The World at the End of Time by Frederick Pohl

The boy searched his memory. “What you called the Big Bang?” he guessed.

“That’s right. The Big Bang. It started out terribly hot and terribly dense, but as it expanded it cooled off. It didn’t grow into space. It made the space, as it grew, and it filled it with things—and finally we came along.”

Balit blinked up at Viktor. “Were we the only ones who came along, Viktor?” he asked.

“I don’t know the answer to that, either, Balit. I haven’t heard of any others. There could have been. There might have been millions of different kinds of people. They could have evolved and developed and then died away, just as human beings did— except for us few.”

“It must have been beautiful, when there were all those stars and galaxies.”

“It was. But stars die, too. All things die, even the universe, even—” To Viktor’s surprise, he found his throat tightening. He had to turn his head away for a moment.

“What’s wrong, Viktor?” Balit said in sudden alarm.

“Nothing, Balit. I think you’d better go to sleep now.”

“No,” the boy insisted. “You looked very sad just then. Was it about something bad? Was it—” He hesitated, then said in a rush, “Was it about the love partner you told me about?”

“It was about my wife,” Viktor corrected him.

Balit nodded soberly. “I know how Frit or Forta would feel if one of them lost the other,” he told Viktor. He looked at him for a moment, then said, sounding very tentative, “Viktor? Didn’t Nrina say she could make you a mate? Don’t you think you might let her?”

Viktor glared at him with a sudden near-anger. Then he relaxed, took a deep breath, and tousled the boy’s hair. “You’re officially grown-up,” he said, “but I think you’ve got a little way to go in some ways. That isn’t how it works, Balit.”

“Then how does it works Viktor?” Balit persisted.

Viktor shook his head. “For me, now,” he said, “I don’t think it’s ever going to work again at all.”

The mechanics of calling someone on Newmanhome were not that difficult, especially after Balit showed Viktor how to use the desk to do it. Actually making the call, however, was a lot harder.

Once again, it was a matter of that unbreakable speed limit of light’s velocity. (The human race had never managed to use tachyons or the Einstein-Rosen-Podolsky effect for any practical purpose. With only their own tiny little cluster of astronomical objects to work on, they hadn’t really needed to.) At their current orbital positions, Moon Mary was a good five hundred million miles from Newmanhome—nearly three-quarters of an hour each way for a message to arrive. You couldn’t converse. It was more like sending a telegram and waiting for a response, though of the course the “telegram” was a television message.

So Viktor, with Balit beside him to help, put through a call to Pelly, all those hundreds of millions of miles away. “Hello, Pelly,” he said, as though reading from a script. “This is Viktor. I was hoping—” He came to a stop there, and looked to Balit for help. “Tell him what you want,” the boy prompted.

“Everything I want?”

“Yes, exactly, everything,” the boy ordered, sounding exasperated. “How will he know if you don’t tell him? Tell him you would like all the old records—about Nebo, about astronomical observations, everything you wish.”

So, gathering speed as he went along, Viktor did. It made a formidable list. When he was through, Balit leaned past him and turned off the desk. Viktor looked at him inquiringly. “What do we do now?”

“We do nothing now,” Balit told him. “It will be hours at least before Pelly can reply, and perhaps he is busy doing something else, and perhaps what you ask takes time.”

“I imagine it will,” Viktor said gloomily. Balit laughed.

“Oh, Viktor,” he said with affection, “it is only hours, perhaps, not forever. Come and walk with me. Perhaps when we get back there will be a response.”

When they had taken that belly-twisting elevator drop down to the parklike grounds around the building, Balit said curiously, “Would you really go to Nebo if you could?”

“In a hot minute,” Viktor said emphatically.

“Even though it’s dangerous?”

Viktor thought. “I’m not sure it’s dangerous anymore,” he said. “They did let that party land—”

“But then some of them were killed!”

“Yes, because they tried to force their way in,” Viktor agreed. “That might not be necessary. There are other ways of investigating what’s in those structures. Not X rays, probably; but ultrasound ranging, perhaps, or something like a neutrino source that can look right through them—”

“No one has any ‘neutrinos,’ Viktor,” Balit said in reproof. Viktor laughed. “All right then. Maybe all we’d really need is a really big can opener. And some dumb volunteer to run it— like me.”

