The Tabit Genesis

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The Tabit Genesis Page 30

by Tony Gonzales


  Vadim stopped walking.

  ‘The Chancellor has become aware of Ceti’s plans,’ Lao said, smugness again on full display, ‘and your attempt to hide them from her.’

  ‘Who?’ Vadim said.

  ‘Captain Lyons, naturally,’ Lao said. ‘Which brings me to the second reason why I’m here: Chancellor Vespa has summoned you to Tabit Prime. She means to question you before the senate.’

  Vadim showed not a trace of emotion.

  ‘Captain Wyllym Lyons is to be arrested at once,’ he ordered.

  Lao’s eyes widened.

  ‘On what charge?’

  ‘Treason, dereliction of duty, and homicidal negligence,’ Vadim said, resuming his stroll. ‘Have Tyrell do it. Always better to have a friend bring bad news.’

  ‘Yes, sir,’ Lao said.

  ‘What a convenience for the highborns,’ Vadim said. ‘Now I have reason to question his entire pilot selection, don’t I?’

  ‘We believe Captain Lyons acted on his own volition,’ Lao said. ‘But the whispers began once the Second Armoured received deployment orders.’

  Vadim stopped dead in his tracks.

  ‘I beg your pardon?’

  ‘Admiral Larksson had them reassigned to the Archangel,’ Lao said.

  They had reached the forest’s edge, and a pathway emerged from the packed soil. A wheeled drone scurried past their feet, collecting the pine cones strewn about. Just beyond the fence was a street lined with buildings. Some people were nearby, many looking directly at him.

  ‘Why did he do that?’ Vadim asked.

  Lao straightened his posture.

  ‘Standard procedure,’ he said. ‘All of our capital assets have infantry units on board …’

  ‘He is as stupid as he is arrogant,’ Vadim growled. ‘If I see an armed soldier anywhere near that ship, I’ll have both your stars.’

  ‘Sir, wh—?’

  ‘Because he’ll incite a panic, you idiot,’ Vadim fumed. ‘Moving ships about is one thing. Mobilising armoured divisions is something else, and frightened civilians are the last thing we need. Tell him to rotate the division to another assignment.’

  Lao began fumbling in his coat for his corelink.

  ‘I don’t know if that’s possible,’ he mumbled.

  ‘Then find a way to make it possible,’ Vadim snapped. ‘For the last time, that Ceti fleet won’t get near the Archangel. Stop acting like a frightened child and follow your orders, Admiral.’

  ‘Yes, sir,’ Lao said, reddening. ‘What shall I tell Chancellor Vespa?’

  ‘Nothing,’ Vadim said. ‘You will tell her absolutely nothing. Is that clear?’

  ‘Yes, sir.’

  ‘Now get out of my sight.’

  Lao forced a quick salute and scurried away, hurrying towards the street. Moments later, a Navy courier arrived to pick him up. The crowd that had gathered went back to their business, some nodding their approval.

  Everything, Vadim knew, was going precisely according to plan.

  27

  ADAM

  In the view from orbit, there was no planetary curve to Zeus. There was only an infinite, flat orange disc whose horizon met the absolute blackness of space. In the opening moments of descent, there was no visual cue of falling. As the sled accelerated, the horizon gradually disappeared, and the first jolt of the metal cage announced stratospheric entry. As wisps of ammonia condensate streaked past the canopy, the roiling cloud tops of the troposphere far below gave the first immense perspective of height.

  By the time the platform emerged into view, Adam had spotted a dozen large hunters circling nearby. And instead of following rigid patrol patterns, their movements were playful – lazy tracks punctuated by the occasional ‘hang tail’, in which one would fully extend its flaps to hold stationary in the wind current for a few moments before freefalling, converting that sudden momentum in a series of loops.

