Who's afraid of Wolf 359? Read online




  Who's afraid of Wolf 359?

  Ken Macleod

  Ken MacLeod

  «Who's afraid of Wolf 359?»

  When you're as old as I am, you'll find your memory's not what it was. It's not that you lose memories. That hasn't happened to me or anyone else since the Paleocosmic Era, the Old Space Age, when people lived in caves on the Moon. My trouble is that I've gained memories, and I don't know which of them are real. I was very casual about memory storage back then, I seem to recall. This could happen to you too, if you're not careful. So be warned. Do as I say, not as I did.

  Some of the tales about me contradict each other, or couldn't possibly have happened, because that's how I told them in the first place. Others I blame on the writers and tellers. They make things up. I've never done that. If I've told stories that couldn't be true, it's because that's how I remember them.

  Here's one.

  I ran naked through the Long Station, throwing my smart clothes away to distract the Tycoon's dogs. Breeks, shirt, cravat, jacket, waistcoat, stockings, various undergarments — one by one they ran, flapped, slithered, danced, or scurried off, and after every one of them raced a scent‑seeking but mercifully stupid hound. But the Tycoon had more dogs in his pack than I had clothes in my bundle. I was down to my shoes and the baying continued. I glanced over my shoulder. Two dogs were just ten metres behind me. I hurled a shoe at each of them, hitting both animals right on their genetically modified noses. The dogs skidded to a halt, yelping and howling. A few metres away was a jewelry booth. I sprinted for it, vaulted the counter, grabbed a recycler, and bashed at the display cabinet. An alarm brayed and the security mesh rattled down behind me. The dogs, recovered and furious, hurled themselves against it. The rest of the pack pelted into view and joined them. Paws, jaws, barking, you get the picture.

  “Put your hands up,” said a voice above the din.

  I turned and looked into the bell‑shaped muzzle of a Norton held in the hands of a sweet‑looking lass wearing a sample of the stall's stock. I raised my hands, wishing I could put them somewhere else. In those days, I had some vestige of modesty

  “I'm human,” I said. “That can't hurt me.”

  She allowed herself the smallest flicker of a glance at the EMP weapon's sighting screen.

  “It could give you quite a headache,” she said.

  “It could that,” I admitted, my bluff called. I'd been half‑hoping she wouldn't know how to interpret the readouts.

  “Security's on its way” she said.

  “Good,” I said. “Better them than the dogs.”

  She gave me a tight smile. “Trouble with the Tycoon?”

  “Yes,” I said. “How did you guess?”

  “Only the owner of the Station could afford dogs,” she said. “Besides …” She blinked twice slowly.

  “I suppose you're right,” I said. “Or serving‑girls.”

  The stall‑keeper laughed in my face. “All this for a servant? Wasn't it her Ladyship's bedroom window you jumped out of?”

  I shuddered. “You flatter me,” I said. “Anyway, how do you know about — ?”

  She blinked again. “It's on the gossip channels already.”

  I was about to give a heated explanation of why that time‑wasting rubbish wasn't among the enhancements inside my skull, thank you very much, when the goons turned up, sent the dogs skulking reluctantly away, and took me in. They had the tape across my mouth before I had a chance to ask the stall‑keeper her name, let alone her number. Not, as it turned out, that I could have done much with it even if I had. But it would have been polite.

  The charge was attempting to wilfully evade the civil penalties for adultery. I was outraged.

  “Bastards!” I shouted, screwing up the indictment and dashing it to the floor of my cell. “I thought polygamy was illegal!”

  “It is,” said my attorney, stooping to pick up the flimsy, “in civilised jurisdictions.” He smoothed it out. “But this is Long Station One. The Tycoon has privileges.”

  “That's barbaric,” I said.

  “It's a relic of the Moon Caves,” he said.

  I stared at him. “No it isn't,” I said. “I don't remember” — I caught myself just in time — “reading about anything like that.”

