"I can take you where you couldn't survive physically," visar's voice said. "Here's a new world being born. The heat and fumes that you feel are just to give the flavor. In reality you'd be asphyxiated instantly, roasted in seconds, and flattened under two tons of body weight."
"This doesn't make sense. Do the Thuriens actually put sensors in places like this? It's crazy. How many visits does it get in a thousand years?"
"Actually, this is largely simulation—interpolated from data being captured long-range from orbit."
"Too hot and stuffy," Gina pronounced.
Then she was in a sea of fantastic, mountain-size sculptures of shining white, rising and curving into delicate pinnacles against a sky of pale azure, fading into pink lower down in every direction. "A wind-carved ocean of frozen methane, not much above absolute zero in temperature," visar said. "Again, interpolated reconstruction by instruments in orbit. Cool enough?"
"Too much. My bones feel cold, looking at it. But you don't
have
to use sensor data at all, do you? It could all be pure simulation?"
"Sure—I can make you a world. Any world."
"Let's go home, then. How about Scotland? I've always wanted to go there but never have. I imagine it with mountains and lochs, and little villages tucked away in glens."
She was sitting on a hillside by a rocky stream, looking across a valley over the tops of pine trees at green slopes topped by craggy bastions of gray rock. Off to one side, rooftops and a church spire huddled together before an expanse of water. Birds were chirping and insects humming. The air was cool and moist with spray from the stream.
"Is this real?" Gina asked, frowning. It couldn't be, she told herself. Scotland wasn't wired into visar.
"No," visar answered. "It's just something I made up—from what you said and what I know about Earth. I told you, I can make any world you want."
"It's too modern," Gina said, studying the offering. "The road down there is built for automobiles. I can see power lines by the houses, and there's a tractor in a tin shed." She could feel herself being carried away by the novelty of it all! Perhaps she was feeling a sense of relief in being back among surroundings that she understood. "If we're getting into fiction, let's go back a bit and make it more romantic," she said. "Maybe somewhere around Bonnie Prince Charlie's time."
"Those times weren't really very romantic," visar observed. "Most of the people lived lives ravaged by disease, poverty, ignorance, brutality. Three-quarters of the children died before they were—"
"Oh, shut up, visar. This is just a game. Leave that kind of stuff out, and make it the way we like to pretend it was."
"You mean like this?"
The. roadway turned into an unfenced cart track, while the power lines, tractor, communications dishes, and other signs of the twenty-first century disappeared. The houses changed into simpler affairs, with roofs of thatch and slate, and a steel footbridge crossing a brook below transformed into an arched construction of rough-cut stone. A dog was barking somewhere. As stipulated, everything was neat and pretty.
For a few moments Gina was astounded, even though she should have had a good idea by now of what to expect. She stood up, staring hard and consciously going through all the impressions being reported by her senses. She could feel a pebble under her shoe, and a branch from a bush beside her brushing her arm as she moved. It was uncanny. The sensation of being there was indistinguishable in any way that she could find from the real thing. Her clothes felt unusually heavy and enveloping. She looked down and saw that she was wearing a shawl and an ankle-length skirt of the period.
She was curious again. "Is there any reason why I shouldn't look around?" she asked.
"Go ahead."
She followed the stream down to a path that joined the cart track. It led to the outskirts of the village. There was a small marketplace with stalls and crude, wooden-shuttered shops displaying meat, vegetables, dairy produce, all plentiful and fresh, fabrics and linen, pottery and pans. And there was a cast of players to complete the scene, correct in character and role: farmers, merchants, tradesmen, housewives; gentry on horseback, a miller with a cartload of sacks, a jolly-faced innkeeper, two Highlanders in kilts, and children, rosy-cheeked and well fed, playing around doorways.
All of it crushingly bland, empty, and uninteresting. It came across as a not very imaginative stage set, populated by moving pieces of scenery added to finish the effect. Which, indeed, was what the inhabitants were.
Gina stopped by a gray-haired old man sitting on a doorstep, smoking a pipe. Alongside him was a sleepy-looking, black-and-white collie. "Hello," she said.
