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Authors: Allen Steele

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BOOK: Spindrift
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Shillinglaw stared at the shuttle with disbelief. The
Maria Celeste
had returned, all right…yet it wasn't the craft that had been mated with the
Galileo
when it left Earth nearly sixty years ago. Something had gotten to it, changed it…

“Like my ship?” A woman's voice, from his left side. “You should…it got us home.”

Shillinglaw looked around, saw a woman in a long, white robe strolling toward him. She reached up to pull back its hood, and that was when he recognized Emily Collins.

Despite all his best efforts, Shillinglaw was an old man. There was no way this could be denied: telomerase manipulation could give the illusion of youth, but nothing could change the subtle expression of age that lurked within one's eyes. Yet one look at Collins, and Shillinglaw saw she hadn't changed since he'd last seen her. She had the same svelte figure, same short-cropped blond hair, same attractive face…but, most importantly, her eyes were still young.

She had not aged. She was still the same woman he'd last seen fifty-six years ago. Gene therapy couldn't accomplish this feat any more than cosmetics could transform a crone into a virgin. Trying not to stare at her face, Shillinglaw looked down. The outfit she wore wasn't an ESA jumpsuit: a floor-length cloak, made of some soft, off-white material threaded with an intricate pattern of whorls and angles and odd, arabesque designs.

“I remember you.” Collins gazed at him with almost as much curiosity as he regarded her. “Shillinglaw, isn't it…John Shillinglaw? Associate director for the agency?”

“Director General now.” He couldn't help but stare at her. “I'm surprised you remember me.”

She raised an eyebrow. As she did, the patterns of her robe seemed to change ever so slightly, becoming reddish orange. “You made an impression on us,” she murmured. “Or perhaps you don't remember?” He shook his head, and for a moment her eyes rolled upward. “Yes, well…it has been some time, hasn't it?” She glanced at Tereshkova. “He's the only one? No one else…not even Beck?”

Not recognizing the name of Shillinglaw's predecessor, Tereshkova's face expressed ignorance. “Rudolph Beck passed away about fifteen…no, twenty years ago,” Shillinglaw replied. “I'm sure he would have wanted to be here now.”

“Oh. So sorry to hear that.” Collins shook her head in dismay; the patterns of her cloak assumed a purple hue. She turned away from him, looking toward the shuttle. “All right, you can come down now. I guess we're going to have to deal with him.”

A moment passed, then Theodore Harker emerged from the shuttle.
Galileo
's first officer was followed by Jared Ramirez, the astrobiologist from the Western Hemisphere Union who'd belonged to the mission's science team. As they walked down the belly ramp, Shillinglaw saw that, like Collins, the two men had remained ageless. Although Harker's hair was long enough now to be pulled back in a ponytail, and Ramirez had cultivated a beard, neither of them were any older than when they'd left Earth. And like Collins, both wore robes, which were identical to hers, with the same complex patterns.

“Sorry about that, sir,” Harker said, grinning sheepishly. “We just wanted to be sure who we were dealing with.” Noticing Shillinglaw's curious gaze, he pinched a fold of fabric upon his left arm. “Gifts from our friends in Rho Coronae Borealis…
sha
, they call them. Sacred robes.”

“Of course…sure.” Still trying to catch his breath, Shillinglaw sought to remember details of the classified memo that had been transmitted via hyperlink from the EA ambassador on Coyote. “The
hjadd
, you mean…the alien race you contacted.”

“That's them, yes.” Harker stepped forward to extend his hand. “Don't know if you remember me, sir. Theodore Harker, first officer…former first officer, rather…of the
Galileo
.”

“Certainly.” Shillinglaw shook his hand, once again marveling at the younger man's apparent immortality. Tall, broad-faced, hair just as dark as it had been almost six decades ago. Shillinglaw glanced again at the shuttle. “Are they…?”

“The
hjadd
emissary? No.” Ramirez stood to one side, as if reluctant to join the other two. “Heshe chose to remain on Coyote, or at least until we've satisfied himher that our mission is successful.”

