“You’ve got it exactly right.
“Quintus Bloom?”
“He was a big name at the Institute a few years ago. He stayed on Labyrinth when it disappeared, and no one to this day knows what happened to him. Then there was the theory that nothing cataclysmic happened to the Builders. They were just like any other species, they grew old, and since they didn’t change they slowly died out. That idea was a kind of orphan, no one knows who had it first. Most people attribute it to Captain Alonzo Sloane, an old space wanderer who went off looking for the Lost Worlds, Jesteen and Skyfall and Petra and Primrose and Paladin and Midas and Rainbow Reef. He never came back, though we did find his ship near Labyrinth.”
“People with ideas about the Builders seem to disappear rather often.”
“Oh, most of them don’t—we just remember the ones who did. I’ve had a dozen ideas of my own to explain who the Builders were and what happened to them, and I’m still here. And I must have read a hundred or a thousand papers by other people. Only one of them could be right, and chances are, all of them are wrong. If you have thoughts of your own, don’t be ashamed of them. Maybe they are new, and maybe they are better than anyone else’s.”
“If you don’t mind listening?”
“As I said, I’ve listened a thousand times, but I’m ready to listen ten thousand more. Hans Rebka tells me that the Builders are an obsession with me. I won’t go quite that far, but I will admit they have been my life’s consuming interest. Go ahead.”
“Well.” Lara glanced across at the two men, making sure that they were still deep in conversation. “I knew that the Builders were around for a very long time, and a few million years ago they disappeared. That never seemed to make much sense to me. If they died out, wouldn’t you expect to see evidence of where and how they died? When I heard about this expedition, and found out where we were going, it occurred to me that perhaps the Builders didn’t die out at all. Perhaps they just moved. Perhaps they decided to make a home in the Sag Arm, instead of in the Orion Arm. I know that they have some way of moving across great distances, because one of the artifacts is supposed to be far out of the galactic plane.”
“Thirty thousand lightyears out of it. Lara, I was there. We called it—or the beings that inhabited it, who claimed to be servants of the Builders, called it—
“Then if they wanted to, they could easily have moved here.”
“Without a doubt. The Builders have—or had—enormous powers, able to do things that still look like magic to us. We’re millennia behind them in our most advanced technology, if not millions of years. But I’m convinced of one thing, Lara. I can’t prove this, but I feel it in my bones: whoever and whatever killed this star system and all the life within it was not the Builders. For that to be true, they would have had to change much more than their location. They would have had to change their whole attitude toward other living creatures. It’s not generally accepted, but I believe that the Builders guided the development of our own local arm. It’s thanks to them that we have a stable civilization involving many species and three major clades. If Captain Rebka were listening, I would say four major clades in deference to his feelings. Even though everyone outside the Phemus Circle regards it as a backward place of no great importance.”