Nemesis (12 page)

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Authors: Isaac Asimov

BOOK: Nemesis
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And as they approached Erythro, the nature of its habitability seem to grow ever more favorable. Erythro was a planet of sea and land, though its seas, from preliminary estimates of its cloud cover as made out in visible light and the infrared, seemed shallower than Earth’s oceans, and really impressive mountains on the land were very few. Insigna, on the basis of further calculations, insisted that the climate on the planet as a whole would be entirely suitable for human life.

And then when the inflight had brought them to a distance from which Erythro’s atmosphere could be studied spectroscopically with precision, Insigna said to him, “Erythro’s atmosphere is a little denser than Earth’s and it contains free oxygen—16 percent of it, plus 5 percent argon and the rest nitrogen. There must be small quantities of carbon dioxide, but we haven’t detected it yet. The point is, it’s a breathable atmosphere.”

“Sounds better and better,” said Pitt. “Who could have imagined this when you first spotted Nemesis?”

“Better and better for the biologist. Maybe not very good for Rotor on the whole, though. A sizable content of free oxygen in the atmosphere is a sure indication of the presence of life.”

“Life?” said Pitt, momentarily stupefied at the thought.

“Life,” said Insigna, boring in, taking an apparent perverse pleasure in stressing the possibilities. “And if life, then possibly intelligent life, perhaps even a high civilization.”

17.

What followed was a nightmare for Pitt. He had not only to live with the terrible apprehension of his own Earthpeople pursuing and overtaking him, superior in number certainly, and in technology possibly—but there was an accompanying fear now that was, if anything, greater. They might be approaching and infringing on an old and advanced civilization capable of eradicating them in a moment of absent-minded annoyance as a human being might, without thinking, crush a mosquito that buzzed too near his ear.

As they continued to approach Nemesis, Pitt said to Insigna with a deeply troubled air, “Need oxygen truly imply the existence of life?”

“It’s a thermodynamic inevitability, Janus. In an Earth-like planet—and, as nearly as we can tell, Erythro is Earth-like—free oxygen cannot exist, any more than in any Earth-like gravitational field, a rock can be suspended in open air of its own accord. Oxygen, if present in the atmosphere to begin with, would spontaneously combine with other elements in the soil, giving off energy. It would only continue to exist in the atmosphere if some process were to supply energy and continually regenerate free oxygen.”

“I understand that, Eugenia, but why need the energy-supply process necessarily involve life?”

“Because nothing has ever been encountered in nature that would do the job, except the photosynthetic action of green plants that make use of solar energy to release oxygen.”

“When you say ‘nothing has ever been encountered in
nature,’ you mean in the Solar System. This is another system with a different sun and a different planet under different conditions. The laws of thermodynamics may still hold, but what if there is some chemical process that we haven’t encountered in the Solar System and that is forming the oxygen here?”

“If you’re a betting man,” said Insigna, “don’t bet on it.”

What was needed was evidence, and Pitt had to wait for the evidence to appear.

To begin with, Nemesis and Megas turned out to have extremely weak magnetic fields. This created no particular stir for it had been expected, since both star and planet rotated very slowly. Erythro, with a rotational period of twenty-three hours and sixteen minutes (equal to the period of its revolution about Megas), had a magnetic field that was similar, in intensity, to Earth’s.

Insigna expressed her satisfaction. “At least we don’t have to worry about dangerous radiation effects from intense magnetic fields, especially since Nemesis’ stellar wind is bound to be much less intense than that of the Sun. That’s good, because it means we might be able to detect the presence or absence of life on Erythro at a distance. Technological life, anyway.”

“Why’s that?” asked Pitt.

“It’s not at all likely that a high level of technology can be reached without copious use of radio-wave radiation, which would be speeding away from Erythro in all directions. We ought to be able to differentiate between it and any random radio-wave radiation from the planet itself, when such natural radiation is minor, considering that its magnetic field is weak.”

Pitt said, “I’ve been thinking that this may not be necessary; that we can reason out Erythro’s lifelessness, even though it does have an oxygen atmosphere.”

“Oh? I’d like to hear how that might be done.”

