Lights in the Deep

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Lights in the Deep Page 12

by Brad R Torgersen


  We shook hands and split up to begin our various tasks.

  • • •

  The system of Eden—circling the yellow dwarf sun we’d named Edenstar—proved remarkably pedestrian. Twelve major planetary bodies, most of them small and rocky, three of them big and gaseous, as well as two thin asteroid belts, and the previously mentioned—and entirely predictable—Kuiper and Oort cometary regions. I spent weeks pulsing across the system, doing detailed examinations of the moons of the big Jovian worlds, poking through the corrosive clouds of two of the smaller terrestrials, and generally growing both bored and discouraged. If the Transplanters—as we’d come to call them—had left any record or sign of their existence, it didn’t show. No staging posts, no warning or sensory networks. Not even industrial trash.

  Wanda caught up with me as I surveyed Eden from a distance of 100,000 kilometers, our mile-long ships locked in co-orbit. Her data core Linked with mine and she said, “Penny for your thoughts?”

  “God is the only answer,” I said across the Link.

  “God?”

  “Yes, because I can’t find a damned thing which would tell us anything otherwise. These people, these Edenites, might have been formed from Adam’s rib, for all the good my research has done.”

  I Linked over my latest findings, and after a few minutes, Wanda Linked back.

  “Maybe it is God,” she said.

  “Getting religion in your old age?” I teased.

  “No. But like Sherlock Holmes said, when you have excluded the impossible, whatever remains, however improbable, must be the truth.”

  “Doesn’t help us a bit,” I said.

  “No, but have you spent any time on the surface of Eden itself?”

  “I thought anthropological studies had been assigned to Kaman and Jorge?”

  “Not the Edenites themselves, dummy, their ruins. Old villages and camps, long abandoned. They go back thousands of years. There are glyphs and markings in the caves.”

  “Think it’s worth a shot?” I said.

  She linked me a smiley face.

  • • •

  I spent a few days Link-talking with Kaman and Jorge, who’d manufactured Edenite bodies for themselves and were going incognito on two separate land masses. They pointed me to some of the oldest ruins; sites which had been deemed interesting but not of pressing value. I built my own Edenite body and dropped it onto the surface near one of the planet’s poles. Tundra territory. Cold, with not much natural flora and even less fauna. The ruins were a collection of mounded stones in the foothills of a substantial, ice-capped mountain range.

  As always, my mechanical self was impervious to local temperature, but I wore what I thought would be appropriate attire should any of the locals discover me—and did a Link update on the dialects that Kaman and Jorge were learning. Might help—or it might not. I didn’t really care. My ship in orbit didn’t show any large animal life for at least fifty kilometers. Only the insects of the tundra kept me company as I spent a few days carefully pawing through the rock mounds, and the bloodsuckers must have bent their beaks trying to penetrate my artificial skin.

  Eventually I wandered up into the foothills themselves. I’d found some burial cairns, but nothing which might tell me where the original inhabitants had gone to. The glaciers were gorgeous and reminded me of photos I’d seen of Earth’s glaciers, before things had gotten warmer and all the glaciers melted. At night, the air was full of distant groaning and popping as the ice made its eternal, ponderous flow off the mountains and down through the valleys toward an eventual meeting with the far away sea.

  My luck turned when I stumbled into the cave.

  The skeletons of what appeared to have been families were huddled around its interior, half-buried by the detritus of time. The absence of large scavengers meant that the skeletons had remained relatively intact, and the cave’s ceiling had a spectacular array of glyphs painted on it. I imaged everything extensively and Linked the information to a grateful Kaman and Jorge, who incorporated these files into their growing picture of the migrating evolution of human life on Eden.

  One image in particular snared my attention as I paced the cave walls, using a hand lamp to keep the ceiling illuminated. Like the ancient glyphwork of Earth, these pictograms were child-like in their rendering: stick people and stick animals, representations of rituals and hunts, killing, feasting, dying, and living again. But one image seemed remarkably unlike the others. It was a particularly precise diamond, inset with what appeared to be three eyes. The middle eye was larger than the other two, and each of them was split through with what appeared to be triskele-shaped irises.

