Firstborn

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by Arthur C. Clarke


  But it was the last spacecraft that would ever leave the surface of Mars.

  Myra knew this was a symbolic moment. Most of Mars’s human population had long gone, along with all they could lift. The various AIs that had inhabited the bases and rovers and bits of equipment had, too, been saved as far as possible, according to laws governing the right to protection of Legal Persons (Non-Human); at the very least copies of them had been transmitted to memory stores off-planet. But there was nothing that touched a human heart as much as seeing the last bundle loaded aboard the last ship out, a last footprint, a last hatch closed.

  Which was why cameras rolled, floated, and flew all around this site. And why a delegate of Chinese stood in a huddle, away from the rest. And why the frantic work of loading was being held up by the presence of Bella Fingal, the now-ousted Chair of the World Space Council, in a Mars suit that looked two or three sizes too big for her, who stood surrounded by a small crowd.

  “One hour,” a soft automated voice said in Myra’s helmet. She saw from the subtle reactions of the others that they had all heard the same warning. One hour left to get off Mars before—well, before something unimaginable happened.

  Myra drifted back to join the small crowd, all in their suits, like a clutch of fat green snowmen.

  Bella said now, “A shame we couldn’t have made this last launch from Port Lowell.” They were in fact fifty kilometers from Lowell, out on the Xanthe Terra, a bay on the perimeter of the great Vastitas Borealis. “It would have been fitting to stage the last human lift-off from Mars at the place Bob Paxton and his crew made the first touchdown.”

  “Well, maybe we could have, if Lowell wasn’t still radioactive,” Yuri O’Rourke growled a bit sharply. He summoned Hanse Critchfield, who was proudly carrying a display tray of materials. “Madam Chair. Here,” he said unceremoniously. “This is a selection of the scientific materials we have been gathering in these last months. Take a look. Samples from a variety of geological units, from the southern highlands to the northern plains to the slopes of the great volcanoes. Bits of ice core from the polar caps, of particular value to me. And, perhaps most precious of all, samples of Martian life. There are relics of the past, look, you see, we even have a fossil here from a sedimentary lake bed, and native organisms from the present day, and samples of the transgenic life-forms we have been experimenting with.”

  Grendel Speth said dryly, “Martians you can eat.”

  Bella Fingal was a small, tired-looking woman, now nearly sixty. She seemed genuinely touched by the gesture. She smiled through her faceplate. “Thank you.”

  Yuri said, “I’m only sorry that we can’t give you a vial of canal water. Or the tripod leg from a Martian fighting machine. Or an egg laid by a Princess…I wish I could show you a Wernher von Braun glider, too. That was the first serious scheme to get to Mars, you know. They would have glided down to land on the smooth ice at the poles. And if that’s the past, I’m sorry you won’t see Mars’s future. A mature human world, fully participating in an interplanetary economic and political system…”

  Myra touched his arm, and he fell silent.

  Bella smiled. “Yes. This is the end of a human story too, isn’t it? No more Martian dreams. But we won’t forget, Yuri. I can assure you that the study of Mars will continue even when the planet itself is lost. We will continue to learn about Mars, and strive to understand.

  “And in this last moment I want to try to tell you again why this has all been worthwhile—even this terrible cost.”

  She said there had been more results from Cyclops.

  The great observatory had been designed before the sunstorm to search for Earth-like worlds. Since the storm, and especially since the return of Athena, its great Fresnel eyes had been turned aside, to peer into the dark spaces between the stars.

  Bella said, “And everywhere the astronomers look, they see refugees.”

  The Cyclops telescopes had seen infrared traces of generation starships, slow, fat arks like the Chinese ships, whole civilizations in flight. And there were immense, flimsy ships with sails hundreds of kilometers wide, scudding before the light of exploding stars. They had even detected narrow-beam laser signals they thought might be traces of efforts to teleport, desperate attempts to send the essence of a living being encoded into a radio signal.

  Myra felt stunned, imaginatively. There was a story, a whole novel, in every one of these brief summaries. “This is the work of the Firstborn. They are everywhere. And everywhere they are doing what they tried to do to us, and the Martians, and at Procyon—eradicating. Why?”

