From any viewpoint the sunrise on Alusoose was spectacular. Yesterday
morning the President of Gallifrey and his party had viewed it from space,
where it was breathtaking. The mesosphere of the desert world’s
atmosphere contained an unusual level of ionised gamma particles, and
the reflected sunlight flared like a corona of light around the planet.
As spectacular as it was, Marion wasn’t sure she liked it. She admitted
as much to Kristoph. It looked as if the planet’s atmosphere was
on fire, and that was a bit TOO much like what had happened not so long
ago on Ventura.
But their hosts expected them to be enthusiastic about a view of their
planet that was only seen by those who could afford to take the thermosphere
shuttle or who were VIP guests.
“I AM enjoying the shuttle,” Marion admitted. “It really
is the smoothest journey I have ever enjoyed – apart from TARDIS
travel, that is.”
Kristoph smiled as she added that codicil to her remark.
“It is smooth because of the way the shuttle skims along the interface
between the thermosphere and the mesosphere. Imagine it like water-skiing
– the skis moving quickly, gracefully and easily over the one element
– water - while you are immersed in the other – air.”
Marion laughed.
“I’ve never tried water-skiing. I imagine I would end up fully
immersed in the water.”
“Ice-skating?” Kristoph suggested.
“Covered in bruises and not at all graceful about it,” Marion
retorted.
They both laughed. It pleased their hosts who imagined that they were
enjoying their trip fully. Marion didn’t tell them that she had
been just a little upset by the view of the sunrise over the planet. It
would have been so disappointing to them.
The shuttle circled the planet running just ahead of the rising sun. The
ionised particles in the mesosphere appeared to be chasing the shuttle.
Marion still felt it a little disturbing, even though she knew it was
just an effect and that there was nothing dangerous happening to the planet
below. The flares and spikes of red-orange that reached up from the mesosphere
like tongues of fire were nothing of the sort. The planet below was hot
and dry, but no more than the Sahara of Earth or the Great Red Desert
of Gallifrey and the people lived under protective shields that kept even
that heat from affecting them.
She kept telling herself that, but still she was glad when the shuttle
accelerated away from the sunrise and into the black of the night in the
eastern hemisphere before beginning its descent back towards the planet.
The desert surface was completely dark except for the places where the
shielded cities were. Those looked like glowing stars in a constellation
of their own. The biggest was the capital, of course, Alusoosea City,
but there were several other large cities and numerous smaller settlements
in which a population of over two million people lived.
There were, in addition, so Marion had learnt, tribes of nomads who travelled
the deserts on three humped, long necked creatures something like camels
with all of their possessions in their saddlebags. But they were less
likely to meet them on this trip than the Outlanders of the Red Desert
whom Marion had never seen in person despite hearing many stories about
them.
The shuttle landed in a place called the Valley of Lava. It would have
sounded worrying if the VIP guests and the paying visitors had not been
assured that the lava had stopped flowing a thousand years ago. What remained
was a landscape shaped by volcanic eruptions that was prized by painters,
photographers and poets as well as volcanologists.
It was still dark when the shuttle landed on a specially built platform
and the roof split apart and folded down with a slight hiss of hydraulics.
The pressure inside and outside the cabin had been equalised first and
the only difference was a cool pre-dawn breeze bringing a fresh and unrecycled
breath of air to them all.
Stewards brought coffee and croissants on trays as the guests waited in
expectation of the second most spectacular way to view the dawn on Alusoose.
It began, as dawn on any planet does, with a lightening of the sky –
in this case to the south-west. As the dark brown turned a dark-orange
it was possible to make out some of that amazing volcanic topography.
A thousand years ago, when the volcano erupted, it had done so on the
bottom of a wide, fast flowing river that had long since dried up and
become desert. When the lava pushed up from beneath the ground the water
had cooled it immediately, forming the eerie structures that the visitors
now gazed upon. There were curling masses of black, solidified lava that
looked for all the world like waves of water that had been petrified in
a single instant before they had come crashing down upon the shore. There
were tall, tree like structures with branches that had never moved even
in the strongest desert wind for that thousand years. There were shapes
sculptured by the action of cold water and hot lava that, to the imaginative
eye might by figures of men standing with sword hands raised or hunched
crones with cloaks around their shoulders, or dragons about to stretch
their wings and fly.
All this they saw against the gradually lightening sky, but it was nothing
to how it looked when dawn broke and the huge yellow sun rose into the
sky above the lava valley. Then the lava formations no longer looked merely
black. Crystalline elements within them caught the rays of the sun and
reflected them so that it actually looked as if a yellow river of lava
was pouring down from those petrified waves, as if the dragon had fiery
eyes, and the huddled crone a body that glowed with an inner light.
The sun continued to climb in the sky until its whole huge mass could
be seen, a terrifyingly big ball of heat and light that was much, much
closer to Alusoose than the suns that warmed either Earth or Gallifrey
were. Now the roof closed again over the shuttle and its passengers. The
heat of the day was starting to be over-powering and so was the direct
light from the sun. The windows automatically tinted so that the passengers
might view the sunspots and the huge, swirling solar flares without damaging
their eyes.
“You find this mostly terrifying, too, don’t you, my dear?”
Kristoph said to Marion gently.
“Yes,” she admitted. “I’m not used to being this
close to a star. Our own sun – the Gallifreyan sun… and the
Earth sun… they both seem so much gentler than this. Yes, I know.
