He turned impatiently to her. “Come on.”
She obeyed — reluctantly. It was against all her instincts, to leave something so novel, about which so many students and experts on the cultures of the spiral arm had expended so much speculative effort. Hans might be right when he said that Speaker-Between might have no idea what the Zardalu were like; but that was just as true of human knowledge of the Zardalu. There was speculation and theory, but no one knew anything. And here she was, with a perfect opportunity to determine a few facts.
Only one thing made her follow right after Rebka: the fear that had crept up her spine unbidden, like a capillary flow of ice water, when she first saw that dark-blue skin and bulky body. She did not want to be alone with a Zardalu, even an unconscious one.
According to all expert knowledge, humans had never encountered Zardalu. The Great Rising had happened before humanity moved into space. But there could be deeper wisdom than anything in the data banks. The submerged depths of Darya’s brain told her that there had been encounters, back before human recorded history.
And they had been bloody and merciless meetings. Sometime, long before, the Zardalu scouts had taken a close look at Earth. They had been stopped before they could colonize. Not by any action of early humans, but by the Great Rising. Dozens of intelligent races and scores of planets had been annihilated in that rebellion. And Earth had benefitted, unknowing, from their sacrifice. The Zardalu had been exterminated.
Or almost exterminated.
Darya found herself shaking all over as she went after Hans. He was right. They had to find Speaker-Between and warn him, even if they were not sure what they were warning him about.
Reaching the Interlocutor should in principle be trivially easy. They had entered the sphere of his body and never left it. Therefore they must still be inside Speaker-Between.
But Darya did not believe it. She did not trust the evidence of her senses anymore. The chambers containing the stasis tanks and the Zardalu were just too big to fit inside Speaker-Between. The Builders had a control of the geometry of space-time beyond anything dreamed of by the current inhabitants of the spiral arm. For all she knew, Speaker-Between could be very far away — thousands of light-years, as humans measured things.
She glanced behind her as she followed Hans Rebka to the two doors of the chamber — the same doors through which they had entered, less than an hour before. The great coffins still sat silent. But now that she knew their contents, that silence had become ominous, a calm that heralded coming activity. She was strangely uncomfortable about leaving that chamber, and even more uneasy about staying there.
As they passed through the first sliding door and then the second one, Darya knew at once that her instincts had been correct. The outside had changed. They were emerging not into the level and infinite plain where they had encountered Speaker-Between, but to a somber gray-walled room. And instead of high-ceilinged emptiness, or the webs, cables, nets, and partitions of Glister, Hans and Darya were standing before hundreds of ivory-white cubes, ranging in size from boxes small enough to tuck easily under one arm, to towering objects taller than a human. The cubes were scattered across the floor of the rectangular room, like dice cast by a giant.
Nothing moved. There was no sign of Speaker-Between.
To Darya’s surprise, after Rebka’s careful inspection of their surroundings he walked forward to look at a couple of boxes. They stood side by side and came about up to his knees. He sat down on one of them, reached into his pocket, and pulled out a packet. As she stared he opened it and started to peel the thin-skinned fruit that it contained.
“It’s still a bit cold on the inside,” he said after a few moments. “But we can’t afford to be too picky.”
“Hans! The Zardalu. We have to find Speaker-Between.”
“You mean we’d like to.” He bit off a small piece of the fruit, chewed it, and frowned. “Not too great, but it’s better than nothing. Look, Darya, I want to find Speaker-Between and talk to him as much as you do. But how? I hoped we’d find that we were still inside him, so coming out would bring us back to talk to him. It didn’t work. This place is stranger than anything I’ve ever seen in my life, and I doubt if you’re any more at home than I am. You saw the size of this artifact when we were approaching it. We could spend the rest of our lives looking for somebody, but if he doesn’t want to be found, we’d never get near him.”
Darya visualized the monstrous space construct that they had seen on the final transition of their approach, its delicate filaments stretching out millions of kilometers. Rebka was right. Its size was too big to contemplate, let alone search. But the idea of not searching…
“You mean you’re just going to sit there and do nothing?”
“No. I could make a case for that — when you don’t know what to do, do nothing. I’m going to sit and eat. And you should do the same.” He patted the box beside him. “Right here. You’re the logical one, Darya. Think it through. We have no idea where Speaker-Between is, or how to go about looking for him. And we don’t know our way around here — I mean, we don’t even know this place’s topology. But if you were to ask the most likely place for Speaker-Between to show up, I’d say it’s right here where he left us. And if you were to ask me the best way for us to spend our time, I’d say we should do two things. We should eat and rest, and we should stay where we can easily keep an eye on what’s happening back in that other room, with the Zardalu. We really ought to eat in there, too, but staring at those tanks I know I couldn’t manage a bite.”
Signs of human frailty in Hans Rebka? Darya did not know if she approved of that or not. She sat down on a white box with a fine snowflake pattern on its sides. The top was slightly warm to the touch. It gave a fraction of an inch under her weight, just enough to make it comfortable.
Maybe it was not weakness in Rebka at all. When you don’t know what to do, do nothing. One might think that would be her philosophy, the research worker who had lived in her study for twenty years. But instead she felt a huge urge to do something — anything. It was Rebka, the born troubleshooter who had lived through a hundred close scrapes, who could sit and relax.
Darya accepted a lump of cool yellow fruit. Eat. She ate. She found it slightly astringent, with a granular texture that encouraged hard chewing. No aftereffects. Rebka was right about that, too. They surely would not have been brought all this way only to be poisoned or left to starve. Except — what right did they have to make any assumptions about alien thought processes, when everything that had happened since they arrived at Gargantua had been a total mystery?
She accepted three more pieces of unfamiliar food. Still her stomach was making no objections, but she wished that what they were eating could be warmed. She felt chilled. Shivering, she set her suit at a higher level of opacity. She was ready to ask for more fruit when she noticed that Rebka was sitting up straighter on his seat and staring around him. She followed his look and saw nothing.
“What is it?”
He shook his head. “I don’t know. Only…” He was focusing his attention on the far side of the room. “Feel it? It’s not my imagination. A draft — and getting stronger.”
A cold draft. Darya realized that she had been feeling it for a while, without knowing what it was. There were chilly breezes blowing past them, ruffling his hair and tugging gently at her suit.