He stared at her, and laughed. “I think we’re going to get on, you and I, Lieutenant Jansson. Sorry. I know I get carried away. Look—did you ever read Robert Heinlein? Basically it’s like that here. You really can build a backyard rocket ship and fly to Mars. What’s not to love about that? All these worlds are ours,
“Listen, Ms. Jansson. Given the reason you’ve come out all this way—you mustn’t think badly of the young guys here. They
“I was a cop,” she said in answer.
He glanced over and grinned. “‘Was’? So when you flashed your badge at me, Lieutenant Jansson—”
“OK, you got me. Call me Monica, by the way.”
His grin widened. “Monica.”
A guy in a Bart Simpson cap came wandering over. “You’re Lieutenant Jansson?”
“That’s me.”
“Your friend Sally Linsay sent me to fetch you. Oh, and she had a message.”
“What message?”
“‘The trolls are gone.’”
“That’s it?”
The guy shrugged. “You coming, or not?”
35
Jansson was escorted over to the big admin block, where Sally waited for her, and—Jansson couldn’t quite figure out how she did it—within thirty seconds Sally had given Bart Simpson the slip.
They hurried through cramped, badly lit, roughly walled corridors. “Come on,” Sally said. “There’s things you need to see in this dump.”
They passed what looked like offices, study rooms, labs, even a kind of computer centre. A few people glanced at them, curiously or not, but nobody stopped them or questioned them. They must be used to strangers here. Jansson was getting the impression that this was indeed a loose organization, a bunch of fan types getting together, and no doubt with people coming and going as enthusiasm or other commitments allowed. No security at all.
They came to a staircase that led them down into an underground complex, a warren of roughly walled corridors and rooms. Jansson remembered what Frank had said about safety bunkers. And she remembered, too, the speculation about why Mary the troll hadn’t just stepped away from her tormentors; keeping her underground would be the simplest way, so she couldn’t step at all.
And now, as they hurried along, Jansson started to hear music, of a jagged, discordant kind.
“So,” Jansson said. “‘The trolls are gone.’ What does that mean?”
“Just that,” said Sally grimly. “Not from here, particularly, not yet, but I bet the drift away has started—here like everywhere else—they’re abandoning the Long Earth in general. Look—you know about the long call. All the trolls everywhere sharing information. Well, it seems they’ve reached some kind of tipping point.”
“Tipping point about what?”
“About us. About humans. Our relationship with them. All over the Long Earth,
Jansson barely understood this, couldn’t comprehend an event of such strangeness, of such magnitude. “Where are they going?”
“Nobody knows.”
Jansson didn’t bother asking how Sally knew about any of this. She’d seen herself how Sally could move around the Long Earth, and she was somehow tuned into the trolls too, and their long call. To Jansson Sally was like a homespun embodiment of some all-pervasive intelligence agency, or a ubiquitous corporate presence, like the Black Corporation maybe.
And Jansson knew Sally held the cause of the trolls close to her heart—well, they wouldn’t be here otherwise. So she was cautious when she asked, “Does it really matter?”
Sally winced, but stayed civil. “Yes, it matters. The trolls
“So,” Jansson said, “of course
“Of course we are,” said Sally, grinning fiercely.
“Starting with what?”
“Starting with right here. This is the place…”