Well, good, bad or indifferent, at least it's done. I'm fairly happy with it.
Still need an actual title.
Have decided against trying to get it vetted. In addition to tracking someone down and the delay this would cause, I've done plenty of research and I've decided there's nothing in here inaccurate or offensive. I've decided to take my chances.
I will submit it later today and I will let you share in my crushing disappointment later.
PART TWO
There were different ways I would come to know which “missions” I was to take. Sometimes I would see a news report and I would know.
I also had contacts within the government and the military. Saving someone’s life or the life of a loved one tended to make people grateful. Or eliminating some embarrassing situation, like those bloodthirsty rebels on New France. On rare occasions I would be so incensed by something I would take it upon myself.
Sometimes it came to me in dreams and White Crow Woman would talk to me, tho I had found out the hard way that in assuming that I had to be careful.
And sometimes, very rarely, it came from the Little Girl.
In the case of the girl (and the dog) that’s how I came to be on Daydream. The Little Girl didn’t say much but I tend to put great stock in what little she says. And so I did some legwork, some research, asked some questions, all of which seemed to irritate some people mightily. I found out the girl (and the dog) had disappeared and that some people, apparently employed by the worst, most underhanded company in the known universe, wanted her bad, and that in her wake, several bodies had begun to pile up. I couldn’t find out much about what she had done or why they wanted her but the Little Girl said she must be found and protected and that was good enough for me.
And so I stood there in the untamed countryside outside of Cloudsafe on the Fringer planet Daydream standing next to an 8 ft. tall cyborg who claimed he was to lead me to her, and wondered, what next. I didn’t say it out loud. I remembered one of my dad’s favorites sayings: “Never ask, ‘what next?’, boy. Somethin’ might be listenin’.”
Mr. Gath was not altogether comfortable around me. I could see him eyeing me sidelong every once in a while. Well, you could hardly blame him. It’s not every day that you see evidence that, not only does the supernatural exist, it’s standing right next to you. He was a man of this age, a man who was used to being in a world ruled by technology. Hell, he was a product of technology. He had been a soldier he said, and volunteered for the cyborg augmentation process when he was injured beyond repair. He had gone on to fight in more little wars and then, all of his comrades dead, he had finally had enough, retired with his pension and gone to the farthest reaches of the known universe. Which was here.
I knew there were horses on Daydream and I had been looking forward to riding, but, no. Mr. Gath was too big for one, of course, but I had thought with his augmented systems he could have just run beside us but he said some of his systems were starting to break down, the joints in his artificial legs particularly. He didn’t know what he would do if they failed. There wasn’t anyone remotely qualified to work on them here on Daydream.
“I didn’t expect to live this long,” he said with a laugh.
I smiled crookedly at that. Neither did I, I thought.
I didn’t explain much about what I was. But he was curious about what an Indian was, and I talked about that, and what it meant to be a Comanche. He was a warrior at heart and some of the history I told him spoke to his spirit. He had known Indians before, he said, from different tribes, he thought, but he had never managed to talk to one.
So we whiled away the time as we walked in the thin air and the dust toward the bare hills miles outside of Cloudsafe. There was no sign it had rained the night before.
“This is the spot,” Mr. Gath said finally.
I looked around. Nothing to see but low rolling hills, treeless, only stacks of rocks of varying size to break up the monotony.
I wasn’t happy with this announcement. “Here?” I asked. “You said you were supposed to take me to her. I don’t see her.”
“She said to bring you here,” he replied defensively. He looked around himself. “That’s all she said.”
I was a naturally suspicious sort but I also had gotten good at reading people. It didn’t seem to me Mr. Gath was playing me.
But on the other hand it was possible someone had been playing him. I drew back my coat from my guns, scanning the empty landscape around us.
“Wait,” he said suddenly, his head cocked. “I hear something.”
His hearing, being artificial, was better than mine.
“Over there,” he said, pointing with one long arm.
“Over there” was one more hilltop, no different than the rest. But I thought I saw a little bit of dust rising up. I put my hand to a gun.
At the crest of the hill it appeared.
