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Sailing Bright Eternity




  Copyright © 1995 by Abbenford Associates

  Excerpt from The Sunborn copyright © 2004 by Abbenford Associates

  All rights reserved. No part of this book may be reproduced in any form or by any electronic or mechanical means, including information storage and retrieval systems, without permission in writing from the publisher, except by a reviewer who may quote brief passages in a review.

  Cover design by Don Puckey

  Cover illustration by Don Dixon

  Warner Books

  Hachette Book Group USA

  237 Park Avenue, New York, NY 10017

  Visit our Web site at HachetteBookGroupUSA.com

  First eBook Edition: March 2005

  ISBN: 978-0-446-51128-5

  Contents

  Also by Gregory Benford

  Dedication

  Prologue: Metallovore

  An Abyss of Time

  Part One: Wondrous Ruins

  Chapter One: Half Vast

  Chapter Two: The Place of Angry Gods

  Chapter Three: Church Mice

  Chapter Four: Alexandria

  Chapter Five: Huck

  Chapter Six: Something Fatal

  Chapter Seven: Old Ones

  Chapter Eight: Grandfather

  Chapter Nine: The Strong Field Limit

  Chapter Ten: Vermin

  Chapter Eleven: The Earthers

  Chapter Twelve: Sobering Perspectives

  Chapter Thirteen: The Physical Representation

  Part Two: Soon Comes Night

  Chapter One: Worm

  Chapter Two: Annihilation Line

  Chapter Three: Interfacer

  Chapter Four: Agonies of Gravity

  Chapter Five: Three Billion Years

  Chapter Six: Deep Down Superficial

  Chapter Seven: A Few Microseconds

  Chapter Eight: Antiques Dealer

  Chapter Nine: The Tilted City

  Chapter Ten: Eine Kleine Nachtmusik

  Chapter Eleven: Sphincter Frequency

  Chapter Twelve: Grudging Respect

  Chapter Thirteen: Only Barbarians

  Chapter Fourteen: Grey Mech

  Chapter Fifteen: Transit

  Chapter Sixteen: Time Is a Horizon

  Chapter Seventeen: Transit; Wait

  Chapter Eighteen: Marching

  Chapter Nineteen: Storytelling

  Chapter Twenty: Generations

  Chapter Twenty-One: Inflection Point

  Chapter Twenty-Two: Far Futures

  Chapter Twenty-Three: Verge of Extinction

  Chapter Twenty-Four: Alexandria

  Chapter Twenty-Five: Mortal Galaxies

  Chapter Twenty-Six: A Far One

  Chapter Twenty-Seven: Radiant

  Chapter Twenty-Eight: Tiny Farmers

  Chapter Twenty-Nine: The Cauchy Horizon

  Chapter Thirty: Comfy Doubt

  Chapter Thirty-One: A Wherewhen String

  Chapter Thirty-Two: Larger Agencies

  Chapter Thirty-Three: No Erasures

  Chapter Thirty-Four: When Paltry Planets Formed a Stage

  Dispassionate Discourse

  Part Three: Categories Beyond Knowing

  Chapter One: Prisoners of Immensity

  Chapter Two: Flight

  Chapter Three: The Impressed Man

  Chapter Four: Carrion

  Chapter Five: Cards and Dodgers

  Chapter Six: The Incredible in Concrete

  A Tapestry of Thought

  Part Four: Sense of Self

  Chapter One: Melted Portals

  Chapter Two: A Fog of Flies

  Chapter Three: The Pleasure Plague

  Chapter Four: The Way of Three

  Decision Tree

  Part Five: The Silver River Road

  Chapter One: Molten Time

  Chapter Two: Confusion Winds

  Chapter Three: The Zom

  Chapter Four: Mr. Preston

  Chapter Five: The Frozen Girl

  Chapter Six: Going Upback

  Chapter Seven: Temporal Turbulence

  Chapter Eight: The Eating Ice

  Chapter Nine: Cairo

  Chapter Ten: Zom Master

  Chapter Eleven: The Past Is Labyrinth

  Chapter Twelve: Whorl

  Chapter Thirteen: Pursuit

  Part Six: Wedded to the Substrate

  Chapter One: Partial to Primates

  Chapter Two: The Gathering Up

  Chapter Three: Some Terrible Wonder

  Chapter Four: Finitudes

