The Stars in Shroud
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The first novel by New York Times bestselling author Gregory Benford, "The Stars in Shroud" original story was a Hugo and Nebula nominee.
The alien Quarn strike suddenly at the heart of Earth's interstellar Empire. Their weapon is a deadly plague—a soul-twisting assault that strips away the veneer of civilization. The psychological illness sends its victims fleeing back a million years to the safety of the ancestral caves.
No one knew how the Quarn spread the plague. No one knew why they wanted to destroy humanity.
But Captain Ling Sanjen had thought of a way to stop them...
Gregory Benford
GREGORY BENFORD teaches at the University of California and lives in Irvine, California. Benford is a winner of the United Nations Medal for Literature, and the Nebula Award for his novel Timescape. In 1995 he received the Lord Prize for contributions to science. Benford conducts research in plasma turbulence theory and experimentation, and in astrophysics. He has published well over a hundred papers in fields of physics from condensed matter, particle physics, plasmas and mathematical physics, and several in biological conservation.
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The Stars in Shroud - Gregory Benford
The Stars In Shroud
By
Gregory Benford
A Lucky Bat Book
LBB_copyrightsmallThe Stars in Shroud
Copyright © 1970, 2014 by Gregory Benford
All rights reserved, which includes the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form whatsoever except as provided by the U.S. Copyright Law.
Cover Design by Brandon Swann
Cover Photo Courtesy of NASA
Published by Lucky Bat Books at Smashwords
Original Publication Notes
A Berkley-Putnam edition published August 1978, Berkley edition / August 1979 ISBN: 0-425-04173-5
Smashwords Edition License Notes
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be resold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with other people, please purchase additional copies. If you’re reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then please return to Smashwords.com for your own copy. Thank you for respecting the hard work of this author.
The Highest Praise is the Praise of Colleagues…
Gregory Benford is no longer just a star in the science fiction galaxy. He’s turned into a nova, outshining most others. This latest hook adds to the brightness.
—Poul Anderson
"The Stars in Shroud confirms Gregory Benford’s growing reputation as one of the half dozen most serious, thoughtful, and significant writers in the science fiction field. No better writer of ‘hard science fiction’ exists!"
—Norman Spinrad
Going back after a lapse of eight years and re-writing your own first novel is one of those clever-sounding ideas that almost never work, but here Benford does make it work, and work nicely. This unusual collaboration between the mature Benford and his younger self produces a good working blend of intriguing social/philosophical speculation and fast paced galactic intrigue!
—Gardner Dozois
Gregory Benford, one of the best science fiction writers working today, has both an impressive scientific background and a strong feel for characterization. The combination is rare and hard to beat.
—Charles N. Brown
…is one of the best SF writers to appear this decade. His fiction is a tantalizing mixture of hard science and spiritualism which makes it fascinating!
—Wichita Falls Times
…is one of the major new talents in science fiction, one of the few to be able successfully to combine the adventure of science with real depth of characterization. Contains all the classic elements of adventure science fiction.
—Seattle Daily Times
…grows, he asks questions and raises ideas to the mind!
—Press Register, Mobile
…has proven himself one of the most talented and likable writers of science fiction to emerge in this decade!
—Pittsburgh Press
A superbly-written novel of the far distant future. Benford neatly weaves in an examination of the nature of religious experience with fast-paced action!
—Advance Booklist
…has psychological depth and subtlety as well as star-spanning adventures…the skillful prose and deft characterization provide an enjoyable and thought-provoking reading exercise.
—Daily Press, Newport News
…is unabashed entertainment in the pulp tradition, but leavened with wit and well-drawn characters. Readers are treated to a smashing adventure yarn!
—Chicago Sun Times Book Week
Dedication
For my father,
James Alton Benford
Know thyself?
If I knew myself, I’d run away.
—Goethe
Don’t follow leaders; watch the parking meters.