Balit shuddered deliciously at the thought. Then he asked, “Viktor? What’s a ‘can opener’?”

There wasn’t any answer to Viktor’s call when they got back, or the next day, or the day after that.

By the end of his third week on Moon Mary Viktor had begun to wonder just how long a guest was supposed to stay. When he touched on the subject with his hosts they were invariably hospitable, and invariably hard to pin down. “Oh, but Balit loves having you here, Viktor, and Forta’s been dying to have you show him some more of those quaint old dances.”

“And it’s so good for your leg to heal here,” Forta put in helpfully.

“But Nrina—” he began.

“Oh, Nrina,” Frit said, affably dismissing Nrina. “She’ll be in touch before long, Viktor, you’ll see. That reminds me, I’ve been meaning to ask you something. Do you think those Nebo colors—the ones you showed us the other day—do you think they would make a good costume for Forta?” And then that inevitably led to a few hours with Forta in his studio, demonstrating the waltz and the Peabody, to be worked into a dance Forta was planning on the heroic subject of the disastrous landing on Nebo.

It was not merely Viktor’s desire to be a good guest—that was to say, one who left before his hosts began to despair he would ever go—that made him begin to be uncomfortable. He also had another problem that was growing larger. Moon Mary was a big place. It was full of people, all kinds of people, and Viktor could not help noticing that some of the ones he passed in the parks and streets were female—were so conspicuously female, to all of his senses, that sometimes he almost thought they were scent marking the shrubbery. It distracted him in ways he had almost forgotten.

To put it more concretely, he was getting pretty horny.

When Pelly’s answer came at last it wasn’t very helpful. The broad pumpkin face looked a little annoyed. “I’ll ask around about what you want to know, Viktor, but I don’t know much about that sort of thing myself. Markety might know; he spends a lot of time digging up old stuff, and so does his wife, Grimler. Unfortunately they’re not here now, and I’m leaving myself pretty soon. Listen. While I think of it, if you see Nrina ask her how she’s coming with my gillies. They need some more here. And say hello to Balit for me.”

That was it. Viktor looked helplessly at Balit. “Who are Markety and Grimler?”

“I guess they’re people who live on Newmanhome—I mean real people. Well, you know what I mean, Viktor,” he finished, half apologizing. Then he thought for a moment and added, “I think Markety studied with Forta for a while, when I was little.”

“Do you mean he’s a dancer? What would a dancer be doing on Newmanhome?”

Balit grinned. “Dancing, I guess. Don’t you think you should give Nrina her message?”

“Oh, well,” Viktor said, stalling, “yes, maybe . . .”

But in the long run he did—hesitantly; he had always thought that Nrina should be the one to call him. But when he saw her lean, wide-eyed face looking up at him out of the desk panel he was unexpectedly happy. Conscious of the boy beside him, Viktor said stiffly, “How are you, Nrina? I’ve missed you.”

It was a downer that she didn’t respond right away. She was gazing up at him without speaking for several seconds, but just as Viktor was beginning to feel insecure she spoke up. “That is good to hear,” she said, smiling. (Oh, of course. Distance again. Only a matter of seconds, this time, because Nrina’s habitat was less than a million miles from Moon Mary—but that was something like five seconds travel time each way. Quite long enough to be disconcerting.)

She did, Viktor thought, still seem affectionate. He gave her Pelly’s message, and Nrina thought for a moment. “The gillies are young,” she said doubtfully. “I wasn’t going to send them for another couple of seasons. Still, it might be better for them to finish growing up where they’re going to live. These are special gillies, you know. They’re almost as strong as the original ‘gorillas’ you talk about, I think, but a lot more tractable. Like you,” she finished, with an affectionate grin. “Oh, and I’m not too happy with the DNA from the stiffs I’ve still got. If you talk to Pelly tell him to bring me some more—no,” she corrected herself, “I might as well call him myself. Well. It’s been nice talking to you. Balit, is that you? How are you doing with your genetic studies?”

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