Выбрать главу

Giacomo played a finger-matching game with another braid. He lifted his closed hand, shook it twice, opened two fingers. The aggregate reared back, shivered with a sound like corn husks, weaved its head through a figure eight, said, “I we am wrong, wrong.”

Rex Live Oak approached Martin. “Hans wants the past Pans to convene in a few minutes in his quarters.”

Cham and Joe Flatworm accompanied Martin along the connecting hallways. Joe was ebullient. “Christ, they’re snakes, but they’re real charmers.”

“Snakes charming us, is that it?” Cham asked.

“Ha ha. Much easier than I thought,” Joe said. “We can work with them.”

Hans seemed gloomy as they entered his quarters. They sat in a broken circle and Hans squatted to finish the loop. Rex Live Oak stood outside the circle, arms folded.

“Stonemaker and I talked a little,” Hans said. “He still has the best English. I asked questions about their command structure. Here’s what I’ve learned so far. Every few days—our days, not theirs—they create a command council by pooling cords, each braid donating two. The pooled cords make a big slicking braid called Maker of Agreement or something like that. This braid uses memories from all the cords and makes decisions. The cords take these decisions back to their braids. There’s nothing like giving orders. That worries me.”

“Why?” Joe asked.

“Because it implies no flexibility. What if we’re in the middle of a crisis and we have to communicate with them? I think they’ll stick with what Maker of Agreement told them, no matter how things have changed… Unless they can go through the whole process again, and we can talk to Maker of Agreement directly. I couldn’t get a clear answer on that.”

“You think they’d do that in battle?”

Hans shrugged. “It’s too early to tell, but it’s never too early to worry. That’s all I’m saying.”

“We should find out what their disaster was like,” Cham said, looking down at his crossed knees. “Where they failed.”

“I’m working on it,” Hans said. “Martin, you don’t seem to have hit it off with any of them… Paola and a few others have made fast friends.”

“I haven’t made friends, either,” Joe said.

“The more we bond, the faster we can learn. Like marriage,” Hans said.

“And we should help them improve their English,” Joe said.

“They’re quick, no doubt about it,” Hans said. “They may be a lot quicker than we are. But there’s still a hell of a lot to learn before we can mesh with them in battle. Am I right?”

“Absolutely,” Rex said from the sidelines.

“I want to find out how our ship’s mind and the moms are going to integrate with Journey House’s mind, whether there will still be moms, or some form acceptable to both groups…”

“The libraries have become huge,” Martin said.

“Anything we can use?” Hans asked.

“Right now, it’s just a big light show,” Martin said. “I hope it can be translated.”

Hans nodded. “I’m satisfied with our progress, for the time being. But I don’t want the crew to be so ecstatic about our new friends that we lose sight of the problems.”

Cham and Joe nodded. Martin fingered the cuff of his overalls leg.

“Something to add?” Hans asked, observing this fiddling.

“You’re managing Rosa now,” Martin said.

Hans hesitated, then nodded with a bitter expression. “I’m managing,” he said. “It isn’t easy, believe me.”

Rex snorted. Hans looked at him with sharp disapproval, and Rex colored and backed away.

“How’s Rosa going to integrate the Brothers into her world view, her… religion?” Martin asked.

“She’ll find a way. She’s good at that sort of thing.”

“I know,” Martin said. “But what you’re doing is dangerous. It’s a game that could backfire any day.”

“Better than letting her run loose, am I right?” Hans asked.

None of the ex-Pans answered.

“Or getting rid of her,” Hans said. “Of course, I’d hate to have to do that. But if worse comes to worse, there’s always that possibility.”

Martin’s face paled. Nobody said anything for a long time, ten seconds—an impressive lull for such a conversation. “Not very smart,” Joe said finally. “Making a martyr.”

“Well, shit, something will happen,” Hans said. “We’re facing a lot of problems more frightening than Rosa.”

Hans invited Stonemaker to meet the full complement of Dawn Treader’s crew, to familiarize them with a Brother, and to explain, in person, the Brothers’ history, in particular their experiences with the Killers.

Hans led Stonemaker into the schoolroom, laddering toward the central star sphere. The crew watched in polite, stiff silence as the Brother undulated through his own ladder field—a cylinder—into their midst.

Martin had learned to identify Stonemaker by the color patterns of two components in his “head”—bright yellow and black stripes on the anterior portion.

“Stonemaker is a friend,” Hans said, arm around the braid’s neck. Smell of burnt cabbage—a sign of affection, Martin had learned, and one he hoped he would find more pleasant as time passed.

Those of the human crew who had not yet met a Brother wrinkled their noses apprehensively. To hear tales was very different from direct experience.

“We we have similar lives, memories,” Stonemaker said.

The repetition of pronouns was going to be unavoidable. By linguistic and cultural convention even deeper than religion, Brother language used two personal pronouns, the first referring to an individual braid or a group of braids, the second to the braid’s or the group’s component cords. I we, we we. Possessives became more confused: we mine, with cords first, individual’s possessive second; we our or we ours for group possessives. Other complications—this we, I we myself, we our ourselves—crept in on an unpredictable basis.

Interestingly, references to humans always relied on single pronouns. Martin hoped this did not reveal prejudice on the part of the Brothers.

“I we myself will pass on to you some of we our lives,” Stonemaker said. “When we we work together, to kill those who killed we our past—” smell of something like turpentine “—we will find common thought, strength.

“We we believe we our worlds were much like your Earth and Mars.”

Inside the star sphere, images of two planets, the first a rich and almost uniform green, the second half as large and yellow ochre and brown in color. “We our kind grew young first on the world you can call Leafmaker. We our time past was long, hundreds of thousands of times year.” Smell of dust and warm sunlight on soil. “Your time past shorter than we ours. But we we able to travel between worlds often, as you did not. We we made young on second other planet, Drysand I we will name it. Ten thousand times years we we lived there, not making weapons, having no enemies.

“Killers come to we us as friends, smelling we our innocent radiation. Killers come as long friends made of jointed parts.”

Stonemaker projected an image of a collection of shining spheres beaded together, a giant chromium caterpillar. Martin was instantly reminded of the Australian robots, shmoos they had been named; these might have been variations on the same form. “Long friends like machines for you, but living, alive within. They tell of wide places beyond, full of interest, that we we are invited to join, to learn, and then we we smell we our world is sick with weapons, it is dying. We we make power-filled ships, leave our kind to die. We we can’t travel between suns, but leave anyway, and watch we our worlds be eaten, made into millions of killer machines. Then come the ones you name Benefactors, and there is a war. We our worlds are gone, only a few alive, but we we are taken in by Benefactors, and removed from the war, to seek Killers. This is short version; long when library smells good to you.