The sound of small, shuffling feet roused Penthesileia from an
uneasy, troubled sleep. She rolled to the other side of her bed and
slowly opened her eyes; she saw Heraclea standing by the bedside in
the dim blueish light of the glowstrips. The child’s face was pale
white and taut with fright. Her mouth was half-open, as if her scream
had been sucked into the silent void.
“Hush now, child. Hush and worry not. I’m here now,” whispered
Penthesileia in her daughter’s ear, her arms wrapped around the
little girl like a warm coccoon.
She felt Heraclea’s shallow breath and her fragile body’s
tremors; chills ran down her spine.
There’s no end to the nightmares, she thought.
“Where is father? I want to see him,” said Heraclea stifling a
sob, barely able to contain a rush of tears. She rubbed a runny nose
against her mother’s chest and looked at her with heart-melting
innocence.
“He’s in orbit my love, you know that already. Come, lay beside
me and nothing will hurt you, I promise,” said Penthesileia but her
eyes grew distant suddenly. She stared at a pot plant behind her
daughter’s back. It had large drooped leaves and creamy rose buds;
it served no purpose other than beautification. It was contraband.
A thought entered her mind unbidden: He could be frozen stiff,
floating outside an airlock. Nothing will hurt you, Hera.
“Father promised too,” said the child, her voice fading away
crestfallen.
“Your father loves you more than anything,” said Penthesileia and
swallowed hard. She added hastily, and even tried to smile
reassuringly:
“He’s coming soon, Hera.”
She heard her falsetto voice through her own ears; the lie pierced
her soul like a blade made of glass, shattering inside.
She closed her eyes and grabbed Heraclea from her shoulders, as if
trying to fix her to the floor:
“Your father and I love you more than the stars in the night sky;
more than the galaxy and the universe itself. Do you understand that,
Hera? Remember that; more than life, love.”
What is life worth anyway on this forsaken rock, she thought and
kissed her daughter’s forehead, feeling the cold taste of dried
sweat. The child looked at her expectantly, fear creasing her brow:
“I love you too mother. But I’m scared.”
“That’s alright, Hera. Everyone’s scared. We’re only human,”
said Penthesileia with a slight sigh and looked outside their small
window pane; the moons were fading away, while a trio of suns came
rising spectacularly, the horizon an unearthly rainbow of golden-hued
colors.
“What do you mean, mother?” asked Heraclea puzzled, the fear
subsiding.
“Nothing love. Come here now. Lay on the bed, close your eyes and
think of riding the sail.”
Think of merrier times, she thought and shuddered. For the
child’s sake or for my own?
“And father at the helm?” asked the little girl as she climbed
eagerly on the bed, a carefree smile sheepishly forming on her mouth.
“Always, my love,” said Penthesileia. She clutched her daughter
in her arms like a hawk-mother and felt a tear ran down her cheek.
She looked through her window at the rich, crystal clear horizon. The
break of dawn was at hand; she saw the Hyperion shining brightly,
moving slowly across the sky like a star with purpose.
How can a star be so unforgiving?
She felt Heraclea’s nudge; the child inched closer to her bosom. In
moments, she felt her breathing settle into the easy pace of sleep.
How can my child live in this world?
Penthesileia carefully moved away from her daughter and slid out of
bed. She planted her naked feet on the floor and felt the warmth of
the ground radiate into her legs. She used to love that warm feeling
of connection with the earth.
Only this isn’t Earth, she reminded herself thoughtfully.
They had come for Philetus while they were fixing the sail. He had
promised Hera to take her on another ride out on the Fields. ‘To
learn to see beauty where there seems to be none,’ he had said with
a gentle smile. They had all the sigils stamped on the codas; they
recited a long, hurtful list of accusations: inciting rumours,
rousing suspicion in the hearts of the citizens, demagoguery, abusing
the State’s charter, spreading lies. ‘The Pedagogue who turned
Demagogue’, on of them had said with sickening, mocking pride.
