‘This is it,’ he said. ‘Some of the space settlers’ diamond ships have just entered the atmosphere. They’re heading for—’
Connection lost.
Myra jumped up, and to her utter horror and amazement she saw them, jinking and jittering through the sky towards her. Their infrared radiation signature was arrogantly clear—they didn’t need to bother with shielding,
unlike the stealth fighters they resembled. One moment they were dots on the horizon, the next they were discs overhead, swooping past at a thousand metres. Their laser lances slashed the vast encampment, and were countered seconds too late by futile fusillades of skyward machine-gun fire. Then they were at the other horizon, and—
—banking around for a second run—
—screams of people and beasts in the night, dying under the laser beams and the humming rain of their own misdirected, falling ordnance—
Earth versus the flying saucers! Way cool!
Myra shook off that mad thought and reached for the command-centre controls as though through thick mud. Valentina’s eyes shone in the firelight for a moment, and Myra saw in them a reflection of her own resolution. Then she and Valentina stooped together to their task. As Myra rattled through the codes, she waited for the laser’s hot tongue on her neck.
The diamond ships were far too fast for human control, or even for their enhanced, superhuman occupants. Their main guidance systems were real-time uplinks to the space stations, which a few good nuclear explosions could disrupt.
The sky went white, and the black discs fell like leaves.
The ablation cascade did not happen all at once. Lagrange went to eternity instantaneously, in one appalling sphere of hell-hot helium fusion, but Earth orbit was a different thing. Hours, perhaps days, would pass before the last product of human ingenuity and industry was scraped from the sky. Even so, the comsats were among the first to fail. Most, indeed, were taken out by the electromagnetic pulses alone. Riding into the first dawn of the new world, Myra knew that the little camcopter dancing a couple of metres in front of her might well be relaying the last television news most of its watchers would ever see.
Behind her, in a slow straggle that ended with the ambulances and litters of the injured and dying, the Kazakh migration spread to the horizon. The sun was rising behind them, silhouetting their scattered, tattered banners. There was only one audience, now, that was worth speaking to: the inheritors.
‘Nothing is written,’ she said. ‘The future is ours to shape. When you take the cities, spare the scientists and engineers. Whatever they may have done in the past you need them for the future. Let’s make it a better one.’
The camcopter spun around, soared, darted about wildly and dived into the ground. The horses’ hooves, the worn tyres of the vehicles, crushed it in seconds. Myra wasn’t worried; she could see her own image, with a few seconds’
delay, appearing in the corner of her eye-band where CNN still chattered away. The rest of the field was filled with bizarre hallucinations, the net’s near-death experience.
God filled the horizon, bigger than the sunrise.
I sat on the plinth of the statue of the Deliverer, and smoked a cigarette to fight my stomach’s heaves. Gradually my mind and my body returned to some kind of equilibrium. The din of the launch celebrations, the lights of the houses and pubs, became again something I could regard without disgust and hear without dismay. I stood up, and the ground was steady under my feet. I looked up, and the sky was dark and starry above my head.
I walked a few steps from the statue and turned around. The Deliverer on her horse reared above me. Merrial had told me, a couple of weeks earlier, the reason why the Deliverer’s features varied on all the statues I’d ever seen. She was a myth, a multiplicity. Her hordes had never ridden from far Kazakhstan to Lisbon’s ancient shore, as the songs and stories say. They had never swept all before them. Instead, each town and city had been invaded by a horde raised closer to home, on its very own hinterland. How many hundred, how many thousand towns had met the new order in the form of a wild woman on a horse, riding in at the head of a ragtag army to proclaim that the net was thrown off, the sky was fallen, and the world was free?
It was that final message, the last ever spoken from the net and the screens, that had identified them with that singular woman, the Deliverer. I leaned forward, to read again the words chiselled on this plinth, as it is on them all, from far Kazakhstan to Lisbon’s ancient shore:
NOTHING IS WRITTEN. THE FUTURE IS OURS TO SHAPE. WHEN YOU TAKE THE CITIES, SPARE THE SCIENTISTS AND ENGINEERS. WHATEVER THEY MAY HAVE DONE IN THE PAST YOU NEED THEM FOR THE FUTURE. LET’S MAKE IT A BETTER ONE.