  Chapter Five: An Abyss of Squashed Duration

  Chapter Six: Uses of the Mose Art

  Part Seven: Gods Provisional and Descending

  Chapter One: A Mantis Blankness

  Chapter Two: Territories of Thought

  Chapter Three: Hard Pursuit

  Chapter Four: Abraham

  Chapter Five: Confusion Squall

  Chapter Six: Conceptual Spaces

  Chapter Seven: The Suredead

  Chapter Eight: Phylum Myriapodia

  Chapter Nine: Stalking

  Chapter Ten: Paths of Glory

  Part Eight: The Syntony

  In Silico

  Chapter One: Unintentional Jokes

  Chapter Two: Besen

  Chapter Three: A Long Way Ago

  Chapter Four: The Eternal Landscape of the Past

  Chapter Five: The Thermodynamics of Intelligence

  Chapter Six: Living in the Substrate

  Chapter Seven: Hard Copy

  Chapter Eight: The Thirst That from the Soul Doth Rise

  Chapter Nine: The Pain of Eternity

  Coda

  Afterword to the Galactic Center Series

  Timeline of Galactic Series

  About the Author

  BATTLE STARS

  As we got closer we could see the brawl. Fat, wobbly stars flaring like angry gods, spewing red tongues. They were the children of awful marriages, when two stars had collided, merged, and fallen into the same oblate quarrel. Stars ripped open, spilled, smelted down into fusing globs. They lit up the dark, orbiting masses of debris like tiny crimson match heads flaring in a filthy coal sack.

  Amid all that were the strangest stars of all. Fast ones, they were. Each half-covered by a hemispherical mask. Light escaped freely on one side. The mask bottled it up on the other. That pushed the star toward the mask. As far as the wretched star knew, however, it was able to eject light in only one direction. So it recoiled in the opposite way.

  Somebody was herding these stars. Those masks made them into fusion-photon engines. Sluggish, but effective. And the herd was headed for the accretion disk.

  Somebody was helping along the black hole’s appetite.

  ACCLAIM FOR GREGORY BENFORD’S CLASSIC NOVELS OF THE GALACTIC CENTER

  IN THE OCEAN OF NIGHT

  “A major novel . . . evokes truly majestic feeling for the vast distances and time scales upon which the universe operates.”

  —Magazine of Fantasy & Science Fiction

  “A brilliant book, a weather vane for the changing winds of science fiction.”

  —Publishers Weekly

  FURIOUS GULF

  “A heady mixture of science . . . and no-holds-barred adventure.”

  —New York Times Book Review

  “When it comes to conjuring the marvels of space and the bizarre possibilities of high-energy physics, Benford is second to none.”

  —Kirkus Reviews

  ALSO BY GREGORY BENFORD

  Fiction

  Beyond Infinity

  The Sunborn

  The Martian Race

  Eater

  The Stars in Shroud

  Jupiter Project />
  Shiva Descending (with William Rostler)

  Heart of the Comet (with David Brin)

  A Darker Geometry(with Mark O. Martin)

  Beyond the Fall of Night (with Arthur C. Clarke)

  Against Infinity

  Cosm

  Foundation’s Fear

  Artifact

  Timescape

  The Galactic Center Series

  In the Ocean of Night

  Across the Sea of Suns

  Great Sky River

  Tides of Light

  Furious Gulf

  Sailing Bright Eternity

  Non-fiction

  Deep Time: How Humanity Communicates

  Across Millennia

  To Mark and Alyson and Joan

  who grew and changed far more

  in the decades it took to write this series of novels

  than novels can possibly portray.

  PROLOGUE

  Metallovore

  Black holes have weather, of a sort.

  Light streams from them. Blackness dwells at their cores, but friction heats the infalling gas and dust. These streams brim with forced radiation. Storms worry them. White-hot tornadoes whirl and suck.

