“I don’t know. Maybe the eggs can last out the winter that way. Maybe the creatures, the flakes, only have active life during the perihelion period, when the atmosphere expands and enriches.” She thought that through. “That fits. That’s why the Poole people didn’t spot anything. The construction team was here close to the last aphelion. Pluto’s year is so long that we’re still only half-way to the next perihelion—”
“So how do they live?” Cobh snapped. “What do they eat?”
“There must be more to the ecosystem than one species,” Lvov conceded. “The flakes—the spiders—need water glass. But there’s little of that on the surface. Maybe there is some biocycle—plants or burrowing animals—which brings ice and glass to the surface, from the interior.”
“That doesn’t make sense. The layer of nitrogen over water ice is too deep.”
“Then where do the flakes get their glass?”
“Don’t ask me,” Cobh said. “It’s your dumb hypothesis. And what about the web? What’s the point of that—if it’s real?”
Lvov ground to a halt. “I don’t know,” she said lamely.
Cobh toyed with a fitting from the drive. “Have you told anyone about this yet? In the inner System, I mean.”
“No. You said you wanted to talk about that.”
“Right.” Lvov saw Cobh close her eyes; her face was masked by the glimmer of her faceplate. “Listen. Here’s what we say. We’ve seen nothing here. Nothing that couldn’t be explained by crystallisation effects.”
Lvov was baffled. “What are you talking about? What about the eggs? Why would we lie about this? Besides, we have the desks—records.”
“Data desks can be lost, or wiped, or their contents amended.”
Lvov wished she could see Cobh’s face. “Why would we do such a thing?”
“Think it through. Once Earth hears about this, these flake-spiders of yours will be protected. Won’t they?”
“Of course. What’s bad about that?”
“It’s bad for
Lvov shrugged. “So we’d have to wait for a slower ship. A liner; one that won’t need to take on more reaction mass here.”
Cobh laughed at her. “You don’t know much about the economics of GUTship transport, do you? Now that the System is criss-crossed by Poole wormholes, how many liners like that do you think are still running? I’ve already checked the manifests. There are
“On the other side of the System.”
“Right. There’s no way either of those ships could reach us for, I’d say, a year.”
“Do you get it yet?” Cobh said heavily. “
“No. It wouldn’t happen like that.”
Cobh shrugged. “There are precedents.”
She was right, Lvov knew. There
Cobh said, “Pan-genetic diversity. Pan-environmental management. That’s the key to it; the public policy of preserving all the species and habitats of Sol, into the indefinite future. The lives of two humans won’t matter a damn against that.”
“What are you suggesting?”
“That we don’t tell the inner System about the flakes.”
Lvov tried to recapture her mood of a few days before: When Pluto hadn’t mattered to her, when the crash had been just an inconvenience.
Cobh seemed to be waiting for an answer.
Lvov thought of how Sol light looked over Pluto’s ice fields, at dawn.
She decided to stall. “We’ll say nothing. For now. But I don’t accept either of your options.”
Cobh laughed. “What else is there? The wormhole is destroyed; even this flitter is disabled.”
“We have time. Days, before the GUTship is due to be launched. Let’s search for another solution. A win-win.”
Cobh shrugged. She looked suspicious.