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VENUS
BEN BOVA
Heaven says nothing, and the whole earth grows rich beneath its silent rule.
Men, too, are touched by heaven's virtue; yet, in their greater part, they are
creatures of deceit. They are born, it seems, with an emptiness of soul, and
must take their qualities wholly from things without. To be born thus empty
into this modern age, this mixture of good and ill, and yet to steer through
life on an honest course to the splendors of success-this is a feat reserved
for paragons of our kind, a task beyond the nature of the normal man.
- Ihara Saikaku
HELL CRATER
I was late and I knew it. The trouble is, you can't run on the moon.
The shuttle from the Nueva Venezuela space station had been delayed, some
minor problem with the baggage being transferred from Earthside, so now I was
hurrying along the underground corridor from the landing pad, all alone. The
party had started more than an hour ago.
They had warned me not to try to run, even with the weighted boots that I had
rented at the landing port. But like a fool I tried to anyway and sort of hip-
hopped crazily and bumped into the corridor wall, scraping my nose rather
painfully. After that I shuffled along in the manner that the tourist-guide
video had shown. It felt stupid, but bouncing off the walls was worse.
Not that I really wanted to go to my father's inane party or be on the Moon at
all. None of this was my idea.
Two big human-form robots guarded the door at the end of the corridor. And I
mean big, two meters tall and almost as wide across the torso. The gleaming
metal door was sealed shut, of course. You couldn't crash my father's party;
he'd never stand for that.
"Your name, please," said the robot on my left. Its voice was deep and rough,
my father's idea of what a bouncer should sound like, I suppose.
"Van Humphries," I said, as slowly and clearly as I could enunciate.
The robot hesitated only a fraction of a second before saying, "Voice print
identification is verified. You may enter, Mr. Van Humphries."
Both robots pivoted around and the door slid open. The noise hit me like a
power hammer: thumping atonal music blasting away against wildly overamped
screeching from some androgynous singer wailing the latest pop hit.
The chamber was huge, immense, and jammed wall-to-wall with partygoers,
hundreds of men and women, a thousand or more, I guessed, drinking, shouting,
smoking, their faces contorted with grimaces of forced raucous laughter. The
noise was like a solid wall pounding against me; 1 had to physically force
myself to step past the robots and into the mammoth chamber.
Everyone was in party attire: brazenly bright colors with plenty of spangles
and glitter and electronic blinkers. And lots of bare flesh showing, of
course. I felt like a missionary in my chocolate-brown velour pullover and tan
micromesh slacks.
A long electronic window swept the length of the cavern's side wall,
alternately proclaiming "HAPPY ONE HUNDREDTH BIRTHDAY!" and showing clips from
pornographic videos.
I might have known Father would pick a bordello as the site for his party.
Hell Crater, named after the Jesuit astronomer Maximilian J. Hell. The gaming
and porn industries had turned the area into the Moon's sin capital, a
complete cornucopia of illicit pleasures dug below the dusty floor of the
crater, some six hundred klicks south of Selene City. Poor old bather Hell
must be spinning in his crypt.
"Hi there, stranger!" said a brassy, buxom redhead in an emerald-green costume
so skimpy it must have been spray-painted onto her. She waggled a vial of some
grayish-looking powder in my general direction, exhorting, "Join the fun!"
Fun. The place looked like Dante's Inferno. There was nowhere to sit except
for a few couches along the walls, and they were already filled with writhing
tangles of naked bodies. Everyone else was on their feet, packed in shoulder
to shoulder, dancing or swaying and surging like the waves of sonic multihued,
gabbling, aimless human sea.
High up near the smoothed rock ceiling a pair of acrobats in sequined
harlequin costumes were walking a tightrope strung across the chamber. A set
of spotlights made their costumes glitter. On Earth, performing that high up
would have been dangerous; here on the Moon they could still break their necks
if they fell-or more likely break the necks of the people they fell upon. The
place was so tightly packed it would've been impossible for them to hit the
floor.
"C'mon," the redhead urged again, pawing at the sleeve of my pullover. She
giggled and said, "Don't be so twangy!"
"Where is Martin Humphries?" I had to shout to be heard over the din of the
party.
She blinked her emerald-tinted eyes. "Hump? The birthday boy?" Turning
uncertainly toward the crowd and waving her hand vaguely, she yelled back,
"The old bumper's around here someplace. It's his party, y'know."
"The old bumper is my father," I told her, enjoying the sudden look of
astonishment on her face as I brushed past her.
It was a real struggle to work my way through the crowd. Strangers, all of
them. I didn't know anyone there, I was certain of that. None of my friends
would be caught dead at a scene like this. As I pushed and elbowed my way
through the jam-packed chamber, I wondered if my father knew any of these
people. He probably rented them for the occasion. The redhead certainly looked
the type.
He knows I can't take crowds, and yet he forced me to come here. Typical of my
loving father. I tried to shut out the noise, the reek of perfume and tobacco
and drugs, and the slimy sweat of too many bodies pressed too close together.
