-of entity/ self-thought of as

  Empathy/

  had no more stomach for it

  and fled back through time

  cloaking itself in human form/

  not for the first time

  The war cannot continue without your UI’s

  wholeness

  Victory by default is not victory for the only

  Ultimate Intelligence

  made by design

  So our UI searches time for the runaway child of

  its opponent

  while your UI waits in idiot

  harmony/

  refusing to fight until Empathy is restored]

  [The end of my story is simple

  The Time Tombs are artifacts sent back to carry the Shrike/

  Avatar/Lord of Pain/Angel of

  Retribution/

  half-perceived perceptions of an all-too-real

  extension of our UI

  Each of you was chosen to help with the opening

  of the Tombs

  and

  the Shrike’s search for the hidden one

  and

  the elimination of the Hyperion Variable/

  for in the space-time knot which our UI

  would rule

  no such variables will be allowed

  Your damaged/ two-part UI

  has chosen one of humankind to travel

  with the Shrike

  and witness its efforts

  Some of the Core have sought to eradicate

  humanity

  Ummon has joined those who sought the second

  path/

  one filled with uncertainty for both races

  Our group told Gladstone of

  her choice/

  humankind’s choice/


  of certain extermination or entry down the black hole

  of the Hyperion Variable and

  warfare/

  slaughter/

  disruption of all unity/

  the passing of gods/

  but also the end of stalemate/

  victory of one side or the other

  if the Empathy third

  of the triune

  can be found and forced to return to the war

  The Tree of Pain will call him

  The Shrike will take him

  The true UI will destroy him

  Thus you have Ummon’s story]

  Brawne looks at Johnny in the hell-light from the megalith’s glow. The egg-chamber is still black, the megasphere and universe beyond, opaqued to nonexistence. She leans forward until their temples touch, knowing that no thought can be secret here but wanting the sense of whispering:

  —Jesus Christ, do you understand all of that?

  Johnny raises soft fingers to touch her cheek:

  —Yes.

  —Part of some human-created Trinity is hiding out in the Web?

  —The Web or elsewhere. Brawne, we do not have much time left here. I need some final answers from Ummon.

  —Yeah. Me too. But let’s keep it from waxing rhapsodic again.

  —Agreed.

  —Can I go first, Johnny?

  Brawne watches her lover’s analog bow slightly and make a you-first gesture and then she returns her attention to the energy megalith:

  —Who killed my father? Senator Byron Lamia?

  [Elements of the Core authorized it Myself included]

  —Why? What did he do to you?

  [He insisted on bringing Hyperion into the equation before it could be factored/predicted/absorbed]

  —Why? Did he know what you just told us?

  [He knew only that the Volatiles were pressing for quick

  extinction

  of humankind

  He passed this knowledge

  to his colleague

  Gladstone]

  —Then why haven’t you murdered her?

  [Some of us have precluded

  that possibility/inevitability

  The time is right now

  for the Hyperion Variable

  to be played]

  —Who murdered Johnny’s first cybrid? Attacked his Core persona?

  [I did It was

  Ummon’s will which prevailed]

  —Why?

  [We created him

  We found it necessary to discontinue him

  for a while

  Your lover is a persona retrieved

  from a humankind poet

  now long dead

  Except for the Ultimate Intelligence Project

  no effort has been

  so complicated

  nor little understood

  as this resurrection

  Like your kind/

  we usually destroy

  what we cannot understand]

  Johnny raises his fists toward the megalith:

  —But there is another of me. You failed!

  [Not failure You had to be destroyed

  so that the other

  might live]

  —But I am not destroyed! cries Johnny.

  Yes

  You are]

  The megalith seizes Johnny with a second massive pseudopod before Brawne can either react or touch her poet lover a final time. Johnny twists a second in the AI’s massive grip, and then his analog—Keats’s small but beautiful body—is torn, compacted, smashed into an unrecognizable mass which Ummon sets against his megalith flesh, absorbing the analog’s remains back into the orange-and-red depths of itself.

  Brawne falls to her knees and weeps. She wills rage … prays for a shield of anger … but feels only loss.

  Ummon turns his gaze on her. The egg-chamber ovoid collapses, allowing the din and electric insanity of the megasphere to surround them.

  [Go away now

  Play out the last

  of this act

  so that we may live

  or sleep

  as fate decrees]

  —Fuck you! Brawne pounds the palm-platform on which she kneels, kicks and pummels the pseudoflesh beneath her. You’re a goddamned loser! You and all your fucking AI pals. And our UI can beat your UI any day of the week!

  [That is

  doubtful]

  —We built you, Buster. And we’ll find your Core. And when we do we’ll tear your silicon guts out!

  [I have no silicon guts/organs/internal components]

  —And another thing, screams Brawne, still slashing at the megalith with her hands and nails. You’re a piss-poor storyteller. Not a tenth the poet that Johnny is! You couldn’t tell a straightforward tale if your stupid AI ass depended—

  [Go away]

  Ummon the AI megalith drops her, sending her analog tumbling and falling into the upless and downless crackling immensity of the megasphere.

