Alternate Realities (44 page)

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Authors: C. J. Cherryh

BOOK: Alternate Realities
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“As to how far off it is,” said Rafe Two, “as to how it adapts to the dark—it might.”
The Original shook his head. “No. If it came from as early as I think it might—no difference, except in what it’s been through.”
“Isn’t that always the difference?” Paul asked, discovering this in himself. “Events change us. Isn’t that why we all exist? I’m not that other Paul. He’s not me. We’re all of us—very real.”
“I feel that way,” Rafe Three said with a small, desperate laugh. “I
feel
alive.” And looking distractedly at Jillan: “You said that once.”
So <> had made <>’s move. was not impressed.
“Mistake,” said, and unleashed the entity had made, Paul-Rafe, while stalked larger quarry.
“See,” <^> wailed, knowing this, skipping along at <>’s side as they proceeded elsewhere in the ship. “<> have
lost
.”
“Not yet,” <> said.
<^> remained. Puzzled; and angry. And frightened, that foremost, as <> and <^> built barriers.
“This is retreat,” <^> said.
“Maneuver,” said <>.
“It’s late for that,” said <^>.
“Everything is late,” <> said.
“<>,” <> heard, a pulse that made <> wince. had gathered strength. “<> , am waiting for <> to cross the line.”
Meanwhile, Paul One had moved, slipping through the corridors. = = = = went at Paul One’s side, in all = = = =’s segments. Some of them shrieked in protest, but they all went, having no choice in this new alignment.
There was dark in the side-corridors of Fargone docks, the kind of deep twilight of betweentimes, between main and alterday, and someone stalked. Rafe ran, in starkest terror.
“Hey, miner-brat,” security yelled and he ought to have turned and faced the man, but he had no pass to be across the lines at this hour, a miner in spacer territory.
He rounded a corner, slid in among shipping canisters awaiting the mover to pick them up. Their shadows passed and his heart crashed against his ribs in regular, aching pulses.
They searched. If they caught him they hauled him in for questions; questions led to Welfare, and Welfare to assigned jobs. Forever.
 
“Please,” they would ask of spacers, shyly on the docks, asked them daily, nightly, in the shadows of twilight hours, “sir, got a fetch-carry? Just a chit or two?”
Most had no job for them. Some trusted Jillan but not him. Docksiders stole. Now and again one gave him a message to run—payment at the other end. Sometimes he was cheated. Once a white-haired woman offered him money and a bed and he took the key she offered and went to that sleepover, humiliated when he discovered what she had not wanted at all. Just charity, for a starving kid trying to stay off Station Welfare lists.
He was humiliated more that he had been willing to sell himself, for what she gave away.
And he did not tell Jillan about that night. He did not tell it even to Paul.
 
“The time has come,” <> said, and made two simulacra. “Wear this,” <> said to <^> of Jillan-shape. “<^>’ll find things in common with her.”
“I don’t know what to do,” Paul said to Rafe’s question. “I don’t—”
And there were two more of them: a fourth Rafe; a third Jillan standing there, in front of the EVA-pod that reflected them and the hall askew in its warped faceplate.
A pair of them, with that deep-eyed stare. There was horror in newcomer-Jillan’s eyes.
“Kepta,” Paul said, guessing.
And: “Kepta,” said Rafe, getting to his feet as the rest of them had, “dammit, let Jillan be!”
“Call him Marandu,” Kepta said of the anxious Jillan-shape beside him. “That was something like his name.
He
doesn’t quite describe him. But
she
doesn’t do it either.”
“More games.”
“No,” Kepta said. “Not now.” Jillan/Marandu had hold of Rafe/Kepta’s arm. Kepta shook off the grip and walked aside with a glance upward and about as if his sight went beyond the walls. “It’s quiet out there now. It won’t be for long. It’s moving slowly, expecting traps.”
“What are you here for?” asked Jillan One.
“You,” Kepta said, and turned a glance at Paul; “It’s time.”
“Leave Jillan here,” Paul said.
“Which one?” it asked him, and sent a chill through his blood. It faced him fully. “You choose. A set of you will stay here safe. A set of you will face it. Likely the encounter will ruin that set. Which?”

None
of them,” Rafe said. “Leave them alone.”