  “If we knew that,” Bella said, “if we understood the Firstborn, we might be able to deal with the threat they pose. This is how our future is going to be, however far we travel, as far as we can see. And that’s how we’ve come to this situation, this desolate beach.” Bella handed the sample tray to an aide, and took a step back. “Would those of you who are leaving now, please come stand behind me?”

  Most of the group stepped forward, including Ellie von Devender, Grendel Speth, Hanse Critchfield. Among those who remained were Myra, and Yuri, and Paula Umfraville. The Chinese stood back too. One of their delegates approached Bella, and told her again that they planned to stay to tend the memorials they had built to their fallen of sunstorm day.

  Bella faced them all. “I understand you’ve plenty of supplies—food, power—to see you through until—”

  Yuri said, “Yes, Madam Chair. It’s all taken care of.”

  “I don’t quite understand how you’ll be able to talk to each other—Lowell to the polar station, for instance. Won’t you lose your comms satellites when the secession comes?”

  “We’ve laid land lines,” Paula said brightly. “We’ll be fine.”

  “Fine?” Bella’s face worked. “Not the word I’d use.” She said impulsively, “Please—come with us. All of you. Even now there’s time to change your minds. We’ve room on the shuttle. And my daughter is waiting in orbit on the Liberator, ready to take you home.”

  “Thank you,” Yuri said evenly. “But we’ve decided. Somebody ought to stay. There ought to be a witness. Besides, this is my home, Madam Chair.”

  “My mother is buried here,” said Paula Umfraville. “I couldn’t abandon that.” Her smile was as professional as ever.

  “And I lost my mother here too,” Myra said. “I couldn’t leave with that unresolved.”

  Bella faced Myra. “You know we’ll do what we can to build on the contact that’s been achieved with Mir. I gave you my word on that, and I’ll ensure it’s a promise that’s kept.”

  “Thank you,” Myra said.

  “But you’re going to a stranger place yet, aren’t you? Is there anybody you’d want me to speak to for you?”

  “No. Thank you, Madam Chair.” In the months since the Q-bomb strike, Myra had tried over and over to contact Charlie, and Eugene. There had been no reply. But then they had seceded from her own personal universe long ago. She had tidied her affairs. There was nothing left for her, anywhere but on Mars.

  “With respect, Madam Chair, you must leave now,” Yuri said, glancing at his suit chronometer.

  There was a last flurry of movement around the shuttle, as ladders were dumped, hatches closed. Myra took part in a last round of embraces, of Ellie and Grendel and Hanse, of the Chinese, even of Bella Fingal. But the Mars suits made the hugs clumsy, unsatisfying, deprived of human contact.

  Bella was the last to stand at the foot of the short ramp that led to the biconic’s interior. She looked around. “This is the end of Mars,” she said. “A terrible crime has been committed here, and we humans have been made complicit in it. That is a dreadful burden for us to carry, and our children. But I don’t believe we should leave with shame. More has happened on Mars in the last century than in the previous billion years, and everything that is good has flowed from the actions of mankind. We must remember that. And we must remember lost Mars with love, not with shame.” She glanced down at the crims
on dust beneath her feet. “I think that’s all.”

  She walked briskly up the ramp, which lifted to swallow her up inside the belly of the shuttle.

  Myra, Paula, and Yuri had to hurry back to the rover, which drove them off through a kilometer, a safe distance from the launch. When the rover stopped they clambered out again, squeezing into their outer suits.

  They stood in a row, Myra between Yuri and Paula, holding hands. They found themselves surrounded by a little crowd of robot cameras, which had rolled or flown or hopped after them.

  When the moment of launch came, the shuttle lifted without fuss. Mars gravity was light; it had always been easy to climb out of its gravity well. The dust kicked up from this last launch quickly fell back through the thin air to the ground, and the shuttle receded into the orange-brown sky, becoming a pale jewel, its vapor trail all but invisible.

  “Well, that’s that,” said Paula. “How long until the light show?”