The last words of the old world, and the first of the new.
I thought of Merrial, and took another step back, still drawing on my cigarette. She was older than I had ever imagined possible. But she was also, I realised, still as young as she’d seemed when I’d first seen her. Nothing had changed, nothing could change that lovely, eager, open personality. She was not old, she had merely … stayed young.
As I would.
What did I have to complain about?
I laughed at myself, at my own youthful folly. In the long view of history, in the promise of a long life to come, the difference in our chronological age, however great, could only be insignificant.
A step, a swish, a scent. Her warm, dry hand clasped mine.
‘Are you all right, Clovis?’
I turned and looked at her, and drew her towards the plinth. We sat down.
‘Merrial,’ I said, ‘I know who you are.’
‘Oh,’ she said. ‘And who am I?’
I handed her the booklet, open at the page.
She sat for a long moment looking down at it, with a slight smile and a slowly welling tear.
‘Ah, fuck,’ she said. ‘Everybody else there is long gone, as far as I know. But maybe I wouldn’t know, as they wouldn’t know about me.’ She sniffed, and handed the booklet back. ‘So now you know. I never wanted to be what people would expect of me, if they knew.’
‘But you are,’ I said. ‘You knew about the AI, and you expected Fergal to do what he did. I saw your face when he said it, and it was like you’d just cracked a piece of white logic.’
‘Or black! Aye, I knew. The Deliverer told me about it herself, just before the end. She warned me that it was a dangerous thing, though benign according to its lights. Like Fergal!’
‘But
why
did you give it to him?’
Merrial leaned back and looked up. ‘Because the deadly debris is up there, colha Gree. I
know
what happened at the Deliverance, because I lived through it. I saw the flashes. I was there when the sky fell. I knew the ship
would never get through without a much better guidance system than the one I was working on—well, I knew by the time I’d finished testing it, which was not that long ago. I needed someone to find the AI under cover of seeking something else, and I needed someone who’d put it on the ship—for good reasons or bad.’
She lowered her gaze and smiled. ‘So here we are. And now it’s you who has to decide,
mo gràidh.
That ship’s success will stimulate others, from other lands as well, from the Oriental and the Austral states. Competition between companies and continents, great revolutions to come, and the sky road before us. If it’s not launched, or its new mind is ripped out and it fails, or if indeed the AI is not smart enough to save it, then it’ll be a long time before it’s tried again. And the next to try might not be as benevolent as the International Scientific Society. It could be an army, or an empire.’
She grabbed my shoulders and gazed at me. ‘If you walk in there and tell Druin and his boys, that’s what could still happen.’
I closed my eyes. ‘I can see that,’ I said, ‘but I’m more concerned about the power Fergal, or someone like him, might have.’
‘Open your eyes,’ Merrial said.
She was looking very serious. ‘That thing, the AI, the planner, it can only do what people let it tell them to do. Fergal said there are no such people yet. What he should have said is, there are no such people
any more.
Your people, colha Gree, they are not the types to let themselves be ordered about by communists—because they have never been ordered about by anyone!’
‘Ah!’ I said, suddenly understanding. ‘Because of the Deliverance, and the Deliverer!’
Merrial laughed.
‘“No saviours from on high deliver”,’ she said wryly. ‘Your people delivered themselves. That’s another thing I saw, and I’ll tell you about one day. If you’re still with me.’
‘Oh, yes,’ I said. ‘I’m still with you.’
‘Good,’ she said. ‘We have a lot to do and a long time to do it in.’
She looked around pointedly. The square was jumping.
‘So, colha Gree, are you going to ask me for a dance?’
‘Of course,’ I said. ‘Would you do me the honour?’
For a second before we whirled away I stared at the scene before me, fixing it in my memory. Behind the statue Mars was rising, a blue-green dot in the East. Whatever became of the ship, whether it soared to a safe orbit or was blasted to smithereens, other ships would get out there somehow, on the sky road.
Whatever the truth about the Deliverer, she will remain in my mind as she was shown on that statue, and all the other statues and murals, songs
and stories: riding, at the head of her own swift cavalry, with a growing migration behind her and a decadent, vulnerable, defenceless and rich continent ahead; and, floating bravely above her head and above her army, the black flag on which nothing is written.