Intelligent Design: Revelations to Apocalypse (2 page)

BOOK: Intelligent Design: Revelations to Apocalypse
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“Not much food, I fear, for the birds of prey,” Janus said. “It does sadden me that while we were able to collect the majority of the planet’s species over the past century, we are leaving many behind.” He leaned on the balcony railing and took another sip of coffee from his high-grade plastic mug.

Two birds took flight from a rooftop and swooped on a small pack of rodent omnivores that had become more daring in the absence of Martians and other prey. The birds seized one of the smaller rodents, but the rodent pack turned on the attackers.

One of the birds barely escaped. The other lifted the struggling rodent into the sky.

That was close. There will be no love lost when that species disappears
, Janus thought while watching the rodent pack reorganize and move onto an unsuspecting garden. He turned and took a slow step from the silence of the outside world into his office, where a low but constant flow of computer voices reciting different data streams, observations, and conclusions played over the office intercom just as they had for centuries. No seats surrounded the large empty work tables in the center of the room, but benches lined the surrounding walls along with potted vegetation, bound books, paper star charts, planetary models, and a sea of color-coded tablets. One uneaten plate of food, a bottle of wine, and an empty glass sat on a bench amongst analytical equipment and paper-bound records. Janus sauntered over to the bottle of wine and poured himself another drink.

“Ah, Keeper, once again it is you and me, a handful of other stubborn old scientists, soldiers and the old left,” he said just loud enough to be heard above the computer voices. “It is sad that after a millennium of preparation, I still wonder if we did everything we could to preserve life in this quiet corner of the galaxy.”

He closed his layered work robes over his tall, thin frame and, with a full glass in hand, walked around his office, listening to the planet’s master computer running billions of computations on the planet, colonies, and the solar event poised to happen at any moment. The master computer’s female baritone stood out from the other computer tones as unmistakably in charge of the entire artificial intelligence of the planet.

“Master Architect Janus, I wish you would reconsider evacuating with the others. Both the Venus Keeper and the junior Architect of Earth request you join them. Your demise here is not necessary and it … it pains me that you will not leave when you could live,” the Keeper said in its resonant, feminine voice.

Hmm … the beginning of emotion? Maybe she will survive and even reach sapience,
he thought as he reviewed the number of cryogenic stasis chambers below. Though he had made his decision to stay long ago, he nodded as if he were actually considering it.

“No. I have no offspring, no spouse and no relatives. I have been in this workspace for two hundred years and in the field for another hundred years. I took over for Master Architect Lucius, who took over for Master Architect Guiana. They were of this world just as you are, Keeper. I cannot leave this world any more than you can. And besides, are there not cryogenic stasis chambers well below the surface?” He sipped his wine.

“Experimental. The liquid bonding and temperature only preserved the last subject for thirty-two thousand annual rotations,” the master computer said.

“Only thirty-two thousand rotations? That’s quite a bit of time. Experimental? What are your metrics for success? A billion annual rotations? Your demand for perfection surpasses even my predecessors, and we know how Architect Lucius was.”

“Yes … Master Architect Lucius was demanding, critical and often correct even when his ideas were unconventional and far from the norm, but I digress. Please, Master Architect Janus, a ship awaits you to leave at any moment. I can report on the final days and moments here should they come as expected. The ship is designed for long range, long term cryogenic sleep. You can join the others who left long ago to find the Originators.” She spoke with more emotion than he expected.

Persistent, and single-minded … Impressive.

“No, Keeper. Enough of this unresolvable discussion. When the time comes, I will, with the others, retreat to the chambers for safekeeping. ” He walked towards the balcony, his mind racing again as thoughts of things to do and check on flowed through his head.

