James P Hogan. Giant’s Star. Giant Series #3

“Are you saying they didn’t know about the ship before we beamed that first signal out from Farside?” he asked.

“So it would appear,” Heller replied.

Hunt thought for a moment. “So again, whoever is handling the surveillance isn’t talking to whoever is sending these messages,” he said.

“Exactly,” Pacey agreed, nodding. “The ones handling the surveillance could hardly have not known about the Shapieron while it was here if they have any access to our communications network. There were enough headlines about it.”

“And that’s not the only strange thing,” Heller went on. “The Thuriens that we have been in contact with seem to have formed a completely distorted picture of Earth’s recent history. They think we’re all set for World War III only this time interplanetary, with orbiting bomfs everywhere, radiation and particle-beam weapons commanding the surface from the Moon. . . you name it.”

Hunt had been growing even more bemused as he listened. He could see now why it looked as if the Shapieron couldn’t have been intercepted-at least not by the Thuriens who were talking to Earth; the Ganymeans from the ship would have cleared up any misunderstandings like that straight away. But even if the Thuriens who were doing the talking hadn’t intercepted the Shapieron, they had an impression of Earth nonetheless, which meant that they could only have obtained it from the Thuriens who were handling the surveillance. The impression they had obtained was wrong. Therefore, either the surveillance wasn’t very effective, or the story being passed on was being distorted. But if the messages had been coming in composed in English, the surveillance methods had to be pretty effective, which therefore implied that

the Thuriens passing on the story weren’t passing it on straight. But that didn’t make a lot of sense, either. Ganymeans didn’t

play Machiaveffian games of intrigue or deceive one another knowingly. Their minds didn’t work that way; they were far too rational. . . unless the Ganymeans who now existed on Thurien had changed significantly in the course of the twenty-five million years that separated them from their ancestors aboard the S/iapieron. That was a thought. A lot of changes could have taken place in that time. He couldn’t arrive at any definite conclusions now, he decided, so the information was simply filed away for retrieval and analysis later.

“It sounds strange, all right,” Hunt agreed after he had sorted that much out in his head. “They must be pretty confused by now.’,

“They were already,” Caldwell said. “The reason they reopened the dialogue is that they want to come to Earth physically- I guess to straighten out the whole mess. That’s what they’ve been trying to get the UN people to arrange.”

“Secretly,” Pacey explained in answer to Hunt’s questioning look. “No public spectacles or anything like that. What it seems to add up to is that they’re hoping to do some quiet checking up without the outfit that’s running the surveillance knowing about it.”

Hunt nodded. The plan made sense. But there was a note in Pacey’s voice that hinted of things not having gone so smoothly. “So what’s the problem?” he asked, shifting his eyes to glance at both Pacey and Heller.

“The problem is the policy that’s been handed down from the top levels inside the UN,” Heller replied. “To put it in a nutshell, they’re scared of what it might mean if this planet simply opens up to a civilization that’s millions of years ahead of us. . . our whole culture could be torn up by the roots; our civilization would come apart at the seams; we’d be avalanched with technology that we’re not ready to absorb. . . that kind of thing.”

“But that’s ridiculous!” Hunt protested. “They haven’t said they want to take this place over. They just want to come here and talk.” He made an impatient throwing-away motion in the air. “Okay, I’ll accept that we’d have to play it soffly and exercise some caution and common sense, but what you’re describing sounds more like a neurosis.”

“It is,” Heller said. “The UN’s being irrational-there’s no other word for it. And the Farside delegation is following that p01-icy to the letter and operating in go-slow, stall-stall-stall mode.” She waved toward the fOlder she had indicated earlier. “You’ll see for yourself. Their responses are evasive and ambiguous, and do nothing to correct the wrong impressions that the Thuriens have got. Norman and I have tried to fight it, but we get outvoted.”

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