Illegal Alien
“I don’t need to say that Sawyer is good—you already know that. But I can assure you that he hasn’t slipped. You’ll enjoy this one.”
—Analog
“So many science-fiction accolades have been showered on Robert J. Sawyer that it’s all too easy to forget his prizes include an Arthur Ellis Award from the Crime Writers of Canada. So it should come as no surprise to find Sawyer’s latest book embracing clues, criminals and cross-examination in an immensely satisfying whodunit…And sci-fi fans should note that Illegal Alien is as much a true science-fiction novel as it is a mystery.”
—Toronto Star
“An intriguing mix of science fiction, mystery and courtroom drama.”
—Hartford Courant
“A tour de force of intricate, puzzle-like complexity. Well worth reading for its cleverness, its portrayal of a fascinating alien race, and its thematic consideration of the role of philosophical and religious beliefs among rational beings.”
—Science Fiction Age
“One fine courtroom drama, with enough twists in the plot to keep any mystery fan flipping the pages…This novel is far too good to attempt to summarize. Let’s just say that Sawyer delves into all sorts of strange and wonderful conflicts, including the war between science and belief, and just what God may or may not be…courtroom dramas and confrontations that put Perry Mason and John Grisham to shame…for my vote, it’s the best Canadian mystery of 1997.”
—Toronto Globe & Mail
“Satisfying…Sawyer’s aliens are both intriguing and different.”
—Denver Post
“Science fiction and suspense mingle as Earth’s first alien visitors become suspects in a murder trial, when expert worldbuilder Sawyer takes the action to our own planet. Recommended.”
—Locus
“Tongue-in-cheek humor.”
—Rocky Mountain News
“Sawyer’s skillful use of dialogue moves the case and the novel briskly along. Illegal Alien has a lot to offer those who enjoy sophisticated alien/human morality plays.”
—Winnipeg Free Press
“Sawyer has written the only novel about human-alien interaction in which we learn about the aliens via testimony disclosed in a court of law…a fast-paced, exciting book.”
—Washington Post
“The best aliens since Larry Niven’s puppeteers.”
—Ken Day, CHAY-FM
“Sawyer deals metaphorically with the issue of racism in the courts, but entertains the reader with sharp wit along with the heavier themes.”
—The Tennessean
Praise for the previous novels of Robert J. Sawyer
STARPLEX
“For big-time interstellar adventure, look no farther.”
—Gregory Benford
“Entertaining.”
—Booklist
“Sawyer deftly weaves personal drama with political intrigue, while catapulting the starship to the farthest reaches of the universe and the endpoint of human evolution. Here, at last, is an ambitious attempt to exploit the possibilities that the genre is capable of.”
—Toronto Star
END OF AN ERA
“Sawyer strikes again…You’ve never read a time-travel story like this one.”
—Roger MacBride Allen
“A haunting collage of complex storylines, exciting ideas, and good old-fashioned action-adventure SF.”
—New York Times bestselling author Kevin J. Anderson
Novels by Robert J. Sawyer
GOLDEN FLEECE
END OF AN ERA
THE TERMINAL EXPERIMENT
STARPLEX
FRAMESHIFT
ILLEGAL ALIEN
THE QUINTAGLIO ASCENSION:
FAR-SEER
FOSSIL HUNTER
FOREIGNER
This Ace Book contains the complete text of the original hardcover edition. It has been completely reset in a typeface designed for easy reading, and was printed from new film.
ILLEGAL ALIEN
An Ace Book / published by arrangement with the author
PRINTING HISTORY
Ace hardcover edition / December 1997
Ace mass-market edition / January 1999
All rights reserved.
Copyright © 1997 by Robert J. Sawyer.
Cover art by Danilo Ducak
This book may not be reproduced in whole or in part, by mimeograph or any other means, without permission.