  With two kilometres remaining, Adam spotted the cause of their elation: an enormous school of sturgeons was approaching. The shimmering effervescence of their spines was bright enough to cast shadows on the rig. By the time the sled doors opened, Adam could see hunters gracefully darting into the swarms and emerging with a sturgeon or two in their grasp, absorbing the meal through their transparent mandibles, the carcasses merging and disappearing into the hunters’ gelatinous flesh.

  Zeus was thriving with life. And Adam was dead inside.

  As the otherworldly alien scene swirled around him, Adam muddled through his routine devoid of emotion. He knew neither happiness nor sadness, anger nor love, regret nor hope. He knew only the Rig, and Helium-3 Production, and Pressure Differential Calculations, and Parts Per Million Samplings. Adam had become an organic machine; an intelligent, self-aware mining mech. The rig had never been more productive; every intake was running at optimal efficiency, wasting none of the ‘noble gold’ in their path.

  His mother and sister loved to count it all, and both seemed happier now that Dad was dead. Their indifference to his passing was evident by the manner in which he was laid to rest: cremated in the trash disposal and jettisoned into orbit along with other atomised flotsam. Aside from a few pictures and corelink recordings, there was no evidence of his existence anywhere on the rig.

  A sudden radio noise startled him.

  ‘Brat Face,’ Abby squawked. ‘Mom wants to know when you’re installing the radars.’

  The neglected equipment was sitting on the platform deck, still packaged in original factory crates. Mom and Abby were taking their newfound profits and reinvesting them into the rig to it more attractive for sale, the added benefit of which was that they could keep a closer eye on what he was doing.

  ‘I’ll get to it later,’ Adam said.

  ‘You said that yesterday, and the day before that, you little shit.’

  ‘Then come down here and install them yourself,’ Adam snapped, slamming a tank filled to capacity with Helium-3 onto the deck. He was tempted to heave it over the side.

  ‘That’s out of character,’ Abby said, in the most condescending tone possible. ‘I’m sorry you’re upset. But the radars are for your safety. It’s dangerous to mine without them.’

  ‘My safety?’ Adam mocked. ‘What do you care? Dad was the only one who did.’

  As he resumed work, he noticed a change in the hunters’ behaviour. Instead of playful beasts, they had become curious sentries, showing more interest in the platform than the bountiful herds of sustenance nearby.

  ‘It’s a difficult time for all of us,’ Abby said. ‘But we’re so close to being able to move on.’

  ‘To what?’

  ‘Anything else.’

  ‘I’ve got a say in that!’ Adam shouted, dismissing another subtle change in the hunters’ behaviour. ‘Dad said I would!’

  ‘Adam, you’re just – too young.’

  ‘But not too young to be down here?’

  ‘We’re grateful for your bravery,’ Abby said, exasperated. ‘But Mom and I make the important decisions now, because that’s what we’re better at.’

  ‘You’re not better at it,’ Adam said. ‘Not even close.’

  ‘Okay, you want to be a grown-up? Here’s a clue,’ Abby hissed. ‘The sooner you accept that Dad is gone, the easier this will be for everyone. So install the fucking radars. Please.’

  She cut the line.

  In that moment, Adam hated his sister so much he wished she was dead as well. And then, realising what he had just hoped for, he felt horrible shame. The darkness in his heart was getting worse. He had never felt more lost. Even the hunters and sturgeons had abandoned him. The sky was clear and he was alone in the clouds of Zeus once again.

  He felt like crying, but was too exhausted to find the tears. Adam sat the mech down, and then onto its back. Gravity felt so good; he considered sleeping here instead of floating in a tethered bedroll. Looking up at the yellow clouds, he closed his eyes, and fell asleep.

  What awoke him was the tapping.

 
A steady cadence of metal striking metal drew him from a fitful dream about his father.

  Then came the realisation that it was darker than usual, followed by a revolting awareness that the mech’s arm was being lifted and dropped onto the deck by something other than his own impulses.

  Sitting upright, Adam saw Pegasus suspended above the rig, held in place by hunters, its expansive underside awash in a torrent of electrical activity. One of its enormous tentacles gently released its grip on the arm of Adam’s mech.

