Jack McDevitt - SEEKER
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One or two came over to introduce themselves, and I said hello through the notebook, but it was a clumsy business. They told me they had never seen a real human before, and I knew they were trying to be complimentary. But I felt like a show animal.
They left after a couple of minutes. My food came and I hurried through it, tried smiling at the surrounding Mutes who persisted in staring at me when they thought I wasn’t looking. I was glad to get back to my room.
I thought about calling it off. Let Alex track down the Falcon himself.
Which he would do.
He wouldn’t say anything to me, wouldn’t criticize me, but I knew how he was. Send a boy-or a woman-to do a man’s job.
I boarded the Komar in the morning. Direct flight to Borkarat, one of the major worlds of the Assemblage. It was eighty-six light-years from Xiala.
I had twenty-one fellow passengers, all Mutes. Most were in the common room when I made my entrance. Which is the right word. A young male saw me. Nobody else turned in my direction, but they all came to alert. Don’t ask me how I knew. But I was suddenly aware they were all watching me through that single pair of eyes.
A kid buried his head in his mother’s robe.
I could see right away this was going to be a thoroughly enjoyable flight. I smiled lamely at the young male. Mutes don’t smile well. Maybe they don’t need to. Some, who’ve lived among us, have picked it up, but they don’t do it naturally, which is the reason it always scares the pants off you when they try.
Another aspect of spending time with Mutes is that they don’t talk. You’re in a room with more than twenty people, and they’re all sitting quietly, looking at one another.
And nobody is saying anything.
They tried to be sociable. They made gestures in my direction. Made eye contact with me. Several raised their hands in greeting.
After a few minutes, I did what I’d promised myself I wouldn’t: I ducked into my compartment and closed the door, wishing with all my heart I could shut the door on my conscious mind. Outside, a short time later, hatches closed. I heard the engines come to life. And there was a knock at the door.
I opened up and looked at a Mute in the same gray uniform Frank had worn. He handed me a white card. It said, Welcome aboard. Please belt in. We are ready to launch. And then a second card: Do you require assistance?
I leaned forward and pointed at my forehead, like a dolt. I wanted him to know I was thinking. And I formed the word No in my mind. No, thank you. I’m fine.
Then I remembered he probably didn’t understand Standard. He bowed.
I know there’s a harness attached to my chair. I’ll use that. I visualized myself secured by the harness.
He bowed again and walked away.
I am a little blue cookie box.
I hid in my cabin. Went out just long enough to use the washroom facilities, or grab my meals, which were okay. (I understood there were special preparations on board for me.) Four days wasn’t terribly long. I could live with that.
We were about an hour into the flight when the knock came again. This time, though, it wasn’t the attendant. It was a male, of indeterminate age, tall even for a Mute. Too tall for the passageway, forcing him to hunch down. He looked at me with stone-cold eyes and I wondered whether he was reading my discomfort. He wore dull blue leggings and a loose shirt, an outfit not uncommon among the Mutes I’d seen, although they usually preferred robes.
I stood staring up at him. Then I heard a click, and an electronic voice said, “Hello.
Are you all right?”
I tried to push everything out of my mind, save a return greeting. “Hello,” I said. “Yes, I’m fine, thank you.”
“Good. I know this sort of thing can be unsettling.”
“No. I’m fine. No problem at all.” And I thought about the logic of trying to lie to a mind reader.
“Can I be of assistance?”
“I think you just have been.”
“Excellent.” The voice was coming from an amulet. “May I point out that, whatever you may think, you are among friends.”
Naked among friends. And I tried to pull that one back.
He hesitated. I began to understand he didn’t want to let me see he could actually probe me.
I was trying to decide whether to invite him in. “I appreciate your concern,” I said.
“Do not take any of this experience seriously. We will be together four days, more or less. At the end of which we will go our separate ways. So nothing you do here can harm you.”
“You’re right, of course.”
“Would you like to join us? We would be very happy to make your acquaintance.”
“Yes. Of course.” He backed away, making room for me. I followed him, closing the door behind me. “My name is Chase.”
“You would probably find mine unpronounceable. Call me-” I literally felt his presence in my head. “Call me Frank.”
Had I been thinking about the flight attendant on the Dipsy-Doodle? “Okay, Frank.” I extended my hand.
I passed my notebook around and the other passengers used it to ask questions. Where was I from? Had I been in the Assemblage before? Where was I headed? Why was I so afraid? (This last came from a child who had participated reluctantly and seemed almost as fearful as I was.) Frank was quite good. “There is nothing that can pass through your mind that we have not seen before,” he said. “Except, perhaps,” he added, “your squeamishness in our presence.”
Don’t hold back, big fella. Just let me have it.
Several of them poked one another and bobbed their heads in what must have been laughter.
I asked Frank whether it wasn’t distracting to be constantly experiencing a flow of thought and emotions from others.
“I can’t imagine life without it,” he explained. “I’d be cut off.” His red eyes focused on me. “Don’t you feel isolated? Alone?”
Over the course of the trip, I learned that a blending of minds lends an extra dimension to what lovers feel for each other. Or friends. That telepathy facilitates a deeper communication. That no, there is not any evolution that any of the Ashiyyur are aware of toward a group mind. In fact they laughed when I relayed Joe’s theory.
“We are individuals, Chase,” said one of the females, “because we can see so plainly the differences between ourselves and others.”
“We can’t hide from what we think,” Frank told me on the second day. “Or what we feel. And we know that. My understanding is that humans are not always honest even with themselves. I can’t understand how that could be, but it’s a fascinating concept.
On another subject, we’re aware of your struggle against your coarser notions. But we all have them. So we think nothing of it. It is part of what we are, what you are, so we accept it.
“And by the way, there is no need to be embarrassed by your reflexive reaction to our appearance. We find you unappealing also.” He stopped and looked around. I had by then picked up some of the nonverbal cues they used, and several signaled their displeasure at his statement. “I should amend that,” he said, “to physically unappealing. But we are coming to know your interior, your psyche. And there we find that you are one of us.”
FOURTEEN
Man has always considered himself the peak of creation, the part of the universe that thinks, the purpose for it all. It’s no doubt a gratifying view. But the universe may have a different opinion.
- Marik Kloestner,
Diaries, 1388 Although Borkarat was not the Mute home world, it was influential. This was where policy toward humans was formulated and, when possible, sold to the various independent political units of the Assemblage. This was the place where representatives met. And from which, during the recurring periods of hostility with the Confederacy, action had been directed.
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