It
won’t,” Kepta said, and looked back at Paul. “I sent a full set here—to keep the promise; I brought them early so that they would have some contact with the oldest. Continuity. That’s as much as I could give. Now it’s time, and no time left. Four to stay and three to go. Shall I choose? Have you not discovered difference?”
“I’ll go,” Paul said. He cast a look at his doppelganger, poor bewildered self, standing there with its mouth open to say something. “No,” it protested. “
No.
It’s why I was born, isn’t it?”
Then things seemed clear to him, clear as nothing but Jillan had ever been. “Take Jillan and Rafe of the new set,” he said, “and me, of the old.” He looked straight at his doppelganger as he said it, proud of himself for once. “I know what the score is.”
And the dark closed about him.
“No!”
he heard Rafe’s hoarse shout pursuing them. He felt a hand seek his in the dark—Jillan’s. Felt her press it hard. He trusted it was the latest one, as he had asked. “You did the right thing,” Rafe Three said—unmistakably Rafe, clear-eyed and sensible, as if he had drawn his first free breath out of the bewilderment the others posed. “What now?”—for Rafe was not senior of this group.
They were gone, just gone, and there was silence after. Rafe stood helpless between Rafe Two and Jillan; and Paul’s hours-younger self, his substitute, whose look at Jillan was apology and shame.
She just stared at that newborn Paul, with that dead cold face that was always Jillan’s answer to painful truths.
“What’s happening out there?” Rafe Two asked. “What’s
happening?

