Authors: Terry Pratchett,Stephen Baxter
Tags: #Fiction, #Science Fiction, #Action & Adventure, #General
‘Well, the cable would wrap around the planet as it rotated, and cause a hell of a lot of damage. There was a novel called
Red Mars
—’
‘It’s not going to fall,’ Willis said.
‘How do you know?’ Sally snapped.
‘Because it’s very ancient. If it was going to break and fall, it would have done so by now. Ancient, and lacking maintenance for a long time.’
‘And how do you know
that
?’
‘Look at the ground below.’
The featureless plain was scattered with meaningless shadows. No structure, Sally realized. No sign even of a relic.
Willis said, ‘Think where we are. At the foot of a space elevator, this should be the hinterland of a port that serves a major chunk of the planet. Where are the warehouses, the rail lines, the airports? Where’s the city to house the travellers and the workers? Where’s the farmland to feed them all? Oh, I know whatever race built this probably had totally different ways from the human of solving those problems. But you don’t build a space elevator unless you want to bring materials down from space, or ship goods back up into space, and you don’t do that without some kind of facility to handle stuff on the ground.’
‘And there’s nothing down there,’ Sally said. ‘How much time, Dad? How much time to erode everything to invisibility?’
‘I can only guess. Millions of years? But the elevator survived all that time, the dust storms and the meteor impacts – and its own exotic hazards, such as solar storms and cable-snipping meteors further up. Whoever built that built it well . . .’
Suddenly the wonder of it hit her, the strangeness of the situation. Here was the product of a long-vanished indigenous civilization, about which Willis could have known
nothing
. Nothing about their nature, the detail of their lives – their rise, their fall, their evident extinction. And yet, from the sheer planetary geometry of Mars, he had deduced they must exist, or must have existed, and they must have built a space elevator. And he was right, here was that final monument, their last legacy, with everything else about them worn to dust. As if they had only ever existed for this one purpose, to fulfil Willis’s ambition. And he, in turn, had crossed two million Earths, the Gap, and three million copies of Mars, in the utter certainty of what he would eventually find. Not for the first time in her life she wondered what it must be like to live inside her father’s head.
‘OK,’ Willis said, ‘we’re coming up on the base of the cable. We’re still a ways short of Pavonis Mons. I guess the base could have been relocated . . .’
The gliders dipped towards the ground. They lit up the darkling landscape ahead with their searchlight beams, and Willis fired off a couple of flares. The artificial light made the cable gleam, a mathematical abstraction above the chaotic jumble of the plain.
At last Sally saw where the cable touched the ground – but it did not stop there. The blue line dived down into a circle of darkness, foreshortened from this distance. At first Sally thought it was a crater. Then, as the gliders flew overhead and looped past the cable itself, she realized she was looking down into a
hole
, a shaft that might have been a half-mile wide – smooth, symmetrical, a well of darkness.
Willis growled, ‘I pinged it with my radar. That’s where the cable goes, all right; that’s where the root station is. Down there. Damn thing is over twenty miles deep.’
That shocked Sally. ‘
How
deep?’
‘Deep enough to contain a decent thickness of air.’
Frank the trained astronaut took over. ‘Deep enough that we wait until the morning before taking a look inside.’
Willis hesitated. Sally knew his instinct would be to uncoil a rope and just plunge down there with a flashlight, Martian night or no Martian night. But at length he said, ‘Agreed.’
Frank said, ‘You hotshot pilots just make sure you don’t run into that cable on the way in to landing. I’m guessing that if this thing has lasted as long as you say, Willis, then if we pick a fight with it our gliders are going to come off worst . . .’
And as they came down, Sally thought she saw a light in the landscape, off in the distance, far away from this beanstalk root. A single light in the dark that was extinguished when she looked again. If it had ever existed at all.
I
N THE MORNING
the three of them resolved to hike to the pit, leaving the gliders behind. That was basically Frank and Willis’s plan. A plan that entailed leaving the gliders unguarded . . .
Sally didn’t contribute much to the discussion. She was doubtful about the plan, however. This was Mars, a typical Mars – a dead Mars, aside from whatever they were likely to encounter in the pit. There were no real hazards here. Even a dust storm, pushed by Mars’s feeble air, would barely leave a mark of its passing. The only real danger was an unlucky meteor strike, and no sentry could ward off that. To post a guard, thus splitting their tiny team, would have been absurd.
