Eternity
By Greg Bear
3.5/5
()
Space Exploration
Artificial Intelligence
Survival
Time Travel
Identity
Space Opera
Fish Out of Water
First Contact
Ancient Conspiracy
Lost World
Chosen One
Memory Manipulation
Dystopian Society
Alien Invasion
Time Dilation
Mystery
Advanced Technology
Personal Growth
Political Intrigue
Power Dynamics
About this ebook
A devastating war has left Earth a nuclear wasteland. Orbiting the planet is the asteroid-starship containing the civilization of Thistledown, humanity’s future descendants. For decades, they have worked to heal their world and its survivors, but their resources are finite. They need to reopen the Way.
An interdimensional gateway to a multiverse of realities, the Way was severed from Thistledown to stop an alien invasion and now exists as its own universe. Reopening the gate would not only benefit Earth but would also help the asteroid’s residents return home.
But on the alternate world of Gaia, Rhita Vaskayza, daughter of mathematician Patricia Vasquez, has taken up her mother’s cause to find her own Earth, one that was never touched by nuclear war. There is a gateway on Gaia that could lead Rhita there—or unleash an even greater apocalypse across the multiverse . . .
“Whether he’s tinkering with human genetic material or prying apart planets, Bear goes about the task with intelligence and a powerful imagination. Eternity offers many delights” (Locus).
Greg Bear
Greg Bear was born in San Diego, California. His father was in the US Navy, and by the time he was twelve years old, Greg had lived in Japan, the Philippines, Alaska – where at the age of ten he completed his first short story – and various other parts of the US. He published his first science fiction story aged sixteen. His novels and stories have won prizes and been translated around the world.
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Related to Eternity
Titles in the series (4)
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Reviews for Eternity
404 ratings13 reviews
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5This second book in the series was more difficult to follow than the first book, but it was well worth the effort.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5This book is the sequel to Eon. It tells the continuing stories of some of the key characters from the earlier book. There are two parallel stories. Firstly, that of the people on the asteroid world Thistledown, including those that settled on Earth and those in the settlements from the Way. In parallel, there is the story of Patricia Vasquez's granddaughter Rhita, who has inherited her grandmother's abilities and objects, and is seeking a way back into the Way under the patronage of Queen Kleopatra XXI of the enduring Alexandrian empire. We see these divergent stories converge together with two of the humans that continued down the Way at the end of Eon. The ending has cosmic significance.Having been introduced to the concept of the Way in Eon, in my opinion its significance is not as great in this book, especially when it is not present for most of the story. However, the intrigue between the various human factions and the Jarts assumes a greater importance as the fate of all are intertwined with that of the Way. Thus, I consider this book to be not as good as the first but I still believe it is worth 4 stars out of 5.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I am currently reading every Greg Bear book I can. He is an amazing writer with skill that is beyond our galaxy!
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5I liked this book better than its predecessor, Eon.For one thing, Bear summed up the nature of the Way with a concise metaphor instead of the bits and pieces of, for me, confusing superscience that were in the last novel. One character describes the Way thus: "The tunnel itself an immense tapeworm curling through the guts of the real universe, pores opening onto other universes equally real but not our own, other times real and equally real"That character is Pavel Mirsky. He went off, down the Way with other humans at the end of Eon. Now he’s back from the end of time and, seemingly, from another universe.Secondly, other characters from the prior novel appear, and they mostly manage to be more interesting this time.Of the Old Native stock, as the members of the Hexamon refer to the humans that survived the nuclear war of 2015, the major returning characters are Gary Lanier, now acting as a liaison and administrator between the Hexamon’s recovery efforts – managed, of course, from Thistledown orbiting Earth – and those stuck on Earth. He’s now married to Karen.Patricia Vasquez, the supergenius of Eon, is mostly offstage, but her granddaughter, Rhita, is a major character. Bear, however, would have been better off without the happy coda to the novel where Patricia gets returned to her family at the end in a world where Thistledown aka Stone doesn’t exist and, presumably, there will also be no nuclear war.Among the Hexamon, Konrad Korzenowski, creator of the Way, is back and a major player. And, of course, Olmy, general fixer – military man, secret agent, and policeman – for the upper echelons of the Hexamon is back.The third reason I liked this novel better is its skepticism, or at least consideration, of the transhuman themes of uploaded minds, body modifications, and synthetic personalities. Not only does the novel take the broad ramifications of those ideas seriously. Bear also casts a skeptical eye on that old value of political in a more coherent way than the earlier novel.I liked the skeptical eye Bear cast – at least in seemed to me – on a couple of utopian notions that show up in sf novels: immortality and a unified humanity. “Contrast and conflict” are necessary to maintain a stable universe, Mirsky tells us in his deposition from the future. But, as the novel shows, contrast and conflict may not be necessary in the political universe of humans, but they are certainly a constant.The story has three major arenas of conflict.Rhita journeys from Rhodes to Alexandria, seat of Imperial intrigue, where Vasquez eventually ended up after gaining some influence with Kleopatra, ruler of that Earth’s long-lived Ptolemic Dynasty. Rhita will eventually be driven to Central Asia where the “clavicle”, the tool that opens up the Way and used by Vasquez in a futile attempt to return home at the end of Eon is.The survivors of the Death on Earth harbor various resentments against the Hexamon after the Sundering of Thistledown from the Way and concentration on rebuilding civilization on Earth.On the one hand, the paternalism of the Hexamon is resented. After all, the Hexamon is descended from another Earth where the survivors rebuilt civilization after their own version of a nuclear war. Why should the people of Earth not be allowed the self-reliance and independence the Hexamon’s ancestors had? It’s also a sometimes heavy-handed paternalism with campaigns of therapy to get the minds of the natives right. The Hexamon even considered releasing mind-altering biological plagues on Earth.The natives of Earth resent the Hexamon being skimpy with longevity treatments and mental implants that allow personalities to exist after death. Not that all the natives want that. A split in the marriage of Karen and Gary has occurred. Karen has accepted Hexamon longevity treatments. Gary has not. Indeed, he does not think the culture and politics of the Old Natives is suited to such technologies. They have not had the long cultural adaptations to them that the Hexamon has. Needless to say, Gary, aging 40 years since the first novel while Karen remains youthful strained things.In the Hexamon itself, that cultural evolution hasn’t occurred just in response to various transhuman’s technologies. The Way has shaped it as well. One faction wants to open it back up. The other thinks the Hexamon should return to its origins on Earth albeit not the exact Earth of their history.The final conflict