  The console was filled with its attempt to communicate with him.

  ADAM

  AWAKEN

  Adam keyed the radio on, locking out the channel that his sister was using. It was good to see Pegasus, even if its menacing, overwhelming appearance turned his stomach into a ball of ice.

  ‘Uh … hello,’ he said, shrugging in disbelief. ‘How are you?’

  A different pattern of flashes appeared, originating from four different locations on the beast’s underside. Adam recognised that two were counting off letters; one forward, the other in reverse; the second set was numbers, one counting forward, the other in reverse.

  Pegasus was offering a more efficient way to communicate: four simultaneous pulse channels instead of one.

  ‘Okay, I understand,’ Adam said, as the creature ceased its light show. ‘I need a few minutes.’

  Adam shook away the surreal circumstances and began typing changes to his decoding algorithm. When he was finished, he got up slowly.

  Pegasus began to speak, and the hunters swayed in unison with the winds.

  MOTHER KNOWS SADNESS

  ‘She does?’ Adam said, confused. ‘I’m sorry …’

  The creature’s language bathed the deck in strobes of light.

  AS SHE IS

  FOR YOU

  ‘Why would she be sorry for me?’

  DAD

  An unwelcome burst of tears erupted from Adam’s eyes.

  WE HEAR WORDS

  WHEN HUMANS FALL

  WE

  ARE SORRY

  ‘I don’t know what to say,’ Adam stammered. ‘What are you? Who is “Mother”?’

  MOTHER IS ZEUS

  SHE LIVES BELOW

  AND WATCHES ALL

  ‘You mean literally? Beneath this platform?’

  THE DEPTHS

  Adam considered the possibility that there were variants of the Arkady that neither he nor anyone else had ever seen before.

  ‘How long have you … or Mother … been here?’

  MOTHER KNOWS NO TIME

  ONLY WHAT THE VEIL GAVE HER

  ‘What did the Veil give her?’

  HUMANS

  OTHERS

  THEIR LANGUAGES

  THEIR KNOWLEDGE

  THEIR MACHINES

  ‘So, you know humans … like me … from listening to us talk, from the Veil?’

  WE LISTEN

  FEEL

  LEARN

  The massive tentacle coiled and gently tapped the deck again. Adam took a deep breath.

  ‘Are you saying that when something … falls from the Veil, into Zeus … that you can learn what that object is?’

  MOTHER LEARNS

  Adam could scarcely believe his eyes. Could it be that the countless bits of mining debris, from discarded waste to the accidents that sent men and machine to their deaths, made literal contact with ‘Mother’ somewhere along the way to implosive doom? Probes, satellites, rigs, entire starships had crashed into Zeus during the colonisation era. From what Adam knew about the Battle of Brotherhood, this was the final resting place for hundreds of ruined warships left adrift in the planet’s iron grasp.

  Mother’s grasp. Mother Arkady.

  The hunters simultaneously broke their rhythmic sway as pulses of excited light chatter exchanged between them and Pegasus.

  ‘What just happened?’ Adam asked. His eyes were beginning to hurt from the rapid fire strobes.

  STRANGER SPEAKS

  WITH ABBY

  ‘My sister?’

  ANOTHER FROM THE VEIL

  APPROACHES

  ‘What? Another ship?’

  ADAM

  TAKE US THERE

  PLEASE

  ‘How?’

  Adam winced from a painful blast of premonition. Lethal danger was imminent.

  MOTHER CAN SHOW Y CD A B

  The underside of Pegasus erupted in a searing burst of light, blinding Adam and sending him staggering backwards. Blinking away phosphenes, he heard loud, dangerous bangs on the deck nearby. The hunters were going insane; most had released their grip on the railing and were flailing wildly. Pegasus was drifting away, its underside a coruscating fury. The four beacons flashed a hasty message.

  A C

  GO

  A

  The hunters had turned on themselves. Furious leviathans with unimaginable strength lashed out with their tentacles, carving off chunks of flesh from each other.

