One could only pace so much, eat so often, meddle with the few active circuits Lindy had left just so many hours, and bathe and sleep and bathe and sleep and make-work at the console, like the visual analysis of stars, the infinite working of infinite problems, calculation of space and acceleration and distances given things that would never, from his vantage, ever be true. But those hypotheses filled the mind and kept it focused, for a little while, on sane outcomes.
Rafe worked at guesses, had pegged several high-magnitude stars, two of which were conspicuous, almost touching. He tried one and another theoretical perspective on them, tormented himself with hopeful and despairing suppositions.
“Hey!” he shouted at the winding corridor more than once, frustrated and desperate. But no sound came back, from either direction.
He called the others’ names; he called his own, and had nothing but silence.
“You can’t take them away,” he muttered to himself, to God, to whatever ran this place, and bowed his head on the console. Finally, which he had never yet done, he truly mourned his dead and sobbed hysterically.
Even that wore thin. There was only so much grief, so much anger, not even so much as when he and Jillan were orphaned. Then there had been guilt—a child’s kind of guilt—Maybe if I’d been good they’d be alive—
It’s my fault. I should have loved them more—
There was no guilt here. Not with Jillan and Paul. He sat there with the last of the tears still cold on his face and judged that whatever mistakes they had made, they were paying for all of it together; Jillan and Paul’s being dead was not final but drawn-out, shared, a life-in-death which still could make jokes about its state, shed tears for itself, know fears for the future. The same thing waited for him, he reckoned, when whatever-it-was got around to his case.
It’s going to do that soon; they don’t want to watch what happens to me.
Or maybe they’re just gone. Turned off, of no more use.
No pain that way, at least.
And at last, all but sobbing in self-pity, he thought: But Rafe’s afraid to die.
He shuddered away from that entanglement and wiped his face with both his hands until the tears went down.
He thought of taking another long, long walk. His bruises had gone to livid green by now. He was stronger. He might take food, fill his pockets with it, use a plastic bag for a canteen—just walk, walk until he ran out of everything and those in charge had to do something about him, either meet him face to face or let him die.
But: Come to the ship, he had told his doppelganger. Perhaps their time sense was different. Maybe for them it was only a little while. If he left they might come and he would never know.
He flung himself down against the wall where he often sat and just stared at Lindy’s remains, not looking down the corridors which led into the dark.
“Rafe,” his own voice said.
He started half to his feet, braced against the wall, levered himself the rest of the way up. “Where have you been?” It came out harsh. He had not meant that. He was all but shaking, facing his naked self, which stood over against the dark of the corridor. “Did you find them?”
“Were you worried?”
“Was I worried? Don’t joke with me, man. I’m not laughing. Where are they?”
The doppelganger pointed, vaguely up and off beyond the walls. “There.”
“They won’t come?”
“Paul’s not coping well with this.”
He let go his breath, found his hands shaking, walked over to the console and sat down, firmly, in a place he knew. “Not coping well.”
“Not at all.”
“Jillan?”
“Better. She’s all right.”
“She’s with him.”
The doppelganger shook his head. “No. She’s not.”
“Cut the riddles. Where’s Jillan?”
“You’re upset.”
“God, what’s wrong—wrong with you?”
“Nothing’s wrong.”
“I know what it’s like—talking to myself; I do know; and you don’t follow my lead, not half right—” He put himself on his feet, leaning on Lindy’s board. “What are you?”
The doppelganger winked out.
“What are you?” Rafe screamed after it. He hit the useless board. “Jil-lan!”
And he sat down again, fell into his seat, trembling from head to foot.
“Clever,” said the doppelganger voice, off to his side.
He spun the chair, faced it where he sat. It stood over by the EVApod, dimmer, for the light was brighter there.
“You,” he said to it, gathering up his mind, “you’re the one I’ve been wanting to get in reach. Why don’t you come in here in person?”
“You want to kill me.”
“Maybe.” He sucked in a copper-edged breath and stood up. “Where’s my sister? Where’s Paul?”
“The physical entities? Dead. I tried to hold them. They died.”
“Dead. And their copies—” He did not want to admit how much it meant, but his knees were weak. He held onto the counter. “Do they still exist?”
“Oh, yes.”
“Bring them here.”
“I’ll let them loose again. Soon. I came to talk with you.”
“Why?” he asked, staring at the mirrored face before the blank visage of the EVApod. “To say what? What shape is Rafe going to be in? Do I get my own doppelganger back?”
“Yes. He’s safe. Is that a concern to you?”
He did not answer. It already knew weaknesses enough in him; it wore his doppelganger like a skin. He straightened his back and moved back to the console, turned around again. “Why not your own shape?”
“It would distress you.”
“You think this doesn’t?”
“A question of degree.”
“You’re not very like us.”
“No. I’m not.”
“You’re fluent.”
The image blinked. “It did take time.”
“How did you do it? How did you learn?”
“It would distress you. Say that I know you pretty well. From inside. I have a lot of your character right now.”
“And my memories?”
“That too.”
Rafe sank again into the chair, wiped a hand across his mouth to still the tic that plagued him. “And the way I think about things. I don’t suppose you’ve got that too.”