Like the others, Jared Ramirez remained unaged; tall and thin, with bushy grey hair and a trim beard, he was still several years older than Harker and Collins, just as he'd been when he joined the expedition—or rather, was drafted. Shillinglaw regarded the scientist with as much distrust as the first time he'd laid eyes on him. The man had once been a traitor; there was no reason for Shillinglaw to think that he had changed.

Instead of looking away, though, as he'd done so often in the past, Ramirez calmly gazed back at him. Only the subtle violet shading of his cloak's patterns gave any hint to his emotions. “In time, the
hjadd
may come here,” he went on. “For now, though, they're waiting to learn what our response…humankind's response…will be to the news of their existence.”

Shillinglaw had seen the images transmitted via hyperlink from Coyote: a bipedal form, vaguely human-shaped but definitely not human, hisher features rendered indistinct by the silver visor of the environmental suit heshe wore when heshe had come down
Maria Celeste
's ramp. Despite repeated requests from various government leaders, though, the
hjadd
Prime Emissary had declined to reveal anything about himherself, aside from hisher long and elaborate name: Mahamatasja Jas Sa-Fhadda.

No one knew anything about himher. No one, at least, except these three.

“Anyone here going to tell me what happened?” Shillinglaw let out his breath. “You launched from here, successfully went through KX-1, made a quick survey of Eris, then set out to intercept Spindrift…and that was it. Last transmission from the
Galileo
was received June 4, 2288.”

“That pretty well summarizes it, yes,” Harker said dryly.

“It does?” Shillinglaw regarded him with skepticism. “Thirteen days ago, you came through the Coyote starbridge, claiming that the
Galileo
had been destroyed, the three of you were the only survivors, you'd been to a planet fifty-four light-years away…”

“Fifty light-years.” Collins shyly raised a hand. “Pardon me, sir, but it's fifty-four-point-four l.y.'s from Earth, but only fifty light-years from 47 Uma.” She hesitated, then added, “In another direction, that is.”

Obviously trying to hide his amusement, Harker coughed into his fist. “Excuse me…she's right, yes. Fifty light-years.” Then he smiled. “Landed during the wedding reception for the president's daughter. Afraid we caused something of a commotion.”

“She wasn't too pleased.” Ramirez fought to keep from laughing and didn't quite succeed. “But, hey, if we'd known, we would've baked a—”

“I don't care.” Impatient with the way this was going, Shillinglaw turned toward Harker. “Commander, I'm glad you're home, but…damn it, do you realize that you're supposed to be dead? We wrote you off almost sixty years ago. And now you turn up, in”—he gestured in the general direction of the shuttle—“in this thing, which doesn't even look like…”

“Right, yes.” Harker raised a placating hand. As he did, the patterns of his robe became a warm yellow; Shillinglaw found himself wondering why it did that. “I'm sorry, sir. It's just that…we've been gone a long time, and everything takes getting used to.” He reached over to take Collins's hand. She smiled, and casually rested her head against his shoulder. “But you're correct,” he went on. “There's a story to be told here. A rather long one…”

“I can only imagine.” Shillinglaw nodded. “Frankly, I'm envious. I wish I could have been there…”

“No, you don't. Remember, we're the only survivors. If you had been aboard the
Galileo
, you'd be dead by now.” Harker glanced at the others, and Shillinglaw saw that their expressions had become solemn. “Which is one of the reasons why we've come back, in fact. To deliver a message…and to give you something.”

“Oh? And what might that be?”

Harker reached into his robe, withdrew a small object: a data fiche. “It's all here,” he said, holding it up for Shillinglaw to see. “Our final reports, along with logbooks, flight recorder transcripts, scientific data…the works.” Shillinglaw started to reach for it, but Harker pulled it back. “Don't be so eager. You may not like what you'll find.”

“Let me be the judge of that.” Shillinglaw held out his hand insistently. Harker hesitated, then extended the disk to him. “And the message?”

