Chapter FIVE
SALLY FOUND A post-it note and wrote: I’m in the back garden. Take the side path to the left and I’ll see you there. She tore off the yellow rectangle, stuck the note to the front door beside the big brass knocker and retreated to the back garden.
For some reason she didn’t want to open the front door and confront Kath – or whatever it was that Kath had become. She did not, she thought, want to be confined in the house with her. It was not a thought she could rationalise, and part of her felt guilty for having it. But it came to her that she needed to meet this new, resurrected Kath in the open, in the sunlight, so that she could run if she needed to.
She was still in a state of shock. She recalled the dazed disbelief she had experienced just after the coming of the Serene. This was similar, only intensified a hundredfold. She felt abstracted from reality, as if she were moving in a bubble secluded from everything, her every sense retarded.
She crossed the garden and sat on the wooden bench beneath the flowering cherry tree. From here she could look back at the house, and the wicket gate to the side path through which, in a matter of minutes, Kath would walk. Kath Kemp, whom Sally had watched die yesterday...
It was an idyllic scene, with the sun shining and the wisteria giving off its heavy scent which wafted to her across the garden. The mullioned windows winked in the sunlight, and the borders were abundant with blooms. It was a scene that might be a hundred years old, so little had changed here in the past century.
The gate beside the house squeaked open and Sally sprang to her feet with a sharp, indrawn breath.
Kath Kemp paused, holding the gate open. She was perhaps twenty metres away from Sally and smiled that familiar smile at her.
Sally took a step forward, and then another. She felt like an invalid, learning to walk again after a terrible accident. She was aware of a pain in her chest and shortness of breath.
Kath too began walking, slowly, and they met in the middle of the lawn, drenched in sunlight, for all the world as if they had never met before.
Sally stared at the woman before her, stared at her broad, smiling face, her swept back hair. Her skin was flushed, alive; she exuded, as she had yesterday, a radiant compassion that Sally found impossible to describe or to quantify: it was who Kathryn Kemp was, an identifying signature, which filled Sally whenever she thought about her friend in absentia.
Kath reached out a small, broad hand, tentatively, as if unsure how she might be greeted.
After a second, Sally took it, almost gasped at its warmth, its... humanity.
She knew, then, suddenly, what had happened.
The Serene had somehow, with the superior technology they possessed, brought Kathryn Kemp back to life. They had deemed her too valuable a person in their schema to allow to die. This was essentially the same Kath as before, but new, remade.
Kath squeezed her hand and said, “Shall we sit down?” She indicated the bench beneath the cherry tree. They crossed the lawn and sat side by side in the dappled shade.
Sally turned and stared at her friend. “I saw it happen, Kath. You quoted Housman, and then... then the truck came around the corner and...”
“I’m sorry,” Kath said. “I can’t imagine what you must have gone through.”
Sally smiled to herself. That was Kath, the compassionate: she had died, and been brought back to life, and she apologised for the hurt that this had occasioned.
“I have a lot to tell you,” Kath said in a soft voice, “to explain.”
“I... I think I know what happened. You are important to the Serene, Kath. And they’re so powerful. I mean, look how they’ve banished human violence. What is it to bring the dead back to life?”
Kath stared at her with wide eyes.
Sally said, “I’m right, aren’t I?”
Kath shook her head. “No,” she said gently.
“I don’t understand. You’re the same Kath I’ve always known. I saw you die, and here you are, alive... The Serene must have brought you back to life. You were dead, Kath!”
“I was dead, and the Serene did resurrect me – I am the same Kath Kemp you have always known, but the truth of it is that I am not, and never was, human.”
Sally felt dizzy. Had she not been sitting down she would have slumped into the seat. A hot flush cascaded across her face.
“Then what?”
“I am what you call a self-aware entity.”
Sally shook her head in a mute negative, unable to find her voice. At last she said, “No. No, that can’t be right, can it? I mean... I knew you before the Serene arrived. I knew you at college. We were twenty. That first meeting, in the canteen and we both reached for the last...”
“Vanilla slice.”