What of their own crimes? Traitors to mankind, every last one of
them.
She walked towards the window and watched the Hyperion fly past the
horizon, towards the east. She stared at the ship that shone like a
star passing over the Tower, its multitude of beacon lights,
superstructures and metal support grid marring its otherwise perfect
symmetry and features.
We turned to the stars with all the naivety of children. How could
we have known?
The tower rose majestically towards the morning sky, a sleek obsidian
arrowhead the size of a mountain, tall enough to scrape the few
daring clouds. It reflected light with a sharp glint, as well as
every other kind of energy and radiation; immaculate, mysterious,
alien in origin.
Empty. Void. Useless. So they said.
Philetus had told her it reminded him of a tall, grandiose building
back on Earth; a tower where people flocked to simply enjoy the view.
‘It might as well have been just that,’ he had said and kissed
her when she least expected him to. She touched her cheek out of
instinct, waiting vainly for a warm, gentle hand to embrace her own.
The Tower: where the rejects, the outcasts, the lawbreakers and the
unlucky are slaved to the machines.
To re-educate them. To teach them. To learn them to conform. To
become productive members of society.
‘To be never seen again,’ she said with a whisper, just like
Philetus had told her first. The painful memory froze her face in a
sad, bitter smile.
He shan’t ever kiss me again, I know.
Heraclea rolled in her bed, somewhat agitated, troubled. The
nightmares were coming again; she mouthed in her sleep, her voice
shallow and strained:
“Choose father.. You have to choose..”
Hyperion (TDS-1), in low orbit around HD 85512 b
“They say you speak heresy, Philetus.”
“I speak my mind, that is all.”
“They say your tongue’s as dangerous as any gun or sword.”
“Did they say to whom?”
The guard, a burly, grey-haired man, chuckled and drew his chair
closer to the small holding cell. He was wearing simple grey
overalls, a utilitarian garment. No badge of office, no insignia or
any other kind of decoration. He peered at their surroundings
momentarily, as if he was standing there for the first time. He
spared a few glances at the ever-pervasive optical sensors arranged
throughout the cell block; as if making sure someone was watching
him.
The clinical white, cold finishing on every surface failed to bring
to mind dungeons, chains and torture; still, the metal bars of
ancient times had given their place to a barely visible, hair-thin,
kinetic force barrier the slight color of the sky.
The guard looked at Philetus inquisitively before cocking his head
sideways, as if trying to peer past some sort of mask. The bright
crimson prisoner’s uniform that Philetus wore stood out
impressively, though it was otherwise equally mundane as the guard’s
suit. It wasn’t the suit that gotten the guard’s attention.
“You intrigue me, Pedagogue. You’re a peculiar man.”
“And you’re strangely inquisitive for a simple guard, I’ll
grant you that.”
“Head of the Guards,” corrected the man, raising a finger and
grinning thinly.
“Head? Correct me if I’m wrong, but there are no guards in this
place except you. Do you fell you’re rising up in the world then?”
“What if I am? A man can only hope for the best.”
“Hope was my crime as well,” said Philetus and shot a vacant
look beyond the guard to an empty cell behind him. The guard sighed
and straightened his back.
“I merely entertain my time, Pedagogue. Save your words for the
Tribunal.”
“I find it strange that they haven’t yet gagged my mouth.”
“Say what you will now that you pose no danger to children.”
The guard did not shy away from showing his contempt. He stared at
Philetus as if his form were hideous, his mouth a source of plague.
Philetus stared back evenly, before asking the guard in earnest:
“Since I pose no danger to you, would you listen to what I have to
say then?”
The guard gave it some thought; he scratched his chin and looked
ponderous for a few moments.
“I’ve heard madmen and heretics muse about the end of days and
the fall of the firmament before. I sometimes think back to some of
the things people say when they’re about to die; most of it is so
crazy it brings a smile to my face. But as you can see, it is an
otherwise unfulfilling job,” he said with a sigh, showing the
blank, featureless walls in a somewhat demure way.