takes inside the head of Olmy. He has discovered a Hexamon secret. One of the alien Jart who have occupied the Way was captured over a century ago and hidden. Olmy must decide whether he wants to investigate its psychology and risk the fate of previous investigators – death or insanity – as the Jart tries to assault or suborn the mental implants of its interrogators.Into all this, Mirsky returns with a fantastic tale from, well, beyond the end of time and the universe. His personality and memories are verified by an old surviving colleague of his. He seems human but his very story suggests otherwise.After the events of Eon, Mirsky traveled down the Way with others and died in the last way left to immortals: “to forget one’s self and to be forgotten by others”. He relates how he entered, at the “finite but unbounded” “blister” at the end of the Way, the “egg of a new universe”. They cannot survive as material entities. They expand this blister into a new universe where they exist as god-like entities with a single will shaping worlds. But they find out that “contrast and conflict” is necessary for a stable universe and theirs is decaying rapidly. Across time (this is all rather poetic and mystic and I very well might have misunderstood it after one reading and a skimming) they hear their descendants who also aren’t really individuated but of a “more practical, hardier intelligence”. They have become the Final Mind.Mirsky is charged with bringing a message back from the End of Time and this pocket universe. The Way must be opened again and then destroyed. The universe cannot die (or, at least, die only badly) with the tapeworm of the Worm in its guts. There is some hint, I don’t think it’s entirely clear, that the enemy Jarts serve the Final Mind that humanity has merged into.The Jarts are revealed, in their actions, not as destroyers of humanity but archivers, preservers of worlds. Granted, this means, as happens to Rhita’s world, wiping human worlds out and preserving their individual memories and their civilizations as information packages to be given to their “final commanders”, the Final Mind.There is as much mysticism in this novel as Eon but the confusing superscience rationalization is less. Bear may tack on a final chapter giving a happy ending to Vasquez’s existence (whether there is continuity with the woman of the prior novel or if she is just a recreation was not clear to me), but the main message is that death and conflict are necessary, seemingly of cultural and political orders.The Hexamon destroys the Way and blows up Thistledown, seemingly committing itself to Earth. How the people of Earth will be ruled and what technology they will get from the Hexamon is unclear.Olmy decides to go to an alien world before the Way closes up.The novel ends with what two sentences that seem to be Bear’s metaphor for life. Mirsky and Lanier have committed themselves to some kind of mental wandering through time: “We search for points of interest, until we come to the end. And then?”.Ultimately, though, I think Bear’s The Forge of God and Blood Music, also sharing themes of radical science and apocalyptic change, are better and more coherent novels. Bear’s plot is not entirely clear. I don’t think the physics or logic of his superscience are intelligible.And I suspect Bear wasn’t actually going for a prescriptive statement but a normative one. Humans will have fundamental disagreements on what change to embrace, when, and to what extent.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/5I loved *Eon* but liked this even better. It's nice to read "hard" SF that bothers to limn decent characters, so you can care about them AND have your "sensawunda" into the bargain.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5At the end of 'Eon', the Way, the artificial universe in the form of an infinite tunnel was separated from Thistledown, the asteroid/starship that served as the Way's anchor in our universe. Some characters chose to stay in the Way and explore its infinite length; others chose to stay in Earth space and assist the inhabitants of the planet in reconstruction after a nuclear war. Now, forty years later, someone appears on Earth who ought not to be there, with a fantastic story and an even more astonishing request.'Eon' was mainly taken up with gosh-wowery at the Way and the worlds that could be accessed from it. The characters were only reasonably well-drawn, and some didn't even come up to that standard; but just as I felt over the relationship between 'The Forge of God' and its sequel, 'Anvil of Stars', that Bear's writing had undergone something of a transformation between the first and second books, and the second novel was more engaging, with better characterisation, so I felt with 'Eternity'. Having introduced us to the way, the Hexamon and its politics, the characters and some of their histories, in this second book Bear gets to grips with some of the implications of the "Sundering", the separation of the Way and the asteroid; and some of the characters undergo major transformations, not all of which could have been foretold.One of the characters from the first book, the mathematician Patricia Vasquez, only makes it into this one as the grandmother of one of the p.o.v. characters in a parallel world now isolated from the Way. This world is quite interesting, being a society descended from Graeco-Roman Egypt in a world where Christianity never gained a serious foothold, and Bear makes a good stab at depicting a world very different from our own. Perhaps my one complaint about the book is that having spent a lot of time setting up Patricia Vasquez's grand-daughter in this alternate reality, Bear then abandons her for a major part of the last third of the book until she is effectively sacrificed to allow the essence of her grandmother to be placed back in her own best of all possible worlds. I was less than happy about that.But overall, I found this book quite engaging and an exemplar of what a sequel ought to be about. The story started in 'Eon' ends here, and the final book in the series, 'Legacy', is a prequel.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5One of the things that makes great science fiction stand out is the big ideas. Eternity is full of big ideas. The story is well told, although it takes a while to get going, but once it does it clips along at a fair rate. Highly recommended.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5The sequel to Eon, in which man has a permanent settlement on the asteroid ship, but now has to deal with some ancient enemies of mankind. Like Eon, it is gripping and brilliant at times, but inter sped with just enough technobabble to make finishing feel more like a job than a treat.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5This is the sequel to Eon. Alien spaceships and The Way, sort of an intergalactic travel/time travel/wormhole device is orbiting Earth, bringing aliens with it, and a total shift of planetwide politics. Of course not everyone agrees with this or sees it as a good thing, so there are opponents. The biggest thing I remember about this book was that it was confusing, the space and time travel aspects of the device make it hard to keep up with who is where, when, and what exactly they are trying to accomplish. Not bad, but the confusion made it harder to read.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5A sequel to Eon, I did not like this book as much as the first. The pace felt rushed and the plot felt forced at times.In addition, characters seemed to be driven by events that occurred in the intervening time between the two books that never really got fleshed out. Several times I felt that people were doing and saying things that were "out of character" or being inordinately surprised by things that seemed relatively mild compared to events that they had witnessed in the first novel.Best parts for me were the passages relating to the Jarts.Overall, a decent read but not spectactular.
