the far shore. “Suppose it uses the sea. According to Doc, that contains just about anything you can think of.”
It was a plausible answer, and Norton had already considered it. There could well be buried pipes leading to the sea; in fact, there must be, for any conceivable chemical plant would require large quantities of water. But he had a suspicion of plausible answers; they were so often wrong.
“That’s a good idea, Karl. But what does New York do with its sea water?”
For a long time nobody answered from ship, hub, or northern plain. Then an unexpected voice spoke.
“That’s easy, Skipper. But you’re all going to laugh at me.
“No, we’re not, Ravi. Go ahead.”
Ravi McAndrews, Chief Steward and Simp Master, was the last person on the Endeavour who would normally get involved in a technical discussion. His IQ was modest and his scientific knowledge was minimal, but he was no fool and he had a natural shrewdness that everyone respected.
“Well, it’s a factory, all right, Skipper, and maybe the sea provides the raw material. After all, that’s how it all happened on Earth, though in a different way…. I believe New York is a factory for making… Ramans.”
Somebody, somewhere, snickered, but became quickly silent and did not identify himself.
“You know, Ravi,” said his commander at last, “that theory is crazy enough to be true. And I’m not sure if I want to see it tested—at least, until I get back to the mainland.”
This celestial New York was just about as wide as the island of Manhattan, but its geometry was totally different. There were few straight thoroughfares; it was a maze of short, concentric arcs, with radial spokes linking them. Luckily, it was impossible to lose one’s bearings inside Rama; a single glance at the sky was enough to establish the north-south axis of the world.
They paused at almost every intersection to make a panoramic scan. When all these hundreds of pictures were sorted out, it would be a tedious but fairly straight-forward job to construct an accurate scale model of the city. Norton suspected that the resulting jigsaw puzzle would keep scientists busy for generations.
It was even harder to get used to the silence here than it had been out on the plain of Rama. A city-machine should make some sound; yet there was not even the faintest of electric hums, or the slightest whisper of mechanical motion. Several times Norton put his ear to the ground, or to the side of a building, and listened intently. He could hear nothing except the pounding of his own blood.
The machines were sleeping; they were not even ticking over. Would they ever wake again, and for what purpose? Everything was in perfect condition, as usual. It was easy to believe that the closing of a single circuit in some patient, hidden computer would bring all this maze back to life.
When at last they had reached the far side of the city, they climbed to the top of the surrounding levee and looked across the southern branch of the sea. For a long time Norton stared at the five-hundred-meter cliff that barred them from almost half of Rama—and, judging from their telescopic surveys, the most complex and varied half. From this angle it appeared an ominous, forbidding black, and it was easy to think of it as a prison wall surrounding a whole continent. Nowhere along its entire circle were there stairways or any other means of access.
He wondered how the Ramans reached their southern land from New York. Probably there was a transport system running beneath the sea, but they must also have aircraft, because there were many open areas here in the city that could be used for landing. To discover a Raman vehicle would be a major accomplishment, especially if they could learn to operate it. (Though could any conceivable power source still be functioning after several hundred thousand years?) There were numerous structures that had the functional look of hangars or garages, but they were all smooth and windowless, as if they had been sprayed with sealer. Sooner or later, Norton told himself grimly, we’ll be forced to use explosives and laser beams. He was determined to put off this decision to the last possible moment.
His reluctance to use brute force was based partly on pride, partly on fear. He did not wish to behave like a technological barbarian, smashing what he could not understand. After all, he was an uninvited visitor in this world, and should act