Read A Fire Upon the Deep Online
Authors: Vernor Vinge
Tags: #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #Hard Science Fiction
"I -- Yes. I talked to him about it beforehand. He didn't want it, but I thought he was just being ... is stiff-necked the word? If I had known how upset he was, well --"
"He practically fell apart out there in front of everybody. If I understand how things work, that would have been his disgrace, right?"
"... Yes. Exchanging honor for loyalty in front of peers, it's an important thing. At least the way I run things; I'm sure Pilgrim or Dataset can say a dozen other ways to lead. Look Johanna, I needed that Exchange, and I needed you and Scrupilo to be there."
"Yeah, I know. 'We two saved the day.'"
"Silence!" Her voice was suddenly edged, and Johanna remembered that this was a medieval queen. "We are two hundred miles north of my borders, almost to the heart of the Flenser Domain. In a few days we will meet the enemy, and more of us will die for we-know-not-quite-what."
The bottom dropped out of Johanna's stomach. If she couldn't get back to the ship, couldn't finish what Mom and Dad had started... "
Please,
Woodcarver! It
is
worth it!"
"I know that. Pilgrim knows it. The majority of my council agrees, though grudgingly. But we of the council have talked with Dataset. We've seen your worlds and what your science can do. On the other hand, most of my people here," she waved a head at the camp beyond the tent, "are here on faith, and out of loyalty to me. For
them
, the situation is deadly and the goal is vague." She paused, though her two pups continued gesturing forcefully for a second. "Now I don't know how you would persuade your kind to take such risks. Dataset talks of military conscription."
"That was Nyjora, long ago."
"Never mind. The point is, my troops are here out of loyalty, mostly to me personally. For six hundred years, I have protected my people well; their memories and legends are clear on it. More than once, I was the only one who saw a peril, and it was my advice that saved all those who heeded it.
That
is what keeps most of the soldiers, most of the cannoneers going. Each of them is free to turn back. So. What should they think when our first 'combat' is to fall like ignorant ... tourists ... onto a nest of wolves? Without the great good luck of you and part of Scrupilo being at the right place and alert, I would have been killed. Pilgrim would have been killed. Perhaps a third of the soldiers would have died."
"If not us, perhaps someone else," Johanna said in a small voice.
"Perhaps. I don't think anyone else came close to firing on the nest. You see the effect on my people? 'If bad luck in the forest can kill our Queen and destroy our marvelous weapons, what will it be like when we face a
thinking
enemy?' That was the question in many minds. Unless I could answer it, we'd never make it out of this valley -- at least not going northward."
"So you gave the medals. Loyalty for honor."
"Yes. You missed the sense of it, not understanding Tinish. I made a big thing of how well they had done. I gave silverwood accolades to packs who showed any competence during the ambush. That helped some. I repeated my reasons for this expedition -- the wonders that Dataset describes and how much we lose if Steel gets his way. But they've heard all that before, and it points to far away things they can scarcely imagine. The
new
thing I showed them today was you and Scrupilo."
"
Us?
"
"I praised you beyond the skies. Singletons often do brave things. Sometimes they are halfway clever, or talk as though they are. But alone, Scrupilo's fragment wouldn't be much more than a good knife fighter. He knew about using the cannon, but he didn't have the paws or mouths to do anything with it. And by himself, he would never have figured out where to shoot it. You, on the other hand, are a Two Legs. In many ways you are helpless. The
only
way you can think is by yourself, but you can do it without interfering with those around you. Together you did what no pack could do in the middle of a wolf-nest attack. So I told my army what a team our two races could become, how each makes up for the age-long failings of the other. Together, we are one step closer to being the Pack of Packs. How is Scrupilo?"
Johanna smiled faintly. "Things turned out okay. Once he was able to get out there and accept his medal," she fingered the broach that was pinned to her own collar; it was a beautiful thing, a landscape of Woodcarver's city, "once he'd done that, he was totally changed. You should have seen him with the cannoneers afterwards. They did their own loyalty/honor thing, and then they drank a lot of beer. Scrupilo was telling them all about what we were doing. He even had me help demonstrate.... You really think the army bought what you said about humans and Tines?"
