Фредерик Пол. За синим горизонтом событий (engl) Frederik Pohl. Beyond the blue event horizon
© Frederik Pohl. Beyond the blue event horizon (1980). GateWay #2. © Фредерик Пол. За синим горизонтом событий. SpellCheck by: GrAnD Date: 16.07.2002
1 Wan It was not easy to live, being young, being so completely alone. "Go to the gold, Wan, steal what you want, learn. Don't be afraid," the Dead Men told him. But how could he not be afraid? The silly but worrisome Old Ones used the gold passages. They might be found anywhere in them, most likely at the ends of them, where the gold skeins of symbols ran endlessly into the center of things. That is, exactly where the Dead Men kept coaxing him to go. Perhaps he had to go there, but he could not help being afraid. Wan did not know what would happen if the Old Ones ever caught him. The Dead Men probably knew, but he could not make any sense out of their ramblings on the subject. Once long ago, when Wan was tiny-when his parents were still alive, it was that long ago-his father had been caught. He had been gone for a long time and then had come back to their green-lit home. He was shaking, and two-year-old Wan had seen that his father was afraid and had screamed and roared because that was so frightening to him. Nevertheless he had to go to the gold, whether the grave old frog-jawed ones were there or not, because that was where the books were. The Dead Men were well enough. But they were tedious, and touchy, and often obsessed. The best sources of knowledge were books, and to get them Wan had to go where they were. The books were in the passages that gleamed gold. There were other passages, green and red and blue, but there were no books there. Wan disliked the blue corridors, because they were cold and dead, but that was where the Dead Men were. The green was used up. He spent most of his time where the winking red cobwebs of light were spread against the walls and the hoppers still held food; he was sure to be untroubled there, but he was also alone. The gold was still in use, and therefore rewarding, and therefore also perilous. And now he was there, cursing fretfully to himself-but under his breath-because he was stuck. Bloody damn Dead Men! Why did he listen to their blathering? He huddled, trembling, in the insufficient shelter of a berry bush, while two of the foolish Old Ones stood thoughtfully plucking berries from its opposite side and placing them precisely into their froggy mouths. It was unusual, really, that they should be so idle. Among the reasons Wan despised the Old Ones was that they were always busy, always fixing and carrying and chattering, as though driven. Yet here these two were, idle as Wan himself. Both of them had scraggly beards, but one also had breasts. Wan recognized her as a female he had seen a dozen times before; she was the one who was most diligent in pasting colored bits of something-paper? plastic?-onto her sari, or sometimes onto her sallow, mottled skin. He did not think they would see him, but he was greatly relieved when, after a time, they turned together and moved away. They did not speak. Wan had almost never heard any of the grave old frog-jaws speak. He did not understand them when they did. Wan spoke six languages well-his father's Spanish, mother's English, the German, the Russian, the Cantonese and the Finnish of one or another of the Dead Men. But what the frog-jaws spoke he did not comprehend at all. As soon as they had retreated down the golden corridor-quick, run, grab! Wan had three books and was gone, safely back in a red corridor. It might be that the Old Ones had seen him, or perhaps not. They did not react quickly. That was why he had been able to avoid them so long. A few days in the passages, and then he was gone. By the time they had become aware he was around, he wasn't; he was back in the ship, away. He carried the books back to the ship on top of a pannier of food packets. The drive accumulators were nearly recharged. He could leave whenever he liked, but it was better to charge them all the way and he did not think there was any need to hurry. He spent most of an hour filling plastic bags with water for the tedious journey. What a pity there were no readers in the ship to make it less tedious! And then, wearying of the labor, he decided to say good-bye to the Dead Men. They might, or might not, respond, or even care. But he had no one else to talk to. Wan was fifteen years old, tall, stringy, very dark by nature and darker still from the lights in the ship, where he spent so much of his time. He was strong and self-reliant. He had to be. There was always food in the hoppers, and other goods for the taking, when he dared. Once or twice a year, when they remembered, the Dead Men would catch him with their little mobile machine and take him to a cubicle in the blue passages for a boring day during which he was given a rather complete physical examination. Sometimes he had a tooth filled, usually he received some long-acting vitamin and mineral shots, and once they had fitted him with glasses. But he refused to wear them. They also reminded him, when he neglected it too long, to study and learn, both from them and from the storehouses of books. He did not need much reminding. He enjoyed learning. Apart from that, he was wholly on his own. If he wanted clothes, he went into the gold and stole them from the Old Ones. If he was bored, he invented something to do. A few days in the passages, a few weeks on the ship, a few more days in the other place, then back to repeat the process. Time passed. He had no one for company, had not had since he was four and his parents disappeared, and had almost forgotten what it was like to have a friend. He did not mind. His life seemed complete enough to him, since he had no other life to compare it with. Sometimes he thought it would be nice to settle in one place or another, but this was only dreaming. It never reached the stage of intention. For more than eleven years he had been shuttling back and forth like this. The other place had things that civilization did not. It had the dreaming room, where he could lie fiat and close his eyes and seem not to feel alone. But he could not live there, in spite of plenty of food and no dangers, because the single water accumulator produced only a trickle. Civilization had much that the outpost did not have: the Dead Men and the books, scary exploring and daring raids for clothes or trinkets, something happening. But he could not live there either, because the frog-jaws would surely catch him sooner or later. So he commuted. The main lobby door to the place of the Dead Men did not open when Wan stepped on the treadle. He almost bumped his nose. Surprised, he stopped and then gingerly pushed against the door, then harder. It took all his strength to force it open. Wan had never had to open it by hand before, though now and then it had hesitated and made disturbing noises. That was an annoyance. Wan had experienced machines that broke down before; it was why the green corridors were no longer very useful. But that was only food and warmth, and there was plenty of that in the red, or even the gold. It was worrisome that anything should go wrong around the Dead Men, because if they broke down he had no others. Still, all looked normal; the room with the consoles was brightly fluoresced, the temperature was comfortable and he could hear the faint drone and rare click of the Dead Men behind their panels as they thought their lonely, demented thoughts and did whatever they did when he was not speaking to them. He sat in his chair, shifting his rump as always to accommodate to the ill-designed seat, and pulled the headset down over his ears. "I am going to the outpost now," he said. There was no answer. He repeated it in all of his languages, but no one seemed to want to talk. That was a disappointment. Sometimes two or three of them would be eager for company, maybe even more. Then they could all have a nice, long chat, and it would be as though he were not really alone at all. Almost as though he were part of a "family", a word he knew from the books and from what the Dead Men told him, but hardly remembered as a reality. That was good. Almost as good as when he was in the dreaming place, where for a while he could have the illusion of being part of a hundred families, a million families. Hosts of people! But that was more than he could handle for very long. And so, when he had to leave the outpost to return for water, and for the more tangible company of the Dead Men, he was never sorry. But he always wanted to come back to the cramped couch and the velvety metal blanket that covered him in it, and to the dreams. It was waiting for him; but he decided to give the Dead Men another chance. Even when they were not eager for talk, sometimes they were interestable if addressed directly. He thought for a moment, and then dialed number fifty-seven. A sad, distant voice in his ear was mumbling to itself: "...tried to tell him about the missing mass. Mass! The only mass on his mind was twenty kilos of boobs and ass! That floozy, Doris. One look at her and, oh, boy, forget about the mission, forget about me... Frowning, Wan poised his finger to cancel. Fifty-seven was such a nuisance! He liked to listen to her when she made sense, because she sounded a little like the way he remembered his mother. But she always seemed to go from astrophysics and space travel and other interesting subjects directly to her own troubles. He spat at the point in the panels behind which he had elected to believe fifty-seven lived-a trick he had learned from the Old Ones-hoping she would say something interesting. But she didn't seem to intend to. Number fifty-seven-when she was coherent she liked to be called Henrietta-was babbling on about high redshifts and Arnold's infidelities with Doris. Whoever they were. "We could have been heroes," she sobbed, "and a ten-million-dollar grant, maybe more, who knows what they'd pay for the drive? But they kept on sneaking off in the lander, and "Who are you?" "I'm Wan," the boy said, smiling encouragingly even though he did not think she could see him. She seemed to be coming into one of her lucid times. Usually she didn't know he was speaking to her. "Please keep on talking." There was a long silence, and then, "NGC 1199," she said. "Sagittarius A West." Wan waited politely. Another long pause, and then she said, "He didn't care about proper motions. He made all his moves with Doris. Half his age! And the brain of a turnip. She should never have been on the mission in the first place..." Wan wobbled his head like a frog-jawed Old One. "You are very boring," he said severely, and switched her off. He hesitated, then dialed the professor, number fourteen: although Eliot was still a Harvard undergraduate, his imagery was that of a fully mature man. And a genius at that. 