James P Hogan. Inherit The Stars. Giant Series #1

techniques, had revealed that the continuity from ancient to modem

had not been as smooth as supposed. There was a confused period in

the recent past-at about fifty thousand years before-during which

the curve was discontinuous, and a comparatively abrupt lengthening

in the day had occurred. Furthermore, the rate of deceleration was

measurably greater after this discontinuity than it had been

before. Nobody knew why this should have happened, but it seemed to

indicate a period of violent climatic upheaval, as the corals had

taken generations to set-

tie down to a stable growth pattern afterward. The data seemed to

indicate that widespread changes had taken place on Earth around

this mysterious point in time, probably accompanied by global

flooding, and all in all there could be enough behind the story to

explain the complete disappearance of any record of the Lunarians’

existence.

The fourth main theory was that of the Returning Exiles, which

found these attempts to explain the disappearance of the

terrestrial Lunarians artificial and inadequate. The basic tenet of

this theory was that there could be only one satisfactory reason

for the fact that there were no signs of Lunarians on Earth: There

had never been any Lunarians on Earth worth talking about. Thus,

they had evolved on Minerva as Danchekker maintained and had

evolved an advanced civilization, unlike their contemporary

brothers on Earth, who remained backward. Eventually, compelled by

the Ice Age threat of extinction, the two superpowers of Cerios and

Lambia had emerged and begun the race toward the Sun in the way

described by Linguistics. Where Linguistics had gone wrong,

however, was that by the time of Charlie’s narrative, these events

were already historical; the goal was already achieved. The

Lambians had drawn ahead by a small margin and had already

commenced building settlements on Earth, several of them named

after their own towns on Minerva. The Cerians followed hard on

their heels and established a fire base on Luna, the objective of

course being to knock out the Lambian outposts on Earth before

moving in themselves.

This theory did not explain the flight time of Charlie’s ship, but

its supporters attributed the difficulty to unknown differences

between Minervan and local (Lunar) dating systems. On the other

hand, it required only a few pilot Lambian bases to have been set

up on Earth by the time of the war; thus, whatever remained of

these after the Cerian assault, could credibly have vanished in

fifty thousand years.

And as the battle lines were drawn up and the first ranging shots

started whistling up and down the corridors of Navcomms, in

no-man’s-land sat Hunt. Somehow, he was convinced, everybody was

right. He knew the competence of the people around him and had no

doubt in their ability to get their figures right. If, after weeks

or months of patient effort, one of them pronounced that x was 2,

then he was quite prepared to believe that, in all probability, it

would turn out to be. Therefore, the paradox had to be an illusion.

To try to argue which side was right and which was wrong was

missing the whole point. Somewhere in the maze, probably so

fundamental that nobody had even thought to question it, there had

to be a fallacy-some wrong assumption that seemed so obvious they

didn’t even realize they were making it. If they could just get

back to fundamentals and identify that single fallacy, the paradox

would vanish and everything that was being argued would slide

smoothly into a consistent, unified whole.

chapter eighteen

“You want me to go to Jupiter?” Hunt repeated slowly, making sure

he had heard correctly.

Caidwell stared back over his desk impassively. “The Jupiter Five

Mission will depart from Luna in six weeks time,” he stated.

“Danchekker has gone about as far as he can go with Charlie. What

details are left to be found out can be taken care of by his staff

at Westwood. He’s got better things he’d like to be doing on

Ganymede. There’s a whole collection of alien skeletons there, plus

a shipload of zoology from way back that nobody’s ever seen the

like of before. It’s got him excited. He wants to get his hands on

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