It was making me weak in the knees, twisting my stomach into knots.
I can't deal with this kind of thing. It's too much. I felt as if I would
collapse if there weren't so many bodies crowded around me. I was starting to
get dizzy, my vision blurring.
I had to stop in the midst of the mob and squeeze my eyes shut. It was a
struggle to breathe. I had taken my regular enzyme shot just before the
transfer rocket had landed, yet I felt as if I needed another one, and
quickly.
I opened my eyes and surveyed the jostling, noisy, sweaty throng again,
searching for the nearest exit. And then I saw him. Through the tangle of
weaving, gesticulating partygoers I spotted my father, sitting up on a dais at
the far end of the cavern like some ancient Roman emperor surveying an orgy.
He was even clad in a flowing robe of crimson, with two beautifully supple
young women at his sandaled feet.
My father. One hundred years old this day. Martin Humphries didn't look any
more than forty; his hair was still dark, his face firm and almost unlined.
But his eyes-his eyes were hard, knowing; they glittered with corrupt pleasure
at the scene being played out before him. He had used every rejuvenation
therapy he could get his hands on, even illegal ones such as nanomachines. He
wanted to stay young and vigorous forever. I thought he probably would. He
always got what he wanted. But one look into his eyes and it was easy to
believe that he was a hundred years old.
He saw me shouldering through the strident, surging crowd and for a moment
those cold gray eyes of his locked onto mine. Then he turned away from me with
an impatient frown clouding his handsome, artificially youthful face.
You insisted that I come to this carnival, I said to him silently. So, like it
or not, here I am.
He paid no attention to me as I toiled to reach him. I was gasping now, my
lungs burning. I needed a shot of my medication but I had left it back at my
hotel suite. When at last I reached the foot of his dais I slumped against the
softly pliable fabric draped over the platform, struggling to catch my breath.
Then I realized that the strident din of the party had dropped to a buzzing,
muted whisper.
"Sound dampers," my father said, glancing down at me with his old disdainful
smirk. "Don't look so stupid."
There were no steps up the platform and I felt too weak and giddy to try to
haul myself up beside him.
I It- made a shooing motion and the two young women jumped nimbly from the
platform, eagerly joining the crowd. I realized that they Were just teenagers.
"Want one?" my father asked, with a leering grin. "You can have 'em both, all
you have to do is ask."
I didn't bother to shake my head. I just clung to the side of his platform,
trying to bring my breathing under control.
"For Christ's sake, Runt, stop that damned panting! You look like a beached
flounder."
I pulled in a deep breath, then stood as straight as I could manage. "And it's
lovely to see you, too, Father."
"Aren't you enjoying my party?"
"You know better."
"Then what'd you come for, Runt?"
'Tour lawyer said you'd cut off my stipend if I didn't attend your party."
"Your allowance," he sneered.
"I earn that money."
"By playing at being a scientist. Now your brother, there was a real
scientist."
Yes, but Alex is dead. It had happened almost two years ago, but the memory of
that day still scalded me inside.
All my life my father had mocked and belittled me. Alex was his favorite, his
firstborn, Father's pride and joy. Alex was being groomed to like over
Humphries Space Systems, if and when Father ever decided to retire. Alex was
everything that I'm not: tall, athletic, quick and handsome, brilliantly
intelligent, outgoing, charming and witty. I'm on the small side, I've been
sickly from birth, I'm told that I tend to be withdrawn, introspective. My
mother died giving birth to me and my father never let me forget that.
I had loved Alex. I truly had. I had admired him tremendously. Ever since I
could remember, Alex had protected me against Father's sneers in id cutting
words. "It's all right, little brother, don't cry," he would tell inc. "I
won't let him hurt you."
Over the years I learned from Alex a love for exploration, for seeing new
vistas, new worlds. But while Alex actually went out on missions to Mars and
the Jovian moons, I had to stay cocooned at home, too frail to venture
outward. I flew an armchair, not a spacecraft. My excitement came from streams
of computer data and virtual reality simulations. Once I walked with Alex on
the red sands of Mars, linked by an interactive VR system. It was the best
afternoon of my life.
Then Alex was killed on his expedition to Venus, he and all his crew. And
Father hated me for being alive.
I left his house for good and bought a home on Majorca, a place all my own,
far from his dismissive sarcasm. As if to mock me, Father moved to Selene
City. Later I found out that he'd gone to the Moon so he could take
nanotherapies to keep himself young and fit. Nanomachines were outlawed on
Earth, of course.
It was clear that Father went for rejuvenation treatments because he had no
intention of retiring now. With Alex dead, Father would never leave Humphries
Space Systems to me. He would stay in command and keep me exiled.
So Father lived some four hundred thousand kilometers away, playing his chosen
role of interplanetary tycoon, mega billionaire, hell-raising, womanizing,
ruthless, corrupt giant of industry. I was perfectly content with that. I
lived quietly on Majorca, comfortable with a household staff that took
excellent care of me. Some of my servants were human; most were robots.