It was a dog. The dog. Big and yellow. It stood at the top of the hill and looked us over. Then it wagged its tail and came running.
I left my hand near my gun.
“Yeah,” said Mr. Gath happily. “That’s her. That’s her dog.”
As it drew nearer I understood why the drunk woman had said it had a big head. I had been picturing a head too big for its body but that wasn’t what it was. Its head was a normal size proportionately but the skull over its eyes was more of a dome. It didn’t slope back from the eyes like usual for a dog of this kind. Otherwise, it looked just like any yellow hound I had ever seen.
It stopped before us, tail wagging, almost bending itself in half it was so happy. Whatever else was going on, I decided, there was no harm in this hound.
I stooped down stroking its big head. “Good dog,” I said, smiling in spite of myself. The head didn’t feel unnatural. No unusual bumps or protrusions. It licked my face. Then it bolted away a few feet and looked back at us.
I looked at Mr. Gath, eyebrow cocked.
It barked, the sound loud in the quiet. It ran a few more feet, then looked back again.
“It looks like,” I said, “we’re supposed to follow it.”
The dog fairly jumped in place. And then it did something that went a long way toward explaining why we were all here.
It began to scratch at the ground with one foreleg. Not haphazardly but with purpose. Deliberate, careful strokes. I walked over.
In the dirt were two clear letters. An “F” and an “O”. As we watched in astonishment it continued until it wrote out the word “Follow”.
“I’ll be damned,” breathed Mr. Gath.
Unconscious at the time of the actual truth of the matter as it applied to me, I repeated, “I’ll be damned.”
The dog barked again, wagged its tail, and ran off.
We followed.
Up across the top of the hill and down we went and saw the dog vanish into the side of the sheer rock face of a narrow ravine. Then it stuck its head back out and barked.
We looked at each other.
“Hologram,” I said.
Mr. Gath looked somewhat relieved by this mundane explanation for what he was seeing. I believed our acquaintance had severely affected his worldview.
We scrambled down the hillside. Mr. Gath stuck his hand into what looked like solid rock and it vanished up to his forearm. He shrugged and we stepped thru.
Inside, the air was cool. And I noticed I was able to breathe easier. Around us was simply a cave. But there was a hum of machinery and a dim light glowing ahead of us, the source of which was lost around a bend.
The dog appeared again, tail wagging still, impatient with our slowness.
We walked on. I had my hands near my guns again.
We rounded the bend and saw a series of steps leading downward, looking as if they had been lasered out of the living rock. A breeze from below tossed my hair. The light came from there and we descended.
The space opened up around us into a vast chamber well lit by glowglobes and tubes. Stalactites hung down, glittering with purple and green. Huge banks of machinery took up most of the space in front of us across a metaled floor. Only some of it looked familiar.
In front of it, the dog beside her, stood the girl. Behind her, floating in a large tube filled with some sort of liquid, was the thin figure of a man. I thought at first he was dead but his eyes were vibrant and alive. He smiled at us. The girl looked tired and pale. She stood aside.
Greetings to you of the Numa, said a voice, except he didn’t say “you” but used my real name. I almost jumped. The voice was speaking in Comanche. It took a few seconds to realize the voice was in my head.
Telepathy had long been a dream of the human race but despite myth and rumors and technology no one had found a way to make it happen. Not as far as I knew. Not until now.
It will happen, said the voice.
Many things will happen, provided the race lasts.With a dawning horror I realized my every secret would be laid bare to this man, my every crime.
I raised my hands to my ears. “Get out of my head,” I said thru clenched teeth.
As you wish, said the man.
I merely desired for you to see a little of what I have done to myself. But rest assured, I do not judge. And I need you.I tried to relax. “You are Jackson Hart,” I said. “You’re her father,” I said, pointing at the girl. “You’re supposed to be dead.”
“My father is a brilliant man,” said the girl, whose name was Lan. She was thin like her father, with a thin nose and long black hair. “He faked his death, three years ago.”
“Obviously,” I said.
She looked to Mr. Gath, who was looking from one of us to the other. “You can go, if you choose. There’s still time,” she told him.
