The
Ship
by Robert Davies
The Ship
arrived on the first Tuesday of the month. A silver spheroid
of frictionless exotic metal, it hovered a half mile above
the ruffled waters of Boston harbour. It was invisible to
radar, and it did not affect radio or television reception
(it was claimed by many that cellular reception actually improved,
though the sudden spike in breathless calls crashed the system
nonetheless). White-winged seabirds gave the Ship wide berth.
Given
the proximity of MIT and Harvard, the scientists were the
first to arrive.
(It is
pointless to say that the three women (miles of bad road,
each) sneaking a ciggy break behind the fish-packing plant
counted for anything, but in all truth they were actually
the first to arrive. But the galactic importance of the Ship
was lost on them, and thus we pass them by.)
The military
was close behind, those not out spreading democracy and cutting
brush. It was with remarkable restraint that it took them
nearly two weeks before firing the first missile.
It did
not explode, and the Ship did not react.
The fifty-second
one did not explode either, but Raytheon got a new contract
and some Senators got to go golfing while their wives shopped.
A structure
reminiscent of three oil rigs strung together with enclosed
walkways and dotted with helipads and boat moorings sprung
up over the course of the next year.
Along
the shore, several makeshift tents filled with cults and doomsayers
went up, supplementing the mobiles homes and RVs of the Scientologists,
the Muslims, Buddhists, Christians, and Mormons; all claimed
that the Ship at once confirmed their creed and threatened
the souls of the unsaved. The new Church of the Ship, like
its God Above, said nothing.
Immense
banks of high-wattage speakers were constructed beneath the
Ship, with nearly the entire library of digitized sound queued
up in stacks of hard drives. An accelerated barrage of music
and narrative crashed against the indifferent Ship, in the
vain hope of finding some sonic key or inciting some response
from those inside.
The Ship,
perhaps deaf, remained silent.
Grown
bored, the scientists returned to the classroom, the priests
and imams found new sins to condemn, and the military found
new targets for their missiles.
The Ship
did nothing.
****
|
Of
course, the major nations soon found their civilian
space programs reinvigorated, and their military space
programs sucked at the teat of GDP with vigour and glee.
Domes dotted the lunar landscape, and blinking skeletal
shipyards orbited the equatorial elevators. In mere
decades, seven bulky yet majestic craft plodded toward
the edge of the solar system, each inspired by the search
for the creators of the Ship.
Each
of the seven was destroyed before reaching Uranus. One
fell to saboteurs, another to a religious coup among
the crew, a third was scuttled by a fist of space junk,
and the fourth was blamed on a mathematical error due
to an engineer's lifelong distaste for the metric system.
As each country watched their national pride founder
between planets, trigger fingers grew itchy.
An
experimental nine-stage semi-sentient missile atomized
the fifth ship.
The
sixth ship was ordered to crash into the seventh.
|
illustration
by mike cody
|
It was
the second World Government that finally managed to corral
the national interests of its constituents into a rather more
coherent space plan. Self-perpetuating wombships were created
in the thousands and shot at random to the stars, each pregnant
with blueprints, genetics, and poetry.
The Ship
hung quiet in the sky.
****
Humanity
had settled into different corners of the galaxy, tweaking
and twisting himself until he resembled nothing before seen.
She became the solar drifters, dreaming long, intricate philosophies
in the wild heat of stars. He became the baryonic gimps huddled
in the icy abysses between. She shunted her intelligence into
chips and crystals and quantum foam. He became the Quo, who
folded galaxies like origami, and then folded themselves.
But they
would never go beyond that, would they? They could never truly
let go. How many times has it been that an Expansion or a
Scattering or a Digital Exodus has come crawling back to Earth?
How many times had they quailed at how far from humanity they
had gone and turned back and followed the star trail back
to the first one, this old, pitiful Sun, and the Ship that
hovered above the third planet?
****
The gaseous Pontiff of the Strentaniam Miasma turned to his
Coevals.
++We see
here a blatant attempt at deception.++
His filaments
indicated the Ship that hung in the sky above them.
++Imagine
the gall to claim that this small planetoid gave birth to
the race of Man++
The Pontiff
gestured and mounds of dirt arose around them, exploding into
clouds of brown earth.
++Mere
dirt! Pah! Certainly, Man came from the Clouds++
The inhabitants
of the gas giant Pulversity 6, ensconced in their perfectglass
shells, laughed and burped naughty limericks about dirt and
the Ship.
The Ship
did not stir.
****
The quantum
pilgrims popped into existence on the hillside beneath the
Ship, beneath them a rusty beach of silica and asphalt stretched
to the horizon. The ocean that had once covered the lands
around had long ago poured into chasms in the crust, to spill
and steam out many miles away.
