She and Nopri sat alone with the drone, Dvelner having returned to her own duties. There were two other tables occupied in the warm but pleasantly dehumidified space. Both supported little groups of four or five people huddled round them, all of whom looked rather drab by the normal standards of Culture sartorial acceptability and all of whom seemed to be keeping themselves to themselves. Yime had guessed, before Nopri had told her anyway, that these were people who were here to rendezvous with the ship which would arrive, sometime in the next two or three days, from the
“What ‘special circumstances’, Mr. Nopri?” she asked.
“I’ve been trying to talk to the Bulbitian,” Nopri told her.
“Talking to it involves dying?”
“Yes, all too often.”
“How often?”
“Twenty-three times so far.”
Yime was appalled. She took a drink before saying, “You’ve been killed by this thing
“No, really.”
“
“Yes.”
“Killed in the Real?”
“Yes.”
“And, what; revented each time?”
“Yes.”
“Did you come with a stack of blank bodies then? How can you-?
“Of course not. It makes me new bodies.”
“It? The
“Yes. I back up before every attempt to talk to it.”
“And it kills you every time?”
“Yes. But only so far.”
Yime looked at him for a moment. “In that case silence might constitute a more prudent course.”
“You don’t understand.”
Yime sighed, put her drink down and sat back, fingers interlocked over her midriff. “And I’m sure I shall continue not to until you enlighten me. Or I can talk to somebody else on your team who is more…” She paused. “Plausible,” she said. The drone’s blueish aura field coloured a subtle shade of pink.
Nopri appeared oblivious to the insult. He sat forward eagerly. “I am convinced that the Bulbitians are in touch with the Sublimed,” he told her.
“You are,” Yime said. “Isn’t that a matter for our colleagues in Numina? Like Ms. Dvelner?”
“Yes, and I’ve talked to them about it, but this Bulbitian only wants to talk to
Yime thought about this. “And the fact that it keeps killing you, every time you attempt to do so, hasn’t shaken your faith in this conviction?”
“Please,” Nopri said. “It’s not faith. I can prove this. Or I will be able to. Soon.” He buried his face in the fumes rising from the drug bowl, sucked in deeply.
Yime looked at the drone. “Ship, are you still listening here?”
“I am, Ms. Nsokyi. Hanging fascinated on every word.”
“Mr. Nopri. There are how many on your team here – eighteen?” Nopri nodded, holding his breath. “Do you have a ship here?” Nopri shook his head emphatically. “A Mind, then?”
Nopri let his clouded breath out and started coughing.
Yime turned to the drone again. “Does the team that Mr. Nopri belongs to have the benefit of a resident Mind or AI?”
“No,” the drone replied. “And neither does the Numina team. The nearest Mind at the moment, aside from my own of course, is probably that belonging to the inbound ship journeying here from the
“It isn’t keen on Minds or AIs,” Nopri agreed, wiping his eyes. He sucked from the drug bowl again. “Not that wild about drones, either, to be frank.” He looked at the ship’s drone, smiled.
“Is there any news of the ship on its way from the
Nopri shook his head. “No. There’s never any news. They don’t tend to publish course schedules.” He breathed deep from the bowl again, but let it out quickly this time. “They just turn up without warning, or don’t show at all.”
“You think it might not show?
“No, it probably will. There’s just no guarantee.”
Nopri showed her to her quarters, a bewilderingly large, multi level space set off a vast curving corridor. To have reached this by walking would have taken about half an hour from the Officers’ Club; instead, one of the wheeled drones just picked up their seats with them still sitting in them and rolled away through the dark, tall corridors towards her cabin. Yime gazed up at the tall inverted arch of the ceiling as they progressed through the bizarre upside-down architecture of the Bulbitian. It was like being at the bottom of a small valley. The smooth floor the drone ran along was narrow; only a metre or so across. The walls took on a ribbed appearance; now it was like travelling through the gutted carcass of some vast animal. The ribs above rose outwards to a broad flat ceiling ten metres wide and easily twenty metres above.
“They did like their high ceilings, didn’t they?”
“Hoppers tend to,” Nopri said.