"Aye."
"It's a fine day."
"'Tis an' all."
"This looks like a nice place."
"It's no' sa bad."
"I'm not from around here."
"I can see that."
Gina stared at him. His gray eyes twinkled back at her with good-humored, imbecilic indifference as he continued puffing his pipe. Her frustration turned to exasperation. "I'm from three hundred years in the future," she said.
"We dinna get vera many o' those around here."
"visar, this isn't going to work," Gina flared. "These are just dummies. Don't they know anything? Don't they have anything to say?"
"What do you want them to say?"
"Use your imagination."
"It's
your
imagination that matters."
"Well, can't you figure it out from whatever you see in my head?" Gina demanded.
"I'm not
permitted
to," visar reminded her.
"Okay, then, I'm permitting you. Go by whatever you find. Don't take any notice of the things we humans fabricate to fool ourselves."
This time the transition was not quite instantaneous.
There was music, muted to a background level. Gina found herself clad in a plain but gracious, classically styled gown. It felt deliciously light and sheer. She was standing among others in a reception room of a large house. It was a solid, mature house, dignified but not pretentious, with high, paneled rooms, lofty gables, and intricately molded ceilings, and it stood by the sea. Across the hall was her library, and off the landing at the top of the curving stairway, the office where she worked, with its picture window framing a rocky shoreline. How she knew these things, she wasn't sure. But she smiled inwardly and gave visar full marks. Yes, it was a kind of life that she had sometimes conjured up in her daydreams.
The room that she and her guests were in had tall windows with heavy drapes, a fine marble fireplace, and furnishings in character. Above the fireplace was a crest, showing arms: unicorn and lion rampant, and a fleur-de-lis surmounted by . . . a shamrock. The music, she realized, was Celtic harp and flute. But from the dress of those present, and as she knew, somehow, anyway, the times were modern.
The words from one member of a group of people talking nearby caught her ear. "Ah, yes, but it would have been a different thing if this country hadn't overcome its internal squabbles and resisted the English." The speaker, a roundly built man with thinning hair and a pugnacious bulldog jaw, stood holding a cigar in one hand and a brandy glass in the other. He spoke with an English accent; his voice had a rasping tone and a hint of a lisp. "Ireland might even have gone solidly over to Rome when Henry VIII went the other way."
"Oh, impossible!" one of the listeners exclaimed.
"Seriously. Purely out of defiance. Then who knows what we might have seen today? The Reversion might never have happened, and England could conceivably have dominated the Irish Isles. Then, America might have been started by some kind of Protestant, Puritan, monogamy cult. Then where would all of the freedoms be that we take for granted today?"
Gina stared in sudden astonishment as she recognized the speaker. It was Winston Churchill, one of her favorite historical figures.
The glowering, stormy-faced man with thick side-whiskers, sitting talking with two women on a sofa facing the fire, was Ludwig van Beethoven.
Shaken, Gina moved her head to take in others. "
Nein.
Zat is not really true, vat zey say. Only two ideas do I haff in my life, unt vun off zem vass wrong." Albert Einstein was talking to Mark Twain.
"Don't misunderstand me. I abhor war as much as anyone—more than most, I suspect. But the reality is that evil people exist, who can be restrained only by the certainty of retaliation . . ." Edward Teller, nuclear physicist.
"Let's face it. Most decisions that matter are made by people who don't know what they're talking about." Ayn Rand, to someone who looked like Mencken.
Another voice spoke close behind her. "Splendid to see you again, Gina. Doubtless dinner will be up to the usual standard." She turned, now feeling bewildered. It was Benjamin Franklin, easily identified even in his dark, contemporary suit and tie. He leaned closer to whisper. "Tell the secret. What are you surprising us with this time?"
"Er, venison." Gina found that she had a complete set of pseudomemories: deciding the menu; consulting with the caterers; planning the seating. The picture of the dining room was clear in her mind.