'I should have been a pair of ragged claws.' The self-deprecation of mass man carried to its symbolic limit. How does he see himself? Not merely as a crustacean. Not even as a crustacean, only the very abstraction of a crustacean: claws. And ragged, at that. In the next line we see..." Wan spat again at the panel as he disconnected; the whole face of the wall was stained with the marks of his displeasure. He liked when Doc recited poetry, not so much when he talked about it. With the craziest of the Dead Men, like fourteen and fifty-seven, you didn't have any choice about what happened. They rarely responded, and almost never in a way that seemed relevant, and you either listened to what they happened to be saying or you turned them off. It was almost time for him to go, but he tried one more time: the only one with a three-digit number, his special friend, Tiny Jim. "Hello, Wan." The voice was sad and sweet. It tingled in his mind, like the sudden frisson of fear that he felt near the Old Ones. "It is you, Wan, isn't it?" "That is a foolish question. Who else would it be?" "One keeps on hoping, Wan." There was a pause, then Tiny Jim suddenly cackled, "Have I told you the one about the priest, the rabbi and the dervish who ran out of food on the planet made of pork?" "I think you have, Tiny Jim, and anyway I don't want to hear any jokes now." The invisible loudspeaker clicked and buzzed for a moment, and then the Dead Man said, "Same old thing, Wan? You want to talk about sex again?" The boy kept his countenance impassive, but that familiar tingle inside his lower abdomen responded. "We might as well, Tiny Jim." "You're a raunchy stud for your age, Wan," the Dead Man offered; and then, "Tell you about the time I almost got busted for a sex offense? It was hot as hell. I was going home on the late train to Roselle Park, and this girl came in, sat across the aisle from me, put her feet up, and began to fan herself with her skirt. Well, what would you do? I looked, you know. And she kept on doing it, and I kept looking, and finally around Highlands she complained to the conductor and he threw me off the train. Do you know what the funny thing was?" Wan was rapt. "No, Tiny Jim," he breathed. "The funny thing was I'd missed my regular train. I had time to kill in the city, so I went to a porn flick. Two hours of, my God, every combination you could think of. The only way I could've seen more was with a proctoscope, so why was I slouching out over the aisle to peek at her little white panties? But you know what was funnier than that?" "No, Tiny Jim." "She was right! I was staring, all right. I'd just been watching acres of crotches and boobs, but I couldn't take my eyes off hers! That wasn't the funniest thing, though. Do you want me to tell you the funniest thing of all?" "Yes, please, Tiny Jim. I do." "Why, she got off the train with me! And took me to her home, boy, and we just made out over and over, all night long. Never did catch her name. What do you say to that, Wan?" "I say, is that true, Tiny Jim?" Pause. "Aw. No. You take all the fun out of things." Wan said severely, "I don't want a made-up story, Tiny Jim. I want to learn facts." Wan was angry, and thought of turning the Dead Man off to punish him, but was not sure whom he would be punishing. "I wish you would be nice, Tiny Jim," he coaxed. "Well..." The bodiless mind clicked and whispered to itself for a moment, sorting through its conversational gambits. Then it said, "Do you want to know why mallard drakes rape their mates?" "No!" "I think you really do, though, Wan. It's interesting. You can't understand primate behavior unless you comprehend the whole spectrum of reproductive strategies. Even strange ones. Even the Acanthocephalan worms. They practice rape, too, and do you know what Moniliformis dubius does? They not only rape their females, they even rape competing males. With like plaster of Paris! So the poor Other Worm can't get it up!" "I don't want to hear all this, Tiny Jim." "But it's funny, Wan! That must be why they call him 'dubius'!" The Dead Man was chuckling mechanically, a-heh! A-heh! "Stop it, Tiny Jim!" But Wan was not just angry any more. He was hooked. It was his favorite subject, as Tiny Jim's willingness to talk about it, at length and in variety, was what made him Wan's favorite among the Dead Men. Wan unwrapped a food packet and, munching, said, "What I really want to hear is how to make out, Tiny Jim, please?" If the Dead Man had had a face it would have shown the strain of trying to keep from laughing, but he said kindly, "'Kay, sonny. I know you keep hoping. Let's see, did I tell you to watch their eyes?" "Yes, Tiny Jim. You said if their pupils dilate it means they are sexually aroused." "Right. And I mentioned the existence of the sexually dimorphic structures in the brain?" "I don't think I know what that means, exactly." "Well, I don't, either, but it's anatomically so. They're different, Wan, inside and out." "Please, Tiny Jim, keep telling me about the differences!" The Dead Man did, and Wan listened absorbedly. There was always time to go to the ship, and Tiny Jim was unusually coherent. All of the Dead Men had their own special subjects that they zeroed in to talk about, as though each had been frozen with one big thought in his mind. But even on the favored topics you could not always expect them to make sense. Wan pushed the mobile unit that they used to catch him-when it was working-out of the way and sprawled on the floor, chin in hands, while the Dead Man chattered and reminisced and explained courtship, and gifting, and making your move. It was fascinating, even though he had heard it before. He listened until the Dead Man slowed down, hesitated, and stopped. Then the boy said, to confirm a theory: "Teach me, Tiny Jim. I read a book in which a male and a female copulated. He hit her on the head and copulated her while she was unconscious. That appears to me an efficient way to 'love', Tiny Jim, but in other stories it takes much longer. Why is this?" "That was not love, sonny. That was what I was telling you about. Rape. Rape is a bad idea for people, even if it works for mallard ducks." Wan nodded and urged him on: "Why, Tiny Jim?" Pause. "I will demonstrate it for you mathematically, Wan," the Dead Man said at last. "Attractive sex objects may be defined as female, no more than five years younger than you are, no more than fifteen years older. These figures are normalized to your present age, and are also only approximate. Attractive sex objects may further be characterized by visual, olfactory, tactile, and aural qualities stimulating to you, in descending weighted order of significance plotted against probability of access. Do you understand me so far?" "Not really." Pause. "Well, that's all right for now. Now pay attention. On the basis of those four preliminary traits, some females will attract you. Up to the point of contact you will not know about other traits which may repel, harm or detumesce you. 5/28 of subjects will be menstruating. 3/87 will have gonorrhea, 2/95 syphilis. 1/17 will have excessive bodily hair, skin blemishes or other physical deformities concealed by clothing. Finally, 2/71 will conduct themselves offensively during intercourse, i/i6 will emit an unpleasant odor, 3/7 will resist rape so extensively as to diminish your enjoyment; these are subjective values quantified to match your known psychological profile. Cumulating these fractions, the odds are better than six to one that you will not receive maximum pleasure from rape." "Then I must not copulate a woman without wooing?" "That's right, boy. Not counting it's against the law." Wan was thoughtfully silent for a moment, then remembered to ask, "Is all this true, Tiny Jim?" Cackle of glee. "Got you that time, kid! Every word." Wan pouted like a frog-jaw. "That was not very exciting, Tiny Jim. In fact, you have detumesced me." "What do you expect, kid?" Tiny Jim said sullenly. "You told me not to make up any stories. Why are you being so unpleasant?" "I am getting ready to leave. I do not have much time." "You don't have anything else!" cackled Tiny Jim. "And you have nothing to say that I want to hear," said Wan cruelly. He disconnected them all, and angrily he went to the ship and squeezed the launch control. It did not occur to him that he was being rude to the only friends he had in the universe. It had never occurred to him that their feelings mattered. 2 On the Way to the Oort Cloud On the twelve hundred and eighty-second day of our all-expense-paid joyride on the way to the Oort Cloud, the big excitement was the mail. Vera tinkled joyously and we all came to collect it. There were six letters for my horny little half-sister-inlaw from famous movie stars-well, they're not all movie stars. They're just famous and good-looking jocks that she writes to, because she's only fourteen years old and needs some kind of male to dream about, and that write back to her, I think, because their press agents tell them it's going to be good publicity. A letter from the old country for Payter, my father-in-law. A long one, in German. They want him to come back to Dortmund and run for mayor or Blirgermeister or something. Assuming, of course, that he is still alive when he gets back, which is only an assumption for any of the four of us. But they don't give up. Two private letters to my wife, Lurvy, I assume from ex-boyfriends. And a letter to all of us from poor Trish Bover's widower, or maybe husband, depending on whether you considered Trish alive or dead: Have you seen any trace of Trish's ship? Hanson Bover Short and sweet, because that's all he could afford, I guess. I told Vera to send him the same reply as always-"Sorry, no." I had plenty of time to take care of that correspondence, because there was nothing for Paul C. Hall, who is me. There is usually not much for me, which is one of the reasons I play chess a lot. Payter tells me I'm lucky to be on the mission at all, and I suppose I wouldn't be if he hadn't put his own money into it, financing his whole family. Also his skills, but we've all done that. Payter is a food chemist. I'm a structural engineer. My wife, Dorema-it's better not to call her that, and we mostly call her "Lurvy"-is a pilot. Damn good one, too. Lurvy is younger than I am, but she was on Gateway for six years. Never scored, came back next to broke, but she learned a lot. Not just about piloting. Sometimes I look at Lurvy's arms with the five Out bangles, one for each of her Gateway missions; and her hands, hard and sure on the ship controls, warm and warming when we touch... I don't know much about what happened to her on Gateway. Perhaps I shouldn't. And the other one is her little jailbait half-sister, Janine. Ak, Janine! Sometimes she was fourteen years old, and sometimes forty. When she was fourteen she wrote her gushy letters to her movie stars and played with her toys-a ragged, stuffed armadillo, a Heechee prayer fan (real) and a fire-pearl (fake) which her father had bought her to tempt her onto the trip. When she was forty what she mostly wanted to play with was me. And there we are. In each other's pockets for three and a half years. Trying not to need to commit murder. We were not the only ones in space. Once in a great while we would get a message from our nearest neighbors, the Triton base or the exploring ship that had got itself lost. But Triton, with Neptune, was well ahead of us in its orbit-round-trip message time, three weeks. And the explorer had no power to waste on us, though they were now only fifty light-hours away. It was not like a friendly natter over the garden hedge. So what I did, I played a lot of chess with our shipboard computer. There's not an awful lot to do on the way to the Oort except play games, and besides it was a good way to stay noncombatant in The War Between Two Women that continually raged in our little ship. I can stand my father-in-law, if I have to. Mostly he keeps to himself, as much as he can in four hundred cubic meters. I can't always stand his two crazy daughters, even though I love them both. All this would have been easier to take if we had had more room-I told myself that-but there is no way to go for a cooling-down walk around the block when you are in a spaceship. Once In a while a quick EVA to check the side-cargos, yes, and then I could look around-the sun still the brightest star in its constellation, but only just; Sirius ahead of us was brighter, and so was Alpha Centauri, off below the ecliptic and to the side. But that was only an hour at a time, and then back inside the ship. Not a luxury ship. A human-made antique of a spaceship that was never planned for more than a six-month mission and that we had to stay cooped up in for three and a half years. My God! We must have been crazy to sign up. What good is a couple million dollars when getting it drives you out of your head? Our shipboard brain was a lot easier to get along with. When I played chess with her, hunched over the console with the big headset over my ears, I could shut out Lurvy and Janine. The brain's name was Vera, which was just my own conceit and had nothing to do with her, I mean its, gender. Or with her truthfulness, either, because I had instructed her she could joke with me sometimes. When Vera was downlinked with the big computers that were in orbit or back on Earth, she