The Panopticon was dark. The only light was a diffused glow through the
glass dome high above – the Gallifreyan moon in her bronze aspect.
That faint light was just enough to outline the unusual shape of a narrow
bed placed in the centre of the hexagonal dais where the Lord High President
usually sat on ceremonial occasions.
Upon that bed a Time Lord was dying.
Malikahathanmachsolace Dúccesci was nearing the end of his last
life. He was doing so peacefully and with all dignity afforded to him
and according to the tradition of his race.
When it was over, his mind, with the accumulated insight of thirteen lifetimes
as the leading climatologist of his world, would be added to the matrix,
the pycho-electronic accumulation of all the knowledge and wisdom of every
Time Lord that ever lived. Or more correctly, perhaps, every Time Lord
who died quietly in circumstances of his own choosing. There were a few
who died far from home in sudden and violent circumstances and their knowledge
was lost.
Kristoph de Lœngbærrow had always expected to be one of those. Only
in very recent years had he begun to live the quieter life that led to
a peaceful death with the proper rites accorded to a Time Lord.
The idea of dying peacefully here on Gallifrey passed idly through his
thoughts as he sat in the unaccustomed position of the public gallery.
He was waiting there with the son of the dying man, the present Lord Dúccesci.
It was not quite time to be at the bedside, but the dark and the quiet
provided solace in these long hours.
The Lord High President with his unique interface with the Matrix through
the Coronet of Rassilon was always present on these occasions. The Premier
Cardinal would always be on hand, too. How many others would keep the
vigil could vary. There had been former presidents who were attended by
every adult member of their dynasty as well as the entire assembled Council.
Malika Dúccesci was the only family member in attendance. His father’s
younger brother was dead and his nephew, Ginnell was under-age. The duty
fell upon him alone.
“I didn’t expect it to happen so soon,” Malika admitted
in a low whisper as he looked down to see the Premier Cardinal coming
to anoint the dying man according to custom. A faint smell of the spiced
oil could be detected even in the gallery.
“Nor I,” Kristoph replied. “I knew, of course, that
his health was not great, but I thought he had a half century at least.”
“His body was less frail than his mind,” Malika continued.
“His grasp on reality has been increasingly weak for some time.
But now the cancer of the liver is spreading faster than his body can
regenerate cells. It is the end, after all.”
There was a philosophy that held that Time Lord minds were immortal within
the Matrix, and therefore it was never the end, but Kristoph wasn’t
going to burden his friend with that just now. He was losing his father
tonight and no words could soften the blow.
Then Dúccesci looked around in surprise. A sound had echoed through
the Panopticon – one that had never been heard within its walls
before.
“Birds,” he said. “Straits gulls at the dawn tide. I
remember the sound so well. Our summer villa by the sea. The sound would
wake me when I was a boy. My father would be awake long before. He would
be walking on the sea shore, studying the shape of the clouds on the horizon
as the sun rose – or the lack of them. By the time I joined him
he could say exactly what the weather would be for the day. He was never
wrong. His long term models for our planetary climate were more scientific,
but his instinct for short term weather changes was phenomenal. I only
wish I had inherited even a fraction of his skill.”
“His predictions about the weather in the Great Desert in the next
millennia are his great legacy to our society,” Kristoph told him.
“Our scientists are already working on solutions to the problems
a prolonged dry period and rising temperatures will bring.”
“The desert was his special interest, but he returned to the sea
when he was done. He loved the summer villa.”
As Malika said that, a new sound was heard – unmistakeably the sound
of the tide rushing onto a sandy beach.
“His mind is creating the sounds, isn’t it,” he said.
“Yes,” Kristoph replied. “He is remembering the peaceful
places where he was content through his life and the background energy
from the Matrix that is concentrated here in the Panopticon is recreating
the strongest memories.”
“It is good to know that he is at peace in these last hours –
and thinking of happy times.”
The screech of the gulls and the whisper of the tide was followed by another
peaceful sound – the laughter of children. Malika was visibly affected
by the memory.
