After the final no there comes a yes.
And on that yes the future world depends.
No was the night. Yes is this present sun.
—WALLACE STEVENS
PART ONE
2076 RA
ONE
Fire boils aft, pushing the ship close to the knife edge of light speed. Its magnetic throats dimple the smooth dipolar field.
—An arrow scratching across the black—
—blue-white exhaust plume of fizzing hydrogen—
—a granite-gray asteroid riding the roaring blowtorch—
It sucks in the interstellar dust. Mixes a caldron of isotopes. And spews them out the back, an ultraviolet flare in the swallowing abyss.
Inside, Nigel Walmsley was eating oysters.
The last of the wine, he thought moodily, peering into his cup. And it was. As nearly as ship’s rumor had it, nobody else had brought more than a bottle or so, and that had been well exhausted in the last two years.
He swirled the cup and swallowed the final chilled mouthful. The Pinot Chardonnay cut the faintly metallic taste of the oysters and left only the sea flavor and the succulent texture, a memory of Earth. He drank the last cold liquid from the shells and savored it. Eight light-years from Earth, the echo of the Gulf Stream faded.
“That’s the lot,” Nigel murmured.
“Uh … what?”
He realized he had been neglecting his guest. Ted had arrived unannounced, after all, and dead on the supper hour, as well. “I doubt I’ll be able to replace California Chardonnay, and certainly not oysters.”
“Oh. No, I suppose not. Are … are you sure the oysters were still okay?” Ted Landon shifted awkwardly.
“Considering they’ve been vac-stored for years, you mean?” Nigel shrugged. “We’ll see.” He lounged back on the tatami mat, nearly elbowing a lacquered lamp into oblivion. His nudity clearly bothered Ted. The man moved again, adjusting his cross-legged sitting position. Well, so be it; Nigel hadn’t had time yet to run out some chairs in the wood shop.
Ted’s tobacco pouch appeared. “Mind?” Nigel shook his head. During meals, he did, yes, but Ted probably knew that already. He knew everything. They had a personality profile on Nigel a yard long, even in ferrite storage. He’d seen it himself.
A slow, profound stuffing of the pipe. “Y’know, when I heard you were carving an apartment in the Low Amenity Area, I thought you’d be living pretty raw. But this looks great.”
Nigel nodded and studied the living room, trying to see it with Ted’s eyes.
—crimson vase, pale yellow flower sprouting, tray cupping single flake of smoldering incense, teakwood box, gossamer paper walls, oblique blades of yellow light drawing motes upward in the fanned air—wait until Ted had to excrete and found the loo, a hole lined with porcelain straight from Korea, closed with a wooden cover, on either side stepping-stones in the shape of feet for the slow learners: squat and deliver, why put a mask on a valuable moment of the day—
“What gives?” Nigel asked, lapsing into transatlantic shorthand.
Ted looked at him flatly, still slightly edgy. “I’m reorganizing staff.”
Aha. “You’re the new Works Manager.”
“That’s not the term, but—look, Nigel, there are some hard choices.”
“Indeed.”
Ted gave a smile, reassuring and broad but capable of vanishing, along with the flicker of one eyelid, as suddenly as it had come.
“You’ve been an ExOp so far.”
“Gridded, yes.” Nigel was too old to do the work directly, with his own muscle power. But his coordination and reflexes, enhanced by constant medservice, were still good. So they linked him by grid into servo’d robots that operated outside the ship.
“Well, y’see, there’s a big waiting list for that job classification. And you’re …”
“Too old,” Nigel said bluntly.
“Well, a lot of people think so. When the community vote came in—the vote on who’ll do what in Isis space—you got a lot of red flags.”
“Not surprising.”
“So I’m here to ask you to resign. Drop out of ExOp.”
“No.”
“What?”
Surely it couldn’t have been that difficult to follow. “No.”