Frederik Pol. Za sinim gorizontom sobytij (engl)
        Frederik Pohl. Beyond the blue event horizon
 © Frederik Pohl. Beyond the blue event horizon (1980). GateWay #2.
 © Frederik Pol. Za sinim gorizontom sobytij.
   SpellCheck by: GrAnD
   Date: 16.07.2002
        1 Wan
   It was not easy to live, being young, being so completely alone. "Go to
the  gold, Wan, steal what you want, learn. Don't be afraid," the Dead Men
told him. But how could he not be afraid? The silly but worrisome Old Ones
used  the gold passages. They might be found anywhere in them, most likely
at  the  ends of them, where the gold skeins of symbols ran endlessly into
the center of things. That is, exactly where the Dead Men kept coaxing him
to go. Perhaps he had to go there, but he could not help being afraid.
   Wan did not know what would happen if the Old Ones ever caught him. The
Dead  Men  probably  knew,  but  he  could not make any sense out of their
ramblings  on  the  subject.  Once  long  ago,  when Wan was tiny-when his
parents were still alive, it was that long ago-his father had been caught.
He had been gone for a long time and then had come back to their green-lit
home.  He  was  shaking, and two-year-old Wan had seen that his father was
afraid and had screamed and roared because that was so frightening to him.
   Nevertheless he had to go to the gold, whether the grave old frog-jawed
ones  were  there  or not, because that was where the books were. The Dead
Men  were  well  enough.  But  they  were  tedious,  and touchy, and often
obsessed.  The  best  sources of knowledge were books, and to get them Wan
had to go where they were.
   The  books  were  in  the  passages that gleamed gold. There were other
passages,  green  and  red  and  blue,  but there were no books there. Wan
disliked the blue corridors, because they were cold and dead, but that was
where  the Dead Men were. The green was used up. He spent most of his time
where  the  winking red cobwebs of light were spread against the walls and
the  hoppers  still  held food; he was sure to be untroubled there, but he
was  also  alone.  The gold was still in use, and therefore rewarding, and
therefore  also  perilous.  And  now  he  was  there, cursing fretfully to
himself-but  under  his breath-because he was stuck. Bloody damn Dead Men!
Why did he listen to their blathering?
   He  huddled,  trembling,  in  the insufficient shelter of a berry bush,
while two of the foolish Old Ones stood thoughtfully plucking berries from
its  opposite side and placing them precisely into their froggy mouths. It
was  unusual,  really,  that they should be so idle. Among the reasons Wan
despised  the  Old  Ones was that they were always busy, always fixing and
carrying  and  chattering, as though driven. Yet here these two were, idle
as Wan himself.
   Both  of  them  had  scraggly  beards,  but  one  also had breasts. Wan
recognized  her  as a female he had seen a dozen times before; she was the
one  who  was  most  diligent  in pasting colored bits of something-paper?
plastic?-onto her sari, or sometimes onto her sallow, mottled skin. He did
not  think  they  would see him, but he was greatly relieved when, after a
time,  they  turned  together  and moved away. They did not speak. Wan had
almost  never  heard  any  of  the  grave  old frog-jaws speak. He did not
understand  them  when they did. Wan spoke six languages well-his father's
Spanish,  mother's English, the German, the Russian, the Cantonese and the
Finnish of one or another of the Dead Men. But what the frog-jaws spoke he
did not comprehend at all.
   As  soon  as  they  had  retreated down the golden corridor-quick, run,
grab!  Wan had three books and was gone, safely back in a red corridor. It
might  be  that  the  Old  Ones had seen him, or perhaps not. They did not
react  quickly. That was why he had been able to avoid them so long. A few
days  in  the  passages, and then he was gone. By the time they had become
aware he was around, he wasn't; he was back in the ship, away.
   He  carried  the  books  back  to  the ship on top of a pannier of food
packets.  The  drive  accumulators  were  nearly recharged. He could leave
whenever he liked, but it was better to charge them all the way and he did
not  think  there  was any need to hurry. He spent most of an hour filling
plastic bags with water for the tedious journey. What a pity there were no
readers  in  the  ship  to make it less tedious! And then, wearying of the
labor,  he  decided  to say good-bye to the Dead Men. They might, or might
not, respond, or even care. But he had no one else to talk to.
   Wan  was  fifteen  years  old,  tall,  stringy, very dark by nature and
darker  still  from  the lights in the ship, where he spent so much of his
time.  He was strong and self-reliant. He had to be. There was always food
in  the  hoppers,  and  other goods for the taking, when he dared. Once or
twice  a  year,  when  they  remembered, the Dead Men would catch him with
their little mobile machine and take him to a cubicle in the blue passages
for  a  boring  day  during  which he was given a rather complete physical
examination.  Sometimes  he  had  a tooth filled, usually he received some
long-acting  vitamin  and mineral shots, and once they had fitted him with
glasses.  But  he  refused  to  wear them. They also reminded him, when he
neglected  it  too  long,  to study and learn, both from them and from the
storehouses of books. He did not need much reminding. He enjoyed learning.
