
But we deepspacers have rattled the bars of our cage. We know our neuroses arise out of the Universe’s great jest.
I stepped forward toward the clearing where the Sol-Gov flivver was settling. It gave my campmates someone to blame for the interruption. I could feel their burning stares.
The beige teardrop opened, and out stepped a tall woman. She possessed a type of statuesque, austere beauty that had not been in fashion on Earth during any of my last four lives. Clearly she had never indulged in biosculpting.
I admit freely that in that first instant I did not recognize her, though we had thrice been married over the slow waityears.
The first thing I knew, the very first thing of all, was that she wore our uniform… the uniform of a Service that had been “moth-balled” (O quaint term!) thousands of years ago.
Silver against dark blue, and eyes that matched… “Alice,” I breathed after a long moment. “Is it true at last?”
She came forward and took my hand. She must have known how weak and tense I felt.
“Yes, Joshua. One of the probes has found another cracked shell.”
“There is no mistake? It’s a goodstar?”
She nodded her head, saying yes with her eyes. Black ringlets framed her face, shimmering like the trail of a rocket.
“The probe called a class-A alert.” She grinned. “There are Shards all around the star, shattered and glimmering like the Oort-sky of Sol. And the probe reports that there is a world within! One that we can touch!”
I laughed out loud and pulled her to me. I could tell the campers behind me came from times when one did not do such things, for they muttered in consternation.
“When? When did the news come?”
“We found out months ago, just after you thawed. Worldcomp still said that we had to give you a year of wakeup, but I came the instant it was over. We have waited long enough, Joshua. Moishe Bok is taking out every deepspacer nowalive.