was very, very smart. But she couldn't carry on a conversation that way, because of the 25-day round-trip communications time, and so when she wasn't in link she was very, very dumb-"Pawn to king's rook four, Vera." "Thank you..." Long pause, while she checked my parameters to make sure who she was talking to and what she was supposed to be doing. "Paul. Bishop takes knight." I could beat the ass off Vera when we played chess, unless she cheated. How did she cheat? Well, after I had won maybe two hundred games from her she won one. And then I won about fifty, and then she won one, and another, and for the next twenty games we were about even and then she began to clobber me every time. Until I figured out what she was doing. She was transmitting position and plans to the big computers on Earth and then, when we recessed games, as we sometimes did, because Payter or one of the women would drag me away from the set, she would have time to get Downlink-Vera's criticism of her plans and suggestions to amend her strategies. The big machines would tell Vera what they thought my strategies might be, and how to counteract them; and when Downlink-Vera guessed right, Shipboard-Vera had me. I never bothered to make her stop. I just didn't recess games any more, and then after a while we were so far away that there just wasn't time for her to get help and I went back to beating her every game. And the chess games were about the only games I won, those three and a half years. There was no way for me to win anything in the big one that kept going on between my wife, Lurvy, and her horny fourteen-year-old half-sister, Janine. Old Payter was a long time between begats, and Lurvy tried to be a mother to Janine, who tried to be an enemy to Lurvy. And succeeded. It wasn't all Janine's fault. Lurvy would take a few drinks-that was her way of relieving the boredom-and then she would discover that Janine had used her toothbrush, or that Janine had unwillingly done as she had been told and cleaned up the food-preparation area before it began to stink, but hadn't put the organics in the digester. Then they were off. From time to time they would go through ritualized performances of woman talk, punctuated by explosions-"I really love those blue pants on you, Janine. Do you want me to tack that seam?" "All right, so I'm getting fat, is that what you're saying? Well, it's better than drinking myself stupid all the time!"-and then back to blow-drying each other's hair. And I would go back to playing chess with Vera. It was the only safe thing to do. Every time I tried to intervene I achieved instant success by uniting them against me: "Fucking male chauvinist pig, why don't you scrub the kitchen floor?" The funny thing was, I did love them both. In different ways, of course, though I had trouble getting that across to Janine. We were told what we were getting into when we signed up for the mission. Besides the regular long-voyage psychiatric briefing, all four of us went through a dozen session hours on the problem during the preflight, and what the shrink said boiled down to "do the best you can." It appeared that during the refamilying process I would have to learn to parent. Payter was too old, even if he was the biological father. Lurvy was undomestic, as you would expect from a former Gateway pilot. It was up to me; the shrink was very clear about that. It just didn't say how. So there I was at forty-one, umpty zillion kilometers from Earth, way past the orbit of Pluto, about fifteen degrees out of the plane of the ecliptic, trying not to make love to my halfsister-in-law, trying to make peace with my wife, trying to maintain the truce with my father-in-law. Those were the big things that I woke up with (every time I was allowed to go to sleep), just staying alive for another day. To get my mind off them, I would try to think about the two million dollars apiece we would get for completing the mission. When even that failed I would try to think about the long-range importance of our mission, not just to us, but to every human being alive. That was real enough. If it all worked out, we would be keeping most of the human race from dying of starvation. That was obviously important. Sometimes it even seemed important. But it was the human race that had jammed us all into this smelly concentration-camp for what looked like forever; and there were times when-you know?-I kind of hoped they would starve. Day 1283. I was just waking up when I heard Vera beeping and crackling to herself, the way she does when there's an action message coming in. I unzipped the restraining sheet and pushed myself out of our private, but old Payter was already hanging over the printer. He swore creakily. "Gott sel dammt! We have a course changing." I caught hold of a rail and pushed myself over to see, but Janine, busily inspecting her cheekbones for pimples in the wall mirror, got there ahead of me. She ducked her head in front of Payter's, read the message, and slid herself away disdainfully. Payter worked his mouth for a minute and then said savagely, "This does not interest you?" Janine shrugged minutely without looking at him. Lurvy was coming out of the private after me, zipping up her skivvies. "Leave her alone, Pa," she said. "Paul, go put some clothes on." It was better to do what she said, besides which she was right. The best way to stay out of trouble with Janine was to behave like a puritan. By the time I fished my shorts out of the tangle of sheets, Lurvy had already read the message. Reasonably enough; she was our pilot. She looked up, grinning. "Paul! We have to make a correction in about eleven hours, and maybe it's the last one! Back away," she ordered Payter, who was still hanging over the terminal, and pulled herself down to work Vera's calculator keys. She watched while the trajectories formed, pressed for a solution and then crowed: "Seventy-three hours eight minutes to touchdown!" "I myself could have done that," her father complained. "Don't be grouchy, Pa! Three days and we're there. Why, we ought to be able to see it in the scopes when we turn!" Janine, back to picking at her cheekbones, commented over her shoulder, "We could have been seeing it for months if somebody hadn't busted the big scope." "Janine!" Lurvy was marvelous at holding her temper in-when she was able to do it at all-and this time she managed to stay in control. She said in her voice of quiet reason, "Wouldn't you say this was an occasion for rejoicing, not for starting arguments? Of course you would, Janine. I suggest we all have a drink-you, too." I stepped in quickly, belting my shorts-I knew the rest of that script. "Are you going to use the chemical rockets, Lurvy? Right, then Janine and I will have to go out and check the side-cargos. Why don't we have the drink when we come back?" Lurvy smiled sunnily. "Good idea, dear. But perhaps Pa and I will have one short one now-then we'll join you for another round later, if you like." "Suit up," I ordered Janine, preventing her from saying whatever inflammatory remark was in her mind. She obviously had decided to be placatory for the moment, because she did as she was told without comment. We checked each other's seals, let Lurvy and Payter double-check us, crowded one by one into the exit and swung out into space on our tethers. The first thing we both did was look toward home-not very satisfying; the sun was only a bright star and I couldn't see the Earth at all, though Janine usually claimed she could.. The second thing was to look toward the Food Factory, but I couldn't see anything there. One star looks a lot like another one, especially down to the lower limits of brightness when there are fifty or sixty thousand of them in the sky. Janine worked quickly and efficiently, tapping the bolts of the big ion-thrusters strapped to the side of our ship while I inspected for tightness in the steel straps. Janine was really not a bad kid. She was fourteen years old and sexually excitable, true, but it was not at all her fault that she had no satisfactory person to practice being a woman on. Except me and, even less satisfactorily, her father. Everything checked out, as of course we bad been pretty sure it would. She was waiting by the stub of the big telescope's mounting by the time I finished, and a measure of her good humor was that she didn't even say anything about who let it crack loose and float away in the crazy time. I let her go back in the ship first. I took an extra couple of minutes to float out there. Not because I particularly enjoyed the view. Only because those minutes in space were about the only time I had had in three and a half years to be anything approaching alone. We were still moving at better than three kilometers a second, but of course you couldn't tell that with nothing around to compare. It felt a lot as though we weren't moving at all. It had felt that way, a lot, for all of the three and a half years. One of the stories we had all been hearing for all that time from old Peter-he pronounces it "Pay-ter"-was about his father, the S. S. Werewolf. The werewolf couldn't have been more than sixteen when The Big One ended. His special job was transporting jet engines to a Luftwaffe squadron that had just been fitted out with ME210s. Payter says his daddy went to his death apologizing for not getting the engines up to the squadron in time to cream the Lanes and the B-17s and change the outcome of the war. We all thought that was pretty funny-anyway, the first time we heard it. But that wasn't the real funny part The real funny part was how the old Nazi freighted them. With a team. Not horses. Oxen. Not even pulling a wagon-it was a sledge! The newest, up to the minute, state of the art jet turbines-and what it took to get them operational was a tow-headed kid with a willow switch, ankle deep in cowflop. Hanging there, creeping through space, on a trip that a Heechee ship could have done in a day-if we had had one, and could have made it do what we wanted it to-I felt a kind of a sympathy with Payter's old man. It wasn't that different with us. All we were missing was the cowflop. Day 1284. The course change went very smoothly, after we all struggled into our life-support systems and wedged ourselves into our acceleration seats, neatly fitted to our air and vital-signs packs. Considering the tiny delta-V involved, it was hardly worth the effort. Not to mention that there wouldn't be much use in life-support systems if anything went wrong enough for us to need them, five thousand A. U. s from home. But we did it by the book, because that was the way we had been doing it for three and a half years. And-after we had turned, and the chemical rockets had done their thing and stopped and let the ion-thrusters take over again, and after Vera had fumbled and clucked and hesitantly announced that it looked all right, as far as she could tell, of course pending confirmation some weeks later from Earth-we saw it! Lurvy was the first one out of her seat and at the visuals, and she snapped it into focus in a matter of seconds. We hung around, staring at it. The Food Factory! It jiggled annoyingly in the speculum, hard to keep in focus. Even an ion rocket contributes some vibration to a spaceship, and we were still a long way off. But it was there. It gleamed faintly blue in the darkness punctuated by stars, strangely shaped. It was the size of an office building and more oblong than anything else. But one end was rounded, and one side seemed to have a long, curved slice taken out of it. "Do you think it's been hit by something?" Lurvy asked apprehensively. "Ah, not in the least," snapped her father. "It is how it was constructed! What do we know of Heechee design?" "How do you know that?" Lurvy asked, but her father didn't answer that; didn't have to, we all knew that he had no way to know, was only speaking out of hope, because if it was damaged we were in trouble. Our bonuses were good just for going out there, but our hopes for real payoff, the only kind of payoff that would pay for seven round-trip years of misery, rested on the Food Factory being operable. Or at least studyable