“Because the signal analyzer is telling us. I said it
“Hans Rebka, you know the answer to that question as well as I do.” Darya turned to face Ben Blesh and Lara Quistner. “We’ve been trying for thousands of years, and still we have no idea what the Phages—and now parts of Iceworld—are made of.”
Ben and Lara had heard about Phages—who in the local spiral arm had not?—but Darya Lang and Hans Rebka had actually seem them in action.
While the
“As much as we know,” Darya said. “You have to remember, Phages have such a terrible reputation that you try not to go near one. The reason you will never encounter them during training is because every exploration vessel employs a Phage avoidance system. They are universal eaters. They don’t look dangerous, just a gray regular dodecahedron. Most of them are forty-eight meters on a side, but we have run across much smaller ones. The big ones can ingest something thirty meters across, and as long as you care to mention.”
“But where does it all go?” Lara’s wide-eyed gaze suggested that she and her companion were ignorant in certain important survival areas.
“No one knows. It sure doesn’t come out again, and mass detectors measure no change in the mass of the Phage. They seem able to digest anything.”
Hans added, “Or nearly everything. They can’t eat each other, or the structural hulls left behind by the Builders. We used to think that they were completely indestructible, until we saw smashed remains of some on an artificial moon called Glister in the Dobelle system. Now we know that they and some of the other Builder constructs are stabilized by powerful electromagnetic fields. If that field dies away, or you can impose a suitable counter-field, the material becomes weak. You can push your fist right through a wall of it. I know, because I did it on Labyrinth.”
Ben Blesh had been listening with the same total absorption as Lara Quistner. He looked away, to where the displays showed the laser beam from
“The right field, in the right place.” Rebka had followed Blesh’s gesture. “Maybe at a place like that one. But remember, most of the surface isn’t Builder material—or if it is, it’s a type we never met before. But you are correct. Judging from our experience, if we land where we see one of the orange flashes, and generate a suitable field, we will drop through into the interior. We know how to set up such a cancellation field. I wonder if we can define one for an individual suit.”
“Of course we can.”
Ben’s answer was no surprise any more to Hans. The suits provided on the
Ben went on, “So we might as well set up cancellation fields, for our individual suits and for the whole ship. According to the sensors, they are seeing the same thing over and over again. We get either nothing at all, unless you count that weak blur of blue light, or we see a flash from a section of Builder material. If we’re going to learn anything new, we have to head down to the surface.”
It was tempting to agree at once with Ben. End the boring survey of an unchanging world from a cramped ship, and move on to where they might discover something that mattered. Hans had felt uneasy before their previous planetfall, because even prior to arrival he had feared the sight of a dead world and murdered inhabitants. Iceworld produced no such qualms. Any danger from Builder artifacts always stemmed from too much human curiosity or a total lack of common sense. He and half a dozen others, including Darya, had almost died on Quake during Summertide Maximum; but no rational creature should have been anywhere near Quake at such a time, after numerous indicators had warned of coming planet-wide violence.