Everything around him was… was familiar.
Was Earth.
The edge of a mixed forest, maple trees and spruces rising to a sky the shade of blue no other planet he’d ever seen had. Sunlight precisely the color of Sol’s—matching the antihomesickness lamps he and Rissa had in their apartment aboard
An illusion, of course. Virtual reality. Make him feel at home. Perhaps they could read his mind, or perhaps they’d already contacted other travelers from Earth.
The travel pod had no elaborate sensors. There was air in the bay, though. He could hear—God, he could hear crickets, and bullfrogs, and, yes, the haunting call of a loon, all transmitted through the hull of the ship from the air outside. No way to test a sample, but they couldn’t have gotten all the other details right and screwed up on something as simple as the gas mixture for human-breathable air.
And yet, he hesitated. The trip to Tau Ceti was supposed to be a simple run; Keith hadn’t even bothered to see if there was a spacesuit in the pod’s emergency locker before departure.
But it was clearly an invitation—an invitation to first contact. And first contact was what
Keith took a tentative breath—
And sneezed.
Jesus Christ, he thought. Ragweed pollen. These guys were
He sniffed again, and could smell all the things he’d have smelled if he really were back on Earth. Wildflowers and grass and damp wood and a thousand other things, subtly mixed. He stepped out.
They’d thought of everything—a perfect re-creation. Why, he even left footprints in the soft earth, something most virtual-reality simulations tripped up on. Indeed, he could feel the texture of the ground through the soles of his shoes, feel it give with each step, feel the springiness of grass compressing beneath his feet, the sharp jab of a stone. It was perfect…
And then it hit him. Maybe he was back on Earth. The shortcut makers knew how to cut across space in the twinkling of an eye. Maybe this was the real thing, maybe he was home—
But there had been no second shortcut inside the docking bay, no flash of purple Soderstrom radiation. And besides, if this was Earth, where had they found such unspoiled wilderness? He looked again at the sky, searching for an airplane or shuttle contrail.
Still—his sneezing meant they’d actually manufactured allergen molecules, or were manipulating his mind on a very sophisticated level. Suddenly Keith felt his throat constricting. A zoo! A goddamned zoo, and he was a specimen in it. He was trapped, a prisoner. He turned around, about to rush back to his pod, and saw the glass man.
“Hello, Keith,” said the man. His whole body was transparent, made of perfect crystal that flowed as he moved. There was only the faintest hint of color to the transparent form, a touch of cool aquamarine.
Keith said nothing for several seconds. The pounding of his heart was drowning out the wilderness sounds. “You know who I am?” he said at last.
“Sort of,” said the glass man. His voice was masculine, deep. His body, although humanoid, was stylized, like a mannequin in a trendy store. His head was a featureless egg shape, with the point forming the chin. Although the arms and legs seemed well proportioned, they were smooth, without any apparent musculature. The belly and chest were flat, and the transparent sex organ between the legs was simplified, rocket-shaped.
Keith stared at the glass man, wondering what to do next. Finally, desperate to know his status, he said: “I want to leave.”
“You may,” said the glass man, spreading his transparent arms. “Anytime you wish. Your pod stands waiting for you.” There was no sign of a speaking orifice on the simple ovoid head, but Keith’s ears told him the sound was indeed emanating from it.
“This—this isn’t a zoo?” asked Keith.
There was a sound like wind chimes—glassy laughter? “No.”
“And I’m not a prisoner?”
The wind chimes again. “No. You are—is ‘guest’ the right word? You are my guest.”
“How can you speak English?”
“I don’t, actually, of course. My reckoner is translating the words for you.”
“Did you make the shortcuts?”
“The what?”
“The shortcuts. The interstellar gateways, the stargates—whatever you want to call them.”
“’Shortcuts,’” said the glass man, nodding. “A good name for them. Yes, we created them.”
Keith’s pulse was racing. “What do you want from me?”
The wind chimes once more. “You seem defensive, Keith. Isn’t there some standard speech you’re supposed to make in a first-contact situation? Or is it too early for that?”