  If I’d had any blood in me, it would have run stone cold.

  I Linked to the first person who came to my mind.

  “Yes?” Wanda said.

  “Take a look at this,” I told her, Linking the image of the diamond with the three eyes.

  “My God,” Wanda said.

  “Show this to the others. We need to talk.”

  • • •

  “The Swarmers were here,” I said.

  Wanda, Ormond, Jorge, Bana, and anyone else who could be spared all sat around the fire that crackled in the pit I’d built. We could have Linked the entire discussion, but nobody argued when they saw the image of the diamond-with-eyes and received my subsequent request for a face-to-face quorum.

  “Coincidence,” Ormond said, waving his huge, copper-colored hand at me. “If the Swarmers had found Eden they’d have destroyed it, just as they’ve destroyed any planet where they’ve found humans. Swarmer behavior is 100% predictable in this regard. Why would the Swarmers make an exception for Eden?”

  “Maybe they found the Edenites in their primitive state,” said Bana, “and, considering them to be harmless, left the Edenites in peace.”

  “It’s possible,” Jorge said, still clad in his Edenite form. “We’ve never known the Swarmers to destroy any species which has not first reached a sufficient technological level to appear threatening. The Edenites have fire and they have stone, but they’ve not so much as smelted tin from what I can discern. Dozens of cultures and languages, and each of them is thoroughly steeped in religious imagery and explanation for the world. The scientific mindset has never found purchase.”

  “Who needs technology when they’re happy the way things are?” Bana said, her four arms crossed. “Long life, neither disease nor parasites; they’ve got relatively little to complain about.”

  “And relatively little tribal competition,” Jorge added.

  I stared at my friends.

  “You admire the Edenites,” I said.

  “Is that a problem?” Bana said defensively.

  “These people are dumb as hammers,” I said. “It would take us decades to teach them even a small fraction of our knowledge.”

  “I thought we’d agreed not to pollute their culture,” Jorge said, rising confrontationally.

  “Now that we know the Swarmers know the Edenites exist, we can’t not begin teaching them,” I said, coming to my own feet. I scanned the group, looking into their eyes. “How long will it take to bring the Edenites to a Classical level of technology? Renaissance level? True industrialism? Space-age automation? This planet is defenseless. To leave the Edenites in their current state would be criminal.”

  “I disagree,” Wanda said. I shot her a look.

  “Explain,” I said, controlling my temper.

  “These people have no awareness whatsoever of Earth,” Wanda continued. “Their languages are their own, their cultures—though somewhat similar to Earth’s most primitive cultures—are their own. They don’t give a damn about the war we lost with the Swarmers.”

  “When the Swarmers come back,” I said, “the Edenites will learn to give a damn, and they’ll learn quickly.”

  I couldn’t believe any of them would so easily disregard what had happened to Earth—what had happened to us. We had no real weapons when the first colony was attacked. We still had nothing
that would make a difference when the Swarmers reached Sol. We—the others and I, our ships—were the last-ditch attempt to fight back. But the shipyards at Jupiter and Ceres were only able to build a few hundred of us before the Swarmers’ annihilation waves came to the inner system and by then it was too late; they’d launched the sun-killer.

  Who’d have thought a yellow dwarf could go supernova?

  Physics said it was impossible—not enough stellar mass.

  But the Swarmers had found a way to make it happen anyway.

  “Perhaps it’s best if we leave,” Carlos said quietly. He’d grown dour as the conversation continued, and he stared morosely into the firelight as he talked. “Eden has existed without incident for thousands of years. We don’t know how humans came here, but even if the Swarmers know the Edenites are here, it doesn’t matter, because unless the Swarmers discover that we’re here….”

  Carlos looked up suddenly, his mouth stuck open.

  “What?” Wanda said.

  “You don’t think….” I said, catching Carlos’s drift.