“I’ve thought this out. Listen! Didn’t you say that tidal influences slow the rotations of Nemesis, Megas, and Erythro? And didn’t you say that, as a result, Megas has moved farther from Nemesis, and Erythro has moved farther from Megas?”

“Yes.”

“Therefore, if we look into the past, Megas was once
closer to Nemesis and Erythro was closer to Megas and to Nemesis, too. That means that Erythro was far too warm for life to begin with, and may only have become hospitable to life recently. There might not have been enough time for a technological civilization to develop.”

Insigna laughed gently. “Good point. I mustn’t underestimate your astronomical ingenuity—but not good enough. Red dwarf stars have a long life and Nemesis might easily have been formed in the very youth of the Universe—say, fifteen billion years ago. The tidal influence would have been very strong at first, when the bodies were closer together, and most of the driving apart may have taken place in the first three or four billion years. The tidal influence decreases as the cube of the distance and, in the last ten billion years or so, there would not have been much change and that would be
plenty
of time for several technological civilizations to be built up, one after the other. No, Janus, let’s not speculate. Let’s wait and see if we can detect radio-wave radiation, or not.”

—Closer still to Nemesis.

It was a tiny red orb now to the unaided eye, but its dimness could be looked at without trouble. To one side, Megas was visible as a ruddy dot. In the telescope, it showed at something less than half-phase as a result of the angle it made with Rotor and with Nemesis. Erythro could be made out in the telescope, too, as a dimmer crimson dot.

It grew brighter with time, and Insigna said, “It’s good news for you, Janus. No suspicious radio-wave radiation of possibly technological origin has yet been detected.”

“Wonderful.” Pitt felt the wave of relief as though it were a physical warmth washing over him.

“Don’t leap, though,” said Insigna. “They might use less radio-wave radiation that we might expect. They might shield it very well. They might even use something else in place of radio waves.”

Pitt’s mouth quirked into a small half-smile. “Are you suggesting that seriously?”

Insigna shrugged uncertainly.

Pitt said, “Because if you’re a betting woman, don’t bet on it.”

—Closer still to Nemesis, and Erythro was now a large
orb to the unaided eye, with bloated Megas near it, and Nemesis on the other side of the Settlement. Rotor had adjusted its velocity to keep pace with Erythro, which, through the telescope, showed drifting broken clouds in the familiar spiral shapes of a planet of Earth-type temperature and atmosphere, and, therefore, it should be counted on as possessing an at least vaguely Earth-like climate.

Insigna said, “There are no signs of light on the night-side of Erythro. That should please you, Janus.”

“The absence of light is not consistent with a technological civilization, I suppose.”

“It certainly isn’t.”

“Let me play devil’s advocate, then,” said Pitt. “With a red sun and dim light, wouldn’t a civilization produce a dim artificial light as well?”

“It might be dim in the visible region, but Nemesis is rich in the infrared and we would expect artificial light to be similarly rich. What infrared we detect, however, is planetary. It appears, more or less equally, over the entire land surface, whereas artificial light would have patterns, coming off richly in population concentrations, sparsely elsewhere.”

“Then forget it, Eugenia,” said Pitt buoyantly. “There is no technological civilization. It might make Erythro less interesting in some ways, but you can’t want us to face our equals, or, perhaps, our superiors. We would have to leave and go elsewhere, and we have nowhere else to go, and perhaps an insufficient energy supply to get there if we did. As it is, we can stay.”

“There’s still copious oxygen in the atmosphere, so there’s still certain to be life on Erythro. It’s only a technological civilization that’s lacking. It means we’ll have to go down and study its life-forms.”

“Why?”

“How can you ask, Janus? If we have another sample of life here, one that is altogether independent of the life developed on Earth, what a bonanza it would be for our biologists!”

“I see. You’re talking about scientific curiosity. Well, the life-forms won’t go away, I suppose. There will be time enough for that later. First things first.”

“What can come ahead of a study of a totally new form of life?”

“Eugenia, be reasonable. We must establish ourselves here. We must build other Settlements. We must create a large and well-ordered society, one far more homogeneous, self-understanding, and peaceful than ever existed in the Solar System.”