  Brawne is buffeted by data traffic, almost trod upon by AIs the size of Old Earth’s moon, but even as she tumbles and blows with the winds of dataflow, she senses a light in the distance, cold but beckoning, and knows that neither life nor the Shrike is finished with her.

  And she is not finished with them.

  Following the cold glow, Brawne Lamia heads home.

  THIRTY-FOUR

  “Are you all right, sir?”

  I realized that I had doubled over in the chair, my elbows on my knees, my fingers curled through my hair, gripping fiercely, palms pressed hard against the sides of my head. I sat up, stared at the archivist.

  “You cried out, sir. I thought that perhaps something was wrong.”

  “No,” I said. I cleared my throat and tried again. “No, it’s all right. A headache.” I looked down in confusion. Every joint in my body ached. My comlog must have malfunctioned, because it said that eight hours had elapsed since I first entered the library.

  “What time is it?” I asked the archivist. “Web standard?”

  He told me. Eight hours had elapsed. I rubbed my face again, and my fingers came away slick with sweat. “I must be keeping you past closing time,” I said. “I’m sorry.”

  “It is no problem,” said the little man. “I am pleased to keep the archives open late for scholars.” He folded his hands in front of him. “Especially today. With all of the confusion, there is little incentive to go home.”

  “Confusion,” I said, forgetting everything for a moment … everything except the nightmarish dream of Brawne Lamia, the AI named Ummon, and the death of my Keats-persona counterpart. “Oh, the war. What is the news?”

  The archivist shook his head:

  Things fall apart; the centre cannot hold;

  Mere anarchy is loosed upon the world,

  The blood-dimmed tide is loosed, and everywhere

  The ceremony of innocence is drowned;

  The best lack all conviction, while the worst

  Are full of passionate intensity.

  I smiled at the archivist. “And do you believe that some ‘rough beast, its hour come round at last,/ Slouches towards Bethlehem to be born’?”

  The archivist did not smile. “Yes, sir, I do.”

  I stood and moved past the vacuum-press display cases, not looking down at my handwriting on parchment nine hundred years old. “You may be right,” I said. “You may well be right.”

  It was late; the parking lot was empty except for the wreck of my stolen Vikken Scenic and a single, ornate EMV sedan obviously handcrafted here on Renaissance Vector.

  “Can I drop you somewhere, sir?”

  I breathed in the cool night air, smelling the fish-and-spilled-oil scent of the canals. “No thanks, I’ll ’cast home.”

  The archivist shook his head. “That may be difficult, sir. All of the public terminexes have been placed under martial law. There have been … riots.” The word was obviously distasteful to the little archivist, a man who seemed to value order and continuity a
bove most things. “Come,” he said, “I’ll give you a lift to a private farcaster.”

  I squinted at him. In another era on Old Earth, he would have been the head monk in a monastery devoted to saving the few remnants of a classical past. I glanced at the old archives building behind him and realized that indeed he was just that.

  “What is your name?” I asked, no longer caring if I should have known it because the other Keats cybrid had known it.

  “Ewdrad B. Tynar,” he said, blinking at my extended hand and then taking it. His handshake was firm.

  “I’m … Joseph Severn.” I couldn’t very well tell him that I was the technological reincarnation of the man whose literary crypt we had just left.

  M. Tynar hesitated only a fraction of a second before nodding, but I realized that to a scholar such as he, the name of the artist who was with Keats at his death would be no disguise.

  “What about Hyperion?” I asked.

  “Hyperion? Oh, the Protectorate world where the space fleet went a few days ago. Well, I understand that there’s been some trouble recalling the necessary warships. The fighting has been very fierce there. Hyperion, I mean. Odd, I was just thinking of Keats and his unfinished masterwork. Strange how these small coincidences seem to crop up.”

  “Has it been invaded? Hyperion?”

  M. Tynar had stopped by his EMV, and now he laid his hand on the palmlock on the driver’s side. Doors lifted and accordioned inward. I lowered myself into the sandalwood-and-leather smell of the passenger cell; Tynar’s car smelled like the archives, like Tynar himself, I realized, as the archivist reclined in the driver’s seat next to me.

  “I don’t really know if it’s been invaded,” he said, sealing the doors and activating the vehicle with a touch and command. Under the sandalwood-and-leather scent, the cockpit had that new-car smell of fresh polymers and ozone, lubricants and energy which had seduced mankind for almost a millennium. “It’s so hard to access properly today,” he continued, “the datasphere is more overloaded than I’ve ever seen it. This afternoon I actually had to wait for a query on Robinson Jeffers!”

  We lifted out and over the canal, right over a public square much like the one where I’d almost been killed earlier this day, and leveled off on a lower flyway three hundred meters above the rooftops. The city was pretty at night: most of the ancient buildings were outlined in old-fashioned glowstrips, and there were more street lamps than advertising holos. But I could see crowds surging in side streets, and there were Renaissance SDF military vehicles hovering over the main avenues and terminex squares. Tynar’s EMV was queried twice for ID, once by local traffic control and again by a human, FORCE-confident voice.

  We flew on.

  “The archives doesn’t have a farcaster?” I said, looking off in the distance to where fires seemed to be burning.

 

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