Excession by Iain M. Banks

She’d never really paid any of them much attention – her interests had always been with the larger, buoyant animals of the fluid environments – but now that they were all likely to suffer the same exile or unconsciousness as the rest, she had started to take a belated, almost guilty interest in them (as though, she thought ruefully, her attention bestowed some special significance on the behaviour she witnessed, or meant anything at all to the creatures concerned).

Amorphia did not come for its regular visit; another couple of days passed.

When the avatar came to her again, she had been swimming with the purple-winged triangular rays in the shallow part of the sea extending beyond the sheer, three-kilometre cliff which was the rear of the craft. Returning, she had taken the flyer which the ship habitually put at her disposal, but asked it to drop her at the top of the scree slope beneath the cliff facing the tower.

It was a bright, cold day and the air tasted sharp; this part of the ship’s environment was cycling towards winter; all the trees save for a few everblues had lost their leaves, and soon the snows would come.

The air was very clear and from the top of the scree slope she could see the Edge islands, thirty kilometres away, out close to where the inner containment field of the ship came down like a wall across the sea.

She had scrambled down the scree in small rattles of stones like dry, fanning rivers of pebbles and dust. She had long ago learned how to use her altered centre of gravity to her advantage in this sort of adventure, and had never yet fallen badly. She got to the bottom, her heart beating hard, her leg muscles warm with the effort expended and her skin bright with sweat. She walked quickly back through the salt marsh, along the paths the ship had fashioned for her.

The sun-line was near setting when she returned to the tower, breathless and still perspiring. She took a shower and was sitting by the log fire the tower had lit for her, letting her hair dry naturally, when Gravious the black bird rapped once on the window and then disappeared again.

She pulled her robe tighter about her as the tall, dark-dressed figure of Amorphia climbed the stairs and entered the room.

‘Amorphia,’ she said, tucking her wet hair into the hood of the robe. ‘Hello. Can I get you anything?’

‘No. No, thank you,’ the avatar said, looking nervously around the circular living room.

Dajeil indicated a chair while she sat on a couch by the fire.

‘Please.’ She pulled her legs up underneath her. ‘So, what brings you here today?’

‘I -‘ the avatar began, then stopped, and pulled at its lower lip with its fingers. ‘Well, it seems,’ it started again, then hesitated once more. It took a breath. ‘The time,’ it said, then stopped, looking confused.

‘The time?’ Dajeil Gelian said.

‘It’s… it’s come,’ Amorphia said, and looked ashamed.

‘For the changes you talked about?’

‘Yes,’ the avatar said, sounding relieved. ‘Yes. For the changes. They have to start now. In fact, they have already begun. The rounding-up of the creatures comes first, and the…’ It looked unsure again, and frowned deeply. ‘The… the de-landscaping,’ it gulped. It tripped up on the next words in its rush to say them. ‘The un-geometri-… The un-geomorphologising. The… the pristinisation!’ it said, almost shouting.

Dajeil smiled, trying not to show the alarm she felt. ‘I see,’ she said slowly. ‘So it is all definitely going to happen?’

‘Yes,’ Amorphia said, breathing heavily. ‘Yes, it is.’

‘And I will have to leave the ship?’

‘Yes. You’ll have to leave the ship. I… I’m sorry.’ The avatar looked suddenly crestfallen.

‘Where am I to go?’

‘Where?’ Confused.

‘Where are you going to stop, or where will I be taken? Is it another ship, or a habitat, or an O or a planet, a rock? What?’

‘I…’ The avatar frowned again. ‘The ship does not know yet,’ it said. ‘Things are being worked out.’

Dajeil looked at Amorphia for a while, her hands absently stroking the bulge of her belly under her robe. ‘What is happening, Amorphia?’ she asked, keeping her voice soft. ‘Why is all this taking place?’

‘I can’t… there is no need… no need for you to know,’ the avatar said hesitantly. It looked exasperated, and shook its head as though angry, gaze flicking up and around the room, as though seeking something.

