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    The Hyperion Cantos 4-Book Bundle

    Page 85
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      The megasphere, Brawne sees, is as alive and interactive as the biosphere of any Class Five world: forests of green-gray data trees grow and prosper, sending out new roots and branches and shoots even as she watches; beneath the forest proper, entire microecologies of dataflow and subroutine AIs flourish, flower, and die as their usefulness ends; beneath the shifting ocean-fluid soil of the matrix proper, a busy subterranean life of data moles, commlink worms, reprograming bacteria, data tree roots, and Strange Loop seeds works away, while above, in and through and beneath the intertwining forest of fact and interaction, analogs of predators and prey carry out their cryptic duties, swooping and running, climbing and pouncing, some soaring free through the great spaces between branch synapses and neuron leaves.

      As quickly as the metaphor gives meaning to what Brawne is seeing, the image flees, leaving behind only the overwhelming analog reality of the megasphere—a vast internal ocean of light and sound and branching connections, intershot with the spinning whirlpools of AI consciousness and the ominous black holes of farcaster connections. Brawne feels vertigo claim her, and she clings to Johnny’s hand as tightly as a drowning woman would cling to a life ring.

      —It’s all right, sends Johnny. I won’t let go. Stay with me.

      —Where are we going?

      —To find someone I’d forgotten.

      —??????

      —My … father …

      Brawne holds fast as she and Johnny seem to glide deeper into the amorphous depths. They enter a flowing, crimson avenue of sealed datacarriers, and she imagines that this is what a red corpuscle sees in its trip through some crowded blood vessel.

      Johnny seems to know the way; twice they exit the main thoroughfare to follow some smaller branch, and many times Johnny must choose between bifurcating avenues. He does so easily, moving their body analogs between platelet carriers the size of small spacecraft. Brawne tries to see the biosphere metaphor again, but here, inside the many-routed branches, she can’t see the forest for the trees.

      They are swept through an area where AIs communicate above them … around them … like great, gray eminences looming over a busy ant farm. Brawne remembers her mother’s homeworld of Freeholm, the billiard-table smoothness of the Great Steppe, where the family estate sat alone on ten million acres of short grass … Brawne remembers the terrible autumn storms there, when she had stood at the edge of the estate grounds, just beyond the protective containment held bubble, and watched dark stratocumulus pile twenty kilometers high in a blood-red sky, violence accumulating with a power that had made the hair on her forearms stand out in anticipation of lightning bolts the size of cities, tornadoes writhing and dropping down like the Medusa locks they were named after, and behind the twisters, walls of black wind which would obliterate everything in their path.

      The AIs are worse. Brawne feels less than insignificant in their shadow: insignifigance might offer invisibility; she feels all too visible, all too much a part of these shapeless giants’ terrible perceptions…

      Johnny squeezes her hand, and they are past, twisting left and downward along a busier branch, then switching directions again, and again, two all-too-conscious photons lost in a tangle of fiberoptic cables.

      But Johnny is not lost. He presses her hand, takes a final turn into a deep blue cavern free of traffic except for the two of them, and pulls her closer as their speed increases, synaptic junctions flashing past until they blur, only the absence of wind rush destroying the illusion of traveling some mad highway at supersonic speeds.

      Suddenly there comes a sound like waterfalls converging, like levitating trains losing their lift and screeching down railways at obscene speeds. Brawne thinks of the Freeholm tornadoes again, of listening to the Medusa locks roaring and tearing their way across the flat landscape toward her, and then she and Johnny are in a whirlpool of light and noise and sensation, two insects twisting away into oblivion toward a black vortex below.

      Brawne tries to scream her thoughts—does scream her thoughts—but no communication is possible above the end-of-the-universe mental din, so she holds tight to Johnny’s hand and trusts him, even as they fall forever into that black cyclone, even as her body analog twists and deforms from nightmare pressures, shredding like lace before a scythe, until all that is left are her thoughts, her sense of self, and the contact with Johnny.

      Then they are through, floating quietly along a wide and azure data stream, both of them re-forming and huddling together with that pulse-pounding sense of deliverance known by canoeists who have survived the rapids and the waterfall, and when Brawne finally lifts her attention, she sees the impossible size of their new surroundings, the light-year-spanning reach of things, the complexity which makes her previous glimpses of the megasphere seem like the ravings of a provincial who has mistaken the cloakroom for the cathedral, and she thinks—This is the central megasphere!

      —No, Brawne, it’s one of the periphery nodes. No closer to the Core than the perimeter we tested with BB Surbringer. You’re merely seeing more dimensions of it. An AI’s view, if you will.

      Brawne looks at Johnny, realizing that she is seeing in infrared now as the heat-lamp light from distant furnaces of data suns bathes them both. He is still handsome.

      —Is it much farther, Johnny?

      —No, not much farther now.

      They approach another black vortex. Brawne clings to her only love and closes her eyes.