Wouldn’t it?
Sally was cautious by nature; living alone in the wild worlds of the Long Earth had made her so, long ago. But her caution was of a different degree to Frank’s. He thought in terms of physical effects, equipment failures – a meteor strike, a solar flare, a leaky pressure hull. While Sally had learned to think in terms of malevolent life – creatures out to kill her, one way or another. Maybe she was importing an over-caution bred on a too-alive Earth to a too-dead Mars where it wasn’t appropriate. Maybe this was just a distraction.
Wasn’t it?
She went along with the guys’ plan. But in her head a small alarm sounded softly, continually.
And she remembered that light she’d thought she’d seen, glowing in the Martian night.
So the three of them walked to the pit. In the bright daylight the thread of the cable was even more striking than in the twilight, a brilliant eggshell blue like no natural colour Sally had seen on any of the millions of Marses they had visited.
As they walked, Willis held up a small sensor pod to study their target. ‘That cable is about a half-inch thick,’ he said. ‘A finger’s width. You know, I’m betting it doesn’t
need
to be that thick.’
‘A safety factor,’ Frank suggested. ‘Maybe the apparent thickness is mostly dummy, a lightweight safety coating. You don’t want to be slicing off the wing of your flying machine—’
‘Or your limbs—’
‘On a super-strong thread that’s too fine to even see.’
As they talked Sally was studying the ground, the lip of the approaching pit. ‘No raying.’
‘What?’ Frank asked.
‘No splash debris, like from any other crater on Mars, or the moon.’
‘Umm,’ Frank said. ‘But there is a crater wall, of sorts . . .’
The ground rose up as they neared the lip, hard-packed under the dust, to become a circular barrier maybe fifty feet tall, Sally saw as she crested it, a wall that ran right around the rim of the hole in the ground. This was a
big
feature, it was obvious now they were standing on top of it, a hole a full half-mile across encircled by this smooth wall. Away from this highest point, which was a broad ridge so Sally had no fear of falling, the lip fell away smoothly, funnelling into the ground. From here she could only see the upper sections of the interior walls of the pit itself, which looked like compacted Martian rock.
Willis cautiously knelt down, tied a fine rope to a handheld sensor pod, and lowered it into the pit, paying out the rope, clumsy with his gloved hands. ‘Yeah, this pit is indeed just about twenty miles deep; the radar confirms it. And pretty much the same radius all the way to the bottom. It’s a cylinder.’
Frank said, ‘Surely no meteor could create a pit as deep and orderly as this. A bigger impactor doesn’t drill a deeper hole, it just melts more rock, and you get a wider, shallower crater.’
‘Hmm,’ Willis said. ‘I can imagine how it could be done. A string of small impactors coming down one after the other. Deepening the hole before it had a chance to infill.’
Frank pulled a face, looking dubious. ‘Maybe. If this
is
artificial I can think of easier ways to build it. Like with a massive heat weapon. Like we saw used in war, back on world – what was it?’
‘About a million,’ Willis said. ‘The Martian Arecibo.’
‘But,’ Sally said, ‘that’s a long way from here, stepwise. We’ve seen no evidence of cross-stepwise transfer of technologies, or even life forms, here on Mars.’
‘True. But convergence of technology types isn’t impossible,’ Willis said. ‘
We
have directed-energy weapons, and we’re not even from Mars.’
Sally shook her head. ‘We’ve got nothing but guesses.
Why
would anybody build this, though?’
Willis was monitoring the results coming back from his sensor pod. ‘I can make a guess at that. This pit is
deep
. The Martian atmosphere’s scale height is only around five miles. At twenty miles deep, you’d expect the air pressure to be around fifty times its value on the surface. Up here you have a typical Martian-surface atmosphere, a scrape of carbon dioxide at about one per cent Earth’s sea-level pressure. At the bottom of this pit, and my instruments are confirming it, that’s up to about fifty per cent.’
Frank whistled. ‘That’s better than on the Gap Mars.’
‘Right. Which is about as hospitable as we’ve found it, anywhere across three million stepwise copies. That’s why they built this pit, Sally. As a refuge.’
‘From what?’