and copyable. "Paul!" Lurvy said suddenly. "Look at the side that's just turning away-aren't those ships?" I squinted, trying to make out what she saw. There were half a dozen bulges on the long, straight side of the artifact, three or four smallish ones, two quite large. They looked like pictures I had seen of the Gateway asteroid, right enough, as far as I could tell. But-"You're the ex-prospector," I said. "What do you think?" "I think they are. But, my God, did you see those two end Ones? They were huge. I've been in Ones and Threes, and I've seen plenty of Fives. But nothing like that! They'd hold, I don't know, maybe fifty people! If we had ships like that, Paul-If we had ships like that..." "If, if," snarled her father. "If we had such ships, and if we could make them go where we wanted, yes, the world would be ours! Let us hope they still work. Let us hope any part of it works!" "It will, Father," caroled a sweet voice from behind us, and we turned to see Janine, propped with one knee under the digester hose, holding out a squeeze bottle of our best home-made genuine recycled grain neutral spirits. "I'd say this really calls for a celebration." She smiled. Lurvy looked at her thoughtfully, but her control was in good shape and she only said, "Why, that's a nice idea, Janine. Pass it around." Janine took a ladylike small swig and handed it to her father. "I thought you and Lurvy might like a nightcap," she said, after clearing her throat-she had just graduated to drinking the hard stuff on her fourteenth birthday, still did not like it, insisted on it only because it was an adult prerogative. "Good idea," Payter nodded. "I have been up now for, what is it, yes, nearly twenty hours. We will all need our rest when we touch down," he added, handing the bottle to my wife, who squeezed two ounces into her well-practiced throat and said: "I'm not really sleepy yet. You know what I'd like to do? I'd like to play Trish Bover's tape again." "Oh, God, Lurvy! We've all seen it a zillion times!" "I know, Janine. You don't have to watch if you don't want to, but I kept wondering if one of those ships was Trish's and-Well, I just want to look at it again." Janine's lips thinned, but the genes were strong and her control was as good as her sister's when she wanted it to be-that was one of the things we were measured on, before they signed us for the mission. "I'll dial it up," she said, pushing herself over to Vera's keyboard. Payter shook his head and retired to his own private, sliding the accordion-pleated barrier into place to shut us out, and the rest of us gathered around the console. Because it was tape we could get visual as well as sound, and in about ten seconds it crackled on and we could see poor, angry Trish Bover talking into the camera and saying the last words anybody would ever hear from her. Tragedy can only be tragic just so long, and we'd heard it all for three and a half years. Every once in a while we'd play the tape, and look at the scenes she had picked up with her handheld camera. And look at them. And look at them, freeze-frame and blowup, not because we thought we'd get any more information out of them than Gateway Corporation's people already had, although you never knew. Just because we wanted to reassure ourselves it was all worth it. The real tragedy was that Trish didn't know what she had found. "This is Mission Report Oh-Seventy-Four Dee Nineteen," she began, steadily enough. Her sad, silly face was even trying to smile. "I seem to be in trouble. I came out at a Heechee artifact kind of thing, and I docked, and now I can't get away. The lander rockets work. But the main board won't. And I don't want to stay here till I starve." Starve! After the boffins went over Trish's photos they identified what the "artifact" was-the CHON-Food Factory they had been looking for. But whether it was worth it was still an open question, and Trish surely didn't think it was worth it. What she thought was that she was going to die there, and for nothing, not even going to cash in her awards for the mission. And then at the end, what she finally did, she tried to make it back in the lander. She got into the lander and pointed it for the sun, and turned on the motors, and took a pill. Took a lot of pills; all she had. And then she turned the freezer up to max and got in and closed the door behind her. "Defrost me when you find me," she said, "and remember my award." And maybe somebody would. When they found her. If they found her. Which would likely be in about ten thousand years. By the time her faint radio message was heard by anybody, on maybe its five hundredth automatic repetition, it was too late to matter to Trish; she never answered. Vera finished playing the tape and quietly restowed it as the screen went dark. "If Trish had been a real pilot instead of one of those Gateway go-go prospectors, jump in and push the button and let the ship do its thing," said Lurvy, not for the first time, "she would have known better. She would have used what little delta-V she had in the lander to kill some angular momentum instead of wasting it by pointing straight in." "Thank you, expert rocket pilot," I said, not for the first time either. "So she could've counted on being inside the asteroids a whole lot sooner, right? Maybe in as little as six or seven thousand years." Lurvy shrugged. "I'm going to bed," she said, taking a last squeeze from the bottle. "You, Paul?" "Aw, give me a break, will you?" Janine cut in. "I wanted Paul to help me go over ignition procedures for the ionthrusters." Lurvy's guard went up at once. "You sure that's what you want him to go over? Don't pout, Janine. You know you've gone over it plenty already, and anyway it's Paul's job." "And what if Paul's out of action?" Janine demanded. "How do we know we won't hit the crazy time just as we're doing it?" Well, nobody could know that, and as a matter of fact I had been forming the opinion that we would. It came in cycles of about a hundred and thirty days, give or take a dozen. We were pushing it close. I said, "Actually, I'm a little tired, Janine. I promise we'll do it tomorrow." Or whenever one of the others was awake at the same time-the important thing was not to be alone with Janine. In a ship with the total cubage of a motel room, you'd be surprised how hard that is to arrange. Not hard. Practically impossible. But I really wasn't tired, and when Lurvy was tucked alongside me and out of it, her breathing too quiet to be called anything like a snore, but diagnostic of sleep all the same, I stretched against the sheets, wide awake, counting up our blessings. I needed to do that at least once a day. When I could find any to count. This time I found a good one. Four thousand A. U. plus is a long trip-and that's as the crow flies. Or, actually, as the photon fires, because of course there aren't a lot of crows in near-interstellar space. Call it half a trillion kilometers, near enough. And we were spiraling out, which meant most of a revolution around the sun before we got there. Our track wasn't just 25 light-days, it was more like 60. And, even power-on the whole way, we weren't coming up to anything like the speed of light. Three and a half years... and all the way we were thinking, Jeez, suppose someone figures out the Heechee drive before we get there? It wouldn't have helped us a bit. It would've been a lot more than three and a half years before they got around to doing all the things they wanted to do when that happened. And guess where on that list the job of coming after us would have been? So the good thing I found to dwell on was that at least we weren't going to find the trip was for nothing, because we were almost there! All that remained was to strap the big ion-thrusters onto it see if it worked... start the slow return trip, shoving the thing back down toward the Earth... and, somehow, survive till we got there. Call it, oh, another four years; I went back to cherishing the fact that we were almost there. The idea of mining comets for food wasn't new, it went back to Krafft Ehricke in the 1950s anyway, only what he suggested was that people colonize them. It made sense. Bring along a little iron and trace elements-the iron to build a place to live in, the trace elements to turn CHON-chow into quiche lorraine or hamburgers-and you can live indefinitely on the food around you. Because that's what comets are made of. A little bit of dust, a few rocks, and a hell of a lot of frozen gases. And what are the gases? Oxygen. Nitrogen. Hydrogen. Carbon dioxide. Water. Methane. Ammonia. The same four elements over and over again. CHON. Carbon, hydrogen, oxygen, nitrogen, and what does CHON spell? Wrong. What comets are made of is the same thing you are made of, and what C-H-O-N spells is "food." The Oort cloud was made up of millions of megaton-sized servings of chow. Back on Earth there were ten or twelve billion hungry people looking toward it and licking their lips. There was still a lot of argument about what comets were doing there, out in the cloud. It was still arguable about whether they even came in families. Opik a hundred years ago said more than half the comets ever sighted fit into well-defined groups, so there, and so did his followers ever since. Whipple said bullshit, there's not a group you can identify that has more than three comets in it. And so did his followers. Then Oort came along to try to make sense of it. His idea was that there was this great shell of comets all the hell around the solar system, and every once in a while the sun would reach out and pluck one out, and it would come loping in to perihelion. Then we would have Halley's comet, or the one that was supposed to have been the Star of Bethlehem, or whatever. Then a bunch of the guys began kicking that around, asking why exactly that should happen. It turned out it couldn't-not if you assume Maxwellian distribution for the Oort cloud. In fact, if you assume normal distribution, you also have to assume that there isn't any Oort cloud in the first place. You can't get the observed nearly parabolic orbits out of an Oort cloud; so said R. A. Lyttleton. But then somebody else said, well, who says the distribution can't be non-Maxwellian? And so it proved. It's all lumpy. There are clusters of comets, and great volumes of space with almost none. And while no doubt the Heechee had set their machine to graze in rich comet pastures, that had been a lot of hundreds of thousands of years ago, and it was now in a kind of cometary desert. If it worked, it had little left to work on. (Maybe it had eaten them all up?) I fell asleep wondering what CHON-food would taste like. It couldn't be a lot worse than what we had been eating for three and a half years, which was mainly recycled us. Day 1285. Janine almost got to me today. I was playing chess with Vera, everybody asleep, happy enough, when her hands came around the big earpieces and covered my eyes. "Cut it out, Janine," I said. When I turned around she was pouting. "I just wanted to use Vera," she said. "For what? Another hot love letter to one of your movie stars?" "You treat me like a child," she said. For a wonder, she was fully dressed; her face shone, her hair was damp and pulled down straight to the back of her neck. She looked like your model serious-minded young teen-ager. "What I wanted," she said, "was to go over thruster alignments with Vera. Since you won't help me." One of the reasons Janine was along with us was that she was smart-we all were; had to be to be accepted for the mission. And one of the things she was smart at was getting at me. "All right," I said, "you're right, what can I say? Vera? Recess the game and give us the program for providing propulsion for the Food Factory." "Certainly," she said,"... Paul." And the board disappeared, and in its place she built up a holo of the Food Factory. She had updated her specs from the telescopic views we had obtained, and so it was shown complete with its dust cloud and the glob of dirty snowball adhering to one side. "Cancel the cloud, Vera," I ordered, and the blur disappeared and the Food Factory showed