—Bob Dylan Subterranean Homesick Blues
Life Systems Schematic Cross Section For Spherical Jump Class Vessel, Farriken
(Propulsion Systems Omitted)
Table of Contents
Part I
Part II
Part III
Part IV
Part V
Part VI
Author’s Note
About Gregory Benford
The Stars In Shroud
The hand upon them.
Strangled shout.
No rest or solace,
Black despair and doubt.
Rising to the Scepter,
They struggled all the more.
And were cast down into darkness
Far deeper than before.
Part I
The Hand upon them.
Strangled shout.
1
The place to begin is at the bottom of the trough. How long I had gone through the motions, living days as alike as beads on a konchu wire, I don’t know. We had been in the apartment—such as it was—a long time.
Something happened, about an hour into the morning shift.
Unlike many, I still worked. In the dark corridors no one would notice the red-rimmed crater like an eye at each shoulder and elbow. And who would care? They were too wound up in themselves, by that year, to raise an eyebrow at what had once been a crime.
I drew the line at my waist: no socketing at hips, knees, ankles. Too many and your body won’t restore the tissue, even under sproc treatments. So I labored at our sim board, hooked into distant machines, visions of far-off places tapped through to my opticals. I was immersed in the jerky thrust of an assembly network, swinging raw and fragrant dirt to the side with my right arm, while the left chunked organiform slabs down into quick-molding foundation fluids. My glance rippled over the grid layout. Every jointed nerve nexus commanded a linkage in the assembly net, processing raw ores into impersonal, blank-walled housing. My sockets linked to machines. I was a neural computer, hired by the hour. The buildings were going up halfway around Earth. I bossed the work through satellite comm.
I’m sure it spooked the kids. There was Dad pinned like a zombie to the board, quivering and jerking and muttering for most of the morning. Then I’d collapse and sit, numb and staring, blank-eyed, enough work done for the day to buy us extras.
Their mother would coax them into watching the screen, and they’d leave me be. But this morning—
"Dad-dy, why do we have to watch this old stuff?" Romana said, jerking her head up with a regal look.
Um?
(Still dazed.)
"None of the other cubes in this block even carry Schoolchannel any more."
Um.
"And it’s boring,’ put in Chark, his thin voice piping.
Everybody knows you can’t learn fast without tapping."
Romana: "We’re going to turn out to be rennies."
Rennies?
Renegades, Ling,
Angela said from the kitchen cloister. It’s the new slang.
Schoolchannel makes you a renegade?
Well, it really means, you know, out of fashion.
Um.
Angela came into the living room, wiping her hands on a towel, and looked at me with her mouth tightening. I knew what was going to happen.
Don’t you think they have a point, Ling? Finally?
No.
I looked away from her. Chark dialed the volume down on the screen, and everybody very carefully sat still. I wasn’t going to get away with a quick victory.
"Dad-dy…"
If you’d seen that counselor at the Center, Ling. Tapping is necessary. You were out there yourself. You—
"Yes. I was out there. And none of you were."
Romana, who is nine, began reasonably, The Assembly says tapping is for the common defense…
It’s useless. Pointless. Harmful. There’s—
I stopped. It wasn’t going to do any good. Their faces were closing up, going blank. I couldn’t tell them the guts of what happened out there. That was buried away in datafile somewhere, sealed against all but high-priority access. Some remnant of Fleet training kept me from talking. That, and a curious inability to focus on that past, a desire to skitter away from it.
Angela broke her silence. I could tell from the brittle edge in her voice that the words had been dammed up for a long time.
"Why do you tell them such things? They—they’ll respect you even less if you try to pretend there’s some big mystery about what you did out there. You were just a shuttle Captain. A pickup convoy, to get the survivors off Regeln after the Quarn hit it."
Uh huh.
And you didn’t even get many off, either.
Something happened. Something really happened.