“My brother and I at play on that same beach,” he said. “Sometimes
it seemed as if father was too wrapped up in his great projects to notice
us, but he did, after all.”
“I often felt the same about my father when I was young,”
Kristoph recalled. “He was more often to be found on the roof with
a telescope than in any room of the house. If I had need of his advice
I would generally find him there. He would test me on the constellations
above our heads before listening to my problems.”
“Will we be like that with our own sons?” Malika asked. “I
hope any boy of mine will KNOW I am always available for him.”
“Likewise,” Kristoph agreed. “But I don’t think
either of us was truly neglected, and we have proud models for our own
actions as parents.”
“Yes.”
Malika was quiet for a while, listening to the sounds that his father
remembered so clearly that they manifested themselves in extremis. They
were a comfort to him as he faced the great loss of his parent.
“It is time to go down there,” Kristoph told him gently after
another hour had passed. The two men quietly left the gallery and walked
along the well lit corridor and down the staircase to the lower corridor
and the ante-chamber leading to the grand entrance to the Panopticon floor.
Gold Usher and the Chancellor joined them there, both dressed in plain
black and silver robes instead of the colourful regalia of an ordinary
day in this place. Kristoph’s aide brought him the Coronet of Rassilon,
a band of precious metal studded with large jewels that sat heavily on
his head. it was more than just an ornament. The metal was infused with
artron energy and the jewels were a focus for the Matrix’s phenomenal
power. It allowed the Lord High President to make direct contact with
those many generations of Time Lord minds within it.
This was the first time in his presidency that Kristoph performed the
Rite of Passing, but he was ready for it. The Coronet not only allowed
him to make contact with the minds of past Time Lords, but to draw upon
them for the strength he needed to help his friend through these hours.
It was customary not to speak while positioned around the dying Time Lord.
Even so, Dúccesci couldn’t help a brief exclamation when
the air above his father’s bier was lightened by a vision of a wide,
white sanded beach with the tide washing over it as the sky turned from
the bright red of dawn to the burnt orange and lighter yellow of a fine
summer day on Gallifrey. The sound of Straits Gulls and the washing tide,
as well as the laughter of children could be heard again, but now there
was a visual context for them.
Kristoph knew that it was the connection with the Matrix through the Coronet
that allowed for such strong visualisations. Dúccesci almost certainly
knew that, too, but right now his emotions were overriding his intellect
and it just seemed like a miracle. He trembled visibly as he reached to
touch his father’s hand, sharing completely the vision from the
past.
“It is close, now,” The Premier Cardinal whispered above the
sounds. “We must be prepared.”
Everyone WAS prepared for the mental jolt they would feel when the body
ceased and the mind of the Time Lord transferred to the Matrix. What they
didn’t expect was the powerful vision that overwhelmed the calm
one that had been maintained until the point of death.
It began in the Red Desert. A hot wind that they could almost feel even
though it was merely a vision scoured the sand until all that remained
for as much as fifty square miles was bare rock. The yellow sky turned
dull orange-black with the sand held in the atmosphere by the phenomenal
air pressure. Meanwhile the wind grew even hotter as it swept across the
desert, whipping and whirling, picking up even more material and holding
it in the vortex of a massive double tornado.
“It’s not possible,” Gold Usher cried out as the wind
actually whipped at his clothes and his thinning hair was blown awry.
“A vision so complete that it manifests itself so… so…
completely.”
Forming grammatically correct sentences was difficult in the circumstances.
The heat and the power of a desert storm troubled them all as they fought
to keep to their feet and maintain the dignity of the death vigil. Dúccesci
threw himself over his father’s body as if to protect him from the
force that his own mind, in the moment of transfer to the Matrix, had
created.
The others were just too astonished by what they were seeing to wonder
about where it was coming from. They stared into the eye of the storm
as it passed across the Red Desert at phenomenal speed and approached
the great glass-like envirodome that protected the Capitol from the elements.