up like an engineering drawing. "Okay, Janine. What's the first step?" "We dock," she said at once. "We hope the lander facsimile fits, and we dock it. If we can't dock we link up with braces to some point on the surface; either way, our ship becomes a rigid part of the structure, so we can use our thrust for attitude control." "Next?" "We all dismount the number-one thruster and brace it to the aft section of the factory-there." She pointed out the place on the holo. "We slave it to the board here, and as soon as it is installed we activate." "Guidance?" "Vera will give us coordinates-oops, sorry, Paul." She had been drifting out of orientation with me and Vera, and she caught my shoulder with her hand to pull herself back. She kept her hand there. "Then we repeat the process with the other five. By the time we have all six going we have a delta-V of two meters per second per second, running off the 239pu generator. Then we start spreading the mirror foils..." "No." "Oh, sure, we inspect all the moorings to see that they're holding under thrust first; well, I take that for granted. Then we start with solar power, and when we've got it all spread we should be up to maybe two and a quarter meters..." "At first, Janine. The closer we get in, the more power we get. All right. Now let's go through the hardware. You're bracing our ship to the Heechee-metal hull; how do you go about it?" And she told me, and kept on telling me; and by gosh she knew it all. The only thing was her hand on my shoulder became a hand under my arm, and it moved across my chest, and began to roam; and all the time she was giving me the specs for coldwelding and how to get collimation for the thrusters, her face serious and concerned, and her hand stroking my belly. Fourteen years old. But she didn't look fourteen, or feel fourteen, or smell fourteen-she'd been into Lurvy's quarter of an ounce of remaining Chanel. What saved me was Vera; good thing, everything considered, because I was losing interest in saving myself. The holo froze while Janine was adding an extra strut to one of the thrusters, and Vera said, "Action message coming in. Shall I read it out for you... Paul?" "Go ahead." Janine withdrew her hand slightly as the holo winked away, and the screen produced the message: We've been requested to ask you for a favor. The next outbreak of the 130-day syndrome is estimated to occur within the next two months. HEW thinks that a full-coverage visual of all of you describing the Food Factory and emphasizing how well things are going and how important it is will significantly reduce tensions and consequent damage. Please follow the accompanying script. Request compliance soonest possible so that we may tape and schedule broadcast for maximum effect. "Shall I give you the script?" Vera asked. "Go ahead-hard copy," I added. "Very well... Paul." The screen turned pale and empty, and she began to squirt out typed sheets of paper. I picked them up to read while I sent Janine off to wake up her sister and father. She didn't object. She loved doing television for the folks back home, it always meant fan letters from famous people for the brave young astronette. The script was what you would expect. I programmed Vera to roll it for us line by line, and we could have read it in ten minutes. That was not to be. Janine insisted her sister had to do her hair, and even Lurvy decided she had to make up and Payter wanted his beard trimmed. By me. So, all in all, counting four rehearsals, we blew six hours, not counting a month's power, on the TV broadcast. We all gathered before the camera, looking domestic and dedicated, and explained what we were going to be doing to an audience that wouldn't be seeing it for a month, by which time we would already be there. But if it would do them any good, it was worth it. We had been through eight or nine attacks of the 130-day fever since we took off from Earth. Each time it had its own syndrome, satyriasis or depression, lethargy or light-hearted joy. I had been outside when one of them hit-that was how the big telescope got broken-and it had been about an even bet whether I would ever make it back inside the ship. I simply didn't care. I was hallucinating loneliness and anger, being chased by apelike creatures and wishing I were dead. And back on Earth, with billions of people, nearly all of them affected to one degree or another, in one or another way, each time it hit it was pure bell. It had been building up for ten years-eight since it was first identified as a recurring scourge-and no one knew what caused it. But everybody wanted it stopped. Day 1288. Docking day! Payter was at the controls, wouldn't trust Vera on a thing like that, while Lurvy was strapped in over his head to call off course corrections. We came to relative rest just outside the thin cloud of particles and gas, no more than a kilometer from the Food Factory itself. From where Janine and I were sitting in our life-support gear it was hard to see what was going on outside. Past Payter's head and Lurvy's gesticulating arms we could catch glimpses of the enormous old machine, but only glimpses. no more than a glimmer of blue-lit metal and now and then a docking pit or the shape of one of the old ships- "Hellfire! I'm drifting away!" "No, you aren't, Payter. The goddam thing's got a little acceleration!" -and maybe a star. We didn't really need the life-support; Payter was nudging us gently as he would a jellyfish in a tank. I wanted to ask where the acceleration came from, or why; but the two pilots were busy, and besides I did not suppose they knew the answer. "That's got it. Now bring her in to that center docking pit, middle of that row of three." "Why that one?" "Why not? Because I say so!" And we edged in for a minute or two, and came to relative rest again. And we matched and locked. The Heechee capsule at the forward end mated neatly with the ancient pit. Lurvy reached down and killed the board, and we all looked at each other. We were there. Or, to put it another way, we were halfway. Halfway home. Day 1290. It was no surprise that the Heechee had breathed an atmosphere we could survive in. The surprise was that any of it was left in this place, after all the tens or hundreds of thousands of years since anyone breathed any of it. And that was not the only surprise. The others came later, and were scarier and worse. It was not just the atmosphere that had survived. The whole ship had survived-in working condition! We knew it as soon as we were inside and the samplers had shown us we could take off our helmets. The blue-gleaming metal walls were warm to the touch, and we could feel a faint, steady vibration. The temperature was around twelve-cool, but no worse than some Earthside homes I've been in. Do you want to guess what the first words were spoken by human beings inside the Food Factory? They came from Payter, and they were: "Ten million dollars! Jesus, maybe even a hundred!" And if he hadn't said it, one or another of us would. Our bonus was going to be astronomical. Trish's report hadn't said whether the Food Factory was operational or not-for all we knew, it could have been a riddled hulk, empty of anything that made it worthwhile. But here we had a complete and major Heechee artifact, in working condition! There was simply nothing like it to judge against. The tunnels on Venus, the old ships, even Gateway itself had been carefully emptied of nearly all their contents half a million years before. This place was furnished! Warm, livable, thrumming, soaked with weak microwave radiation, it was alive. It did not seem old at all. We had little chance to explore; the sooner we got the thing moving in toward Earth, the sooner we would cash in on its promise. We allowed ourselves an hour to roam around in the breathable air, poking into chambers filled with great gray and blue metal shapes, slithering down corridors, eating as we wandered, telling each other over the pocket communicators (and relayed through Vera to Earth) what we found. Then work. We suited up again and began the job of derigging the side-cargos. And that was where we ran into the first trouble. The Food Factory was not in free orbit. It was accelerating. Some sort of thrust was driving it. It was not great, less than one percent of a G. But the electric rocket assemblies weighed more than ten tons each. Even at one percent of perceived weight, that meant over a hundred kilograms of weight, not counting ten tons worth of inertia. As we began to unship the first one it pulled itself free at one end and began to fall away. Payter was there to catch it, but it was more than he could hold for long; I pulled myself over and grabbed the side-cargo with one hand, the brace it had been fastened to with the other, and we managed to keep it in place until Janine could secure a cable over it. Then we retired inside the ship to think things over. We were already exhausted. After three-plus years in confined quarters, we were not used to hard work. Vera's bio-assay unit reported we were accumulating fatigue poisons. We bickered and worried at each other for a while, then Payter and Lurvy went to sleep while Janine and I schemed out a rigging that would let us secure each side-cargo before it was released and swing it around the Food Factory on three long cables, belayed by smaller guiding cables so that it would not smash into the hull at the far end of its travel and pound itself into scrap. We had allowed ten hours to move a rocket into position. It took three days for the first one. By the time we had it secured we were stark, staring wrecks, our heartbeats pounding, our muscles one solid ache. We took a full sleep shift and a few hours of loafing around the interior of the Food Factory before we went back to securing the rocket so that it could be started. Payter was the most energetic of us; he went prowling as far as he could go down half a dozen corridors. "All come to dead ends," he reported when he came back. "Looks like the part we can reach is only about a tenth of the object-'less we cut holes through the walls." "Not now," I said. "Not ever!" said Lurvy strongly. "All we do is get this thing back. Anybody wants to start cutting it up, it will be after we've collected our money!" She rubbed her biceps, arms folded across her chest, and added regretfully, "And we might as well get started on securing the rocket." It took us another two days to do that, but finally we had it in place. The welding fluxes they had given us to secure steel to Heechee metal actually worked. As far as we could tell from static inspection, it was solid. We retired into the ship and commanded Vera to give it a ten percent thrust. At once we felt a tiny lurch. It was working. We all grinned at each other, and I reached into my private hold-all for the bottle of champagne I had been saving for this occasion-Another lurch. Click, click, click, click-one after another our grins snapped off. There should have been only one felt acceleration. Lurvy jumped to the cyber board. "Vera! Report delta-V!" The screen lighted up with a diagram of forces: the Food Factory imaged in the middle, force arrows showing in two directions. One was our thruster, doing its job of pushing against the hull. The other was not. "Additional thrust now affecting course... Lurvy," Vera reported. "Vector result now same in direction and magnitude as previous delta-V." Our rocket was pushing against the Food Factory. But it wasn't doing much good. The factory was pushing back. Day 1298. So we did what we obviously had to do. We turned everything off and screamed for help. We slept, and ate, and wandered around the factory for what seemed like forever, wishing the 25-day delay did not exist. Vera wasn't much help. "Transmit full telemetry," she said, and, "Stand by for further directives." Well, we were doing that already. After a day or two I pulled the champagne out anyway, and we all drank up. At . 