As soon as the wormhole closed, the starship began to decelerate, chasing down towards the planet where New Helsinki lurked behind the darkness of the terminator. From its position just ahead of the starship’s engineering section, the angel could see the archipelagos rolling past beneath. The impression of speed was such that it felt there should be a wind blowing its long honey-coloured hair back. Instead it just smiled across the vacuum at the world which awaited it. Advancer senses revealed the dense electronic chatter of the planetary cybersphere ghosting through the atmosphere, with intangible peaks reaching out to connect with Anagaska’s satellite constellation. When the angel accessed the starport’s traffic control it could find no hint that their flight was subject to any additional audit. Security was light and no intelligent scrutineers were probing the starship’s systems. The local Protectorate group didn’t know it was here. Not that there was ever any active presence at the starport; but every visitor to Anagaska was quietly recorded and checked; if it had arrived incognito there was a small risk their identity-examiner programs would raise a query. This way was safer. It was playing very long odds against detection.
As soon as the starship fell below orbital velocity, the angel let go. It configured the biononic organelles inside its cells to provide a passive deflective field around itself, one that would surreptitiously warp the active sensor radiation pouring out from the starship’s navigation network. The energy sequence flowing through its biononics was even sophisticated enough to disguise its mass, leaving it completely undetected as the starship raced away.
The angel began its long fall to the ground. It expanded its integral force field into a lenticular shape over two hundred metres wide. Electric-blue scintillations slithered over the surface as it caught the first wisps of Anagaska’s upper atmosphere, aerobraking in a long curve to subsonic speed. Its descent strategy was simple enough, the majority of its flight was out over the ocean where there would be no one to see the tell-tale crimson flare of ions against the force field as it sank ever-lower, nor hear the continual thunderclap of its hypersonic passage through the air.
When it reached a three-kilometre altitude its downward plummet had slowed to less than a hundred kilometres an hour, thanks to the protective force field which was now over three hundred metres wide and acting like a parachute. It was fifty kilometres out from Olhava’s western coastline when it changed the shape of the force field once again, producing the dragonfly-wing planform which contributed to its name.
An hour and a half later the angel swooped out of the nighttime sky to step lightly onto a sandy beach. It shut down most of its Higher functions, pulled a pair of soft leather sandals from its shoulder bag, and began to walk up the grassy slope to the coastal road.
They’d been lucky, Paul acknowledged, as soon as he’d reviewed the arrival. A lone yachtsman had been underneath the angel as it aerobraked, a man sailing out from Olhava to spend a long vacation amid the archipelagos. A true sailor who knew the seas and the skies. He’d seen the glowing point flashing across the stars and known what it meant; and he had a friend who had a friend who knew a unisphere contact code. Paul and his team had arrived at the coast that morning to begin their tracking operation.
It had taken them a couple of weeks to corner the sneaky creature as it began its mission in Kuhmo. The fight when they surrounded it had taken out three Protectorate members and created a firestorm in the town’s college campus; but they’d eventually driven it into a force-field cage which could contain its Higher energy functions. They loaded it into a big regrav capsule and ferried it over to the arcology as the flames from the art block building roared up into the night sky behind them.
‘I would have just left,’ the angel said in its pleasant melodic voice as the capsule negotiated its way through the rent in the wall of the seventy-fifth floor. ‘There was no need for all this.’
‘That depends whose viewpoint you’re taking,’ Paul snapped back. He was still shaken and infuriated by the deaths; they’d left the bodies behind in the flames and now he was worried the heat might damage his colleagues’ memorycells. Once they were re-lifed in replacement clone bodies they could well lose several hours of memories since they last backed up in their secure stores.
‘The obvious one, of course,’ the angel said.
‘That’s it for you, isn’t it? Game over. Shake hands. All go home.’
The angel’s pale mouth smiled. ‘It’s the civilized thing to do. Don’t you approve of that?’
‘Ask my three colleagues that you slaughtered back there. They might have an opinion on just how civilized you are.’
‘As I recall, you fired first.’
‘Would you have come quietly?’
‘So that you could perform your barbarisms on me? No.’
‘Just tell us what we need to know. Have you contaminated any of us?’
‘Contaminated! How I curse your corruptors. You could have lived a rich rewarding life, instead they have condemned you to this poverty of existence.’
‘Screw you, pal. You Highers want to condemn us to your non-existence. We retain the right to choose our destiny. We demand the right.’
‘Two hundred billion people can’t all be wrong. The Central Commonwealth worlds have all embraced biononics, why do you think it is called Higher civilization?’
Paul gave the angel an evil grin. ‘Self-delusion? More likely: desperate self-justification.’
‘Why do you resist using biononics?’ the angel asked, its beautiful face frowning disparagingly. ‘You of all people must be aware of the benefits they bring to a human body. Immortality without your crude rejuvenation treatments; a society which isn’t based around industrial economics and its backward ideologies, new vistas, inspiring challenges.’
‘Challenges? You just sit and vegetate all day long. That and plot our downfall. What have you got to look forward to? Really? Tell me. The only thing that awaits a Higher is downloading into Earth’s giant brain library. Why bother waiting? You know that’s where you’re all heading. Just migrate there and plug yourself into that big virtual reality in the sky, go right ahead and play mental golf for the rest of eternity. I know the numbers downloading themselves are increasing; more and more of you are realizing just how pointless your lives are. We’re not designed for godhood, basic human essence cannot be tampered with. We need real challenges to satisfy ourselves with, we need to have our hearts broken, we need to watch our children grow up, we need to look over the horizon for new wonders, we need to build and create. Higher civilization has none of that.’
‘The Central Commonwealth is our race’s greatest creation. To misquote an ancient lyric: Do you think we don’t love our children, too?’
‘I’m sure you do. But not enough to give them a choice. To be born Higher is to stay Higher, they can’t escape.’
‘They could, they just don’t want to. Yet tens of millions of ordinary Advancer humans convert to Higher every year. Does that tell you anything?’
‘Yes. It’s simply the last step in their adventure. They’ve lived first, they know there are different ways to exist. Only then do they go in for your defeatist digital dreaming; they’ve decided that they want to die then anyway, so what have they got to lose?’
‘Is that what you’ll do, Paul? Give in and download your memories into Earth’s repository?’
‘When I’m finally tired of life, then I might just. But don’t expect it for another millennium or ten; it’s a big galaxy.’
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