- Rating: 3 out of 5 stars3/5A sequel to Eon; nothing special.
- Rating: 4 out of 5 stars4/5Sequal to "Eon". Good but not as satisfying as some of fhis other works.
- Rating: 5 out of 5 stars5/55/5. I consider this and Eon to be one book, and the best work of Bear's career. There's just something about an line leading to multiple universes of no size but infinite length that grabs me.
Book preview
Eternity - Greg Bear
1
Recovered Earth, Independent Territory of New Zealand, A. D. 2046
The New Murchison Station cemetery held only thirty graves. Flat grassland surrounded the fenced-in plot, and around and through the grassland a narrow runoff creek curled protectively, its low washing whisper steady above the cool dry wind. The wind made the blades of grass hiss and shiver. Snow-ribboned mountains shawled in gray cloud glowered over the plain. The sun was an hour above the Two Thumb Range to the east, its light bright but not warm. Despite the wind, Garry Lanier was sweating.
He helped shoulder the coffin through the leaning white picket fence to the new-dug grave, marked by a casually lumpy mound of black earth, his face a mask to hide the effort and the sharp twinges of pain.
Six friends served as pallbearers. The coffin was only a finely shaped and precisely planed pine box, but Lawrence Heineman had weighed a good ninety kilos when he died. The widow, Lenore Carrolson, followed two steps behind, face lifted, puzzled eyes staring at something just above the end of the coffin. Her once gray-blond hair was now silver-white.
Larry had looked much younger than Lenore, who seemed frail and phantasmal now in her ninetieth year. He had been given a new body after his heart attack, thirty-four years before; it was not age or disease that had killed him, but a rockfall at a campsite in the mountains twenty kilometers away.
They laid him in the earth and the pallbearers pulled away the thick black ropes. The coffin leaned and creaked in the dirt. Lanier imagined Heineman was finding his grave an uneasy bed, and then dismissed this artless fancy; it was not good to reshape death.
A priest of the New Church of Rome spoke Latin over the grave. Lanier was the first to drop a spade of damp-smelling dirt into the hole. Ashes to ashes. The ground is wet here. The coffin will rot.
Lanier rubbed his shoulder as he stood with Karen, his wife of almost four decades. Her eyes darted around the faces of their distant neighbors, searching for something to ease her own sense of displacement. Lanier tried to look at the mourners with her eyes and found only sadness and a nervous humility. He touched her elbow but she was having none of his reassurances. Karen felt as if she didn’t belong. She loved Lenore Carrolson like a mother, and yet they hadn’t talked in two years.
Up there, in the sky, among the orbiting precincts, the Hexamon conducted its business, yet had sent no representative from those august heavenly bodies; and indeed, considering how Larry had come to feel about the Hexamon, that gesture would have been inappropriate.
How things had changed …
Divisions. Separations. Disasters. Not all the work they had done in the Recovery could wipe away these differences. They had had such expectations for the Recovery. Karen still had high hopes, still worked on her various projects. Those around her did not share many of her hopes.
She was still of the Faith, believing in the future, in the Hexamon’s efforts.
Lanier had lost the Faith twenty years ago.
Now they laid a significant part of their past in the damp Earth, with no hope of a second resurrection. Heineman had not expected to die by accident, but he had chosen this death nonetheless. Lanier had made a similar choice. Someday, he knew, the earth would absorb him, too, and that still seemed proper, though not without its terror. He would die. No second chances. He—and Heineman, and Lenore—had accepted the opportunities offered by the Hexamon up to a certain point, and then had demurred.
Karen had not demurred. If it had been her under the rock slide, rather than Larry, she would not be dead now; stored in her implant, she would await her due resurrection, in a body newly grown for her on one of the precincts, and brought to Earth. She would soon be as young or younger than she was now. And as the years passed, she would not grow any older than she wished, nor would her body change in any but accepted ways. That set her apart from these people. It set her apart from her husband.
Like Karen, their daughter Andia had carried an implant, and Lanier had not protested, something that had shamed him a little at the time; but watching her grow and change had been an extraordinary enough experience, and he realized he was far readier to accept his death than this beautiful child’s. He had not overruled Karen’s plans, and the Hexamon had come down to bless the child of one of their faithful servants, to give his own daughter a gift he did not himself accept because it was not (could not be) made available to all the Old Natives of Earth.
