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There was a dazzling electric-blue flash, gone in an instant.

A shift in the Wind touched Manekato’s face. She looked into the tunnel of stars.

“If you embrace experience,” she said, “then you must embrace that.”

Without-Name lifted her head awkwardly, and fell forward onto her knuckles.

Babo was already gazing at the sky, open-mouthed. Even the Workers were backing away, small visual sensors protruding from their hides, peering up at the dangerous sky.

Suddenly the Red Moon swam there, complete, huge.

Reid Malenfant:

Nemoto said in a monotone, “We are dealing with multiple universes. That much is clear. We have seen for ourselves multiple Moons. And we have hints of multiple Earths. The Earth of Hugh McCann is clearly quite different from our Earth even if his history is interestingly convergent with ours. And the Hams talk of a Grey Earth, a third place where conditions may be different again…”

In the hut Malenfant had come to think of as the dining hall, Nemoto and Malenfant faced each other at either end of the long table. The table’s wooden surface, polished to darkness by decades of use, was bare. An elderly Ham woman was preparing lunch.

It had taken days before Malenfant had been able to face Nemoto, such was his anger at her betrayal. But she was his only companion from home, and if he was ever going to get out of here he might need her help. As for Nemoto, it was as if the incident of the betrayal had simply been a step in some grand plan, which any rational person would accept as justified.

But she was changing, Malenfant saw: becoming more withdrawn, hollow-eyed dangerously detached from the texture of the world around her, obsessed instead with huge ideas of origins and destinies.

So Malenfant listened coldly, as Nemoto described alternate realities.

“Malenfant, perhaps there are a cluster of alternate universes with identical histories up to the moment of some key event in the evolution of humanity — and differing after that only in the details of that event, and its consequences.” Nemoto waved her hands vaguely, as if trying to indicate three-dimensional space around her. “Imagine the possible universes arrayed around us in a kind of probability space, Malenfant. Do you see that universes differing only in the details of the evolution of mankind must somehow be close to ours in that graph?”

“And you’re saying this is what we’re experiencing — a crossover between possible universes? Well, maybe. But it’s just talk. What I don’t see is how you can hop from one cosmos to the next.”

Nemoto smiled coldly. “I do not know how that is possible, Malenfant. And what is more important is that I do not know why anybody should wish to make it happen.”

“Why… You think all of this is deliberate — somehow artificial?”

“Your Wheel in Africa looked artificial to me, Malenfant. Perhaps the Hams” Old Ones, if they exist, will be able to tell us what they intended.”

“And you’re going to ask them, I suppose.”

“If they exist. If I can find them. What else is there to do? Malenfant, there is something else. I have raised with McCann the question of whether other life forms exist beyond the Earth — his Earth, I mean. His scientists have looked for evidence, as ours have. They have found none. Philosophers there have propounded something similar to our Fermi Paradox to crystallize this observation.”

“Why is this important?”

“I don’t know yet. But it does appear odd that such a profound contradiction is to be found in both universes…”

Light flickered, startlingly blue, beyond the door frame. Malenfant gasped. The colour had tugged at his heart — for it was the colour of the flash from within the Wheel that had consumed Emma.

They hurried outside. There was something in the sky.

Manekatopokanemahedo:

In her first stunned glance Manekato made out a single vast continent, scorched red, and a blue-grey ocean from which the sun cast a single blunt highlight. The disc, almost full, was surrounded by a thin layer of blurred softness. An atmosphere, then. But no lights shone in the darkened, shadowed crescent.

The Wind buffeted Manekato, turbulent, suddenly uneven. Already it begins, she thought.

Small Workers, no larger than insects, hovered around Babo’s head, defying the shifting breeze; she saw their light play over his face, dense with information. “Its gross parameters are as we anticipated,” he said. “A Moon, a world, two thirds of Earth’s diameter, a quarter of its mass. It has an atmosphere—”

“It is not Farmed,” Without-Name hissed. “Your jabber of numbers is meaningless, you fool. Look at it: it is not Farmed. This Moon is primordial.”

Without-Name was right. Even without magnification Manekato could see great expanses where nothing lived: that ugly red scar of a continent, the naked oceans, those crude caps of ice. It was a world of waste, of unawakened resources.

Wild.

“Wild, yes,” growled Without-Name. “Consider the comparison with our Earth. For two million years we have cherished every atom. We have carefully sustained the diversity of species. We have even sacrificed ourselves — billions of years of lost lives — refusing longevity in order to maintain the balance of the world.”

Mane murmured, “An ecology consisting of a single species would not be sustainable.”

Without-Name laughed. “You quote childish slogans. Think, Manekato! Our species has been shaped, even as we have shaped our world. But nothing about that ugly Moon has been managed. We will have no place. We will have to fight to achieve our purposes, perhaps even to survive.”

Mane was troubled by that perception, though she acknowledged it might contain a grain of truth.

“But,” Babo said, an edge in his voice, “the Red Moon cannot be primordial — it must contain mind — for it would not be here otherwise.”

Yes, Mane thought. Yes. And for that she was afraid of this monstrous Moon. It was a deep fear, of a type she had never suffered before, a fear suffused by a sense of powerlessness. She had to search deep into the recesses of her memory, poring through the most ancient roots of the million-year-old language with which all children were born, to find an ancient, obsolete word that suited what she felt: Superstition.

Babo rattled more statistics of the Moon’s composition, describing a ball of silicate rock and a small iron core. But as his courage grew his thinking seemed to clear. “Earth,” he said. “That wandering Moon is made of the same material as Earth’s outer layers. How can that be?”

The three of them began to talk rapidly, their minds developing and sharing hypotheses.

“Given the identity of substances this body cannot have formed elsewhere in the Solar System.”

“Could it have budded off an Earth while the planet was accreting from the primordial cloud of dust and ice?”

“No, for then its proportions should resemble Earth’s global composition, and this body shows a deficiency of iron and other heavy elements. It is more like a piece of the Earth’s mantle, its outer layers, ripped up and wadded together and thrown into the sky.”

“Then an Earth must have formed, differentiated so the iron-rich rocks sank to the core, before the material to assemble this Moon was detached from the outer layers. But how would it happen?”