Ragnarok 03 - Resonance (22 page)

BOOK: Ragnarok 03 - Resonance
4.01Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

THIRTY-TWO

NULAPEIRON, 2657-2713 AD

From her distributed surveillance motes throughout Palace Avernon, Kenna watched most of the preparations, while her own hidden programme continued slowly: that work was not to be rushed. The Pilot, Caleb deVries, used a lev-platform several times to return to his ship on the surface, via a giant vertical shaft on the edge of the demesne. The first time, he had taken the crystal spearhead stolen from Avernon's collection. Had Kenna wanted to blackmail deVries, the opportunity was gone, at least without betraying the undercover Pilot, Linda Gunnarsson, living the life of an epsilon-class servitrix in the lowest level of the Palace.

From a balcony protected by membrane, as well as the sharpest members of his personal guard, Lord Avernon watched a sequence of nine master-drones, each ten metres long, float one by one into the centre of the shaft, and then begin a slow vertical ascent to the surface a hundred metres above, there to gently glide into the cargo hold of deVries's ship.

Kenna noted that Avernon had not proposed going into space himself. He was content for deVries, or rather the drones that deVries was due to deploy, to carry out the experiments, while he, Avernon, would wait to collect, collate and analyse the subsequent results. Realtime images and readings would be tightbeamed down to a receiver near the shaft opening on the planet's surface. The chances of a neighbouring Lord eavesdropping on the signals were minimal; to involve oneself in tasks up above, even when others did the hard work, was scarcely thinkable, a blindspot in thinking that in the lower strata was taken to the extreme. Many were inhibited
against – not to mention prohibited from – ascending to the next stratum. Such concepts as ground and sky were as little thought of as, say, a mythical hell, and exactly as frightening to someone who seriously imagined it.

Had it not been for the theoretical work performed by Avernon's grandfather, the current Lord would scarcely have thought of this. But the earlier results were intriguing, with the kaon-antikaon decay rates indicating the potential for reversing time's arrow.

Finally, deVries flew.

Kenna's airborne surveillance motes showed her: from barely a metre above the surface, deVries's bronze ship disappeared in a white flash that Kenna knew to be as risky as it was flamboyant. There was no realtime signal relaying the ship's reappearance in distant orbit; neither the deployment of the first master-drone, nor the subsequent hops as it deployed the other eight, were tightcast to the ground. It was only when the master-drones themselves completed initialisation procedures that the signals began.

First, readings established that each drone was in clear space, with no hindrances to letting loose the cargo, comprising thousands of fist-sized mini-drones.

The last of the master-drones also sent holovideo footage of deVries's vessel, until it transited out of realspace, leaving nothing to see. If the experimental programme worked, any or all of the master-drones would commence a slow descent back to the shaft on Nulapeiron's surface that led down to Demesne Avernon, where the ruling Lord and his logosophical research team would commence work on whatever came back.

Soon clouds of mini-drones were spraying out into space.

I wonder what they'll find
.

Kenna already possessed dangerous knowledge of the future, assuming that everything she had learned as Rhianna Chiang from placing Roger Blackstone into deepest trance so long ago was true, and not a delusion formed during her
reconstruction and resurrection as a static cyborg formed of distributed components.

A few mini-drones performed initial checks on kaon-antikaon decay rates, finding them skewed further from previous readings by 0.06 per cent. There were no other unusual phenomena. This was a research programme whose payoff might come in days (as the current Lord Avernon hoped) or decades or never.

While deep inside the Palace walls, where no surveillance system beyond Kenna's own could see, her own programme of experiments was well under way, although she had to be careful because of one severely limited resource.

The splinter of crystal, removed from the spearhead now in mu-space, was so very, very small. She had to plan hard and ration carefully at every stage: that was obvious from the start.

But the energy spectrum . . .

Whatever Kenna was, she was no longer a Pilot, no longer able to perceive mu-space or to work directly with Labyrinthine technologies; but she remembered things, and the results of her every analysis implied a strange construction pathway – transitions to impossible minima – to produce that splinter of crystal taken originally from the spearhead. It did not match any physical process in mu-space that she could remember or imagine.