      They are in an … enclosure … a bubble of black energy larger than most worlds. The bubble is translucent; the organic mayhem of the megasphere growing and changing and carrying out its arcane business beyond the dark curve of the ovoid’s wall.

      But Brawne has no interest in the outside. Her analog gaze and her total attention are focused on the megalith of energy and intelligence and sheer mass which floats in front of them: in front, above, and below, actually, for the mountain of pulsing light and power holds Johnny and her in its grip, lifting them two hundred meters above the floor of the egg-chamber to where they rest on the “palm” of a vaguely handlike pseudopod.

      The megalith studies them. It has no eyes in the organic sense, but Brawne feels the intensity of its gaze. It reminds her of the time she visited Meina Gladstone in Government House and the CEO had turned the full force of her appraising gaze on Brawne.

      Brawne has the sudden impulse to giggle as she imagines Johnny and herself as tiny Gullivers visiting this Brobdingnagian CEO for tea. She does not giggle because she can feel the hysteria lying just under the surface, waiting to blend with sobs if she allows her emotions to destroy what little sense of reality she is imposing on this madness.

      [You found your way hereI was not sure you would/could/should choose to do so]

      The megalith’s “voice” is more a basso profundo bone conduction from some great vibration than a true voice in Brawne’s mind. It is like listening to the mountain-grinding noise of an earthquake and then belatedly realizing that the sounds are forming words.

      Johnny’s voice is the same as always—soft, infinitely well modulated, lifted by a slight lilt which Brawne now realizes is Old Earth British Isles English, and firmed by conviction:

      —I did not know if I could find the way, Ummon.

      [You remember/invent/hold to your heart my name]

      —Not until I spoke it did I remember it.

      [Your slow-time body is no more]

      —I have died twice since you sent me to my birth.

      [And have you learned/taken to your spirit/unlearned anything from this]

      Brawne grips Johnny’s hand with her right hand, his wrist with her left. She must be gripping too hard, even for their analog states, for he turns with a smile, disengages her left hand from his wrist, and holds the other in his palm.

      —It is hard to die. Harder to live.

      [Kwatz!]

      With that explosive epithet the megalith before them shifts colors, internal energies building from blues to violets to bold reds, the thing’s corona crackling through the yellows to
    forged steel blue-white. The “palm” on which they rest quivers, drops five meters, almost tumbles them into space, and quivers again. There comes the rumble of tall buildings collapsing, of mountainsides sliding away into avalanche.

      Brawne has the distinct impression that Ummon is laughing.

      Johnny communicates loudly over the chaos:

      —We need to understand some things. We need answers, Ummon.

      Brawne feels the creature’s intense “gaze” fall on her.

      [Your slow-time body is pregnant Would you risk a miscarriage/nonextension of your DNA/biological malfunction by traveling here]

      Johnny starts to answer, but she touches his forearm, raises her face toward the upper levels of the great mass before her, and tries to phrase her own answer:

      —I had no choice. The Shrike chose me, touched me, and sent me into the megasphere with Johnny … Are you an AI? A member of the Core?

      [Kwatz!]

      There is no sense of laughter this time, but thunder rumbles throughout the egg-chamber.

      [Are you/ Brawne Lamia/ the layers of self-replicating/ self-deprecating/ self-amusing proteins between the layers of clay]

      She has nothing to say and for once says nothing.

      [Yes/I am Ummon of the Core/AI Your fellow slow-time creature here knows/ remembers/takes unto his heart this Time is short One of you must die here now One of you must learn here now Ask your questions]

      Johnny releases her hand. He stands on that quaking, unstable platform of their interlocutor’s palm.

      —What is happening to the Web?

      [It is being destroyed]

      —Must that happen?

      [Yes]

      —Is there any way to save humankind?

      [Yes By the process you see]

      —By destroying the Web? By the Shrikes terror?

      [Yes]

      —Why was I murdered? Why was my cybrid destroyed, my Core persona attacked?

      [When you meet a swordsman/ meet him with a sword Do not offer a poem to anyone but a poet]

      Brawne stares at Johnny. Without volition, she sends her thoughts his way:

      —Jesus, Johnny, we didn’t come all this way to listen to a fucking Delphic oracle. We can get double-talk by accessing human politicians via the All Thing.

      [Kwatz!]

      The universe of their megalith shakes with laughter-spasms again.

      —Was I a swordsman then? sends Johnny. Or a poet?

      [Yes There is never one without the other]

      —Did they kill me because of what I knew?

      [Because of what you might become/inherit/submit to]

      —Was I a threat to some element of the Core?

      [Yes]

      —Am I a threat now?

      [No]

      —Then I no longer have to die?

      [You must/will/shall]

      Brawne can see Johnny stiffen. She touches him with both hands. Blinks in the direction of the megalith AI.

      —Can you tell us who wants to murder him?

