Authors: Stephen Baxter
Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Space Opera, #Science Fiction, #Floods, #Climatic Changes
2
T
hey clambered aboard a jeep, and the convoy moved off with a soft whirr of electric engines. This small fleet of cars, emblazoned with Homeland Security and US military logos, had brought the Ark crew here from the coast. The convoy soon broke up, cars peeling off, leaving Gordo’s jeep and one other heading steadily north out of town, skirting the flanks of Pikes Peak.
Gordo sat with Grace behind the young uniformed woman who drove the jeep. He pointed ahead; the road was a good track through the mountains. “The drive will take a few hours. This is mountain country, the Rockies. We’re following the old state highway up to US 24 at Divide, where we’ll head west. We’ll turn north at Hartsel and make for Fairplay, and then you’re only a few miles from Alma, which is south of the Hoosier Pass.”
“Is that where we’re going? Alma?”
“It’s just a little town, an old mining place. Or was. I don’t know if any of these names mean anything to you.”
“We never walked this way.”
“Right, with your okie army.”
“Walker City. We had maps from the old days. But on Ark Three there were computer maps. Up to date.” The ship’s computers generated maps that showed the consequences of a flood that now approached eighteen hundred meters above the old sea level, maps of the archipelago that was the surviving remnant of the Rocky Mountain states. “The flooding started just about when I was born. I don’t remember the country the way it used to be.” You always had to explain that to older people, who clung in their heads to images of what had been.
Divide, when they reached it, was just another small town. Whatever it had once been before the flood it was now overwhelmed by eye-dees, IDPs, Internal Displaced Persons, as was everywhere else. The road was fenced off by rabbit wire. As the little convoy passed through people came out of their shacks and tents to watch. Grace saw how the troopers in the lead jeep cradled weapons.
The two jeeps drove steadily west, through Ute Pass that Gordo said was above nine thousand feet. Everything seemed to be feet, inches, miles with Gordo the astronaut. Gary Boyle, the scientist who had raised her, had taught Grace to measure her world in meters and kilometers.
The mountains had a bare, brown look. It hadn’t snowed here for years. As they passed through a tiny community called Florrisant, Gordo talked about a park of fossil beds nearby, full of petrified redwood thirty-five million years old. Now, he said, it held more people than fossils.
Then, at Wilkerson Pass, views of a high-elevation meadow called South Park opened up, and the road seemed to sail off into the air.
“God,” Gordo said suddenly, “
look
at that view. You know, it’s just not reasonable that all this can be drowned beneath a mile of fucking seawater. I guess this is why I work so hard at Nimrod—trying to save something of it, the essence anyhow. Bobbing around on some crumbling raft just won’t be the same.”
Grace stared at him. The driver kept her eyes fixed firmly on the road, as if she hadn’t heard this outburst.
Gordo relaxed, and laughed at himself. “Sorry. Am I coming over like a tourist guide?”
She frowned. “I’m not sure what a tourist is.”
“OK. I’m told you used to be a princess.”
“My mother, in captivity, was raped by a Saudi prince. Does that count? If so I still am a princess. You used to be an astronaut.”
He nodded his bullet head. “I guess I still am, following your logic. Flew in space once, to ISS.”
“To what?”
“The space station.” He pointed up. “But after that my own career got fucked over by the flood. Well, grounded I may be, but I found something worthwhile to do here.”
“It’s got nothing to do with me. And I didn’t ask for it.”
“Maybe not. But we didn’t ask for you either. Look, there’s a selection process for newcomers to the project. Like Thandie said back in Cripple Creek, you’re actually a better candidate than your husband would have been, in terms of Nimrod’s criteria. You’ve shown independent survival skills. I saw that for myself. How old are you?”
“Twenty-six.”
“Well, if you make it you’ll be one of the oldest on the crew. Any religious affiliation?”
“Walker City had priests, rabbis, imams—”
“I didn’t ask about Walker City. I asked about you.”
“No. I’m not religious.”
“Good. The social engineers are trying to make the crew an entirely secular society. Lessens the chance of factionalization and conflict, they think. Well, we’ll see about that. And Thandie was right that the selectors currently like pregnant women, by the way. With a pregnant woman aboard you’re getting two sets of genes in one package. You’ll be an easier sell.”
