Chalker, Jack L. – Well of Souls 04

Com Police Laboratories, Suba

“STAND BY!”

The technicians ran for shields. To reinforce the controller’s verbal warning a series of buzzers sounded, then anxious supervisors visually confirmed that all were out of the danger zone.

They watched the experimental chamber on large monitors, for they were dealing with something they did not understand in the slightest and were taking no chances. The shielding on the room was sufficient to contain a thermonuclear explosion; the command cen­ter even had its own heavily shielded self-contained life-support systems. Even if the rest of the planetoid was destroyed they might survive.

Inside the chamber was a large, slightly concave metal disk; a small rod protruded slightly from its cen­ter. The disk aimed down at another disk, one that had no protuberance but was flattened slightly in the center. In the exact center of the lower disk a single plastic cup contained exactly four-tenths of a liter of distilled water. Nothing more.

The men in the command center grew tense as the operators hovered over their consoles.

“Energize!” came the command of the project di­rector. “On my mark . . . Mark!”

A switch was thrown. Inside the experimental cham­ber the upper disk shimmered slightly and projected an odd violet light onto the lower disk and the glass it held. Now they would learn if this attempt would suc­ceed, unlike the thousands tried earlier. So far they hadn’t even managed to boil the water.

The senior scientists of the project wondered why Zinder had been successful with essentially the same setup. They were using the plans and the math Zinder had described in bis position papers; the computers of Suba and the Council had assured them that if Zinder’s theories were correct the device would work. Historical record said he was right. Why wouldn’t it work?

They were missing Zinder’s computer, they finally concluded, and the plans for it had died with him on some Markovian world that possibly was not even in our Universe and the machine itself had been destroyed in a Com Police operation where chunks of anti-matter had been driven into collision with it.

Once understood, the problem was simply stated. To do as Zinder said could be done, what had been done, a computer would not only have to analyze a substance, but also discover its basic mathematical re­lationships, apply Zinder’s own formula to correlate it to his greater Universe, and isolate just that set of equations that fully describe that substance—in this case water, and not all water, but specific water. You were dealing not only in basic chemistry and physics, but in time as well. Apply feedback to the signal and the substance should simply cease to exist except in the memory of the computer. Reapply the signal to the Zinder energy flux and the substance should be restored. Or, take the substance’s equation and re­write it to produce, say, H2O2—with a little ingenuity and a sufficiently sophisticated computer the alchem­ist’s dreams were realizable.

And so, all the available computers of the Com area were soon linked to one network, supporting a single goal. And when Zinder’s violet beam descended, the contents of the glass were noted, analyzed, and stored.

“Feedback on my mark!” the controller called. “Mark!”

A switch was thrown. The water in the glass became discolored, then seemed to wisk out of existence. In­struments indicated normal conditions in the chamber. The scientists wasted no time getting there.

The glass was, in fact, empty. Not a drop of water remained, yet the glass was cool to the touch.

“Okay, so now we’ve done what any good micro­wave generator could do,” one glum technician com­mented. “Now let’s see you put it back.”

Again the procedures, again the signals, again the eerie photographic effect, and now, when they en­tered, the glass was full again. They measured it. Exactly four-tenths of a liter.

They had the solution then. They played with it. Over the next few days they became quite adept at transmutation, even removing or adding atomic ma­terial. Lead into gold, gold into iron, whatever. Nothing more complicated, though.

“We’re limited by our computer capacity,” the pro­ject chief explained. “Until we develop a better, faster, smaller computer designed specifically for this sort of work, as Zinder did, we’ll be limited. Give us a year, maybe two, and we’ll be able to conjure up any­thing at will, I believe—but not now.”

The political and military leaders sighed and gnashed their teeth. “We don’t have a year,” one said for all of them. “We have months at best.”

“We can’t do it, then,” the scientist told them. “It takes time to design such a piece of machinery—al­though theoretically it’s within our capabilities—and even more time to build one.”

“Playing god is for later,” a politician snapped. “First we must have a later. Is there nothing you can do now to use this device as a weapon?”

“We could just build a huge disk, or set of disks, and use them for example, to project feedback along the entire atomic spectrum. Within the device’s limits, which are governed by power source and disk size, we should be able to nullify the individual atoms, al­though we’d be unable to store them or put them back together again. Whatever is struck by such a field would cease to exist.”

“I thought matter and energy could never be created or destroyed, just changed,” somebody with a little on the ball objected.

“That’s true, within our physical laws,” the project chief admitted. “But Zinder’s mathematical reality is outside of those. In a sense we don’t create or destroy, we merely allow the Universe to transmute the atoms and energy back into a state of rest—his ethers or primal energy. In effect, the so-called laws of the Universe are turned off. for anything within that field.”

“Build it!” they ordered.

Zinder Nullifiers, they called them. They were built in under four months, months of costly gains by the Dreel, who were constantly growing in numbers, re­sourcefulness, and boldness. Little testing could be done; the Nullifiers would work or they would not. If they did not, the Com faced annihilation; if they did, the fleet of the Dreel faced oblivion.

