SOUL RIDER IV: THE BIRTH OF FLUX AND ANCHOR BY CHALKER, JACK

The dumping-ground concept extended to many of those assigned to the engineering team. They had given him what had been called even back on Titan the Yankee Maniacs, a group of young and middle-aged engineers and computer experts who had managed to get out of dominated North America or who were from some of the Pacific islands, many of which, like Hawaii, had been hit by the pulses but had been ignored afterward. This gave him some expatriate Cana­dians with names like McKenzie and Franco-Russian accents as well as Americans with thick southern accents slightly tinged with Spanish and a lot of Polynesian-looking people to boot. All had kept their nationalist loyalties intact and the Canadians and Americans would refer, every once in a while, to their homelands as “occupied” or “captive nations.”

All engineers were considered slightly mad, including Haller, but this was a particularly odd group, many looking to estab­lish outposts here of the old cultures that were dying out back where they came from (or, rather, some idealized version of them). The Polynesians, male and female alike, tended to make comments to each other in tongues like Hawaiian to keep others from knowing what they were saying and tended to go around barefoot dressed only in colorful skirts or skirtlike garments with no tops. Haller decided to let them have their eccentricities so long as they did their jobs well, and he also decided not to tell the Polynesians that he’d discovered that their little language was close enough to Maori, which he’d picked up as a boy in New Zealand, that he could make out what they were saying.

There were fourteen primary programming engineers in the Anchor Luck team, and another twelve assistants, for a total of twenty-six under him. Twelve were Polynesians—eight women, four men—and there were ten expatriate Americans and four equally dispossessed Canadians, of whom eight were women and six were men. The sexual division was not un­usual among the various departments as a whole; many more women than men had grabbed at the equal-opportunity chance to be a high-tech pioneer, particularly from places where the society was still very male-dominated. It was, overall, a young crowd for such expertise, with a large majority of those over forty married, some with children, about an even split between married and unmarried in the thirty-to-forty age group, and almost no one married under the age of thirty.

His team tended to regard him as a bit too straight and stiff, and he had been unnerved to overhear himself being referred to as the “Old Man,” but he got along reasonably well by giving them their head and letting them participate in decisions.

The Kagan 7800 was indeed an impressive machine, and when they studied its power grids and networks, they saw the potential as almost unlimited. It was possible to remotely address a meter square of grid far from the center of Anchor and tell everything about whatever was in it by simple commands.

Connie Makapuua was his chief assistant. She’d been among the first on the scene and had the most experience working out simulations on the 7800, and he studied her plans and recommendations carefully. There was unanimous agreement that the core area around the headquarters was the place to start, simply because they could test out ideas and then build over their mistakes. Once that was out of the way, though, an overall program to expand and stabilize the An­chor and create a miniature climatological system was the first order of business. They wanted clearly defined bound­aries, clear air and good light, and a system of water circula­tion which, they decided, would have to be based primarily on convection. The land could have some roll to it, but was basically flat on the master plan; this was to minimize erosion and runoff and because Luck was to be basically an agricul­tural unit.

They felt they were ready to begin, but they were held up for lack of remote connection units. These large devices were actually small auxiliary computers tied into the Overrider interface of the 7800; with one riding Guard at the 7800, deep below the still building headquarters complex, the operational engineer could sit in the midst of no-man’s-land connected through his remote unit to the big one and at once be with the computer and in the field to see and adjust his or her handi­work. Without the remotes, or “big amps” as they were called by the engineers themselves, they could do little. Some administrator with no idea of the technical situation had an idea to get some teams of initial settlers from Populations out there to plant what seed could be planted, but Haller had to patiently point out that the Anchor only looked formed. It was still basically a Flux area and anything done to it now would simply be negated by his people when the big amps arrived.

A much bigger surprise was the arrival in Gate Four of a transitory Soviet ship on its way to the next world out. Only the transport crew was released for a little discussion and walking about though; everyone else was kept sedated. Al­though it was known that both the Russians and Chinese had colonies up the line under way with some preliminary person­nel, nobody had any idea that one of them at least was this far along. It showed just how thin the time margin had been in settling New Eden.

The Soviet ship resembled the Westrex ships to a great degree, only partly because of the shared technology agree­ments to make sure all the ships fit all the gates on all the worlds. When the only way to point C was with a required stop at point B, it wouldn’t do to have any incompatibilities there. Haller was able to meet with some of the officials from the ship and discuss their own plans for their new world. They had one advantage over him, a genuine planet about the size of Venus and in the right orbit. It hadn’t been nearly human-habitable until Points had been punched and computer work begun, but the implications for back home were obvi­ous. The Soviets already had Mars; Venus was clearly next.