Harker nodded toward the disk. “Read this first. Then we'll talk.”

PART ONE:
Transit of Centauri
TWO

APRIL 16, 2288—WILTON PARK, ENGLAND

T
he Daimler hovercoupe glided up the narrow country road that wound its way through rolling meadows, passing ancient oaks where magpies fluttered from limb to limb. Once the fields had been filled with vast flocks of sheep placidly grazing upon emerald grass; when the global climate began to change, though, sheep were among the livestock in the United Kingdom to succumb to disease and longer winters. Although the West Sussex countryside was one of the few places in England that remained relatively unspoiled, even the small, white-shouldered birds had become an endangered species, and it was nothing short of a miracle that a semblance of springtime had come to the downs.

The coupe slowed down as it approached a security gate. Its scanner recognized the vehicle, and the gate swung open. The Daimler moved up the serpentine driveway, heading toward the grey manor house that sprawled across the crest of the hill, until it finally came to a halt within a courtyard in front of the main entrance.

Jared Ramirez waited until the Daimler's skirts deflated and the coupe came to rest. Even then, though, he was not at liberty to leave the vehicle by himself; he had to be patient until a pair of Special Air Service officers—or at least that was what he assumed they were, even though they were dressed in civilian clothes—came out from beneath the archway and opened the back door for him. Seated beside him, John Shillinglaw prompted him with an unnecessary nudge to the elbow. Ramirez ignored him, and instead glanced toward the driver.

“Thanks for the lift, David,” he said. “See you on the way back?” The driver, who'd picked them up at the shuttle landing field at the nearby RAF base and doubtless was another SAS man, favored him with a brief nod and a smile. Picking up his cane, Ramirez swung his right leg out of the vehicle, ducked his head and, with his wrists still bound together by magnetic handcuffs, allowed the two security guards to extract him carefully from the car.

“Welcome to Wiston House,” one of them said, as if he were an honored guest instead of a prisoner. “May I take your bag for you?”

“Certainly. Thank you.” Leaning heavily on his cane, Ramirez watched as his escort opened the coupe's boot and removed the nylon duffel bag that contained everything he owned, not counting his prison jumpsuit and the handful of trinkets he'd left behind on the Moon. Almost everything else he'd brought with him, including the suit he wore, supplied courtesy of ESA along with the cane that he used to help himself cope with Earth's gravity. If all else failed, at least he'd return to Dolland with a few items he might use for barter with his fellow inmates.

But you're not going back there, are you?
he thought.
You got off the Moon. And one way or another, you're getting out of here, too.

Ramirez gazed up at the weather-beaten Tudor walls and mullioned windows of Wiston House. During the short ride over from Wilton Field, David had obliged his curiosity by giving him a brief history of the place. Established on a private estate that dated back to the eleventh century, the manor had been erected in the 1500s, with additional wings, along with an adjacent chapel and carriage house, built during the eighteenth century. Although parts of the original edifice had been demolished during the nineteenth century by an overenthusiastic architect, Wiston House remained largely unchanged through the mid-twentieth century, when the family that owned the manor put it under long-term lease to the British government. Since then, Wilton Park had served as a site for high-level conferences. The manor's interior might have been remodeled many times to suit contemporary requirements, yet its purpose was still the same: a dignified and comfortable place where diplomats, scholars, defense officials, and scientists could discuss the pressing issues of the day.

This wasn't the first conference Ramirez had been invited to attend, but it was the first one where he'd arrived wearing manacles. As one of the SAS men carried their bags through the front entrance, he turned to Shillinglaw. “Think you could have these removed?” he asked. “They're rather unnecessary…not to mention humiliating.”

Shillinglaw hesitated, yet before he could respond, someone else answered for him. “I don't think that's an inappropriate request. If you're willing to trust us, then we should be willing to trust you.”

A tall, young-looking man with thinning blond hair sauntered toward them from the door. “Rudolph Beck,” he said, his voice thickened by an Austrian accent. “Director General, European Space Agency.” He glanced at Shillinglaw. “Good to see you again, John”—Shillinglaw briefly nodded—“and you must be the famous Dr. Jared Ramirez. Delighted to meet you at long last.”

