Monday, February 28, 2011

Twenty-Three: In the Places of Memory

It was a couple of days after the rains started that a messenger came from the library to tell us that they’d found a cubicle for us and we could start reading about Star’s Reach. If it hadn’t been right after the beginning of the rains, I’d probably have spent the time before the messenger came pacing around the dorm at Melumi and making life miserable for Berry, but I had one mother of a hangover to get through, and it did a fair job of keeping my mind off Star’s Reach for a little while. Still, by the time the messenger came, I was eager to start, and Berry and I went splashing across the brick square at the center of the Versty just as soon as we could.

The messenger led us in through the big double doors of the library and told us to wait there in the big empty room just inside. Before we could ask much of anything she was gone through one of the little doors on the far wall, and so Berry and I stood there and waited, steam rising from us in the warm damp air, looking up at the windows to either side. I don’t know what they were made of; they looked like somebody had taken pieces of colored glass or something and fit them together into a picture, all red and yellow and green and blue with clear bits here and there to set the other colors off. It was really something to look at, and so that’s what I did.

Click of the door told me that somebody had come for us. I turned, and saw Eleen standing there. I’d been wondering since the hangover stopped making thinking hard just how she’d react when we next met, after the way we spent the first day of the rains, and guessed that she would look embarrassed but say nothing about what happened. I was right, too; her skin was light enough that you could see the blush, but all she said was, “If you’ll follow me.”

So we followed her, through the door and down a long hallway lined with doors and finally to a big room lit with watery light from tall windows along one side. The wall under the windows was divided up by short walls that jutted out a little way into the room, and between each pair of walls was a table and a couple of chairs. Just across from the row of cubicles, for that’s what they were, was a long counter, and beyond that was the library itself, shelves and shelves and shelves full of more books than I’d ever imagined in one place.

Eleen led us to the cubicle third from the far end, and waved us to the chairs. “This is yours,” she said. “When you’re ready for books, go to the counter and ask the librarians; they’ll get them for you. I’ve talked to them about what you’re looking for, so they should have something ready.”

“Thank you!” I said. She smiled and nodded, and turned to go.

“Good luck finding that acronym,” Berry said then.

That got him a startled look over her shoulder. “Thank you,” she said, and left the room.

We went to the counter right away, and one of the librarians, a plump old woman with glasses so thick they made her eyes look huge, came over. “You’re the ruinmen looking for Star’s Reach,” she said, as though it wasn’t a question she needed to ask.

“Yes.”

“Ah. Just a moment.” She went over to another part of the counter, reached underneath it, and pulled out close to a dozen books in a teetering stack. Berry and I both thanked her, took the stack back to the cubicle, sat down, stared at each other for a long moment, and then started looking at the books.

We figured out right away that Eleen hadn’t made things easy for us. I’d wanted to read about Star’s Reach, and so she’d had the librarians find books that had something to say about Star’s Reach, but what they had to say wasn’t in any particular order and much of it was in words longer than I was used to reading back then. After a bit, Berry whispered a suggestion and I nodded, and he went to the counter, talked to the librarian for a bit, and then left the room and came back maybe a quarter hour later with a couple of notebooks and pens. We spent the rest of the day copying out everything we could find on Star’s Reach into those notebooks; the light through the windows got too faint to read before we were done, and so we gave the books back to the librarian and did what we could to keep the notebooks dry while we crossed the brick square to the guests’ dorm in time for dinner. Afterwards, back in our room, the two of us went over what we’d found, Berry helped with the words I didn’t know, and we tried to figure out anything we could about Star’s Reach.

That’s how we spent the next day, and the day after that, and pretty much all the days we were in Melumi while the rain pounded down and life did what life in Meriga usually does during the rains, which is to say, not very much. Now and then there were breaks in the routine, when Jennel Cobey had us come up to his room and tell him what we’d found so far, or when the library was closed for some Versty function that nobody but the scholars could go to, but the rest of the time, Berry and I were copying things out of old books in the daytime and trying to figure out what it all meant at night.

By the time the clouds started to thin and the rain went from pouring down every single day to skipping a day now and then, we’d filled a couple of notebooks each, but I don’t think either of us knew much more than we did when we started. I won’t say that all of it was a waste; the librarians found us a couple of books about how people in the old world went looking for life on other worlds, which was at least interesting, and they also brought us any number of things written by scholars at Melumi who read every scrap of paper left from the old world that mentioned Star’s Reach or anything like it, which saved us a bunch of searching but didn’t tell us anything we didn’t already know.