“There is a great deal of congruency at present. I’ve walled off some of myself; that’s the nearest analogue. I’m larger. Smarter. Far more educated.”
“Modest too.”
The doppelganger grinned.
“God,” Rafe said, “a sense of humor.” It sent a chill up his back, lent him other thoughts. “You can feel anything I’d feel. Do you?”
“Everything.”
“Like—loving them. Like that.”
“I do.”
He sat silent a moment, trying not to shiver.
“While I’m you,” it said. “In my full mind there are other considerations, I assure you. But within this configuration, I do love them. I understand perfectly what you mean.”
“You hurt us. Do you know that?”
“You can assume I remember. You don’t have to ask. You’re concerned about your safety, about the others. Let me destroy your illusions—”
“Don’t. Please. Don’t.”
“Not those.” The mouth twisted in a smile that left no residue of humor. “Not physically. ...”
> had made a move. In the rest of <>’s mind, extended elsewhere in the ship, <> was well aware of this. > gained access to apparatus > could not otherwise have touched, and > grew suddenly knowledgeable. It was the file on the intruders > had gotten. > gained sudden capability.
“Help,” (#) cried, rushing through the ship. “Help, help!”
“I told you so,” said <^>.
“... but I won’t tell you any more than you really have to know, if y
ou’d rather not. I do mean to take you back.”
“Where?”
“To the star where I found you.”
“Is this a game?” Rafe’s heart was beating hard. “Why? Why do that?”
“A capsule with a beacon. They’ll pick you up, so this mind believes.”
“Why go to the trouble?”
“Why not? Harm to me? I don’t think they could.”
“You’re lying.”
There was long silence. “I understand your caution. Believe me. I do understand.”
“More humor.”
The mouth—his own—quirked up in a touch of mirth. “It doesn’t depend on your belief anyway.”
“You mean you’ll do what you like.”
“Aaaaiiiiiiiiii!” The sound began from far away; it roared closer and closer, speakers coming alive right overhead and fading away again, lightning-fast, blinding pain that hit and left: Rafe leaped up, trembling in its wake.
“Is that for effect?”
“That one’s mad,” the doppelganger said. “And a little upset right now. Don’t let it trouble you.”
“Sure. Sure I won’t. Cheap trick, hear? Like all the rest. Real cheap.”
“I’ll leave now. Something wants my attention. A minor thing. But I’ll put in somewhere soon at a human port and drop you off. Don’t worry for the jump drugs. I don’t know the composition of what you take. You don’t. But I can make you sleep; that should be enough.”
“Why does it matter? You’ve killed two people, damn you! Why does it matter now?”
“Because it’s easy,” the doppelganger said, and faded out altogether.
“Why?” he yelled after it until his voice cracked. He fell down into the chair, being alone again, in the silence. “Rafe?” he said aloud, querulously, hoping for the old one, the friendly one. “Jillan.” And last and with least hope: “Paul?”
No one answered. No one came. He was scared finally, finally terrified for himself, sitting and staring at nothing at all.
Going home, he thought. With human beings. Living ones. He did not believe it. He did not believe it loved. He did not believe it told the truth at all, or that it cared.
But there remained the possibility.
There remained the greater likelihood it had other motives. And it wore a human shape and used a human mind.
“Paul,” > said, having penetrated the barriers <> had imposed about the stranger, having, momentarily, seized control of that territory. “Paul.”
And > took the Rafe-image on > self.
“You’re awake,” Paul said. “You’re awake.”
“Paul,” > said, getting to >’s human feet. “Paul.” > had that word down pat. > snatched Paul in >’s borrowed arms and carried him rapidly out through barriers, along passages.
Paul screamed, and stopped screaming, simply clinging to what he feared, a logic that >, in Rafe’s mind, understood with curious poignancy.
<> was too late to prevent the theft.
<> simply recreated the Paul-simulacrum of which <> had been robbed and left him asleep in a safer place, far inside <>’s boundaries.
Paul was not a serious loss. Paul had never adjusted and likely never would, but <> was still nettled.
“<> wish you success,” <> taunted >, for <> had shed the Rafe-mind and felt differently about many things.
There was a division in Trishanamarandu-kepta. It had happened long ago. There was a place where > did very much as > pleased; and another where <> was the law. This was an agreement they had, one which made diversions, and <> cherished those.
Slowly, as <>’s humor improved, <> found a sense of ironical amusement in the theft, for the Paul-entity was unstable; and the Rafe-one had been unwaked and was now vastly disturbed. One did not intrude into a simulacrum and leave it intact.
“Do something,” <^> mourned.
“<> have,” <> said, for <> was still controlling the moves: > had, being flawed, acquired two flawed entities, one flawed by nature, the other by invasion.
The important two were safe.
<> was awake again. All the way.
And the passengers scurried this way and that in panic, examining old alliances and likely advantage.
Only ((())) ranged the passages, wailing in ((()))’s madness. Perhaps only ((()))’s lower mind was left; perhaps some memory remained, what side ((())) had taken once. “Aaaaiiiieeeee,” ((())) cried. “Help us, help us all! O strangers, rescue us!”