Apart  from  that, he was wholly on his own. If he wanted clothes, he went
into  the  gold  and  stole  them  from  the Old Ones. If he was bored, he
invented  something  to do. A few days in the passages, a few weeks on the
ship, a few more days in the other place, then back to repeat the process.
Time  passed. He had no one for company, had not had since he was four and
his parents disappeared, and had almost forgotten what it was like to have
a  friend.  He did not mind. His life seemed complete enough to him, since
he had no other life to compare it with.
   Sometimes  he  thought  it  would  be  nice  to  settle in one place or
another,  but  this  was  only  dreaming.  It  never  reached the stage of
intention. For more than eleven years he had been shuttling back and forth
like  this.  The  other place had things that civilization did not. It had
the dreaming room, where he could lie fiat and close his eyes and seem not
to feel alone. But he could not live there, in spite of plenty of food and
no  dangers, because the single water accumulator produced only a trickle.
Civilization  had much that the outpost did not have: the Dead Men and the
books, scary exploring and daring raids for clothes or trinkets, something
happening. But he could not live there either, because the frog-jaws would
surely catch him sooner or later. So he commuted.
   The  main lobby door to the place of the Dead Men did not open when Wan
stepped  on  the treadle. He almost bumped his nose. Surprised, he stopped
and  then  gingerly  pushed against the door, then harder. It took all his
strength  to  force  it open. Wan had never had to open it by hand before,
though  now and then it had hesitated and made disturbing noises. That was
an  annoyance. Wan had experienced machines that broke down before; it was
why the green corridors were no longer very useful. But that was only food
and  warmth, and there was plenty of that in the red, or even the gold. It
was  worrisome  that anything should go wrong around the Dead Men, because
if they broke down he had no others.
   Still,  all  looked  normal;  the  room  with the consoles was brightly
fluoresced,  the  temperature  was comfortable and he could hear the faint
drone  and  rare click of the Dead Men behind their panels as they thought
their  lonely, demented thoughts and did whatever they did when he was not
speaking  to  them.  He  sat  in his chair, shifting his rump as always to
accommodate to the ill-designed seat, and pulled the headset down over his
ears.
   "I am going to the outpost now," he said.
   There was no answer. He repeated it in all of his languages, but no one
seemed  to want to talk. That was a disappointment. Sometimes two or three
of  them  would be eager for company, maybe even more. Then they could all
have a nice, long chat, and it would be as though he were not really alone
at  all.  Almost as though he were part of a "family", a word he knew from
the  books and from what the Dead Men told him, but hardly remembered as a
reality.  That  was  good.  Almost  as good as when he was in the dreaming
place,  where  for  a  while he could have the illusion of being part of a
hundred  families,  a million families. Hosts of people! But that was more
than  he  could  handle  for  very  long. And so, when he had to leave the
outpost to return for water, and for the more tangible company of the Dead
Men,  he was never sorry. But he always wanted to come back to the cramped
couch  and  the  velvety  metal blanket that covered him in it, and to the
dreams.
   It  was  waiting  for  him; but he decided to give the Dead Men another
chance.  Even  when  they  were  not  eager  for talk, sometimes they were
interestable  if  addressed  directly.  He  thought for a moment, and then
dialed number fifty-seven.
   A  sad,  distant  voice in his ear was mumbling to itself: "...tried to
tell  him  about  the  missing  mass.  Mass! The only mass on his mind was
twenty  kilos  of  boobs and ass! That floozy, Doris. One look at her and,
oh, boy, forget about the mission, forget about me...
   Frowning,  Wan  poised  his  finger  to  cancel. Fifty-seven was such a
nuisance!  He  liked  to  listen  to  her when she made sense, because she
sounded  a  little  like  the way he remembered his mother. But she always
seemed  to  go  from  astrophysics  and space travel and other interesting
subjects  directly to her own troubles. He spat at the point in the panels
behind  which  he  had elected to believe fifty-seven lived-a trick he had
learned from the Old Ones-hoping she would say something interesting.
   But  she  didn't  seem  to  intend  to. Number fifty-seven-when she was
coherent  she  liked  to  be  called  Henrietta-was babbling on about high
redshifts  and  Arnold's  infidelities  with Doris. Whoever they were. "We
could  have  been  heroes,"  she  sobbed, "and a ten-million-dollar grant,
maybe  more,  who  knows  what  they'd pay for the drive? But they kept on
sneaking off in the lander, and "Who are you?"