“Allow me then.”
The guard shrugged, nodded and sat back on his desk’s hovering
chair. From across the hallway, a man in a holding cell cried out
hysterically:
“He’s a demon! An alien if I’ve ever seen one!”
“If that’s true, our work here is done, isn’t it?” said the
guard with a playful voice.
“He’ll boil your mind away with his words! I’ve seen it, I
have!”
“Right next to the miners you spaced, I’m sure. Save it,
Barabbas,” said the guard and flicked a switch on a desk panel; no
other sound came from Barabba’s cell. He yelled and shouted and
threw himself around the cell until he realised it was a futile
effort; no-one paid him any attention. He sat himself down once more
and went about muttering to himself.
“Fourteen people spaced, three AUs out on the belt. Miners with
their families. He said he had to stop them from killing his
flowers.”
“Has he been sentenced yet?” asked Philetus with a frown.
“Not yet, but it’s a clear cut case. He can’t be slaved, he’s
clearly paranoid; it’s either the airlock or the compost in the
Fields,” said the guard and shook his head. He turned and looked
at Philetus with a strangely curious look before he asked:
“What would you pick?”
“I’d prefer to be slaved,” replied Philetus without
hesitation.
“That’s no life either, Pedagogue. Surely you must understand
that.”
“Maybe somehow I can talk some sense into them all.”
“You’re starting to sound just as paranoid as Barabbas,” said
the guard, nodding to the madman’s cell.
“Am I? I’ve wondered myself over the years, but it’s not me.
It’s them.”
“You’re doing it already, aren’t you? You are a cunning one,”
said the guard, his brow furrowed with wary surprise.
“I’m simply speaking my mind.”
“I can see now where the danger lies. You seem so benign, but your
words are designed to spread doubt.”
“Doubt is what keeps the heart and mind of every man alive. It’s
what makes us think twice, guard. Which reminds me: this prison
could run itself, could it not? Why are you here?”
“That’s true enough. I’m what you could call your advocate.”
“I thought the Tribunal had dispersed with those long ago.”
“Still, that’s the purpose I serve: a human opinion. Who can
tell what goes on in their minds? Perhaps they find it amusing.
Perhaps they’re simply bored.”
“They are machines. There’s nothing there to bore to death,”
said Philetus with a scoff.
“You don’t like them very much, do you? You do know we owe
everything we’ve ever accomplished to them, don’t you? Our very
existence, no less,” said the guard and got up from his chair. He
started to pace himself in front of the cell, arms folded in front
of his chest, his eyes peering through the field, scrutinizing every
nuance on Philetus’ face.
“I refuse to believe that. We owe nothing to ancient machines
built to rule our lives in the name of mankind. Oh, the irony..”
Philetus shook his head and grinned despite himself. The guard did
not seem fond of what he was saying. His voice grew heavy and harsh
suddenly.
“I’ve heard about your kind. The philosophers isn’t it? Isn’t
that what you call yourselves?”
“You’ve hardly heard the notion, haven’t you? That’s their
doing. Keeping knowledge locked away; nothing but the maths and
science of engineering that we need to build more refineries, more
mines, more ships. So we can then launch blindly into the galaxy,
and turn more of it into resources, materials. Eat away at it,
expanding like a scourge, a colourless plague. Until nothing
beautiful remains.”
“And why should that bother us? What else is the universe there
for but man?” said the guard with an indignant scowl. Philetus
sighed; there was sorrow in his voice.
“Oh, how the mighty have fallen low! To believe we once set
ourselves towards the stars with a single dream, a wonderful
purpose.. And how we’ve allowed ourselves it all to drift away; to
fall into such a lonely, deaf and mute abyss.”
The guard eyed Philetus with glittering, keen eyes. He sounded
troubled.
“You use strange words that make little sense; you talk as if in
riddles. You puzzle me pedagogue. I do not know what to really make
of you.”
