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  Table of Contents

  Title Page

  Copyright Notice

  DRAMATIS PERSONAE

  PROLOGUE - CELEBRATIONS OF THE IMMORTALS

  1 - THE OLD MAN

  1.

  2.

  3.

  2 - THE NEPTUNIAN

  1.

  2.

  3.

  4.

  5.

  6.

  3 - THE SOLDIER

  1.

  2.

  3.

  4.

  5.

  6.

  7.

  8.

  9.

  10.

  11.

  4 - THE STORM-SCULPTOR

  1.

  2.

  3.

  4.

  5.

  6.

  7.

  8.

  5 - THE CHAMBER OF MEMORIES

  6 - THE ARMOR

  1.

  2.

  7 - AT TEA

  8 - THE SUMMONS

  9 - THE CURIA

  1.

  2.

  10 - THE VERDICT

  1.

  2.

  11 - THE SYMPHONY OF DREAMS

  1.

  2.

  12 - THE MASTER OF THE SUN

  1.

  2.

  3.

  13 - THE MASS MIND

  1.

  2.

  14 - THE GOLDEN DOORS

  1.

  2.

  3.

  4.

  15 - THE COFFIN

  16 - THE MASQUERADER

  17 - THE MEMORY

  1.

  2.

  3.

  18 - THE WARLOCK

  1.

  2.

  19 - THE COLLEGE OF HORTATORS

  20 - THE EXILE

  1.

  2.

  3.

  4.

  5.

  6.

  21 - THE DESCENT

  1.

  2.

  3.

  Copyright Page

  DRAMATIS PERSONAE

  grouped by nervous system formation (neuroform)

  Biochemical Self-Aware Entities

  Base neuroform

  PHAETHON PRIME of RHADAMANTH, Silver-Gray Manorial School

  HELION RELIC of RHADAMANTH, Phaethon’s sire, founder of the Silver-Gray Manorial School, and a peer

  DAPHNE TERCIUS SEMI-RHADAMANTH, Phaethon’s wife

  GANNIS HUNDRED-MIND GANNIS, Synergistic-Synnoint School, a peer

  ATKINS VINGT-ET-UN GENERAL-ISSUE, a soldier

  Nonstandard neuroforms

  VAFNIR of MERCURY EQUILATERAL STATION, a peer

  XENOPHON of FARAWAY, Tritonic Neuroform Composure School, called the Neptunians

  XINGIS of NEREID, also called DIOMEDES, Silver-Gray School

  Alternate Organization neuroform, commonly called Warlocks

  AO AOEN, the Master-Dreamer, a peer

  NEO-ORPHEUS the Apostate, protonothary and chair of the College of Hortators

  ORPHEUS MYRIAD AVERNUS, founder of the Second Immortality, a peer

  Cortial-Thalamically Integrated neuroform, commonly called Invariants

  KES SENNEC the Logician, a peer

  Cerebelline neuroform

  WHEEL-OF-LIFE, an Ecological Mathematician, a peer

  GREEN-MOTHER, the artiste who organizes the ecological performance at Destiny Lake

  Mass-Mind Compositions

  The ELEEMOSYNARY COMPOSITION, a Peer

  The HARMONIOUS COMPOSITION, of the College of Hortators

  The BELLIPOTENT COMPOSITION (disbanded)

  Electrophotonic Self-Aware Entities

  Sophotechs

  RHADAMANTHUS, a manor-house of the Silver-Grey School, million-cycle capacity

  EVENINGSTAR, a manor-house of the Red school, million-cycle capacity

  NEBUCHEDNEZZAR, advisor to the College of Hortators, ten-million-cycle capacity

  HARRIER, consulting detective, one-hundred-thousand-cycle capacity

  MONOMARCHOS, a barrister, one-hundred-thousand-cycle capacity

  AURELIAN, host of the Celebration, fifty-thousand-million-cycle loose capacity

  The ENNEAD consists of nine Sophotech groups, each of over a billion-cycle capacity, including Warmind, Westmind, Orient, Austral, Boreal, Northwest, Southwest, and others.

  EARTHMIND, the unified consciousness in which all terrestrial machines, and machines in Near-Earth-Orbit, from time to time participate: trillion-cycle capacity

  PROLOGUE

  CELEBRATIONS OF THE IMMORTALS

  It was a time of masquerade.

  It was the eve of the High Transcendence, an event so solemn and significant that it could be held but once each thousand years, and folk of every name and iteration, phenotype, composition, consciousness and neuroform, from every school and era, had come to celebrate its coming, to welcome the transfiguration, and to prepare.

  Splendor, feast, and ceremony filled the many months before the great event itself. Energy shapes living in the north polar magnetosphere of the sun, and Cold Dukes from the Kuiper belts beyond Neptune, had gathered to Old Earth, or sent their representations through the mentality; and celebrants had come from every world and moon in the solar system, from every station, sail, habitat and crystal-magnetic latticework.