“War,” said that Paul, in a faint, thin voice. “Something like. That Paul that changed—it wants the rest of us. And he’s got to stop it. Paul has to. The real one. The one I belong to. The one I
am
.”
“It can make more of us,” Jillan said. “It can keep this thing going—indefinitely.”
“It won’t,” Paul Three said, “It won’t take the chance. It said it wouldn’t risk the ship. Kepta’s words.”
“It—” Jillan said; and: “O
God!
”—her eyes directed toward the tunnel-length.
Rafe spun and looked, finding nothing but dark; and then the howling sound raced through the speakers, leaving them shivering in its wake.
made haste now, sending tendrils of self into essential controls. encountered elements of <>, which had expected, but <>’s holdouts were growing few. There had been major failures. <>’s resistance collapsed in some areas, continued irrationally in others.
Other passengers, such as |:|, declared neutrality and retreated to the peripheries.
Paul, meanwhile.... wielded Paul/Rafe like an extension of self.
The variant minds of the simulacra were the gateway, reckoned. <> had invested very much of <>self in the intruders, which had proved, in their own way, dangerous.
The passengers were mobilized, as they had not been in eons. There was vast discontent.
“<> has lost <>’s grip,” whispered through the passages, everywhere. “<> has been disorganized. am taking over. Step aside. Neutrality is all ask—until matters are rectified.”
“Home,”
said one of [], with the ferocity of desire. [] forgot that []’s war was very long ago, or that []’s species no longer existed, and whose fault that was. But they were all, in some ways, mad.
Kepta joined them, a Rafe-shape with infinity in its eyes. It stood before them in the featureless dark, and Paul faced it in a kind of numbness which said the worst was still coming; and soon.
He was, for himself, he thought, remarkably unafraid; not brave—just self-deprived of alternatives.
“It will be there,” Kepta said, turning and pointing to the dark that was like all other dark about them. “Distance here is a function of many things. It can arrive here very quickly when it wants.”
“What’s it waiting for?”
“My extinction,” Kepta said, “and that’s become possible. You must meet it on its own terms. You must stand together, by whatever means you can. You will know what to do when you see it, or if you don’t, you were bound to fail from the beginning, and I will destroy you then. It will be a kindness. Trust me for that.”
And it was gone, leaving them alone; but a star shone in the dark, a murkish fitful thing. Rafe pointed to it; Paul had seen it already.
“Is that it?” Rafe wondered.
“I suppose,” said Paul, “that there’s nothing else for it to be.”
“Make it come to us,” Jillan said. “Get it away from whatever allies it has.”
“And what if its allies come with it?” Paul asked. “No. Come on. Time—may not be on our side.”
They advanced then. And it moved along their horizon, a baleful yellow light.
IX
T
hey waited; that was what they were left to do, prisoners of the corridor, of
Lindy
’s scattered pieces, of Kepta’s motives and the small remnant of former realities.
“I can’t,” Rafe Two mourned, having tried to will himself away into the dark where Paul had gone; and Rafe himself looked with pity on his doppelganger.
“That’ll be Kepta’s doing,” Jillan said. She sat tucked up in a chair that phased with her imperfectly, near Paul, loyally near their relict Paul, whose face mirrored profoundest shame.
“I tried too,” Paul Three said, in a hushed, aching tone, as if he were embarrassed even to admit the attempt. “Nothing. It’s shut down, whatever faculty we had.”
“You were outmaneuvered,” Rafe said. “He’s a little older than you.”
“Not much,” Jillan said to Paul on her own. “Hours. But a few choices older. He
knew
, that’s what. He’d had time to figure it out; and he was way ahead of us. He got us all.”
There was a glimmering of something in Paul Three’s eyes. Resolve, Rafe thought. Gratitude. And something he had suddenly seen in that other Paul Gaines, the look of a man who knew absolutely what he was doing.
Rafe Two picked that up, perhaps. Perhaps envied it; their minds were very close. That Rafe got up and turned his back as if he could not bear that confidence.
Why not me?
The thought broadcast itself from Rafe Two’s every move and shift of shoulders. He walked away, partly down the corridor.
Why not choose me? I was best. Oldest. Strongest.
Responsibility.
“Don’t,” Rafe said. “Stay put.”
“I am,” Rafe Two said, facing him against the dark, with bitterness. “I can’t blamed well get anywhere down the hall, can l?”
And then there was a Jillan-shape at his back, glowing in the dark.
“Rafe,” Rafe said, and Rafe Two saw his face, their faces, if not what was at his back. Rafe Two acquired a frightened look and turned to see what had appeared behind him in the corridor.
The light retreated before them, continually retreated.
“I guess,” Rafe said, not breathing hard, because they could not be out of breath, or tired, nor could what they pursued, “—I guess it’s not willing to be caught.”
“If that’s the case,” said Jillan, “we don’t have a prayer of taking it.”
“Unless it’s willing to catch us,” Paul said. “Maybe it’s counted the odds and doesn’t like three of us at once.
I’ll
go forward. Maybe that will interest it.”
“You can bet it will,” Jillan said, and caught his arm. She was strong; strong as he: that was the law of this place; and he was going nowhere, not against her, not by any means against the two of them. Rafe stepped in his way and faced that distant light in his stead.
“You!”
Rafe yelled at it. “Lost your nerve? Never had it in the first place?”
“That’s one way,” Paul said. “Let me tell you about that thing. It knows it’s a coward. It lives with that real well. It knows all kinds of things about itself. That’s its strength.”
“You’re wrong,” Jillan said. “If it’s you it’s not a coward.”
“Let’s say it’s prudent,” he said. “Let’s say—it knows how to survive. If we split up—it’ll go for one of us. Me, I’m betting.”
“Me,” said Jillan. “I’m the one it doesn’t have.”
“It’s scared of you,” Paul said with a dangerous twinge of shame. “I really think it is.”
“What’s
that
mean?” Jillan asked.
“That. Just that. It is. Keep pressing at it.” He walked farther with them. The light they pursued grew no brighter.
“Ever occur to you,” Jillan asked then, “that we’re being lured—ourselves?”
“Where’s Kepta?”
Rafe demanded of the uncounseling dark, the void about them. “Dammit, where is he? He could be more help. What’s he expect of us?”
“Kepta’s saving his own precious behind,” Jillan said. “We’re the delaying action. Don’t you figure that?”
But they kept walking, kept trying, together, since he could not persuade them otherwise. “Think of something,” Paul said. “That’s
me
we’re chasing. It knows every move I’d make. Think of something to surprise it.”
“It knows us,” Jillan said, a low enthusiastic voice. “Too bloody well. It’s not taking the bait.”
“Kepta?” Rafe Two asked, facing Jillan’s shape that strode toward him; but even while he asked it he kept backing up until he was within
Lindy
’s limits, until he had Rafe beside him, and true-Jillan and Paul Three. There was something very wrong with that Jillan-shape, something very much different from Kepta in its silence, the curious unsteadiness of its walking.

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