  From the immense hole at the exact center of the galaxy, a virulent glow hammers outward. It pushes incessantly at the crowded masses that circle it, jostling in their doomed orbits. Gravity’s gullet forces the streams into a disk, churning ever inward. Suffering in the weather.

  The press of hot photons is a wind, driving all before it. Except for the grazers. To these photovores, the great grinding disk is a source of food.

  Fire-flowers blossom in the disk, sending up lashes of fierce ultraviolet. Storms of light.

  Both above and below the accretion disk, in hovering clouds, these photons smash molecules to atoms, strip atoms into bare charge, whip particles into sleet. The clouds are debris, dust, grains. They are already doomed by gravity’s rub, like nearly everything here.

  Nearly. To the gossamer, floating herds this is a fountain. Their life source.

  Sheets of them hang, billowing with the electromagnetic winds. Basking in the sting. Holding steady.

  The photovores are patiently grazing. Some are Infras, others Ultras—tuned to soak up particular slices of the electromagnetic spectrum.

  Each species has a characteristic polish and shape. Each works within evolutionary necessity, deploying great flat receptor planes. Each has a song, used to maintain orbit and angle.

  Against the wrathful weather here, information is at least a partial defense. Position-keeping telemetry flits between the herd sheets. They sing luminously to each other in the eternal brimming day.

  Hovering on the pressure of light, great wings of high-gloss moly-sheet spread. Vectoring, skating on winds, magnetic torques in a complex dynamical sum. Ruling forces govern their perpetual, gliding dance. This is decreed by intelligences they scarcely sense, machines that prowl the darker lanes farther out.

  Those magisterial forms need the energies from this furnace, yet do not venture here. The wise and valuable run no risks.

  At times the herds fail. Vast shimmering sheets peel away. Many are cast into the shrouded masses of molecular clouds, which are themselves soon to boil away. Others follow a helpless descending gyre. Long before they could strike the brilliant disk, the hard glare dissolves their lattices. They burst open and flare with fatal energies.

  Now a greater threat spirals lazily down. It descends from the shelter of thick, turbulent dust. It lets itself fall toward the governing mass, the black hole itself. Then it arrests its descent with outstretched wings of mirrors. They bank gracefully on the photon breeze.

  Its lenses swivel to select prey. There a pack of photovores has clumped, disregarding ageless programming, or perhaps caught in a magnetic flux tube. The cause does not matter. The predator eases down along the axis of the galaxy itself.

  Here, navigation is simple. Far below, the rotational pole of the Eater of All Things is a pinprick of absolute black at the center of a slowly revolving, incandescent disk.

  The clustered photovores sense a descending presence. Their vast sailing herds cleave, peeling back to reveal deeper planes of burnt-gold light seekers. They all live to ingest light and excrete microwave beams. Their internal world revolves around ingestion, considered digestion, and orderly excretion.

  These placid conduits now flee. But those clumped near the axis have little angular momentum, and cannot pivot on a magnetic fulcrum. Dimly they sense their destiny. Their hissing microwaves waver.

  Some plunge downward, hoping that the predator will not follow so close to the Eater. Others cluster ever more, as if numbers give safety. The opposite is true.

  The metallovore folds its mirror wings. Now angular and swift, accelerating, it mashes a few of the herd on its carapace. It scoops them in with flux lines. Metal harvesters rip the photovores. Shreds rush down burnt-black tunnels. Electrostatic fields separate elements and alloys.

  Fusion fires await the ruined carcasses. There the separation can be exquisitely tuned, yielding pure ingots of any alloy desired. In the last analysis, the ultimate resources here are mass and light. The photovores lived for light, and now they end as mass.

  The sleek metallovore never deigns to notice the layers of multitudes peeling back, their gigahertz cries of panic. They are plankton. It ingests them without registering their songs, their pain, their mortal fears.

  Yet the metallovore, too, is part of an intricate balance. If it and its kind were lost, the community orbiting the Eater would decay to a less diverse state, one of monotonous simplicity, unable to adjust to the Eater’s vagaries. Less energy would be harnessed, less mass recovered.

