Red was putting on the plastic layers that made up his Mars suit. He picked me up and I cried out in startled pain—the skin on my right forearm and breast and hip had frozen to the rock—and he held me close with three arms while the fourth did something to seal the plastic. Then he held me with all four arms and crooned something reassuring to weird creatures from another planet. He smelled like a mushroom you wouldn't eat, but I could breathe again.
I was bleeding some from the ripped skin and my lungs and throat still didn't want to work, and I was being hugged to death by a nightmarish singing monster, so rather than put up with it all my body just passed out again.
I woke up to my lover fighting with Red, with me in between. Red was trying to hold on to me with his small arms while Paul was going after him with some sort of pipe, and he was defending himself with the large arms. “No!” I screamed. “Paul! No!"
Of course he couldn't hear anything in the vacuum, but I guess anyone can lip-read the word “no.” He stepped back with an expression on his face that I had never seen. Anguish, I suppose, or rage. Well, here was his lover, naked and bleeding, in the many arms of a gruesome alien, looking way too much like a movie poster from a century ago.
Taka Wu and Mike Silverman were carrying a spalling laser. “Red,” I said, “watch out for the guys with the machine."
"I know,” he said, “We've seen you use it underground. That's how they tore up the first set of doors. We can't let them use it again."
It was an interesting standoff. Four big aliens in their plastic-wrap suits. Paul and my father and mother and nine other humans in Mars suits, armed with tomato stakes and shovels and one laser, the humans looking kind of pissed off and frightened. The Martians probably were, too. A good thing we hadn't brought any guns to this planet.
Red whispered. “Can you make them leave the machine and follow us?"
"I don't know ... they're scared.” I mouthed “Mother, Dad,” and pointed back the way we had come. “Fol-low us,” I said with slow exaggeration. Confined as I was, I couldn't make any sweeping gestures, but I jabbed one forefinger back the way we had come.
Dad stepped forward slowly, his hands palm out. Mother started to follow him. Red shifted me around and held out his hand and my father took it and held his other one out for Mother. She took it and we went crabwise through the dark layers of the second airlock. Then the third and the fourth, and we were on the slope overlooking the lake.
The crowd of aliens we'd left behind was still there, perhaps a daunting sight for Mother and Dad. But they held on, and the crowd parted to let us through.
I noticed ice was forming on the edge of the lake. Were we going to kill them all?
"Pardon,” Red muttered, and held me so hard I couldn't breathe, while he wiggled out of his suit and left it on the ground, then set me down gently.
It was like walking on ice—on dry ice—and my breath came out in plumes. But he and I walked together along the blue line paths, followed by my parents, down to the sanctuary of the white room. Green was waiting there with my skinsuit. I gratefully pulled it on and zipped up. “Boots?"
"Boots,” she said, and went back the way we'd come.
"Are you all right?” Red asked.
My father had his helmet off. “These things speak English?"
Red sort of shrugged. “And Chinese, in my case. We've been eavesdropping on you since you discovered radio."
My father fainted dead away.
* * * *
Green produced this thing that looked like a gray cabbage and held it by Dad's face. I had a vague memory of it being used on me, sort of like an oxygen source. He came around in a minute or so.
"Are you actually Martians?” Mother said. “You can't be."
Red nodded in a jerky way. “We are Martians only the same way you are. We live here. But we came from somewhere else."
"Where?” Dad croaked.
"No time for that. You have to talk to your people. We're losing air and heat and have to repair the door. Then we have to treat your children. Carmen was near death."
Dad got to his knees and stood up, then stooped to pick up his helmet. “You know how to fix it? The laser damage."
"It knows how to repair itself. But it's like a wound in the body. We have to use stitches or glue to close the hole. Then it grows back."
"So you just need for us to not interfere."
"And help, by showing where the damage is."
He started to put his helmet on. “What about Carmen?"
"Yeah. Where's my suit?"
Red faced me. I realized you could tell that by the little black mouth slit. “You're very weak. You should stay here."
"But—"
"No time to argue. Stay here till we return.” All of them but Green went bustling through the airlock.
"So,” I said to her. “I guess I'm a hostage."
"My English is not good,” she said. "Parlez-vous francais?" I said no. "Nihongo de hanashimasu ka?"
Probably Japanese, or maybe Martian. “No, sorry.” I sat down and waited for the air to run out.
* * * *
6. Zen for morons
Green put a kind of black fibrous poultice on the places where my skin had burned off from the icy ground, and the pain stopped immediately. That raised a big question I couldn't ask, having neglected both French and Japanese in school. But help was on its way.
While I was getting dressed after Green had finished her poulticing, another green one showed up.
"Hello,” it said. “I was asked here because I know English. Some English."
"I—I'm glad to meet you. I'm Carmen."
"I know. And you want me to say my name. But you couldn't say it yourself. So give me a name."
"Um ... Robin Hood?"
"I am Robin Hood, then. I am pleased to meet you."
I couldn't think of any pleasantries, so I dove right in: “How come your medicine works for us? My mother says we're unrelated at the most basic level, DNA."
