The president’s face was a battleground, with grimaces coming into existence and then being suppressed. Susan watched for a moment in concerned fascination, but then saw a preternatural calm come over Prospector’s face, as if he was now drawing strength from all the linked minds. “My God,” he said. “It’s wonderful.”
Perhaps fifty million people were linked together now—but there were still seven billion who weren’t. The daybreak line would continue to sweep across Canada, the US, and Mexico, but it would be four hours until New Zealand—the first non–North American landmass of any size—saw the dawn, at about the same time that Ketchikan, Alaska, did. If it really was going to take a full day for the effect to circle the globe, covering fifteen degrees every hour, then the United States would be fully absorbed long before Russia or China or North Korea.
“We’re not safe,” Susan said. “If those who aren’t linked decide that we’re an abomination, they could nuke us. We have to maintain the appearance of normalcy until tomorrow morning—until the transition is complete.”
“But how?” asked Jerrison. “Everyone would have to act in concert to maintain the illusion, and…oh.”
Susan nodded. “Exactly. We’re linked; we’re one.”
“It’s like my kirpan,” Singh said. “An instrument of
Susan looked at him, and he went on. “In the ancient past, a crazed human could only kill one other person at a time. Then we developed the ability to kill small groups, and then larger groups, and still larger groups, and so on, until now a person can take out a major portion of a city, or”—and Singh glanced at Jerrison—“even a whole country, and soon after that, the whole wide world.”
“And so
“I think so,” said Singh. “Once again, the needs of the many
Darryl Hudkins spoke up. “I do,” he said, and then, “We do.”
Singh looked at him and nodded. “It’s
Susan looked out the window. The sun wasn’t directly visible anymore, but the trees were still casting long shadows. It had been perhaps two hours since daybreak, meaning it would presumably take another twenty-two hours for the process to finish. She was worried that someone here who had ties to people in Russia or China or another nation with nuclear weapons would alert them, urging them to stop the expansion in the only way they could.
But no—no. This was too good to wreck, this was too wonderful to derail, this was too
On that point, all those who had been affected were of one mind.
Day came to Montana and Wyoming and Colorado and New Mexico. And then to Washington state and Idaho and Utah and Arizona. And, at last, it swept west into California, the sun clearing the Sierra Nevada mountains.
Susan Dawson now knew things she had never known.
The complete works of William Shakespeare.
Every verse of the Bible, and the Qu’ran, and every other religious text.
How to identify thousands of species of birds and thousands of kinds of minerals.
She knew calculus and how to play the stock market. She understood rainbows and tides. She knew why Pluto wasn’t a planet.
She could play hundreds of musical instruments and speak many dozens of languages.
And she remembered countless lives: millions of first days at school, millions of first kisses, starting millions of new jobs, and millions of dreams about a better tomorrow.