  Adam jammed the throttle to run as fast as the mech could. Behind him, the deck was getting bashed to pieces.

  Just before reaching the sled, he switched radio frequencies. When he turned around to step inside, he gasped.

  The hunters were attacking Pegasus, and the gentle giant was breaking apart as gaping wounds were opened in a relentless, barbaric attack.

  ‘Hi, Adam!’ Abby said, in sarcastic cheer. ‘Did you install the radars?’

  ‘Who are you talking to up there?’ Adam said, failing to keep the fear from his voice.

  ‘No one, why?’

  ‘You liar,’ he whispered, cutting the line.

  Adam slammed the launch trigger. The sled rockets ignited.

  The wind tore Pegasus in half, and then the hunters quartered the carcass, decimating the last slabs of flesh.

  Adam watched the disintegrating carcass as long as he could. The horror spread more darkness through his young heart.

  They were waiting for him in the hangar.

  ‘Hello, Adam,’ the stranger said. ‘My name is Captain Mohib of the Merckon Research vessel Lycidas.’

  The mech’s cockpit hatch had barely opened before his mother led them all in; Abby, who appeared anxious; this captain; an armed Merckon security guard; and an exotic-looking woman who kept her distance from the main group.

  ‘This is Doctor Viola Silveri,’ Captain Mohib finally introduced her, ‘the brightest xenologist in Orionis. Her speciality is Arkady research.’

  Adam climbed down to the deck, avoiding eye contact.

  ‘They’re not with Ceti,’ his mother explained. ‘They want to help us.’

  Adam began stripping off his survival suit, still sweating, and shaking. It wasn’t from the cold.

  Abby cleared her throat as he strapped into his mag greaves.

  ‘He’s shy around strangers,’ she offered.

  ‘Do strangers come here often?’ Captain Mohib asked.

  ‘Just the ones we owe money to,’ Abby blurted.

  ‘Which is to say no one comes by at all,’ his mother interrupted. ‘We are free of debt and profitable, thanks in large part to Adam’s efforts.’

  ‘He’s a brave boy,’ Captain Mohib said, flashing a disingenuous smile. ‘That hunter tentacle you found spawned a legend. That’s why we’re here. We just had to meet the roughneck who took the beast down.’

  Adam mashed the suit into his locker and slipped into dry clothes.

  ‘Adam,’ his mother said. ‘These people have some questions they’d like to ask …’

  The only one not blocking the exit was the ‘doctor’, and thus she was the only person in the room he decided not to hate. There was something trustworthy about her appearance, beneath her stunning, unnatural beauty. Her eyes were violet with traces of orange in them. They were unique, and held the only expression of concern in the room.

  But the hatch was still ten metres away.

  ‘… it would mean a lot to me if you answered them,’ his mother said.

  With his head down, Adam began h
is walk towards freedom.

  ‘You know, son,’ Captain Mohib said. ‘You can see the Lycidas from—’

  ‘Don’t call me that,’ Adam snapped.

  Everyone, Adam included, was surprised. He bit down the urge to say anything else and focused on taking the next step.

  ‘Adam!’

  It was Abby. She was the easiest to ignore.

  ‘Your mother told us about your radar issues,’ Captain Mohib called out, ‘and that she had no idea what was really happening down there.’

  Adam nearly stopped walking.

  ‘So we put ours on,’ Captain Mohib said, ‘and saw something extraordinary. Don’t you think?’

  Adam’s stomach churned as he remembered the words of Pegasus:

  ELECTROMAGNETIC WAVES

  WE FEEL THEM

  SEE THEM

  FROM AFAR

  ‘Oh, no,’ he whispered, halting as the truth sunk in:

  The Lycidas’s radar killed Pegasus.

  Intentional or not, it didn’t matter. For as long as Adam remembered, the rig platform had never had functioning radars. That was almost certainly the reason why he had been able to get close to the Arkady at all. It also explained every hostile encounter between them and miners.

 

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