“For that we’ll need material supplies, which takes us down to Erythro again, where we’ll have to study the life-forms—”

“No, Eugenia. To land on Erythro and to take off again in the face of its gravitational field would be too costly at the present moment. The intensity of the gravitational fields of Erythro and of Megas—don’t forget Megas—is great enough, even out here in space. One of our people calculated it for me. We’ll have a problem getting our supplies even from the asteroid belt, but it will be less of a problem than getting them from Erythro. In fact, if we station ourselves in the asteroid belt, matters would be even more price-effective. The asteroid belt will be where we build our Settlements.”

“Are you proposing to ignore Erythro?”

“For a while, Eugenia. When we are strong, when our energy supply is much greater, when our society is stable and growing, time enough then to investigate Erythro’s life-forms or, perhaps, its unusual chemistry.”

Pitt smiled soothingly, understandably, at Insigna. The side issue of Erythro, he knew, had to be delayed as long as possible. If it bore no technological society, then whatever other life-forms and resources it had could wait. The pursuing hordes from the Solar System were the true enemy.

Why couldn’t others see what had to be done? Why were others so easily diverted into useless side paths?

How would he ever dare to die and leave the fools unprotected?

TEN
PERSUASION
18.

So now, twelve years after the discovery that no technological civilization existed on Erythro, and twelve years during which no Settlements from Earth had suddenly appeared to ruin the new world that was gradually being constructed, Pitt could appreciate these rare moments of rest. And yet, even in these rare moments, doubts crept in. He wondered whether Rotor would not have been better off, if he had clung to that original resolve of his—if they had not remained in orbit about Erythro, and if the Dome on Erythro had never been built.

He was leaning back in his soft chair, the restraining fields cushioning him, the aura of peace lulling him almost into sleep, when he heard the soft buzz that drew him back, reluctantly, into reality.

He opened his eyes (he had not realized they were closed) to look at the small viewpatch on the opposite wall. A touch of a contact magnified it into holovision.

It was Semyon Akorat, of course.

There he was with his bald bullethead. (Akorat shaved off the dark fringe that would otherwise show, feeling, quite rightly, that a few fugitive hairs would but make the desert in the center look the more pathetic, whereas a shapely skull, unmarred by interruption, could look almost stately.) There he was, also, with his worried eyes, which always looked worried even when there was no cause for worry.

Pitt found him unpleasant, not because of any failure in loyalty or efficiency (he could not be improved on, either way) but simply because of conditioned response. Akorat always announced an invasion of Pitt’s privacy, an interruption of his thoughts, a necessity for doing what
he would rather not do. In short, Akorat was in charge of Pitt’s appointments and said who could see him and who could not.

Pitt frowned slightly. He could not recall that he had an appointment, but he often forgot and relied on Akorat not to.

“Who is it?” he said resignedly. “No one important, I hope.”

“No one at all of any real significance,” said Akorat, “but perhaps you had better see her.”

“Is she within earshot?”

“Commissioner,” said Akorat reproachfully, as though he were being accused of dereliction of duty. “Of course not. She is on the other side of the screen.” He had an enormous precision of speech, which Pitt found soothing. There was never any question of mistaking his words.

Pitt said, “She? I presume it is Dr. Insigna, then. Well, stick to my instructions.
Not
without an appointment. I’ve had enough of her for a while, Akorat. Enough of her for the last twelve years, in fact. Make up an excuse. Say I’m in meditation—no, she won’t believe that—say—”

“Commissioner, it’s not Dr. Insigna. I would not have disturbed you if it were. It’s—it’s her daughter.”

“Her daughter?” For a moment, he fumbled over her name. “You mean Marlene Fisher?”

“Yes. Naturally, I told her you were busy, and she said that I ought to be ashamed of myself for telling a lie, for my expression showed it was a lie, up and down, and that my voice was too tense to be telling the truth.” He recited this with baritone indignation. “In any case, she won’t leave. She insists you will see her if you know she is waiting. Would you see her, Commisioner? Those eyes of hers rattle me, frankly.”

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