“By the way,” he said, “I’m curious that with all my planning and efforts to salvage this solar system, why did you take it upon yourself to attempt to terraform Terra along with Junior Architect Hades? Why would you move ahead with such an unlikely plan on that tidal-locked planet, closer to hell than hope? If I did not know better, I would have guessed that Architect Lucius was still milling around here, or that he left a hidden program.” He gazed out the balcony window and sipped his wine, hoping that his efforts to distract the master computer worked. The computer background voices and the quiet dialogue of internal programs on the intercom comforted rather than distracted him after all their years together. Yet, ironically, his one voice easily distracted his longtime master computer, colleague and friend.

“While primary efforts to relocate the majority of our indigenous species to Venus while we transform Terra are running well ahead of schedule, Earth’s indigenous life has made it difficult to relocate the excess there. The massive warm-blooded omnivores have made havoc of our efforts, and the air quality still needs work, though minimal. Effort to transform Terra is low on the list but necessary should Earth not be a viable place for the excess overflow from Venus …” the Keeper said.

Janus interrupted her. “So you allowed Architect Hades to create a warehouse on a planetary scale. Based on the manifests of terraform equipment and fission producers, there is more than enough power to simply heat a contained environment along the terminal line rather than create a habitable world. Am I right?”

“Yes. But Junior Architect Hades is young and ambitious. He did, in fact, keep your ideas as a backup plan should things go awry. However, like many his age, he prefers to dream big and take risks.”

“And he took the rodents and their favorite mushrooms to Terra? Was this part of an experiment or does he have a fondness for fanged, long-scaled, tailed omnivores and fungi?” He watched the rodents methodically ravage the unattended garden.

“Architect Hades has taken a number of species, animal and vegetable, to see which species could exist underground in harsh conditions and darkness. He believes he can orchestrate an ecosystem where he can create a source of food, the omnivorous rodents, for higher order species should the proposed food chains collapse, such as a planetary disruption to food transports, supplies and commerce.”

“Smart for sure but dangerous—the fungi and rodents will multiply and live anywhere. He would be better served to focus on transforming and let those species die out.” Janus found it difficult to conceal his natural dislike for both species. He cringed at the thought of needing to eat either one if necessary.

“I suppose there’s also a good reason why Hades collected every large scale holographic emitter on our planet? Does he have any idea how the public would’ve responded if they were here to witness this act? They are difficult to construct and more difficult to move. I suppose I should be grateful he left mine alone.”

“Architect Hades is convinced that with a continuous supply of energy the holographic emitters will bend light just beyond our visual range.”

Janus calculated the creativity required and the probability of success in converting holographic emitters from projecting light particles to bending them and pushing them to either end of the light spectrum. After a moment, he chuckled.

“Once again, creative. He would need to utilize a power source as great as the terraform equipment, but he could do it. Risky, but he could cloak physical objects on a planetary scale, especially with Terra’s dark side of ice as a reflector. Provided he doesn’t blow up the planet. Very risky.”

“Yes.”

But why he would want to do this? Because he can? Was I that foolish when I was young?

“Speaking of taking risks, please remind Architect Iris to slow down her titration of the Venetian atmosphere. I am concerned she’s moving too quickly and could inadvertently create a runaway greenhouse effect. That would be bad.”

He stood, taking in the sight of his Martian home, and thought of something else to convey to Iris, about another young ambitious Junior Architect.

“She has been warned repeatedly on this matter … Wait. Wait. Architect Janus, please look …” Janus heard the Keeper speak, but the sky already drew his attention. A brilliant light filled the Martian twilight and, as it faded, a few lights flickered on in the empty cityscape—the homes of those citizens who had decided to stay. Janus took a deep breath, and his shoulders and the top of his back relaxed as if they’d been waiting for this moment, this catastrophic, extinction-level event.

“I take it the dwarf planets Gemini Alpha and Beta finally collided. I expected it to happen next month. I hoped their gravity wells might survive this pass. How their orbits became suddenly destabilized in the first place is beyond me, just as it was to my predecessors.” Janus calmly continued to watch the light fade and the sky return to its darkening reddish blue tint.

“Not all the predecessors. Master Architect Guiana believed that it was ’the will and hand of the Originators,’ though she lacked scientific support,” the master computer said.