Willis said, ‘From the collapse of the air. Maybe there was something like a volcano summer here – a deep one, a long one—’
Frank said, ‘Long enough for some breed of Martians to come up with a space programme.’
‘Right. But, like all summers, eventually it came to an end. The heat leaked out, the snow started falling at the poles, the oceans froze over and receded. The usual story.’
Sally thought she saw it now. ‘This pit is a refuge.’
‘Yeah. And it couldn’t be simpler. The pit would keep its air, water, even if civilization fell.’
Frank said, ‘And the elevator?’
‘Maybe they moved the root station here, before the end, from Pavonis or wherever else. Kind of romantic, but
very
long-term thinking. They lived in a hole in the ground to make sure they saved their air and water, but they kept their ladder to the planets.’
Sally peered into the pit. ‘So what’s down there now?’
‘Life,’ said Willis. ‘I can tell that much. There’s oxygen, methane – the atmosphere is unstable, chemically. So something must be photosynthesizing away, pumping all that oxygen into the air.’ He glanced around, at the way the slanting morning sunlight caught only the upper surface of the pit walls. ‘No, not photosynthesis. Not primarily anyhow – not enough direct light, in the depths. Maybe it’s like the deep-sea organisms on Earth, out of sight of sunlight, feeding on seeps of minerals and energy from underground. We’re close enough to the Tharsis volcanoes for that to work; the big magma pockets under those babies must leak a lot of heat.’
Sally asked, ‘So this is the last refuge of their civilization. Where’s the city lights, car exhausts, radio chatter?’
‘None of that, I’m afraid. There is one splash of metal.’
Frank looked startled. ‘Metal?’
‘An irregular form. Down on the floor of the pit.’
Sally said wistfully, ‘All this makes me think of Rectangles.’
Willis wasn’t interested, but Frank glanced at her. ‘Where?’
‘A Long Earth world I discovered with Lobsang and Joshua. We called it Rectangles, for the traces of foundation ruins we found on the ground. Another site with relics of a vanished civilization.’
‘Right. And a cache of high-tech weapons.’
She looked at Frank in surprise. ‘How did you know that? Oh. Jansson told you.’
‘We spoke a lot. Especially when she was in her last days, during Yellowstone. Told me a lot about her life. Her time with you—’
‘We’ll have to go down,’ Willis said, cutting across their talk. ‘Into the hole.’
Sally took a breath. ‘I was afraid you’d say that.’
‘In the spirit of noble exploration, I suppose,’ Frank said.
‘No. So that I can get up close and personal with that cable. And get a look at the root station.’
‘OK,’ Sally said dubiously. ‘Suppose, hypothetically, we agree we’re going to do this. How? We don’t have twenty miles of rope – do we, Frank?’
‘No. Anyhow we’d need a lot more, for doubling up, fail-safes.’
‘We don’t have winches, or jet packs—’
‘We fly down,’ Willis said. ‘We take one of the gliders, and fly down.’ He looked at them both. ‘You’re going to say no, aren’t you? Look. You can see how wide this pit is. A half-mile across – plenty of room for a spiral flight, down and back up.’
‘The air at the base is a hell of a lot thicker than the design optimum, Willis,’ Frank protested.
‘You know as well as I do that fifty per cent bar is still within the performance envelope. And besides, there’s a lot of heat seeping out of this hole in the ground. We can ride back up using the thermals; that will help.
‘Here’s the plan. Two of us will ride one glider down, leaving the other glider on the surface as backup, together with one pilot. We can offload stores before the flight. There are obvious fallback strategies, if anything goes wrong. Maybe we could even climb back up, out of this pit. The gravity is a baby.’
Frank said, ‘Why not send down a drone plane?’
‘Not equipped to take samples.’
‘But—’
‘End of discussion,’ Willis said. ‘We came here for that damn space elevator. We ain’t going home without a piece of it. Got that? OK. Let’s get down to specifics.’
They argued about how to split the crew. They agreed that one should stay on the surface, two descend. Which one, which two?
In fact the logic was clear. Willis was always going to go into the pit. Sally was the least good pilot, but as the youngest and fittest she had the best chance of climbing out of that hole in the ground if things got bad enough. Frank, meanwhile, the best pilot, was the obvious choice for the reserve on the surface.