01G the carbonation had more muscle than gravity did, and actually I had to hold my thumb over the bottle and my palm over each glass to squirt and catch the spraying champagne. But after a fashion we toasted. "Not so bad," said Payter when he had chug-a-lugged his wine. "At least we've got a couple million each." "If we ever live to collect it," snarled Janine. "Don't be such a downer, Janine. We knew when we started out that the mission might bum out." And so we had; the ship was designed so that we could start back on our basic fuel, then rerig the photon-thrusters to get us home-in another four years or so. "And then what, Lurvy? I'll be an eighteen-year-old virgin! And a failure." "Oh, God. Janine, go explore for a while, won't you? I'm tired of the sight of you." And so were all of us, of each other. We were more tired of each other, and less tolerant, than we had been all the way out in the cramped quarters of the ship. Now that we had more space to lose each other in, as much as a quarter-kilometer of it at farthest stretch, we were more abrasive on each other than ever. Every twenty hours or so Vera's small, dull brain would stumble through her contingency programs and come up with some new experiment: test thrusts at one percent of power, at thirty percent of power, even at full power. And we would get together long enough to suit up and carry them out. But they were always the same no matter how hard we pushed against the Food Factory, the artifact sensed it, and pushed back at exactly the right magnitude and in exactly the right direction to keep its steady acceleration to whatever goal it had in mind. The only useful thing Vera came up with was a theory: the factory had used up the comet it was working on and was moving on to a new one. But that was only intellectually interesting. It did not do a practical thing to help. So we wandered around, mostly alone, carrying the cameras into every room and corridor we could reach. What we saw they saw, and what they saw was transmitted on the time-sharing beam to Earth, and none of it offered much help. We found where Trish Bover had entered the factory easily enough-Payter did that, and called us all to look, and we gathered silently to inspect the remnants of a long-decayed lunch, the discarded pantyhose and the graffiti she had scratched on the walls: TRISH BOVER WAS HERE And GOD HELP ME! "Maybe God will," said Lurvy after a while, "but 1 don't see how anybody else can." "She must have been here longer than I thought," Payter said. "There's junk scattered all around in some of the rooms." "What kind of junk?" "Old spoiled food, mostly. Down toward the other landing face, you know where the lights are?" I did, and Janine and I went to see. It was her idea to keep me company, and not an idea I had been enthusiastic about at first. But maybe the 12C temperature and the lack of anything like a bed tempered her interest, or maybe she was too depressed and disappointed to be very interested in her ambition to lose her virginity. We found the discarded food easily enough. It didn't look like Gateway rations to me. It seemed to come in packets; a couple of them were unopened, three biggish ones, the size of a slice of bread, wrapped in bright red something or other-it felt like silk. Two smaller ones, one green, one the same red as the others but mottled with pink dots. We opened one experimentally. It stank of rotten fish and was obviously no longer edible. But had been. I left Janine there to go back to find the others. They opened the little green one. It did not smell spoiled, but was hard as rock. Payter sniffed it, then licked It, then broke off a crumb against the wall and chewed it thoughtfully. "No taste at all," he reported, then looked up at us, looked startled, then grinned. "You waiting for me to drop dead?" he inquired. "I don't think so. You chew on it awhile, it gets soft. Like stale crackers, maybe." Lurvy frowned. "If it really was food..." She stopped and thought. "If it really was food, and Trish left it there, why didn't she just stay here? Or why didn't she mention it?" "She was scared silly," I suggested. "Sure she was. But she did tape a report. She didn't say a word about food. The Gateway techs were the ones who decided this was a Food Factory, remember? And all they had to go on was the wrecked one they found around Phyllis's World." "Maybe she just forgot." "I don't think she forgot," said Lurvy slowly, but she didn't say any more than that. There wasn't anything more to be said. But for the next day or two we did not do much solitary exploring. Day 1311. Vera received the information about the food packages in silence. After a while she displayed an instruction to submit the contents of the packages to chemical-and bio-assay. We had already done that on our own, and if she drew conclusions she did not say what they were. For that matter, neither did we. On the occasions when we were all awake together what we mostly talked about was what we would do if Base could not figure out a way for us to move the Food Factory. Vera had already suggested that we install the other five side-cargos, turn them all on full-power at once and see if the factory could out-muscle six thrusters. Vera's suggestions were not orders, and Lurvy spoke for all of us when she said, "If we turn them on full and they don't work, the next step is to turn them on to over rated capacity. They could get damaged. And we could get stuck." "What do we do if we hear from Earth and they make it an order?" I asked. Payter cut in ahead of her. "We bargain," he said, nodding sagely. "They want us to take extra risks, they give us extra pay." "Are you going to do the bargaining, Pa?" "You bet I am. And listen. Suppose it don't work. Suppose we have to go back. You know what we do then?" He nodded to us again. "We load up the ship with everything we can carry. We find little machines that we can take out, you know? Maybe we see if they work. We stuff that ship with everything it can hold, throw away everything we can spare. Leave most of the side-. cargos here and load on big machines outside, you see? We could come back with, God, I don't know, another twenty, thirty million dollars' worth of artifacts." "Like prayer fans!" Janine cried, clapping her hands. There were piles of them in the room where Payter had found the food. There were other things there, too, a sort of metal-mesh couch, tulip-shaped things that looked like candleholders on the walls. But hundreds of prayer fans. By my quick guess, at a thousand dollars each, there was half a million dollars' worth of prayer fans in that room alone, delivered to the curio markets in Chicago and Rome... if we lived to deliver them. Not counting all the other things I could think of, that I was inventorying in my mind. I wasn't the only one. "Prayer fans are the least of it," Lurvy said thoughtfully. "But that's not in our contract, Pa." "Contract! So what are they going to do with us, shoot us? Cheat us? After we give up eight years of our lives? No. They'll give us the bonuses." The more we thought about it, the better that sounded. I went to sleep thinking about which of the gadgets and what-you-call 'ems I'd seen could be carried back, and what among them seemed the most valuable, and had my first pleasant dreams since we had tested the thruster- And woke up with Janine's urgent whisper in my ear. "Pop? Paul? Lurvy? Can you hear me?" I swam up to a sitting position and looked around. She wasn't speaking in my ear; it was my radio. Lurvy was awake beside me, and Payter came hurrying around a corner to join us, their radios going too. I said, "We hear you, Janine. What..." "Shut up!" the whisper came, hissing out with white sound as though her lips were pressed against the microphone. "Don't answer me, just listen. There's someone here." We stared at each other. Lurvy whispered, "Where are you?" "I said shut up! I'm out at the far docking area, you know? Where we found that food. I was looking for something we could bring back with us, like Pop said, only-"Well, I saw something on the floor. Like an apple, only it wasn't-kind of reddish brown on the outside and green on the inside, and it smelled like...I don't know what it smelled like. Strawberries. And it wasn't any hundred thousand years old, either. It was fresh. And I heard-wait a minute." We did not dare answer, just listened to her breathing for a moment. When she spoke again her whisper sounded scared. "It's coming this way. It's between me and you, and I'm stuck. I-keep thinking it's a Heechee, and it's going to be..." Her voice stopped. We heard her gasp; then, out loud, "Don't you come any closer!" I had heard enough. "Let's go," I said, jumping toward the corridor. Payter and Lurvy were right behind me as we hurried in long, swimming leaps down the blue-walled tunnel. When we got near the docks we stopped, looking around irresolutely. Before we could make a decision on which way to search, Janine's voice came again. It was neither whisper nor terrified cry. "He-he stopped when I told him," she said unbelievingly. "And I don't think he's a Heechee. He looks like just an ordinary person to me-well, kind of scruffy. He's just standing there staring at me, kind of sniffing the air." "Janine!" I shouted into the radio. "We're at the docks-which way from here?" Pause. Then, strangely, a kind of shocked giggle. "Just keep coming straight," she said shakily. "Come on quick. You-you wouldn't believe what he's doing now!" 3 Wan in Love The trip to the outpost seemed longer than usual to Wan, because he was troubled in his mind. He missed the companionship of the Dead Men. He missed even more what he had never had. A female. The notion of Wan in love was a fantasy for him, but it was a fantasy he wanted to make real. So many of the books helped it along, Romeo and Juliet and Anna Karenina and the old romantic Chinese classics. What drove the fantasies out of his mind at last was the sight of the outpost as he drew near. The board lighted up to signal the beginning of docking maneuvers, the flow lines on the screen melted away, and the shape of the outpost snapped into vision. But it was not the same shape as always. There was a new ship in one of the docking hatches, and a strange jagged structure strapped to one side of the hull. What could such things mean? When the docking was complete Wan poked his head through the hatch and stared around, sniffing and listening. After a time he concluded that no one was near. He did not remove his books or other possessions from the ship. He resolved to stay ready to flee at a moment's notice, but he decided to explore. Once before, long ago, some other person had been at the outpost, and he believed it had been a female. Tiny Jim had helped him identify the garment then. Perhaps he should ask Tiny Jim for advice now? Munching on a berryfruit, he handed himself easily along the rails toward the dreaming room, where the pleasure couch lay surrounded by the book machines. And stopped. Had that been a sound? A laugh or a cry, from far away? He threw the berryfruit away and stood for a moment, all his senses tensely extended. The sound was not repeated. But there was something-a smell, very faint, quite pleasant, quite strange. It was not unlike the smell in the garment he had found, and carried around for many days until the last vestige of scent was gone from it and he put it back where it was found. Had that person come back? Wan began to shake. A person! It had been a dozen years since be had smelled or touched a person! And then only his parents. But it might not be a person, it could be something else. He launched himself toward the dock where that other person had been, craftily avoiding the main passages, hurling himself down narrower, less direct ways where he did not think any stranger was likely to go. Wan knew every inch of the outpost, at least as far within it as it was possible to travel without coming to the dead-end locked walls that he did not know how to open. It took him only a few minutes to reach the place where he had carefully rearranged the debris left by the outpost's one visitor. Everything was there. But not, he saw, as he had left it. Some things bad been picked up and dropped again. Wan knew he had not done that. Apart from the discipline he had always imposed upon