Flip leads us to the lift, which takes us down further into the ground rather than up. We stop in a dimly lit chamber, with blue lights along the walls. I grasp the knife I lifted from the armory as we descend. Flip points. “Over there.”
I’m startled to see the shadows of about one hundred people standing along the far wall. Each is motionless, rigid. I walk up to one of the figures. Its skin is drawn, lips rigid, teeth jutting forward. Nails extend from shriveled, bent fingers. The mummy is adorned in some type of blue outfit with metal buttons. Strangely, the one non-desiccated feature is the mummy’s eyes, which are strangely lucid and a striking blue.
“That is Private Silian Dorse. She became inactive 1,112 years ago. She was the top in her class at Dartmouth — a university. I do miss her.” Troll the box rolls to each erect body, producing a short biography. This person enjoyed a game called tennis; this poor soul detested breakfast; this individual was the best rifle shot in the unit.
“Where’s my ancestor, Jonston?” I ask.
Troll leads me to a tall body with broad shoulders. Strange, lively brown eyes stare at me — my mother’s eyes. My gut squeezes and breakfast is on its way up. I turn away and gain my composure. I want so desperately to sob, but my brain won’t allow it.
“Troll, all these people died young, didn’t they?” Bets asks cautiously.
“Yes they did,” the machine voice answers.
Theo looks at all of us with silent concern. We understand that we are in danger, although the nature of the threat is unclear. We realize that we still haven’t accomplished any of our intended goals. Theo clears his throat, “Troll, please take us back upstairs to see more about what happened during the fall of the ancients.”
“Very well.”
The room grows dark as we ascend into artificial daylight.
The viewing space is now filled with a giant blue, green, and white sphere, rotating slowly in a field of ebony velvet. I gasp at its beauty. “Is this our world, Troll?”
“Yes, Amy Marksman.” A small, blinking white dot appears on one of the green blobs of earth. “We are here at this spot.” I presume the blobs are continents floating in the ocean. There’s so much ocean. Troll continues. “The mysterious terrorist attack likely began at this spot, a place once called New York.” Another dot appears on the globe. “The world that culminated in creatures like me was connected in many ways. Communication among the human machine interfaces occurred through a vast, complex network of cables of optical fibers.” The globe before us bursts with white lines like webs. “Power was distributed by organic materials usually in parallel with the communications system. Most facilities were not completely independent. When the attack by the substance occurred, the wires connecting all the cities, homes, factories, schools, hospitals, et cetera, began to degrade quickly.” The lines on the globe connected to New York thin and disappear. We have little idea of what Troll is talking about, but it’s apparent that the loss of connections was a problem.
“The first course of action by the network of human machine interfaces, including me, was to cut back the growth of the attacking material, which was more insidious than any weapon every envisioned. We began to send as many materials to destroy the advancing wave.” The images before us change to explosions, fire, and dirt billowing into the sky. The boxes we saw flying in the air of the cities are now crashing into buildings. Large, bird-like vehicles that Troll calls planes fall from the sky into the earth. The worst vision is of a box that is clearly full of children. They are looking out of their windows helplessly as the box crashes into a stone building, exploding on impact.
“You killed people in their carts and destroyed cities?” Bets asks breathlessly.
“The only logical course of action was to use every vehicle and weapon at our disposal to sever all connections to the New York attack. We also eliminated the city and its surrounding areas to avoid further contamination.”
We freeze, much like the mummies below us. Troll and its kind were cold, calculating, and clearly homicidal. Those poor people had put themselves in the hands of their destroyers. And we all realize that we now have placed ourselves in these very same hands.
“Unfortunately, the attacks were not confined to New York. All major network nodes throughout the world were experiencing the same degradation of wires and cables connecting them. We continued to confine the infections, but we failed. Any vessels leaving the planet were decommissioned to prevent spread beyond orbit.” The white lines connecting points across the globe vanish quickly. Within a few moments, the lines are nearly gone.
Theo is clearly nervous. “Troll, why was this place spared?”
“This facility and a few others across the globe were commissioned to operate independently. Power is furnished by an internal fusion reactor deep in the ground below us that is rated for 10,000 years. Communication is via a satellite link and passive, long-range radar.”
“Troll, we got no idea what you’re talking about,” Theo complains.
“Simply put, this facility, me, will survive for another 9,000 years as long as external threats are eliminated. Internal threats also must be curtailed.”
If I understand Troll’s last sentence, we’re in trouble.
“What about the people in this facility?” Bets asks, her voice warbling. “The people in the cellar?”
“They disagreed with my actions and were disabled. I removed the air from the facility, suffocating them. I keep them here, preserved, as a memorial.”
“Are you still able to talk with others — others like you?” I ask, trying to divert the subject.
“Yes, there are 30 intact HM units around the world. We communicate via a series of satellites but have lost contact with other interfaces beyond earth. We are very isolated and cannot see far beyond our enclaves.”
“Are there other ancient ones on earth?” Theo keeps the questioning going.
“If you mean other humans that are associated with the governments that arose after earth was isolated — no. The planet has been quarantined indefinitely because of the threat of the agent that destroyed the networked system. If it gets out, it may destroy all of civilized, industrialized space, which I assume has spread considerably in scope during the past centuries. Of course, surviving humans such as yourselves have been allowed to persist because you are not conceived as a threat.”
“Thanks, we appreciate it,” Bets responds.
Troll pauses for a few minutes as if it is considering what information it should divulge next. “There may be a stranded vessel in my quadrant of this continent.”
Theo perks up. “If I understand correctly, and believe me, I’m only getting bits and pieces here, you think there might be some ancient ones — or space people — stranded with a ship near here?”
“Yes, Theo leader. Three-hundred and sixty-seven days ago I detected the signature of an ion propulsion drive near the ocean, here.” The image of earth zooms to a patch showing our location and that of the downed vessel near a large body of water, likely the ocean.
“How far away’s this ship?” Theo asks.
“Do you still use standard units of measure for distance such as kilometers?”
“No, I don’t know about kilometers. How about the distance a horse can travel on a working trot?”
Troll is working through calculations. “About a week’s ride from here. Why do you ask Theo? I hope that you do not intend to leave. That would be unacceptable.”
“Just wondering. I’m ready for a break.” Theo nods at all of us. “Let’s wander a bit.”
Troll’s box rolls away to tend to some unknown business.