  Bana, Jorge, they stared.

  “A trap,” Carlos and I said in unison.

  “Oh, please, no,” Wanda whispered.

  Just then, a near-blinding light flashed in the sky above. It glared brighter than the noon sun for a few seconds, then slowly began to fade.

  We tried the Link to our friends in the outer parts of the system, and got silence.

  “They’re here,” I said.

  Bana gasped, and Wanda hugged her knees, burying her face.

  “They brought humans here,” I suddenly intuited. “Once Earth and the colonies were gone, the Swarmers knew our ships still existed. They couldn’t find us to kill us, so they needed a way to bring us all together. So they could finish the job.”

  “It had been so long,” Wanda said, voice muffled. “Real people. Real, live people. The Swarmers knew we couldn’t resist such bait. They waited for us to find this place, however long it took, and—”

  More flashes sprang into the sky—a fantastic, if grotesque, fireworks display.

  The air remained silent, though we guessed that our friends in space were dying.

  “What do we do now?” Bana asked, looking genuinely sick.

  “What else can we do?” I said. “We fight!”

  • • •

  Leaving our bodies abandoned by the side of the fire, we instantaneously returned to our ships. Each of the vessels was essentially a huge, empty cylinder—the reaction chamber necessary for transluminal travel. We’d have liked to jump instantly to the front line, but jumps were suicide this deep inside Edenstar’s gravity well.

  A few of us Linked a predictable question to each other: why didn’t the detectors warn us?? But I knew why. The Swarmers had been here all along, waiting in the distant reaches of Edenstar’s Oort Cloud. Silently. Coldly. Dark, in the same way we’d often traveled dark, to avoid detection. Until they were satisfied that enough of us had arrived to make the trap worth springing.

  Deep space telemetry told us the awful truth: the Swarmers were coming from all sides and all directions, a three hundred-sixty degree, three-axis-wide attack pattern. The big mother ships—converted asteroids, just like when they attacked Earth—disgorged smaller ships, which in turn disgorged smaller ships still. We pulsed madly away from Eden, the blue world shrinking quickly to a point of light, and fell back on our battle training of old: staggered formations, twos and threes covering one another, the big antiproton generator on the bow of each ship slowly charging from our antimatter reactors.

  Gee was of little concern. Each ship had been originally built to house no crew. We had no flesh-and-blood bodies to suffer the ravages of extreme delta-vee. Our minds and personalities—our souls—had been recorded into the control computers of each ship just prior to the shipyards being hit and humanity’s capacity for self defense obliterated. Thousands of years evaporated as I recalled the battle fleet that had vainly fought to protect Earth. Then, as now, Wanda was on my flank, the others spread out a few hundred kilometers apart, trying to maximize distance without causing too much spread in the antiproton discharge.

  We fired in unison, our beams spreading and converging to form a single, massive column of antiprotons moving at near light-speed towards our intended targets, still interplanetary distances away. We didn’t wait for results. We pulsed into a new formation which would cover a new firing arc, paused for the generators to reach green, then fired again. And again. And again. Over hours.

  Tens of thousands of Swarmers perished.

  But their fleet—their ever-dispersing and multiplying fleet—was hundreds of thousands in number, and growing larger with the passage of time.

  The similarity to The Battle of Sol was undeniable. The Swarmers used no special maneuvers, no grand strategy. They came in such great numbers that even a hundred of us—our guns blazing together at once—could have only dispatched a fraction of them at any one time.

  The mood on the Link grew grim.

  We’d all seen this before. Seen it, and knew the end results.

  But one thing seemed peculiar. Where was the sun-killer?

  I Linked this question to the others, who sent the equivalent of shrugs.

  That had been something we’d seen at Sol, and not realized what was happening until it had been too late. Not a large device, the sun-killer was a bit like a bastardized superluminal reactor, only with extra shielding and inverted coils. How it penetrated so deeply into a star’s mantle or generated the chain reaction necessary to cause a yellow dwarf to blow apart remained a mystery, but we’d seen the device plunge into the heart of Sol, and none of us could ever forget the results. So where was the sun-killer this time?