himself, of leaving the outpost exactly as he had found it, so that no one could ever know he was there, this time he had been especially careful to arrange the litter precisely as it had been left. Someone else was on the outpost. and he was many minutes away from his ship. Cautiously but quickly he returned to the docks on the other side, pausing at every intersection to look and smell and listen. He reached his ship and hovered at the hatch, indecisively. Run or explore? But the smell was stronger now, and irresistible. Step by step he ventured down one of the long, dead-end corridors, ready to retreat instantly. A voice! Whispering, almost inaudible. But it was there. He peered around a doorway, and his heart pounded. A person! Huddled against a wall, with a metal object at its lips, staring at him in terror. The person cried out at him: "Don't you come any closer!" But he could not have if he had wanted to; he was frozen. It was not merely a person. It was a female person! The diagnostic signs were clear, as Tiny Jim had explained them to him: two swellings at the chest, a swelling around the hips and a narrowing at the waist, a smooth brow with no bulges over the eye sockets-yes, female! And young. And dressed in something that revealed bare legs and, oh, bare arms; smooth hair tied behind the head in a long tail, great eyes staring at him. Wan responded as he had learned to respond. He fell gently to his knees, opened his garment and touched his sex. It had been several days since he had masturbated, and with no such stimulus as this; he was erect at once and shuddering with excitement. He hardly noticed the noises behind him as three other persons came racing up. It was not until he was finished that he stood up, adjusted his clothing and smiled politely to them where they were ranged around the young female, talking excitedly and almost hysterically among themselves. "Hello," he said. "I am Wan." When they did not respond, he repeated the greeting in Spanish and Cantonese, and would have gone on to his other languages except that the second female person stepped forward and said: "Hello, Wan. I'm Dorema Herter-Hall-they call me 'Lurvy'. We're very glad to see you." In all of Wan's fifteen years there had never been twelve hours as exciting, as frightening and as heart-stoppingly thrilling, as these. So many questions! So much to say and to hear. So shuddery-pleasant to touch these other persons, and to smell their smells and feel their presence. They knew so incredibly little, and so astonishingly much-did not know how to get food from the lockers, had not used the dreaming couch, had never seen an Old One or talked with a Dead Man. And yet they knew of spaceships and cities, of walking under an open sky ("sky"? it took a long time for Wan to grasp what they were talking about) and of Making Love. He could see that the younger female was willing to show him more of that, but the older one did not wish her to; how strange. The older male did not seem to make love with anyone; even stranger. But it was all strange, and he was expiring of the delights and terrors of so much strangeness. After they had talked for a long time, and he had shown them some of the tricks of the outpost, and they had shown him some of the wonders of their ship (a thing like a Dead Man, but which had never been alive; pictures of people on Earth; a flush toilet) after all these wonders, the Lurvy person had commanded that they all rest. He had at once started toward the dreaming couch, but she had invited him to stay near them and he could not say no, though all through the sleep he woke from time to time, trembling and sniffing and staring around in the dim blue light. So much excitement was bad for him. When they were all awake again he found himself still shaking, his body aching as though he had not slept at all. no matter. The questions and the chatter began again at once: "And who are the Dead Men?" "I don't know. Let us ask them? Perhaps-sometimes they call themselves 'prospectors'. From a place called 'Gateway'." "And this place they are in, is it a Heechee artifact?" "Heechee?" He thought; he had heard the word, long ago, but he did not know what it meant. "Do you mean the Old Ones?" "What do the Old Ones look like?" And he could not say in words, so they gave him a sketch pad again and he tried to draw the big waggling jaws, the frowsty beards, and as each sketch was finished they snatched it up and held it before the machine they called "Vera". "This machine is like a Dead Man," he offered, and they flew in with questions again: "Do you mean the Dead Men are computers?" "What is a 'computer'?" And then the questions would go the other way for a while, as they explained to him the meaning of "computer", and presidential elections, and the 130-day fever. And all the while they were roaming the ship, as he explained to them what he knew of it. Wan was becoming very tired. He had had little experience of fatigue, because in his timeless life when he was sleepy he slept and did not get up until he was rested. He did not enjoy the feeling, or the scratchiness in his throat, or the headache. But he was too excited to stop, especially when they told him about the female person named Trish Bover. "She was here? Here in the outpost? And she did not stay?" "No, Wan. She didn't know you would come. She thought if she stayed she would die." What a terrible pity! Although, Wan calculated, he had only been ten years old when she came, he could have been a companion for her. And she for him. He would have fed her and cared for her and taken her with him to see the Old Ones and the Dead Men, and been very happy. "Then where did she go?" he asked. For some reason, that question troubled them. They looked at each other. Lurvy said after a moment, "She got in her ship, Wan." "She went back to Earth?" "No. Not yet. It is a very long trip for the kind of ship she had. Longer than she would live." The younger man, Paul, the one who coupled with Lurvy, took over. "She is still traveling, Wan. We don't know where exactly. We are not even sure she is alive. She froze herself." "Then she is dead?" "Well-she is probably not alive. But if she is found, maybe she can be revived. She's in the freezing compartment of her ship, at minus-forty degrees. Her body will not decay for some time, I think. She thought. At any rate, she thought it was the best chance she had." "I could have given her a better one," Wan said dejectedly. Then he brightened. There was the other female, Janine, who was not frozen. Wishing to impress her, he said, "That is a gosh number." "What is? What kind of a number?" "A gosh number, Janine. Tiny Jim talks about them. When you say 'minus-forty' you don't have to say whether it is in Celsius or Fahrenheit, because they are the same." He tittered at the joke. They were looking at each other again. Wan could see that something was wrong, but he was feeling stranger, dizzier, more fatigued at every second. He thought perhaps they had not understood the joke, so he said, "Let us ask Tiny Jim. He can be reached just down this passage, where the dreaming couch is." "Reached? How?" demanded the old man, Payter. Wan did not answer; he was not feeling well enough to trust what he said, and, besides, it was easier to show them. He turned abruptly away and hauled himself toward the dreaming chamber. By the time they followed he had already keyed the book in and called for number one hundred twelve. "Tiny Jim?" he tried; then, over his shoulder, "Sometimes he doesn't want to talk. Please be patient." But he was lucky this time, and the Dead Man's voice responded quite quickly. "Wan? Is that you?" "Of course it is me, Tiny Jim. I want to hear about gosh numbers." "Very well, Wan. Gosh numbers are numbers which represent more than one quantity, so that when you perceive the coincidence you say, 'Gosh.' Some gosh numbers are trivial. Some are perhaps of transcendental importance. Some religious persons count gosh numbers as a proof of the existence of God. As to whether or not God exists, I can give you only a broad outline of..." "No, Tiny Jim. Please stick to gosh numbers now." "Yes, Wan. I will now give you a list of a few of the simplest gosh numbers. Point-five degrees. Minus-forty degrees. One thirty-seven. Two thousand and twenty-five. Ten to the 39th. Please write one paragraph on each of these, identifying the characteristics which make them gosh numbers and..." "Cancel, cancel," Wan squeaked, his voice rising higher because it smarted so. "This is not a class." "Oh, well," said the Dead Man gloomily, "all right. Point-five degrees is the angular diameter of both the sun and the Moon as seen from Earth. Gosh! How strange that they should be the same, but also how useful, because it is partly because of this coincidence that Earth has eclipses. Minus-forty degrees is the temperature which is the same in both Fahrenheit and Celsius scales. Gosh. Two thousand twenty-five is the sum of the cubes of the integers, one cubed plus two cubed plus three cubed and so on up to nine cubed, all added together. It is also the square of their sum. Gosh. Ten to the thirty-ninth is a measure of the weakness of the gravitational force as compared with the electromagnetic. It is also the age of the universe expressed as a dimensionless number. It is also the square root of the number of particles in the observable universe, that is, that part of the universe relative to Earth in which Hubble's constant is less than point-five. Also-well, never mind, but gosh! Gosh, gosh, gosh. On these goshes P. A. M. Dirac constructed his Large Numbers Hypothesis, from which he deduced that the force of gravity must be weakening as the age of the universe increased. Now, there is a gosh for you!" "You left out one thirty-seven," the boy accused. The Dead Man cackled. "Good for you, Wan! I wanted to see if you were listening. One thirty-seven is Eddington's fine structure constant, of course, and turns up over and over in nuclear physics. But it is more than that. Suppose you take the inverse, that is one over one thirty-seven, and express it as a decimal. The first three digits are Double Ought Seven, James Bond's identification as a killer. There is the lethality of the universe for you! The first eight digits are Clarke's Palindrome, point oh seven two nine nine two seven oh. There is its symmetry. Deadly, and two-faced, that is the fine structure constant! Or," he mused, "perhaps I should say, there is its inverse. Which would imply that the universe itself is the inverse of that? Namely kind and uneven? Help me, Wan. I am not sure how to interpret this symbol." "Oh, cancel, cancel," said Wan angrily. "Cancel and out." He was feeling irritable and shaky, as well as more ill than he had ever been, even when the Dead Men had given him shots. "He goes on like that," he apologized to the others. "That's why I don't usually speak to him from here." "He doesn't look well," said Lurvy worriedly to her husband, and then to Wan, "Do you feel all right?" He shook his head, because he did not know how to answer. Paul said, "You ought to rest. But-what did you mean, 'from here.' Where is, uh, Tiny Jim?" "Oh, he is in the main station," said Wan weakly, sneezing. "You mean..." Paul swallowed hard. "But you said it was forty-five days away by ship. That must be a very long way." The old man, Payter, cried: "Radio? Are you talking to him by radio? Faster-than-light radio?" Wan shrugged. Paul had been right; he needed to rest, and there was the couch, which had always been the exact proper place to make him feel good and rested. "Tell me, boy!" shouted the old man. "If you have a working FU radio...The bonus..." "I am very tired," said Wan hoarsely. "I must sleep." He felt himself falling. He evaded their clutching arms, dove between them and plunged into the couch, its comforting webbing closing around him. 4 Robin Broadhead, Inc. Essie and I were water-skiing on the Tappan Sea when my neck radio buzzed to tell me that a stranger had turned up on the Food Factory. I ordered the boat to turn immediately and take us back to the long stretch of