“And we were friends from the start, best friends, and that was years and years before the Serene arrived... And I remember you saying – I remember it clearly! You said you didn’t believe in UFOs and little green men. You called it all...”
“A wish-fulfilling delusion...” She nodded, smiled. “Yes, I did.”
Sally took a deep breath. She felt as if she were about to faint. She fought to remain conscious. “Then... in that case...”
“I am and always have been a self-aware entity,” Kath said.
Sally sprang to her feet and ran off down the garden, hugging herself tightly, her thoughts in turmoil.
She stopped before the swing, brought up short by its ridiculous, meretricious essence. The swing made her think of Hannah, and what she might be doing now. Break time – so she would be chomping on her health bar, sipping apple juice.
Sally knew that when she turned around and looked at the bench beneath the cherry tree, it would be empty. She had hallucinated the meeting with Kath, was suffering hysteric delusions brought about by the shock of her friend’s death last night.
She turned around.
Kath Kemp sat on the bench in the shifting, dappled sunlight, gazing across the lawn at her.
Sally hugged herself, as if protectively, and stared across at Kath Kemp, or at whatever Kath Kemp was.
A self-aware entity?
The idea was impossible.
Slowly, hesitantly, she retraced her steps and paused before the bench, staring down at her friend. Kath looked up, squinting against the sunlight.
She found her voice at last. “But you look so human, Kath.” You are so human, Kath...
“Of course.” Kath smiled. “I had to pass for human.” She patted the bench. “Please, sit down.”
Sally obeyed, then said, “But everything we shared, the friendship. You were... my best friend, Kath. We shared everything. I told you...” She stopped, staring at Kath. She had told Kath everything, had opened her heart to the woman... and Kath had listened, taken it all in, and for her own part had reciprocated... nothing about herself.
Had that been, Sally thought, because she had nothing human to say about herself?
“But I am still your best friend, Sally. I might not be human, but that doesn’t mean that everything we shared is invalidated. I am an empathetic, thinking, feeling, being. I have emotions, emotions that over the years of interacting with your kind have flourished, become almost human. Your friendship means everything to me. This... my death, your learning of my true nature, should not come between us.”
Sally sat in silence, trying to order her thoughts. At last she said, “A self-aware entity...” She shrugged. “It means nothing really, does it? Surely everything sentient in existence is a self-aware entity?” She stopped, staring at her friend, and asked softly, “Just what are you?”
Kath took a deep breath, as Sally had seen her do on a thousand previous occasions when preparing to answer a complex question. “I will give you my history, Sally, and see what you make of it.”
Sally had the ridiculous impulse, then, to ask Kath, to ask this self-aware entity, if she would care for a cup of tea. She restrained herself.
Kath said, “I am an organic somatic structure grown around a programmable sentient-core nurtured to term in a vat on the planet of Delta Pavonis V, twenty light years from Earth.” She paused, then went on, “I am partly organic, partly artificial. I am what you humans describe, crudely, as a cybernetic organism. In the Serene system, I am accorded full citizen’s rights; I am beholden to no one. I have what you call free will.”
“But you said you were programmable.”
“My sentient core, in infancy, was programmable – but then you could say the same of a human baby’s brain. It is programmable, and is programmed, by its environment, by its parents and peers. It is a question, I suppose, of defining one’s terms. Because I was programmable does not de facto make me some soulless machine in the employ of the Serene.”
“But you work for them?”
“Through choice, yes. Because I perceive what the Serene are doing, here and elsewhere, as a wholly beneficial and good endeavour.”
“But... you were programmable. Therefore, you were programmed.”
“In my early years, yes. I was programmed with the knowledge of what the Serene were doing. But, later, I was given the choice of whether to serve them, or not.”
A silence came between them, and at last Sally asked, “And you are... immortal?”
Kath smiled and shook her head. “I will live for a long time, perhaps a thousand years, before my mind and body... degrades, and I die.”
Sally stared at the entity she had thought of, over the years, as her best friend, and something struck her. She asked in almost a whisper, as if afraid of the answer, “And how old are you?”