The pilgrims
regarded the Ship. Their U-ghz minds collated bits of information:
the number of photons reflected by the exotic metal, the motion
of air molecules as sour winds caressed the quiet Ship, the
composition of the planet beneath them (ancient cities worn
away to grit and powder), the ingredients of atmosphere, the
perturbations at the quantum level.
In the
long five seconds of their pilgrimage, nothing novel was discovered.
The Ship
maintained its secrets.
As one,
the quantum pilgrims popped out of existence.
****
The tattered
remnants of Man returned to the Earth, hoping to elude the
impossible reach of the Adversary. Whether spawned in quantum
pools of AI thought or in unguessable broths of exalted genes,
the Adversary of Man was implacable. In the quickest of centuries,
it had decimated the myriad bastions of all manner of humanity
that had flourished across a thousand galaxies.
As they
fled, the remnants of Man peppered the cosmos with sentry
beacons to monitor the encroachment of the Adversary and its
implacable machines of metal and bone.
Gathered
in their settlements around the Ship, the sole rallying point
on the desiccate world, the remnants of Man settled in and
waited.
The Ship
waited, too.
****
The Shaman
rode a worn wagon of wood and steel, leading his people through
the trees. The Ship hung in the sky before them, tangible
proof of the Star Gods' powers. The Chosen had come to the
Place of Revelation at last.
That rickety wagon became the cornerstone of the Tower to
Heaven that quickly arose. Tattooed backs and calloused hands
felled great swaths of forest and shattered great mountains
of stone with a singular purpose, the industry of thousands
united in the building of the Tower.
It rose
with a slow, but certain, elegance, until that fated day when
it reached the Ship.
The Shaman
gathered his people around, men, women, sexless. All wore
adoring faces, their eyes glinting with wonder.
He spoke
to them of the Old Gods, and of the Gods Older Still, and
the New Gods that lay quietly in their Ship above them now.
Only the
faithful would be welcome.
Only the
few would be saved.
The Shaman
suffered one broken leg and an even dozen broken ribs as the
crowd surged forward, the heated mass making its ungainly
way to the Tower. A small gold-skinned hermaphrodite was the
first to reach the Tower, and it quickly began its mad scramble
up the tall Tower. It was followed by men, women, children
and drones, all seeking the blessing of the New Gods.
The Shaman,
in agony, had an ideal vantage point from which to watch the
Fall of the Tower. The wooden structure didn't merely topple;
it imploded in a dusty cloud of stone, wood, flesh and dried
mud. It formed an impromptu cairn beneath the silent Ship.
The Shaman
laid back and waited as the Little Gods within his blood soothed
his pain and mended his bones. As night fell around him, the
Shaman stood, whole again, and made his way inland alone,
toward the Heart of Merica.
****
The Last
Man stepped from the worldforest into the clearing, the vast
silver of the Ship visible through the opening in the hypertrees.
He could
not believe his quest was at an end.
From what
he could puzzle together from the sung histories, the Ship
had stood silent watch over a dying Earth for millennia. Never
once did the occupants communicate with Man. Never once did
they make their intentions known.
The Last
Man would learn why.
He strode
toward the Ship. Several of the greatest hypertrees brushed
against its silvery hull.
Finding
a suitable tree, the Last Man began his ascent. It took him
four days, pausing occasionally to sleep among the giant branches
and murmur the required words.
His climbing
spikes were worn down and his hands bled when he clambered
off the tree and onto the smooth hull. He stood gingerly and
made his way toward the top of the seamless Ship.
He knocked
his hand against the cool metal, saying all the right words.
Surely, they would understand.
After
waiting for a few moments, he slammed his hands against the
frictionless exotic metal. The sound was of meat slapping
against stone.
The rage
of righteousness filled him and he struck the metal yet again.
His finger bones shattered, yet he did not relent. His continued
assault only served to have slivers of bone pierce the flesh
of his knuckles, and soon his hands and forearm were sodden
with blood. He slammed again and again until exhaustion overtook
him and darkness fell.
He awoke
with the light of the morning sun reflecting off the silent
metal.
His hands
were new.
He slammed
them again into a red ruin again. And again, he slept.
The Last
Man continued this ritual for almost two weeks.
He then
felt hungry. It was a feeling he actually had forgotten to
recognize. His Little Gods were now angry and demanded sacrifice.
He had no elixir. He had no tongues of the wildebeests. He
had no water. One by one, the Little Gods stopped their sacred
dance. He felt forgotten pain as he fell forward, sliding
toward the edge of the Ship, and then over.
The Last
Man was dead before he hit the ground.
****
The Ship
rose toward the stars.
First
appeared in Interzone, Sept./Oct. 2006