He shrugged. “I’ll stay,” he replied gruffly. “I don’t like leaving in the middle of a story.”
Lan gestured to a small table. “I’m sure you’re thirsty, gentlemen. A drink?”
I was thirsty at that. Mr. Gath and I moved to the table. There were two cups on the table filled with a golden liquid. She passed one to me. I drank, eyes on Jackson Hart as he floated in his tank. It was wine. Not a favorite of mine, but just then it was very welcome. There was a chair near me. I took off my hat and sat down.
Talking to Mr. Gath I said, “I was...told I should protect this girl. So I’ve been tracking her.” Then to Lan, I said, “The guys from Happy Science want you back or maybe...” I gestured to the dog, “they want her back.”
“Jia never belonged to them. Jia is mine.”
“Happy Science?” interjected Mr. Gath. “That’s who wants you?” Happy Science presented a fair face to the universe. But there were stories. Evidently even Mr. Gath had heard some.
“So what do they want?” I asked.
She sat across from me. Sighed. “My father is a brilliant man, as I said. He worked for HS a long time. In genetics. Specifically in Artificial Intelligence.”
“Ah,” I said glancing at the dog.
“Yes,” said Lan, smiling at Jia. “Eventually, they partnered my father with another man. His field of expertise was in nano.”
If I may, gentlemen, said Hart.
I can speak to you without prying.I saw Mr. Gath wince, then nod. “Go ahead,” I said.
As my daughter says my expertise was in AI. I know you are familiar with its applications in machines. The Combator you fought is one example of my work.“I don’t thank you for that,” I said.
There are many things I regret now, Mr. Redbone, he said. I was thankful he knew enough not to use my real name now.
At any rate HS had other designs upon my work. And I had a breakthrough. A very great breakthrough. But it was my partner, unknown to me, who decided to experiment on Jia. And you have seen the results. She is now almost as intelligent as an adult human being. It was a miracle.I agreed. “I can see how they might like her back,” I said. “I can see how this could be applied. Mental deficiencies could be eradicated. More intelligent animals might be valuable, too. But there’s more to it, isn’t there?”
Oh, indeed, Mr. Redbone. Just imagine, if this process could increase the intelligence of a dog, what would it do for a creature that was already intelligent? A man, say?“It might produce someone like yourself, I suppose.”
Yes! I had not planned to experiment on myself. Lan was dying. Are you familiar with Aparna’s Disease?“Yes. Incurable.”
Not any more, Mr. Redbone. I cured it. I saved my daughter. Without anyone’s knowledge I subjected myself to our technique. We had made it absurdly simple. And in humans, with our larger cranial capacity, it did not require surgery of any kind as it had on poor Jia. But, Mr. Redbone, I had no appreciation for what it would do to me! It expanded every iota of my intellect! I saw things. Things about our very existence, our very being! I could not contain it all. I think I went a little mad. I became one with the cosmos, Mr. Redbone. We are so ignorant! We are like ants! I knew the truth of many things! Things which had been dismissed as folly! Things which had been ignored by science for centuries! I could see the future! Or rather many, many futures. I could see the past. I knew why we had never encountered an intelligent alien species in all our wanderings!“But the Elders,” I said. It was true we had never met an alien in all our history. But we had seen artifacts. We had uncovered their ancient structures and sometimes their machines. “What about Iapetus?” I asked, the moon of Saturn which had turned out to be an alien construct and which had accidentally been destroyed. Or the scientist crawling around on it had triggered a fail-safe.
Humans, Mr. Redbone! Humans! All the artifacts we have uncovered have been built by human hands!“How is that possible?” I asked mystified. “They were already there when we found them. I...”
“Father,” said Lan. Hart was moving now, flapping his arms in his agitation. She moved to his tank, adjusted some knobs on the side of it. “You musn’t get too excited. Not now.” She looked hard at me. “No more questions like that,” she said. “His body is very weak.”
Hart’s voice came again, calmer now.