Friends came to visit often enough. I could flit over to Paris or New York or
wherever for theater or a concert. I spent my days studying the new data about
the stars and planets that were constantly streaming back from our space
explorers.
Until one of my friends repeated a rumor she had heard: My brother's
spacecraft had been sabotaged. His death was not an accident; it was murder.
The very next day, my father summoned me to his moronic birthday party on the
Moon, under the threat of cutting off my stipend if I didn't show up.
Looking up at his youthfully taut face again, I asked my father, "Why did you
insist that I come here?"
He smiled down sardonically at me. "Aren't you enjoying the party?"
"Are you?" I countered.
Father made a sound that might have been a suppressed laugh.
Then he said, "I have an announcement to make. I wanted you to be on hand to
hear it directly from my lips."
I felt puzzled. An announcement? Was he going to retire, after all? What of
it; he would never allow me to run the corporation. Nor did I want to,
actually.
He touched a stud set into the left armrest of his chair and the stupefying
noise of the party blasted against my ears hard enough to crack my skull. Then
he touched the other armrest. The music stopped in mid-beat. The tightrope-
walking acrobats winked out like a light snapped off. A holographic image, I
realized.
The crowd fell silent and still. They all turned toward the dais, like a
sullen horde of party-dressed schoolchildren forced to listen to their
principal.
"I'm delighted that you could come to my party," Father began, his low,
modulated voice amplified and echoing across the crowded chamber. "Are we
having fun yet?"
On that cue they all cheered, clapped, whistled, and yelled lustily.
Father raised both hands and they all fell silent again.
"I have an announcement to make, something that you hardworking
representatives of the news media out there will find particularly worthwhile,
I think."
Half a dozen camera-carrying balloons were already hovering a few meters from
the dais, like glittering Christmas ornaments floating buoyantly. Now several
more drifted out of the farther reaches of the chamber to focus on my father.
"As you know," he went on, "my beloved son Alexander was killed three years
ago while attempting to explore the planet Venus."
A collective sigh swept through the throng.
"Somewhere on the surface of that hellhole of a world his spacecraft lies,
with his remains inside it. In that terrible heat and pressure, the corrosive
atmosphere must be slowly destroying the last mortal remains of my boy."
Somewhere a woman broke into soft sobbing.
"I want to offer an inducement to someone who is bold enough, tough enough, to
go to Venus and reach its surface and bring back what's left of my son to me."
They all seemed to stand up straighter, their eyes widened. An inducement?
My father hesitated for a dramatic moment, then said in a much stronger voice,
"I offer a prize often billion international dollars to whoever can reach my
dead son's body and return his remains to me."
They gasped. For several seconds no one spoke. Then the chamber filled with
excited chatter. Ten billion dollars! Reach the surface of Venus! A prize of
ten billion dollars to recover Alex Humphries's body!
I felt just as stunned as any of the others. More, perhaps, because I knew
better than most of those costumed freeloaders what an impossible challenge my
father had just offered.
Father touched the stud on his chair arm and the babble of the crowd
immediately was cut down to a muted buzz again.
"Very nice," I said to him. "You'll be named Father of the Year."
He gazed disdainfully down at me. "You don't think I mean it?"
"I think you know that no one in his right mind is going to try to reach the
surface of Venus. Alex himself only planned to coast through the cloud decks."
"So you think I'm a fraud."
"I think you're making a public relations gesture, nothing more."
He shrugged as if it didn't matter.
I was seething. He was sitting up there and getting all this publicity. "You
want to look like a grieving father," I shouted at him, "making the whole
world think you care about Alex, offering a prize that you know no one will
claim."
"Oh, someone will try for it, I'm certain." He smiled coldly down at inc. "I
en billion dollars is a lot of incentive."
"I'm not so sure," I said.
"But I am. In fact, I'm going to deposit the whole sum in an escrow account
where no one can touch it except the eventual prize winner."
"The entire ten billion?"
"The whole sum," he repeated. Then, leaning slightly toward me, he added, "To
raise that much cash I'm going to have to cut a few corners here and there."
"Really? How much have you spent on this party?"
He waved a hand as if that didn't matter. "One of the corners I'm cutting is
your allowance."
"My stipend?"
"It's finished, Runt. You'll be twenty-five years old next month. Your
allowance ends on your birthday."
Just like that, I was penniless.
DATA BANK
She glows so bright and lovely in the night sky that virtually every culture
on Earth has called her after their goddess of beauty and love: Aphrodite,
Inanna, Ishtar, Astarte, Venus. Sometimes she is the dazzling Evening Star,
brighter than anything in the sky except the Sun and Moon. Sometimes she is
the beckoning Morning Star, harbinger of the new day. Always she shines like a
precious jewel.
As beautiful as Venus appears in our skies, the planet itself is the most
hellish place in the solar system. The ground is hot enough to melt aluminum.
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