Read Quiet Invasion Online

Authors: Sarah Zettel

Quiet Invasion (39 page)

BOOK: Quiet Invasion
3.58Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“Ambassador T’sha, where are you?” came D’seun’s voice. If his voice was anything to go by, he was puffed up with anger again.

She gave him her coordinates, and from the resounding silence, she knew he recognized them. She said nothing. She waited for him to ask.

“What are you doing there?”

“I was led here. The New People are trying to communicate.”

Silence again. T’sha chose to interpret it as stunned disbelief.

“This is significant,” said D’seun dryly.

“Yes it is. I need you and yours to gather together everything you’ve got on how the New People communicate so we can find a way to answer them.”

“What…we…” he stammered.

T’sha swelled, although there was no one there to see. “We can delay this no longer, D’seun. I know you have been observing the New People closely for a long time now. I’ve seen your specialized constructors.” She looked down at the waiting transports and their viewing station. “The New People have tried to speak with us and are waiting for us to make some kind of reply. I will not disappoint them. You can help, or you can force me to tell the Law Meet about exactly who here has overstepped their commission.”

Stillness and silence. The wind buffeted T’sha, urging her to motion.

“How did they try to communicate?” he asked, finally. His voice was small and tight, as his body was right now, T’sha was sure.

“Visually. They have created a display with images.” The detail was very fine for all its lack of color. She could see the New People had five fingers on each hand, that they had crests of fine, long tendrils on their heads, that the elbows of their forearms bent in two, maybe three places, depending on how you counted.

“Effective. We’re not certain they hear as we do, but they can see the same wavelengths we do.” She heard the rustle of movement. “They have a written language. We have been working on deciphering it and have made great progress, we think.”

“Good,” she said firmly. “Then you can come and interpret.”

“T’sha, we must report this to the Law Meet.”

“As soon as we have something to report we will. We must address them now. They are waiting for us.”

Yet another silence. “You are pleased with this, aren’t you?”

T’sha hesitated, clutching the camera a little too tightly. It squeaked, and she eased her grip at once. “It is what I wanted, yes. I am not pleased with how I’ve gotten it. You must come here now, D’seun.”

She heard him whistle, low and disapproving, but in the end he said, “Very well. We will be there soon. Good luck, Ambassador T’sha.”

“Good luck, Ambassador D’seun.” The connection died, and she was left alone with the New People waiting below her.

Vee sat in the copilot’s chair on board Scarab Three, which looked exactly the same as Scarab Five. Helen Failia sat in the pilot’s chair as if it were the most natural place in the world for her to be. Adrian Makepeace and a woman named Sheila Whist had brought them down, but they were both in the back now, running diagnostics and suit checks and generally keeping themselves out of the way.

Through the main window, Vee watched the sheltered holotank with its trio of images—her own picture, taken from her image gallery, a set of prime numbers, and a miniature of the solar system with Earth highlighted. She’d been frustrated by the lack of color, but lasers were, by definition, monochromatic, and if they were going to make the one-week deadline, they had to work with what was available.

The tank connection was one of the biggest jury-riggings she’d ever built. The lasers’ beams had been directed out of the Discovery through two ceramic-metallic tunnels. One for writing, one for display. The display screen consisted of some of her best films on a refrigerated platform between slabs of doped quartz.

It looked like somebody had set up a view screen in the middle of a desert.

The pressure wasn’t the real problem. Years of oceano-graphic mining had resulted in the creation of pressure-resistant materials and provided collateral research on the effect of pressure on a whole world of substances. The real problem was the heat. The entire communications station had to be constructed so it wouldn’t vaporize out there.

“How are we doing?” came Josh’s voice through the intercom. He and his assistants, Ray and Heather, were down in the Discovery with the laser, making sure the Cusmanoses’ machine worked and stayed working.

“No change.” Vee craned her neck so she could see the circling black dot the scarab’s cameras showed as a sparkling, golden, winged alien. Vee had wanted to fly the scarab straight to their base and get them to follow along, but Helen had nulled out that idea. She worried the aliens might take it as a threat or a challenge of some kind. So Scarab Ten had gone out on the ground and flashed lights.

It had worked, though. One of the aliens followed Scarab Ten back from wherever they had found it. Then it had dropped a little jellyfish down. The jellyfish had hovered over the holotank and shot back up to its owner. Since then, the alien had stayed where it was, tracing circles in the shifting, leaden sky.