It’s only because we’re so many millions of light years away
from those suns and Alusoose is about as close as Venus is to the Earth
sun or Demos to the Gallifrey sun.”
“Not just that,” Kristoph reminded her. “The Alusoosean
sun is ten times bigger than those. It is a red giant. And it is far more
volatile than our smaller yellow suns. That is why the sunrises are so
spectacular. It is all just physics.”
“I feel as if it’s about to expand outwards and swallow the
planet, and all of us with it,” Marion admitted. “And, of
course, it will do that one day, won’t it?”
“Every star will do that one day when it reaches that point in its
life cycle. Earth’s benign sun, and lovely Pazithi the star that
lights the Shining System will one day engulf and destroy the planets
they have nurtured and given life to, like the Titans devouring their
own children. It will happen here much sooner than it will on our beloved
worlds, but even here it won’t be for another billion, billion years.
The lives of stars are longer than even a Lord of Time can encompass in
his imagination.”
“I prefer not to think about all of that,” Marion said. “I’ve
seen so many wonders of the universe at close quarters – black holes
and supernovas, nebulae and… and phenomena that don’t even
have names… and most of it is frightening.”
“That’s because it is a reminder of how vast and old and yet,
at the same time, relatively young, the universe is,” Kristoph told
her. “It is a reminder to you that your place in it is such a very
small one.”
“And yours, surely?” Marion said.
“Time Lords never suffer from that worrying feeling of smallness,”
Kristoph admitted. “That is one of the effects of facing the Untempered
Schism. We look upon the whole universe in an eyeblink. We see infinity’s
boundaries, as impossible as that sounds. We are shown eternity wrapped
in a moment. And we are told that we are masters of it. Even a terrified
eight year old feels great when he knows that he is the most important
being in the whole of Creation.”
“Humility isn’t something Time Lords suffer from,” Marion
joked. What Kristoph described was almost impossible for her mind to encompass.
But it made her concern about the sun of Alusoose pale into insignificance.
Even that was only one star in the billions upon billions that were in
even one galaxy among the billions of those that existed.
“No, for the most part humility is for lesser beings,” Kristoph
conceded. “Lords of Time is not merely a poetic term. But I like
to think we have other qualities that stand in its stead. If we choose,
we can have a great deal of empathy for others. And some of us temper
our superiority with the knowledge that even we, masters of eternity,
can always learn something new about the universe we live in.”
“Good enough,” Marion told him. “But just think…
in a few months time… when we get back from this tour of the dominions
– Rodan will be facing the Untempered Schism. She will learn that
her place in the universe is as a master of it. What will knowing that
do to her?”
“We will have to see,” Kristoph said. “Don’t worry
about that. I will be her mentor on that day. I will see that no harm
comes to her through that experience.”
“I know that she won’t come to any harm,” Marion assured
him. “But will she be our little girl when it is done? Or will she
be an enlightened being who knows so much that she won’t be a child
at all any more?”
“She will be our Rodan,” Kristoph insisted. “Let us
not think of anything else. Meanwhile, look at the last wonder of the
Alusoosean sunrise.”
She looked and shivered in dread fascination as an object flew across
the sky much faster than seemed in any way safe. The Alusoosean moon orbited
the planet eighteen times in the twenty-eight hour day, leaving the appearance
of a vapour trail in its wake that was, in fact, dust in the atmosphere
that was drawn by the gravity of the moon.
At night, the moon had a honey-yellow colour. By full
day it was russet red. At this time, with the newly risen sun’s
rays glancing obliquely at it, the moon looked like a black-brown sphere
that was burning from within its core. It was, like the lava flow in the
valley, merely an optical illusion. The light that appeared to be within
the moon was just the reflection of crystalline formations on the surface.
That was the end of the wonders of an Alusoosean sunrise. The stewards
brought more coffee as the shuttle rose up into the lower troposphere
for the journey back to the capital.
The Lord High President of Gallifrey and his First Lady returned to the
Palace at the heart of Alusoosea City where whole wing had been given
over for their use during their state visit. Rodan was awake and having
her breakfast in the drawing room of her very own suite of rooms within
that wing. She had been more than a little surprised by the idea of her
own drawing room, her own bathroom with a sunken bath big enough for her
to swim back and forward in it, and a bedroom with floorspace wider than
the whole of the little house on the southern plain that her grandfather
built. Marion had been concerned about the grandeur of it for one child
who they had promised not to spoil with too much luxury. Even the rooms
she had in Mount Lœng House seemed small in comparison to this, but
once she got over the surprise, Rodan took it all philosophically. In
any case, with the full programme of daily excursions she didn’t
spend very much time in the rooms.
“I’m going to the zoo, today,” she reminded her foster
parents. “To see all the different Alusoosean animals.”
“Yes, you are,” Kristoph said. “I’m coming with
you. Your mama is going to have a morning’s rest after her early
trip to see the Alusoosean sunrise.”
“Yes, I am,” Marion admitted, stifling a yawn. “You
have an absolutely wonderful time, my dear. I shall have an absolutely
wonderful sleep.”
“There are horses at the zoo,” Rodan pointed out, as if that
was a guarantee that she was going to have a wonderful time.
Marion hoped that her delight in such things really would remain after
she faced the Untempered Schism, but she had promised Kristoph she would
not worry about such things, and she kept that promise as she kissed her
foster child and told her to bring back a souvenir – not a horse
– from the zoo and retired to her bed chamber for the rest she very
much needed, now.
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