Everyone pretty much agreed that if the Star’s Reach project actually existed, which none of them were exactly sure about, it started out using the big radio telescope in the hills between Meriga and Jinya, the one the letter I found called NRAO, and the people who were trying to figure out what the aliens were saying were at the place near Orrij in Tenisi the letter also mentioned. Most of the scholars insisted that the whole thing had been shut down when the Second Civil War broke out, or maybe when all the ice on the place called Greenland slid off into the sea and a lot of the coastal cities went under water; some of them thought that all the people and equipment might have gone somewhere else, but they didn’t have the least idea where.

One evening toward the end of our stay in Melumi, Berry and I got to the end of a couple of hours of trying to make some kind of sense of the latest things we’d copied, and both realized at right around the same moment that we hadn’t gotten anywhere. I got up and went to the window; the clouds were breaking apart off to the west, and stray beams of orange sunlight were slanting down over the Versty and the town off past it, reminding me that we didn’t have that much longer before we’d have to choose a direction to go. Berry stayed at the table, propping his chin in his hands.

“I hope she finds something about WRTF,” he said after a long moment.

I turned around. “So do I.” Then: “If she doesn’t, we can go to Orrij and the radio telescope place, and see if the records have anything.”

It was a long shot, and we both knew it. The ruins near Orrij had been stripped to the bare walls around the time the old world ended, and ruinmen had finished the job more than a century back; as for the NRAO, it was right in the middle of the fighting in a couple of campaigns in one of the civil wars, I forget which, and ruinmen had been there, too, long before I was born. If anyone took the time to copy out papers from the ruins into the local guild records, which sometimes happened, there might be something about WRTF, but more likely there’d be nothing of the kind.

Still, Berry nodded. “Worth a try, Mister Trey.”

I think it was two days later that we got something better, and it wasn’t anything the librarians brought us. Berry and I were in our cubicle as usual; the only sounds in the whole library, it seemed just then, were the rain drumming on the windows above us, the scratch of pens on paper, and every so often a rustle and tap as one of us handed a book to the other and tapped a finger on a passage worth a second look. That’s why I noticed, long before anybody came into sight, footsteps in the corridor coming toward us fast.

It was Eleen. She caught sight of us, and motioned for us to come with her. A few minutes later all three of us were in one of the little rooms off the corridor, and she was handing me a small piece of paper. On it were these words:
White River Transport Facility
I realized what the words meant before I’d even finished reading them. “You found it.”

“Maybe,” she said. “I know where it is, too, or nearly. There was a White River in most of the old states, but this one’s in Mishga, the old state of Michigan, near Muskegon – that’s Skeega nowadays.”

I nodded, and tried to stay calm while I wrote down the name of the town in my notebook. “Somewhere near Skeega.”

“That’s what the book said.” She drew in an uneven breath. “We’re not quite finished searching, but this is the only WRTF that’s been found so far.”

I thanked her, and she nodded and left the little room. Neither Berry nor I had any patience left for the books then; we went back to the guest’s dorm, across a brick square that was only a little wet with drizzle, and went straight to our room to talk. Jennel Cobey would hear the news soon enough; until then, this was ruinmen’s business.

“Transport facility,” Berry said as soon as the door was shut.

“Meaning they may have gone somewhere else from there.”

“That’s my thought. I hope there are records.”

I grinned. “Best in the world. Skeega’s right across Mishga from Troy.” Berry’s eyes went wide, as I expected, and before he could say anything I went on: “So we’ll have to stop at Troy on the way.”

He let out a whoop, and at his age I would have done the same thing. Troy’s where the ruinmen started, and if there’s a ruinman in Meriga who hasn’t been there and doesn’t want to go, I’ll eat my boots for breakfast. Back five hundred years or so it was a big city full of factories and towers, but even before the old world ended it fell on hard times, most of the people left, and most of the factories and towers and houses and all fell into ruin. The story has it that people started making their livings by stripping the ruins for raw materials and selling them, and as time went on and the people who were doing that figured out that they’d be better off if they worked together, the first ruinmen’s guild was organized. The last ruins in Troy were stripped down to the ground so long ago nobody alive remembers it, and there are only a few ruinmen there now, but the guild hall is still there and they’ve got records of most of the digs in Mishga and the parts of the country nearby. Melumi is where the scholars and most of the other people in Meriga keep their memories, but Troy is where we keep ours.