Then, irony had stepped in and left a permanent mark on their lives. Twenty years ago, Andia’s airplane had crashed in the eastern Pacific and she had never been found. Their daughter’s chances for a return to life lay in the silt at the bottom of some vast deep, a tiny marble, untraceable even with Hexamon technology.
The tears in his eyes were not for Larry. He wiped them and drew his face into stiff formality to greet the priest, a pious young hypocrite Lanier had never liked. Good wine comes in strange glass,
Larry had once said.
He came into a wisdom I envy.
In the first flush of wonder, working with the Hexamon, all had been dazzled; Heineman had after all accepted his second body gladly enough, and Lenore had accepted youth treatments to keep up with her husband. She had later dropped the treatments, but now she seemed no more than a well-preserved seventy …
Most Old Natives did not have access to implants; even the Terrestrial Hexamon could not supply everybody on Earth with the necessary devices; and if they could have, Earth cultures were not ready for even proximate immortality.
Lanier had resisted implants, yet accepted Hexamon medicine; he did not know to this day whether or not that had been hypocrisy. Such medicine had been made available to most but not all Old Natives, scattered around a ruined Earth; the Hexamon had stretched its resources to accomplish that much.
He had rationalized that to do the work he was doing, he needed to be healthy and fit, and to be healthy and fit while doing that work—going into the deadlands, living amidst death and disease and radiation—he needed the privilege of the Hexamon’s medicine.
Lanier could read Karen’s reaction. Such a waste. All these people, dropping out, giving up. She thought they were behaving irresponsibly. Perhaps they were, but they—like himself, and like Karen—had given much of their lives to the Recovery and to the Faith. They had earned their beliefs, however irresponsible in her eyes.
The debt they all owed to the orbiting precincts was incalculable. But love and loyalty could not be earned by indebtedness.
Lanier followed the mourners to the tiny church a few hundred meters away. Karen stayed behind, near the graves. She was weeping, but he could not go to comfort her.
He shook his head once, sharply, and glanced up at the sky.
No one had thought it would ever be this way.
He still could hardly believe it himself.
In the single-story meeting room of the church, while three younger women set out sandwiches and punch, Lanier waited for his wife to join the wake. Groups of two or three gathered in the room, ill at ease, to step forward as one and pay their respects to the widow, who took it all with a distant smile.
She lost her first family in the Death, he remembered. She and Larry, after their retirement from the Recovery ten years ago, had behaved like youngsters, hiking around South Island, taking up various hobbies, occasionally going to Australia for extended walkabouts, once even sailing to Borneo. They had been or had seemed carefree, and Lanier envied them that.
Your wife takes this hard,
a red-faced young man named Fremont said, approaching Lanier alone. Fremont ran the re-opened Irishman Creek Station; his half-wild merinos sometimes spread all the way to Twizel, and he was not considered the best of citizens. His station mark was an encircled kea, odd for a man who made his living from sheep; still, he had once been reputed to say, I’m no less independent than my sheep. I go where I will, and so do they.
We all loved him,
Lanier said. Why he should suddenly open up to this red-faced half-stranger, he did not know, but with his eye on the door, waiting for Karen, his mouth said, He was a smart man. Simple, though. He knew his limits. I …
Fremont cocked a bushy eyebrow.
We were on the Stone together,
Lanier said.
So I’ve heard. You were all confused with the angels.
Lanier shook his head. He hated that.
He did good work here and all over,
Fremont said. Everybody’s decent at a funeral. Karen came in through the door. Fremont, who could not have been more than thirty-five, glanced in her direction and then turned back to Lanier, speculation in his eyes. Lanier compared himself with this young and vigorous man: his own hair was solid gray, hands large and brown and gnarled, body slightly bent.
Karen seemed no older than Fremont.
2
Terrestrial Hexamon, Earth Orbit, Axis Euclid
"Let’s talk," Suli Ram Kikura suggested, turning off her collar pictor and folding up in a chair behind Olmy. He stood by her apartment window—a real window, looking through the Axis Euclid’s interior wall at the cylindrical space that had once surrounded the Way’s central singularity. Now it revealed swimming aeronauts with gauzy, bat-like wings, floating amusement parks, citizens tracting on causeways formed by faint purple fields—and a small arc of darkness to the left, near-Earth space visible beyond the interior wall.
The colors and activity reminded him of a French painting from the early twentieth century, a park scene suddenly bereft of gravity, strolling couples and children of orthodox Naderites scattered crazily every which way. The view changed constantly as the axis’s body rotated around the hollow at its center, a streaming display of Hexamon life and society, of which Olmy no longer seemed a part.
I’m listening,
he said, though he did not look at her.
You haven’t visited Tapi in months.
Tapi was their son, created from their mixed mysteries in Euclid’s city memory. Such conception had only returned to favor the past ten years; before that, when orthodox Naderites had dominated Euclid’s precinct government, natural births and ex utero births had been the order of the day, and the hell with centuries of Hexamon tradition. Hence, the children playing in the Flaw Park beyond Ram Kikura’s window.
Olmy blinked, guilty about avoiding his son. The point was always quickly reached with Suli Ram Kikura. He’s doing fine.
He needs us both. A partial on demand is no replacement for a father. He’s up for his incorporation tests in a few months and he needs—
Yes, yes.
Olmy almost wished they had never had Tapi. The weight of responsibility now, with his researches also heavy on him, was too much. He simply did not have time.
I don’t know whether to be mad at you or not,
she said. You’re facing something difficult. I suppose a few years ago I could have guessed what it is …
Her voice was rich and even, well-controlled, but she could not hide concern mixed with irritation at his quiet obtuseness. I value you enough to ask what’s bothering you.