   "I'm  Wan,"  the boy said, smiling encouragingly even though he did not
think  she  could  see  him. She seemed to be coming into one of her lucid
times.  Usually  she  didn't  know he was speaking to her. "Please keep on
talking."
   There  was a long silence, and then, "NGC 1199," she said. "Sagittarius
A West."
   Wan  waited politely. Another long pause, and then she said, "He didn't
care about proper motions. He made all his moves with Doris. Half his age!
And  the  brain  of a turnip. She should never have been on the mission in
the first place..."
   Wan  wobbled his head like a frog-jawed Old One. "You are very boring,"
he  said  severely,  and  switched  her off. He hesitated, then dialed the
professor,   number   fourteen:   although   Eliot  was  still  a  Harvard
undergraduate, his imagery was that of a fully mature man. And a genius at
that. 'I should have been a pair of ragged claws.' The self-deprecation of
mass  man  carried  to  its  symbolic  limit. How does he see himself? Not
merely  as  a  crustacean.  Not  even  as  a  crustacean,  only  the  very
abstraction  of a crustacean: claws. And ragged, at that. In the next line
we see..."
   Wan  spat  again at the panel as he disconnected; the whole face of the
wall  was  stained  with  the  marks of his displeasure. He liked when Doc
recited  poetry, not so much when he talked about it. With the craziest of
the  Dead  Men,  like fourteen and fifty-seven, you didn't have any choice
about what happened. They rarely responded, and almost never in a way that
seemed  relevant,  and  you  either  listened  to what they happened to be
saying or you turned them off.
   It  was almost time for him to go, but he tried one more time: the only
one with a three-digit number, his special friend, Tiny Jim. "Hello, Wan."
The  voice  was  sad  and  sweet.  It tingled in his mind, like the sudden
frisson  of  fear  that  he felt near the Old Ones. "It is you, Wan, isn't
it?"
   "That is a foolish question. Who else would it be?"
   "One  keeps  on hoping, Wan." There was a pause, then Tiny Jim suddenly
cackled,  "Have  I  told  you  the one about the priest, the rabbi and the
dervish who ran out of food on the planet made of pork?"
   "I  think you have, Tiny Jim, and anyway I don't want to hear any jokes
now."
   The invisible loudspeaker clicked and buzzed for a moment, and then the
Dead Man said, "Same old thing, Wan? You want to talk about sex again?"
   The boy kept his countenance impassive, but that familiar tingle inside
his lower abdomen responded. "We might as well, Tiny Jim."
   "You're  a  raunchy  stud for your age, Wan," the Dead Man offered; and
then,  "Tell  you about the time I almost got busted for a sex offense? It
was  hot  as hell. I was going home on the late train to Roselle Park, and
this  girl  came  in,  sat  across the aisle from me, put her feet up, and
began to fan herself with her skirt.
   Well,  what would you do? I looked, you know. And she kept on doing it,
and  I  kept  looking,  and finally around Highlands she complained to the
conductor  and he threw me off the train. Do you know what the funny thing
was?"
   Wan was rapt. "No, Tiny Jim," he breathed.
   "The funny thing was I'd missed my regular train. I had time to kill in
the  city,  so  I  went  to  a  porn  flick.  Two  hours of, my God, every
combination you could think of. The only way I could've seen more was with
a  proctoscope,  so  why was I slouching out over the aisle to peek at her
little white panties? But you know what was funnier than that?"
   "No, Tiny Jim."
   "She  was right! I was staring, all right. I'd just been watching acres
of  crotches  and boobs, but I couldn't take my eyes off hers! That wasn't
the  funniest thing, though. Do you want me to tell you the funniest thing
of all?"
   "Yes, please, Tiny Jim. I do."
   "Why,  she got off the train with me! And took me to her home, boy, and
we  just made out over and over, all night long. Never did catch her name.
What do you say to that, Wan?"
   "I say, is that true, Tiny Jim?"
   Pause. "Aw. No. You take all the fun out of things."
   Wan  said  severely, "I don't want a made-up story, Tiny Jim. I want to
learn  facts."  Wan  was angry, and thought of turning the Dead Man off to
punish him, but was not sure whom he would be punishing. "I wish you would
be nice, Tiny Jim," he coaxed.
   "Well..."  The  bodiless  mind  clicked  and  whispered to itself for a
moment,  sorting through its conversational gambits. Then it said, "Do you
want to know why mallard drakes rape their mates?"
   "No!"
   "I  think  you  really  do,  though,  Wan.  It's interesting. You can't
understand  primate  behavior  unless you comprehend the whole spectrum of
reproductive  strategies.  Even  strange  ones.  Even  the Acanthocephalan
worms.  They  practice rape, too, and do you know what Moniliformis dubius
does?  They  not  only rape their females, they even rape competing males.