“It was her faith, Master Computer, not science that provided her answer, the answer that satisfied her to the last days of her life. Still, I thought there might be a little more time …”

“Your assessment is accurate. In regards to the early destruction of the planets, it was the extreme gravitational pull of the twin planets’ close proximity that ripped their cores apart. Our sensors have captured dramatic images of each planet’s final moments. I will forward these events and recordings to the Keepers. The others will appreciate the scientific significance of this rare occurrence.”

Though the Master Keeper’s artificial intelligence often precluded emotion, Janus thought he detected emotion in her voice—sadness.
Our time is close to an end and another story is about to begin without us.

“Even with all our advanced technology, we could not keep the planets from destroying themselves.”

“It was not through lack of trying,” she said.

Janus smiled and started to take another sip of wine but stopped with a sigh at the compassion in her voice.

If only there was more time …

“I’m guessing that extinction level debris will hit us in three days.” He wasn’t afraid. He, like everyone else, knew the end was coming. They’d had years to choose whether to leave or stay, and he’d decided, like Hades, the junior architects, all of them, to witness this phenomenon and see if they could save the viable worlds. Most left, few stayed. He’d made peace with his decision years ago.

“Unknown. It will take less than a minute to determine a timetable and where we will be hit. The impact craters will be impressive. Even with the debris on the other side of the Jovian planets, I speculate, based on their size and number of strikes, that nothing will survive on our planet’s surface. I am also concerned based on the timing of this collision that Earth may be in the line of impact. Venus should be clear and the Sun will easily protect Terra,” the Keeper said.

“That’s ironic. The least habitable planet is safely protected behind the sun while Earth’s monsters rule the planet, but … if a series of meteors large enough to wipe out the species but not destroy the atmosphere struck … it would give a narrow opening to transport mammalian life to Earth after the initial fallout.”

“The gravitational disturbances could affect Terra’s orbit as well as ours. They could alter the planetary axis as well, changing the climates and biosphere of each planet in unique ways.”

“Yes … the effects of a massive impact may eliminate the dinosaurs and provide an opportunity for new, more viable sapient life similar to our own,” Janus said.

“Architect Iris will take full advantage of that,” the master computer added.

“But no rodents or fungi … please tell Hades to spare the planet.” He turned from the balcony and marched to the center of his office, wondering if his sarcasm would be lost on the computer. “If your data collection is complete, please simulate the destruction of the Gemini planets with a projection of debris field, trajectory and the inner and outer planets’ orbits,” he said.

Within seconds, the architect’s simple office mutated into a star field with the planetary bodies of Earth, Mars and Venus in position around the sun while images of the Jovian planets, Jupiter and Saturn with all of their moons, hovered in front of him. Just beyond them, two small planets close in mass to Mercury and in different orbital planes looked as if they would miss a collision. A sudden explosion of light sent a shock wave of debris in all directions.

“The energy released from their collision is impressive,” Janus said.

“Yes.”

“And based on the positioning of the Jovian planets, most of the debris will strike Jupiter and Saturn.”

“But not all of the debris. Those planets’ mass will pull in a substantial portion, but Earth, Venus and our world are exposed.”

“And Terra is behind the sun.” “Yes.”

“Maybe just enough debris … end simulation,” Janus said. The solar system dissolved around him and, once again, he stood in a simple office. After a moment of reflection, he strode to one of the desks.

“Based on your rate of walking and accelerated heart rate and blood pressure, I am guessing that you are revisiting transforming Earth based on the possibility that its life might be destroyed?” the Keeper asked.

“Yes.”

“It is possible that should the dinosaurs survive, they might evolve into sapience, similar to mammals.”

“Possible. But, based on computer projections, I believe Earth’s atmosphere is slowly choking them into extinction. This cataclysmic event could clear the planet for another attempt for another species,” he said as ideas flooded his mind.

BOOK: Intelligent Design: Revelations to Apocalypse
6.01Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
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