  No human or posthuman race of the Golden Oecumene was absent from these festivities. Fictional as well as actual personalities were invited. Composition-assisted reconstructions of dead or deleted paladins and sages, magnates and philosophers, walked by night the boulevards of the Aurelian palace-city, arm-in-arm with extrapolated demigoddesses from imagined superhuman futures, or languid-eyed lamia from morbid unrealized alternatives, and strolled or danced among the monuments and energy sculptures, fountains, dream fixtures, and phantasms, all beneath a silver, city-covered moon, larger than the moon past ages knew.

  And here and there, shining like stars on the active channels of the mentality, were recidivists who had returned from high transhuman states of mind, bringing back with them thought-shapes or mathematical constructions inexpressible in human words, haunted by memories of what the last Transcendence had accomplished, feverish with dreams of what the next might hold.

  It was a time of cheer.

  And yet, even in such golden days, there were those who would not be satisfied.

  1

  THE OLD MAN

  1.

  On the hundred-and-first night of the Millennial Celebration, Phaethon walked away from the lights and music, movement and gaiety of the golden palace-city, and out into the solitude of the groves and gardens beyond. In this time of joy, he was not at ease himself; and he did not know why.

  His full name was Phaethon Prime Rhadamanth Humodified (augment) Uncomposed, Indepconciousness, Base Neuroformed, Silver-Gray Manorial Schola, Era 7043 (the “Reawakening”).

  This particular evening, the west wing of the Aurelian Palace-city had been set aside for a Presentation of Visions by the elite of Rhadamanthus Mansion. Phaethon had been extended an invitation to sit on the panel of dream-judges, and, eager to experience the future histories involv
ed, had happily accepted. Phaethon had been imagining the evening, perhaps, would be in miniature, for Rhadamanthus House, what the High Transcendence in December would be for all mankind.

  But he was disappointed. The review of one drab and uninspired extrapolation after another had drained his patience.

  Here was a future where all men were recorded as brain-information in a diamond logic crystal occupying the core of the earth; there was one where all humanity existed in the threads of a plantlike array of sails and panels forming a Dyson Sphere around the sun; a third promised, larger than worlds, housings for trillions of minds and superminds, existing in the absolute cold of trans-Neptunian space—cold was required for any truly precise subatomic engineering—but with rails or elevators of unthinkably dense material running across hundreds of AU, across the whole width of the solar system, and down into the mantle of the sun, both to mine the hydrogen ash for building matter, and to tap the vast energy of Sol, should ever matter or energy in any amount be needed by the immobile deep-space mainframes housing the minds of mankind.

  Any one of them should have been a breathtaking vision. The engineering was worked out in loving detail. Phaethon could not name what it was he wanted, but he knew he wanted none of these futures being offered him.

  Daphne, his wife, who was only a collateral member of the House, had not been invited; and, Helion, his sire, was present only as a partial-version, the primary having been called away to a conclave of the Peers.

  And so it was that in the center of a loud, happy throng of brightly costumed telepresences, mannequins, and real-folk, and with a hundred high windows in the Presence Hall busy and bright with monotonous futures, and with a thousand channels clamoring with messages, requests, and invitations for him, Phaethon realized that he was entirely alone.

  Fortunately, it was masquerade, and he was able to assign his face and his role to a backup copy of himself. He donned the disguise of a Harlequin clown, with lace at his throat and mask on his face, and then slipped out of a side entrance before any of Helion’s lieutenants or squires-of-honor thought to stop him.

  Without a word or signal to anyone, Phaethon departed, and he walked across silent lawns and gardens by moonlight, accompanied only by his thoughts.

  2.

  He wandered far, to a place he had not seen before. Beyond the gardens, in an isolated dell, he entered a grove of silver-crowned trees. He paced slowly through the grove, hands clasped behind his back, sniffing the air and gazing up at the stars between the leaves above. In the gloom, the dark and fine-grained bark was like black silk, and the leaves had mirror tissues, so that when the night breeze blew, the reflections of moonlight overhead rippled like silver lake water.

  It took him a moment to notice what was odd about the scene. The flowers were open, even though it was night, and their faces were turned toward one bright planet above the horizon.

  Puzzled, Phaethon paused and pointed two fingers at the nearest trunk, making the identification gesture. Evidently the protocols of the masquerade extended to the trees as well, and no explanation of the trees, no background was forthcoming.

  “We live in a golden age, the age of Saturn,” said a voice from behind him. “Small wonder that our humor should be saturnine as well.”

  One who appeared as a wrinkle-faced man, wearing a robe as white as his hair and beard, stood not far away, leaning on a walking stick. During masquerade, Phaethon had no recognition file available in mind, and thus could not tell what dream-level, composition, or neuroform this old man was. Phaethon was not sure how to act. There were things one could say or do to a computer fiction that a real person, a telepresence, or even a partial, would find shockingly rude.

  He decided on a polite reply, just in case. “Good evening to you, sir. Then there is a hidden meaning to this display?” His gesture encompassed the grove.

  “Aha! You are not a child of this present age, then, since you seek to look below the surface beauty of things.”