"I think so. In my own language, I can be very eloquent. I've bred myself to be." Woodcarver was silent for a moment. Her puppies scrambled across the carpet, and patted their muzzles at Johanna's hands. "Besides ... it may even be true. Pilgrim is sure of it. You can sleep in this same tent with me and still think. That's something that he and I can't do; in our own ways, we've each lived a long time and I think we are each at least as smart as the humans and other creatures that Dataset talks about in the Beyond. But you singleton creatures can stand next to each other, and think and build. Compared to us, I'll bet singleton races developed the sciences very fast. But now, with your help, maybe things will change fast for us, too." The two puppies retreated, and Woodcarver lowered heads to paws. "That's what I told my people, anyway.... You should try to get some sleep now."
On the ground beyond the tent's entrance there were already splashes of sunlight. "Okay." Johanna slipped off her outer clothes. She lay down and dragged a light quilt across herself. Most of Woodcarver already looked asleep. As usual, one or two pairs of eyes were open, but their intelligence would be limited -- and just now, even they looked tired. Funny, Woodcarver had worked with Dataset so much, her human voice had come to capture emotion as well as pronunciation. Just now she had sounded so tired, so sad.
Johanna reached out from under her quilt to brush the neck of Woodcarver's nearest, the blind one. "Do
you
believe what you told everyone?" she said softly.
One of the "sentry" heads looked at her, and a very human sigh seemed to come from all directions. Woodcarver's voice was very faint. "Yes ... but I am very afraid that it doesn't matter any more. For six hundred years, I have had proper confidence in myself. But what happened on the south wall ... should not have happened. It would not if I had followed Vendacious's advice, and come down on the New Road."
"But we might have been seen --"
"Yes. A failure either way, don't you see? Vendacious has precise information from the highest councils of the Flenser. But he's something of a careless fool in everyday matters. I knew that, and thought I could compensate. But the Old Road was in far worse condition than I remembered; the wolf-nest could never have settled by it if there had been any traffic during the last few years. If Vendacious had managed his patrols properly, or if I had been managing
him
properly, we would never have been surprised. Instead we were nearly overrun ... and my only remaining talent appears to be in fooling those who trust me into thinking I still know what I'm doing." She opened another pair of eyes and made the smile gesture. "Strange. I haven't said these things even to Pilgrim. Is this another 'advantage' of human relations?"
Johanna patted the blind one's neck. "Maybe."
"Anyway, I believe what I said about things that
could
be, but I fear the my soul may not be strong enough to make them so. Perhaps I should turn things over to Pilgrim or Vendacious; that's something I must think on." Woodcarver
shh
ed Johanna's surprised protests.
"Now sleep please."
.Delete this paragraph to shift page flush
-=*=-
There was a time when Ravna thought their tiny ship might fly all the way to the Bottom unnoticed. Along with everything else, that had changed. At the moment,
Out of Band II
might be the most famous star ship known to the Net. A million races watched the chase. In the Middle Beyond there were vast antenna swarms beaming in their direction and listening to the news -- mostly lies -- sent from ships that pursued the
OOB
. She couldn't hear those lies directly, of course, but the transmissions from beyond were as clear as if they were on a main trunk.
Ravna spent part of each day reading the News, trying to find hope, trying to prove to herself that she was doing the right thing. By now, she was pretty sure what was chasing them. No doubt even Pham and Blueshell would have agreed on that.
Why
they were being chased, and
what
they might find at the end was now the subject of endless speculation on the Net. As usual, whatever the truth might be was well hidden among the lies.
Crypto: 0
As received by:
OOB
shipboard ad hoc
Language path: Triskweline, SjK units
From: Hanse [No references prior to the fall of Relay. No probable source. This is someone being very cautious.]
Subject: Alliance for the Defense fraudulent?