For information address: The Berkley Publishing Group,
a member of Penguin Putnam Inc.,
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http://www.penguinputnam.com
ISBN: 0-441-00592-6
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ACE and the “A” design are trademarks
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PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA
10 9 8 7 6 5 4 3 2 1
FOR EDO AND ROBERTA VAN BELKOM,
with thanks and friendship
ACKNOWLEDGMENTS
Amici curiae in the creation of this novel include my wife, Carolyn Clink; my editors, Susan Allison at Ace and Jane Johnson at HarperCollins UK; Asbed Bedrossian, who was my host during my visit to Los Angeles; Richard M. Gotlib, barrister and solicitor, sessional lecturer at Osgoode Hall Law School, Toronto; Professor Edward F. Guinan, Department of Astronomy and Astrophysics, Villanova University, Villanova, Pennsylvania; Dr. Ariel Reich, Esq., of the Silicon Valley office of the firm Weil, Gotshal & Manges, LLP; Dena Rosenberg Thaler, J.D.; Ted Bleaney; Linda C. Carson; David Livingstone Clink; Richard Curtis; Paul Fayter; Karl Fuss; James Alan Gardner; Terence M. Green; Howard Miller; John-Allen Price; Alan B. Sawyer; Jean-Louis Trudel. If any errors remain in the text, mea culpa.
For Justice, though she’s painted blind,
is to the weaker side inclined.
—SAMUEL BUTLER (1612–1680)
CONTENTS
Chapter 1 Chapter 2 Chapter 3 Chapter 4 Chapter 5 Chapter 6 Chapter 7 Chapter 8 Chapter 9 Chapter 10 Chapter 11 Chapter 12 Chapter 13 Chapter 14 Chapter 15 Chapter 16 Chapter 17 Chapter 18 Chapter 19 Chapter 20 Chapter 21 Chapter 22 Chapter 23 Chapter 24 Chapter 25 Chapter 26 Chapter 27 Chapter 28 Chapter 29 Chapter 30 Chapter 31 Chapter 32 Chapter 33 Chapter 34 Chapter 35 Chapter 36 Chapter 37 Chapter 38 Chapter 39 Chapter 40
Epilogue
CHAPTER
1
The Navy lieutenant poked his close-cropped head into the aircraft carrier’s wardroom. “It’s going to be another two hours, gentlemen. You should really get some sleep.”
Francis Nobilio, a short white man of fifty with wavy hair mixed evenly between brown and gray, was sitting in a vinyl-upholstered metal chair. He was wearing a two-piece dark-blue business suit and a pale blue shirt. His tie was undone and hung loosely around his neck. “What’s the latest?” he said.
“As expected, sir, a Russian sub will beat us to the location. And a Brazilian cruise ship has changed course to have a look-see.”
“A cruise ship!” said Frank, throwing his arms up in exasperation. He turned to Clete, who was leaning back in a similar chair, giant tennis-shoed feet up on the table in front of him.
Clete lifted his narrow shoulders and grinned broadly. “Sounds like a big ol’ party, don’t it?” he said, his voice rich with that famous Tennessee accent—Dana Carvey did a devastating Cletus Calhoun.
“Can’t we cordon off the area?” said Frank to the Navy man.
The lieutenant shrugged. “It’s in the middle of the Atlantic, si
r—international waters. The cruise ship has as much right to be there as anyone else.”
“The Love Boat meets Lost in Space,” muttered Frank. He looked up at the Navy man. “All right. Thanks.”
The lieutenant left, doing a neat step over the raised lip at the bottom of the door.
“They must be aquatic,” said Frank, looking at Clete.
“Mebbe,” said Clete. “Mebbe not. We ain’t aquatic, and we used to land our ships at sea. This very aircraft carrier picked up an Apollo command module once, didn’t it?”
“My point exactly,” said Frank. “We used to land our ships at sea, because that was easier than landing them on land, and—”
“I thought it was because we launched out over the ocean from Canaveral, so—”
“The Shuttle goes up from Canaveral; we bring it down on land. If you’ve got the technology, you come down on land—if that’s where you live; the Russians came down on land from day one.”
Clete was shaking his head. “I think you’re missing the obvious, Frankie. What was it that boy said a moment ago? ‘International waters.’ I think they’ve been watching long enough to figger it’d be a peck o’ trouble landin’ in any particular country. Only place on Earth you can land that ain’t nobody’s turf is in the ocean.”