I got up dumbly and moved toward a cabinet, thinking to get a drink, and when I reached out for balance my hand came down on something on the cabinet. It was the Firetongue Stet. The fifty-centimeter block felt cool and reassuring. Having it here was an outright violation of Fleet regs. Even though it was out of date now, I could conceivably be executed for keeping my Commander’s Stet after I was court-martialed. But I’d substituted a dud, a blank Stet, when the time had came in the official decommissioning ceremonies. To cling to some last bauble of the Fleet officer I had been?
The children were dead silent, not even swinging a foot with nervous energy, the way they get when they sense that the adults have forgotten they’re around and maybe a fight is about to start. Angela and I both noticed it at the same time; the children were our lines of communication now.
All right. We’ll talk about it later,
I said.
The kids grumbled a bit and went back to their screen lecture. Angela walked into the bedroom. Probably to pout, I thought sourly. One more nick in an eroding marriage.
We would talk. Oh yes, there would be a plentitude of talk. I had been a man who acted. Now I was a mumbler, a parody. I had lost momentum, and Angela’s coming accusations and complaints would sting. But I couldn’t deflect them. Maybe I didn’t care to.
I sat down. I hadn’t really thought about Regeln for a long time. That seemed all buried now, a subtle and somehow faceless past. I had tried to ride the events as they came to me, to swim between the smashing waves, but in the end I had washed up on this barren shore.
To wait.
And while waiting, to be reborn among the dead.
2
It was supposed to be a quick, daring run: Loop my ship into the Regeln system, drop planetward, scoop up whatever was left before the Quarn returned.
The crew didn’t take it well. Fleet had already lost many ships. A month before they had taken us off a routine run and outfitted our ships with enough extras—blister pods for defense, mostly—to put the convoy on the lowest rung of warship class.
But men take longer to adjust. Most of them were still nervous and edgy about the changes. They were suddenly oraku, warrior status. They didn’t like it—neither did I—but there was nothing to be done. This was an emergency.
I had us roar out of orbital port at full bore, giving the ships that hot crisp gunmetal smell. That perked them up. But maintenance is only maintenance, the hours stretched long, and soon they found the time to think, to wring out self-doubts, to fidget. In a few days the results began to come up through the confessional rings: anxieties, exclusion feelings, loss of phase.
I told Fleet we’d have this,
I said to Tonji, my Exec. These are traditional men. They can’t take a sudden change of role.
I let go of the clipboard that held the daily report Stet. I watched it tumble slowly in the weak gravity.
Tonji blinked languidly. I think they are overreacting to the danger involved. None of us signed for something like this. They aren’t men who hired on to win a medal—a bronzer, as ship’s slang puts it. Give them time.
Time? Where am I going to get it? We’re only weeks out from Regeln now. This is a large group, spread over a convoy. We’ll have to reach them quickly.
He unconsciously stiffened his lips, a gesture he probably associated with being tough-minded. It will take effort, true. But I suppose you realize there isn’t any choice.
Was that a hint of defiance in his voice, mingled with his habitual condescending? I paused, let it go. More Sabal, then. Require all senior officers to attend as well.
You’re sure that’s enough, sir?
Of course I’m not sure! I haven’t got all the answers in my pocket. This convoy hasn’t had anything but shuttle jobs for years.
But we’ve been reassigned…
Slapping a sticker on a ship doesn’t change the men inside. The crews don’t know what to do. There isn’t any confidence in the group, because everyone can sense the uncertainty. Nobody knows what’s waiting for us on Regeln. A crewman wouldn’t be human if he didn’t worry about it.
I looked across the small cabin at my kensdai altar. I knew I was losing control of myself too often and not directing the conversation the way I wanted. I focused on the solid, dark finish of the wood that framed the altar, feeling myself merge with the familiarity of it. Focus down, let the center flow outward.
Tonji flicked an appraising glance at me. The Quarn were stopped on Regeln. That’s why we’re going.