  He tapped a slight bulge on his cranium. “That's what it says here. Argue with the editors, not with me.”

  “All right,” I said. A second complaint rose to the top of the stack. “She never said anything about being married!”

  “Did you ask her?”

  “Of course not,” I said. “That would have been grossly impolite. In the circumstances, it would have implied that she was contemplating adultery.”

  “I see.” He sighed. “I'll never understand the… ethics, if that's the word, of you young gallants.”

  I smiled at that.

  “However,” he went on, “that doesn't excuse you for ignorance of the law — ”

  “How was I to know the Tycoon was married to his wenches?”

  “ — or custom. There is an orientation pack, you know. All arrivals are deemed to have read it.”

  “ 'Deemed',” I said. “Now, there's a word that just about sums up everything that's wrong about — ”

  “You can forego counsel, if you wish.”

  I raised my hands. “No, no. Please. Do your best.”

  He did his best. A week later, he told me that he had got me off with a fine plus compensation. If I borrowed money to pay the whole sum now, it would take two hundred and fifty seven years to pay off the debt. I had other plans for the next two hundred and fifty seven years. Instead, I negotiated a one‑off advance fee to clean up Wolf 359, and used that to pay the court and the Tycoon. The experimental civilization around Wolf 359 — a limited company — had a decade earlier gone into liquidation, taking ten billion shareholders down with it. Nobody knew what it had turned into. Whatever remained out there had been off limits ever since, and would be for centuries to come — unless someone went in to clean it up.

  In a way, the Wolf 359 situation was the polar opposite of what the Civil Worlds had hitherto had to deal with, which was habitats, networks, sometimes whole systems going into exponential intelligence enhancement — what we called a fast burn. We knew how to deal with a fast burn. Ignore it for five years, and it goes away. Then send in some heavily‑firewalled snoop robots and pick over the wreckage for legacy hardware. Sometimes you get a breakout, where some of the legacy hardware reboots and starts getting ideas above its station, but that's a job for the physics team.

  A civilizational implosion was a whole different volley of nukes. Part of the problem was sheer nervousness. We were too close historically to what had happened on the Moon's primary to be altogether confident that we wouldn't somehow be sucked in ourselves. Another part of it was simple economics: the job was too long‑term and too risky to be attractive, given all the other opportunities available to anyone who wasn't completely desperate. Into that vacancy for someone who was completely desperate, I wish I could say I stepped. In truth, I was pushed.

  Even I was afraid of Wolf 359.

  An Astronomical Unit is one of those measurements that should be obsolete, but isn't. It's no more — or less — arbitrary than the light‑year. All our units have origins that no longer mean anything to us — we measure time by what was originally a fraction of one axial rotation, and space by a fraction of the circumference, of the Moon's primary. An AU was originally the distance between the Moon's primary and its primary, the Sun. These days, it's usually thought of as the approximate distance from a G‑type star to the middle of the habitable zone. About a hundred and fifty million kilometres.

  The Long Tube, which the Long Station exist
ed to shuttle people to and from and generally to maintain, was one hundred and eighty Astronomical Units long. Twenty‑seven thousand million kilometres, or, to put it in perspective, one light‑day. From the shuttle, it looked like a hairline crack in infinity, but it didn't add up to a mouse's whisker in the Oort. It was aimed straight at Sirius, which I could see as a bright star with a fuzzy green haze of habitats. I shivered. I was about to be frozen, placed with the rest of the passengers on the next needle ship out, electromagnetically accelerated for months at 30 g to relativistic velocities in the Long Tube, hurtled across 6.4 light‑years, decelerated in Sirius's matching tube, accelerated again to Procyon, then to Lalande 21185, and finally sent on a fast clipper to Lalande's next‑door neighbour and fellow red dwarf, Wolf 359. It had to be a fast clipper because Wolf 359's Long Tubes were no longer being calibrated — and when you're aiming one Long Tube across light‑years at the mouth of another, calibration matters.

