Arthur C Clarke - Light Of Other Days

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by Light Of Other Days (lit)


  The grandmother's head flicked from side to side, ner- vously, every few seconds, even as she chewed on fruit and leaves. Bobby wondered what predators might loom out of this strange sky to target an unwary primate.

  With Bobby's unspoken consent, David released the moment, and they fell away once more. The background blurred into a blue-green wash, and the ancestor's face flowed, growing smaller, her eyes wider and habitually black. Perhaps she had become nocturnal.

  Bobby glimpsed vegetation, thick and green, much of it unfamiliar. And yet now the land seemed strangely empty: no giant herbivores, no pursuing carnivores crossed the empty stage beyond his ancestor's thin- cheeked, shadowed, huge-eyed face. The world was like a city deserted by humans, he thought, with the tiny creatures, the rats and mice and voles burrowing among the huge ruins.

  But now the forests began to shrink back, melting away like summer mist. Soon the land became skeletal, a plain marked by broken stumps of trees that must once have risen tall.

  Ice gathered suddenly, to lie in thick swaths across the land. Bobby sensed life drawing out of this world like a slow tide.

  And then clouds came, immersing the world in dark- ness. Rain, dimly glimpsed, began to leap from the dark- ened ground. Great heaps of bones assembled from the mud, and flesh gathered over them in gray lumps.

  "Acid rain," murmured David.

  Light flared, dazzling, overwhelming.

  It was not the light of day, but of a fire that seemed to span the landscape. The fire's violence was huge, star- tling, terrifying.

  But it drew back.

  Under a leaden sky, the fires began to collapse into isolated blazes that dwindled further, each licking flame restoring the greenery of another leafy branch. The fire drew at last into tight, glowing pellets that leapt into the sky, and the fleeing sparks merged into a cloud of shoot- ing stars under a black sky.

  Now the thick black clouds drew back like a curtain. A great wind passed, restoring^smashed branches to the trees, gently ushering flocks of flying creatures to the branches. And on the horizon a fan of light was gath- ering, growing pink and white, at last turning into a bea- con beam of brilliance pointing directly up into the sky.

  It was a column of molten rock.

  The column collapsed into an orange glow. And, like a second dawn, a glowing, diffuse mass rose above the horizon, a long, glowing tail spreading across half the sky in a great flamboyant curve. Masked by the daylight, brilliant in the night, the comet receded, day by day, drawing its cargo of destruction back into the depths of the Solar System.

  The brothers paused in a suddenly restored world, a world of richness and peace.

  The ancestor was a wide-eyed, frightened creature that lingered above ground, perhaps incautiously trapped there.

  Beyond her, Bobby glimpsed what appeared to be the shore of an inland sea. Lush jungles lapped the swampy lowlands along the coast, and a broad river decanted from distant blue mountains. The broad ridged backs of what must be crocodiles sliced through the river's slug- gish, muddy waters. This was a land thick with life— unfamiliar in detail, and yet not so unlike the forests of his own youth.

  But the sky was not a true blue—more a subtle violet, he thought; even the shapes of the clouds, scattered over- head, seemed wrong. Perhaps the very air was different here, so deep in time.

  A herd of homed creatures moved along the swampy coast, looking something like rhinos. But their move- ments were strange, almost birdlike, as, lumbering, they mingled, browsed, nested, fought, preened. And there was a herd of what looked at first glance like ostriches— walking upright, with bobbing heads, nervous move- ments and startled, suspicious glances.

  In the trees Bobby glimpsed a huge shadow, moving slowly, as if tracking the giant plant-eaters. Perhaps this was a carnivore—even, he thought with a thrill, a raptor.

  All around the dinosaur herds, clouds of insects hov- ered.

  "We're privileged," David said. "We've a relatively good view of the wildlife. The dinosaur age has been a disappointment for the time tourists. Like Africa, it turns out to be huge and baffling and dusty and mostly empty. It stretches, after all. over hundreds of millions of years."

  "But," Bobby said dryly, "it was kind of disappointing to discover that T. rex was after all just a scavenger.... All this beauty, David, and no mind to appreciate it. Was it waiting for us all this time?"

  "Ah, yes, the unseen beauty. 'Were the beautiful volute and cone shells of the Eocene epoch and the gracefully sculpted ammonites of the Secondary period created that man might ages afterward admire them in his cabinet?* Darwin, in the Origin of Species."

  "So he didn't know either."

  "I suppose not. This is an ancient place, Bobby- You can see it: an antique community that has evolved to- gether, across hundreds of millions of years. And yet—"

  "And yet it would all disappear, when the Cretaceous Wormwood did its damage."

  "The Earth is nothing but a vast graveyard, Bobby. And, as we dive deeper into the past, those bones are rising again to confront us... -"

  "Not quite. We have the birds."

  "The birds, yes. Rather a beautiful end to this partic- ular evolutionary subplot, don't you think? Let's hope we turn out so well. Let's go on."

  "Yes."

  So they plunged once more, dropping safely through the dinosaurs' Mesozoic summer, two hundred million years deep.