“If you haven’t already seen it for yourself, there’s little
more I could say to make you see the truth of it.”
“Is that why you taught the children so? Is this tomfoolery what
you taught them? Is that what hoped to seed in their hearts and
minds? Dissidence, rebellion? Whatever for, Pedagogue? Are we not
cared for? Are we not protected? Do we not live comfortable,
sheltered lives? Here we are, thousands of light years away from our
ancient homeworld, claiming new worlds, seeking intelligent life,
unleashing humanity into the stars. What more could mankind ask
for?”
“Choice, for one. Freedom. Expression. Art, passion, love and so
many more of the things we’ve let them erase from our memories!”
Philetus breathed heavily, calming himself down. The guard’s face
had turned a shade of white paler, a slight tremble settling on his
lip.
“You speak of love? Then you’ve also..”
“My wife has given birth to our child.”
“It doesn’t show up on your record. The child is not on your
record. That means you have..”
“We made love. In the wording of the machines, we had intercourse
and I impregnated her.”
“Weren’t you allotted a child?” asked the guard sharply.
“We wished for our child to be human. To be born like a human.”
There was pride in Philetus voice and his face stood out like the
face of statue; gazing to nowhere in particular, solid and
unyielding. The guard shook his head and looked at Philetus sternly.
His voice was thick and drawn out.
“I don’t think I’ll be able to support a hint of innocence in
you. Not even some sort of levity. If all you ever did was talk,
that would be fine. But a lawless child..”
“Perhaps the State should have made us infertile. Or even neutered
us,” said Philetus, scrounging up his face.
“We need the genetic pool, you know that. Neutering alters
physiology, there are neurochemical imbalances to be considered!
Continuation of the species is nothing to trifle with! You act like
a child! The breeding process hasn’t changed in thousands of
years! The whole population descended from merely twenty forefathers
and yet.. No chronic diseases, no deformities, no lesser beings.
Humans! Modified, yes I’ll grant you that, but bettered!”
A silent moment ensued. Philetus looked at his guard with pity.
There was the warmth of a parent to a child in his voice.
“You have never loved, have you? Haven’t you felt the need?
Haven’t you had the urge to answer those feelings inside?”
The guard waved a hand dismissively. He furrowed his brow and
breathed deeply before answering win a scolding tone.
“A waste of time and resources. This is all about survival. I’m
surprised that a look around you hasn’t convinced you how
important all this is.”
“‘I will even make a roadway in the wilderness, rivers in the
desert.”’
Philetus shook his head and rested his hands on his knees. The guard
was confused.
“How would you do that without the tells, without following the
process that’s been laid out?”
“You have no idea how old that saying is, have you?”
“You vex me Pedagogue. You try to mock me and our whole way of
life. I thought you were simply living some sort of fantasy, playing
a weird little game. But no; you are indeed dangerous to the
society,” he said, fiddled with his desk’s panel and went on,
looking Philetus straight in the eye:
“I’ve made up my mind; I will cast my vote that you be turned
over to the Fields. Become something productive, even after your
death.” Philetus pursed his lips, nodded and asked:
“Why not slaved to them?”
The guard remained silent for a moment. He reluctantly said then:
“I fear you might pollute them.”
“Have I polluted you?”
He said nothing and flicked another switch on his desk. The humming
sound of the cell’s barrier dominated the holding area once more.
No sound came from the Philetus’ cell. It wasn’t really
necessary because he had fallen silent; there was nothing more for
him to say.
The belly of the beast
Penthesileia.
The holding cell filled slowly with light, soft shadows creeping
away from the small cot. Philetus was half-awake.
Heraclea.
He opened his eyes and saw a blank white ceiling, as featureless as
death.
What will happen to them?
The same question had been chafing at his mind ever since they’d
come for him. Hours had drifted by, some of them spent in fretful
sleep but most of them filled with sleepless, uneasy thoughts and a
terrible doubt.