“The pleasure is all mine.” For the first time since this all began, Ramirez found himself taken off guard. “Are you sure you don't mean the
infamous
Dr. Jared Ramirez? I believe that's who you're expecting.”

“Only if he's still in the car and hasn't gotten out yet.” Beck made a show of glancing past him at the coupe. “No? Well, then, I suppose we'll just have to make do with you.” He looked at their driver. “David, would you please…?”

Without a trace of reluctance, David produced a remote unit from his pocket, aimed it at Ramirez's wrists. A brief buzz, and Ramirez felt the cuffs loosen as his hands parted from each other. “There's an interesting legend about this place,” Beck went on, while David removed the manacles. “The first conference was held here shortly after World War II. The subject was the rebuilding of Germany, and the participants included a number of high-ranking former Nazi officials. One of the conference organizers asked whether they should take special precautions to make sure that none of the POWs escaped, to which another is said to have replied, ‘Then we'll have to make sure that they don't
want
to escape.'”

The Director General pointed to the long driveway leading down the hill. “As you see, there are no guards, no watchtowers. Nothing but the gate, and you can walk around it easily enough. So there's nothing to prevent you from leaving anytime you choose to do so.”

“Honor system?” Ramirez tried not to smirk, but he couldn't help himself. “I appreciate your…um, candor, but unless you've haven't heard, I'm the man who sold out the human race. I've just spent the last nine years of my life in a place where people barter sex for an extra roll of toilet paper. And when I'm done here…”

“You're going back. Or at least so you assume.” Beck turned to lead them toward the iron-strapped front door; Ramirez noticed that the SAS men remained behind. “Dr. Ramirez…Jared, if I may?…ifyou don't wish to participate in this conference, that's your choice. Your manacles have been removed, and as I said, you're free to go as you will…although I doubt you'd get very far. There are quite a few people who won't want you running loose.”

Passing through a small foyer, they strolled through the manor's great hall. Ramirez paused to marvel at the hammer-beam rafters of the high ceiling, rising sixty feet above a Renaissance dining room lined with oak tables and high-backed chairs. At the far side of the room was an ornate fireplace, its white-marble mantel carved with a family crest. Midmorning sunlight streamed in through tall windows; from the kitchen door, he caught the mixed aroma of broiled salmon, steamed asparagus, fresh-baked bread. A team of waiters quietly moved through the room, setting the tables for the luncheon soon to come, while Mozart gently filtered from speakers concealed within the minstrel gallery.

“But if you choose to work with us,” Beck continued, oblivious to the luxury through which they casually passed, “we may find a way to ease your sentence. Make it possible for you to reenter society in your former capacity.”

Distracted, Ramirez almost missed this part. He stopped, turned around. “What are you saying? Are you telling me…?”

“Not now,” Beck said quietly, raising a hand to shush him. By then they'd reached a hallway running lengthwise across the manor's ground floor. To their left, past a mahogany staircase leading to the second floor, was an open door leading to what appeared to be a parlor. Ramirez spotted several men and women standing around, drinking coffee and chatting among themselves. Other conference members, taking a break between sessions.

“You've missed the keynote,” the Director General said quietly, “but you have a few minutes before we begin your presentation.” He pointed to the nearby stairs. “Your bag has already been taken to your room. Perhaps you'd like to go up there, freshen up a bit…”

“Thanks, but that's not necessary.” During the long trip from the Moon, he had spent the last two days preparing his notes and mentally rehearsing what he'd have to say. Although he was tired and his clothes felt rumpled, he was ready for what lay ahead. To the right, he saw another door at the other end of the corridor. “That's the conference room?”

“Yes, it is.” Beck turned to escort him that way. “Come. We'll get you set up.” Then he smiled, and gently grasped his elbow in what was meant to be a comradely gesture. “Relax. This is supposed to be informal. And besides, you're among friends.”