  The metallovore prunes less efficient photovores. Its ancient codes, sharpened over time by natural selection, prefer the weak. Those who have slipped into unproductive orbits are easier to catch. It also prefers the savor of those who have allowed their receptor planes to tarnish with succulent trace elements, spewed up by the hot accretion disk below. The metallovore spots these by their mottled, dusky hue.

  Each frying instant, millions of such small deaths shape the mechsphere.

  Predators abound, and parasites. Here and there on the metallovore’s polished skin are limpets and barnacles. These lumps of orange-brown and soiled yellow feed on chance debris from the prey. They can lick at the passing winds of matter and light. They purge the metallovore of unwanted elements—wreckage and dust that can jam even the most robust mechanisms, given time.

  All this intricacy floats on the pressure of photons. Light is the fluid here, spilling up from the blistering storms far below in the great grinding disk. This rich harvest supports the mechsphere that stretches for hundreds of cubic light-years, its sectors and spans like armatures of an unimaginable city.

  All this, centered on a core of black oblivion, the dark font of vast wealth.

  Inside the rim of the garish disk, oblivious to the weather here, whirls a curious blotchy distortion in the fabric of space and time. It is called by some the Wedge, for the way it is jammed in so close. Others term it the Labyrinth.

  It seems to be a small refraction in the howling virulence. Sitting on the very brink of annihilation, it advertises its artificial insolence.

  Yet it lives on. The mote orbits perpetually beside the most awful natural abyss in the galaxy: the Eater of All Things.

  An Abyss of Time

  Interior state: a place cloudless and smooth, without definition:

  The mechanicals are converging, Nigel.

  “You feel them?”

  Clearly. They can now manifest themselves in magnetic vortices.

  “Bloody dexterous, they are.”

  I can feel them. Something bad is coming.

  “Thanks for the warning, m’love. But I’ve got to bring the lad Toby up to speed, and it’ll take a while.”

  There is nothing you could do for me anyway.

  He smiled without mirth. “All too t
rue.”

  I will alert you if the energy densities change for the worse.

  He nodded and the space without definition vanished.

  He was back in a bare room, sitting opposite a young man, trying to frame the immense story that had led him to this moment.

  —nothing you could do—

  He remembered another time, long ago.

  He and Carlos stood on a dry ridge of bare rock and looked out over a plain. This was not a world at all but a convoluted wraparound of space-time itself. Its sky curved overhead, a bowl of scrub desert.

  Still, it felt like a place to live. A remarkable, alien-made refuge. Dirt, air, odd but acceptable plants.

  They talked about finding a way to live here, in a hard, dry place twisted and alive in a way that rock was not.

  Carlos had just made a good joke and Nigel laughed, relaxed and easy, and then Carlos plunged forward, his shoulder striking Nigel’s arm. Carlos went down with his head tilted back, as if he were looking up at the sky, a quizzical expression flickering as the head brushed by Nigel and down and hit face first on the baked dirt. Carlos had not lifted his hands to break the fall. He slid a foot as he struck.

  The noise that had started it all was ugly. It seemed to condense out of the air, a soft thump like an ax sinking into a rotten stump.

  As Carlos pitched forward something rose from his back, a geyser of skin and frothy blood. It spattered over the back of the tunic as the body smacked into the dirt. The thump, Nigel realized later, was the compact explosion of electromagnetic energy, targeted a few centimeters below the skin.

  As Nigel dropped to lower his profile he got a good look at Carlos. One was enough. Then he ran, bent over, hearing the harsh following buzz of the electromagnetic pulse tapering away as he zigzagged behind some jagged boulders.

  Too much open space and too little shelter. He squatted and could not see what had fired the shot. Carlos lay flat without a twitch.

  Nothing happened. No following pulses.

  Nigel replayed the images as he waited. A spout of rosy blood from a circle punched high in the spine. Absolutely dead center, four centimeters below the neck. Kilojoules of energy focused to a spot the size of a fingernail.