Kath tipped her head, closed one eye, and looked at Sally. How familiar that semi-amused expression was! How many times had Sally seen it in the past? A hundred, a thousand?
Kath said, with a twinkle in her eye, “I am a little over two hundred years old.”
Sally nodded, as if it were perfectly acceptable to have one’s best friend inform you that she was over two centuries old.
“And before you came to Earth... you lived on Delta Pavonis V?”
“For a hundred years,” Kath said, “while in training for my assignment on Earth.”
“So... so you have been on Earth for more than a hundred years?”
“A little over one hundred, in various guises.”
Sally took a breath, her heart racing. She felt as if she were hyperventilating, and tried to assess what she was thinking, feeling.
She had always assumed that she had been Kath’s best friend – as they had shared so much in the past – and to find out now that Kath had had a previous incarnation, or many incarnations on Earth, gave her an obscure sense of being let down, of not being unique in Kath’s estimation.
Ridiculous, she knew.
She said, “A hundred years? So the Serene have known for that long that one day they would come to Earth and... change things?”
“For much longer than that,” Kath said.
“And they sent you here to...?”
“Initially I was sent here on a fact-finding mission, to gather and collate information and send it back to our home planet.”
“And then?”
“And then, along with other self-aware entities, I helped to smooth the way, to create benevolent institutions, create an intellectual atmosphere wherein the very notion of the other, the alien, could be discussed, accepted.”
“You had a different guise? You were not always Kathryn Kemp, of course?”
“Of course. I was a male for many years, then female, and then a male again.”
“And... how many of your fellow self-aware entities were there, and still are?”
“We numbered, in the early years, in our hundreds, and then fifty years ago in our thousands. Now... there are perhaps a million of us on the planet.”
A million, Sally thought.
“And you were never found out? There were never accidents like last night, when you might have been hospitalised, examined and discovered?”
“We are similar, physiologically, to yourselves. A surgical examination of our bodies would reveal nothing – only a neurological scan, or neurosurgery might give away the lie, but we had means of ensuring we never compromised our identities.”
She smiled at Sally, then surprised her by saying, “I don’t know about you, Sally, but I would love a cup of tea...” She gestured to the house. “Let me go and potter about in the kitchen, while you sit here and think about what I’ve said. Earl Grey?”
“My favourite.”
“I know...”
Impulsively, both Sally and Kath, human and Serene self-aware entity, came together in a hug. Sally held on and closed her eyes, and told herself that it really didn’t matter that her friend was not human.
Kath moved into the house and Sally sat in the shade, watching her as she moved back and forth behind the kitchen window.
Kath was Kath, she told herself – the friend she had had for more than thirty years. Did it matter, really matter, that she was alien? Perhaps if Kath had befriended Sally back in their college days with some ulterior motive in mind, then Sally would have cause for unease. But as far as she could tell they had come together spontaneously, drawn to each other by that inexplicable personal chemistry that attracted human beings to each other... or in this case humans and self-aware entities.
Unless...
A thought struck Sally as she watched Kath ease herself sideways through the back door bearing a tray.
Sally drew up a small table and Kath poured two cups of Earl Grey.
They sat side by side and Kath said, “I hope this doesn’t change things between us, Sally. I value our friendship.”
“So do I, of course. But there is something I’d like to know.”
“Go on.”
“Our friendship... Why? I mean, when we met, I was instantly attracted to you. It was spontaneous.” She looked at her friend, then away across the garden. “What I’d like to know is... was it planned on the part of the Serene, for some ultimate purpose?” She took a breath, and voiced her fear: “Were you aware of what would happen, with Geoff being a representative...?”
“Do you mean,” Kath asked, “can we see into the future?”
“I suppose I do mean that, yes.”
“Well, of course not. The Serene are powerful, that I will admit, and much of our science might seem to you like magic, but there are some things that are even beyond the remit of the Serene.”
“So our friendship?”
“Is nothing more than friendship, and nothing less. A coming together of like souls, if you will. We... are encouraged by our overseers to inhabit our lives as humans, to live and think and feel as you do. Part of that is to experience what makes being human so often rewarding, to share friendships and...”