With like plaster of Paris! So the poor Other Worm can't get it up!"
   "I don't want to hear all this, Tiny Jim."
   "But  it's  funny,  Wan!  That must be why they call him 'dubius'!" The
Dead Man was chuckling mechanically, a-heh! A-heh!
   "Stop  it,  Tiny  Jim!"  But  Wan  was  not just angry any more. He was
hooked.  It  was  his  favorite subject, as Tiny Jim's willingness to talk
about it, at length and in variety, was what made him Wan's favorite among
the  Dead  Men.  Wan  unwrapped a food packet and, munching, said, "What I
really want to hear is how to make out, Tiny Jim, please?"
   If the Dead Man had had a face it would have shown the strain of trying
to  keep  from laughing, but he said kindly, "'Kay, sonny. I know you keep
hoping. Let's see, did I tell you to watch their eyes?"
   "Yes,  Tiny  Jim.  You  said  if  their pupils dilate it means they are
sexually aroused."
   "Right.  And  I  mentioned  the  existence  of  the  sexually dimorphic
structures in the brain?"
   "I don't think I know what that means, exactly."
   "Well,  I  don't,  either, but it's anatomically so. They're different,
Wan, inside and out."
   "Please, Tiny Jim, keep telling me about the differences!" The Dead Man
did, and Wan listened absorbedly. There was always time to go to the ship,
and  Tiny  Jim  was  unusually coherent. All of the Dead Men had their own
special  subjects  that  they  zeroed in to talk about, as though each had
been  frozen  with  one  big  thought in his mind. But even on the favored
topics  you  could  not  always  expect them to make sense. Wan pushed the
mobile unit that they used to catch him-when it was working-out of the way
and sprawled on the floor, chin in hands, while the Dead Man chattered and
reminisced and explained courtship, and gifting, and making your move.
   It  was  fascinating,  even  though he had heard it before. He listened
until the Dead Man slowed down, hesitated, and stopped. Then the boy said,
to confirm a theory:
   "Teach  me,  Tiny  Jim.  I  read  a  book  in which a male and a female
copulated.  He  hit  her  on  the  head  and  copulated  her while she was
unconscious.  That appears to me an efficient way to 'love', Tiny Jim, but
in other stories it takes much longer. Why is this?"
   "That was not love, sonny. That was what I was telling you about. Rape.
Rape is a bad idea for people, even if it works for mallard ducks."
   Wan nodded and urged him on: "Why, Tiny Jim?"
   Pause.  "I  will  demonstrate it for you mathematically, Wan," the Dead
Man  said  at  last.  "Attractive sex objects may be defined as female, no
more  than  five  years  younger  than you are, no more than fifteen years
older. These figures are normalized to your present age, and are also only
approximate.  Attractive  sex  objects  may  further  be  characterized by
visual,  olfactory,  tactile,  and  aural qualities stimulating to you, in
descending  weighted  order of significance plotted against probability of
access. Do you understand me so far?"
   "Not really."
   Pause. "Well, that's all right for now. Now pay attention. On the basis
of those four preliminary traits, some females will attract you. Up to the
point  of  contact  you  will not know about other traits which may repel,
harm  or  detumesce  you. 5/28 of subjects will be menstruating. 3/87 will
have  gonorrhea, 2/95 syphilis. 1/17 will have excessive bodily hair, skin
blemishes  or  other  physical deformities concealed by clothing. Finally,
2/71  will  conduct  themselves  offensively during intercourse, i/i6 will
emit  an  unpleasant  odor,  3/7  will  resist  rape  so extensively as to
diminish  your  enjoyment; these are subjective values quantified to match
your known psychological profile. Cumulating these fractions, the odds are
better  than  six  to  one that you will not receive maximum pleasure from
rape."
   "Then I must not copulate a woman without wooing?"
   "That's right, boy. Not counting it's against the law."
   Wan  was  thoughtfully silent for a moment, then remembered to ask, "Is
all this true, Tiny Jim?"
   Cackle of glee. "Got you that time, kid! Every word."
   Wan  pouted  like a frog-jaw. "That was not very exciting, Tiny Jim. In
fact, you have detumesced me."
   "What  do you expect, kid?" Tiny Jim said sullenly. "You told me not to
make up any stories. Why are you being so unpleasant?"
   "I am getting ready to leave. I do not have much time."
   "You don't have anything else!" cackled Tiny Jim.
   "And you have nothing to say that I want to hear," said Wan cruelly. He
disconnected  them  all,  and angrily he went to the ship and squeezed the
launch control. It did not occur to him that he was being rude to the only
friends  he  had  in the universe. It had never occurred to him that their
feelings mattered.
