"A pleasure to meet you, Don. Please, won’t you have a seat?" He gestured back toward his desk and, to Don’s astonishment, two luxurious leather-upholstered chairs were rising up through hatches in the carpeted floor. McGavin helped Sarah across the room, offering her his arm, and got her seated. Don shuffled across the carpet and lowered himself into the remaining chair, which seemed solidly anchored now.
"Coffee?" said McGavin. "A drink?"
"Just water," said Sarah. "Please."
"The same," said Don.
The rich man nodded at the robot behind the bar, and the machine set about filling glasses. McGavin perched his bottom on the edge of the granite desk and faced Don and Sarah. He was not a particularly good-looking man, thought Don. He had doughy features and a small, receding chin that made his already large forehead seem even bigger. Still, he’d doubtless had some cosmetic work done. Don knew he was sixty-something, but he didn’t look a day over twenty-five.
The robot was suddenly there, handing Don a beautiful crystal tumbler full of water, with two ice cubes bobbing in it. The machine handed a similar glass to Sarah, and one to McGavin, and then silently withdrew to behind the bar.
"Now," said McGavin, "let’s talk turkey. I said I’ve got a" — he paused, and gave the word a special weight, recalling the banter of the day before — "
He was looking at Sarah exclusively, Don noted. "And I do."
Sarah smiled. "As we used to say about the Very Large Array, I’m all ears."
McGavin nodded. "The first message we got from Sig Drac was a real poser, until you figured out its purpose. And this one is even more of a puzzle, it seems.
Encrypted! Who’d have guessed?"
"It’s baffling," she agreed.
"That it is," said McGavin. "That it is. But I’m sure you can help us crack it."
"I’m no expert in decryption or codes, or things like that," she said. "My expertise, if I have any, is in exactly the opposite: understanding things that were designed to be read by anyone."
"Granted, granted. But you had such insight into what the Dracons were getting at last time. And we know
"You’re very kind," she said, "but—"
"No, really," said McGavin. "You were a crucial part of it then, I’m sure you’re going to be a crucial part of it now, and you’ll continue to be so well into the future."
She blinked. "The future?"
"Yes, yes, the future. We’ve got a dialogue going here, and we need
Don felt his eyes narrowing, but Sarah just laughed. "Don’t be silly. I’ll be dead long before then."
"Not necessarily," said McGavin.
"It’ll be thirty-eight years, minimum, before we get a reply to anything we send today," she said.
"That’s right," replied McGavin, his tone even.
"And I’d be — well, um…"
"A hundred and twenty-five," McGavin supplied.
Don had had enough. "Mr. McGavin, don’t be cruel. My wife and I have only a few years left, at best. We both know that."
Sarah had drained her water glass. The robot silently appeared with a replacement and swapped it for the empty one.
McGavin looked at Don. "The press has had it all wrong, you know, from day one.
Most of the SETI community hasn’t understood, either. This isn’t a case of Earth talking to the second planet of the star Sigma Draconis. Planets don’t talk to each other.
Sarah looked at Don, then back at McGavin. She took another sip of her water, perhaps to buy herself a few seconds to think. "That’s an…
"No, no, that’s not right at all," said McGavin. "Look, what are the fundamental tenets of SETI? Certainly one of them is this: almost any race we contact will be more advanced than us. Why? Because, as of this year, we’ve only had radio for a hundred and fifty-three years, which is nothing compared to the fourteen billion years the universe is old. It’s a virtual certainty that anyone we make contact with has been around as a radio-using civilization longer than we have."
"Yes," said Sarah, and "So?" added Don.