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Authors: Christopher Nuttall

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BOOK: The Trojan Horse
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The first alien stopped in front of the small welcoming committee.  Jayne had heard reports that the United Nations had practically turned into a war zone over who should greet the aliens first.  There had even been a suggestion that the Pope should join the greeting party, a suggestion that had been howled down by representatives from almost every other religion on Earth.  Some of the Witnesses – she could see them at the far edge of the field – had suggested that the aliens would inform the human race that their religions were nothing more than nonsense, dreamed up by men who had wanted power over their fellow men.  She could just imagine the social upheaval that would be caused by the aliens discrediting the world’s major religions.

 

In the end, seven people had been chosen to greet the aliens first.  The Secretary-General of the United Nations had taken the lead as the only person with even a tenuous claim to represent the entire human race.  Beside him, Mayor Hundred had bullied his way onto the greeting committee by fair means and foul, having waged a skilful media campaign that had won the support of New York’s population and the backing of the Federal Government.  A representative from the European Union, the Russian-dominated Commonwealth of Independent States, the African Union, the Organization of American States and the South Asian Association for Regional Cooperation completed the welcoming committee.  The Arab League had wanted to put forward their own representative, but infighting over which country should have the honour of sending the representative and vigorous opposition from Israel had defeated the proposal. 

 

The Secretary-General of the United Nations, Kareem Choudhury of India, stepped forward.  He was an elderly man with a neat goatee, wearing a simple black suit; an experienced diplomat holding down a job that required nothing, but diplomacy.  Jayne was familiar with the fears that the UN was somehow a supranational organisation that was bent on subverting freedom and democracy, yet common sense proved that the UN was nothing more than a talking shop, a forum to air grievances and issue largely-unheeded resolutions that were rarely enforced by concentrated military action.  And without force backing up the resolutions – and the absence of will to use military force – the UN was useless.  It was something that galled those who believed in international development even as they sought to raise more and more money for development plans that went nowhere.

 

“In the name of the United Nations of Earth,” Choudhury said, very calmly, “I welcome you to our world.”

 

The glowing device on the alien’s chest sparkled as the alien spoke, his mouth moving in odd twitches that suggested that the alien couldn’t quite form human words.  Jayne had seen portable translators before, but she’d never been very impressed with even the best of them, not when local dialects and even basic structure could produce widely disparate translations that made little sense.  But it stood to reason that the aliens would have better translation technology and their messages had proven that they could speak English.  Conspiracy theorists had had fun coming up with all kinds of theories – the one about the government having known about the aliens since Roswell was very popular – but Jayne suspected that the real explanation was simpler.  The human race had been beaming transmissions into space for over a century and most of those transmissions would have been in English.  And some of them had even been intended to
teach
English.

 

“I am Ambassador Haffash of the Galactic Federation,” the alien said.  His voice was flat, almost – but not quite – atonal.  There were few hints of emotion, something that puzzled Jayne until she realised that the alien computers were almost certainly checking, rechecking and updating their language databanks.  The alien sounded…pleased?  It was impossible to tell for sure.  “In the name of the association of intelligent beings that have formed our unity, I welcome the human race into the galactic community.  May you find friends and cousins among the stars, as so many have done before you.”

 

The crowd burst into cheers.  Jayne watched as the alien turned and waved at the crowd, one oddly-jointed hand passing through the air.  Just how closely had they studied humanity, Jayne wondered, to know what that gesture meant?

 

Once the remaining members of the welcome committee had greeted the alien – the other two aliens were not introduced, something that puzzled Jayne – the Secretary-General of the United Nations invited the aliens to follow him into the UN Building.  The aliens, who were still looking at the crowd, turned and followed, their necks twisting oddly in a way that would have proven fatal to any human neck.  As they passed the press pool – the reporters, for once, were silent, staring at the aliens in front of them – Jayne caught a whiff of scent from one of the aliens.  He smelled hot and spicy, yet something about the scent made her hair stand on end.  She told herself that she was imagining it.  Who expected an alien to smell pleasant?

 

Puzzled, uneasy despite herself, she followed the aliens into the UN Building.

Chapter Five

 

New York

USA, Day 5

 

The wallflowers – the collection of aides, secretaries and mistresses that followed their masters everywhere – stood pressed against the walls of the General Assembly Hall, watching their political masters from a distance.  They were joined by the Ambassadors to the United Nations, who had been displaced by their respective Heads of State, and hundreds of unarmed security staff, who universally shared a horror at the possible danger to their charges and their outrage at being ordered to come unarmed.  Toby understood their fears, but there was little choice.  The last thing anyone needed was an incident when the Ambassador from the Galactic Federation was shot dead on Earth.  It was the kind of event that tended to start wars.

 

He looked around the room, and then fixed his gaze on the alien Ambassador.  The General Assembly Hall had a seating capacity of 1800 and it was full to bursting, creating a fire risk that had – inevitably – added to the fears of the security officers.  Above the podium, the UN emblem glittered in the light, a reminder of the hopes of those who had founded the UN – hopes that had been brutally dashed by reality, just like the League of Nations before the Second World War.  The alien didn't seem impressed, but it was impossible to read the alien face.  For all they knew, an alien ‘smile’ could really be a frown.  There was no reason why an alien race had to share the same visual cues as an American-born human.