  Ancient jungles swept in a meaningless green wash across Bobby's view, framing "the timid, mindless eyes of millions of generations of ancestors, breeding, hoping, dying.

  The greenery abruptly cleared, revealing a flat dusty plain, an empty sky.

  The denuded land was a desert, baked hard and flat beneath a high, harsh sun, the sands uniformly reddish in color. Even the hills had shifted and flowed, so deep was time.

  The ancestor here was a small reptile-like creature who nibbled busily on what looked like the remains of a baby rat. She was on the fringe of a scrubby forest, of stunted ferns and conifers, that bordered a straggling river.

  Something like an iguana scampered nearby, flashing rows of sharp teeth. Perhaps that was the mother of all the dinosaurs, Bobby mused. And, beyond the trees,

  Bobby made out what looked like warthogs, grubbing in the mud close to the sluggish water.

  David grunted. ^Lystrosaurs" he said. "Luckiest crea- tures who ever lived. The only large animal to survive the extinction event—"

  Bobby was confused. "You mean the dinosaur-killer comet?"

  "No," David said grimly. "I mean another, the one we must soon pass through, two hundred and fifty million years deep. The worst of them all..."

  So that was why the great lush jungle panorama of the dinosaurs had drawn back. Once again, the Earth was emptying itself of life. Bobby felt a profound sense of dread.

  They descended once more.

  At last the final, stunted trees shuddered back into their buried seeds, and the last greenery—struggling weeds and shrubs—shriveled and died. A scorched land began to reconstitute itself, a place of burned-out stumps and fallen branches and, here and there, heaped-up bones. The rocks, increasingly exposed by the receding tide of life, became powerfully red.

  "It's like Mars."

  "And for the same reason," David said grimly. "Mars has no life to speak of; and, in life's absence, its sedi- ments have rusted: slowly burning, subject to erosion and wind, killing heat and cold. And so Earth, as we approach this greatest of the deaths, was the same: all but lifeless, the rocks eroding away."

  And all through this, a chain of tiny ancestors clung to life, subsisting in muddy hollows at the fringes of inland seas that had almost—but not quite—dried to bowls of lethal Martian dust.

  Earth in this era was very different, David said. Tec- tonic drift had brought all of the continents into a single giant assemblage, the largest landmass in the history of the planet. The tropical areas were dominated by im- mense deserts, white the high latitudes were scoured by glaciation. In the continenta
l interior the climate swung wildly between killing heat and dry freezing.

  And this already fragile world was hit by a further calamity; a great excess of carbon dioxide, which choked animals and added greenhouse heating to an already near-lethal climate.

  "Animal life in particular suffered: almost knocked back to the level of pond life. But for us it's nearly over, Bobby; the excess CO, is drawing back into where it came from: deep sea traps and a great outpouring of flood basalts in Siberia, gases brought up from Earth's interior to poison its surface. And soon that monstrous !". world continent will break up.

  ;; "Just remember this: life survived. In fact, our ances- f tors survived. Fix on that. If not, we wouldn't be here." ;;' As Bobby studied the flickering mix of reptile and rodent features that centered in his vision, he found that idea cold comfort-

  They moved beyond the extinction pulse into the deeper past.

  The recovering Earth seemed a very different place. There was no sign of mountains, and the ancestors clung to life at the margins of enormous, shallow inland seas that washed back and forth with the ages. And, slowly, after millions of years, as the choking gases drew back into the ground, green returned to planet Earth.

  The ancestor had become a low-slung, waddling crea- ture, covered with short dun fur. But as the generations - fluttered past, her jaw lengthened, her skull morphing ; back, and at last she seemed to lose her teeth, leaving a ;. mouth covered with a hard, beaklike material. Now the fur shrank away and the snout lengthened further, and the ancestor became a creature indistinguishable, to Bobby's untrained eye, from a lizard.

  He realized, in fact, that he was approaching so great a depth in time that the great families of land animals— the turtles, the mammals and the lizards, crocodiles and birds—were merging back into the mother group, the reptiles.

  Then, more than three hundred and fifty million years deep, the ancestor morphed again. Her head became blunter, her limbs shorter and stubbier, her body more streamlined. Perhaps she was amphibian now. At last those stubby limbs became mere lobed fins that melted into her body.

  "Life is retreating from the land," David said. "The last of the invertebrates, probably a scorpion, is crawling back into the sea. On land, the plants will soon lose their leaves, and will no longer be upright. And after that the only form of life left on land will be simple encrusting forms...."

  Suddenly Bobby was immersed, carried by his retreat- ing grandmother into a shallow sea.

  The water was crowded. There was a coral reef below, stretching into the milky blue distance. It was littered with what 'looked like giant long-stemmed flowers, through which a bewildering variety of shelled creatures cruised, looking for food. He recognized nautiloids, what looked like a giant ammonite.

  The ancestor was a small, knifelike, unremarkable fish, one of a school which darted to and fro, their move- ments as complex and nervous as those of any modem species.

  In the distance a shark cruised, its silhouette unmis- takable, even over this length of time. The fish school, wary of the shark, darted away, and Bobby felt a pulse of empathy for his ancestors.