Now of course Berry and I both knew that our chances of finding out where the people in the Star’s Reach project went from Skeega weren’t that much better than our chances of figuring out the same thing by digging through the records in Orrij and NRAO, but at least we had another chance at it, and the chance to visit Troy into the bargain. The watery sunlight that came in through the window now and then, bringing its reminder of the approaching end of the rains, seemed much more promising than it had a few days before, and I began to hope – well, not that I would actually find Star’s Reach, but that the search wouldn’t come to a dead halt quite as soon as I thought. There was a much longer and stranger road ahead of me than I had any idea just then, but I didn’t know that yet.

14 comments:

Richard said...

After following the Archdruid Report for a while and knowing about Star's Reach, I finally went ahead and read it all over the course of a few days, just before this most recent chapter came out. I know every month from now on I'll be watching this site for the next chapter.

A few things I do want to mention, however. You say the new gulf coast is the southern border of Tennessee (Tenisi). I guess this includes parts of what is now Georgia, Alabama, and even some of Mississippi? Even if all the glacieers in the world melted, parts of those states would still be above water. See map of the coastline with a 100-meter rise here, http://vrstudio.buffalo.edu/~depape/warming/EastCoast100-960.jpg

I keep hearing the figure of either 100 meters or 300 feet as the most possible rise if all the icecaps melted.

While I'm in complete agreement with you that mass migrations are likely to happen in the next few hundred years, I don't think the scenario of a takeover of the Northwest by Japanese immigrants is very likely, especially not with the timeline and scenario you're talking about (I'm thinking about the report from 2109 showing that's the time that migration was peaking). If a harder crash happened sooner, that scenario would be more likely.

The reason for my views is that Japan currently has a low birthrate and an aging and declining population. Japan is well over it's carrying capacity, but even with current trends the population is expected to decline from 127 million people currently to less than 50 million in 2100. Of course with a greater death rate in a collapsing world the declines will likely be even greater, unless the birthrate increases, but the examples we have of declining industrial societies (such as Russia) shows that when they hit hard times the birthrate tends to decrease as well as the death rate increase. The Japanese population might already be significantly smaller and older when the situation gets desperate enough to consider mass migration, and in a world with as much warming as yours projects, I think they'd mostly head to Kamchatka and Alaska or northern British Columbia, with a newly more habitable climate but still far fewer people than the Pacific Northwest of the lower 48. I suspect the large mass migrations will come from areas that currently have a more youthful growing population.

John Michael Greer said...

Richard, thank you! Glad you're enjoying the story so far. As for the details, well, first of all, remember that this is a work of fiction; I've tried to make the Meriga of Trey's time the kind of place that might emerge in the aftermath of our age, but some of the details are there for literary reasons. Second, Trey is fairly well educated by the standards of his time, but by our standards his geographical knowledge is pretty minimal, and the only part of Meriga's southern coast he's seen is the mouth of the Misipi at Memfis. You're doubtless right that the shoreline doesn't exactly follow today's boundaries.

As for the Neeonjin presence in the Northwest, remember the North Pacific current. When I was young, glass floats from Japanese fishing fleets in the northeast Pacific used to wash ashore all the time on the beaches of Washington state; if you're in Japan and have a boat, the Pacific Northwest is among the easiest places in the world for you to get to. Kamchatka and British Columbia may have a more favorable climate around 2100, but they're still rugged country difficult to settle, and much less inviting than a Pacific Northwest partly depopulated by civil war and the aftermath of American imperial collapse. And of course point #1 also applies: this is a work of fiction.

R D said...

Great story. I had to laugh when I read Richard's comment. I did exactly the same thing. Sorry, I'm an engineer. I just can't help myself. Anyway, the USGS is of the opinion that if every speck of ice melted, sea level will rise 80 m, about 260 feet. Their excellent topographic maps show that Atlanta and Birmingham are safe, but Memphis is indeed at the mouth of the Mississippi.

I usually give scifi writers a lot of latitude. I just ask that the science be plausible. I think your idea that government and military facilities will be nuclear powered is spot on. The post peak-oil world will demand it. There are two technologies that would work, the plutonium thermoelectric reactor (as on the Voyager spacecraft) and the thorium reactor. I read recently that DARPA is funding development of small thorium reactors for military bases (thorium reactors can't be weaponized if captured). So the idea of finding such a base with electrical power 400 years in the future is plausible.

