The president stared for a moment, perhaps listening to someone offstage explaining what the Praetorian Guard was. "Science is on my side here, Professor. This energy beam goes at the speed of light. Do you know of any way to detect it and get out of its way?"
"No, but neither do I have a spaceship that can go the speed of light. If I did, I'd probably have something to protect myself against twenty-first-century weapons."
"Exactly my point last night," Pauling said. "The only thing we know about these creatures is that their science is beyond our comprehension."
"You may be committing suicide for the whole human race," Rory said. "Or murdering the human race out of ignorance and hubris."
"This is not just a bad idea," Deedee said. "This is the worst idea in history."
The president's famous temper finally boiled over. "Then history will judge me! Not a roomful of professors!" She disappeared, along with Pauling. The governor faded out with a fixed smile pasted on his face.
It was just the three of them, spaced around a plain round table.
Rory sipped cold coffee. "I think she has a thing about professors."
"Professors tend to have a thing about her," the chancellor said.
"We don't have to keep this secret," Deedee said. "We ought to get the word out before the administration does."
Mal shook his head. "She said it was top secret."
"I don't have any clearance," she said. "Do you?"
"I can probably get Marya Washington," Rory said. "She's not exactly pro-administration." She took a phone out of her purse and punched two numbers. She nodded at a robot voice. "Tell Marya that Rory Bell, down in Florida, has to talk to her immediately. Big scoop." She pushed the "off button. "Big scoop of something."
"I need a real cup of coffee," Deedee said. "Go by Sara's on the way back?"
Mal checked his watch. "You two go. I still have time to show up at a budget hearing and surprise some people." He smiled and the smile faded. "Let me know if you need any help, Rory. With the cube people or Her Nibs."
"Thanks, Mal. I may need you to back me up on what the president said."
"Count on it." He looked at Deedee. "See you Saturday?"
Deedee
"With bells on." The chancellor nodded, snapped his attaché case shut, and left.
"Hobnobbing with the greats?" Rory said.
"He's a tiger in bed," she said hoarsely. "'Administer me! Administer me!'" They both laughed. "It's something the provost dreamed up. They've invited all the four-point seniors to a barbecue with all the deans and Mal. Should be fun, if Mal and I aren't in some dungeon in Washington, along with you."
"Any bets as to who he'll show up with?"
"I don't gamble with love." There was a faint rumble of thunder, and she held up an umbrella. "Beat the rain?"
They didn't. Halfway to Dos Hermanos the skies opened up. The umbrella kept their heads dry, but not much else.
Dos Hermanos was warm and crowded. They sat at the bar and ordered cafés con leche.
"So it's us against the president of the United States," Deedee said. "Where do we go from here?"
"You know, she didn't say why she called the meeting," Rory said. "She must have known what our reaction was going to be. So what did she gain by letting us know before a general announcement was made?"
Deedee shook her head. "Maybe it was Pauling who set it up. She pretty much does what her cabinet tells her to do."
"Yeah, Snow White and the Fourteen Dwarfs. The executive branch has seen better days." The coffee came and Rory stirred in a spoonful of sugar. Deedee just sprinkled a little cinnamon on top. "I wonder," Rory continued. "What if you could get someone to claim that this was a declaration of war, and need the approval of Congress?"
"Well, she owns the House, except the Greens. Put the House Greens with the Senate Democrats, you'd at least have some noise. But I don't think you can declare war against a vessel—or a message, which is all we really have."
She held the coffee cup to warm her fingers and sniffed deeply at the cinnamon. "I think the key is going to be education, or propaganda. Your newscaster is probably our most powerful weapon. If the gallups tell LaSalle not to launch the things, she won't."
Pepe burst through the door, drenched, holding a soggy newspaper over his head. "¡Hola!" He dropped the paper into the recycle bin.
There were no seats at the bar. He stood between them and ordered a double espresso.
"How'd the meeting go? Is Fearless Leader smarter in person?"