“Paul,” Rafe said, who was not-Rafe, and something very strong.
Paul lay still and stared, heaving for breath in the all-enveloping dark while Rafe changed into something huge and slightly blurred. Paul flinched at this transformation and started to twist away, but Rafe’s touch was gentle, very easy, on his shoulder.
“You’re not him,” Paul said, and his own voice seemed very distant in his ears, as if he had been drugged. Everything seemed far.
“You’re safe,” it told him, which he wanted now desperately to hear. “You’re safe with me.” The strangeness had gotten to the all-enveloping point and battered at his mind; and just when it was at its worst, it promised him safety and protection. He was ready to believe.
“I have you,” the blurred shape said. The voice was Rafe’s, but strange and deep, like a motor running. “You’re very safe in my company. You don’t have to worry while I’m here.”
He let it hold him like a child. The voice sank to be one vast burr that filled everything, replaced everything. It touched him, mother-gentle, spoke to him in a language eloquent of protection; and he shut his eyes, trusting finally, because he could only sustain the fear so long in such closeness, in an existence in which he could not tire or sleep: the voice went on and on.
“Let go,” it hummed, “listen to me. You’re safe.”
“I’m dead,” he said. “What’s safe in that?”
“Not dead. Not truly. Not at all. You exist. You can come and go at will. You have long life ahead of you; and a comfortable one, with me. Be still, be quiet, rest. Nothing can reach you in my heart.”
“We don’t get hungry,” Jillan said. “I could wish we got hungry. I miss—” She shook her head and stopped, wisely.
Rafe stared at her bleakly, remembering many things he missed. At length he got up and tried the barrier again. It still held and he came and sat down again, letting his shoulders fall. There was no pretending with Jillan. Finally they had passed all embarrassment, all other pretenses; he was naked inside and out with Rafe and stopped minding: now he could be that way with Jillan, at least in most things.
“Beats station life,” he said, which was an old joke with them, that anything did. Even dying.
“Got ourselves a ship,” she said, rising to it valiantly, but the grief never left her eyes. Paul, Paul, Paul, they said, wrath and divided loyalties.
“Got ourselves a big one,” he said.
“What we have to do,” she said, “we find our way to controls—in our android shapes—and then we take this thing.”
“Deal,” he said.
But they sat there, with a barrier about them. With Paul missing, and neither of them made guesses about Paul.
He’ll find a way to rescue us, Rafe thought, trying to convince himself. He’s still loose, he’s smart—So’s Rafe—without modesty. But Paul can move through the ship....
Maybe it’s taking Paul apart now.
“Idea,” said Jillan.
“What?”
“Rafe. They’re keeping Rafe locked up. That means he could do damage.”
“They’re keeping us locked up, too,” he said, and they turned that thought over separately for a moment.
“Huh,” she said, his Ma’am; his number One, his crew.
“I’ll make you a present of this ship,” he said.
“That’s the Old Man talking,” she said, seeming to take heart. “You do that, Rafe. Let’s find something to break, when we get out of here.”
“
No way,” he said. “It’s our ship, remember. We want this thing intact.”
The chittering came back, the wailing thing passed, as it had passed before. He refused to wince, refused even to acknowledge it.
When we get out of here.
Then, in a blink, Paul was lying a dozen feet beyond them.
Jillan moved, scrambled to Paul’s side with a soft, frightened oath.
Rafe moved up and knelt again, cautious of such gifts. “Paul,” he said.
Paul opened his eyes to pale slits, shuddered and came suddenly wide-eyed, lurching up on his arm.
“Where are we?” Paul asked. “O God, where are we? Jillan—?” He sat upright, looked down at his own body, at theirs—panicked, darting glances. “What is this place?”
“The same as it’s ever been,” Rafe said.
“What do you mean, the same?” Paul’s voice rode close to breaking. “Where are we? Where’s the ship?”
“He doesn’t remember,” Rafe said, at Jillan’s frightened glance his way. “He’s lost it all.”
“Lost what?” asked Paul. “What don’t I remember?”
Rafe put out a hand and held it on his shoulder. “This place—you’ve lost a little time, Paul. Just take it easy. We’re all right. Take it easy. We’ll fill you in.”
Paul was scared again, mortally scared. So was Jillan; he could read it in that thin-lipped calm.
“It’s all right,” Jillan said. “It’s all right, we’ve got you back. We lost you for a while. You scared us; Paul.”
<> listened for a time. <> had debated with <>self, how much interference was wise, whether to restore Paul to the set at all. And then it occurred to <> that a different waking experience might change the Paul-mind to some advantage.
So <> had restored him to the others, this copy fresh from its death experience.
> would know that, of course. There remained the very strong likelihood > would attempt a substitution the moment > had a chance.
But <> took the risk. Perhaps Jillan or Rafe-mind had left its influence on <>. <> was not sure. Many entities had tried; but their desire to keep that set intact was strong.
There was also, native to <>self and them—curiosity.
<> took up the Rafe-image again and visited the corridor, finding Rafe asleep.