        2 On the Way to the Oort Cloud
   On  the  twelve  hundred  and eighty-second day of our all-expense-paid
joyride  on  the  way  to the Oort Cloud, the big excitement was the mail.
Vera  tinkled  joyously  and  we  all  came  to collect it. There were six
letters   for   my   horny  little  half-sister-inlaw  from  famous  movie
stars-well,   they're  not  all  movie  stars.  They're  just  famous  and
good-looking  jocks  that she writes to, because she's only fourteen years
old  and  needs  some  kind of male to dream about, and that write back to
her,  I  think, because their press agents tell them it's going to be good
publicity.  A  letter from the old country for Payter, my father-in-law. A
long  one,  in  German. They want him to come back to Dortmund and run for
mayor  or  Blirgermeister  or  something.  Assuming, of course, that he is
still  alive when he gets back, which is only an assumption for any of the
four of us. But they don't give up. Two private letters to my wife, Lurvy,
I  assume  from  ex-boyfriends.  And a letter to all of us from poor Trish
Bover's  widower,  or  maybe  husband, depending on whether you considered
Trish alive or dead:
   Have you seen any trace of Trish's ship?
                              Hanson Bover
   Short  and  sweet,  because that's all he could afford, I guess. I told
Vera  to  send  him  the same reply as always-"Sorry, no." I had plenty of
time  to  take  care of that correspondence, because there was nothing for
Paul C. Hall, who is me.
   There  is  usually  not much for me, which is one of the reasons I play
chess  a lot. Payter tells me I'm lucky to be on the mission at all, and I
suppose  I  wouldn't  be if he hadn't put his own money into it, financing
his  whole  family.  Also his skills, but we've all done that. Payter is a
food  chemist.  I'm a structural engineer. My wife, Dorema-it's better not
to  call  her  that,  and we mostly call her "Lurvy"-is a pilot. Damn good
one,  too.  Lurvy  is  younger  than  I am, but she was on Gateway for six
years.  Never  scored, came back next to broke, but she learned a lot. Not
just  about  piloting.  Sometimes I look at Lurvy's arms with the five Out
bangles,  one  for  each  of her Gateway missions; and her hands, hard and
sure  on the ship controls, warm and warming when we touch... I don't know
much about what happened to her on Gateway. Perhaps I shouldn't.
   And  the  other  one  is  her  little jailbait half-sister, Janine. Ak,
Janine!  Sometimes  she  was fourteen years old, and sometimes forty. When
she was fourteen she wrote her gushy letters to her movie stars and played
with her toys-a ragged, stuffed armadillo, a Heechee prayer fan (real) and
a  fire-pearl (fake) which her father had bought her to tempt her onto the
trip.  When  she was forty what she mostly wanted to play with was me. And
there  we  are. In each other's pockets for three and a half years. Trying
not to need to commit murder.
   We  were not the only ones in space. Once in a great while we would get
a  message  from  our  nearest neighbors, the Triton base or the exploring
ship that had got itself lost. But Triton, with Neptune, was well ahead of
us in its orbit-round-trip message time, three weeks. And the explorer had
no power to waste on us, though they were now only fifty light-hours away.
It was not like a friendly natter over the garden hedge.
   So what I did, I played a lot of chess with our shipboard computer.
   There's  not  an  awful  lot  to  do on the way to the Oort except play
games,  and  besides  it  was  a  good way to stay noncombatant in The War
Between  Two  Women that continually raged in our little ship. I can stand
my  father-in-law, if I have to. Mostly he keeps to himself, as much as he
can  in  four  hundred  cubic  meters.  I can't always stand his two crazy
daughters, even though I love them both.
   All  this would have been easier to take if we had had more room-I told
myself  that-but  there is no way to go for a cooling-down walk around the
block  when  you  are in a spaceship. Once In a while a quick EVA to check
the  side-cargos,  yes,  and  then  I  could look around-the sun still the
brightest star in its constellation, but only just; Sirius ahead of us was
brighter,  and  so  was  Alpha Centauri, off below the ecliptic and to the
side.  But that was only an hour at a time, and then back inside the ship.
Not  a  luxury  ship.  A  human-made antique of a spaceship that was never
planned  for  more than a six-month mission and that we had to stay cooped
up  in for three and a half years. My God! We must have been crazy to sign
up.  What  good is a couple million dollars when getting it drives you out
of your head?
   Our  shipboard  brain was a lot easier to get along with. When I played
chess  with  her,  hunched  over  the console with the big headset over my
ears,  I could shut out Lurvy and Janine. The brain's name was Vera, which
was  just  my  own  conceit  and  had  nothing to do with her, I mean its,
gender. Or with her truthfulness, either, because I had instructed her she
could  joke  with  me  sometimes.  When  Vera  was downlinked with the big
computers  that  were in orbit or back on Earth, she was very, very smart.