  Yuri made to look at his watch, and then thought better of it. “Not long. Do you want to go back into the rover, get out of these suits?”

  None of them did. Somehow it seemed right to be out here, on the Martian ground, under its eerie un-blue sky.

  Myra looked around. The landscape was just a flat desert with meager mountains in the far distance. But in a deep ditch not far away there was a mosslike vegetation, green. Life, returned to Mars by the sunstorm and cherished by human hands. She held tightly to her companions. “This is the dream of a million years, to stand here and see this,” she said.

  Yuri said, “Yes—”

  And the light went, just like that, the sky darkening as if somebody was throwing a dimmer switch. The sun rushed away, sucking all the light with it. The sky turned deep brown, and then charcoal, and then utterly black.

  Myra stood in the dark, clinging to Yuri and Paula. She heard the cameras clatter about, confused.

  It had only taken seconds.

  “I hope the cameras got that,” Yuri murmured.

  “It feels like a total eclipse,” Paula said. “I went to Earth once to see one. It was kind of exciting, oddly…”

  Myra felt excited too, stirred in an unexpected way by this primeval, extraordinary event. Strange lights in the sky. But, standing there in the dark, she felt a flicker of fear when she reminded herself that the sun was never, ever going to shine on Mars again.

  “So we’re alone in this universe,” Yuri said. “Us and Mars.”

  The ground shuddered gently.

  “Mars quake,” Paula said immediately. “We expected this. We just lost the sun’s tides. It will pass.”

  The rover’s lights came on, flickering before settling to a steady glow. They cast a pool of light over the Martian ground, and Myra’s shadow stretched long before her.

  And there was a circle in the air before her. Like a mirror, full of complex reflections, highlights from the rover’s lamps. Myra took a step forward, and saw her own reflection approach her.

  The thing in the air was about a meter across. It was an Eye.

  “You bastard,” Yuri said. “You bastard!” He bent awkwardly, picked up handfuls of Martian rocks, and hurled them at the Eye. The rocks hit with a clatter that was dimly audible through the thin, cold air.

  The ground continued to shake, the small, hard planet ringing like a bell.

  And then a white fleck drifted past Myra’s faceplate. She followed it all the way down to the ground, where it sublimated away. It was a snowflake.

  59: TEMPLE

  Abdikadir Omar met them at the Temple of Marduk.

  A loose crowd had gathered around the Temple precinct. Some even slept here, in lean-tos and tents. Vendors drifted slowly among them, selling food, water, and some kind of trinkets, holy tokens. They were pilgrims, Abdi said, who had come from as far as Alexandria and Judea.

  “And are they here for the Eye of Marduk?”

  Abdi grinned. “Some come for the Eye. Some for Marduk himself, if they remember him. Some for Bisesa. Some even for the man-ape that’s in there with her.”

  “Remarkable,” Grove said. “Pilgrims from Judea, come here to see a woman of the twenty-first century!”

  Eumenes said, “I sometimes wonder if a whole new religion is being born here. A worship of the Firstborn, with Bisesa Dutt as their prophet.”

  “I doubt that would be healthy,” Grove said.

  “Man has worshipped destroying gods before. Come. Let us speak to Bisesa Dutt.”

  Abdi escorted them through the crowd and into the temple’s convoluted interior, all the way up to the chamber of the Eye.

  The small room with its scorched brick walls was utterly dominated by the Eye, which floated in the air. By the light of the oil lamps Grove saw his own reflection, absurdly distorted, as if by a fairground trick mirror. But the Eye itself was monstrous, ominous; he seemed to sense its gravity.

  Bisesa had made a kind of nest in one corner of the chamber, of blankets and paper and clothes and bits of food. When Grove and the others walked in, she smiled and clambered to her feet.

  And there was the man-ape. A lanky, powerful mature female, she sat squat in her cage, as still and watchful as the Eye itself. She had clear blue eyes. Grove was forced to turn away from her gaze.

  “My word,” Batson said, holding his nose. “Ilicius Bloom wasn’t lying when he said the stink wasn’t him but the ape!”