"Wonderful. One of my favorites. And my congratulations on the new book. It's bound to raise a few hackles, but somebody needed to say it. Nothing could be more obvious than that individuals are
not
equal. They differ in size, shape, speed, strength, intelligence, aptitude, and in the disposition to better themselves. Of course, the opportunities to all should be the same. But to demand equality of results as a right is absurd. Since it is impossible for anything to grow beyond its inherent potential, the only way of achieving it would be to cut all trees down to the size of the shortest."
Amazingly, Gina knew exactly what he was talking about. "I'm glad you agree," she said, forcing a thin smile.
Franklin leaned forward again and covered his mouth with a hand. "Ayn is livid that
she
didn't write it. You ought to try and find some way to console her."
"I'll bear it in mind," Gina promised, pulling herself together at last and managing a conspiratorial smile.
"Good . . . And how are your husbands? Well, I trust?"
Husbands?
"visar, what does this mean?"
"You tell me."
Heads turned toward the door. Gina followed their gaze. A lithe, athletic figure, resplendent in tuxedo and evening dress, had appeared and was beaming at the company with arms extended wide. He had piercing blue eyes, a droopy mustache, and hair that fell in yellow waves to his shoulders. "We thank all of you for coming. Dinner will be just a few minutes. Meanwhile, enjoy yourselves. Feel that this home is all your homes." Appreciative murmurs came from around.
Gina gaped at him with a mixture of disbelief and confusion. He came over to her, assured, confident, mocking behind the laughing eyes, and offered his arm. "Excuse us. May I have my wife back?" he said to Franklin.
"But of course." Franklin bowed his head and moved back.
They moved away.
"What are you doing here, Larry?" Gina hissed.
"
You
brought me here. I'm just obliging."
"I don't believe you."
"Believe yourself, then."
"Why do you always insist on acting like an asshole?"
"Why did you marry an asshole?"
"That was a long time ago. It's been over between us for years."
"Only because you made it that way."
"We weren't suited."
"Wrong. We could have had fun. You had the curiosity, but you didn't know how to handle it. So you turned the problem into something else."
"I don't know what you're talking about," Gina told him.
"Oh no? Come on, you're not really interested in listening to this bunch all night. Let's move the night along."
The reception room and the guests vanished. Larry was dominating the situation, the way he always had. Gina started to rebel, the way she always had. Why had it always had to be his way?
They had been transported upstairs to the master bedroom. Larry's jacket and tie hung on a chair, and he was standing by her. Another of his wives was lying propped against pillows on the bed. She smiled invitingly, her breasts and legs outlined through a thin, white robe that contrasted with her dark hair. Larry grinned at Gina challengingly. Despite herself, she felt an excitement rising inside her.
The woman stretched out a hand. "It's only a dream, Gina. We can do anything we like. Haven't you always been curious about everything?"
Gina felt Larry's arm slide around her waist. She pulled back. "No, I don't want this."
"Oh, but you
do.
" visar's voice said from somewhere distant.
"
Get me away from here!
"
And Gina was back in the coupler cubicle. She tore herself up from the recliner and fled into the corridor. Farther along, she passed Alan and Keith, who were just leaving the bar; she did not even see them. They exchanged baffled looks, shrugged, and continued on their way.
Ten minutes later, her chest was still thumping as she sat on her bed, smoking a tranquilizer. Yes, she thought. She had a pretty good idea of what could have deranged a planetful of Jevlenese. Small wonder that half of them seemed to have lost touch with reality.
In a rocky hollow below the mountainside, Thrax stood before the Rock of Decision, staring at the stone pillar that rose almost to the level of his head and concentrating his inner energy into his hand as he held it before him. To one side, the Master, Shingen-Hu, looked on impassively, while the three other initiates of the school sat watching from behind and the monks stood in a silent circle, projecting sympathetic thought rays.
"Believe now," Shingen-Hu told him. "There must be no holding back. Let no part of you doubt."
This had to be the moment of complete faith. Thrax focused all the effort that he had learned to muster. His hand glowed, then shone with an inner light.
"Now!" the Master commanded.
Thrax drove his hand against the solid rock. The rock yielded, and his hand passed through. He held it steady, inside the pillar, feeling the strange sensation of directed energy coursing through him, and the exhilaration of matter being subordinated to his will.