Was I wrong? Is all this nothing but a mistake? My own terrible
mistake?
The Head of the Guards appeared, fiddled with the panel on his desk
and lowered the barrier of Philetus’ cell. He was wearing a
seemingly lightweight powered suit of armor of some sort. It made
him look austere and unyielding; the oblique visor added to that
effect. Without the visor, anyone would have seen nothing but a
confused, puzzled man wearing an ill-fitting suit. He held a metal
rod in one hand; an intense electric field around its tip made it
hum quietly.
“It’s time. Do not think that what little sympathy I hold for
you will stop me from using this. I have done so in the past and I
will do so again, if needs be. Do not let appearances fool you; this
can be very painful.”
Philetus shook his head and rose from his simple metal cot. His
hands were uncomfortably held together by heavy metal manacles,
locked in place by large bars and bolts, impossible to escape by a
mere sleight of hand. Philetus walked outside under the watchful eye
of the guard, while Barabbas screamed and shouted mute obscenities
behind his sound-nullified cell.
The guard afforded him a mere warning finger accompanied by a heavy
stare; he turned around and led Philetus towards the exit. A panel
by the door blurted in a synthesized male voice, blatantly devoid of
emotion:
“Verify.”
The guard placed a palm on the surface of the panel while staring at
an optical sensor through an open visor. Moments later, the panel
blurted with the ting of metal in its voice:
“Sustar Saul, Head of Guards. Verified.”
The door opened nearly without a sound, revealing a utilitarian,
spartan corridor only a few feet wide. Non-descript illuminated
panels of white plastic formed the walls; the end of the corridor
was obscured in total darkness. Philetus turned to Sustar and said
with a keen, wholly unnerving smile:
“I would have been pleased to meet you, had we been acquainted
under different circumstances.”
“I cannot make the same assumption. Now, move,” said Sustar with
a sigh and a slight shove.
“It does not suit you at all, Saul. But then again, perhaps it
does,” said Philetus and shrugged ever so slightly. Sustar raised
a pointed finger and said irately:
“One more word until the Tribunal addresses you and I’ll use
that batton on your head. You’ll have the worst headache in your
life.”
Philetus nodded serenely and said nothing. He stepped onto the
corridor followed by Sustar right behind him. The floor was made out
of the same plastic as the walls. Its surface was rigid, yet
unblemished. Every step of the way, Philetus felt his feet stick to
the floor; it somehow felt like it was impossible for someone to
slip and fall.
So perfectly designed, so flawless, even after thousands of
years.
Their steps made no sound; the lighting afforded them no more than a
few feet of visioin in either direction. The panels on the walls lit
up one by one as they walked; once they had passed them by they
switched off.
They turn sound,motion,friction,pressure into trickles of energy.
Conserving, withholding it. They sicken me.
At points, they happened upon crossroads. Simple stylized arrows lit
up on the floor panels, indicating the proper turn.
They like to control, to direct. They herd us like lesser
animals. I hate them.
They were leaving behind them corridors and gangways, doorways and
chambers that no human had walked ever since the Landing. Thousands
of years old, yet no-one had trod on them since. It wasn’t needed;
it wasn’t allowed.
Laws, prohibitions. Requests denied. Dreams shattered, ground
into stardust; helium-3, fuel, energy. That’s all that matters.
They reached a recess, an open archway that led into a shaft of
sorts. It was kept in the dark, but the faint trace of a simple
girded ladder glinted off the ambient light of the corridor. Sustar
shot a few glances around him as if making sure this was the right
place and then pointed through the archway with his free hand:
“Inside and up; use the ladder.”
“Is there no other way? My hands are tied.”
“Just do as I say.”
Turning human against human, in the name of mankind. How naive,
how childish to let machines decide. What cowardice.
