Read Halo: First Strike Online
Authors: Eric S. Nylund
Tags: #Science Fiction - Adventure, #Fiction - Science Fiction, #Video & Electronic, #Action & Adventure, #Science Fiction & Fantasy, #Imaginary wars and battles, #Space Opera, #Halo (Game), #General, #Space warfare, #Science Fiction - General, #Human-alien encounters, #Games, #Adventure, #Outer space, #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #Computer games
as all cultivators do, to isolate certain species and provide favorable conditions for their growth. But our 'seeds,' if you will, the spores, are very small things, and to locate them, isolate them, bring them to spawn, this requires delicacy and techniquein a word, art." She paused, and Gonzales nodded. They came to a low structure of plastic sheets draped over metal walls and stopped in front of a door labeled STERILE INOCULATION ROOM. They passed through a hanging sheet into an anteroom to the sterile lab beyond. She said, "Take a look through the window here." Beyond the window, small robots worked at benches barely two feet high. Like the robot he'd seen in the Berkeley Rose Gardens, they had wheels for locomotion and grippers with clusters of delicate fibroid fingers at their ends. She said, "Their hands have a delicacy and precision no human being can achieve. And they are single-minded in their concentration on the jobthey preserve our intentions completely and purely." "They are machines." "If you wish." She pointed through the window, where one of the robots manipulated ugly looking inoculation needles as it transferred some material into Petri dishes. She said, "By their gestures I can identify my sams, even in a crowd of others." Gonzales said nothing. She went on, "The pure mushroom mycelium is used to inoculate sterile grain or sawdust and bran. The mycelium expands through the sterile medium, and the result is known as spawn." "Too much technical stuff," she said, and smiled. "Once we have spawn, the sams can take their baskets and go through Halo, placing the spawn into dead grass and wood, into seedling roots and the spawn will grow and bear fruitmushrooms." She paused. "Any questions?" Gonzales shook his head, no. "Then let's go next door." They left the lab anteroom through the hanging curtain and turned left. The building next to the lab was a fragile tent-like structure of metal struts and draped sheets of colorful plastic red, blue, yellow, and green. "This way," she said, from behind him. She said, "It's around dinnertime for me. Are you hungry?" "Not really," he said. "What is this place?" "Home," she said. The interior was filled with cheery, diffuse lightthe shaft of sunlight Gonzales had seen outside here brought in and spread around. The place seemed almost conventional, with ordinary walls and ceilings of painted wallboard. The twins waited in the kitchen, among flowers and bright yellow plastic work surfaces. They sat at a central table and chairs of bleached oak. "Would you two like to eat?" Trish asked. "Yes," the Alice twin said. "And we think that Mister Gonzales"she giggled"should have the special dinner." "I don't think so," Trish said. "What is she talking about?" Gonzales asked. The woman seemed hesitant. She said, "I supply the collective with psychotropic mushrooms, varieties of Psilocybe for the most part." "They use them to prepare for interface," Gonzales said, guessing. "Sometimes," she said. "At other times, it's not clear what they're using them for." "For inspiration," the Alice twin said. "For imagination." "Consolation," the Eurydice twin said. "When I remember Orpheus and our trip from the Undergroundthe terrible moment when he looked back and so lost me foreverthen I am very sad, and I eat Trish's mushrooms to plumb my sorrow. And when I think of the day I joined the maenads who tore Orpheus to pieces, I eat Trish's mushroomswhich are the same as we ate that day, the body of the godthen I recall the frenzy with which we attacked the beautiful singer, and I recall my guilt afterward, and my sorrow, but I take solace from the knowledge that the god was pleased." "And I," the Alice twin said, "can grow ten feet tall." "The mushrooms can serve many purposes," Trish said. "You should eat mushrooms," the Alice twin said. "You are both sad and confused. They will help you grow large or small as the occasion demands." "Perhaps I am sad and confused," Gonzales admitted. "But I think they would make me more so." Around him, the room lights pulsed ever so slightly, and the shapes at the edge of his vision flickered. "Confused into clarity," the Eurydice twin said. "If you cannot come up from Underground, you must go deeper in." An absurd idea, but it put barbs into his skin and clung there. Gonzales asked, "Do the collective ever take the mushrooms after interface?" Often enough, he had prepared to go into the egg by taking psychotropic