"A regular Hawking," Deedee said, and in low voices the two of them summed up what had transpired.
"I wouldn't be too worried," he said. "She's just putting on her 'woman of action' hat. France is going to raise holy hell, and Russia, too. She'll never get the Security Council behind it, and she knows that. She's posturing. Campaigning."
"Wish I could be sure of that," Rory said. "Sounds too sophisticated for her." Her phone rang and she plucked it out of her purse. "Con permiso. I have a call in to Marya Washington." She pushed the "record" button. "Buenos?"
Her jaw actually dropped; sharp intake of breath. "Did you record it? I'll be right over." She folded up the phone and put it away. "That was Norman, at the office. There's a new message from the aliens. A long one."
They left three coffees steaming on the bar.
Norman
He thumbed in a blank crystal and made another copy, for safety's sake. Then he sat and read the message on the wall:
We will arrive on Earth exactly one month from now, landing at Cape Kennedy 1200 Greenwich Standard Time on January 1. We will use the old shuttle landing strip. Please make sure it is clear and smooth.
We have a message that must be delivered in person. Recognizing the need for some ceremony, we will stay for a short time. Soon after landing, though, the runway must be clear for our departure. The nature of our message will make it clear why timing is crucial.
If we are delayed, your planet will be destroyed.
If any action is taken against us, every human being on Earth will die, whether we survive or not.
Our intentions are peaceful, but we know your nature well enough not to come unprotected. We will provide a small demonstration of our power as we approach, by destroying the martian moon Phobos. Be sure that there is nothing of value on that moon by Christmas.
We do come in peace, and we bring a message of hope.
Norman grinned. The third partita would be Christmas hymns, combining and then clashing, building to chaos and silence.
He would write the fourth partita after he heard what they had to say. If composer and audience were still alive.
Rory came bustling in with Deedee and Pepe, all of them drenched. They stared at the message, wordless. The phone chimed, over and over. Someone important, or the secretary would just file a message.
Still looking at the writing on the wall, Rory groped behind her and found the chair at her desk. She sat down slowly and pushed a button. "Buenos."
"I don't know how you did it." President LaSalle's face on the screen was blotchy, livid. "But it's not going to work. We will have those weapons in orbit in a week."
"Ms. President," Rory said, "I just saw this message one minute ago for the first time. I assume it did come from the spaceship?"
"That's what the NASA people say. But the timing is too perfect. I don't know how you did it, but you did it. And it's not going to work."
"Why don't you ask your NASA people how I could manage that trick?" she said slowly. "I assume they picked it up on the Moon as well as here. So by simple triangulation, you can tell how far the message has come. It was probably sent before we began to talk."
"Impossible," the president said, and disappeared.
"Pepe, go check on the Moon?" The phone started chiming again. Rory shook her head and stabbed the button.
It was Marya Washington, her face distorted and bouncing around the screen. "Rory, I'm in a cab to JFK. The station's putting me on the
ir own plane; I'll be down in Gainesville"—she looked at the inside of her wrist—"in maybe ninety minutes. Can we have lunch?"
"Uh … sure. We have a lot to talk about."
"That Mexican place on Main Street? At twelve o'clock?"
"Yeah, fine."
"Good. Más tarde." The screen went blank.
"What the hell was that all about?" Norman said. "The prez?"
"That's what our meeting was about. She wants to orbit those killer satellites. The secretary of defense's idea, I take it. But all the cabinet's behind it, except Pauling."
Norman let out a little snort. "I guess this means we won't be invading France. Just frying it."
Pepe was mopping his long hair with a paper towel. "Surely she'll reconsider after she calms down." He gestured at the screen. "Or wiser heads may prevail."
"Wiser heads better get her out of office," Deedee said. "The woman is seriously bent. She sees everything in terms of conspiracy."
"Yeah," Norman said. "Poor old Brattle."
"Who's Brattle?" Rory said. Everybody looked at her.
"Undersecretary of defense," Norman said. To the others: "She doesn't listen to the news."