  “You get used to it,” Bisesa said. She greeted Batson with a warm handshake, and an embrace for Grove that rather embarrassed him. “Anyhow Grasper is company.”

  “‘Grasper’?”

  “Don’t you remember her, Grove? Your Tommies captured a man-ape and her baby on the very day of the Discontinuity. The Tommies called her ‘Grasper’ for the way she uses those hands of hers, tying knots out of bits of straw, for fun. On the last night before we tried sending me back to Earth through the Eye, I asked for them to be released. Well, I think this is that baby, grown tall. If these australopithecines live as long as chimps, say, it’s perfectly possible. I’ll swear she is more dexterous than I am.”

  Grove asked, “How on earth does she come to be here?”

  Eumenes said, “She rather made her own way. She was one of a pack that troubled the western rail links. This one followed the line all the way back to Babylon, and made a nuisance of herself in the farms outside the city. Kept trying to get to the city walls. Wouldn’t be driven off. In the end they netted her and brought her into the city as a curiosity for the court. We kept her in Bloom’s cage, but the creature went wild. She wanted to go somewhere, that was clear.”

  “It was my idea,” Abdi said. “We leashed her, and allowed her to lead us where she would.”

  “And she came here,” Bisesa said. “Drawn here just as I was. She seems peaceful enough here, as if she’s found what she wanted.”

  Grove pondered. “I do remember how we once kept this man-ape and her mother in a tent we propped up under a floating Eye—do you remember, Bisesa? Rather disrespectful to the Eye, I thought. Perhaps this wretched creature formed some sort of bond with the Eyes then. But how the devil would she know there was an Eye here?”

  “There’s a lot we don’t understand,” Bisesa said. “To put it mildly.”

  Grove inspected Bisesa’s den with forced interest. “Well, you seem cheerful enough in here.”

  “All mod cons,” she said, a term that baffled Grove. “I have my phone. It’s a shame Suit Five is out of power or that might have provided a bit more company too. And here’s my chemical toilet, scavenged from the Little Bird. Abdi keeps me fed and cleaned out. You’re my interface to the outside world, aren’t you, Abdi?”

  “Yes,” Grove said, “but why are you here?”

  Eumenes said gravely, “You should know that Alexander thinks she is trying to find a way to use the Eye for his benefit. If not for the fact that the King believes Bisesa is serving his purposes, she would not be here at all. You must remember that when you meet him, Captain.”

 
“Fair enough. But what’s the truth, Bisesa?”

  “I want to go home,” she said simply. “Just as I did before. I want to get back to my daughter, and granddaughter. And this is the only possible way. With respect, there’s nothing on Mir that matters to me as much as that.”

  Grove looked at this woman, this bereft mother, alone with all this strangeness. “I had a daughter, you know,” he said, and he was dismayed how gruff his voice was. “Back home. You know. She’d be about your age now, I should think. I do understand why you are here, Bisesa.”

  She smiled, and embraced him again.

  There was little more to be said.

  “Well,” Grove said. “I will visit again. We will be here for several more days in Babylon, I should think. I feel I really ought to try to do something for this wretched fellow Bloom. We moderns must stick together, I suppose.”

  “You’re a good man, Captain. But don’t put yourself in any danger.”

  “I’m a wily old bird, don’t you worry…”

  They left soon after that.

  Grove looked back once at Bisesa. Alone save for the watchful man-ape, she was walking around the hovering sphere and pressed her bare hand against the Eye’s surface. The hand seemed to slide sideways, pushed by some unseen force. Grove was awed at her casual familiarity with this utterly monstrous, alien thing.

  He turned away. He was glad he could hide the wetness of his foolish old eyes in the dark of the temple’s corridors.

  60: HOUSE

  March 30, 2072

  Paula called, using the optic-fiber link. Since the secession of the sun, the big AIs at New Lowell had been refining their predictions of when the Rip would finally hit Mars.

  “May 12,” Paula said. “Around fourteen hundred.”

  Six weeks. “Well, now we know,” Myra said.

  “I’m told that in the end they will get the prediction down to the attosecond.”

 

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