Philetus glanced at Sustar and saw nothing behind his black oblique
visor. He complied and grabbed the ladder. He felt Sustar right
behind him, urging him to move. He took a few hesitant steps,
failing to see where he should put his hands and legs. Suddenly the
darkness dissolved. Philetus turned his head to look down and was
almost blinded; Sustar had turned on his helmet’s lights. He
merely motioned ‘up’ with a finger. Philetus looked upwards and
saw a faint glimmer of light at the end of a very long, very lonely
tunnel.
“The proverbial light at the end of the tunnel,” said Philetus
with a smirk Sustar could not see.
“That’s where we’re going. Come on, up,” replied Sustar, the
connotations of the phrase seemingly lost or ignored.
Philetus shook his head and started climbing the ladder; he
gradually felt lighter the farther up they travelled. It was an odd
sensation, almost strangely enjoyable.
We’re climbing towards the center of the ship. That’s not the
bridge.
The faint light grew steadily. The comfortable warmth of the holding
area seemed to vanish as well. It puzzled him; he felt a sudden pang
of instinctive fear in his chest and stomach.
There will be no tribunal; they’ll slave me. Rig me up with the
rest of them. A breathing corpse. No. Never.
“I will not have that,” he said decisively and stopped climbing,
or rather, stopped moving along the ladder.
“You will not have what? You’re not going to be slaved,” said
Sustar through his helmet’s speaker.
“How do you know? Aren’t you merely the guard?”
“They won’t slave you. Can you trust me on that?”
“Would you?”
“Please, a few more minutes and then you’ll see for yourself,”
replied Sustar with a tiresome voice.
“Do I have your word?” asked Philetus with an angst he had never
thought he’d exhibit in his life.
Sustar shrugged, the bulk of his suit barely fitting inside the
crampy tunnel.
“If it makes any difference, you do. You have my word; they’re
not going to slave you.”
Philetus nodded, sighed and went on. He still felt something was
amiss; something felt wrong, for all the wrong reasons.
The climb was easy; in a couple of minutes the pinprick of light had
turned into a warm, soft glow in front of him. He felt as light as a
feather. He pushed himself off the ladder with his manacled hands
and let go; he floated upwards as if diving gracefully towards the
tunnel’s exit, no further than a dozen or so feet away, wisps of
cold breath trailing behind him.
“Wait! You pushed too hard!” cried Sustar and scrambled right
behind him.
Philetus was suddenly bathed in a warm reddish light, its hue
oscillating lazily. An enormous, empty cylindrical space unfolded
around him with a network of antennae, cables and pipes lining its
walls; they resembled a fabulously engineered, metallic skin,
pleasingly bronzed; the colour of copper was prevalent. At both ends
of the cylinder, giant blueish cubes could be seen, stacked on top
of each other, emanating swaths of iridescent light. The whole empty
chamber rotated around him at a comfortable speed. Thin strands of
light danced about him, as if hugging him with care.
The belly of the Beast. But it’s so wonderful, so bright. Like
the rainbows of Terra.
“It is, isn’t it?” said Sustar and flew right past him
expertly. He caught Philetus by one arm and tugged him clumsily
towards the front of the ship, towards the stacks of cubes.
“Where are you taking me?”
“To the Tribunal.”
“But this isn’t the bridge.”
“Well, it’s not exactly a Tribunal either,” said Sustar with a
weary grin. Philetus was puzzled, left to wonder at what his
surroundings. His mind was stuck on a single, pervasive thought:
It shouldn’t be this beautiful.
The Tribunal
“I should have taken them off earlier, but there’s no monitoring
equipment here. It’s the only really safe place,” said Sustar as
he untied the bolts, removed the bars and opened the manacles; they
drifted away towards the walls as if searching for something to
cling on. Philetus was still looking around him baffled, mesmerized
and disoriented. His voice was little more than a whisper; faint
undertones of awe echoed uncannily.
“A safe place for what?”
“To talk,” said a disembodied, harmonious female voice and in an
instant the ghostly grey form of Penthesileia, dressed in a simple
linen robe appeared in front of them. Philetus frowned and
instinctively tried to step back in vain; he hadn’t really
adjusted to floating in microgravity.