Finally it looked back at her. ‘I might be able to tell you more, later, if you will agree to stay on board until… until a time comes when I can only evacuate you by another vessel.’

She smiled. ‘That sounds like no great hardship. Does that mean I can stay here longer?’

‘Not here; the tower and everything else will have gone; it will mean living inside. Inside the GSV.’

Dajeil shrugged. ‘All right. I suppose I can suffer that. When will that have to happen?’

‘In a day or two,’ Amorphia said. Then the avatar looked concerned, and sat forward on the seat. ‘There… it’s possible… it’s possible there… might be a slightly increased risk to you, staying aboard until then. The ship will do all it can to minimise that, of course, but the possibility exists. And it might be…’ Amorphia’s head shook suddenly. ‘I – the ship, would like you to remain on board, if possible, until then. It might be… important. Good.’ The avatar looked as though it had startled itself. Dajeil suddenly recalled having held a tiny baby when it had farted loudly; the look of utter, blinking surprise on its face was not dissimilar to that on Amorphia’s face now. Dajeil choked back an urge to laugh, and it disappeared anyway when, as though prompted by the thought, her child kicked within her. She clamped a hand to her belly. ‘Yes,’ Amorphia said, nodding vigorously. ‘It would be good if you stayed on board… Good might come of it altogether.’ It sat staring at her, panting as though from exertion.

‘Then I had better stay, hadn’t I?’ Dajeil said, again keeping her voice steady and calm.

‘Yes,’ said the avatar. ‘Yes; I’d appreciate that. Thank you.’ It stood up suddenly from the seat, as though released by a spring within. Dajeil was startled; she almost jumped. ‘I must go now,’ Amorphia said.

Dajeil swung her legs out and stood too, more slowly. ‘Very well,’ she said as the avatar made its way to the staircase set onto the wall of the tower. ‘I hope you’ll tell me more later.’

‘Of course,’ the avatar mumbled, then it turned and bowed quickly and was gone, bootsteps clattering down the stairs.

The door slammed some moments later.

Dajeil Gelian climbed the steps to the parapet of the tower. A breeze caught her robe’s hood and spilled her heavy, still-wet hair out and down. The sun-line had set, throwing highlights of gold and ruby light across the sky and turning the starboard horizon into a fuzzy violet border. The wind stiffened. It felt cold.

Amorphia was not walking back this evening; after the creature had hurried up the narrow path through the tower’s walled garden and out of the land-gate, it just rose up into the air, without any obvious AG pack or flying suit, and then accelerated through the air in a dark, thin blur, curving through the air to disappear a few seconds later over the edge of the cliff beyond.

Dajeil looked up. There were tears in her eyes, which annoyed her. She sniffed them back angrily and wiped her cheeks. A few blinks, and the view of the sky was steady and unobscured again.

It had indeed already begun.

A flight of the dirigible creatures were dropping down from the red-speckled clouds above her, heading for the cliffs. Looking closely, she could see the accompanying drones that were their herders. Doubtless the same scene was being repeated at this moment both beneath the grey surface of the sea on the far side of the tower as well as above, in the region of furious heat and crushing pressure that was the gas-giant environment.

The dirigible creatures hesitated in the skies above; in front of them, a whole area of the cliff, perhaps a kilometre across and half that in height, simply folded in on itself in four parcel-neat sections and disappeared backwards into four huge, long glowing halls. The reassured dirigible creatures were shepherded towards one of the opened bays. Elsewhere, other parts of the cliffs were performing similar tricks; lights sparkled in the spaces revealed. The entire swathe of grey-brown scree – easily twenty kilometres across and a hundred metres in both depth and height – was folding and tipping in eight gigantic Vs and channelling several billion tonnes of real-enough rock into eight presumably reinforced ship bays, doubtless to undergo whatever transformational process was in store for the sea and the gas-giant atmosphere.

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