"She had him charged with sedition," Deedee said. "Sedition! 'Moderation' is more like it. But he's being investigated by a closed committee. Essentially under house arrest."
"Well, she can house-arrest me." Rory smiled at Norman. "At least I have a good cook. She's going to be terminally pissed off after I talk to Marya."
"Don't do that," Pepe said. "You mustn't do that. Not yet."
"Somebody has to stop her."
"Somebody will. In Washington."
"You sound pretty confident. For someone who's usually nothing but sarcastic about government."
"Just give it a day or two, and see what happens. If you violate the president's trust, you'll be out of the game completely. And you probably will go to jail somewhere."
"I think he's right," Norm said. "Where there's a loose cannon on deck, you want to be belowdecks."
"So what do I tell Marya? I left her a message that we were conferencing with La Presidente this morning."
"Just tell the truth," Pepe said. "That important matters were discussed, but you were sworn to secrecy."
Rory shook her head. "We're talking about the survival of the whole human race, versus my going to jail."
"Just give it one day," Pepe said. "See what Washington does. If they conceal it, hell, you'll give Marya even more of a story."
"I think he's right," Deedee said. "Another couple of days won't make a big difference. Stay out of jail and hold on to your professorship. That's my strategy."
Norm nodded at the screen. "You'll have plenty to talk about. I mean, now it really is an invasion from outer space."
"I'll do something useful," Pepe said, "besides checking the Moon. See whether we can calculate how big a boom it would take to blow up Phobos."
"It's just a little pebble, isn't it?" Norm said.
"Compared to a planet," Rory said. "About twenty kilometers in diameter?"
"You're asking me?" Pepe said. "I'm not a planet guy. But that's twice as big as Mount Everest is tall. Think about a bomb that could level Mount Everest. Then multiply it by eight; two-cubed."
"Considerable bang," Rory said. "Interesting that they chose the larger one. If memory serves, Diemos is only half its size."
"I'll go see if I can find Leo." Leo Matzlach was their Mars expert. "Maybe I can get you a number before launch."
"That would be good," Rory said. "Anything concrete. We're not exactly in a data-rich environment."
Running out, Pepe almost collided with the chancellor.
Malachi Barrett
"Sorry." He dodged the young man, then walked into the office and exchanged greetings.
"Dr. Bell," he said to Norman, "I have to speak with your wife and Dr. Whittier in private."
"No problem." Norm got up and stretched. "Guess our lunch date's off, anyhow."
"Unless you want to be interviewed," Rory said.
"No; think I'll go home and play." He jerked a thumb in the direction of the wallscreen. "That gives me an idea." To Mal: "Stopped raining?"
"For a while." He brushed a few drops from his shoulder.
"Try to beat it home." Norm scooped up his bicycle helmet and left.
"This changes things." Mal dropped heavily into the chair Norm had vacated. "A direct threat."
"Her Nibs called right after the message came," Deedee said. "She thinks it's a fake, and Rory's behind it."
"Well?" Mal said.
"Well what?" Rory said. "Is it a fake?"
Mal shrugged. "Tell me it's not."
"Mal … okay, you've got me. It's a fake. But since it came from beyond the solar system, I had to send the message before we met with La Presidente. So I'm not only a traitor, I'm a fucking clairvoyant!"
Mal raised a hand. "Okay, sorry. I hadn't thought of that."
"You're one step ahead of Fearless Leader," Rory said. "She not only didn't think of it, she doesn't believe it. I don't think they covered that speed-of-light stuff at her finishing school."
"So you think she's going to go ahead with orbiting those weapons?"
"Seems likely. She has a testosterone problem. And she has the backing to push it through."
"They would probably work, though, wouldn't they?"
"What, the weapons?"
"Yes. I mean, there are thousands of satellites up there. Surely the aliens couldn't tell that three of them were weapons."