Value. They had been primary lovers for more decades than he cared to count. (seventy-four years, his implant memory stores reminded him, unbidden), and they had lived through—and taken part in—some of the Hexamon’s most turbulent and spectacular history. He had never seriously courted any woman but Ram Kikura; he had always known that wherever he went, whomever else he established a brief liaison with, he would always return to her. She was his match—a homorph, neither Naderite nor Geshel in her politics, lifelong advocate, one-time senior corprep for Earth in the Nexus, champion of the unfortunate, the ignored and the ignorant. With no other would he have made a Tapi.
I’ve been studying. That’s all.
Yes, but you won’t tell me what you’ve been studying. Whatever it is, it’s changing you.
I’m just looking ahead.
You don’t know something I’m not privy to, do you? Coming out of retirement? The trip to Earth—
He said nothing and she pulled back, lips tightly pressed together. All right. Something secret. Something to do with the re-opening.
Nobody seriously plans that,
Olmy said, an edge of petulance in his voice unseemly in a man over five centuries old. Only Ram Kikura could get through his armor and provoke such a response.
Not even Korzenowski agrees with you.
With me? I’ve never said I support re-opening.
"It is absurd, she said. Now they had both probed beneath armor.
Whatever our problems, or shortages, to abandon the Earth—"
That’s even less likely,
he said softly.
—And re-open the Way…. That goes against everything we’ve worked for the past forty years.
I’ve never said I wanted it,
he reiterated.
Her look of scorn was a shock to him. Never had their distance been so great that either could have felt intellectual contempt for the other. Their relationship had always been a mix of passion and dignity, even in the years of their worst dispute … which this showed signs of equaling or surpassing, though he refused to admit disagreement.
"Nobody wants it, but it sure would be exciting, wouldn’t it? To be gainfully employed again, to have a mission, to return to our youth and years of greatest power. To open commerce with the Talsit again. Such wonders in store!"
Olmy lifted one shoulder slightly, a bare admission that there was some truth in what she said.
Our job here isn’t finished. We have our entire history to reclaim. Surely that’s labor enough.
I’ve never known our kind to be moderate,
Olmy said.
"You feel the call of duty, don’t you? You’re preparing for what you think will happen. Suli Ram Kikura uncurled and stood, taking him by the arm more in anger than affection.
Have we never truly thought alike? Has our love always been just an attraction of opposites? You opposed me on the Old Natives’ rights to individuality—"
Anything else would have damaged the Recovery.
Her bringing the subject up after thirty-eight years, and his quick response, showed clearly that the embers of that dispute had not died.
We agreed to differ,
she said, facing him.
As Earth’s advocate in the years after the Sundering and in the early stages of the Recovery, Ram Kikura had opposed Hexamon efforts to use Talsit and other mental therapies on Old Natives. She had cited contemporary Terrestrial law and taken the issue to the Hexamon courts, arguing that Old Natives had the right to avoid mental health checkups and corrective therapy.
Eventually, her court challenge had been denied under special Recovery Act legislation.
That had been resolved thirty-eight years before. Now, approximately forty percent of Earth’s survivors received one or another kind of therapy. The campaign to administer treatment had been masterful. Sometimes it had overstepped its bounds, but it had worked. Mental illness and dysfunction were virtually eradicated.
Ram Kikura had gone on to other issues, other problems. They had stayed lovers, but their relationship had been strained from that point on.
The umbilicus between them was very tough. Disagreements alone—even this—would not cut it. Ram Kikura could not, and in any event would not cry or show the weaknesses of an Old Native, and Olmy had given up those abilities centuries ago. Her face was sufficiently evocative without tears; he could read the special character of a Hexamon citizen there, emotions withheld but somehow communicated, sadness and loss foremost.
You’ve changed during the past four years,
she said. I can’t define it … but whatever you’re doing, however you’re preparing, it diminishes the part of you that I love.
His eyes narrowed.
You won’t talk about it. Not even with me.
He shook his head slowly, feeling just another degree of withering inside, another degree of withdrawal.
"Where is my Olmy? Ram Kikura asked softly.
What have you done with him?"
Ser Olmy! Your return is most welcome. How was your journey?
President Kies Farren Siliom stood on a broad transparent platform, the wide orb of the Earth coming into view beneath him as Axis Euclid rotated. Five hundred square meters of stressed and ion-anchored glass and two layers of traction field lay between the president’s conference chamber and open space; he seemed to stand on a stretch of open nothingness.
Farren Siliom’s dress—white African cotton pants and a tufted black sleeveless shirt of Thistledown altered linen—emphasized his responsibility for two worlds: Recovered Earth, the Eastern hemisphere of which rolled into morning beneath their feet, and the orbiting bodies: Axes Euclid and Thoreau and the asteroid starship Thistledown.
Olmy stood to one side of the apparent void in the outer shell of the precinct. The Earth passed out of view. He picted formal greetings to Farren Siliom, then said aloud, My trip was smooth, Ser President.
He had waited patiently for three days to be admitted, using the time for the awkward visit to Suli Ram Kikura. Countless times before, he had waited on presiding ministers and lesser officials, fully aware, as centuries passed, that he had developed the old soldier’s attitude of superiority over his masters, of respectful condescension to the hierarchy.
And your son?
I haven’t seen him in some time, Ser President. I understand he is doing well.
A whole crop of children coming up for their incorporation exams soon,
Farren Siliom said. They’ll be needing bodies and occupations, all of them, if they pass as easily as I’m sure your son will. More strain on limited resources.
Yes, Ser.
I’ve invited two of my associates to attend part of your briefing,
the president said, hands folded behind his back.
Two assigned ghosts—projected partial personalities, acting with temporary independence from their originals—appeared a few meters to one side of the president. Olmy recognized one of them, the leader of the neo-Geshels in Axis Euclid, Tobert Tomson Tikk, one of Euclid’s thirty senators in the Nexus. Olmy had investigated Tikk at the start of his mission, though he had not met with the senator personally. The image of Tikk’s partial looked slightly more handsome and muscled than his original, an ostentation gaining favor among the more radical Nexus politicians.