But  she  couldn't carry on a conversation that way, because of the 25-day
round-trip  communications  time,  and  so when she wasn't in link she was
very, very dumb-"Pawn to king's rook four, Vera."
   "Thank you..." Long pause, while she checked my parameters to make sure
who  she  was  talking  to  and  what she was supposed to be doing. "Paul.
Bishop takes knight."
   I could beat the ass off Vera when we played chess, unless she cheated.
How  did she cheat? Well, after I had won maybe two hundred games from her
she  won  one.  And  then  I  won  about  fifty, and then she won one, and
another,  and  for  the  next twenty games we were about even and then she
began  to  clobber  me every time. Until I figured out what she was doing.
She  was transmitting position and plans to the big computers on Earth and
then,  when  we recessed games, as we sometimes did, because Payter or one
of  the  women would drag me away from the set, she would have time to get
Downlink-Vera's  criticism  of  her  plans  and  suggestions  to amend her
strategies.  The  big  machines  would  tell  Vera  what  they  thought my
strategies  might  be,  and how to counteract them; and when Downlink-Vera
guessed right, Shipboard-Vera had me. I never bothered to make her stop. I
just  didn't  recess games any more, and then after a while we were so far
away  that  there  just wasn't time for her to get help and I went back to
beating her every game.
   And  the chess games were about the only games I won, those three and a
half  years.  There  was no way for me to win anything in the big one that
kept  going  on  between  my  wife, Lurvy, and her horny fourteen-year-old
half-sister,  Janine. Old Payter was a long time between begats, and Lurvy
tried  to  be  a  mother to Janine, who tried to be an enemy to Lurvy. And
succeeded.   It  wasn't  all  Janine's  fault.  Lurvy  would  take  a  few
drinks-that  was  her  way  of  relieving  the  boredom-and then she would
discover  that  Janine  had  used  her  toothbrush,  or  that  Janine  had
unwillingly  done as she had been told and cleaned up the food-preparation
area  before  it  began  to  stink,  but  hadn't  put  the organics in the
digester.  Then  they  were  off.  From time to time they would go through
ritualized  performances of woman talk, punctuated by explosions-"I really
love those blue pants on you, Janine. Do you want me to tack that seam?"
   "All  right, so I'm getting fat, is that what you're saying? Well, it's
better  than  drinking  myself  stupid  all  the  time!"-and  then back to
blow-drying  each  other's hair. And I would go back to playing chess with
Vera.  It was the only safe thing to do. Every time I tried to intervene I
achieved  instant  success  by  uniting  them  against  me:  "Fucking male
chauvinist pig, why don't you scrub the kitchen floor?"
   The  funny  thing  was,  I  did  love  them both. In different ways, of
course, though I had trouble getting that across to Janine.
   We  were  told  what  we  were  getting  into when we signed up for the
mission. Besides the regular long-voyage psychiatric briefing, all four of
us went through a dozen session hours on the problem during the preflight,
and what the shrink said boiled down to "do the best you can." It appeared
that  during  the  refamilying  process  I  would have to learn to parent.
Payter  was  too  old,  even  if  he  was the biological father. Lurvy was
undomestic,  as you would expect from a former Gateway pilot. It was up to
me; the shrink was very clear about that. It just didn't say how.
   So  there  I was at forty-one, umpty zillion kilometers from Earth, way
past  the  orbit  of  Pluto, about fifteen degrees out of the plane of the
ecliptic,  trying not to make love to my halfsister-in-law, trying to make
peace  with  my  wife, trying to maintain the truce with my father-in-law.
Those were the big things that I woke up with (every time I was allowed to
go to sleep), just staying alive for another day. To get my mind off them,
I would try to think about the two million dollars apiece we would get for
completing  the  mission. When even that failed I would try to think about
the  long-range  importance  of  our mission, not just to us, but to every
human being alive. That was real enough. If it all worked out, we would be
keeping most of the human race from dying of starvation.
   That  was  obviously important. Sometimes it even seemed important. But
it   was  the  human  race  that  had  jammed  us  all  into  this  smelly
concentration-camp  for  what  looked  like  forever; and there were times
when-you know?-I kind of hoped they would starve.
   Day  1283. I was just waking up when I heard Vera beeping and crackling
to  herself,  the way she does when there's an action message coming in. I
unzipped  the  restraining sheet and pushed myself out of our private, but
old Payter was already hanging over the printer.