I cannot tell you. I will not tell you. Oh, there are many things I cannot tell you. But I will say this, Mr. Redbone. War is coming. The Republic will fall and just as in ancient Rome, an empire will take its place. The Outsiders will return!”“Father!” said Lan sharply.
Forgive me. Hart was silent for a moment, seeming to gather his thoughts or to control them. Then he said,
As you see what I have become, now imagine, if you will, what would happen to society if this experiment were to be used on everyone?“Chaos,” I said with feeling. “Society would crumble. I have no great love for government as you can imagine but it has its uses. But this. This would lead to a total breakdown.”
Yes! And that would be the case if benevolent people with good intentions tried to use it! Now imagine, what would happen if evil men were to use this knowledge?My jaw fell open as I thought of a reply. I looked at Lan and then at Mr. Gath. Lan nodded. Mr. Gath looked horrified.
Yes, I see you understand, said Hart.
And so I destroyed all my work. I destroyed the laboratory. I destroyed every trace of this experiment wherever I found it. And yes, I’m afraid, I was forced to kill my partner in this crime as well. And I faked my own death and I came here. That was three years ago. And I managed to keep Lan and Jia hidden until I was ready.“Ready for what?” I asked.
“We will be leaving soon, Mr. Redbone. We will be going somewhere where no one can follow. I needed time to prepare. And I needed you here. I needed a warrior.I was becoming somewhat alarmed. Had this mission come from the Little Girl after all?
“I’m only one man, Mr. Hart,” I glanced at Mr. Gath. “Even if I’m a somewhat special man. That assassin we took care of in Cloudface said many more were coming.”
At that moment Jia rose to face the stairs we had come down. She growled. A tiny beeping sound began to come from somewhere.
“They’re here, father,” said Lan.
I rose.
Oh, Mr. Redbone. I think one man will be enough, said Hart gleefully.
Especially if it’s you. You are a unique character after all. And do you recall, I said the experiment had been reduced to an absurd ease of application?Now I became seriously alarmed. Lan backed away from me.
Your drink, Mr. Redbone. It should be taking affect right about now, I believe.“What have you done to me?” I shouted. I drew my pistols.
And then the world in front of my eyes seemed to explode into light.
Don’t worry, Mr. Redbone, I heard Hart say from what seemed a great distance.
You won’t end up like me. Just a taste. Just a little, necessary taste...I wish I had words to describe what I saw and what I felt. Or maybe not. I only remember a little of it now.
Out of the light I fell like I was spinning, down, down to the great plains of my ancestors. I heard a chant coming from the bright sky and I couldn’t tell whether it was the voice of White Crow Woman or my great-grandmother or the Great Spirit.
Eight parts to form Man
Eight parts to form Man
Bones of Stone
Body from Earth
Blood of Dew
To give you birth
Eyes of Clear Water
With the Sun deep within
Thoughts from the Waterfalls
And Breath from the Wind
Stand tall in pride!
With the Strength of the Storm!
Stand tall in beauty!
In My Own Form!
And the Great Spirit commanded all the spirits to bow down before Man and all obeyed save one and his name was Iblis. And God banished him but in his spite and pettiness he put a little of himself into the fangs of the snake and the tail of the scorpion and the venom of the spider...
And God sent the angels to mankind to teach them. And Moloch went to the Canaanites and Nisroch to Assyria and Rahab to Egypt and Michael to Israel and I went to the People and taught them how to make arrows and stone knives and that all the animals were there for their use...
I spun away and away from myself, and I was an eagle soaring in a moment of quiet so still not even the wind whispered to me. And I fell down to the earth like lightning and I was a buffalo and I felt the strength of my stride as my hooves tore the earth and I ran and I ran and then I was surrounded by thousands of my kind, a million and I was all of them and I was a river of black thunder across the endless grass...
And I saw Mankind stumble and rise and swarm and build and launch themselves into airless space, a universe with no intelligence in it save ours as if it was made just for us and the immensity of this, the implications caused me to shrink back in fear and awe...
