"What kind of coordinates?" Hans asked.
"Jennifer thinks they may describe a two-dimensional image."
"You mean, television?"
"Digital, not analog—not modulated."
"A crude picture," Martin suggested.
"Perhaps only a few dozen pictures in sequence," Hakim said. "We just can't be sure yet."
"Call me when you are," Hans said.
Jennifer entered the nose and stood for a moment, blinking at them, grinning with canines prominent: Jennifer's wolfish expression of intellect triumphant. Giacomo came in behind her. She lifted her wand and said, "We've got it. Too simple to see, actually. Polar coordinates, not rectangular, spiral within a circle, a sweep point, angle theta, radius measured from the center, groups of numbers in sequence: theta, radius, gray-scale value. Theta changes every one hundred and twenty numbers. The gray-scale value gives about thirty shades. The signals translate to about a hundred graphic images before it starts to repeat. It's clumsy but simple enough for almost anyone to decode."
"Want to see?" Giacomo said.
Hans patted his arm with strained gentleness, impatient. "Show us."
Jennifer lifted her wand.
The first picture was difficult to make out, a series of blurs and blocks of shadow. Harpal pointed to a mottled oval white blur and said, "That's a face, I think. It's very low resolution, isn't it?"
"We can interpolate, do some so-called Laplace enhancements," Giacomo said. "But I thought we should see the original images first."
"Enhance. We'll worry about distortions later," Martin suggested.
Giacomo picked out simple enhancements, stabbing with his finger expertly at a menu of selections only he could see. The picture became at once more contrasting and easier to perceive, but reduced to blacks and whites with few shades of gray. "Five faces, I think," Harpal said, pointing them out slowly. Martin nodded; Hans simply looked with hands folded, frowning.
"They're not human, but they're bilaterally symmetric," Harpal said.
"I think there are more faces, but they're too blurred to make out," Giacomo said.
"Eyes," Jennifer said. "A mouth perhaps."
"I don't give a slick what they look like," Hans said, scowl deepening. "What do they mean!"
"Maybe these are the crew of the…" Jennifer said, and stopped.
"The crew of the other Ship of the Law. Our future comrades," Martin finished for her.
"If they are, they're awfully stupid, radiating a signal like this for anybody to pick up."
"This could be more of a last testament," Hakim said. "A dying ship, channeling power to send out a weak but detectable signal… Someone who no longer cares about being found."
"The moms would tell us at least that much—whether they're still dead, or alive. Wouldn't they?" Harpal asked.
"These aren't our partners," Hans said. "They're just some other poor sons of bitches lost out here."
More faces. Dark interiors with brightly lighted figures. They began to see the overall shape of the beings: round bodies with four thick stubby legs, elongated horse-like heads on long necks, a pair of slender limbs rising from the "shoulders" and tipped with four-fingered hands. They wore harness-like outfits more useful for carrying things than as concealment.
"Centaurs," Jennifer said.
"They look more like dinosaurs to me," Giacomo said. "Sauropods."
"Tweak it again," Hans ordered.
Giacomo and Jennifer worked together to interpolate more detail. For a moment, the picture fuzzed into grayness, and then it stood out in artificial clarity, all shapes reduced to plastic simplifications. "I'll enhance shadows, since the light source seems to be from this angle," Giacomo said, pointing his finger in toward the picture experimentally.
Hans' scowl did not change. Something new and he doesn't like it, Martin thought.
Giacomo poked the unseen menu and keyboard and spoke short verbal commands, all interpreted by his wand.
The image's contrast became more dramatic, shadows more pronounced, and the scene suddenly took on depth. Five of the sauropod beings floated in an ill-defined interior, joined in a five-pointed star, heads toward the middle, linked by hand-like appendages.
"Group portrait," Martin said.
"Next picture, and tweak it the same," Hans said.
More figures appeared, arrayed with machines as difficult to riddle as the interiors of the Dawn Treadermight have been to fresh Earthbound eyes. The tenth image was a diagram: stars and larger balls against mottled dark sky. Arrays of dots and slashes that might have been labels for the image seemed to be compromised by the enhancements, but when Giacomo removed the enhancements, the symbols made no more sense than before.
Hakim leaned closer to the picture and said, "I can make out a familiar constellation. Familiar to the search team, at least… We have called it the Orchid. It has been with us for a year now. It looks a little different, however… The brightest star, there…"He gestured to Giacomo, who surrendered control of the image to him. Hakim brought up a crystalline starfield, live, and rotated it until he found the constellation he wanted. Then he flash-compared the blurred chart with the fresh image, adjusted for scale, and the corresponding stars jumped in and out, the brightest jumping the farthest.
"Time has passed," Hakim said, "but these are the same stars. Notice that stars in the distant background do not jump."
"I noticed," Hans said. "How long has it been?"
Hakim worked his momerath quickly. "If estimates of proper motion are correct, this image would have to be one, perhaps two thousand years old."
"They've been out here two thousand years?" Harpal asked, whistling.
The next few images showed the spacecraft itself from several angles: three spheres linked by necks.
"It's like our ship," Jennifer said.
Harpal whistled again. "It's a Ship of the Law, all right."
More pictures: cabin interiors, what might have been a social or even a mating ritual, sauropods holding up pale ovoids for examination, breaking the ovoids and appearing to consume the contents, beings in repose or dead, twenty blocks of what was probably text, then a series of ten individual portraits.
The next ten images were simple charts of a stellar system. Hakim compared these charts with the charts they had made of Leviathan. The numbers and orbits of the planets were very similar, though not exact. "Puzzling," Hakim said. "There is strong similarity, but…"
"Maybe the system has changed," Martin suggested.
"Not natural changes. Twelve planets are shown in these charts, but we have detected only ten. The largest planet is not shown in the earlier charts. Where could it have come from?"
"You're saying they didn't visit Leviathan? This is another system?" Hans asked.
Hakim frowned. "I do not know what to say. The resemblance is too close to be coincidence… these six similar planets, congruent masses, orbits, diameters…"
"Forget it for now," Hans said.
The next forty images showed planets and planetary surfaces, details too muddied to be very useful. Hints of mountains or large structures with regular, smooth surfaces; a lake or body of water; dramatic cloud formations over a flat-topped mesa, sauropods in suits exploring a broad field.
The last image was startling in its directness.
Three sauropods in suits on a planetary surface confronted a being of another kind entirely; three times more massive than they, barrel-bodied, standing on two massive legs like an elephant's, with a long, flat head topped by a row of what might have been eyes, nine of them.