Distribution:
Threat of the Blight, War Trackers Interest Group, Homo Sapiens Interest Group
Date: 5.80 days since Fall of Sjandra Kei
Key phrases: Fools' errand, unnecessary genocide
Text of message:
Earlier I speculated that there had been no destruction at Sjandra Kei. Apologies. That was based on a catalog identification error. I agree with the messages (13123 as of a few seconds ago) assuring me that the habitations of Sjandra Kei suffered collisional damage within the last six days.
So apparently the "Alliance for the Defense" has taken the military action they claimed earlier. And apparently, they are powerful enough to destroy small civilizations in the Middle Beyond. The question still remains: "Why?" I have already posted arguments showing it unlikely that Homo sapiens is especially controllable by the Blight (though they were
stupid
enough to create that entity). Even the Alliance's own reports admit that less than half of Sjandra Kei's sophonts were of that race.
Now a large part of the Alliance fleet is chasing into the Bottom of the Beyond after
a single ship
. What conceivable damage can the Alliance do to the Blight down there? The Blight is a great threat, perhaps the most novel and threatening in well-recorded history. Nevertheless, Alliance behavior appears destructive and pointless. Now that the Alliance has revealed some of its sponsoring organizations (see messages [id numbers]), I think we know its real motives. I see connections between the Alliance and the old Aprahant Hegemony. A thousand years ago, that group had a similar jihad, grabbing real estate left vacant by recent Transcendences. Stopping the Hegemony was an exciting bit of action in that part of the galaxy. I think these people are back, taking advantage of the general panic attending the Blight (which is admittedly a much greater threat).
My advice: Beware of the Alliance and its claims of heroic efforts.
Crypto: 0
As received by:
OOB
shipboard ad hoc
Language path: Schirachene->Rondralip->Triskweline, SjK units
From: Harmonious Repose Communications Synod
Subject: Encounter with agents of the Perversion
Distribution:
Threat of the Blight
Date: 6.37 days since Fall of Sjandra Kei
Key phrases: Hanse fraudulent?
Text of message:
We have no special inclination toward any of the posters on this thread. Nevertheless, it's remarkable that an entity that has not revealed its location or special interests -- namely "Hanse" -- should be smearing the efforts of the Alliance for the Defense. The Alliance kept its constituents secret only during that period when its forces were being gathered, when a single stroke of the Perversion's power might destroy it entirely. Since that time, it has been quite open in its efforts.
Hanse wonders how a single starship could be worth the Alliance's attention. As Harmonious Repose was the site of the latest turn of events, we are in a position to give some explanation. The ship in question, the
Out of Band II
, is clearly designed for operations at the Bottom of the Beyond -- and is even capable of limited operations within the Slow Zone. The ship presented itself as a special zonographic flight commissioned to study the recent turbulence at the Bottom. In fact, this ship's mission is a very different one. In the aftermath of its violent departure, we have pieced together some extraordinary facts:
At least one of the ship's crew was human. Though they made great efforts to stay out of view and used Skroderider traders as intermediaries, we have recordings. A biosequence of one individual was obtained, and it matches the patterns maintained by two out of three of the Homo sapiens archives. (It's well known that the third archive, on Sneerot Down, is in the control of Human sympathizers.) Some might say this deception was founded in fear. After all, these events happened after the destruction of Sjandra Kei. We think otherwise: The ship's initial contact with us occurred before the Sjandra Kei incident.
We have since made a careful analysis of the repair work our yards performed on this vessel. Ultradrive automation is a deep and complex thing; even the cleverest of cloaking cannot mask all the memories in it. We now know that the
Out of Band II
was from the Relay system and that it left there
after
the Perversion's attack. Think what this means.
The crew of the
Out of Band II
brought weapons into a habitat, kill several local sophonts, and escaped before our musicians [harmonizers? police?] were properly notified. We have good reason to wish them ill.
Yet our misfortune is a small thing compared to the unmasking of this secret mission. We are very grateful that the Alliance is willing to risk so much in following this lead.