Three Nullifiers were built and two were deployed almost immediately, guarded by the planet-wreckers of the weapons locker and the best automated defenses the Com had. They resembled giant radar antennas, over fifteen kilometers across, and were constructed of thin, metallic fabric. When folded for travel the de­vices were able to keep pace with the fastest Com ships.

True to form, the Dreel allowed the attacking Com fleet to approach unmolested; Com forces penetrated the perimeter with no opposition. Only when the cor­ridor could be effectively closed behind them did the attack begin.

The umbrellalike dishes had been deployed long before. Suddenly the Com forces slowed, inviting at­tack. The location of the Dreel main force and its cen­tral command world was known because the Dreel believed in commanding from the forward edge of the battle area, to be seen but not to be reached, advanc­ing with the forward units.

The incredibly fast needle shapes of the Dreel ships closed on the fleet from all sides in a flash; they were ready. The two Zinder Nullifiers were deployed back to back; each could sweep one hundred eighty degrees. The balance of the Com force floated between the two projectors.

The Com fleet waited. Hoped. At the speed of the Dreel fighters, human control was out of the question—computers alone could manage the necessary nano­second response time. The crews could only monitor their screens while the Dreel closed, then suffer the jolts and unexpected accelerations as the automated defenses took over; the projector crews experienced pulsed vibrations as very short bursts of Zinder feed­back were used.

Then the Dreel just weren’t there any more. Not only did they vanish suddenly, but so did all other matter within the disks’ foci. Light, even gravity van­ished, annihilated; briefly a great hole opened around the task force, one in which absolutely nothing, not even a hard vacuum, existed. A scientist checked his instruments, frowned. “That shouldn’t have hap­pened. The device was to annihilate matter, not energy.”

Scientists fell to, trying to locate the flaw. The mili­tary didn’t care; their forces were committed and the thing worked. The task force accelerated and headed for the known command center of the Dreel. Mean­while Dreel counterattacks not only continued, their intensity increased. As yet the Dreel had no idea of the danger they faced, could not understand what was involved.

The unwanted total annihilation was observed doz­ens of times before the science monitors had doped the problem out: Their relatively puny computers were unable to discriminate properly between matter and energy, and the violet ray was not fully controlled. The device had been designed for transmutation and re-creation by Zinder, not as disintegration weapon. Without the supercomputer the carrier was wild; it nullified everything it struck. Everything.

“We’re tearing a hole in the fabric of space-time itself!” one of the scientists exclaimed. “Thanks to the pulsed field we’ve been able to let things repair them­selves—but sustained nullification on a huge scale might be beyond nature’s ability to counteract!”

“The Markovian brain might not be able to handle such a huge gap,” another agreed. “The rip might be impossible to close!”

They rushed to communicators to warn the military leaders who made the decisions, but the military’s response was an unexpected one. “We have lost al­most a third of the Com; we face certain destruction. This is the only effective, deployable weapon you have managed to produce. While it is true that we might condemn ourselves by using it, we most cer­tainly will condemn ourselves by not using it. We go on!”

As its forces simply winked out of existence, the Dreel Set did what any intelligent beings would do. They started a retreat, withdrawing as quickly as pos­sible. For the bulk of their forces this was simple be­cause they were faster than anything the Com could muster. But for the mother ship, an artificial planetoid over ten thousand kilometers in diameter, such flight was not possible. While the mother ship could attain the speeds required, powering up and the preparations necessary to prevent killing all aboard would take per­haps three days. In its present shape the mother ship was not as fast as the Com ships pursuing it.

Due to the limitations of their power sources, the Zinder Nullifiers had an effective range of under one light-year; they had closed to within a parsec of their quarry when it started to move.

The Dreel knew they could not outdistance the Nul­lifiers, but those aboard the task force did not.

“Turn the forward disk on and keep it on, aimed at the Dreel mother ship, unless needed for defense,” ordered the military men; the military computers agreed that it was the only thing to do.

A hole opened before the Com task force, a hole in space—time. Not having enough experience to appre­ciate the effect of the Nullifiers, the fleet officers sud­denly discovered that they could no longer see their quarry on the other side of the hole. Even light was destroyed—and they were moving into the very hole they had created!

Scientists all over the task force held their breath.

Something winked, momentarily producing an ef­fect like a photographic negative, then there was noth­ing, not even Nullifiers.

The hole, though, didn’t stop; it expanded in all directions, devouring everything in its path. The Dreel mother ship was caught when the hole was barely a light-year wide; it devoured two stars and their at­tendant planetary systems within five days. And it kept growing. And at its center was nothing.

Gramanch, a Planet in the Galaxy M51

THE BLUE-WHITE EXPANSE OF GRAMANCH SPREAD below the shuttle as it rose toward a small and not very imposing moon. Gramanch had several moons, most no more than cratered rock and airless wastes and none larger than three thousand kilometers around. The shuttle’s destination was smaller than that but different in that it was a private moon accli­matized for its owners and not very natural at all. It was said that they had snared an asteroid, refurbished it as one would an old spaceship, added a drive, and moved it into orbit. Certainly it had not been there even a year.