waterfront property owned by Robin Broadhead, Inc. before I told Essie what it was. "A boy, Robin?" she shouted over the noise of the hydrogen motor and the wind. "Where in hell a boy comes to Food Factory?" "That's what we have to find out," I yelled back. The boat skillfully snaked us in to shallow water and waited while we jumped out and ran up the grass. When it recognized that we were gone, it purred down the shoreline to put itself away. Wet as we were, we ran directly to the brain room. We had begun to get opticals already, and the holo tank showed a skinny, scraggly youth wearing a sort of divided kilt and a dirty tunic. He did not seem threatening in any way, but he sure as hell had no right to be there. "Voice," I ordered, and the moving lips began to speak-queer, shrill, high-pitched, but good enough English to understand: "From the main station, yes. It is about seven seven-days...weeks, I mean. I come here often." "For God's sake, how?" I could not see the speaker, but it was male and had no accent: Paul Hall. "In a ship, to be sure. Do you not have a ship? The Dead Men speak only of traveling in ships, I do not know any other way." "Incredible," said Essie over my shoulder. She backed away, not taking her eyes off the tank, and came back with a terrycloth robe to throw over my shoulders and one for herself. "What do you suppose is 'main station'?" "I wish to God I knew. Harriet?" The voices from the tank grew fainter, and my secretary's voice said, "Yes, Mr. Broadhead?" "When did he get there?" "About seventeen point four minutes ago, Mr. Broadhead. Plus transit time from the Food Factory, of course. He was discovered by Janine Herter. She did not appear to have had a camera with her, so we received only voice until one of the other members of the party arrived." As soon as she stopped speaking the voice from the figure in the tank came up again; Harriet is a very good program, one of Essie's best. "...sorry if I behaved improperly," the boy was saying. Pause. Then, old Peter Herter: "Never mind that, by God. Are there other people on this main station?" The boy pursed his lips. "That," he said philosophically, "would depend, would it not, on how one defines 'person'? In the sense of a living organism of our species, no. The closest is the Dead Men." A woman's voice-Dorema Herter-Hall. "Are you hungry? Do you need anything?" "No, why should I?" "Harriet? What's that about behaving improperly?" I asked. Harriet's voice came hesitantly. "He, uh, he brought himself to orgasm, Mr. Broadhead. Right in front of Janine Herter." I couldn't help it, I broke out laughing. "Essie," I said to my wife, "I think you made her a little too ladylike." But that wasn't what I was laughing at. It was the plain incongruity of the thing. I had guessed-anything. Anything but this: a Heechee, a space pirate, Martians-God knows what, but not a horny teen-aged boy. There was a scrabble of steel claws from behind and something jumped on my shoulder. "Down, Squiffy," I snapped. Essie said, "Just let him nuzzle neck for a minute. He'll go away." "He isn't dainty in his personal habits," I snarled. "Can't we get rid of him?" "Na, na, galubka," she said soothingly, patting the top of my head as she got up. "Want Full Medical, don't you? Squiffy comes along." She kissed me and wandered out of the room, leaving me to think about the thing that, to my somewhat surprise, was making all sorts of tiny but discomforting stirrings inside me. To see a Heechee! Well, we hadn't-but what if we did? When the first Venus explorers discovered the traces the Heechee had left, glowing blue-lined empty tunnels, spindle-shaped caves, it was a shock. A few artifacts, another shock-what were they? There were the scrolls of metal somebody named "prayer fans" (but did the Heechee pray, and if so to whom?) There were the glowing little beads called "fire pearls", but they weren't pearls, and they weren't burning. Then someone found the Gateway asteroid, and the biggest shock of all, because on it were a couple of hundred working spaceships. Only you couldn't direct them. You could get in and go, and that was it... and what you found when you got there was shock, shock, shock, shock. I knew. I had had the shocks, on my three silly missions-No. Two silly missions. And then one terribly unsilly one. It had made me rich and deprived me of somebody I loved, and what is silly about either of those things? And ever since then the Heechee, dead half a million years, not even a written word left to tell what they were up to, had permeated every part of our world. It was all questions, and not very many answers. We didn't even know what they called themselves, certainly not "Heechee", because that was just a name the explorers made up for them. We had no idea what these remote and godlike creatures called themselves. But we didn't know what God called Himself, either. Jehovah, Jupiter, Baal, Allah-those were names people made up. Who knew by what name He was known to His buddies? I was trying to let myself feel what I might have felt if the stranger in the Food Factory had actually been Heechee when the toilet flushed, Essie came out and Squiffy made a dash for the bowl. There are indignities to having Full Medical coverage, and a mobile bio-assay unit is one of them. "You are wasting my program time!" Essie scolded, and I realized that Harriet had been sitting patiently in the tank, waiting to be told to get on with her information about the other claims on my attention. The report from the Food Factory was all being taped and stored in any case, so Essie went to her own office to deal with her own priorities, I told Harriet to start the cook on lunch, and then I let her do her secretarial duties. "You have an appointment to testify before the Senate Ways and Means Committee tomorrow morning, Mr. Broadhead." "I know. I'll be there." "You're due for your next checkup this weekend. Shall I confirm the appointment?" That's one of the penalties of Full Medical, and besides Essie insists-she's twenty years younger than I, and reminds me of it. "All right, let's get it over with." "You are being sued by one Hanson Bover, and Morton wants to talk to you about it. Your consolidated statement for the quarter came in and is on your desk file-except for the food mine holdings, which will not be complete until tomorrow. And there are a number of minor messages-most of which I have already dealt with-for your review at your convenience." "Thank you. That's all for now." The tank went transparent and I leaned back in my chair to think. I didn't need to see the consolidated statement-I already pretty well knew what it would say. The real estate investments were performing nicely; the little bit I had left in sea farming was moving toward a record profit year. Everything was solid, except for the food mines. The last 130-day fever had cost us. I couldn't blame the guys in Cody, they weren't any more responsible than I was when the fever bit. But they had somehow let the thermal drilling get out of control, and five thousand acres of our shale were burning away underground. It had taken three months to get the mine back in operation at all, and we still didn't know what it was going to cost. no wonder their quarterly statement was late. But that was only an annoyance, not a disaster. I was too well diversified to be killed by any one sector going bad. I wouldn't have been in the food mines except for Morton's advice; the extraction allowance made it a really good thing, tax-wise. (But I'd sold most of my sea-farming holdings to buy in.) Then Morton figured out that I still needed a tax shelter, so we started The Broadhead Institute for Extra-Solar Research. The Institute owns all my stock, but I vote it, and I vote it for what I want to do. I got us into the coownership with the Gateway Corporation that financed probes to four detected but unvisited Heechee-metal sources in or near the solar system, and one of them had been the Food Factory. As soon as they made contact we spun off a separate exploitation company to deal with it-and now it was looking really interesting. "Harriet? Let me have the direct from the Food Factory again," I said. The holo sprang up, the boy still talking excitedly in his shrill, squeaky voice. I tried to catch the thread of what he was saying-something about a Dead Man (only it wasn't a man, because its name was Henrietta) speaking to him (so it wasn't dead?) about a Gateway mission she had been on (when? why hadn't I heard of her?). It was all perplexing, so I had a better idea. "Albert Einstein, please," I said, and the holo swirled to show the sweet old lined face peering at me. "Yes, Robin?" said my science program, reaching for his pipe and tobacco as he almost always does when we talk. "I'd like some best-guess estimates from you on the Food Factory and the boy that turned up there." "Sure thing, Robin," he said, tamping the tobacco with his thumb. "The boy's name is Wan. He appears to be between fourteen and nineteen years of age, probably toward the young end of the spread, and I would guess that he is fully genetically human." "Where does he come from?" "Ah, that is conjectural, Robin. He speaks of a 'main station', presumably another Heechee artifact in some ways resembling Gateway, Gateway Two and the Food Factory itself, but without any self-evident function. There do not appear to be any other living humans there. He speaks of 'Dead Men', who appear to be some sort of computer program like myself, although it is not clear whether they may not in fact be quite different in origin. He also mentions living creatures he calls 'the Old Ones' or 'the frog-jaws'. He has little contact with them, in fact avoids it, and it is not clear where they come from." I took a deep breath. "Heechee?" "I don't know, Robin. I cannot even guess. By Occam's Razor one would conjecture that living non-humans occupying a Heechee artifact might well be Heechee-but there is no direct evidence. We have no idea what Heechee look like, you know." I did know. It was a sobering thought that we might soon find out. "Anything else? Can you tell me what's happening with the tests to bring the factory back?" "Sure thing, Robin," he said, striking a match to the pipe. "But I'm afraid there's no good news. The object appears to be course-programmed and under full control. Whatever we do to it it counteracts." It had been a close decision whether to leave the Food Factory out in the Oort cloud and somehow try to ship food back to Earth, or bring the thing itself in. Now it looked as though we had no choice. "Is there-do you think it's under Heechee control?" "There is no way to be sure as yet. Narrowly, I would conjecture not. It appears to be an automatic response. However," he said, puffing on his pipe, "there is something encouraging. May I show you some visuals from the factory?" "Please do," I said, but actually he hadn't waited; Albert is a courteous program, but also a smart one. He disappeared and I was looking at a scene of the boy, Wan, showing Peter Herter how to open what seemed to be a hatch in the wall of a passage. Out of it he was pulling floppy soft packages of something in bright red wrappings. "Our assumption as to the nature of the artifact seems to be validated, Robin. Those are edible and, according to Wan, they are continually replenished. He has been living on them for most of his life and, as you see, appears to be in excellent health, basically-I am afraid he is catching a cold just now." I looked at the clock over his shoulder-he always keeps it at the right time for my sake. "That's all for now, then. Keep me posted if anything that affects your conclusions turns up." "Sure thing, Robin," he said, disappearing. I started to get up. Talking of food reminded me that lunch should be about ready, and I was not only hungry, I had plans for an afterlunch break. I tied the robe around me-and then remembered the message about the lawsuit. Lawsuits are nothing special in any rich man's life, but if Morton wanted to talk to me I probably ought to listen. He responded at once, sitting at his desk, leaning forward earnestly. "We