The presence of projected partials was both old and new. For thirty years after the Sundering, the separation of Thistledown from the Way, orthodox Naderites had controlled the Hexamon and such technological displays had been relegated to situations of extreme necessity. Now the use of partials was commonplace; a neo-Geshel such as Tikk would not be averse to casually scattering his image and personality patterns about the Hexamon.
Ser Olmy is acquainted with Senator Tikk. I don’t believe you’ve met Senator Ras Mishiney, senator for the territory of Greater Australia and New Zealand. He’s in Melbourne at this moment.
Pardon the time delay, Ser Olmy,
Mishiney said.
No fear,
Olmy said. The audience was purely a formality, since most of Olmy’s report was contained on record in detailed picts and graphics; but even so, he had not expected Farren Siliom to invite witnesses. It was a wise leader who knew when to admit his adversary—or adversaries—into high functions; Olmy knew little about Mishiney.
Let me apologize again for disturbing your well-deserved retirement.
Earthlight flooded the president. As the precinct rotated, the Earth again seemed to pass below them. You’ve served this office for centuries. I thought it best to rely on someone with your experience and perspective. What we’re dealing with here, of course, are largely historical problems and trends …
Problems of cultures, perhaps,
Tikk interposed. Olmy thought it brash for a partial to interrupt the president; but then, that was neo-Geshel style.
I assume these honorables know the task you set for me,
Olmy said, nodding at the ghosts. But not the whole task.
The president picted assent. The moon slipped beneath them, a tiny bright platinum crescent. They all stood near the center of the platform now, the partials’ images flickering slightly to indicate their nature. I hope this assignment was less strenuous than the ones you’re famous for.
Not strenuous at all, Ser President. I’ve been afraid of losing touch with the details of the Hexamon—
or indeed the human race, he thought, —living so calmly and peacefully.
The president smiled. Even for Olmy, it was hard to imagine an old warhorse like himself living a life of studious leisure.
"I sent Ser Olmy on a mission around the Recovered Earth to provide an independent view of our relations. This seemed necessary in light of the four recent assassination attempts on Hexamon officials and Terrestrial leaders. We in the Hexamon are not used to such … extreme attitudes.
"They might be the last vestiges of Earth’s political past, or they might indicate breaking strains we are not aware of—reflections of our own ‘belt-tightening’ in the orbiting precincts.
I asked him to bring me an overview on how the Recovery was proceeding. Some believe it is finished, and so our Hexamon has designated the Earth itself ‘Recovered,’ past tense, job accomplished. I am not convinced. How much time and effort will be necessary to truly bring the Earth back to health?
The recovery goes as well as could be expected, Ser President.
Olmy consciously altered his speaking and picting style. As the senator from Australia and New Zealand is aware, even the Hexamon’s vast technologies cannot make up for a lack of resources, not when you wish to accomplish such a transformation in mere decades. There is a natural time required for Earth’s wounds to heal, and we cannot accelerate that by much. I estimate that about half the task has been accomplished, if we say that full recovery is a return to economic conditions comparable to those preceding the Death.
Doesn’t that depend on how ambitious we are on Earth?
Ras Mishiney asked. If we wish to bring Terrestrials to a level comparable with the precincts or Thistledown …
He did not finish his sentence; it was hardly necessary.
That could take a century or more,
Olmy said. There’s no universal agreement that Old Natives want such rapid advancement. Some would doubtless openly resist it.
How stable are our relations with Earth just now?
the president asked him.
They could be much improved, Ser. There are still areas of strong, overt political resistance, Southern Africa and Malaysia among them.
Ras Mishiney smiled ironically. Southern Africa’s attempted invasion of Australia was still a sore memory, one of the greatest crises in the four decades of the Recovery.
But the resistance is strictly political, not military, and it’s not very organized. Southern Africa is subdued after the Voortrekker defeats, and Malaysia’s activities are unorganized. They do not seem worrisome at the moment.
Our little ‘sanity plagues’ have done their job?
Olmy was taken aback. The use of psychobiologicals on Earth was supposed to be highly confidential; only a few of the most trusted Old Natives knew of them. Was Ras Mishiney one such? Did Farren Siliom trust Tikk so much that he could mention them casually?
Yes, Ser.
Yet you’ve had qualms about these mass treatments?
I’ve always recognized their necessity.
No doubts whatsoever?
Olmy felt as if he were being toyed with. It was not a sensation he enjoyed. If you’re referring to the opposition of Earth’s former advocate, Suli Ram Kikura … we do not necessarily share political beliefs even when we share beds, Ser President.
These are past matters now. Forgive my interruption. Please continue, Ser Olmy.
There’s still a strong undercurrent of tension between most Old Natives and the ruling parties of the orbiting bodies.
That’s a painful puzzle to me,
Farren Siliom said.
I’m not sure it can be surmounted. They resent us in so many ways. We robbed them of their youth—
We pulled them up from the Death!
the president said sharply. Ras Mishiney’s assigned ghost gave a faint smile.
We’ve prevented them from growing and recovering on their own, Ser. The Terrestrial Hexamon that built and launched Thistledown rose from just such misery, independently; some Old Natives feel perhaps we’ve helped too much, and imposed our ways upon them.
Farren Siliom picted grudging agreement. Olmy had noticed a hardening of attitude against Old Natives among Hexamon administrators in the orbiting bodies the past decade. And the Old Natives, being what they were—many still rough and uneducated, still shocked by the Death, without the political and managerial sophistication earned through centuries of experience in the Way—had grown to resent the firm but gentle hand of their powerful descendants.