Which was strange, because the crystal sure as hell did not originate in realspace either.

It doesn't matter.

Practicality overrode theory every time.

I only have to work the stuff.

In the event, it took fifty-one more years to achieve a breakthrough.

To the continuing sequence of Lords Avernon, Kenna made herself indispensable, because she could not count on them all ignoring her like Lord Dalgen Avernon. Ironically, he,
short-sighted and machiavellian, had commissioned one of the most far-sighted experiments to be carried out by Nulapeiron's logosophers. But he lost interest during the years that followed, as the tiny anomalous results produced zero payoff.

People got on with the march of their lives, and in due course died, while Kenna remained immobile, her pseudo-face embedded in the wall of a laboratory chamber deep inside Palace Avernon. Her larger components were splayed across that same wall, while many more components, far smaller, were distributed throughout the Palace.

Lord Alvix, who had dropped the Avernon suffix though it remained the legal name of his line, was the fifth Lord chronologically, and the nearest so far to recreating the intellectual daring and humour of the old Duke.

But the demesne he had inherited was not financially stable, and so he was forced consciously to use his brilliance and expertise in areas he would rather have avoided – or so Kenna read the situation, on the basis of both passive observation and their personal chats, when Alvix felt there was no one he could talk to besides his immobile cyborg adviser.

What Kenna had kept to herself for decades was the truth about Dalgen Avernon's death, for the causes were not natural, as everyone in the demesne had believed: not unless you counted an assassin's work paid for by Lord Vikal, a scheming Lord Minor from Realm Grisengahl, as a natural occurrence.

‘Bloody hell,' said Lord Alvix now. ‘Kenna, will you look at this?'

He was in the centre of the lab chamber, surrounded by a plethora of holovolumes: sheaves of numbers; intricate, shifting phase spaces rendered in a thousand hues where every nuance of colour held meaning; and many-dimensioned emergenic maps, which tracked the generation of properties emergent from complex substrates, always checking and attempting to predict the emergence of order from chaos.

Alvix's self-mending tunic had failed to do so: his faded
once-black-now-grey garment looked as if a rat had been chewing at the sleeves. In public he knew how to dress with propriety, but when he withdrew himself from matters political, he became the distracted scholar he was meant to be.

‘Not that old thing,' said Kenna.

Lord Alvix laughed.

‘My grandfather's great disappointment,' he said. ‘But look at these gamma-rays.'

‘Holy shit.' Kenna absorbed the readings, allowing herself to feel surprised. ‘You've found a
second
temporal phenomenon.'

Was this the beginning of a successful logosophical attempt to read the future? It was over a century ago that Max Gould, dear Uncle Max, director of Labyrinth's intelligence service, had despatched her here – or rather, despatched Rhianna Chiang – to investigate the rumour.

‘I always thought,' Kenna added, ‘that only the kaon-antikaon thing was sensitive to the direction of time. But this one was always there, waiting to be seen.'

‘Yes,' said Alvix. ‘Except that I never thought I would see it.'

He dimmed the holovolumes, except for one that he shifted to the centre, and caused to magnify and brighten. Inside, successive layers of spherical waves, with a common centre, shrank inwards to that central point and were absorbed.

Over and over, wavefronts diminished to nothing.

In terms of subatomic process, the kaon reaction stands alone; but there is one other phenomenon not seen in nature, because it would be the equivalent of a smashed egg reforming. Emissions of radiation outwards from a point are common; what is rarely seen is the reverse: spherical wave-forms shrinking inwards – except that was what the data was showing Alvix now.

‘I'm going to call them spinpoints,' he said. ‘Singularities being born. They're appearing in the regions around Nulapeiron where the kaon-antikaon decay was most strongly affected before. Just
look
how they behave.' He could not stop
smiling. ‘Time to contact l'Academia. This is going to cause such a stir.'

‘Or you could call on your friends' – Kenna meant his allies – ‘to fund a private research effort.'

Alvix paused, then: ‘Practicalities. That's why I like you hanging around, Kenna. Unless you've reconsidered my offer.'

‘Of a drone body? I thank you again, my Lord,' she answered. ‘And decline once more, with gratitude.'