“And love?”
Kath nodded. “That too, occasionally.”
Sally asked, “And you have known love?”
“Not this time, Sally. For the past thirty years I have been so busy with... with laying the groundwork, that I have had little time left for affairs of the heart. But in a previous life...yes, I loved a woman.”
Sally sipped her tea and regarded her friend. “That must have been hard.”
“In some ways it was, but in others it was not. We were together for twenty years. We self-aware entities are... developed with an aging capability, for want of a better expression. I grew old and watched my lover grow old too, and I felt sadness that her time was so brief while mine, comparatively, was so extended. To watch her die was painful, but an experience, I told myself, that was essential in order to fully understand what it is to be human.”
Sally looked at her friend, wondering at her past lives. “When was this?”
“In the middle of the last century. My guise was that of a British diplomat working at various postings around the world. I met and fell in love with a wonderful woman, a novelist whose work I still keep, and read. It’s a comfort to have her voice to hand.”
They drank their tea in silence for a time. A slight wind stirred the boughs of the cherry tree, and its scent descended like a balm.
Sally said at last, “I would have thought, when you ‘died’ this time, that... I don’t know; that the life you had would have ceased and you would have started a new incarnation.”
Kath nodded. “It sometimes does happen like that, Sally. It’s a ‘natural’ transition, so to speak. But not this time. I have important work which it is essential I continue in my guise as Kathryn Kemp.”
“And I suppose you can’t tell me of this work?”
“I’m sorry, I can’t. The work is sensitive and confidential.”
She looked at her friend, who was holding the small china teacup in both hands before her wide lips and smiling across the garden, considering who knew what memories? Sally said, “But you need not have told me all this, Kath. You could have been resurrected, and gone back to your life and our paths might never have crossed again.”
What did she hope would be Kath’s reply? That their friendship meant so much that she, Kath, could not continue living without telling Sally that she had not in fact met her end in a leafy English lane?
Kath was nodding. “I could have done that, but I would have been uncomfortable, both on a personal level and on a more fundamental, logistical level. I, Kath, your friend, would have been distressed at your pain, your grief – quite apart from the fact that, one day, our paths might have crossed... and I am human enough to envisage the hurt this would have caused you.” She reached out and squeezed Sally’s hand. “Also, I wanted to tell you what really happened last night.”
“What really happened? But I saw what happened? The speeding truck...”
Kath was regarding her earnestly. “Didn’t it occur to you that the truck came out of nowhere rather fast?”
“Well, yes, but...”
“And the rapid response of the ambulance and the police? They arrived in minutes after your call – a world record, wouldn’t you say?”
“I... I don’t know. I was in shock. Numbed. I lost all track of time.” She stared at her friend. “But I don’t understand. What do you mean?”
“The ambulance and the paramedics, the young police officer who questioned you, they were all, like me, self-aware entities.”
Sally said tentatively, “Yes, that makes sense. When one of their own dies, I can see that it’s best that they respond to the incident themselves.”
“That’s true, and we do institute such procedures, but in this instance there were... special circumstances, is perhaps the best way to put it.”
Sally repeated the phrase.
Kath paused for a second or two, regarding her tea. She looked up. “This is what I, we, wanted you to know. You, and people around the world like your husband Geoff, the special representatives of the Serene, are essential to our regime on Earth and beyond. It is only fair that we share with you the facts of the situation.”
“Now you’re sounding like a character from a bad spy novel.”
They both laughed. Back in their twenties, in their student days, as a relief from course work Kath had taken refuge in spy novels of the fifties and sixties, often reading out lurid passages to Sally over breakfast.
It was one of the many hundreds, thousands, of memories Sally had of her friend which she would be forced to reassess, in light of recent revelations. Why was an alien self-aware entity reading cold war spy novels? As part of her deep cover guise, as an attempt to understand the machinations of human politics?
She shook her head, clearing her thoughts, and asked, “And what are the facts of the situation?”
Kath regarded her half-empty cup. It was a while before she spoke. “The Serene, in what they are doing here on Earth and elsewhere, have opposition; enemies, if you like.”