  Phaethon was not certain how to take this comment. It was either a slight against the society in which he lived, or else against himself. “You suspect me to be a simulacrum? I assure you, I am real.”

  “So simulacra must seem to themselves, I suppose, should anyone ask them,” said the white-bearded man with a wide-armed shrug.

  Then he seated himself on a mossy rock with a grunt. “But let us leave the question of your identity—this is a masquerade, after all, and not the right time to inquire, eh?—and study instead the instruction of the trees here. I do not know if you detect the energy web grown throughout the bark layers; but a routine calculates the amount of light which would shine, and the angle of its fall, were the planet Saturn to ignite like some third sun. Then, true to these calculations, the energy web triggers photosynthesis in the leaves and flowers, and, naturally, favors the side and angles from which the light would come, you see?”

  “Thus they bloom at night,” Phaethon said softly, impressed by the intricacy of the work.

  “Day or night,” the white-bearded man said, “provided only that Saturn is above the horizon.”

  Phaethon thought it ironic that the white-haired man had picked Saturn as the position for his fictitious new sun. Phaethon knew Saturn would never be improved, the huge atmosphere never be mined for volatiles. He himself had twice headed projects to reengineer Saturn and render that barren wasteland more useful to human needs, or to clear out the cluttered navigational hazards for which near-Saturn space was notorious. In both cases public outcry had halted his efforts and driven away his financial support. Too many people were in love with the majestic (but utterly useless) ring-system.

  The white-haired man was still speaking: “Yes, they follow the rise and fall of Saturn. And—listen! here is the curious part—over the generations, the flowers have evolved complex reactions so that their heads can turn to follow that wandering planet through cycle and epicycle, opposition, triune and conjunction. Thus they thrive. They are not one whit disaccommodated by the fact the sun they follow with such effort is a false one.

  Phaethon looked back and forth across the grove. It was extensive. The cool night breeze tingled with the scents of eerie mirrored blossoms.

  Perhaps because the man looked so odd, white bearded, wrinkled, and leaning on a stick, just the way a character from an old novel or reproduction might look, Phaethon spoke without reflection. “Well, the artist here did not use flint-napped knives for his gene-splicing, and he didn’t run his calculations in Roman numerals on an abacus, eh? Rather a lot of effort for a pointless jest.”

  “Pointless?” The white-haired man scowled.

  Phaethon realized his blunder. Perhaps the man was real after all. Probably he was the very artist who had made this place. “Ah … Pardon me! ‘Pointless,’ I admit, may be too strong a word for it!”

  “Oh? And what is the right word, then, eh?” asked the man testily.

  “Well, ah … But this grove is meant to criticize the artificiality of our society, is it not?”

  “Criticize?! It is meant to draw blood! It is Art! Art!”

  Phaethon made an easy gesture. “No doubt the point here is too subtle for me to grasp. I fear I do not understand what it means to criticize civilization for being artificial. Civilization, by definition, must be artificial, since it is manmade. Isn’t ‘civilization’ the very name we give to the sum total of manmade things?”

  “You are being obtuse, sir!” shouted the odd man, drumming his cane sharply into the moss underfoot. “The point is! The point is that our civilization should be simpler.”

  Phaethon realized then that this man must be a member of one of those primitivist schools, whom everyone seemed to revere but no one wanted to follow. They refused to have any brain modifications whatsoever, even memory aids or emotion-balancing programs. They refused to use telephones, televection, or motor transport.

  And some, it was said, programmed the nanomachines floating in their cell nuclei to produce, as years passed,
the wrinkled skin, hair defects, osteoarthritis, and general physical decay that figured so prominently in ancient literature, poems, and interactives. Phaethon wondered in horror what could prompt a man to indulge in such slow and deliberate self-mutilation.

  The man was speaking: “You are blind to what is plain before your eyes! Behold the mirrored layer of tissue growing over all these leaves. It is to block the true sun from the knowledge of these plants. Tracking a sun, which merely rises and sets, is easier than anticipating retrograde motion, I assure you. Complex habits, painfully learned through generations, would be instantly thrown aside in one blast of true sunlight. And therefore these little flowers have a mechanism to keep the truth at bay. Strange that I’ve made the blocking tissue look mirrored; you can see your own face in it … if you look.”

  This comment verged on insult. Phaethon replied hotly: “Or perhaps the tissue merely protects them from irritants, good sir!”

  “Hah! So the puppy has teeth after all, eh? Have I irked you, then? This is Art also!”

  “If Art is an irritant, like grit, good sir, then spend your genius praising the society cosmopolitan enough to tolerate it! How do you think simple societies maintain their simplicity? By intolerance. Men hunt; women gather; virgins guard the sacred flame. Anyone who steps outside their stereotypic social roles is crushed.”

  “Well, well, young manor-born—you are a manorial, are you not? Your words sound like someone taught by machines—what you don’t know, young manor-born, is that cosmopolitan societies are sometimes just as ruthless about crushing those who don’t conform. Look at how unhappy they made that reckless boy, what’s-his-name, that Phaethon. There are worse things in store for him, I tell you!”