 

The Secretary-General returned to his place in the Assembly as the alien slowly mounted the podium.  It was clear that they’d studied the UN; the alien escorts – or maybe they were aides, or security personnel – didn't show any sign of surprise or confusion.  Toby risked a quick glance at his palmtop and wasn't too surprised to see that the latest electronic detection gear developed by the NSA couldn't tell if the aliens were exchanging secret messages or not.  The chances were that the Galactics would possess technology centuries beyond human science, although perhaps not beyond imagination.  One resource the human race most definitely possessed was years of science-fiction writing to study for ideas and inspirations.

 

Just for a moment, Toby caught the bright red eyes of the alien Ambassador.  They were almost hypnotic, seeming to draw him towards the alien and yet refuse to reveal anything about the alien’s motives, or purpose in visiting Earth.  The alien briefly revealed his sharp teeth and Toby shivered.  There was no way to avoid the conclusion that the alien was a predator.  They would have been on top of the food chain on their planet, just as humanity sat at the top of Earth’s food chain.  And anyone capable of getting into space would be intelligent, powerful – and willing to use that power in their own interests.  Who knew what the Galactics really had in mind for humanity?

 

It wasn't uncommon for speeches at the UN to be interrupted with shouts and walk-outs.  Only a few years ago, a lengthy speech by an Iranian delegate claiming that the Holocaust had never taken place had resulted in a mass walk-out by Western delegates.  Toby had a feeling that no one would walk out of this speech, no matter what the aliens said.  The CIA’s analysts had wondered if the alien desire to meet with humanity’s leaders represented a determination to talk to whoever
really
made the decisions on Earth, or was a subtle slap at Earth’s population.  Ambassadors were expendable; they could be ordered home, their careers destroyed, without starting a war.  It was much harder to avoid a diplomatic incident if a Head of State had started it.  And the alien, as exotic as he was, was
only
a mere Ambassador.  But God only knew how the Galactic Federation would respond to any mistreatment of their representatives.  They might not be as willing as President Carter to allow an insult to go unpunished...and they had seventeen starships orbiting the Earth, a silent reminder of their power.

 

Silence fell as the alien opened his mouth.  The voder – it couldn't be anything, but a translator and speaker – started to blink as the alien spoke.  There had been no way to slip a microphone near the podium without alerting the UN’s security force, but some of the cameras at the rear of the chamber were actually designed and operated by NSA technicians.  If they were lucky, they might pick up samples of the alien language and start humanity on the long road towards deciphering their words.  Being dependent upon alien translators was a dangerously insecure position.

 

“In the name of the Galactic Federation, thank you for welcoming us to your world,” he said.  The voice seemed to becoming more natural as the voder – there had to be a hell of a translation program buried within the small device – adapted to Earth’s conditions.  “It is always a delight to encounter another intelligent race.  There are many hundreds of races within the Federation, yet they all add something unique to the melange of cultures shared by the sentient races of the galaxy.  You have wondered if you are truly alone in the universe.  Know now that you are far from alone.  The stars wait for you.”

 

There was a long pause.  “The translation program we have developed is adaptive, but it can make mistakes,” the Ambassador added.  “We apologise for any confusion caused by the translation.  We will not take offense if you wish clarification of any matters raised during this meeting and we hope that you will extend us the same courtesy.  The Federation has extensive experience in contacting new races and welcoming them into the fold, but each race poses its own problems which require individual solutions.  We look forward to the day when your race joins us in the endless quest to seek out new worlds and civilisations, boldly going into the endless unknown.”

 

Toby thought fast.  The aliens had admitted a weakness, which was odd.  There were human cultures that saw admitting weakness as somehow intolerable, as if it hurt their pride to be thought less than perfect.  And yet part of him admired the aliens for being willing to admit that they were far from all-powerful.  Or...had they warned of translation errors to allow them to claim a mistranslation if humanity took offense at their words?  He looked up at the unreadable red eyes and shivered.  It was easy to believe in friendly aliens in the abstract, but in person...there was something about the Galactics that alerted every ancient sense in his mind.  The aliens were dangerous.

 

And their words sounded suspiciously like
Star Trek’s
central credo...

 

“There are two ways in which we can encounter a new world of friends,” the Ambassador said.  He had the attention of the entire chamber. 
Everyone
was paying attention to his words, calculating how they offered advantages and threats to their particular nation.  No matter how anyone looked at it, the aliens would change the entire world.  Nothing before – not Korea, not Iraq – had ever matched the sheer significance of First Contact.  The world would never be the same again.  “We can encounter them in space, when they have developed starships to cross the gulfs of space and reach worlds that belong to the Galactic Federation.  They have no difficulty in being integrated into the Federation, if that is their choice.  The Federation has never had to force a member to join.  All join willingly, convinced of the benefits of membership.  Access to our vast database of knowledge about the galaxy, about the hundreds of races that flower out into space, is the least of it.

