Arthur Clarke - Firstborn

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The Firstborn — the mysterious race of aliens who first became known to science fiction fans as the builders of the iconic black monolith in 2001: A Space Odyssey — have inhabited legendary master of science fiction Sir Arthur C. Clarke’s writing for decades. With Time’s Eye and Sunstorm, the first two books in their acclaimed Time Odyssey series, Clarke and his brilliant co-author Stephen Baxter imagined a near-future in which the Firstborn seek to stop the advance of human civilization by employing a technology indistinguishable from magic.
Their first act was the Discontinuity, in which Earth was carved into sections from different eras of history, restitched into a patchwork world, and renamed Mir. Mir’s inhabitants included such notables as Alexander the Great, Genghis Khan, and United Nations peacekeeper Bisesa Dutt. For reasons unknown to her, Bisesa entered into communication with an alien artifact of inscrutable purpose and godlike power — a power that eventually returned her to Earth. There, she played an instrumental role in humanity’s race against time to stop a doomsday event: a massive solar storm triggered by the alien Firstborn designed to eradicate all life from the planet. That fate was averted at an inconceivable price. Now, twenty-seven years later, the Firstborn are back.
This time, they are pulling no punches: They have sent a “quantum bomb.” Speeding toward Earth, it is a device that human scientists can barely comprehend, that cannot be stopped or destroyed — and one that will obliterate Earth.
Bisesa’s desperate quest for answers sends her first to Mars and then to Mir, which is itself threatened with extinction. The end seems inevitable. But as shocking new insights emerge into the nature of the Firstborn and their chilling plans for mankind, an unexpected ally appears from light-years away.
From the Hardcover edition.

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But later—”

“Yes, yes,” Witness said impatiently. She already knew the story. “Tools, minds, civilization.”

“Yes. But you can see that we owe all we have — even our minds — to the pulsation of the sun. We can’t even breed in the water anymore; we need access to the land.”

Witness prompted, “And now—”

“And now, that pulsation has gone. Dwindled almost to nothing,” said her father.

“And our world is dying,” said her mother sadly.

Now there was no sunlight peak, no melting of the ice. The people’s machines kept some of the ice open. But without the mixing of the air caused by the pumping of the star, a layer of carbon dioxide was settling over the surface of the ocean.

After a few centuries the islands were becoming uninhabitable.

“We have become creatures of sea and land,” Witness’s mother said. “If we can’t reach the land—”

“The implications,” her father said, “are clear. And there was only one possible response.”

Unlike humans, Witness’s folk had never got as far as a space program. They had no way of fighting this catastrophe, as humans had built a shield to fend off the sunstorm. They had faced the horror of extinction.

But they would not accept it.

“We simply had less children,” Witness’s mother said.

The generations of these folk were much briefer than humanity’s.

There had been time for this cull of numbers to slash the population until, by the time of Witness’s birth, there were only a few dozen of them left, in all the world, where once millions had swum.

“You can see why we did it,” her mother said. “If a child never existed, it can’t suffer. It wasn’t so bad,” she said desperately. “For most of the generations you could still have one child. You still had love.

Her father said, “But in the last generation—”

Witness said blackly, “In this last generation you have produced only me.”

Witness was the last ever child to be born. And she had precious duties to fulfill.

“Stars are simple beasts,” her father told her. “Oh, it took many generations for our astronomers to puzzle out the peculiar internal mechanism that made our giant sun breathe out and in. But puzzle it out they did. It was easy to see how the pulsing started. But no matter how contorted a model the theoreticians dreamed up they could never find a convincing way to make the star’s pulsation stop.

Her parents allowed Witness to think that through.

“Oh,” she said. “This was a deliberate act. Somebody did this.”

Witness was awed. “ Why ? Why would anybody do such a terrible thing?”

“We don’t know,” her father said. “We can’t even guess. But we have been trying to find out. And that’s where you come in.”

Listening stations had been established on many of the planet’s islands. There were clusters of telescopes sensitive to optical light, radio waves, and other parts of the spectrum: there were neutrino detectors, there were gravity wave detectors, and a host of still more exotic artificial ears.