drugs; why not the reverse, eat the mushrooms to recover from interface? And he thought, the logic of Underground, of the Mirror. Suddenly he felt anxiety grip him so he could hardly breathe. He tottered a bit, then sat in a chair and looked at the others. The three women watched as he sat breathing deeply. He said, "I want to take the mushrooms." "Are you sure?" Trish asked. "I want to." "All right," she said. "First I will feed the twins, then I will prepare your mushrooms." Trish went to the refrigerator and took out a plastic bag filled with a mixture of vegetables and bean sprouts. She pulled the rubber stopper from an Erlenmeyer flask and poured oil into the bottom of an unpainted metal wok that was heating over an open gas ring. She waited until light smoke came out of the wok, then dumped in the vegetables and sprouts and stirred the mix for a minute or two. She unplugged the rice cooker, a ceramic-coated steel canister, bright red, and carried it to where the twins sat. She put shining aluminum plates and chopsticks in front of the twins, opened the rice cooker and swept rice onto each plate, then tilted the wok and poured the steaming mixture inside it onto the rice. "There," she said. "That's for you two." She looked across to where Gonzales sat, now oddly calm, and she said, "I'll be back in a minute." The twins ate with their eyes fixed on Gonzales. Trish came back with a small wire basket of mushrooms. "Psilocybe cubensis," she said. "Of a variety cultivated here that has undergone some changes from the Earth-bound kind." She held up an unremarkable mushroom with long white stem and brownish cap. "Do you ever make mistakes in identifying the mushrooms?" Gonzales asked. "No," Trish said. She was smiling. "We do not have to seek among thousands of kinds for the right one, as mushroom hunters do. These are ours, grown as I told you, for our own needs." She lay the mushrooms on the chopping block and began to slice them. "I cleaned them in the shed," she said. When she was done, she used the knife to slide the slices into a sky-blue ceramic bowl. She turned on the wok, poured more oil into it, and stood smiling at Gonzales as the oil heated. When the first smoke came, she swept the mushrooms into the wok with quick motions of her chopsticks. She stirred them for perhaps half a minute, then tilted the wok and poured them into the blue bowl. She placed the bowl in front of Gonzales and laid black lacquered chopsticks across its rim. Gonzales picked up the chopsticks, lifted his plate, and began to eat, shoveling the mushrooms into his mouth. Back at the wok, she stirred more vegetables in and said, "I'm making my dinner." Gonzales sat back, looking at the empty bowl. Well, he thought, now we'll see. He said, "How many kinds of mushrooms do you grow?" "Quite a few, some rather ordinary, others esotericfor purposes of research. Aleph determines what kinds, how many." The twins had gone completely silent. As Trish ate, they watched Gonzales, who had gone totally fatalistic. What he had done seemed incredibly stupid, like applying heat to a burn common sense would tell him that. He smiled, thinking, what did common sense have to do with his life these days? The twins smiled back at him. "Who was that woman?" Gonzales asked. "Who do you mean?" Trish asked. "The old woman, the potter," Gonzales said. "She makes pots, and she teaches," Trish said. "She's employed by SenTrax; she was brought here by Aleph." "Why?" Gonzales asked. What did SenTrax or Aleph have to do with potting? "Pour encourager les autres," one of the twins said, distinctly. Gonzales turned but couldn't tell who had spoken. Trish laughed. "To encourage art at Halo," she said. "Pottery from lunar clay, stained glass and beta cloth tapestries from lunar silica." Gonzales sat thinking on these things until he realized that Trish had finished eating some time ago, and they had been sitting at the table for some timea very long time, it suddenly seemed to Gonzales. Involuntarily, he shoved his chair back from the table. Trish said, "It's all right." The twins got up from their chairs and walked behind him. When he started to turn, he felt their hands on his shoulders and neck, kneading muscles that went liquid beneath their pressure. Trish said, "It's begun. Now you must go walking around Halo, up and down in it, to and fro " She paused, and the twins' hands continued to work. She said, "Walk in the woods, see what we have growing there shaggy manes, garden giants, oyster and shiitake " "Shiitake," he saidshi-i-ta-keythe name's syllables falling like drops of molten metal through water She said, "The twins can guide you, or a sam can take you with it on an inoculation trip. Or if you prefer, you can go by yourself." "Yes," he said, the image suddenly very compelling of him walking around the entire circle of the space city, exploring, |