They’ll be back. The colony there beat them off but took a lot of losses. It’s now been twenty-four days since the Quarn left. You heard the signals from the surface—they’re the only ones we got after their satellite link was destroyed. The correct code grouping was there, but the signal strength was down. Then transmission faded. Whoever sent them was working in bad conditions, or didn’t understand the gear, or both.
Fleet doesn’t think it’s a trap?
Tonji’s features, Mongol-yellow in the diffused light of my cabin, took on a cool, distant look.
They don’t know. I don’t, either. But we need information on Quarn tactics and equipment. They’re a race of hermits, individuals, some say—but somehow they cooperate against us. We want to get an idea how.
The earlier incidents…
They were just that—incidents. Raids. Fleet never got enough coherent information out of the surviving tapes, and what there was they can’t unravel. There were no survivors.
But this time the colonists stood off a concentrated attack.
Yes. Perhaps there are good records on Regeln.
Tonji nodded, smiling, and left after proper ceremonies. I was sure he knew most of what I’d told him, through his own sources, but he’d seemed to want to draw the details out of me, to savor them. Why? I could guess: the better the mission, the gaudier the reports, then all the faster would rise the fortunes of Mr. Tonji. A war—the first in three centuries, and the first in deepspace—has the effect of opening the staircases to the top. It relieves a young officer of the necessity for worming his way through the belly of the hierarchy.
I reached out, dialed a starchart of Regeln’s neighbors, studied.
The Quarn had been an insect buzzing just beyond the range of our senses for decades now. Occasional glancing contacts, rumors, stories. Then war.
How? Security didn’t bother to tell lowly convoy Captains—probably only a few hundred men anywhere knew. But there had been a cautiously worded bulletin about negotiations in the Quarn home worlds, just before the War. But no one had ever seen one face to face. The Council had tried to establish communal rapport with some segment of Quarn society. It had worked before, with the Phalanx and Angras.
Among the intellectual circles I knew—such as they were—it was holy dogma. Sense of community was the glue that held a culture together. Given time and correct Phase, it could bind even alien societies. In two cases it already had.
And it wove a universe for us. A world of soft dissonances muting into harmonies, tranquil hues of waterprints fading together.
To it the Quarn were a violet slash of strangeness. Hermitlike, they offered little and accepted less. Privacy extended to everything for them; we still had no clear idea of their physical appearances. Their meetings with us had been conducted with only a few individual negotiators.
Into this the Council had moved. Perhaps a taboo was ignored, a trifle overlooked. Perhaps. It seemed the mistake was too great for the Quarn to pass; they came jabbing into the edge of the human community. Regeln was one of their first targets.
First Sabal call,
Tonji’s voice came over the inboard. You asked me to remind you, sir.
It was ironic that Tonji, with all his ancestors citizens of Old Nippon, should be calling a Sabal game to be led by me, a half-breed Caucasian—and I was sure it wasn’t totally lost on him. My mother was a Polynesian and my father a truly rare specimen: one of the last pure Americans, born of the descendants of the few who had survived the Riot War. That placed me far down in the caste lots, even below Australians.
When I was a teenager it was still socially permissible to call us ofkaipan, a term roughly analogous to nigger in the early days of the American Republic. But since then had come the Edicts of Harmony. I imagine the Edicts are still ignored in the Offislands, but with my professional status it would be a grave breach of protocol if the word ever reached my ears. I’d seen it often enough, mouthed wordlessly by an orderlyman who’d just received punishment, or an officer who couldn’t forget the color of my skin. But never aloud.
I sighed and got up, almost wishing there was another of us aboard so I wouldn’t have moments of complete loneliness like this. But we were rare in Fleet, and almost extinct on Earth itself.
I uncased my formal Sabal robes and admired their delicate sheen a moment before putting them on. The subtle reds and violets caught the eye and played tricks with vision. They were the usual lint-free polyester that shed no fine particles into the ship’s air, but everything possible had been done to give them texture and depth beyond the ordinary uniform. They were part of the show, just like the bals and chants.