  A fast clipper — in fact, painfully slow, the name a legacy of pre‑Tube times, when 0.1 c was a fast clip — also has calibration issues. Pushed by laser, decelerated by laser reflection from a mirror shell deployed on nearing the target system, it was usually only used for seedships. This clipper was an adapted seedship, but I was going in bulk because it was actually cheaper to thaw me out on arrival than to grow me from a bean. If the calibration wasn't quite right, I'd never know.

  The shuttle made minor course corrections to dock at the Long Tube.

  “Please pass promptly to the cryogenic area,” it told us.

  I shivered again.

  Cryogenic travel has improved since then: subjectively, it's pretty much instantaneous. In those days, it was called cold sleep, and that's exactly what it felt like: being very cold and having slow, bad, dreams. Even with relativistic time‑dilation and a glacial metabolism, it lasted for months.

  I woke screaming in a translucent box.

  “There, there,” said the box. “Everything will be all right. Have some coffee.”

  The lid of the box extruded a nipple towards my mouth. I screamed again.

  “Well, if you're going to be like that…” said the box.

  “It reminded me of a nightmare,” I said. My mouth was parched. “Please.”

  “Oh, all right.”

  I sucked on the coffee and felt warmth spread from my belly.

  “Update me,” I said, around the nipple.

  My translucent surroundings became transparent, with explanatory text and diagrams floating like after‑images. A view, with footnotes. This helped, but not enough. An enormous blue‑and‑white sphere loomed right in front of me. I recoiled so hard that I hurt my head on the back of the box.

  “What the fuck is that?”

  “A terraformed terrestrial,” said the box. “Please do try to read before reacting.”

  “Sorry,” I said. “I thought we were falling towards it.”

  “We are,” said the box.

  I must have yelled again.

  “Read before reacting,” said the box. “Please.”

  I turned my head as if to look over my shoulder. I couldn't actually turn it that far, but the box obligingly swivelled the view. The red dwarf lurked at my back, apparently closer than the blue planet. I felt almost relieved. At least Wolf 359 was where I expected it. According to the view's footnotes, nothing else was, except the inactive Long Tubes in the wispy remnant of the cometary cloud, twelve light‑hours out. No solar- orbit microwave stations. Not even the hulks of habitats. No asteroids. No large cometary masses. And a planet, something that shouldn't have been there, was. I didn't need the explanatory text to make the connection. Every scrap of accessible mass in the system had been thrown into this gaudy reconstruction. The planet reminded me of pictures I'd seen of the Moon's primary, back when it had liquid water.

  The most recent information, inevitably a decade or so out of date, came from Lalande 21185. Watching what was going on around Wolf 359 was a tiny minority interest, but in a population of a hundred billion, that can add up to a lot. Likewise, the diameter of Lalande's habitat cloud was a good deal smaller than an Astronomical Unit, but that still adds up to a very large virtual telescope. Large enough to resolve the weather patterns on the planet below me, never mind the continents. The planet's accretion had begun before I set off, apparently under deliberate control, and the terraforming had been completed about fifty years earlier, while I was on route. It remained raw — lots of volcanoes and earthquakes — but habitable. There was life, obviously, but no one knew what kind. No radio signals had been detected, nor any evidence of intelligence, beyond some disputably artificial clusters of lights on the night side.

  “Well, that's it,” I said. “Problem solved. The system's pretty much uninhabitable now, with all the mass and organics locked up in a planet, but it may have tourist potential. No threat to anyone. Call in a seedship, they can make something of what's left of the local Kuiper Belt, and get the Long Tubes back on stream. Wake me up when it's over.”

  “That is very much not it,” said the box. “Not until we know why this happened. Not until we know what's down there.”

  “Well, send down some probes.”

  “I do not have the facilities to make firewalled snoop robots,” said the box, “and other probes could be corrupted. My instructions are to deliver you to any remnant of the Wolf 359 civilization, and that is what I shall do.”