And I saw reality pealed back like a curtain and on the other side was nothing but a Void. Not a mote of dust, not a molecule of anything was there. Utter and complete nothingness. And this lay just next to all of us, all creation. A vacuum of absolute emptiness. Not even God was there...
And I walked across a dry cracked plain but no, it was the skin of a human being and I sank into it and I saw planets spinning around a sun but no, it was atoms and electrons and I saw that everything, everything in creation was connected....
And I saw a youth huddled and fearful and ashamed and conscious of the shame he had brought to his family and his People and of how he was stopped from taking his own life and I realized I was looking at myself and I remembered myself...
I opened my eyes and I saw I was still in the cave of Jackson Hart. I stood up. I was aware of Mr. Gath behind me. I was aware of his fear. I saw the girl Lan standing next to the tank that contained her father and I was aware of her fear and her sorrow and her pity. And I was aware of Hart and his greed and his arrogance and his fractured sense of reality which mirrored my own at that moment. And I was aware of his sorrow, too.
And I knew that whatever this man was and whatever he knew must not be allowed to leave this chamber.
You have used me, I said calmly, not even aware I was speaking with my mind.
Yes, he replied.
I will come for you when this is finished.Yes, he said.
I gathered up my hat and my guns. I was seeing things as matrices of light, as patterns of energy. I went to the stairs and up into the air outside. I climbed up over a hill and stood there looking down at those searching below.
There was a small army there. I saw soldiers. I saw another Combator. It was not disguised as a human. It would have made no difference to my senses then if it was. I saw that two of the soldiers were encased in Exoshells. There was a lone skimmer further off in the sky. 31 men and women in all. Some of them saw me. They converged, their weapons brought to bear on me.
I became aware that Mr. Gath had followed me out.
“This is not your fight,” I said to him. “You can leave.” My voice sounded hollow and strange to me.
“Like hell,” he said. “You can’t take them all by yourself. I ain’t never run from a fight. I ain’t startin’ now.” There was fear in his voice but resolve too and I knew he smiled as he said, “I’ll take the robot.”
The men below were shouting something at us. Questions, warnings, demands. I saw the sunlight streaming down in particles and waves. I moved my coat back from my guns. And it seemed as if my black coat grew and elongated and flapped in the wind and merged with the crow which was no longer on my chest but behind me and it spread great black wings on either side of me, throwing my shadow on those beneath.
And then I began.
Everything was slow but me. I drew and fired. I moved and danced along the lines of force throbbing thru the planet and dealt death to those around me as if I were a ghost. Even so, I took hits from their weapons but they didn’t slow me down. I fired until the pistols whined and then I threw them from me. I jumped and spun and planted the remaining popbombs on those in the Exoshells. I drew my handray and slashed the skimmer from the sky. I drew the firewhip from my hat and twirled thru their ranks as if they were standing still and the blood and metal and ceramics and glass and scorched flesh sprayed up like splashing water.
And then it was over. I stood panting over a fallen soldier. A woman. Half her helmet smashed away, blood trickling down, her eyes wide and staring at me in fear and disbelief. And I knew somehow that I had to leave at least one alive.
My vision, my energy began to return to normal. I saw Mr. Gath, or what was left of him lying near the broken remains of the Combator. I ran to him. There were also a couple of dead soldiers near him. It wasn’t just the robot he had taken out. Perhaps he had been right and I couldn’t have taken them all by myself. He was still alive. He grinned up at me thru broken teeth.
“Hell’uva fight,” he said.
I realized I could fix him, I could heal him. I could reach out and draw the lines of force from the air and from the ground beneath us and knit him back together. Ignoring my own pain I stretched out my hands and became a magnet for the energy. I saw his flesh begin to heal, the exposed metal in his body twisting back into straight lines. But even as it began to do so, the powers I had commanded faded. He sighed once and then he was dead.
I knelt there in the dust, tasting blood in my mouth, for what seemed a long time.
Then I climbed to my feet. The gravity of Daydream seemed to have increased; my legs felt like stone. That reminded me of something but I couldn’t remember what just then. I made my way back to the cave of Jackson Hart. The hologram disguise was gone; the entrance stood open now. I was so tired I could barely stumble down the steps.
