The wall of the bubble was passing sprites, but it
resisted the
"We could make another one," Tchicaya suggested. "Right in front of their eyes."
"Why not see what they do with this one?"
"You think we should follow it?"
Mariama nodded. "They might release it from the container, once they’ve got it where they want it. They might even have their own signaling device down there."
Tchicaya was not convinced. "If they think it’s just a message in a bottle, they’re not going to talk back to it. And if we can’t regain control of it, the last place we want to try scribing a new one is in the middle of some chamber down there."
"We’ll only find out what they think it is if we go after
it," Mariama replied. "Besides, we initiated contact
That did make sense. They had to be flexible, or they’d
end up chasing their preconceptions down a
Tchicaya said, "All right, we’ll follow it!" He
instructed the
As they descended, it finally struck him just how
extraordinary a sight they were witnessing. The banner was still
flashing out its programmed sequence from within its container; the
Colonists hadn’t damaged it at all.
He turned to Mariama. "This is proof, isn’t it? They have to be more than animals, to be able to move it like that."
Mariama hesitated, no doubt pondering the evolutionary advantages of a delicate touch when kidnapping other species of xennobe to fill with your parasitic young.
But she said, "I think you’re right. I’ve been giving them the benefit of the doubt until now, but I think they’ve finally earned it."
The six Colonists touched down on the surface and
proceeded along a narrow path that opened up in the throng ahead of
them. The bubble appeared to be following a vendek trail laid by its
creators, and the
Close up, the ship’s probes revealed more of the Colonists' anatomy. Dwelling on the crude, wind-blown X of their overall shape was pointless; everything that mattered was in the vendek mixtures locked in the network of tubes. The toolkit struggled to annotate the images, hinting at the subtlety of the vendekobiology and the complexity of the network’s topology. Tchicaya could only take in a fraction of what the toolkit was managing to glean, but the Colonists were manipulating their internal physics with as much precision as any animal controlling its biochemistry, juggling pH or glucose concentrations.
He caught Mariama’s eye, and the two of them exchanged giddy, fearful smiles. Like Tchicaya, she was enraptured by the beauty and strangeness around them, but more painfully aware than ever of the vast gulf they’d have to bridge in order to protect it. The closer they came to the possibility of success, the more vertiginous the fall if they lost their grip. To be overrun by Planck worms in the honeycomb would have meant nothing but a bleak local death; here, they would be witnessing a whole world dying.