  It must have been an illusion, given what I could read of our velocity, but the planet seemed to come closer.

  “You're proposing to dock — to land on that object?”

  “Yes.”

  “It has an atmosphere! We'll burn up! And then crash!”

  “The remains of our propulsion system can be adapted for aerobraking,” said the box.

  “That would have to be ridiculously finely calculated.”

  “It would,” said the box. “Please do not distract me.”

  Call me sentimental, but when the box's Turing functionality shut down to free up processing power for these ridiculously fine calculations, I felt lonely. The orbital insertion took fourteen hours. I drank hot coffee and sucked, from another nipple, some tepid but nutritious and palatable glop. I even slept, in my first real sleep for more than half a century. I was awakened by the jolt as the box spent the last of its fuel and reaction mass on the clipper's final course correction. The planet was a blue arc of atmosphere beneath me, the interstellar propulsion plate a heat shield in front, and the deceleration shell a still‑folded drogue behind. The locations were illusory — relative to the clipper I was flat on my back. The first buffeting from our passage through the upper atmosphere coincided with an increasing sense of weight. The heat shield flared. Red‑hot air rushed past. The weight became crushing. The improvised heat shield abraded, then exploded, its parts flicked away behind. The drogue deployed with a bang and a jolt that almost blacked me out. The surface became a landscape, then a land, then a wall of trees. The clipper sliced and shuddered through them, for seconds on end of crashes and shaking. It ploughed a long furrow across green‑covered soil and halted in a cloud of smoke and steam.

  “That was a landing,” said the box.

  “Yes,” I said. “You might have tried to avoid the trees.”

  “I could not,” said the box. “Phytobraking was integral to my projected landing schedule.”

  “Phytobraking,” I said.

  “Yes. Also, the impacted cellulose can be used to spin you a garment.”

  That took a few minutes. Sticky stuff oozed from the box and hardened around me. When the uncomfortable process finished, I had a one‑piece coverall and boots.

  “Conditions outside are tolerable,” said the box, “with no immediate hazards.”

  The box moved. The lid retracted. I saw purple sky and white clouds above me. Resisting an unease that I later identified as agoraphobia, I sat up. I found myself at the rear of the clipper's pointed wedge shape, about ten metres above the ground and fifty metres from the
ship's nose. The view was disorienting. It was like being in a gigantic landscaped habitat, with the substrate curving the wrong way. Wolf 359 hung in the sky like a vast red balloon, above the straight edge of a flat violet‑tinged expanse that, with some incredulity, I recognised as an immense quantity of water. It met the solid substrate about a kilometre away. A little to my left, an open channel of water flowed toward the larger body. The landscape was uneven, in parts jagged, with bare rock protruding from the vegetation cover. The plain across which our smoking trail stretched to broken trees was the flattest piece of ground in the vicinity. On the horizon, I could see a range of very high ground, dominated by a conical mass from whose truncated top smoke drifted.

  The most unusual and encouraging feature of the landscape, however, was the score or so of plainly artificial and metallic gnarly lumps scattered across it. The system had had at least a million habitats in its heyday; these were some of their wrecks. Smoke rose from most of them, including the nearest, which stuck up about twenty metres from the ground, about fifteen hundred metres away.

  “You can talk to my head?” I asked the ship. “You can see what I see?”

  “Yes,” it said, in my head.

  I climbed down and struck out across the rough ground.

  I was picking my way along a narrow watercourse between two precipices of moss‑covered rock when I heard a sound ahead of me, and looked up. At the exit from the defile, I saw three men, each sitting on the back of a large animal and holding what looked like a pointed stick. Their hair was long, their skin bare except where it was draped with the hairy skin of some different animal. I raised one hand and stepped forward. The men bristled instantly, aiming their sharp sticks.

  “Come forward slowly,” one of them shouted.

  Pleased that they had not lost speech along with civilization, I complied. The three men glowered down at me. The big beasts made noises in their noses.

  “You are from the space ship,” said one of them.