"Am I ‘DNA’ now? I thought I was Robin Hood."
This was not going to be easy. “No. Yes. You're Robin Hood. Why does your medicine work on humans?"
"I don't understand. Why shouldn't it? It's medicine."
So much for the Enigmatic Superior Aliens theory. “Look. You know what a molecule is?"
"I know the word. Very small. Too small to see.” He took his big head in two large-arm hands and wiggled it, the way Red did when he was agitated. “Forgive me. Science is not my ... there is no word. I can't know science. I don't think any of us can, really. But especially not me."
I gestured at everything. “Then where did this all come from? It didn't just happen."
"That's right. It didn't happen. It's always been this way."
I needed a scientist and they sent me a philosopher. Not too bright, either. “Can you ask her?” I pointed to Green. “How can her medicine work, when we're chemically so different?"
"She's not a ‘her.’ Sometimes she is, and sometimes she's a ‘he.’ Right now she's a ‘what.’”
"Okay. Would you please ask it?"
They exchanged a long series of wheedly-poot-rasp sounds.
"It's something like this,” Robin Hood said. “Curing takes intelligence. With Earth humans, the intelligence comes along with the doctor, or scientists. With us, it's in the medicine.” He touched the stuff on my breast, which made me jump. “It knows you are different and works on you differently. It works on the very smallest level."
"Nanotechnology,” I said.
"Maybe smaller than that,” he said. “As small as chemistry. Intelligent molecules."
"You do know about nanotechnology?"
"Only from TV and the cube.” He spidered over to the bed. “Please sit. You make me nervous, balanced there on two legs."
I obliged him. “This is how different we are, Carmen. You know when nanotechnology was discovered."
"End of the twentieth century sometime."
"There's n
o such knowledge for us. This medicine has always been. Like the living doors that keep the air in. Like the things that make the air, concentrate the oxygen. Somebody made them, but that was so long ago, it was before history. Before we came to Mars."
"Where did you come from? When?"
"We would call it Earth, though it's not your Earth, of course. Really far away, really long ago.” He paused. “More than ten thousand ares."
A hundred centuries before the Pyramids. “But that's not long enough ago for Mars to be inhabitable. Mars was Mars a million ares ago."
He made an almost human gesture, all four hands palms up. “It could be much longer. At ten thousand ares, history becomes mystery. Our far-away Earth could be a myth, and the Others who created us. There aren't any spaceships lying around.
"What deepens the mystery is that we could never live on Mars, on the surface, but we could live on Earth, your Earth. So why did the Others bring us many light years just to leave us on the wrong planet?"
I thought about what Red had said. “Maybe because we're too dangerous."
"That's a theory. Or it might have been the dinosaurs. They looked pretty dangerous."
Dinosaurs. I took a deep breath. “Robin Hood. Have you, have your people, actually been on Mars that long? I mean, dinosaurs were on Earth a long time before people."
He wiggled his head again, with his big hands. “I don't know! You have to ask the story family, the history family. The yellow people?"
I remembered the two dressed in amber in that room where I was taken for inspection. “Okay. I'll ask a yellow person. So what do green people do? Are you doctors?"
"Oh, no.” He pointed at the other. “It's green and it's a doctor. But why would you think that all of us greens are doctors? Every human I ever saw wears white, but I don't think therefore that you all have the same function."
Good grief. Was I the first cross-species racist? “I'm sorry. What is it that you do, then?"
He shuffled forward and back like a nervous spider. “I'm not a ‘do'—” He put a small hand on my knee. “—I'm more a ‘be.’ You humans...” He touched his head with both large hands but didn't wiggle it. “You are all about what you do. Like, what do you do, Carmen?"
"I'm a student. I study things."
"But that's not a ‘do’ at all! That's a be, like me."
I was either out of my depth or into a profound shallowness. “So while you're ... being, what do you ... be? What do you be that's different from what others be?"
"You see? You see?” He emitted a sound like a thumbnail scraping across a comb. “'What do you be'—you can't even say it!"
"Robin Hood. Look. I'm both a do and a be—my ‘be’ is I'm a human being, female, American, whatever—it's what I am when I'm just standing here. But then I can go do something, like get a drink of water, and that doesn't change my be at all."
"But it does! It always does. Don't you see?"
Ontology, meet linguistics. Go to your corners and come out swinging. “You're right, Robin. You're absolutely right. We just don't put things quite that way."
"Put things?"
"We don't say it quite that way.” I took a deep breath. “Tell me about these Others. They lived very far away?"
"Yes, very far. We used to call it something like the ‘heaven’ some humans talk about, but since we got TV and the cube, we know it's just really far away. Some other star."
"But you don't know which one."
"No, not which and not how long ago. But very far and very long. The story family says it was a time before time had meaning. The builder family says it must be so far away that light takes ares to get from that star to here. Because there are no stars any closer."
"That's interesting. You don't have telescopes and things, but you figured that out?"
"We don't need telescopes. We get that kind of knowledge from you humans, from the cube."
"Before the cube, though. They were up in heaven?"
"I guess so. We also learned about gods from you. The Others are sort of gods; they created us. But they actually exist."
