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“You don’t intend to stay?”

“No,” said Horrocks. “I’m crew, and that’s all there is to it.”

Synchronic gave him a teasing look. “You’re sure of that? Some of the crew always elect to stay.”

“And some of the founders always choose to go.”

She smiled at his riposte. “True enough. And it’s always a surprise, even for them, or so I’m told. But for now, you’re certain you don’t want to stick around here?”

“Yes.”

“Good,” she said, with a hint of regret. “That puts you in a good position to be objective. You see, our interests are potentially in conflict with those of the ship generation.”

Horrocks was shocked. The harmony of interests between the crew, the founder generation, and the ship generation was almost an axiom. He put down his empty glass and, without thinking, refilled it.

“I don’t understand,” he said. He looked around at the ancient faces and found no clue in them.

“You know the ship generation,” Synchronic said.

“Not as well, surely, as you,” he said.

She smiled, with a trace of impatience. “You’ve seen a lot more of them since they grew up than I have. You’ve trained scores of them.”

Horrocks nodded. “Hundreds. I’ve been favourably impressed. They’re enthusiastic, eager to learn, quick to pick up.”

“I should hope so,” said Synchronic. She glanced around the others. Something flashed between them, too fast for Horrocks to decode. “They were raised for this adventure; they were, in a sense, bred for it. That’s our problem.”

“I still don’t see the problem.”

Chandrasekhar Limit Lamont, a habitat-design entrepreneur in a blue skirt and a buzz cut, leaned forward, elbows on knees, spreading greasy fingers. “They’re eager to start colonising,” he said. “The ship is like a seedpod about to burst.”

Horrocks nodded. “Of course,” he said. He wondered if the man knew of his wonderment at the plant genetic machinery dispersal system. Unlikely — the image would be familiar to the flatfooter. “If I’d grown up in one of the small settlements, getting out would be the foremost thing on my mind. Apart from sex, I suppose.”

Synchronic laughed. “It’s the same thing.”

“Still,” said Horrocks. “The problem with that?”

“Is that we may have to delay colonisation,” said Chandrasekhar.

Horrocks had heard the option being bandied about, on the margins of the raging debates about whether or not to contact the aliens. Hearing it put forward as a serious possibility startled him.

“If you want to know how the ship generation will react to that,” he said, “you don’t need me to tell you. You already know the answer. They’ll not stand for it. They’ll be furious.”

Chandrasekhar nodded. “That’s what we expect, yes. We were curious as to whether you would confirm it. Nevertheless, it’s a step we may be forced to, in the… awkward circumstance.”

“Why?” Horrocks asked. “Everyone’s tooled up for the usual sky-down approach. We don’t have to go near the terrestrial for centuries. Or any of the planets, come to that. Apart from scooping helium 3 from the gas giant. The aliens don’t even have to notice us.”

“Oh, they’ll notice us,” said Armstrong Phillipic Natura, an artist. She regarded him over the rim of her glass. “Unless we stealth all our comms, which is impracticable. And as soon as we start doing things, they’ll see the industry.”

“What if they do?” Horrocks asked. “It still doesn’t affect them. Not until they get space travel, anyway. And when they come out, we’ll have plenty to offer them, and no doubt they us.”

“It’ll affect them long before they get space travel,” said Chandrasekhar Limit.





“We know this?” Horrocks asked.

The three who had just spoken to him exchanged looks.

“How much,” asked Synchronic, “do you know about what people did before they lived in caves?”

The shade had covered the sunline. A few lights had come on in the courtyard. Small insects had become bothersome. Horrocks stood staring into the pool. Mullets nibbled at what he had spewed in it. The sight failed to disgust him. He felt cold. He did not look again at the pictures that Armstrong Phillipic had conjured in his head, but their images remained in his memory. It wasn’t that they were news to him. He’d known, in the abstract, that terrible things had happened in the deep past. Everybody did. It was part of education. But — wisely, he now thought — the teachers and careparents and even the history texts had never brought it home to him; never rubbed his nose in it; never given him the full picture.

The pictures were bad enough, but it was the mentality that had produced the reality they depicted that had shocked him. His prehistoric ancestors seemed more alien than anything down on Destiny II. No, that wasn’t it: they were precisely as alien, and the aliens as prehistoric.

The clique had long dispersed, but for Synchronic. He heard her light footsteps, felt her arm across his back and her hand on his shoulder, her head against his upper arm. He took a deep breath. Her scent was motherly, with a faint erotic tang.

“Feeling better?” she asked.

“Not really,” he said.

“I can tell by your tone that you are,” she said.

He shrugged away from her and paced around the pool, all the way around and back. She had sat down on the wall. He sat beside her. “I am better.”

“And you know what we would like you to do?”

He could see her register her mistake as soon as the words were out of her mouth. His flare of anger subsided. Anxiety had driven over her tact.

“No,” he said. “I don’t. And even if I did, I’m not sure I’d agree to do it.”

“That’s fair,” she said.

“It’s knowing that their just knowing that we’re here will drive them to — all that.” He clenched his fists. “It makes me want to go down there and tell them to stop — make them stop — teach them the law of association — make them see it—”

Synchronic laughed. “That’s one option, yes. Only the most dangerous one. The reaction we most want to avoid.”

“ ‘We’?”

“The Red Sun Circle. And others of our generation, of course. But the first priority is to have a moratorium on colonization. At least in the i

Horrock snorted. “Ask people to wait fifty years while we trundle back out there? No way. And the crew wouldn’t be too happy either, I can tell you that.”

The cometary cloud was usually the last of a system’s resources to be exploited. Though vast, it was far too thin a gruel to satisfy a ship generation keyed up for asteroids and moons and planets. Horrocks doubted even that it would be practicable to colonize it, without the power and resources of an i

“All right,” said Synchronic. “Scratch that. So — shall I tell you what we want you to do?”

Horrocks felt a momentary combination of dismay, at what he might be enjoined to do, and self-importance, that these ancient and powerful people should need his help. It faded as he reflected that he was, in all likelihood, far from the only one of his generation who would be thus approached.

“Please do,” he said.

“As a microgravity trainer,” Synchronic said, “you have some influence and respect among the ship generation. You have credibility. Especially because your speculation on terrestrials was so profitable to you. It gives you some glamour.”

“That was Awlin’s doing.”

“Nevertheless, it exists. Call it a halo effect. We would be very grateful if you would use what influence you have to ask the ship generation to be patient, to forgo colonization for as long as it takes for us to work out some solution. Bear in mind, we expect some good informed and considered advice to come from the Red Sun system in less than eight years.”