During the dressing I made the ritual passes as my hands chanced to pass diagonally across my body, to induce emotions of wholeness, peace. The vague fears I had let slip into my thoughts would be in the minds of the crew as well.
The murmur in our assemblyroom slackened as I appeared. I greeted them, took my place in the hexagon of men, and began the abdominal exercises, sitting erect. I breathed deeply, slowly, and made hand passes. At the top of the last arc the power was with me and, breathing out, I came down into focus, outward-feeling, koda-kani.
I slowed the juggling of the gamebals, sensing the mood of the hexagon. The bals and beads caught the light in their counter-cadences, glancing tones of red and blue off the walls as they tumbled. The familiar dance calmed us and we moved our legs to counter-position, for meditation.
My sing-chant faded slowly in the softened acoustics of the room. I began the Game.
First draw was across the figure, a crewman fidgeting with his Sabal leafs. He chose a passage from the Quest and presented it as overture. It was a complex beginning—the Courier was endowed with subtleties of character and mission. Play moved on. The outline of our problem was inked in by the others as they read their own quotations from the eaves into the Game structure.
For the Royal Courier rode down from the hills, and being he of thirst, hunger, and weariness, he sought aid in the town. Such was his Mission that the opinion he gained here of the inhabitants of the village, their customs, honesty, and justice (not only to the courier, but to themselves), would be relayed to the Royal Preseme as well. And then, it is said, to Heaven. Having such items to barter, he went from house to house…
After most entries were made, the problem maze established had dark undertones of fear and dread. And rippling them slowly through my fingers, began the second portion of Sabal: proposing of solution. Again the draw danced among the players.
It comes to this:
You are one of two players. There are only two choices for you to make—say, red and black. The other player is hidden, and only his decisions are reported to you.
If both of you pick red, you gain a measure each. If both are black, a measure is lost. But if you choose red and your opponent (fellow; mate; planet-sharer) votes black, he wins two measures, and you lose two.
He who cooperates in spirit, he who senses the Total, wins.
Sabel is infinitely more complex than this description, but contains the same elements. The problems set by the men ran dark with subtle streams of anguish, insecurity.
But now the play returned to me. I watched the solution as it formed around the hexagon. Rejoiced in harmony of spirit. Indicated slight displeasure when divergent modes were attempted. Rebuked personal gain. And drew closer to my men.
Free yourself from all bonds,
I chanted, and bring to rest the ten thousand things. The way is near, but we seek it afar.
The mood caught slowly at first, and uncertainty was dominant, but with the rhythm of repetition a compromise was struck. Anxiety began to submerge. Conflicting images in the Game weakened.
I caught the uprush of spirit at its peak, chanting joyfully of completion as I brought the play to rest. I imposed the dreamlike flicker of gamebal and bead, gradually toning the opticals until we were clothed in darkness. Then stillness.
The fire burning, the iron kettle singing on the hearth, a pine bough brushing the roof, water dripping.
The hexagon broke and we left, moving in concert.
3
The game on our flagship was among the best, but it was not enough for the entire mission. I ordered Sabal as often as possible on all ships, and hoped it would keep us in correct Phase. I didn’t have time to attend all Games, because we were getting closer to drop and all details weren’t worked out.
In the hour preceding the Jump I made certain that I was seen in every portion of the ship, moving confidently among the men. The number of ships lost in the Jump is small but rising dangerously, and everyone knew it.
I stood on the center bridge to watch the process, even though it was virtually automatic. The specialists and crewmen moved quickly in the dull red light that simulated nightfall—Jump came at 2200 and we kept to the daily cycle. Fifteen minutes before the computers were set to drop us through, I gave the traditional order to proceed. It was purely a formalism. In theory the synchronization could be halted even at the last instant. But if it was, the requirements of calculating time alone would delay the Jump for weeks. The machines