The Terrestrial Senate is quiet and cooperative,
Olmy said, avoiding Ras Mishiney’s eyes. The worst dissatisfactions, outside those already mentioned, seemed to be in China and Southeast Asia.
Where science and technology first rose after the Death, in our own history … willful and strong peoples. How resentful are the Old Natives overall?
Certainly not to the point of worldwide activism, Ser President. Consider it a prejudice, not a rage.
What about Gerald Brooks in England?
I met with him, Ser. He is not a threat.
He worries me. He has quite a following in Europe.
At most two thousand in a recovered population of ten million. He’s vocal but not powerful. He feels deep gratitude for what the Hexamon has done for the Earth … he merely resents those of your administrators who treat terrestrials like children.
Far too many of that kind, he thought.
"Resents my administrators. The president paced on the platform. Olmy watched this with a deep, ironic humor. Politicians had certainly changed since the days of his youth—even since the Sundering. Formal deportment seemed an art of the past.
And the religious movements?"
As strong as ever.
Mm.
Farren Siliom shook his head, seeming to relish bad news to fuel a smoldering irritation.
There are at least thirty-two religious groups which do not accept your administrators as temporal or spiritual rulers—
"We don’t expect them to accept us as spiritual rulers," Farren Siliom said.
Some officials have tried several times to impose the rule of the Good Man on Old Natives,
Olmy reminded him. Even on the honorable Nader’s contemporaries …
How long ago had it been since a fanatic orthodox Naderite corprep had recommended using an illegal psychobiological to convert the faithless to Star, Fate and Pneuma? Fifteen years? Olmy and Ram Kikura had helped suppress that notion before it had even reached a secret Nexus session, but Olmy had almost converted overnight to her radical views.
We’ve dealt with these miscreants,
Farren Siliom said.
Perhaps not harshly enough. Many are still in positions of influence and continue their campaigns. At any rate, none of these movements advocate open rebellion.
Civil disobedience?
That is a protected right in the Hexamon,
Olmy said.
Used very seldom the past few decades,
Farren Siliom countered. And what about the Renewed Enterprisers?
Not a threat.
No?
The president seemed almost disappointed.
No. Their reverence for the Hexamon is genuine, whatever their other beliefs. Besides, their leader died three weeks ago in the old territory of Nevada.
A natural death, Ser President,
Tikk said. That’s an important distinction. She refused offers of extension or downloading to implants—
Refused them,
Olmy said, because they were not offered to her followers.
We do not have the resources to give every citizen of the Terrestrial Hexamon immortality,
Farren Siliom said. And they would not be socially prepared, at any rate.
True,
Olmy acknowledged. At any rate … they never opposed Hexamon plans beyond their immediate territory.
Did you meet with Senator Kanazawa in Hawaii?
Ras Mishiney asked with a hint of distaste. Olmy suddenly understood why the senator was attending. Ras Mishiney was heart and soul in the camp of the orbiting bodies.
No,
Olmy answered. I wasn’t aware he had been anything but cooperative with the Hexamon.
He’s gathered a lot of power to himself in the past few years. Particularly in the Pacific Rim.
He’s a competent politician and administrator,
Farren Siliom said, reining in the senator with a glance. It isn’t our duty to keep power forever. We’re doctors and teachers, not tyrants. Is there anything else of significance, Ser Olmy?
There was, but Olmy knew it would not be discussed before these partials.
No, sir. The details are all on record.
Gentlemen,
the president said, raising his arms and opening his hands to them. Have you any final questions for Ser Olmy?
Just one,
Tikk’s partial said. How do you stand on the re-opening of the Way?
Olmy smiled. My views on that issue are not important, Ser Tikk.
My original is most curious about the views of those who remember the Way vividly.
Tikk had not been born until after the Sundering; he was one of the youngest neo-Geshels on Axis Euclid.
Ser Olmy has a right to keep his opinions to himself,
Farren Siliom said.
Tikk’s partial apologized without any deep sincerity.
Thank you, Ser President,
Mishiney’s partial said. I appreciate your cooperation with Earth’s parliament. I look forward to studying your complete records, Ser Olmy.
The ghosts faded, leaving them alone above the dark fathomless void, now empty of both Earth and Moon. Olmy looked down and spotted a glimmer of light amidst the stars: Thistledown, he thought, and his implants quickly provided a calculation that confirmed his guess.
One last question, Ser Olmy, and then this meeting is completed. The neo-Geshels … if they manage to get the Hexamon to re-open the Way, do we have the resources to continue the Earth’s support at present levels?
No, Ser President. Successful re-opening would cause long delays at the very least in major rehabilitation projects.
We’re already strapped for resources, aren’t we? More than the Hexamon is willing to admit. And yet, there are Terrestrials—Mishiney among them—who believe that in the long run, re-opening would benefit us all.
The president shook his head and picted a symbol of judgment and a symbol of extreme foolishness: a man sharpening a ridiculously long sword. The pict symbol no longer had a connection with war, per se, but its subtext was still a little surprising to Olmy. War with whom?
We must learn to adapt and live under the present circumstances. I believe that deeply,
Farren Siliom said. But my influence is not boundless. So many of our people have become so very homesick! Can you imagine that? Even I. I was one of the firebrands who supported Rosen Gardner and demanded a return to Earth, to what we thought of as our true home—but no one alive in the Way had ever been to Earth! How sophisticated we think we are, yet how irrational and protean our deepest emotions and motivations. Perhaps a better grade of Talsit would help, no?
Olmy smiled noncommittally.
The president’s shoulders slumped. With an effort, he squared them again. We should learn to live without these luxuries. The Good Man never availed himself of Talsit.