“We want to know who has done this,” said her father bitterly,

“and why. And so we listen. But now our time is done. Soon only you will remain…”

“And I am Witness.”

Her parents clustered around her, stroking her belly and her six flippers as they had when she was a baby. “Tend the machines,” her father said. “ Listen. And watch us, the last of us, as we go into the dark.”

“You want me to suffer,” Witness said bitterly. “That’s really what this is about, isn’t it? I will be the last of my kind, with no hope of procreation. All those who preceded me at least had that.

You want me to take on all the terrible despair you spared those un-born. You want me to hurt, don’t you?”

Witness’s mother was very distressed. “Oh, my child, if I could spare you this burden I would!”

This made no difference to Witness, whose heart was harden-ing. Until their deaths, she struck back at her parents the only way she could, by shunning them.

But there came a day, at last, when she had been left alone.

And then the signal from Earth arrived.

Aristotle, Thales, and Athena, refugee intelligences from Earth, learned how to speak to Witness. And they learned the fate of Witness’s kind.

Procyon’s pulsation had died away much too early for human astronomers to have observed it. But Aristotle and the others knew Fthe same phenomenon had been seen in a still more famous star: Polaris, Alpha Ursae Minoris. A baffling decay of the north pole star’s pulsing had begun around 1945.

“ ‘ But I am constant as the northern star, ’ ” Aristotle said, “ ‘ Of whose true-fix’d and resting quality / There is no fellow in the firma-ment. ’ Shakespeare.”

“So much for Shakespeare!” said Athena.

“This is the work of the Firstborn.” Thales’s observation was obvious, but it was chilling even so. The three of them were the first minds from Earth to understand that the reach of the Firstborn stretched so far.

Aristotle said gravely, “Witness, it must hurt very much to watch the end of your kind.”

Witness had often tried to put it into words for herself. Any death was painful. But you were always consoled that life would go on, that death was part of a continuing process of renewal, an unending story. But extinction ended all the stories.

“When I am gone, the Firstborn’s work will be complete.”

“Perhaps,” said Aristotle. “But it need not be so. Humans may have survived the Firstborn.”

“Really?”

They told her the story of the sunstorm.

Witness was shocked to discover that her kind were not the only victims of this cosmic violence. Something stirred inside her, unfamiliar feelings. Resentment. Defiance.

“Join us!” Athena said with her usual impulsiveness.

“But,” Thales pointed out, stating the obvious, “she is the last of her kind.”

“She isn’t dead yet,” Aristotle said firmly. “If Witness were the last human alive, we could find ways to reproduce her, or preserve her. Cloning technologies, Hibernacula.”

“She isn’t human,” Thales said bluntly.

“Yes, but the principle is the same,” Athena snapped. “Witness, dear, I think Aristotle is right. One day humans will come here. We can help you and your kind to go on. If you want us to, that is.”

Such possibilities bewildered Witness. “Why would humans come here ?”

“To find others like themselves.”

“Why?”

“To save them,” Athena said.

“And then what? What if they find the Firstborn?”

“Then,” Aristotle said blackly, “the humans will save them too.”

Athena said, “Don’t give up, Witness. Join us.”

Witness thought it over. The ice of the freezing ocean closed around her, chilling her aging flesh. But that spark of defiance still burned, deep in the core of her being.

She asked: “How do we start?”

Part 3 REUNIONS

26: The Stone Man

Year 32 (Mir)

The consul from Chicago met Emeline White off the train from Alexandria.

Emeline climbed down from the open-top carriage. At the head of the train, monkish engineers of the School of Othic tended valves and pistons on the huge oil-burning locomotive. Emeline tried not to breathe in the greasy smoke that belched from the loco’s stack.

The sky was bright, washed-out, the sunlight harsh, but there was a nip of cold in the air.

The consul approached her, hat in hand. “Mrs. White? It’s good to meet you. My name is Ilicius Bloom.” He wore gown and sandals like an oriental, though his accent was as Chicagoan as hers.

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