Hart was no longer in his tank. Much of the machinery was shut down. I walked past it and farther back into the cave where I could see light.
There was another chamber there, like a large globe. There was no liquid in this one. Hart was lying on the floor of it, gasping like a fish. Lan was kneeling next to him. Both were naked. I stood there, my clothes and some of my flesh in tatters, the crow back across my chest like a black tattoo.
And so you have come back for me, Mr. Redbone, he said, but again, not calling me that but using my real name and speaking Comanche.
You have no weapons, I see. I was too tired now and in too much pain. I was too exhausted. I was weary unto death of conflict. “I don’t care anymore, Hart. I just want you gone,” I said aloud in English.
In that we are agreed, Mr. Redbone. You understand even better now, I think, why we couldn’t allow this secret to be used. “What happens now?” I asked.
The soldier you left alive will report that my daughter was here, that there was a great battle against mercenaries she had hired, and that everything, all traces of the experiment and my daughter and Jia and most of the battle was obliterated. They will have no more cause to search for anything. And we will depart.“And me?”
They will merely think you were part of the army, Mr. Redbone, and that you died here, too. The soldier will not report you were even here. Only the few who saw you in Cloudsafe will remember you. There is a chamber below this one. There is a small ship there. I suggest you enter it and leave. This complex will indeed be destroyed soon once the surviving soldier is far enough away. The ship’s computers hold some valuable information, including the cures for several diseases, Mr. Redbone. I leave it to you to decide how to distribute this knowledge. The ship is also programmed with the coordinates of a planet I took from your mind. You will be safe there. And you may find some answers there, too.I sank to my knees, too tired to stand anymore. The dog, Jia, came to me, whining. She licked the blood from my face.
“Dog,” I said to her, not unkindly, turning my face away, resting a broken hand on her warm fur. “What about the dog?” I asked Hart.
Oh, she cannot come with us. Not the way we shall travel. It would be a little too...intimate, shall we say. She is your dog now, Mr. Redbone. You can keep her safe, I think. And you will find her an invaluable companion in the future. And now, Mr. Redbone, one last request. There is a switch next to this chamber. Trip it for us.I dragged myself up again, feeling as if I weighed a ton. I tripped the switch.
Light blinding and golden sprang out from the chamber. The hum of the machinery grew into a screaming buzzsaw crescendo. I raised my hands to shield my eyes. Jia barked. Thru my fingers I saw the bodies of Hart and Lan dissolve into a glow. I thought I heard, over the sound of the machines, Lan scream once. Their bodies became one, a miniature sun hovering within the globe.
Farewell, man of the Numa, said a voice, different now then it had been. The glow faded, the machinery wound down to silence.
They were gone.
Jia knew what I was looking for and showed me where the ship was. We entered it. My guns were still out there in the dirt somewhere. So was my hat. I would miss the hat but I couldn’t make myself walk back out there.
The ship was small and an unfamiliar design but it didn’t matter; the computer activated as we entered. A female voice welcomed me. More of Hart’s AI expertise, I thought. I didn’t know what commands it would respond to so I wearily just told it to take off. It understood and went thru the sequences. Then it lurched into motion and I realized it was moving thru a long tunnel. There was a small couch in the rear of the ship and a little compartment for the dog where she would be safe until we were in space.
“Jia,” I murmured to her as I helped her in and shut the little door. “What kind of name is that for a dog.”
I felt drunk; I hadn’t been drunk since I was a kid. My brain was still suffering from the affects of Hart’s little deception. I only hoped he was being truthful and the effects had only been temporary. The thought of millions of nanites crawling thru my head made me shudder. I was starting to forget already what I had seen. I didn’t try to hold onto the memories.
I dropped onto the couch and strapped myself in and closed my eyes. Cold air began pumping thru the vents. I felt something touch my forehead and I thought at first it was the air. I opened my eyes.
The Little Girl stood beside me, caressing my brow. She smiled.
“Now, you can rest,” she said, “for a little while.”
My eyes filled with tears and, gratefully, I closed them again.