He walked to the edge of the platform, as if to avoid the abyss beneath their feet. Earth was coming into view again. Have the neo-Geshels carried their activities to Earth? Beyond people like Mishiney?
No. They seem content to ignore the Earth, Ser President.
"The least I’d expect from such visionaries. That’s a political wellspring they’ll regret overlooking. Surely they can’t believe the Earth will have no say in such a decision! And on Thistledown?"
They’re still openly campaigning. I found no sign of subversive activities.
Such a delicate balance a man in my position holds, trying to play so many factions against each other. I know my tenure in this office is limited. I’m not good at hiding my beliefs, and they are not the easiest beliefs to hold these days. I’ve fought the notion of re-opening for three years now. It will not die. But I can’t help believing that no good will come of it. ‘You can’t go home again.’ Especially if you can never decide where home is. We’re in a delicate time. Shortages, weariness. I see the inevitability, someday, of re-opening…. But not now! Not until we have finished our tasks on Earth.
Farren Siliom regarded Olmy with an expression near pleading. "I’m as curious as Senator Tikk, I’m afraid. What are your opinions about the Way?"
Olmy shook his head slightly. I’m resigned to living without it, Ser President.
Yet you won’t be able to renew your body parts soon … or are the shortages already acute?
They are,
Olmy admitted.
You’ll resign yourself to city memory willingly?
Or death,
Olmy said. But that won’t be for years.
Do you miss the challenges, the opportunities?
I try not to worry about the past,
Olmy said. He was being less than candid, but he had learned long before when to be open, and when not.
You’ve been an enigma for all your centuries of service, Ser Olmy. So the records tell me. I won’t press you. But in your brief … considerations of the problem, have you thought of what might happen to us, should we re-open the Way?
Olmy did not answer for a moment. The president seemed to know more about his recent activities than Olmy found comfortable. The Way could be reoccupied by Jarts, Ser.
Indeed. Our eager neo-Geshels tend to overlook that problem. I can’t. I’m not unaware of your researches. I believe you show extreme foresight.
Ser?
Your researches in city memory and the Thistledown libraries. I have my own active rogues, Ser Olmy. You seem to be accessing information with a direct bearing on re-opening, and you’ve been studying for years, at some personal cost, I imagine.
Farren Siliom regarded him shrewdly, then turned back to the railing, knocking it lightly with the knuckles of one hand. Officially, I’m releasing you from any further duties. Unofficially, I urge you to continue your studies.
Olmy picted assent.
Thank you for your work. Should you have any further thoughts, by all means let me know. Your opinions are valued, whether or not you think we need them.
Olmy left the platform. The Earth had rotated into view again, perpetual responsibility, unfamiliar home, sign of pain and triumph, failure and regrowth.
3
Gala, Island of Rhodos, Greater Alexandreian Oikoumenē, Year of Alexandros 2331-2342
Rhita Berenikē Vaskayza grew wild on the shores near the ancient port of Lindos until she was seven years old. Her father and mother let the sun and sea have their way with her, teaching her only what she was curious to know—which was a great deal.
She was a brown, bare-limbed wild thing, wide-eyed and elusive among the brown and white and faded gold battlements and columns and steps of the abandoned akropolis. From the bright expanse of the porch of the sanctuary of Athēnē Lindia, palms pressed against the crumbling walls, she stared down the cliffs into the azure unending sea, counting the steady, gentle march of waves against the rocks.
Sometimes she crept through the wooden door into the shed that housed the giant statue of Athēnē, rising thick-limbed and serene in the shadows, looking decidedly Asiatic, with her radiant brass crown (once gold) and her man-high stone shield. Few Lindians came up here; many thought it was haunted by the centuries-dead ghosts of Persian defenders, massacred when the Oikoumenē regained control of the island. Sometimes there were tourists from Aigyptos or the mainland, but not often. The Middle Sea was not a place for tourists any more.
The farmers and shepherds of Lindos saw her as Artemis and believed she brought them luck. In the village, her world seemed full of welcoming smiles from familiar faces.
On her seventh birthday, Berenikē, her mother, took her from Lindos to Rhodos. She did not remember much about the island’s biggest city besides the imposing bronze Neos Kolossos, re-cast and erected four centuries ago, and now missing all of one arm and half of another.
Her mother, with red-brown hair, as wide-eyed as her daughter, led her through the town to the whitewashed brick and stone and plaster home of the first-level Akademeia didaskalos—the master of children’s education. Rhita stood alone before the didaskalos in the warm sunny examination chamber, barefoot in a plain white shift, and answered his simple but telling questions. This was little more than formality, considering that her grandmother had founded the Akademeia Hypateia, but it was an important formality.
Later that day, her mother told her she had been accepted into the first school, her lessons to begin at age nine. Then Berenikē took Rhita back to Lindos, and life went on much as before but with more books and more lessons to prepare her and less time to run with wind and water.
They did not visit the sophē on that journey; she had been ill. Some said she was dying, but she recovered two months later. This all meant very little to young Rhita, who knew almost nothing about her grandmother, having met her only twice, in infancy and at age five.
The summer before she began her formal schooling, her grandmother called upon her to return to Rhodos, and to spend some time with her. The sophē was reclusive. Many Rhodians thought she was a goddess. Her origins and the stories that had grown up around her supported their beliefs. Rhita had no fixed opinions. What the Lindians said and what her father and mother told her were confusingly far apart on some points and close on others.
Rhita’s mother was almost frantically thrilled by this privilege, which Patrikia had accorded to none of her other grandchildren. Her father, Rhamōn, accepted it with the calm, self-assured air he had in those days, before the sophē’s death and the factional fighting at the Akademeia. Together, they took her to Rhodos