‘We're alone. You don't need the polite rigmarole.' He grinned. ‘And point taken. You'll help me work through the details?'

‘Of course I will,' she said.

But either because of coincidence or the subtle psychological effects of Alvix's breakthrough – the realisation that decades-long effort could provide sudden insight – Kenna's attention would become distracted in a matter of days, as she broke through her own private research barrier. In her case, there was no one at all with whom to share the news.

A microscopic fragment of crystal suddenly
wriggled
under gamma-ray bombardment.

The manner in which that tiny sample had become not just liquid – though highly viscous – but actually motile . . . that might not have seemed like much, any more than spherical absorption rather than emission of radiation might be radically significant.

It might take decades more, even a century, to grow enough of the crystal to work with, and then to learn the ins and outs of engineering with the stuff; but it was a start.

Roger Blackstone's dreams might come true.

Such a strange reason for the feeling of triumph that spread throughout Kenna's dispersed, distributed self.

Five years later, the prototype Oraculum was ready, and a more hardened-looking Lord Alvix was getting ready to receive his noble visitors, the Lords and Ladies who had sunk
finances into his project and were intrigued at the notion they might get a return sooner than expected.

Whether that was true, Kenna was less sure than Alvix. Lately the practicalities she had been dealing with had been those of engineering, helping develop new manipulation techniques that might some day help her directly, but for now were key to the manipulation of harvested spinpoints.

Those spinpoints were gathered by mini-drones in far orbit, and brought down to Nulapeiron by one of the master-drones that deVries had deployed fifty-six years ago.

Each spinpoint was a tiny seed, wrapped in magnetic fields and glowing in visible wavelengths once stabilised, and in the more energetic end of the spectrum before capture. A hall had been refashioned to hold them, with massive coils embedded in its walls, located close to the vertical shaft down which the master-drone descended, bearing its strange cargo.

In that hall, magnetic fields guided spinpoints into new carry-drones fashioned for the purpose, the lower surface of their carapaces formed of flowskin, so that they could move snail-like along the Palace corridors, bearing their magnetically trapped spinpoints, one per carry-drone.

Perhaps if it were not for the state in which Kenna herself existed, she would have felt more ethical concern at the treatment of the young people whom Alvix's research team were hoping to turn into Oracles. The notion of perceiving the future, as described in primitive folklore, was ill-defined, akin to seeing distant events without technological intervention. But practical precognition was ‘simply' one of future memory: of ‘remembering' thoughts and perceptions from one's own future mind.

‘It's cosmology and the subatomic realm,' Alvix had said at the start of the project, ‘going hand in hand yet again. That resonance between the cosmically large and attoscopically small has been fascinating scientists and now logosophers for hundreds of years.'

When Alvix had first sought investors, seven of the currently
visiting Lords and Ladies had come to Palace Avernon, and attended a presentation in the Great Hall. There Alvix had projected a huge holo, of a globe filled with filaments and membranes of light surrounding empty spaces that looked like biological cells.

Each cell interior was in fact a cosmic void, and the tiniest points of light constituting those filaments and membranes represented galactic superclusters; because this was the entire realspace universe.

And of course, he caused it to shrink back to the tiny point that was the Big Bang, before expanding it to the fill the hall once more.

‘When I shrank the cosmos, as it were' – Alvix had smiled at his audience – ‘was I predicting a Big Crunch, or showing expansion from the Big Bang in reverse?'

His point was that a universe as viewed from outside might be seen to shrink, but the cosmological arrow of time seemed predicated on the future always being the direction in which the universe was bigger. It indicated that timeflow might flip into reverse, should a Crunch occur.

And that meant you could never know whether you were in a universe that an outsider would say was expanding or collapsing.

Other books

Love in a Nutshell by Evanovich, Janet, Kelly, Dorien
Swann by Carol Shields
Flower Feud by Catherine R. Daly
Green Girl by Sara Seale
HEARTTHROB by Unknown
Lone Tree by O'Keefe, Bobbie
Whipple's Castle by Thomas Williams
The Secret Scripture by Sebastian Barry