‘You,’ he said.
‘Hello, Jack Raoul.’ It was the Ghost known to humans as the Ambassador to the Heat Sink. Raoul had dealt with this one many times before, over decades.
‘What are you doing here? How did you get past the Commission security? … Ambassador, I’m afraid I’m not much use to you any more.’
‘Jack Raoul, I am here for you.’
Raoul grimaced. What in Lethe did that mean? ‘Look, I don’t know how closely you’ve been following human politics. This isn’t a good day for me.’
‘As in former times, you hide your emotions behind weak jokes.’
‘They’re the best jokes I’ve got,’ he said defensively.
‘The truth is well known. Today you must face the sentence of your conspecifics.’
‘So you’re here for the spectacle?’
The Ghost said, ‘I am here to present another option, Jack Raoul.’
Raoul studied the Ghost’s bland, shimmering surface. There was no hope for him, of course. But he felt oddly touched. ‘You’d better come in.’
The Ambassador sailed easily into the apartment, making the walls crumble to pixels where its limbs brushed against them. ‘How is the whisky today?’
Raoul sipped it, savouring its peaty smoke. ‘You know, I’m more than two hundred years old. But I figure that I could live another two hundred and not get this stuff right.’ Still, maybe this would be his lasting legacy, he thought sourly: the best Virtual whisky in all the Third Expansion, savoured and remembered long after the Raoul Accords had been forgotten – which time might not be so far into the future.
‘You are missing Eve,’ said the Ambassador.
The Ghost’s perception had always surprised him. ‘Yeah,’ he admitted. ‘In a way this place is all I have left of her. But even here she is just an absence.’
‘You must leave her now,’ said the Ghost. ‘Come with me.’
The abruptness of that startled him. ‘Leave? How? Where are we going?’
‘Jack Raoul, do you trust me?’
Escape was impossible, of course; Coalition security was tight, the Commission omnipresent. But this lunatic Ghost must have come a long way for this stunt, whatever it was. Maybe it was only respectful to go along for the ride.
Anyhow, what did he have to lose? One last adventure, Jack: why not?
He put the whisky glass down on a low table, savouring the weight of the heavy crystal, the gentle clink of its base on the table. ‘Yes,’ he said, looking into his heart. ‘Yes, I guess I do trust you.’ He stood straight. ‘I’m ready.’
Again he had the sensation that somebody was calling his name.
The room crumbled into blocky pixels that washed away like spindrift, and suddenly he was suspended in light.
‘It is important to understand that Raoul’s fully human brain was maintained by normal physiological functions. Think of him as a human being, then, flensed and de-boned, sustained within a shell of alien artifice.
‘The operation was more like a dismantling than a medical procedure. It was rapid.
‘Immediately after the beheading I lifted the head and observed Raoul’s eyes.
‘The lids worked in irregularly rhythmic contractions for about five or six seconds. Then the spasmodic movements ceased. The face relaxed, the lids half-closed on the eyeballs, leaving only the white of the conjunctiva visible. (It will be recalled that Raoul’s “eyes” were quasi-organic Ghost artefacts.)
‘I called in a sharp voice: “Jack Raoul!” I saw the eyelids lift up, without any spasmodic contractions.
‘Raoul’s eyes fixed themselves on mine.’
Raoul looked down at himself. His body gleamed, a silver statue.
He peered around, trying to get oriented. He made out a tangle of silvery rope, a complex, multi-layered webbing that appeared to stretch around him in all directions. Everywhere he looked, Ghosts slid along the cables like droplets of mercury. And beyond and through it all, a deep glimmering light shone, a universal glow made pearl grey by the depth of the tangle.
He sure wasn’t on 51 Pegasi I-C any more.
Jack Raoul had spent his working life at the uneasy political interface between Ghost and human. In those vanishing days of more-or-less friendly rivalry, governed by more-or-less equable accords, it had been Raoul’s responsibility to ensure that humans knew what the Ghosts were doing, on their vast, remote experimental sites, just as Ghost observers were allowed to inspect human establishments. Mutual security through inspection and verification, an old principle.
But Raoul had soon learned that asking for evidence wasn’t enough. Somebody had to go out there and see for himself – and on Ghost terms. That meant a sacrifice, though, that nobody was prepared to accept.
Nobody but Raoul himself.
So his brain and spinal cord were rolled up and moved into a cleaned-out chest cavity. His circulatory system was wrapped into a complex mass around the brain pan. The Ghosts built a new metabolic system, far more efficient than the old and capable of working off direct radiative input. New eyes, capable of working in spectral regions well beyond the human range, were bolted into his skull. He was given Ghost ‘muscles’ – a tiny antigravity drive and compact actuator motors. At last he was wrapped in something that looked like sheets of mercury.
Thus he was made a Ghost.
Jack Raoul couldn’t live with people any more, outside of Virtual environments. Not that he wanted to. But he could fly in space. He could eat sunlight and survive the vacuum for days at a time, sustaining his antique human core in warmth and darkness. It was odd that he was actually more at home here in a Ghost ship than anywhere in the human Expansion.
‘…Jack Raoul.’ The Sink Ambassador swum before him, spinning languidly. ‘How do you feel?’
Raoul flexed his metal fingers. ‘How do you think I feel?’
‘You are as evasive as ever.’
‘Am I on a ship, Ambassador?’ If so it was bigger than any Ghost cruiser he had ever seen.
‘In a manner of speaking. For now, we must ascend.’
‘Ascend?’
‘Towards the light. Please.’ The Ghost rose, slow waves crossing its surface.
Effortlessly Raoul followed.
Soon they were passing into the tangle of silvery ropes. When he looked back, there was nothing to mark the place he had emerged from – not even a hollow in the tangle.
At home or not, he knew he shouldn’t be here.
‘Ambassador, I was under house arrest. How did you get me out of there?’
‘Have you improved your understanding of quantum physics since we last met?’
Inwardly, Raoul groaned.
The Ambassador began, somewhat earnestly, to describe how the Ghosts had learned to break up electrons: to divide indivisible particles.
‘The principle is simple,’ said the Ghost. ‘An electron’s quantum wave function describes the probability of finding it at any particular location. In its lowest energy state, the wave function is spherical. But in its next highest energy state the wave function has a dumb-bell shape. Now, if that dumb-bell could be stretched and pinched, could it be divided?…’
The Ambassador described how a vat of liquid helium was bathed in laser light of a precise frequency, exciting electron wave functions into their dumb-bell configurations. Then, as the pressure within the helium was increased, the electron dumb-bells split and pairs of half-bubbles drifted apart.