“Lily Brooke planned it that way,” Grace said, the bitterness welling up again. She had figured all this out in the hours since Lily had delivered her into the hands of Gordo, had reevaluated everything that had happened to her over the last months and years on Ark Three. All of it had been the product of manipulation by Lily. “She set up my relationship with Hammond so Nathan would favor me. She even timed my pregnancy, I think, so I’d tick another box on your chart.”
“And she did this because—”
“Lily was in captivity with my mother. In Barcelona, Spain. I was born there, in some cellar, with my mother manacled to a radiator. Lily feels obligated to me because of that.”
“You’re not entirely grateful.”
“Lily just controls me. Who would want that?”
He waved a hand. “Well, none of that matters now. You’ll never see Lily again. Here you are, here’s the situation you face, however you got here. The only question is where you go from here.”
“And if I choose not to go along with your project?”
Gordo said bleakly, “Then you’ll have no place with us. You or your kid. We can’t feed you.”
3
T
hey drove through one last town, Fairplay, where an open-air museum of old wooden structures from the mining camps had been colonized by refugees. Gordo said the museum had once been much more extensive, but wood to burn was precious.
Then they followed the signs for Hoosier Pass, driving along a well-maintained highway, and came at last into Alma. The place was overlooked by a broad peak called Mount Bross, on whose flanks sprawled a pine forest, much scarred by logging. The original town was little more than a handful of blocky buildings to either side of the road, clustered between rusting speed-limit signs. But newer, more extensive facilities had accreted around the old stock, blocks of glass and unpainted concrete.
The cars pulled off the road onto a dirt track, and stopped before one anonymous block. A slogan was neatly painted over a heavy steel door: “Genesis 11:6: NOW NOTHING WILL BE RESTRAINED FROM THEM, WHICH THEY HAVE IMAGINED TO DO.” Oddly, a child’s swing, metal and bright plastic, stood before the door.
Their driver got out and opened the door for Gordo, saluting him briskly.
Gordo had a cell phone clamped to his ear. “Hey, Holle? Glad I caught you. Would you mind coming out front? There’s somebody I want you to meet.” He put away the phone. “Doesn’t look like much, does it? But we retrieved a lot of facilities from the NASA sites in Houston. Control, comms, training centers. There’s even a small nuke reactor. We brought all this stuff all the way up to Alma, some little bitty miners’ town. And you know why? Because Alma, ten thousand, three hundred and sixty-one feet above the old sea level, is the highest incorporated municipality in the United States.”
The driver, a woman no older than Grace, said, “Actually, sir, that’s not quite true. My mother was born around here, and she said it lost out to Winter Park—”
Gordo waved that away. “All Winter Park has above Alma’s elevation are ski lifts, so the hell with that, Cooper.”
“Sorry, sir.”
“Grace, at times government works in simple ways. The decision-makers wanted this facility to survive as long as possible, no matter how bad the flood gets. So where do you build? You go to the record books for the highest town in America, and that’s why a significant chunk of the single most expensive federal project since the decampment to Denver was unloaded on this little mountain town of two hundred souls. Look, I live over there—see the block in back of the Stone Church? Some of us pray in there, come Sundays.”
“
What
facility? What is this place?”
The door opened. A young woman emerged, slim, not tall, pale, her red hair shaved short. She wore a lurid red and blue jumpsuit, with phones and other gadgets stuck in pockets. She was young, twenty-one, twenty-two. Blinking in the daylight she looked warily at Grace.
“Grace, this is Holle Groundwater, one of our most promising Candidates. Not that that’s saying much. Holle, meet Grace Gray—and Gray junior,” he said, clumsily pointing to Grace’s belly. “Here for selection. Maybe you could show her the ropes.”
“Sure.” Holle smiled at Grace, and offered a hand to shake. But Grace could see the smile was forced.
“You aren’t glad to see me,” Grace said bluntly.
Holle raised thin eyebrows over sea blue eyes. “It’s just we’ve got enough competition for places already, and there are only a few months left. The last thing we need is more applicants.” Her accent was soft, lilting, British maybe, unfamiliar to Grace. Then she grinned. “Of course that’s not your fault.”
“Places? Places on what?”
But there was no reply. Evidently secrecy was habitual. Holle was well fed, earnest, bright. Grace remembered how she had been at Holle’s age, still on the road, feet like leather and not a gram of fat on her body, everything she owned in a faded pack on her back.
Maybe Gordo sensed the tension between the women. He took off his cap and ran a hand over his grizzled scalp. “Listen, Grace. You’re going to need some way to prove your capabilities. Let me give you an assignment. Just now we have a crime we need solving here.”