  We saw only Swarmer fighters and carriers, nothing more.

  Carlos, Wanda, the others, they were frantic on the Link, relaying tactical suggestions and working far too hard to conceal the terror underlying each communication.

  It occurred to me that this might not be the first time the Swarmers had done this. Having constructed their trap, what was the use in destroying it if they still had more bugs to zap? I imagined previous collections of us—the many of us who had escaped Sol after our world was obliterated by our exploding sun—finding this planet in our wanderings; a planet populated with humans. When enough of us arrived, the Swarmers attacked, destroyed, recovered the wreckage, then returned to their lairs in the Oort, like trap door spiders, ready for the next set of prey.

  It was a clever ploy. Far more clever than any of us had suspected might be possible on the part of these aliens.

  I sent my hypothesis via Link, only to find the con-nection…muddied. Not blocked per se, just clouded. I could no longer coherently talk to any of the others. Nobody could hear me, which meant none of us could hear each other.

  The massive gaps we’d first created in the Swarmer battle line, gradually filled. Without the Link to keep us organized, our firing discipline began to falter; we could not mass our attacks into truly effective strikes. On its own, a single antiproton weapon could only clear a corridor a handful of kilometers in diameter. And our envelope of free maneuvering space was being squeezed inward, from hundreds of thousands of kilometers in diameter, to a hundred thousand kilometers, then ninety thousand, then eighty thousand….

  Carlos was the first one to go. Precision particle beam strike from somewhere in the crowding Swarmer fleet. One instant Carlos’s ship was there; the next, a ball of light and gas.

  We were now firing randomly in all directions, taking divots out of the Swarmer cloud without having any real impact.

  Bana went up. Then Charlie. And then Ormond.

  It was like skeet shooting. The Swarmers were having sport at our expense.

  And all I could think about was the clouding of the Link.

  I chanced a switch to ordinary radio. It too was jammed. In desperation, I tried a message laser. The beam lanced out towards where I knew Wanda should be.

  “Wand
a,” I broadcast to my flank-mate. “Resume parallel course with me. We’re going to get the hell out of here.”

  “How?” she replied, her thoughts muted by the ordinariness of the laser signal.

  “Just keep the laser communication open and follow me. Maximum pulse.”

  We broke and ran, delta-vee ferocious, pulsing at the limit of our structural integrity. I felt my ship complaining around me, the internal sensors going from blue to green to yellow to orange. I indicated to Wanda a somewhat diffuse sector in the enemy fleet and lasered for her to get her antiproton gun ready.

  It took agonizing moments for both of our weapons to reach capacity, then we fired in unison, clearing a path through the Swarmer cloud approximately twenty kilometers wide. We pulsed like crazy, seeing the escape window begin to close almost as quickly as it had opened. I lasered to Wanda to drop behind me as I waited for my gun charge, then fired it again, re-opening the path.

  A particle beam lashed me but it was a glancing blow. Systems across my ship went red.

  “Rordy,” Wanda said through the laser, “we’re not going to make it.”

  “We have to make it,” I lasered back. “We’re all that’s left. Someone has to get out of here. Get to the transluminal boundary. Go find and tell the others who are left.”

  “We can’t abandon Eden,” she said.

  “Eden will be fine,” I told her.

  Then I sent across my trap door spider hypothesis, and she understood.

  “As long as they think some of us are still out there,” I lasered, “they won’t destroy Eden. Not yet. Not when they know there are people around who will come.”

  Another particle beam bit me. Then another. These were smaller, from the littlest ships in the Swarmer line. I opened up with my antiproton weapon and re-cleared the corridor a final time. Most of me was red—which meant dead—and I wondered how much bigger I might make the hole if I simply dropped the antimatter containment separators entirely when I hit the demarcation point of the Swarmer line—giving Wanda a great big hole.

 

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