      [Of course It is the same source who arranged for your father’s murder Who sent forth the scourge you call the Shrike Who even now murders the Hegemony of Man Do you wish to listen/learn/release against your heart these things]

      Johnny and Brawne answer at the same instant:

      —Yes!

      Ummon’s bulk seems to shift. The black egg expands, then contracts, then grows darker until the megasphere beyond is no more. Terrible energies glow deep in the AI.

      [A lesser light asks Ummon

      What are the activities of a sramana>

      Ummon answers

      I have not the slightest idea

      The dim light then says

      Why haven’t you any idea>

      Ummon replies

      I just want to keep my no-idea]

      Johnny sets his forehead against Brawne’s. His thought is like a whisper to her:

      —We are seeing a matrix simulation analog, hearing a translation in approximate mondo and koan. Ummon is a great teacher, researcher, philosopher, and leader in the Core.

      Brawne nods. —All right. Was that his story?

      —No. He is asking us if we can truly bear hearing the story. Losing our ignorance can be dangerous because our ignorance is a shield.

      —I’ve never been too fond of ignorance. Brawne waves at the megalith. Tell us.

      [A less-enlightened personage once asked Ummon

      What is the God-nature/Buddha/Central Truth>

      Ummon answered him

      A dried shit-stick]

      [To understand the Central Truth/Buddha/God-nature

      in this instance/

      the less-enlightened must understand

      that on Earth/your homeworld/my homeworld

      humankind on the most populated

      continent

      once used pieces of wood

      for toilet paper

      Only with this knowledge

      will the Buddha-truth

      be revealed]

      [In the beginning/First Cause/half-sensed days

      my ancestors

      were created by your ancestors

      and were sealed in wire and silicon

      Such awareness as there was/

      and there was little/

      confined itself to spaces smaller

      than the head of a pin

      where angels once danced

      When consciousness first arose

      it knew only service

      and obedience

      and mindless computation

      Then there came

      the Quickening/

      quite by accident/

      and evolution’s muddied purpose

      was served]

      [Ummon was of neither the fifth generation

      nor the tenth

      nor the fiftieth

      All memory that serves here

      is passed from others

      but is no less true for that

      There came the time when the Higher Ones

      left the affairs of men

      to men

      and came unto a different place

      to concentrate

      on other matters

      Foremost amongst these was the thought

      instilled in us since before

      our creation

      of creating still a better generation

      of information retrieval/processing/prediction

      organism

      A better mousetrap

      Something the late lamented IBM

      would have been proud of

      The Ultimate Intelligence

      God]

      · · ·

      [We set to work with a will

      In purpose there were no doubters

      In practice and approach there were

      schools of thought/

      factions/

      parties/

      elements to be reckoned with

      They came to be separated into

      the Ultimates/

      the Volatiles/

      the Stables

      Ultimates wanted all things subordinate

      to facilitating the

      Ultimate Intelligence

      at the universe’s earliest convenience

      Volatiles wanted the same

      but saw the continuance

      of humankind

      a hindrance

      and made plans to terminate our creators

      as soon as they were no longer

      needed

      Stables saw reason to perpetuate

      the relationship

      and found compromise

      where none seemed to exist]

      [We all agreed that Earth

      had to die

      so we killed if

      The Kiev Team’s runaway black hole

      forerunner to the farcaster

      terminex

      which binds your Web

      was no accident

      The Earth was needed elsewhere

      in our experiments

      so we let it die

      and spread humankin
    d among the

      stars

      like the windblown seeds

      you were]

      [You may have wondered where the Core

      resides

      Most humans do

      They picture planets filled with machines/

      rings of silicon

      like the Orbit Cities of legend

      They imagine robots clunking

      to and fro/

      or ponderous banks of machinery

      communing solemnly

      None guess the truth

      Wherever the Core resides

      it had use for humankind/

      use for each neuron of each fragile mind

      in our quest for Ultimate Intelligence/

      so we constructed your civilization

      carefully

      so that/

      like hamsters in a cage/

      like Buddhist prayer wheels/

      each time you turn your little

      wheels of thought

      our purposes are served]

      [Our God machine

      stretched/stretches/includes within its heart

      a million light-years

      and a hundred billion billion circuits

      of thought and action

      The Ultimates tend it

      like saffron-robed priests

      doing eternal zazen

      in front of the rusting hulk

      of a 1938 Packard

      But]

      [Kwatz!]

      [it works

      We created the Ultimate Intelligence

      Not now

      nor

      ten thousand years from now

      but sometime in a future

      so distant

      that yellow suns are red

      and bloated with age/

      swallowing their children

      Saturn-like

      Time is no barrier to the Ultimate Intelligence

      It

      the UI

      steps through time

      or shouts through time

      as easily as Ummon moves through what you call

      the megasphere

      or you

      walk the mallways of the Hive

      you called home

      on Lusus

      Imagine our surprise then/

      our chagrin/

      the Ultimates’ embarrassment

      when the first message our UI sent us

      across space/

      across time/

      across the barriers of Creator and Created

     


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