Waiting.

“How are things down there?” Vee asked Josh, to keep the conversation going. Waiting and watching were starting to get to her. She oscillated between wonder and an involuntary fear that she couldn’t make go away.
This kind of thing is tough on the sensitive artist’s stomach.

“No change here either,” answered Josh. “But I’ll tell you what. If we’re going to keep this up, we need to terraform this room. I’ve got sand in my eyes.”

“Ouch.” Vee grimaced in sympathy. Not being able to touch your own skin was definitely a design limitation in the hardsuits, and when Josh had locked himself into his, there had been bags under his eyes.

Neither one of them had gotten a full night’s sleep for a week. They’d spent the entire time in his lab trying to find ways to make this work. They had cannibalized half-a-dozen survey drones and simulated eight different kinds of protective covers and cooling systems before they found one that looked like it would work.

Their setup was that it not only had to function under conditions that were literally hellish, but it also had to be flexible. They had to be able to write and rewrite the images and do it quickly with minimal help from a computer. They had put so much work into the hardware that there had been little left for the controlling software. Vee would be typing in most of the commands by hand and most of those commands were recorded nowhere but in her own head.

There were going to be so many bugs to work out of this system that it wasn’t funny. The biggest was that the whole lash-up was computer controlled from inside the scarab. How would the aliens be able to answer?

“Let me know when you’re going to start making demands on this thing,” said Josh. “I am not happy about some of these connections.”

“Will do,” Vee told him. Josh had a camera of his own down there. He could see what was going on. He just wanted some contact. Vee couldn’t blame him. In fact, she was kind of glad.

“Coffee?” Dr. Failia asked Vee, reaching for the thermos stowed in the holder on the pilot’s chair.

“No thanks,” said Vee. “I’m wound up so tight right now I think caffeine would tear me in two.”
And you didn’t think to stock any tea for the trip, did you? Where are your priorities, Vee?

“Ah, youth.” Helen unscrewed the thermos and poured herself a cup. “You need to learn to relax.”

Josh chuckled on the other side of the intercom. “Forgive me for saying so, Dr. Failia, but the only reason you’re offering around the coffee is because you can’t stand to sit in silence anymore.”

“Tact,” said Helen, sipping a cup of the thick, black liquid, “is another thing that comes with age.”

Vee smiled. Josh had a good sense of humor, and he could dish it out and take it with equanimity. She liked that. She liked him. It felt good. He’d gotten out of her way like an old pro when her ideas had run ahead of her explanations and she’d just typed furiously, bringing the simulation up to speed, or had raged, unfairly, she knew, against his lab preparation because they didn’t have the specialty parts she needed.

Good guy. Steady. A friend. Just what they’d need when…

A dark blur flew over the volcano’s rim.

“Heads up.” Vee leaned forward, squinting at the sky and ignoring the camera. “They’re coming in.”

The kite rode ahead of the winds, guided by a competent mind. T’sha resisted the urge to turn loops in the sky to say “Over here, over here.” They knew where she was, and they were heading there at full speed.

“We will meet down beside the transports, T’sha,” D’seun said through her headset.

T’sha whistled her assent.

The dirigible slowed its forward progress and descended toward the crust. T’sha pulled in her wings and deflated, settling further and further into the thickening air. There was no real wind this far down, just faint strugglings in air that was so solid you could perch on it. It was grossly uncomfortable, but T’sha had done plenty of deep work in her time. She could accommodate herself to it.

The New People’s transports still waited side by side. They made an amazing amount of noise, all high squeals and long snores. But if they were speaking to each other, T’sha could make no sense out of it. A piercing metallic smell surrounded them, reminding T’sha sharply of the scents in the World Portal complex.

D’seun launched himself from the dirigible’s gondola, leaving Br’sei, D’han, and P’tesk to drop the moorings and wrestle out the toolboxes.

D’seun didn’t even acknowledge T’sha. He flew straight to the New People’s display. He hovered around it for a long time, looking at the images from every possible angle.

T’sha glanced at the transports. What were they doing in there right now? Were they pleased? Bored? Worried?

“Grow the viewer,” said D’seun to the engineers. “Make sure it faces the transports, not this screen. I don’t know if this thing can see.”