   He  swore  creakily.  "Gott  sel  dammt!  We have a course changing." I
caught  hold  of  a rail and pushed myself over to see, but Janine, busily
inspecting  her cheekbones for pimples in the wall mirror, got there ahead
of  me.  She  ducked  her head in front of Payter's, read the message, and
slid  herself  away disdainfully. Payter worked his mouth for a minute and
then said savagely, "This does not interest you?" Janine shrugged minutely
without looking at him.
   Lurvy  was coming out of the private after me, zipping up her skivvies.
"Leave  her  alone,  Pa," she said. "Paul, go put some clothes on." It was
better  to  do what she said, besides which she was right. The best way to
stay  out of trouble with Janine was to behave like a puritan. By the time
I fished my shorts out of the tangle of sheets, Lurvy had already read the
message.  Reasonably  enough;  she was our pilot. She looked up, grinning.
"Paul!  We have to make a correction in about eleven hours, and maybe it's
the  last  one! Back away," she ordered Payter, who was still hanging over
the  terminal, and pulled herself down to work Vera's calculator keys. She
watched  while  the  trajectories  formed, pressed for a solution and then
crowed: "Seventy-three hours eight minutes to touchdown!"
   "I myself could have done that," her father complained.
   "Don't  be grouchy, Pa! Three days and we're there. Why, we ought to be
able to see it in the scopes when we turn!"
   Janine, back to picking at her cheekbones, commented over her shoulder,
"We could have been seeing it for months if somebody hadn't busted the big
scope."
   "Janine!"  Lurvy  was  marvelous  at holding her temper in-when she was
able  to  do  it  at all-and this time she managed to stay in control. She
said  in her voice of quiet reason, "Wouldn't you say this was an occasion
for  rejoicing, not for starting arguments? Of course you would, Janine. I
suggest we all have a drink-you, too."
   I stepped in quickly, belting my shorts-I knew the rest of that script.
"Are  you going to use the chemical rockets, Lurvy? Right, then Janine and
I  will  have  to  go out and check the side-cargos. Why don't we have the
drink when we come back?"
   Lurvy  smiled sunnily. "Good idea, dear. But perhaps Pa and I will have
one  short  one  now-then  we'll  join you for another round later, if you
like."
   "Suit  up,"  I  ordered  Janine,  preventing  her  from saying whatever
inflammatory  remark  was  in  her  mind.  She obviously had decided to be
placatory for the moment, because she did as she was told without comment.
We  checked  each  other's  seals,  let  Lurvy and Payter double-check us,
crowded  one by one into the exit and swung out into space on our tethers.
The  first thing we both did was look toward home-not very satisfying; the
sun  was  only  a  bright star and I couldn't see the Earth at all, though
Janine usually claimed she could.. The second thing was to look toward the
Food Factory, but I couldn't see anything there. One star looks a lot like
another  one, especially down to the lower limits of brightness when there
are fifty or sixty thousand of them in the sky.
   Janine  worked  quickly  and  efficiently, tapping the bolts of the big
ion-thrusters  strapped  to  the  side  of  our ship while I inspected for
tightness  in  the  steel straps. Janine was really not a bad kid. She was
fourteen years old and sexually excitable, true, but it was not at all her
fault  that  she  had no satisfactory person to practice being a woman on.
Except  me  and,  even less satisfactorily, her father. Everything checked
out, as of course we bad been pretty sure it would. She was waiting by the
stub of the big telescope's mounting by the time I finished, and a measure
of  her  good humor was that she didn't even say anything about who let it
crack  loose  and  float  away in the crazy time. I let her go back in the
ship  first.  I  took  an  extra couple of minutes to float out there. Not
because  I  particularly  enjoyed  the view. Only because those minutes in
space  were  about the only time I had had in three and a half years to be
anything approaching alone.
   We  were  still moving at better than three kilometers a second, but of
course  you  couldn't  tell that with nothing around to compare. It felt a
lot  as  though we weren't moving at all. It had felt that way, a lot, for
all  of  the  three  and  a half years. One of the stories we had all been
hearing  for  all  that time from old Peter-he pronounces it "Pay-ter"-was
about his father, the S. S. Werewolf. The werewolf couldn't have been more
than  sixteen when The Big One ended. His special job was transporting jet
engines to a Luftwaffe squadron that had just been fitted out with ME210s.
Payter  says  his  daddy went to his death apologizing for not getting the
engines  up  to  the squadron in time to cream the Lanes and the B-17s and
change   the   outcome  of  the  war.  We  all  thought  that  was  pretty
funny-anyway,  the  first time we heard it. But that wasn't the real funny
part The real funny part was how the old Nazi freighted them. With a team.
Not horses. Oxen. Not even pulling a wagon-it was a sledge! The newest, up
to  the minute, state of the art jet turbines-and what it took to get them
operational  was  a  tow-headed  kid  with  a willow switch, ankle deep in
cowflop.
