“Of course I have — many times. And promise me this — ”
“What is it?”
“Don’t believe anything I’ve told you — merely because I said it. No serious philosophical problem is ever settled. Omega is still around — and sometimes I wonder about Alpha…”
VII. AS THE SPARKS FLY UPWARD
Her name was Carina; she was eighteen years old, and though this was the first time she had ever been out at night in Kumar’s boat, it was not by any means the first time she had lain in his arms. She had, indeed, perhaps the best title to the much-disputed claim of being his favourite girl.
Though the sun had set two hours ago, the inner moon — so much brighter and closer than the lost Moon of Earth — was almost full, and the beach, half a kilometre away, was awash with its cold, blue light. A small fire was burning just outside the line of the palm-trees, where the party was still in progress. And the faint sound of music could be heard from time to time above the gentle murmur of the jet drive operating at its very lowest power. Kumar had already arrived at his prime goal and was in no great hurry to go elsewhere. Nevertheless, like the good seaman he was, he occasionally disengaged himself to speak a few words of instruction to the autopilot and made a swift scan of the horizon.
Kumar had spoken the truth, thought Carina blissfully. There was something very erotic about the regular, gentle rhythm of a boat, especially when it was amplified by the airbed on which they were lying. After this, would she ever be satisfied by lovemaking on dry land?
And Kumar, unlike quite a few other young Tarnans she could mention, was surprisingly tender and considerate. He was not one of those men who was only concerned with his own satisfaction; his pleasure was not complete unless it was shared. While he’s in me, Carina thought, I feel I’m the only girl in his universe — even though I know perfectly well that isn’t true.
Carina was vaguely aware that they were still heading away from the village, but she did not mind. She wished that this moment could last forever and would hardly have cared if the boat had been driving at full speed out into the empty ocean, with no land ahead until the circumnavigation of the globe. Kumar knew what he was doing — in more ways than one. Part of her pleasure derived from the utter confidence he inspired; within his arms, she had no worries, no problems. The future did not exist; there was only the timeless present.
Yet time did pass, and now the inner moon was much higher in the sky. In the aftermath of passion, their lips were still languidly exploring the territories of love when the pulsing of the hydrojet ceased and the boat drifted to a stop.
“We’re here,” Kumar said, a note of excitement in his voice.
And where may ‘here’ be? Carina thought lazily as they rolled apart. It seemed hours since she had last bothered to glance at the coastline… even assuming that it was still within sight.
She climbed slowly to her feet, steadying herself against the gentle rocking of the boat — and stared wide-eyed at the Fairyland that, not long ago, had been the dismal swamp hopefully but inaccurately christened Mangrove Bay.
It was not, of course, the first time she had encountered high technology; the fusion plant and Main Replicator on North Island were much larger and more impressive. But to see this brilliantly illuminated labyrinth of pipes and storage tanks and cranes and handling mechanisms — this bustling combination of shipyard and chemical plant, all functioning silently and efficiently under the stars with not a single human being in sight — was a real visual and psychological shock.
There was a sudden splash, startling in the utter silence of the night, as Kumar threw out the anchor.
“Come on,” he said mischievously ‘I want to show you something.”
“Is it safe?”
“Of course — I’ve been here lots of times.”
And not by yourself, I’m sure, Carina thought. But he was already over the side before she could make any comment.
The water was barely more than waist deep and still retained so much of the day’s heat that it was almost uncomfortably warm. When Carina and Kumar walked up on to the beach, hand in hand, it was refreshing to feel the cool night breeze against their bodies. They emerged from the random rippling of tiny wavelets like a new Adam and Eve given the keys to a mechanized Eden.
“Don’t worry!” Kumar said. “I know my way around. Dr. Lorenson’s explained everything to me. But I’ve found something I’m sure he doesn’t know.”
They were walking along a line of heavily insulated pipes, supported a metre from the ground, and now for the first time Carina could hear a distinct sound — the throbbing of pumps forcing cooling fluid through the maze of plumbing and heat exchangers that surrounded them.
Presently they came to the famous tank in which the scorp had been found. Very little water was now visible; the surface was almost completely covered with a tangled mass of kelp. There were no reptiles on Thalassa, but the thick flexible stalks reminded Carina of intertwining snakes.
They walked along a series of culverts and past small sluice gates, all of them closed at the moment, until they reached a wide, open area, well away from the main plant. As they left the central complex, Kumar waved cheerfully at the lens of a pointing camera. No one ever discovered, later, why it had been switched off at the crucial moment.
“The freezing tanks,” Kumar said. “Six hundred tons in each. Ninety-five per cent water, five per cent kelp. What’s so funny?”
“Not funny — but very strange,” answered Carina, still smiling. “Just think of it — carrying some of our ocean forest, all the way to the stars. Who would ever imagine such a thing! But that’s not why you brought me here.”
“No,” said Kumar softly. “Look…”
At first, she could not see what he was pointing at. Then her mind interpreted the image that flickered at the very edge of vision, and she understood.
It was an old miracle, of course. Men had done such things on many worlds, for over a thousand years. But to witness it with her own eyes was more than breathtaking — it was awesome.
Now that they had walked closer to the last of the tanks, she could see it more clearly. The thin thread of light — it could not have been more than a couple of centimetres wide! — climbed upward to the stars, straight and true as a laser beam. Her eyes followed it until it narrowed into invisibility, teasing her to decide the exact place of its disappearance. And still her gaze swept onward, dizzyingly, until she was staring at the zenith itself, and at the single star that was poised motionless there while all its fainter, natural companions marched steadily past it towards the west. Like some cosmic spider, Magellan had lowered a thread of gossamer and would soon be hoisting the prize it desired from the world below.
Now that they were standing at the very edge of the waiting ice block, Carina had another surprise. Its surface was completely covered with a glittering layer of golden foil, reminding her of the gifts that were presented to children on their birthdays or at the annual Landing Festival.
“Insulation,” Kumar explained. “And it really is gold — about two atoms thick. Without it, half the ice would melt again before it could get up to the shield.”
Insulation or no, Carina could feel the bite of cold through her bare feet as Kumar led her out on to the frozen slab. They reached its centre in a dozen steps — and there, glittering with a curious nonmetallic sheen, was the taut ribbon that stretched, if not to the stars, at least the thirty thousand kilometres up to the stationary orbit in which Magellan was now parked.
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