Approaching it one could easily see the differences. One hemisphere was protected by some kind of energy shield that gave it the appearance of slightly opaque plastic; there were signs of greenery beneath, and of clouds.

The other hemisphere was harder to make out but as the shuttle approached the surface could be seen. It was pitted but not as cratered as the other moons. Only a huge concave dish whose metal ribs gleamed in the sunlight indicated that this must be the area of the space drive.

The Gramanch were a spacefaring race; they were expanding and had managed to do so without conflict, although there were some uneasy moments with sev­eral of the nonhuman spacefaring races they had en­countered. The people of Gramanch were small, barely a meter tall, swaddled in long sable fur from which faces like miniature lions or Pekinese dogs peered. They were unusual in that they walked on all fours but sat on hind legs when they wanted to use their thin, delicate, ape-like, fingers with opposable thumbs. They were like some sort of impossibly furry kangaroos balanced on thick thighs and curled yet muscular, furry tails.

The ship docked easily and the passengers felt slightly lighter than they had been. The difference was enough to put a spring in their step, but not enough to be uncomfortable.

Their hostess, a striking female whose flaming or­ange fur was tinged with gray and white, greeted them as they debarked: “Welcome, welcome to Nautilus,” she told them, apparently totally sincere. “I am Sri Khat, your hostess and the manager of this facility. Please do not worry about your luggage; it will be transferred to your rooms. If you will just follow me.”

They trotted happily after her, thirty-four in all, taking in the strange little world beyond the tiny two-ship-terminal.

It was green and beautiful. Grass was everywhere, and they could see copses of alien trees off to the left. The buildings, too, were alien, but were somehow pleasing and not a little imposing. Strange birds flitted through air that was exceptionally invigorating and pleasant; flowers, familiar and alien, grew everywhere; here and there small animals scurried to and fro. They passed beautifully manicured gardens and fountains spurting crystal-clear water. Amid this bucolic wonder the hostess stopped, turned, sat up and faced the crowd.

“Welcome again to Nautilus,” she repeated in the pleasant, professional tones of an old-hand tour guide. “This world, the only known product of the coopera­tion among private interests of alien creatures, exists for your comfort and pleasure. It is a resort free from pressures and fears. Feel free to come and go as you like, to wander our fields and woods, to fish our streams—to jump into a fountain if that suits you.”

They chuckled at the last, as they always did, and she continued.

“Shops and stores here are for your convenience; no tax collectors will spoil your leisure. We have fitness programs, sporting courts, restaurants, clubs and lounges, and even a gambling casino for your enjoy­ment. Everything on Nautilus is designed to help you enjoy the money you have spent and will spend here. Maps are to be found in every guest room.”

A furry hand made as if it were pawing the air, the Gramanch version of raising a hand. She nodded, rec­ognizing the man.

“What is ‘Nautilus’?” he asked curiously. “It is not a word that I’ve ever heard.”

Sri Khat’s mouth formed a toothy Gramanchian grin. “Nautilus is an alien word, of course,” she told them. “In the legends of a long-dead alien race it was the name of a fantastic pirate ship.”

They laughed again at that, for there was a joke in it. Their bank accounts would be far lighter when they left this place.

Another pawing. “Yes?”

“We’ve heard rumors that you can do wonders— arrest aging, cure even the most severe illnesses. Is that true?”

“It is true that we have certain curative methods,” the hostess acknowledged. “As you may know, we ac­cept a large number of seriously ill people every day for treatment in our special wards, and we don’t charge for it. Our success rate is quite good with terminally ill patients. Of course, you are helping pay for the service by spending your money on Nautilus, so if you drop a bundle in the casino you can at least console yourself that your loss helped save someone else’s life.”

They liked that touch. It was also good for business.

“May we see where this is done?” another asked.

A head signaled the negative. “I’m afraid not, for several reasons. First, our space is limited—the medi­cal work is done inside this world, far from here. Second, we cannot maintain a sterile environment if people other than the staff and patients continually troop through. And, finally, how would you like to be terribly ill and find yourself a tourist attraction in your own hospital bed?”

They accepted that.

Soon they were off to their rooms, settled in, and had their first gourmet meal.

Sri Khat relaxed in her private office and looked over the passenger list. It was a good bunch. Three corporation presidents, two in heavy industry with Important political connections, plus one Vice Premier. A good batch.

This was a delicate business, but a rewarding one. The Gramanch had expanded peacefully but that was ending now. They were breeding too fast, consuming too greedily, their nine colonies were getting crowded —and they had counted. Some of the alien races with whom they shared their region of space outnumbered them five or even ten to one. The Gramanch were technologically superior to any of the others, without doubt, but they were competing with other races for the same types of planets and finding very few. An expand-or-be-damned attitude, based only on the uneasy realization of who outnumbered whom, was spreading through the ruling circles. Paranoia had inspired a mind set that would lead inevitably to ag­gression and conquest. The Gramanch refused to limit their population because other races outnumbered theirs; yet they could not support the population ex­plosion their paranoia was creating.

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