I doubt that
, Ramirez thought, although he didn't say so aloud.

 

The Wilton Park conference room was long and broad, with tall windows that looked out across the downs and a fireplace topped with a gilded antique mirror. An oak-top table shaped like an elliptical ring dominated the room, with a decorative floral arrangement set up in its center and high-backed leather chairs evenly spaced around the ring's outer rim. The table was equipped with built-in data screens and microphones; bottles of springwater and crystal jars of hard candy had been set out, refreshments intended to keep the attendees comfortable during the long hours they spent in session.

As the principal speaker for this session, Ramirez was seated in front of the fireplace, with the conference chairman to his right. He turned out to be someone Ramirez had encountered many years ago: Sir Peter Cole, the Royal Society professor of physics at Cambridge who, only a little while ago, had been appointed Britain's Astronomer Royal. Tall and slender, with longish grey hair and an air of studied affability, he greeted Ramirez with a firm handshake and a pleasant smile, as if they were old colleagues who'd simply been too involved with their own careers to drop each other a line now and then. Yet Ramirez hadn't forgotten that Sir Peter once published a blistering critique of his work in the
Astrophysical Journal
; perhaps he was no longer a foe, but he certainly wasn't a friend either.

His left knee involuntarily twitching beneath the desk, Ramirez watched the other conference members as they filtered into the room to resume their places at the table. Besides Cole, Beck, and Shillinglaw, the only person he recognized was Donald Sinclair. The political officer gave him a cursory nod, then opened his screen and began to review his notes from the previous session. The rest were strangers, identified only by last-name placards arranged along the table. Most looked like tenured academics or government officials of one stripe or another; they regarded him with guarded curiosity, as if he were a rare beast, reasonably domesticated yet nonetheless dangerous, that had been temporarily released from his cage and trotted out on a leash.

Once Cole rang a small silver bell to bring the meeting to order, he began the meeting by reminding everyone that the proceedings were officially classified Top Secret, and that the nondisclosure agreements they'd signed forbade them from any pubic discussion or publication of what they learned during the conference. Knowing nods from around the table, yet once again Ramirez was puzzled by Sinclair's presence. Why had a WHU political officer—along with a contingent of Union scientists, no doubt—been invited to attend a high-level scientific conference sponsored by the European Alliance? Had the rivalry between the two superpowers eased that much while he was in Dolland? He doubted it, yet nonetheless there they were, just the same.

Sir Peter then briefly introduced Ramirez. He pointedly didn't mention where he'd been the last nine years, or the crimes for which he'd been convicted—everyone there knew those things already. Instead he stated that Ramirez was an astrobiologist associated with the Union Astronautica and, in his capacity as a SETI researcher, the creator of Raziel. Then Cole turned the session over to Ramirez.

Ramirez didn't rise to speak, but instead remained in his seat. Although he made use of his screen's interactive features, for the most part he consulted the handwritten notes he'd made during his trip from the Moon. Much of his material was already well-known, of course. Christened after the ancient Hebrew angel of mysteries, Raziel was a lunar-based optical interferometer: twenty-seven twenty-meter reflector telescopes configured along a Y-shaped axis, with each arm six kilometers in length and the entire array having a baseline of ten kilometers. Located within Mare Muscoviense on the far side of the Moon, a few kilometers from the Union Astronautica's long-baseline radio telescope to which it was linked and operated, Raziel was designed to work independently for years at a time, conducting full-sky sweeps of the galaxy in cycles that would take up to two years to complete before they'd begin again.

In the beginning, Raziel hadn't been intended for SETI research. Its primary mission had been the discovery of habitable worlds—or at least terrestrial-size planets—in orbit around distant stars. But that mission had been largely fulfilled by 2278 with the discovery of a little over a hundred terrestrial planets within a seventy-light-year radius of Earth; less than ten were considered to be habitable, and none was closer than Coyote, forty-six light-years from Earth. Furthermore, none of these worlds displayed any signs of intelligent life.

BOOK: Spindrift
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