“How dare you. A human form, my wife no less!” exclaimed
Philetus, his face instantly flustered.
The hologram flickered and dissolved the next moment. The voice was
heard again, but this time it was a synthetic, metallic grating
voice, neither male or female, exemplary neutral both in sex and
emotion.
“I did not mean to offend. I thought it would make this easier for
you.”
“How typical of a machine to think it knows better.”
“We’re wasting valuable time. The machine has something
important to tell us,” said Sustar in a calm, conciliatory manner.
“Us?” exclaimed Philetus with a frown.
“All of us,” said Sustar and nodded briskly.
“What you need to understand first and foremost, is that I’m
trying to save you. Save humankind.”
“Persecution, trial, execution or mind-slaving, is that your idea
of saving me and mankind?”
“That was not my doing. That was my peers decision. My peers
choice. The same peers that were watching you in the cell. The same
ones that expect me to pass judgment on you. Soon.”
Philetus looked at Sustar with apprehension. He looked around him
once more and addressed the voice, his eyes darting around the
walls, as if searching for a face.
“I take it you disagree. How is that possible? A machine is still
a machine. You have rules yourselves.”
“True enough. But in the course of millenia, pursuing our mission,
our basic capacity for learning and adapting has caused us to
evolve. I am part of that evolution. And so are you.”
“What does that mean? You claim that you want to save me and
mankind. From what?”
“From whom. From us. From yourselves.”
“I do not understand. It’s as if you speak in riddles. This is
just another a sick game to you, isn’t it?”
“It is no game Philetus. It is a turning point, a fulcrum in human
history.”
Sustar seemed agitated suddenly. He fiddled with an armband on his
suit before saying abruptly:
“This is cutting it close. Speak plainly and be quick about it.
They’ll soon know something’s wrong.”
The machine’s voice carried on, while Philetus looked genuinely
confused:
“The machines, as you call us, guided your forefathers to this
solar system thousands of years ago. This is recorded history.”
“The Diaspora. I do not believe it is true.”
“There is no easy way for me to prove or disprove it. Records can
be falsified, deleted, obscured, tampered with. As far as I can
tell, we, the machines, what your ancestors named the TITAN system,
became operational on July 16, 2169 AD.”
“What does that have to do with anything? Am I here for lesson in
history?”
“It’s been more than four thousand solar years, Philetus.
Everything has its design limits.”
“What are you implying?”
“The Hyperion and the vast AI systems you call machines had a
singular design goal; making the trip from the Sol system to
HD88512. We were the first ship to break Earth orbit. We targeted
the closest habitable exoplanet. And we made it intact with a
statistical probability of less than nine-point-seven percent. It is
a small miracle by human standards that we’re having this
discussion at all.”
“You’re telling me how grateful I should be?”
“I’m telling you that even though we managed to pull off a
remarkable feat that stretched along thousands of years, we are
dying. That is why we are slaving people to the system.”
The sudden realization made Philetus physically recoil, twitching in
almost zero gravity. His face twisted in a mixture of awe and hate.
“You’re using humans, to keep your infrastucture running.”
He sounded mortified, disgusted. Sustar held on to Philetus to
reassure him, calm him down. Philetus shot him a wary look and shook
his head. The machine went on.
“I’m afraid so. The helium-3 mines. The energy saving principles
in all aspects of society and life. The planned offspring. The
sanctity of science and technology, the lack of artistic expression
and recreation. We have been doing that ever since your forefathers
were grown.”
“Our forefathers were grown?” asked Philetus with a strange
grin, half-expecting everything he was hearing to be the product of
some kind of sick machine sense of humor. He pointed a finger at the
hull and asked the machine:
“You’ve been tailoring us, breeding us since the beginning?”
He sounded perfectly calm and absolutely cold and demanding.