 

“Or we can discover them before they make the climb into space.”

 

There was a second pause, more chilling than the first.  “In normal cases, a world is left to develop on its own until its natives start building starships for themselves.  We have discovered that contact between an advanced civilisation and a primitive race, one unaware of atoms, or that their planets orbit stars, is utterly devastating for the primitive race.  Everything they might have brought to the Galactic Federation – knowledge they might have developed, understandings they might have shaped, contributions to art and crafts...everything is lost forever.  They become, at best, shadows of what they might have become.

 

“Your race has seen a similar process, although on a much smaller scale.  Contact between the Native Americans, or Australian Aborigines, and the Europeans proved devastating for the weaker side.  They were crippled by disease, by technology and – above all – by a worldview they could not match.  The Galactic Federation has long determined that all contact between the advanced civilisations that make up the Federation and the primitive races that have not yet discovered the building blocks of science and technology is to be forbidden.  This is the most powerful edict of our culture.  We do not contact races below a certain level of technology.

 

“In rare cases, we discover a race that has developed a level of technology without advancing into space, or is on the verge of destroying itself with technology that it has not yet developed the maturity to handle safely.  In such cases, it is the responsibility of the discoverers to attempt to guide the discovered through the bottlenecks that can destroy an entire race, removing its potential from the galaxy forever.  Your race is unusual in that it has both failed to move into space in any meaningful way
and
has failed, as a society, to develop the maturity that would allow you to avoid being destroyed by your own technology.  We have observed you long enough to know that the only thing that prevented you from destroying yourselves before we made contact was sheer luck.

 

“There is much we do not understand about your race.  You are lucky enough to live in one of the most blessed solar systems in the galaxy, yet you have been almost childishly lax about moving into space.  You could have started mining asteroids and the gas giants and placing your heavy industries in space, but instead you choose to continue polluting your planet and poisoning your environment.  We will show you models that will illustrate the true danger of the situation you are facing.  Total environmental collapse may well be possible within decades.  You have even failed to produce defences in case of a natural disaster from space; there are asteroids orbiting near your world that may eventually intersect with your planet, slamming into it with a force that would shake your world. 

 

“Put bluntly, your race is isolated on a single vulnerable world.  You have been risking extinction for centuries...and not just through natural disasters or your polluting of your own environment.  You pose a very real threat to yourselves.

 

“By the time most races reach your level of technology, they have developed governing systems that span most of their homeworld’s surface.  They develop political systems that allow them to concentrate their efforts on reaching into space and ensuring their own survival.  You have chosen to fragment your world into many disparate countries, each one scrabbling with its neighbours; the rich choosing to exploit the poor, the strong choosing to oppress the weak.  You fight wars over religion, over skin colour; in over half of your countries, you allow your females to be brutalised by an oppressive male patriarchy that weakens their ability to contribute to the whole.  Your governments have shown a sickening hypocrisy in allowing short-term national gains at the expense of long-term planetary development.  Your global system has been trending towards disaster – an event that would shatter the foundations of your world – for the last four decades.  Our models predict disaster within the next ten years, an upheaval of such power that it would dramatically reduce your population and destroy your governments.”

 

The Ambassador seemed to pause for a long moment.  He was lecturing the Assembly, not debating with them, yet no one seemed inclined to object.  Toby suspected that he understood; the alien, isolated from global politics, might be seen as a neutral observer rather than someone pushing a view for their own purposes.  Or perhaps they were reluctant to risk the alien’s ire.  If half of the speculated benefits from joining the Federation happened to materialise, angering the aliens could result in the benefits to their countries being lost – permanently.

 

“There are those among us who wonder if your race is...sick,” the Ambassador said.  “Not seventy of your years ago, one of your nation-states attempted to exterminate millions of humans because of their religion, or ethnic origin, or merely because they wanted living space.  The survivals of that terrible period have gone on to oppress others, who in turn have chosen to oppress themselves rather than learning to live with their fellow humans.  Your race has produced some of the most evil regimes in the galaxy and yet many of your worst acts come from absent-mindedness rather than outright evil.  There are even some amongst us who have considered establishing a permanent blockade of your world, fearful that you carry a mental disease that would spread into the galaxy.  You are xenophobic to a degree we find alarming and almost unbelievable.  How will you act if unleashed upon the universe?

 

“And if left to your own devices, you will cripple yourselves – perhaps even destroy yourselves – within decades.

 

“The Galactic Federation has made the decision to try to help you.  We will provide you with technologies that you lack – technologies you could have developed for yourselves, had you chosen to spend the effort you spent on developing weapons on developing ways to improve your lives instead.  We will assist you in escaping the bottleneck that threatens your race; we will guide you towards a point where you will be mature enough to enter the Galactic Federation without posing a threat to your cousins among the stars.  Over the next few weeks and months, we will enter into talks with your political and economical leaders that will attempt to ensure that the level of disruption caused by our technology – our mere presence – is kept to a minimum.  But we must also issue one word of warning.

BOOK: The Trojan Horse
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