Hask’s tuft danced in agitation. It was a moment before he replied. "Our race sent starships to all the worlds neighboring ours to see if there was any life there. Actually, although Sol is our closest neighbor, we dispatched much faster ships to several more-distant stars, including the ones you call Epsilon Indi and Epsilon Eridani, from whom we had already detected radio signals. As you may have noticed, we make much less use of metal than you do; again, the lack of lunar churning has kept most of our world’s metals deep beneath the crust. We simply did not have the resources to send equally sophisticated ships to all possible destinations. When we left Alpha Centauri, two hundred of your years ago, you had not yet begun to broadcast by radio, of course, and so you were not a high-priority target.
"Still, we were not just looking for intelligent life, you understand, but also for
What about hostile worlds bent on conquest? No aliens had yet visited our world, so we assumed we were the most advanced form of life in the local universe. But if we were to stop evolving for four hundred thousand years, who knows what now primitive lifeforms from other worlds would — what was the word you used, Frank? — would leapfrog past us during that time? Who knows what threat they might pose to us when we reawaken? Who knows if they would even allow us to reawaken, or would kill us all while we slept?"
"God," said Dale. "You came here to wipe out all the life on Earth."
"Not all the life, Dale — I doubt we could do that, anyway. But we certainly intended to wipe out all the vertebrates, just to be on the safe side."
Frank felt his jaw go slack.
"A very good question," said Hask. He looked at Seltar, then continued.
"We used to think we were the divinely created children of God — and that, of course, would be sufficient to give us the right to do whatever we deemed necessary; if God did not want us to do it, after all, she would thwart our attempt. But when we discovered that that is not true, that we are merely products of evolution, well, then, the question of having the right to do something no longer enters into it. Survival of the fittest, no? The struggle for life, no? Competition, no? If we can advantage our species, then we have the right and the obligation to do so."
"Jesus," said Dale.
"I agree," said Hask.
"Pardon?"
"Do I misunderstand you? When you invoke the name of your putative savior in that tone of voice, you are expressing disgust, no?"
"Well — yes."
"Then we do agree. I share your disgust, and so does Seltar. But we are a tiny minority. Our hope was that once the others met you, they would realize that it would be inappropriate to wipe your planet clean of life. But they have not wavered in their plan. Indeed, if it had not been for the accident in your Kuiper belt, they would have already completed that task: our mothership is equipped with a high-powered wide-angle particle-beam weapon, which we would have trained on your world from orbit. In short order, we would have irradiated the entire surface of your planet. Indeed, the other Tosoks still intend to do that, once the repairs are complete."
Dale’s deep voice: "Do the other Tosoks know that you’re a… a…"
"A traitor?" Hask lifted his front and back shoulders, an acquired human gesture. "Do not hesitate to say it; I am comfortable with the term. No, they do not. We had two possible hopes. The first was to prove that your race was divinely created — if we could show that you were the true children of God, our people would never have harmed you. But your form is as imperfect as ours."
"And the other hope?"
"Seltar. If the mothership was repaired, and the attack on Earth imminent, then Seltar would sabotage the ship — something she could only do if no one suspected her existence. The eight of us would have been marooned here, but that would be — what is your metaphor? — a small price to pay."
"If you woke up first, why not just disable the ship then?" asked Dale.
"I do wish to return home, counselor."
"You could have killed the other Tosoks in their sleep," said Frank.