Rory paused. "Maybe they couldn't, especially if the weapons were disguised as other kinds of satellites. Though their positioning would be suggestive, suspicious." She rubbed her still-damp hair. "Besides, suppose there's more than one alien vessel? They seem to know a bit about human nature. Maybe they know us well enough to send a decoy first."
"Which could be behind the Phobos demonstration, too," Deedee said. "If it is an actual invasion, they may be sending a decoy in to provoke us and test our resources."
"Well, if it is an invasion, we can save our H-bombs. They can stand back a ways and throw rocks at us, at .99c."
"Another thing the president seems not to believe," Mal said. His own background was in psychology and sociology, but he knew enough science to grasp that.
"And she doesn't want to listen to the one person who keeps telling her the truth," Deedee said. "Poor Pauling. He'll be out on the sidewalk before long."
"Replaced by her astrologer," Mal said.
"She has an astrologer?" Rory said, wide-eyed.
Mal shrugged. "Might be tabloid nonsense. Maybe she does chicken entrails instead."
"So what do your chicken entrails say?" Deedee said. "Rory's talking with Marya Washington at noon. We've been telling her to keep it under her hat, at least for the time being."
"I would, too. The president was unambiguous about that. Top secret,' she said. Though I'm certain she's about to reveal it herself. Maybe not until after the launch."
"She thinks these aliens aren't watching our broadcasts?"
"She doesn't think very far beyond the nearest camera lens, and this morning's gallup numbers. And she knows the people are going to eat this up."
"The people," Deedee said. "The only thing wrong with democracy."
The phone chimed and Rory thumbed it. It was the departmental secretary, looking strained. "Dr. Bell, I'm sorry to interrupt. But I have calls stacked up from all over the world. If we could schedule a press conference…"
"Okay, let's say fourteen hundred. Do you have Marya Washington's phone number?"
"Right here."
"She'll be landing here in a half hour or so, I guess with a small crew. Call her first, set up a time and place, and then contact everyone else."
"Okay, will do." The screen went blank.
"You always play favorites like this?" Mal asked.
"I guess I do. She's well informed and fair."
"She probably doesn't have a qua
rter the market share of CNN."
"I should care? The news gets out." The phone chimed and the screen flashed INTRADEPARTMENTAL. She pushed it.
Pepe: "Okay, I called the Moon and they confirmed. And the choice of Phobos is no mystery. It's cracked. There's a crater, Stuckney, that's a third the size of the moon itself, and it damn near blew the thing apart. Fractures radiate away from it; you just have to shoot a bomb down into there, and finish Mother Nature's job for her."
"So how big a bomb?"
Pepe shrugged. "Pick a number. Leo guessed a hundred thousand megatons. Give or take a factor of a thousand."
Rory laughed. "Well, that's precise enough. A hundred million megatons it is. Thank Leo for me—you want to come to this interview?"
"No; God, no. Earthshaking stress isn't in my job description."
Pepe
"Buenos." He pushed the "on/off" button on the pay phone and looked around the library. This was as good a place as any to wait for the news to break.
News. He hadn't been keeping up. He sat down at a console and called up The New York Times, and toggled back a couple of days.
That must have been when the president first got a hair up her ass about the orbital weapons. She was evidently a pawn, or a rook anyhow, in the current Defense Department power struggle—a schism between those who wanted to ally with Germany and Russia, and the isolationist/pacifist/Francophile set, who wanted us to sit back and watch.
If we stayed out of it, France and her allies would prevail; the eastern coalition was about to spin apart into impotent factions. But with our killer satellites always within a few minutes of Paris and Lyons, coupled with a commander-in-chief who was pro-East and prone to dramatic gestures, Paris had to stop and think: We could be vaporized.
Washington was thinking, as well. Not talking yet, waiting for the White House's lead.
It was like watching an ant colony scurry around, oblivious to the larger world around them. The Defense Department seized on the threat of the Coming to justify "weapons of mass destruction" in orbit. Thinking that when the alien hoax petered out, the weapons would still be up there. Pointed down, at Paris and her allies.