The ordinary elements, at least. It was never built for the terrible force
that was unleashed on it by nature itself. The double tornado was bad
enough, tearing at the dome, weakening the very fabric of the great shield.
But then all of that sand and rock that had been dragged up into the sky
dropped onto the dome at once. The sound of it cracking open like a giant
egg was louder than the storm itself, but the devastation could only be
guessed at because that was where the vision finally collapsed and the
Panopticon was silent, still and dark once again.
“He’s gone.” Dúccesci’s voice, dull with
grief, filled the silence after a few stunned minutes. The men around
him remembered what they had been there for in the first place. The Premier
Cardinal again anointed the corpse of Malikahathanmachsolace Dúccesci.
Gold Usher closed the dead Time Lord’s eyes and folded a black satin
cloth over his face. Later, the body would be sewn into a shroud and prepared
for a funeral pyre, but not just yet.
Kristoph removed the Coronet from his head. It felt even heavier than
usual and he wanted to distance himself from the minds of all those great
Time Lords of history.
“I think you need some time alone,” he said to the grieving
son. “We’ll return in a little while to complete the ceremonial
duties.”
Dúccesci nodded. Kristoph led the other two men out of the Panopticon.
They said nothing until they reached the Presidential Chamber which was
protected by anti-telepathic fields.
“What do you think we saw?” Kristoph asked his two most senior
colleagues on the High Council, two of the most intelligent men on the
planet.
“A vision from the mind of a man who had lost touch with reality
for a very long time before his death,” The Premier Cardinal answered.
“A delusion.”
“Perhaps not,” Gold Usher argued. “What we saw up until
the moment of death had veracity. I think….”
He paused, unsure about what he had seen.
“I felt it more strongly than either of you,” Kristoph told
them. “The connection to the Matrix through the Coronet enhanced
my experience, allowed me a closer association….”
“As it should, of course,” Gold Usher noted.
“I felt the difference between a vision of the past and one of the
future. What we saw was a warning, a vivid and exceedingly coherent vision
from the greatest climatologist in the history of our world. He was telling
us to prepare for a disaster that will come at some time in the future.
Whether it is imminent, sme time within our lifetimes or not for several
millennia I don’t know. Climatology is far from my specialist field.
But we should begin to make preparations. We must see that those who do
know about these things constantly measure the temperatures, the wind
speeds, the patterns of weather around the Red Desert – even in
those zones where it is difficult to make accurate measurements of anything.
We must strengthen the envirodome over the Capitol, and do it all without
letting the ordinary people of the city know that there is anything to
be concerned about. That much is imperative.”
“You are certain it was not just the ramblings of a madman?”
The Premier Cardinal asked. “To take such measures – expensive
measures – on such a basis might be considered frivolous.”
“I for one would prefer to be thought frivolous than incautious,”
Gold Usher answered. “If we ignore the warning, then posterity will
find us accountable.”
“It was not the ramblings of a madman,” Kristoph assured them.
“The precognitive vision began a micro-second after death occurred.
The mind had already joined with the Matrix and was free of the bond that
joined it to the body. It was as strong as it had ever been when the late
Lord Dúccesci was young and vigorous, and it was supported by the
combined wisdom of our ancestors. There is no doubt. It was a warning.
It was the very reason the Matrix exists and we WILL take note of the
warning.”
His colleagues accepted his word. They agreed to do what had to be done
to avert that future disaster while sworn to secrecy on the Seal of Rassilon
itself.
That done they returned to the Panopticon and kept company with Malika
Dúccesci until the dawn light began to filter greyly through the
dome above their heads. Finally, as the great chamber filled with light
they brought him away to eat a little breakfast and talk through his grief
until he was ready to go home to his wife and begin to face the future
without his father – a process every sentient being in the universe
except those born by clone batch or in surrogate farms went through at
some time in their lives.
Kristoph returned to his home and assured his wife that
Lord and Lady Dúccesci were as well as might be expected, then
proposed an afternoon at the Dower House.
He felt the need to spend some time with his father.
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