The engineers flew to obey. While Br’sei tore open a dish of growth medium, P’tesk opened the stasis cover on a box of seed crystals. Br’sei laid the seeds into the jellylike medium. The seeds responded instantly, fusing and replicating until the jelly swelled up out of its dish, forming a glistening bubble. The bubble grew until it was nearly the size of the New People’s screen. P’tesk poured the neutralizer into the dish. Br’sei rooted a works box onto the side, running through the standard checks. The crystal was good. The medium was adequately conductive. No flaws in structure.

D’seun, meanwhile, pulled two cortex boxes out of the portable caretaker. He weighed them in his forehands and put one back. He laid the one he selected onto the works box, letting its sensors reach into the works and twine around the neural net. D’seun fanned his wings and backed away.

He spoke rapidly in the cortex’s command language. T’sha was not surprised to find that she did not understand a word of it. The crystal lit up and a set of symbols printed themselves across its surface. D’seun looked toward the transports and the New People’s screen.

“What are you saying?” asked T’sha.

“I am stating our purpose,” D’seun said. His voice was slurred, suspicious. “Now we will see what they will do.”

Inside the scarab, they watched the aliens arrive, watched their transmitter grow as if by magic, and saw bright-red letters coalesce inside it

WE SERVE LIFE.

Vee had to swallow before she could force any words out. “It appears,” she said slowly, “that they’ve been watching us a lot longer than we’ve been watching them.”

“So it would seem,” agreed Josh. “Now what?”

Vee looked to Dr. Failia. The older woman had set her coffee down. She watched the aliens, her hands on her knees, immobile and yet at the same time incredibly alive. Every line of her body sang with eagerness. She was looking out onto something magnificent.

Vee knew exactly how she felt. She thought of the portrait file waiting in her briefcase. She’d have to start all over. She didn’t do their beauty, their grace, their sheer
otherness
justice, not by light-years.

Dr. Failia cleared her throat, coming back to the everyday acknowledgment of her fellow human beings reluctantly.

“Well, since they’re chatty, let’s try the basics. Ask who they are.”

“Cross your fingers over your connections, Josh.” Vee’s hands hovered over the keys while she remembered how they had this all coded in. Mentally crossing her own fingers for the solidity of their improvisation, she typed in a set of commands. The introductory images vanished and the holotank showed the words,
Who are you?

The aliens stayed as they were. Helen reached across the command board and punched up the zoom on the camera. Now they could see the muzzle moving on the smallest of the group.

The words shifted inside the glass bubble to read
The People
.

“Well, that’s helpful.” Vee almost giggled. She swallowed. Too much wonder obviously had similar effects on the human psyche as too much fear. “First contact. Complicated stuff. How about I try a more detailed question?” Without waiting for an answer, she typed in a new set of commands. Their screen read:

I am Doctor Veronica Hatch. What is your name?

More conferring between the aliens. One of them, whose feathered crest was mottled crimson and ivory, flapped its wings restlessly. The smallest turned toward their screen and spoke again. More new words.

I am Ambassador D’seun Te’eff Kan K’edch D’ai Gathad. With me is Ambassador T’sha So Br’ei Taith Kan Ca’aed. We are ambassadors of the High Law Meet of the People. We have with us our engineers and assistants. Are there others with you? What is your purpose?

“Loaded question,” said Josh.

Vee paused with her hands over the keyboard. “Can I ignore it?”

Helen raised her eyebrows. “I don’t think so.”

Vee nodded, chewed her lip thoughtfully, and typed.

With me are Doctor Helen Failia, Mister Adrian Makepeace, and Miss Sheila Whist. In the underground chamber are Doctor Joshua Kenyon, Mister Ray Sandoval, and Miss Heather Wilde. We are from Venera Base, which is a research colony for the people of Earth.
She added a few extra commands. The pictorial diagram of the solar system reappeared with arrows and labels.

BOOK: Quiet Invasion
3.58Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Shepherd One by Rick Jones
Every Night I Dream of Hell by Mackay, Malcolm
Expecting Miracle Twins by Barbara Hannay
An Angel Runs Away by Barbara Cartland
All Souls by Javier Marias
Cruel Justice by William Bernhardt
Beautiful Mess by Preston, Jennifer
The Lost Heir by Tui T. Sutherland
The Teacher's Secret by Suzanne Leal