In a way, he envied the Soviets, not only for their planet but also for their seemingly uniform culture and solidly secu­lar outlook. He thought he had enough problems with the nuns, but now a whole contingent of Hindus had arrived and shortly another large group of Shi’ite Moslems was due in. The culture shock was building, with various incredibly wild versions of English the only real common denominator.

This was even more of a problem for administration and Populations, since some of the groups were not naturally friendly toward one another and all insisted on keeping their basic customs and cultures as much as practical. Everything from meals to child care services was communal out of necessity, and that created frequent cultural conflicts over everything from dietary requirements to sexual mores and values. The Moslems, for example, many of whom were quite conservative, with about two thirds of the women, for example, in long black chadoors with veils, had a hard time dealing with the likes of a Connie Makapuua, who hadn’t worn much more than a thin flowered skirt since coming to New Eden.

Police powers were vested in the Security unit, a much-feared and distrusted group with considerable powers from the board. They patrolled the area, enforced basic rules, stopped fights, and settled arguments even if it meant knock­ing both antagonists cold, and, occasionally, would remove a real troublemaker, who was never seen again. The official line was that they were either sent to another Anchor or shipped home on the deadhead returns of the transit ships, but no one really knew for sure. Although relatively crime-free except for petty stuff, there were now and then cases of rape or at­tempted rape and these were dealt with quickly and harshly. There were few secrets possible for long in the increasingly crowded tent city.

The Moslems had a long series of arguments about the direction of Mecca and finally decided that the only logical direction to pray in was heavenward, which, Haller decided, at least got all the religions to agree on one thing anyway. Watching the call to prayer, though, it seemed to him as if they were praying not to heaven but to the giant gaseous planet that hovered over them and gave them their strange light. He often wondered, as there was inevitable cultural dilution which could be seen even this early as so many diverse groups became crammed together in communal squa­lor, if their children, or grandchildren, might ever get con­fused as to who or what they were praying to.

Haller had been maintaining his diary, on and off, although he forgot it far more than he went to it. His dates, since arriving, had been guesswork, and he’d adopted the adminis­trative calendar, as they all had, for uniformity’s sake.

Still, they worked under extremely primitive conditions, out of prefabricated offices with long cables snaking back into the administration building’s foundation below which the com­puter and communications centers were already built and in operation. Much of the interior structure was in, laboriously built piecemeal, by Christmas, but no one wanted to pour the exterior and plasticlike interior wall sets until they were cer­tain that they had everything in there that would be needed. Once the thing was actually poured and completed, it would have to be dissolved and then redone almost from scratch. In spite of the discomfort of the people, the powers that be had no sense of urgency about completing it as long as work was going on within the temporary structures nearby.

It wasn’t until April that the massive and tough walls of the headquarters building were poured, the interior having al­ready set, and the resultant large building dominated and dwarfed everything, the synthetic outer walls covering the whole structure from masts to street level, giving it the ap­pearance of a single unified structure with surrealist over­tones. It shone and gleamed in the odd light, and looked to some like a distorted medieval castle, and to others like some ancient cathedral. It was imposing, and its solidity lifted all their spirits even though they still lived in tents and were still discovering the joys of mass pit toilets and chamber pots.

Two days later Haller received the first of four big amps— the remote computers with which he and his team could work their magic. These four were all they would get, but they were more than enough. From this point they could use the existing remotes to create out of Flux as many more as they would require.

They were finally out of the dark ages and into the twenty-second century plus. If they had a prototype of an object, they could now create as many of that object as they needed by sheer energy-to-matter transfer. From this point, they all knew, things would proceed at a rapid pace, and as crowded and miserable as everyone was, this raised everybody’s spirits.

On June 19 Haller carefully began what he called a “con­trolled bleed” from the Gate into the areas of his Anchor boundary, restoring some of what the initial program had cleared away. Over the next week all save the area immedi­ately around the headquarters building began to be covered in a permanent haze that gradually thickened and occasionally sparkled with little dancing discharges. For a while it seemed like fun, but as the days went by and it became quieter, gloomier, and harder to see—even the sounds seemed damped in it—more gloom descended over the still growing little colony, and irritations and fights increased.

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