I am somewhat dismayed that the only machines are ancient. It would seem that some technologies such as firearms (I assume Jenel Colby's is an antique), bicycles, even steam threshers and steam boats (wood fueled as in the old days) would survive. Ah, but it is your story, and a good one at that.

Robert

John Michael Greer said...

Robert, the exact height of sea level in a completely postglacial era is an interesting question; the story assumes 300 feet or so, with wiggle room to allow for the effects of isostatic change. I haven't tried to work out the design of the nuclear power cores used in old government facilities, not being a nuclear engineer, but there are any number of nicely self-contained ways to make a steady source of heat produce electrical current to trickle-charge capacitor banks.

As for machines, the limit on how many complex machines a society can have is energy per capita, which means a society without fossil fuels can't afford much. Jennel Cobey's gun isn't an antique; gunsmiths have the same sort of cachet in Trey's time that swordsmiths had in medieval Japan, and their work costs about as much compared to an ordinary laborer's wages, i.e., if you're not as rich as a jennel you can't afford one. The story's already mentioned radios, which are in common use (most homes have a cheap crystal set), and you'll get to see a riverboat in action further along, but by and large, it costs much less to do something with muscles and brains than to do it with machines, and so there aren't that many machines.

Richard said...

Yes, I do recognize it's a work of fiction, I don't mean my comments to be criticism but just issues to be brought up that are relevant to the story. I do appreciate how well thought out the scenario you have for the book is. I had actually pondered the whole Japanese migration scenario since I first read the mention of it in either the Long Descent or the Ecotechnic Future, I forget which one it's in. Thanks for taking the time to respond to people's comments.

jvolzka000 said...

Ya, ditto for me, John. I think I did 19 chapters in two evenings and have been waiting on the rest.
I've personally tried some writing and it was almost like bits of soul were being sucked out. That's my way of saying good job, and thanks.
The scenario you paint seems quite viable, but a far more scary one puts Shanuga under mile of ice. Too bad Mam has a plan and we aren't privy.

dalev

Don Plummer said...

Nice touch: Detroit becomes Troy! Have you any plans to develop a literary parallel here?

Don Plummer said...

I'm sure you know, by the way, that there is a Troy, Michigan today. It's a suburb north of Detroit and southeast of Pontiac.

John Michael Greer said...

Richard, understood. Of course none of us will know who's right until the future shows up!

Dalev, Shanuga's a bit far south to be under ice -- the southern edge of the continental glaciers at the peak of the last glaciation was not far below the southern shores of the Great Lakes. Mind you, I expect an ice age in a few thousand years, but that's another story.

Don, good for you for catching that. As far as a literary parallel, it's a bit more complex than that, rendered even more so by the very jumbled notion of history in our narrator's mind. Stay tuned!

Doctor Westchester said...

Your discussion on how many complex machines this society might have reminded me of a thought I've had that welds together some earlier comments and plot points. You had Trey using a poison detector on the corpses that were found at Star's Reach. As former research chemist who has worked with the things (GC/MS, etc., etc.) that could currently do this sort of thing, I found it not really believable that such mechanical device would be available in the future you are describing, even people really wanted one.

Yet, I think that Trey would have such a detector. It would have fur, a wagging tail and would bark. As has been previously pointed out, that old partnership between our two species will be coming back, possibly to greater degree than ever before.

MaryAnne said...

Good story; I'm enjoying it lots (caught up with all the back chapters in one sitting; what a drag to hit the end! Looking forward to where it goes). Yeah, there would be dogs, also, I suspect cats, furry opportunists that they are. (Good to see you back at P-Con this year.)

Loveandlight said...

You could have distorted Detroit's original name much more thoroughly and still 99% of your regular readers would have known exactly to what city you were referring! Poor Detroit was on the skids even well before 1981.

Richard Larson said...

Is Mishga Lake Michigan? I like your storyline.

FARfetched said...

Ah, Dune. I wouldn't necessarily put it at the top of the all-time list, but it would make my own Top 5 for sure.

I like the way you managed to slip Anna into the story, very smooth. And I got a big chuckle out of [they] took one look at Jennel Cobey and jumped as though Tashel Ban had wired their whatnots to a battery and thrown the switch.

Are you and I the only ones writing peak oil fiction, more than a one-off in a forum comment or blog? If there are others, I'd like to hear about it.