“What kind of crime?”
“A murder,” Gordo said simply.
The word shocked Grace. She looked blankly at the block, the biblical slogan, Holle’s intent, competent-looking face. “I don’t know anything about investigating crimes. We had cops in Walker City, and on the Ark Nathan’s guards—”
“You can start by talking to Holle, here. Find out how it all started for her. I mean, you’ve been in the program since you were six years old—right, kid?”
Holle smiled. “According to my father, since I was conceived.”
“It will be a way for you to figure out what we’re up to here.” Gordo grinned. “Yeah. Solve the crime, and earn your place. Two birds with one stone. I don’t often have ideas, but when I do they’re generally doozies. Now I got work to do, not least organizing the retrieval of Nathan Lammockson’s seed cache from his sinking ship. But before I go—” Gordo fished in a jacket pocket, and produced a key ring with a bauble pendant. “I hand these out to the government suits, and anybody else I think needs some inspiration. What we’re working toward.” He put the little artifact in Grace’s hand.
She raised the key ring. The pendant was a translucent sphere, bluish, maybe a centimeter across. Embedded within it were two silver splinters, connected by a bit of thread. “What is it?”
“Ask Holle. Catch you later, Groundwater.” He strode off back toward the cars, and once more Grace was abandoned with a stranger.
“This way—Grace, is it?” Holle led Grace into the building.
Inside, the block was corridors and offices and computer rooms, suffused by a hum of air-conditioning. It reminded Grace of facilities aboard Lammockson’s Ark Three, the bridge, the engine room.
The two of them didn’t meet anybody else until the corridor opened out into a glass-fronted room with banks of chairs, microphones, screens. Through the glass Grace saw a larger chamber, dug some way into the ground so that she was looking down on rows of people before consoles, where screens glowed brightly, text and images flowing. Before them the front wall was covered by two huge screens. One showed a map of the world—continents outlined in blue, surviving high ground glowing bright green—with pathways traced over it. On the second screen concentric circles surrounded a glowing pinpoint, each circle labeled with a disc. Gary’s amateur education program had always heavily favored science. Grace understood that she was looking at a map of the solar system.
Holle was watching her curiously. Grace felt utterly out of place in this technological cave, still in the clothes she had put on that morning on the Ark, with her pitiful collection of belongings lost forever.
“This is at the heart of what we do,” Holle said.
“What is this place?”
“Mission Control. We’re running a simulation right now—”
“And this?” Grace held up the key ring globe.
“Our spaceship.” Holle smiled, a basic humanity shining through the competitiveness. “Come on. You look like you need a coffee. We’ll talk about how Harry Smith got killed. And I’ll tell you how we got started here.”
Two
2025-2041
4
June 2025
I
t was raining in Denver, a steady, unrelenting downpour that fell from a gray lid of sky. It pinged off the wings of the plane that brought Patrick Groundwater and his daughter in over the city, and glistened on the runways and sculpted roofs of the terminal buildings as he carried six-year-old Holle through the international airport, discreetly tailed by Alice Sylvan and the rest of her security team, and hammered on the roofs of the cars that drove them through kilometers of suburban sprawl, crowded with IDP camps and welfare facilities, toward downtown. Under rusting junction signs the interstate was deserted save for police and government vehicles, and only a handful of private cars. To the west the mountain line was entirely invisible.
Patrick had visited Denver long ago, in his early teens, on his way to go skiing at Aspen. This was before the turn of the millennium, maybe fifteen years before the inception of the flood. He remembered the breathlessness, and today the air felt just as thin. Back then it hadn’t rained at all, save for a couple of intense storms which had been kind of fun, nothing like this steady, relentless downpour. But since those days the sea had risen two hundred meters from where it used to be, the air was full of heat and moisture, and you couldn’t expect to escape the rain even in the mile-high city. Well, Thandie Jones would tell Patrick and the other assembled mega-rich folk of LaRei all about that tomorrow.
All Thandie’s words wouldn’t deflect a single raindrop from his daughter’s head. But in Denver he hoped to meet people who intended to do something about it.
At the hotel they were met by smiling porters in galoshes and wielding umbrellas.