“Enemies?”
“The universe is vast. This small galaxy alone has at least a hundred sentient, space-faring races, though only two as evolved as the Serene.”
“And one of these...?”
Kath nodded. “I’ll spare you the lurid details, but the Serene and our opponents have been pitched against each other for millennia.”
“And they oppose what you are doing here on Earth?”
“One day, Sally, when I have more time, I will tell you the history of our mutual opposition, our mutually exclusive philosophies of species evolution. Suffice it to say that they will do everything to halt our progress here on Earth and across the solar system.”
“And last night – how did they manage to...?” She thought of the truck, and what Kath had said about it appearing from nowhere.
“Sally, our opponents are not here, physically. That eventuality would be a disaster – but they infiltrate our ranks on a virtual level, let’s say.”
“I’m not sure I understand.”
Kath nodded, and paused to consider her explanation. “The way the Serene have turned the human race against violence is to... manipulate reality on a quantum level. To use a crude analogy, they re-program the ‘strings’ that are the fundamental building blocks of reality. Now, on occasions, our opponents are able to get past our defences and infiltrate this virtuality, re-program events to their own desires. Last night was one small, and very insignificant example – but they are becoming more frequent of late and what we fear is that they are a precursor to a greater, more sustained attack. Last night’s incident and others like it was our enemy testing the waters, so to speak, stretching the parameters of our defences. My death was trivial, but we fear what they are building up to.”
Sally finished her tea and set the cup on the seat beside her. “Geoff and I... over the years we’d lie awake and stare out at the stars, and do you know what? We’d speculate about the Serene... what was out there, what the Serene were doing. I think Geoff even surmised that the Serene must have enemies, political, if not military.”
She looked at her friend. “I believe that the Serene are working for the best interests of humanity, Kath.” She shrugged and smiled. “I suppose I have to believe that, don’t I? I have only the evidence of my experience, limited though that is, and the parameters of my prejudice. But, really, what as human beings do we know?” She thought of the fishpond analogy and said, “We are like fish being fed crumbs by vastly superior benefactors. We know nothing, really, of what lies beyond our pond.”
“I can only tell you what you would expect to hear from the representative of the Serene,” she said, “and that is that we have the best interests of the human race at heart. You are destined for great things; please believe me when I say this, and that your destiny lies beyond the bounds of your home planet, and will be determined by the success of the Serene in defeating the objectives of our enemy.”
“Which is why you told me about the push to Mars?”
“And beyond. We will move from Earth, terraforming and inhabiting the planets, first Mars, then Venus; we will set up colonies among the asteroids – vaster and more complex than the mining outposts that exist out there now – and then you will colonise the moons of Jupiter and Saturn, and beyond.”
“And one day, the stars?”
“Not for a long, long time, Sally,” Kath said. “There is much to be done before then, much to prepare the human race for. There is work to be done in the solar system itself.”
“Work?”
“One day, when we are on Mars or beyond, it might be safe to confide in you. For the present, and especially after last night’s events, I must be wary.”
“So... your enemies don’t know of your ultimate objectives?”
Kath smiled, then laughed. “It is always unwise, and dangerous, to underestimate the knowledge of one’s opponents. I sincerely hope that they are unaware of what we plan, but who can tell?” She stood. “I mentioned an e-brochure last night, about the colonisation of Mars. I have it in the car. I’ll fetch it and then, maybe, it would be nice to prepare lunch together, yes?”
“That would be wonderful.”
Kath set off across the lawn, and Sally called after her. “Kath, be careful...”
Her friend turned and beamed her a wonderful smile. “I’ll do my best.”
Sally sat in silence in the shifting sunlight and realised that she felt an odd, lazy contentment; Kath, her best friend, was back from the dead, and the Serene were leading the human race towards its destiny...
And, tomorrow, Geoff would return.
Kath was back minutes later with the brochure. “In a couple of days I’ll drop by and we’ll discuss everything,” she said.
“And when Geoff gets back I can tell him about last night?”
Kath nodded. “Everything.”
They passed into the house and, together, prepared lunch.
The Serene Invasion
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