Red suddenly appeared to rescue me from Sunday school. “Carmen, if you feel able, we'd like to have you up where we're working. The humans are not understanding us too well."
My experience with Robin Hood didn't make me too hopeful. But I could do “pick this up and put it there.” I stepped into my suit and chinned the heat up all the way and followed him up to the cold.
* * * *
7. Suffer the little children
The damage from the laser was repaired in a few hours, and I was bundled back to the colony to be rayed and poked and prodded and interviewed by doctors and scientists. They couldn't find anything wrong with me, human or alien in origin.
"The treatment they gave you sounds like primitive arm-waving,” Dr. Jefferson said. “The fact that they don't know why it works is scary."
"They don't know why anything works over there. It sounds like it's all hand-me-down science from thousands of years ago. Ares."
He nodded and frowned. “You're the only data point we have. If the disease were less serious, I'd try to introduce it to the kids one at a time and monitor their progress. But there's no time. And everyone may have it already."
Rather than try to take a bunch of sick children over there, they invited the Martians to come to us. It was Red and Green, logically, with Robin Hood and an amber one following closely behind. I was outside, waiting for them, and escorted Red through the airlock.
Half the adults in the colony seemed crowded into the changing room for a first look at the aliens. There was a lot of whispered conversation while Red worked his way out of his suit.
"It's hot,” he said. “The oxygen makes me dizzy. This is less than Earth, though?"
"Slightly less,” Dr. Jefferson said. He was in the front of the crowd. “Like living on a mountain."
"It smells strange. But not bad. I can smell your hydroponics."
"Where are les enfantes?" Green said as soon as she was out of the suit. “No time talk.” She held out her bag of herbs and chemicals and shook it.
The children had been prepared with the idea that these “Martians” were our friends and had a way to cure them. There were pictures of them and their cave. But a picture of an eight-legged potato-head monstrosity isn't nearly as distressing as the real thing—especially to a room full of children who are terribly ill with something no one can explain, but which they know is Martian in origin. So their reaction when Dr. Jefferson walked in with Dargo Solingen and Green was predictable—screaming and crying and, from the ambulatory ones, escape attempts. Of course the doors were locked, with people like me spying in through the windows, looking in on the chaos.
Everybody loves Dr. Jefferson, and almost everybody is afraid of Dargo Solingen, and eventually the combination worked. Green just quietly stood there like Exhibit A, which helped. It takes a while not to think of giant spiders when you see them walk.
They had talked about the possibility of sedating the children, to make the experience less traumatic, but the only data they had about the treatment was my description, and they were afraid that if the children were too relaxed, they wouldn't cough forcefully enough to expel all the crap. Without sedation, the experience might haunt them for the rest of their lives, but at least they would have lives.
They wanted to keep the children isolated, and both adults would have to stay in there for awhile after the treatment, to make sure they hadn't caught it, the Martians’ assurances notwithstanding.
So the only thing between the child who was being treated and the ones who were waiting for it was a sheet suspended from the ceiling, and after the first one, they all had heard what they were in for. It was done in age order, youngest to oldest, and at first there was some undignified running around, grabbing the victims and dragging them to behind the sheet, where they volubly did the hairball performance.
But the children all seemed to sleep peacefully after the t
hing was over, which calmed most of the others—if they were like me, they hadn't been sleeping much. Card, one of the oldest, who had to wait the longest, pretended to be unconcerned and sleep before the treatment. I know how brave that was of him; he doesn't handle being sick well. As if I did.
The rest of us were mostly crowded into the mess hall, talking with Red and Robin Hood. The other one asked that we call him Fly-in-Amber, and said that it was his job to remember, so he wouldn't be saying much.
Red said that his job, his function, was hard to describe in human terms. He was sort of like a mayor, a local leader or organizer. He also did things that called for a lot of muscular strength.
Robin Hood said he was being modest; for forty ares he had been a respected leader. When their surveillance device showed that I was in danger of dying, they all looked to Red to make the decision and then act on it.
"It was not a hard decision,” he said. “Ever since you landed, we knew that a confrontation was inevitable. I took this opportunity to initiate it, so it would be on our terms. I couldn't know that Carmen would catch this thing, which you call a disease, and bring it back home with her."
"You don't call it a disease?” one of the scientists asked.
"No ... I guess in your terms it might be called a ‘phase,’ a developmental phase. You go from being a young child to being an older child. For us, it's unpleasant but not life threatening."
"It doesn't make sense,” the xenologist Howard Jain said. “It's like a human teenager who has acne, transmitting it to a trout. Or even more extreme than that—the trout at least has DNA."
"And you and the trout have a common ancestor,” Robin Hood said. “We have no idea what we might have evolved from."
"Did you get the idea of evolution from us?” he asked.
"No, not as a practical matter. We've been crossbreeding plants for a long time. But Darwinism, yes, from you. From your television programs back in the twentieth century."
"Wait,” my father said. “How did you build a television receiver in the first place?"
There was a pause, and then Red spoke: “We didn't. It's always been there."
Analog SFF, March 2008 Page 24