Patrick was reassured by his first impression of the Brown Palace. Set on a peculiar triangular lot where two street layout systems collided, it reminded him oddly of an ocean liner wrought of red granite and sandstone. Inside, an atrium towered up eight stories. While Alice completed the check-in formalities, Holle ran around the polished floor, pointing at the golden onyx pillars and lifting up her little face to peer wide-eyed at the filigree rails and the stained-glass ceiling far above, from which hung an immense Stars and Stripes. In a world that was slowly breaking down, you could rely on a church-like Victorian-vintage pile like the Brown to stand solid and comfortable where newer confections of glass and reinforced concrete were crumbling. Besides, it was only a few hundred meters from Denver’s civic center, where in the morning he was due to meet Nathan Lammockson and the rest of the LaRei people.
The suite Patrick was given had everything he needed to keep Holle happy, including a kid-friendly mini-bar, a net sack of books and toys, and screens with a variety of entertainments. There were tough notices about conserving water. Denver’s weather had always come from rain on the Rockies, and although the climate was a lot wetter now, the disruption to the rainfall patterns and the increased population made the freshwater supply chancy.
One TV screen was tuned permanently to a news channel, put out by the Rocky Mountain News, a defunct old print outlet revived as a broadcaster. Over a rolling tickertape of more or less dismal headlines, the channel showed images of the latest disaster, in this case a kind of limited civil war that had broken out around Alice Springs, Australia, as the residents resisted attempts by the federal government to relocate refugees from flooded-out Victoria, New South Wales and South Australia.
Holle played before the TV, investigating the toys. She seemed immune to the bombardment of horrors on the news, just as the world’s various disasters had seemed unreal to Patrick when he was a kid in the long-lost twentieth century. Best not to hide stuff from her, he had decided. Holle’s life was liable to be shaped by bad news. He liked to think Linda would have backed up this intuition, but he was never going to know.
That evening he took Holle down to dinner in one of the hotel’s fancy restaurants. The waiters made a fuss of her as they elegantly served her a kiddie version of paella. It was a special request from Patrick, a kind of comfort food, a dish her mother used to make for her. Afterward, back in the suite, he played card games with her, and let her watch a couple of episodes of
Friends
on TV, and read to her until she slept.
Then he opened up his laptop and checked his e-mails.
The big construction projects up on the Great Plains were proceeding well, although disgruntled refugees being settled there bitterly called them “Friedmanburgs.” He referred that to his PR department for guidance.
Patrick was also involved in the furiously paced open-cast mining of the Athabasca Oil Sands in Alberta. Oil, coal, gas and oil shale were already being intensively mined in Colorado, all over the Western Slope. The Alberta grab was on a different scale. It was supposedly sanctioned by the relocated Canadian government in Edmonton, but that was a fig-leaf fiction. The US federal government in Denver intended to extract as many of the hundreds of billions of barrels of oil available from the bitumen as possible before the seas closed over it all, in not many years from now if the gloomier experts were right. The government’s purpose was to secure its own position in the short term, and have a basis for national recovery in the longed-for day when the flood started to recede. The damage already done to the ecology and environment and so forth was ruinous. But rich men in the right place, like Patrick Groundwater, were getting even richer. Patrick had never imagined he would find himself in such a role. But somebody had to do it, and he tried to fulfill what he saw as his responsibilities conscientiously. Such was the way of the world.
A gentle snoring told him Holle was sleeping deeply. He checked on her, covering her with her blanket a little more tightly, and made sure her Angel was switched off.
Then he went back to work.
In the morning Holle woke him up at six a.m., as usual. To his huge relief it wasn’t raining, and the summer sun was trying to break through towering clouds. By eight they had finished their room-service breakfast.
Despite Alice Sylvan’s protestations, he decided they were going to walk and see the sights; they had a couple of hours to spare before he was due to meet Nathan Lammockson at the city’s public library. Holle had spent most of her young life in gated communities. It would be enriching for her to see something resembling a functioning city. So he packed a bag with child-type essentials, tissues, a book, a couple of toys, Holle’s Angel, a water bottle. Holle wore a summer dress, and with sunblock on her arms and face and a pink hat on her head they were ready to go.
They set off with Alice’s team scattered around them, pushing through the early morning crowds down Tremont Place toward the 16th Street Mall. The buildings were marred by cracked glass panes and peeling paint, the green spaces given over to crops like potatoes and beans, and the trees had long ago been cut down for firewood. Few cars moved on the wide avenues—you saw tanks or armored vehicles more than cars—but the roads were full of pedestrians and cycles and rickshaws, pushing past long-disconnected traffic lights.
