“Well, it wasn’t so hard to hit. The channel is over two thousand light-years wide, and as straight as one of your blowpipes. The channel was cut so recently that the galaxy’s rotation hasn’t had time to distort it too far — although, in another few hundred thousand years there will be barely a trace of this feature left…”
The ’fighter plunged along the gouge, and the view was spectacular. Above her was the gaunt, galaxy-stained sky of the Attractor; below and around her was an open tunnel of stars, hurtling past her. Looking ahead, it seemed she could see all the way to the gleaming core of the galaxy. It was difficult to remember that this neat star-walled valley was no less than fifty thousand light-years long…
At thirty-five light-years a second, the ship would reach the core in under thirty minutes.
Now the ’fighter dived into a bank of opaque dust — and then exploded out again, the stars gleaming crimson and gold in the walls of the galaxy-spanning tunnel.
Spinner punched her fist into her palm and whooped.
She heard Louise laugh. “You’re enjoying the ride, Spinner-of-Rope?”
There were voices behind Louise Armonk. “I see it.” Excited, shouting. “I see it — ”
I see it, too.
Spinner turned in her chair, the restraints riding up awkwardly across her chest. The voice had sounded as if it had come from her left.
It had been the voice of the man from her forest dreams, of course. She almost expected to see that slim, dark form, sitting out there beyond the cage: that sixty-year-old face, the hair of gray pepper-speckled with black, the vulnerable brown eyes…
Somehow, she felt he was coming closer to her. He was emerging.
But there was nobody there. She felt disappointed, wistful.
“That was Morrow, butting in,” Louise was saying. “I’m sorry, Spinner. Do you want me to patch you into the conversation?… Spinner? Did you hear me? I said — ”
“I heard you, Louise,” she Said. “I’m sorry. Yes, patch me in, please.”
“…straight ahead of us, at the end of this gouge,” Morrow was saying. “There… there… See?”
“Spinner, I’ll download our visuals to you,” Louise said.
Spinner’s faceplate image was abruptly overlaid with false colors: gaudy reds, yellows and blues, making detail easy to discriminate.
The glowing walls of the star valley dwindled into a dull mist at infinity. And at the end of the valley — almost at the vanishing point itself — there was a structure: a sculpture of thread, colored false blue.
“I see it,” Spinner breathed. Subvocally, she called for magnification.
“Do you know what you’re looking at, Spinner?” Louise’s flat voice contained awe, humility. “It’s what we suspected must have gouged out this valley. It’s a fragment of cosmic string…”
At the center of an immense cavity, walled by crowded galaxies, Lieserl and Mark rotated slowly around each other, warm human planets.
The sky was peppered with the dusty spirals of galaxies, more densely than the stars in the skies of ancient Earth. But the cavity walls were ragged and ill defined, so that it was as if Lieserl was at the center of some immense explosion. And every one of the galaxies was tinged by blue shift: the light from each of these huge, fragile star freights was compressed, visibly, by its billion-year fall into this place.
Mark took her hand. His palm was warm against hers, and when he pulled gently at her arm, her body slowly rotated in space until she faced him.
“I don’t understand,” Lieserl said. “This — cavity — is empty. Where’s the Ring?”
The light of a hundred thousand galaxies, blue-shifted, washed over his face. Mark smiled. “Have patience, Lieserl. Get your bearings first.
“Look around. We’ve arrived at a cavity, almost free of galaxies, ten million light-years across: a cavity right at the site of the Great Attractor. The whole cavity is awash with gravitational radiation. Nothing’s visible, but we know there’s something here, in the cavity… It just isn’t what we expected.”
Lieserl raised her face to stare around the crowded sky, at the galaxies embedded in the walls of this immense cave of sky. One galaxy with an active nucleus — perhaps a Seyfert emitted a long plume of gas from its core; the gas, glowing in the search-light beam of ionizing radiation from the core, trailed behind the infalling galaxy like the tail of some immense comet. And there was a giant elliptical which looked as if it was close to disintegration, rendered unstable by the fall into the Attractor’s monstrous gravity well; she could clearly see the elliptical’s multiple nuclei, orbiting each other within a haze of at least a thousand billion stars.
Some of the galaxies were close enough for her to make out individual stars — great lacy streams of them, in disrupted spiral arms — and, in some places, supernovae glared like diamonds against the paler tapestry of lesser stars. She picked out one barred-spiral with a fat, gleaming nucleus, which trailed its loosening arms like unraveling bandages. And there was a spiral heartbreakingly like her own Galaxy — undergoing a slow, stately collision with a shallow elliptical; the galaxies’ discs had cut across each other, and along the line where they merged exploding stars flared yellow-white, like a wound.
It was, she thought, as if the Universe had been wadded up, compressed into this deep, intense gravity pocket.
Everywhere she caught a sense of motion, of activity: but it was motion on an immense scale, and frozen in time. The galaxies were like huge ships of stars, Lieserl thought, voyaging in toward here, to the center of everything — but they were ships caught suspended by the flashbulb awareness of her own humanity. She longed for the atemporal perspective of a god, so that she could run this immense, trapped diorama forward in time.
“It’s all very beautiful,” she said. “But it almost looks artificial — like a planetarium display.”
Mark grunted. “More like a display of trapped insects. Moths, maybe, drawn in to an invisible gravitational flame. We’re still sifting through the data we’re gathering,” he said softly. “I wonder if any astronomers in human history have ever had such a rich sky to study… even if it does mark the end of time.
“But we’ve found one anomaly, Lieserl.”
“An anomaly? Where?”
He raised his arm and pointed, toward an anonymous-looking patch of sky across the cavity. “Over there. A source in the hydrogen radio band. As far as we can tell it’s coming from a neutron star system — but the neutron star is moving with an immense velocity, not far below lightspeed. Anomalies all round, right? The source is difficult to pick out against all this galactic mush in the foreground. But it’s undoubtedly there…”
“What’s so special about it?”
He hesitated. “Lieserl, it seems to be a signal.”
“A signal? From who?”
“How should I know?”
“Maybe it’s a freak; an artifact of our instruments.”
“Quite possibly. But we’re thinking of checking it out anyway. It’s only a million light-years away.” He smiled ruefully. “That’s all of eight hours’ travel, if you hitch a ride on a nightfighter…”
A signal, here at the end of space and time… Was it possible the motley crew of the Northern wasn’t alone after all?
The hair at the base of her skull prickled. At the end of this long, long life, she’d thought there was nothing left to surprise her.
Evidently, she was wrong.
Mark said, “Lieserl, what you’re looking at here is visible light: the Virtual display we’re drifting around inside is based on images from right at the center of the human visible spectrum. You’re seeing just what any of the others would see, with their unaided vision. But the image has been enhanced by blue shift: red, dim stars have been made to look blue and bright.”
“I understand.”
Now the blue stain faded from the galaxy images, seeping out like some poor dye.
A new color flooded the galaxy remnants, but it was the color of decay dominated by flaring reds and crimsons, though punctuated in places by the glaring blue-white of supernovae. And without the enhancement offered by the blue shift, some of the galaxies faded from her view altogether.