  They accelerated once more: four hundred million years deep, four hundred and fifty.

  There was a flurry of evolutionary experimentation, as varieties of bony armor fluttered over the ancestors' sleek bodies, some of them appearing to last little more than a few generations, as if these primitive fish had lost me knack of a successful body plan. It was clear to Bobby that life was a gathering of information and com- plexity, information stored in the very structures of liv- ing things—information won painfully, over millions of generations, at the cost of pain and death, and now, in this reversed view, being shed almost carelessly.

  ... And then, in an instant, the ugly primeval fish disappeared. David slowed the descent again.

  There were no fish in this antique sea. The ancestor was no more than a pale wormlike animal, cowering in a seabed of rippled sand.

  David said, "From now on it gets simpler. There are only a few seaweeds—and at last, a billion years deep, only single-celled life, all the way back to the begin- ning."

  "How much further?"

  He said gently. "Bobby, we've barely begun. We must travel three times as deep as to this point."

  The descent resumed.

  The ancestor was a crude worm whose form shifted and flickered—and now, suddenly, she shriveled to a mere speck of protoplasm, embedded in a mat of algae.

  And when they fell a little fin-ther, there was only the algae,

  Abruptly they were plunged into darkness.

  "Shit," Bobby said. "What happened?"

  "I don't know."

  David let them fall deeper, one million years, two. Still the universal darkness persisted.

  At last David broke the link with the ancestor of this period—a microbe or a simple seaweed—and brought the viewpoint out of the ocean, to hover a thousand ki- lometers above the belly of the Earth.

  The ocean was white: covered in ice from pole to equator, great sheets of it scarred by folds and creases hundreds of kilometers long. Beyond the icy limb of the planet a crescent Moon was rising, that battered face unchanged from Bobby's time, its features already uni- maginably ancient even at this deep epoch. But the cra- dled new Moon shone almost as brightly, in Earth's reflected light, as the crescent in direct sunlight.

  Earth had become dazzling bright, perhaps brighter than Venus—if there had been eyes to see.

  "Look at that," David breathed. Somewhere close to Earth's equator there was a circular ice structure,, the walls much softened, a low eroded mound at its heart. "That's an impact crater. An old one. That ice covering has been there a long time."

  They resumed their descent. The shifting details of the ice sheets—the cracks and crumpled ridges and lines of dunelike mounds of snow—were blurred to a pearly smoothness. But still the global freeze persisted.

  Abruptly, after a fall of a further fifty million years, the ice cleared, like frost evaporating from a heated win- dow. But, just as Bobby felt a surge of relief, the ice clamped down again, covering the planet from pole to pole.

  There were three more breaks in the glaciation, before at last it cleared permanently.

  The ice revealed a world that was Earthlike, and yet not. There were blue oceans and continents. But the con- tinents were uniformly barren, dominated by harsh ice- tipped mountains or by rust-red deserts, and their shapes were utterly unfamiliar to Bobby.

  He watched the slow waltz of the continents as they assembled themselves, under the blind prompting of tec- tonics, into a single giant landmass.

  'There's the answer," David said grimly. *The super- continent, alternately coalescing and breaking up, is the cause of the glaciation. When that big mother breaks up, it creates a lot more shoreline. That stimulates the pro- duction of a lot more life—which right now is restricted to microbes and algae, living in inland seas and shallow coastal waters—and the life draws down an excess of carbon dioxide from the atmosphere. The greenhouse ef- feet collapses, and the sun is a little dimmer than in our times—"

  "And so, glaciation."

  "Yes. On and off, for two hundred million years. There can have been virtually no photosynthesis down there for millions of years at a time. It's astonishing life survived at all."

  The two of them descended once more into the belly of the ocean, and allowed the DNA trace to focus their attention on an undistinguished mat of green algae. Somewhere here was embedded the unremarkable cell which was me ancestor of all the humans who ever lived.

  And above, a small shoal of creatures like simple jel- lyfish sailed through the cold blue water. Farther away, Bobby could make out more complex creatures: fronds, bulbs, quilted mats attached to the seafloor or free- floating.

  Bobby said, ^They don't look like seaweed to me."

  "My God," David said, startled. 'They look like edi- acarans. Multicelled life-forms. But the ediacarans aren't scheduled to evolve for a couple of hundred m
illion years. Something's wrong."

  They resumed their descent. The hints of multicelled life were soon lost, as life shed what it had painfully learned.

  A billion years deep and again darkness fell, like a hammer blow.

  "More ice?" Bobby asked.

  "I think I understand," David said grimly. "It was a pulse of evolution—an early event, something we haven't recognized from the fossils—an attempt by life to grow past me single-celled stage. But it's doomed to be wiped out by the snowball glaciation, and two hun- dred million years of progress will be lost.... Damn, damn."

  When the ice cleared, a further hundred million years deep, again mere were hints of more complex, multicel- led life forms grazing among the algae mats: another false start, to be eliminated by the savage gtaciation, and again the brothers were forced to watch as life was crushed back to its most primitive forms.

 

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