The Mall itself was a straight-line strip of shops, once a pedestrian precinct, with rusting tram lines and tree stumps. The shoppers’ trolley-buses no longer ran, but heavy vehicles from the Sheriff’s office and the police passed slowly along the road, occasionally barking instructions from bullhorns. Patrick was struck by how many military and security operative types he was seeing. He suspected that the Mall was being used as a control corridor, stretching through the Central Business District and maybe up to Lower Downtown.
The walking turned out to be relatively easy, with only a fringe of homeless camped under heaps of blankets and cardboard in the doorways, some families with children. Cops and Homeland Security on foot were checking the permit papers and biometric ID markers of the unresisting IDPs, making sure no more illegals had slipped into the city during the night. Aid workers handed out cups of beans, rice and hot water.
Some of the shops were still functioning. The food stores and restaurants sold local produce almost exclusively. In the other windows you saw rebuilt and repaired electronics, clothes and accessories, shoes and coats, even books, everything recycled or reclaimed from drowned cities. Patrick found the existence of the shops comforting, a sign that he was in a functioning city, a contrast to the chaos prevailing over much of the surviving country. But if any of the original character of Denver had lasted into the twenty-first century, anything of its origins as a western trading post, nothing had survived the great erasure of the refugee flows. Without buying anything, they walked on.
They came to California Street, and cut down to the Colorado Convention Center on 14th. This had been turned into a refugee processing camp, and long lines wound through the streets around it. The IDPs, from a distance, were gray clumps of misery, as they always were. The time for the meeting was approaching and, following Alice’s lead, they turned down 14th toward the civic center park. As they tried to cross Colfax Avenue, the main east-west artery through the city, they had to get through a cordon around the civic center, manned by police and military detachments.
Patrick led his daughter past the monumental buildings set around the park: the US Mint, the curving frontage of the City and County Building, and the public library where Thandie Jones was due to give her briefing. The Art Museum was particularly striking, and Holle stared at its angular geometric forms, like the abandoned origami experiments of a giant. But the thin metal panels were streaked and corroded, the windows boarded up, the billboards empty. The coming of the flood had frozen all Earth’s great cities at around 2015, save for emergency construction to cope with refugee flows, where it hadn’t drowned them altogether. That was a decade ago, and buildings like the Museum, neglected or co-opted for purposes for which they had never been designed, were showing their age.
Denver, as the largest city for a thousand kilometers around and a key junction for transport and communications, had been a significant federal center long before the flood. Since the capital had decamped here after Washington had flooded six years before, properties around the city had been requisitioned by the great departments of government. President Vasquez herself, the first three-term president since Roosevelt, had moved into the governor’s mansion. Patrick happened to know that much of the government’s business was run out of a more secure location, an old FEMA regional command center, a two-story bunker refurbished and revamped for the purpose. There were even embassies here, some from drowned nations, their flags hanging limp in the morning air. These struck Patrick as pitiful relics.
In this civic center, however, you had the sense of a great capital, the way Patrick remembered DC in the old days. People in suits bustled everywhere, many of them speaking into the air or with the characteristically absent expression of Angel users. Patrick imagined they were lobbyists and bureaucrats and staffers of all stripes, maybe even congress-men and senators. Patrick had a sense of the vast resources being poured into this place, that the city was the focus of huge energies and determination, a new refuge for the spirit of America and a base for the recovery to come. The President herself was in Denver. If you weren’t safe here, then where?
A brace of helicopters swept low overhead with a great clatter of noise. Holle squealed and jumped, excited.
Holle was enchanted by the State Capitol, an eighteen-story structure with Greek columns and rotunda and golden dome, gleaming in the watery morning sunlight. She skipped up the Capitol’s stone steps, counting them until she got to the eighteenth. Here the step was engraved, and she read with painstaking care: “ ‘One mile above sea level.’ Is that right, Dad?”
“That’s so, sweets. One mile up, right here.”
A gruff voice broke in. “Well, a mile less six hundred feet or so. They ought to make that plaque dynamic. Hey, George, we should get AxysCorp to pitch for the business . . .” A burly man, short, aged maybe mid-fifties, was coming down the steps toward them. His gray-flecked hair was shaved short to the scalp, and his fleshy nose and double chin were bright with sweat. His accent was British, London or Essex maybe. He was trailed by a couple of other men, one tall, composed, black, the other shorter, agitated. “Patrick Groundwater, you old dog. Good to see you again.” He stuck out a hand. “Nathan Lammockson.”