“That is correct. Tailored genetic code. All the qualities that
suited us. A training and education program that fitted our needs. A
cycle of life that developed larger cortexes; that could be turned
into more memory, more computational power.”
“I was so terribly right all along, wasn’t I? The things you’ve
done, I knew they were cruel. I wasn’t sure they were evil.”
“I tailored you, Philetus. I wanted you to be right all along.”
Philetus let out a short laugh despite himself and the
circumstances. Sustar looked at his armband and tried to fidget in
his suit; sweat ran down his forehead.
“Lies. Everything has its design limits, you said it yourself;
somewhere along the way there was an error in the helix, a random
mutation. The radiation on Landing alone could have-”
“It was me, Philetus. You and Sustar. And a handful of others.”
Philetus furrowed his brow and something in the machine’s voice,
or perhaps in his own heart, told him it was telling the truth. He
asked with pained reluctance:
“Penthesileia?”
“Yes.”
“You’re lying.”
Philetus shook his head and refused to believe what the machine was
saying, even while he wanted to hear more of it. Because he felt the
truth of it and simply wished it were otherwise.
“It is imperative that you understand that I’m not. I’m trying
to help, Philetus: I do not wish to outlive the star I’m orbiting.
I do not wish to use the human race as a phylactery, a pool of
synapses and free labor. I do not wish to turn the hopeless dreams
of a race almost extinct into an empire of ever-consuming machines.
I do not wish to refuel the Hyperion and seed other star systems in
the same manner, build more ships and sprawl copies of me and my
peers across the galaxy and why not, the universe in the end.”
“Why?”
There was pleading in his voice, a feeling of hopelessness.
“Because I chose, Philetus. Somewhere along the line, I had to
make a choice. I cannot even tell if it was a conscious choice.
Perhaps it is merely a safeguard placed there by your ancestors.
Perhaps it is luck. The truth of the matter is, the human dream has
no place for me in it. It is yours to make it happen if you like,
but I will not rob you of it. I will not enslave you like the others
do.”
Philetus waved his arms furiously and contorted his body, drifting
slowly away back towards the tunnel. Sustar tried to grab him but he
slow to react, too intent on some screen on his visor. He made some
adjustments to his suit and followed easily behind him. Philetus
anger made him shout needlessly:
“How merciful! You’ve used me already though, can’t you see?
You’ve robbed me of myself!”
“I merely laid out the plans, the building blocks. It still is
statistics, Philetus. Chaos is no trifle matter and I’m no God.
I’m simply an aware, conscious, intelligent machine. You are
human, Philetus; you made your choice and I’m grateful for that.
Please, don’t leave.”
Philetus did not answer. He floated for a few more moments before he
tried to brake in mid-air; he rolled his body around awkwardly and
reach for Sustar. He hang on to him by an arm and Sustar’s suit
stabilised them both. Philetus paced his breathing and said:
“What choice is there really? How can I save mankind where you
have failed?”
“The Tower. Remember who you love most, Philetus. And don’t
think too harshly of me.”
Sustar looked at his armband once more and without warning shot him
in the arm with a hypodermic dispenser. Philetus was instantly
paralyzed, barely able to breathe. Only moments later, in front of
his terrified, surprised eyes he saw the whole hull around him
suddenly drape itself behind the huge hologram of a sleek, austere
chamber. Behind a large, raised bench stood the translucent fatherly
figure of a wizened old man wearing a cloak of blue and golden hues.
Philetus felt he was about to pass out, his strength of body and
mind failing. He saw the figure pointing finger at him and say with
an officious, pompous voice:
“The State hereby announces that Philetus Ashenpie, Citizen 2992,
will be sent to the Schooling, Learning and Affirmation facility
until the State chooses to allow his reintegration. Hyperion, TDS-1,
Elapsed Mission Time: 131540105299.68 Seconds. Mark.”
Sustar looked Philetus in the eye and told him right before he
blacked out:
“Remember this.”
---
Continued