   Hanging  there,  creeping  through space, on a trip that a Heechee ship
could have done in a day-if we had had one, and could have made it do what
we  wanted  it  to-I  felt  a kind of a sympathy with Payter's old man. It
wasn't that different with us. All we were missing was the cowflop.
   Day  1284. The course change went very smoothly, after we all struggled
into  our  life-support systems and wedged ourselves into our acceleration
seats,  neatly  fitted  to  our air and vital-signs packs. Considering the
tiny delta-V involved, it was hardly worth the effort. Not to mention that
there  wouldn't be much use in life-support systems if anything went wrong
enough for us to need them, five thousand A. U. s from home. But we did it
by the book, because that was the way we had been doing it for three and a
half years.
   And-after  we had turned, and the chemical rockets had done their thing
and  stopped and let the ion-thrusters take over again, and after Vera had
fumbled  and clucked and hesitantly announced that it looked all right, as
far  as  she  could  tell, of course pending confirmation some weeks later
from  Earth-we  saw it! Lurvy was the first one out of her seat and at the
visuals, and she snapped it into focus in a matter of seconds.
   We hung around, staring at it. The Food Factory!
   It  jiggled  annoyingly in the speculum, hard to keep in focus. Even an
ion  rocket contributes some vibration to a spaceship, and we were still a
long  way  off.  But it was there. It gleamed faintly blue in the darkness
punctuated  by  stars,  strangely  shaped.  It  was  the size of an office
building  and more oblong than anything else. But one end was rounded, and
one  side  seemed  to  have  a long, curved slice taken out of it. "Do you
think it's been hit by something?" Lurvy asked apprehensively.
   "Ah,  not  in  the  least,"  snapped  her  father.  "It  is  how it was
constructed! What do we know of Heechee design?"
   "How do you know that?" Lurvy asked, but her father didn't answer that;
didn't  have to, we all knew that he had no way to know, was only speaking
out  of  hope,  because  if it was damaged we were in trouble. Our bonuses
were  good  just  for  going out there, but our hopes for real payoff, the
only  kind  of payoff that would pay for seven round-trip years of misery,
rested  on  the  Food  Factory  being  operable. Or at least studyable and
copyable.  "Paul!"  Lurvy  said  suddenly.  "Look  at the side that's just
turning away-aren't those ships?"
   I  squinted,  trying  to make out what she saw. There were half a dozen
bulges  on the long, straight side of the artifact, three or four smallish
ones, two quite large. They looked like pictures I had seen of the Gateway
asteroid,   right  enough,  as  far  as  I  could  tell.  But-"You're  the
ex-prospector," I said. "What do you think?"
   "I  think  they  are. But, my God, did you see those two end Ones? They
were  huge.  I've  been in Ones and Threes, and I've seen plenty of Fives.
But  nothing  like that! They'd hold, I don't know, maybe fifty people! If
we had ships like that, Paul-If we had ships like that..."
   "If,  if,"  snarled  her father. "If we had such ships, and if we could
make  them  go  where we wanted, yes, the world would be ours! Let us hope
they still work. Let us hope any part of it works!"
   "It  will, Father," caroled a sweet voice from behind us, and we turned
to  see Janine, propped with one knee under the digester hose, holding out
a  squeeze  bottle  of  our  best home-made genuine recycled grain neutral
spirits. "I'd say this really calls for a celebration." She smiled.
   Lurvy looked at her thoughtfully, but her control was in good shape and
she only said, "Why, that's a nice idea, Janine. Pass it around."
   Janine  took  a  ladylike  small  swig  and handed it to her father. "I
thought you and Lurvy might like a nightcap," she said, after clearing her
throat-she had just graduated to drinking the hard stuff on her fourteenth
birthday,  still  did  not  like it, insisted on it only because it was an
adult prerogative.
   "Good  idea,"  Payter nodded. "I have been up now for, what is it, yes,
nearly  twenty  hours.  We  will all need our rest when we touch down," he
added,  handing  the  bottle  to my wife, who squeezed two ounces into her
well-practiced throat and said:
   "I'm  not  really sleepy yet. You know what I'd like to do? I'd like to
play Trish Bover's tape again."
   "Oh, God, Lurvy! We've all seen it a zillion times!"
   "I  know,  Janine.  You don't have to watch if you don't want to, but I
kept  wondering if one of those ships was Trish's and-Well, I just want to
look at it again."
   Janine's lips thinned, but the genes were strong and her control was as
good  as  her sister's when she wanted it to be-that was one of the things
we  were measured on, before they signed us for the mission. "I'll dial it
up,"  she  said, pushing herself over to Vera's keyboard. Pay