"But why destroy the vaults at the Group complex when you would have eventually told us anyway?"
"It wasn't only the
Samuels cleared his throat and nodded to the observation windows.
Alexandria closed her eyes and gestured for Samuels to commence.
"Please cover your ears. A few of you may feel some discomfort, but it will pass in a moment."
Yeoman Alvera pulled away from Heirthall, almost as if she was being held against her will, and then she faced the glass expectantly.
"Officer of the deck, this is the first officer. Begin the tones," he said into the microphone embedded into the large chair.
"Aye, Commander, tones have been initiated."
Before the orders were confirmed from below, Alice, Everett, Lee, and Mendenhall placed their hands over their ears as a soundless tone penetrated into their brain through the ear canal.
"Okay, that hurts ... uh ... really ... it hurts," Mendenhall said as he leaned into Jason Ryan.
"The tones are used to call the syms. It resembles their own style of speech and can carry up to a hundred miles. This is what led to my family's understanding of whale song."
The tones stopped, and Alice was the only one who had to sit, feeling sick to her stomach.
"Oh, God," Virginia said, looking through the glass.
All eyes turned in that direction, and then one by one the Event Group slowly approached the large windows as
"Conn, lower exterior lighting to twenty-five percent power," Samuels ordered. Then he too advanced to see the wonder of the entire world.
"Beautiful." Ryan was the first to react.
The adult symbiants came out of the darkness. They had long ago shed the protective shell of octopuslike armor and were in their final form, as they would remain for the rest of their lives.
The tails, shaped like maple leaves, gently pushed them through the water toward the humans staring at them from their strange environment. They had small, thin legs that extended through the tail like veins, ending in tiny humanlike feet that exited the tail at its sides. There were discharges of internal electricity that coursed through the tail, pulsating soft pink and light blue in blood veins and arteries far different from that of man. The center of the tail radiated a soft greenish color, pulsing as their small hearts beat at the center of their chests, which could be seen through the clear membrane of their outer skin.
The first symbiant to reach the glass raised a small hand and touched it as its tail kept its body in pace with the drifting
"Yes, Mr. Ryan, it is beautiful," Niles said as he slowly reached up to the glass. He stopped and looked at Alexandria. She nodded her head that it was all right to touch the window.
The symbiant, with blinking eyes, smiled. The clear mouth curved upward and the hands slid across the window to mimic Niles's movement. The small creature tilted its head and looked directly at Niles. The smile remained.
"Captain, what nourishment do they consume at these depths?" Everett asked the practical question.
"There are over two million lava vents that supply nutrients and animal life that the symbiants harvest. Their needs are not all that great. When we visit, we like to leave them several tons of goods on the sea floor. Vitamin-filled feed, usually reserved for cows and horses. We do the same for the small children and their adults in the Gulf of Mexico."
"I count ten in all," Jack said as he too became entranced by the legend of all legends before him. He could feel Sarah next to him take a deep breath as she took in the wondrous sight.
"There is more. We estimate this colony is down to fewer than a thousand," Samuels said as he helped Alexandria to a chair. She sat and watched the Event personnel closely. "Captain, have you noticed there are only a few here? Where are the rest?"
Heirthall counted and then recounted the syms outside the glass.
"This is strange. There should be what's left of the colony here," she said, looking concerned.
Other symbiants came to the window and examined the faces looking at them. The colors in their tails enhanced to deeper blues and brighter pinks. They crowded around the glass, seemingly looking beyond the gathering of humans, looking for something that wasn't there.
"They look like a species of jellyfish. They must use the electrical current and colors for--" Virginia started to say.
"Mating, communication, navigation; right now they are asking a question," Alexandria said, watching Niles and the others closely.