“Oh, come on. I doubt they’ve been able to decipher our radio or TV, and—”
“Don’t need to do none o’ that,” said Clete. He was forty years old, pale, thin, gangly, jug-eared, and redheaded—not quite Ichabod Crane, but close. “You can deduce it from first principles. Earth’s got seven continents; that implies regional evolution, and that implies territorial conflict once the technology reaches a level that lets you travel freely between the continents.”
Frank blew out air, conceding the point. He looked at his watch for the third time in the last few minutes. “Damn, I wish we could get there faster. This is—”
“Hang on a minute, Frankie,” said Clete. He used one of his long arms to aim the remote at the seventeen-inch color TV mounted on the wall, turning off the mute. The aircraft carrier was picking up CNN’s satellite feed.
“…more now on that story,” said white-haired Lou Waters. “Civilian and military observers worldwide were stunned late yesterday when what was at first taken to be a giant meteor skimmed through Earth’s atmosphere over Brazil.” Waters’s face was replaced with grainy amateur video of something streaking through a cloudless blue sky. “But the object flew right around the Earth well inside our atmosphere, and soon almost every public and private telescope and radar dish on the planet was trained on it. Even the U.S. government has now conceded that the object is, in all likelihood, a spacecraft—and not one of ours. Karen Hunt has more. Karen?”
The picture changed to show a pretty African-American woman, standing outside the Griffith Park Observatory. “Lou, for decades human beings have wondered if we are alone in the universe. Well, now we know. Although the U.S. and Russian military aircraft that flew over the splashdown site earlier today failed to make public the videos they shot, a Moroccan Airlines 747 en route to Brasilia passed directly over the area about three hours ago. That plane has now safely landed, and we’ve obtained this exclusive footage, taken by passenger Juan Rubenstein with his home-video equipment.”
The image was coarse, but it clearly showed a large object shaped like a shield or a broad arrowhead floating atop gray water. The object seemed capable of changing colors—one moment it was red; the next, orange; then yellow. It cycled through the hues of the rainbow, over and over again, but with a considerable period of pure black between being violet and red.
Cut to a dour, middle-aged man with an unkempt beard. The title “ARNOLD HAMMERMILL, PH.D., SCRIPPS INSTITUTE,” appeared beneath him. “It’s difficult to gauge the size of the spaceship,” said Hammermill, “given we don’t know the precise altitude of the plane or the zoom setting used at the time the video was taken, but judging by the height of the waves, and taking into account today’s maritime forecast for that part of the Atlantic, I’d say the ship is between ten and fifteen meters long.”
A graphic appeared, showing the vessel to be about half the size of a Space Shuttle orbiter. The reporter’s voice, over this: “The United States aircraft carrier Kitty Hawk is on its way now to the splashdown site. Earlier today, the president’s science advisor, Francis Nobilio” (black-and-white still of Frank, a few years out of date, showing his hair as mostly brown) “and astronomer Cletus Calhoun, best known as the host of PBS’s popular Great Balls of Fire! astronomy series” (silent clip of Clete at the rim of Arizona’s Barringer crater) “were flown by military jet to the Kitty Hawk, and are now on their way to rendezvous with the alien ship. The Kitty Hawk should reach its destination in just over one hundred minutes from now. Bobbie and Lou?”
Back to CNN Center in Atlanta and a two-shot of Lou Waters and Bobbie Battista. “Thanks, Karen,” said Battista. “Before Dr. Calhoun left the U.S., our science correspondent Miles O’Brien managed to interview him and University of Toronto exobiology professor Packwood Smathers about what this all means. Let’s have another look at that tape.”
The image changed to show O’Brien in front of two giant wall monitors. The one on the left was labeled TORONTO and showed Smathers; the one on the right was labeled LOS ANGELES and showed Clete.
“Dr. Smathers, Dr. Calhoun, thanks for joining us on such short notice,” said O’Brien. “Well, it looks like the incredible has happened, doesn’t it? An alien spaceship has apparently landed in the middle of the Atlantic. Dr. Smathers, what can we expect to see when this ship opens up?”
Smathers had a square head, thick white hair, and a neatly trimmed white beard. He was wearing a brown sports jacket with leather patches on the elbows—the quintessential professorial look. “Well, of course, we first have to suspect that this ship is unmanned—that it’s a probe, like the Viking landers, rather than carrying a crew, and—”
“Look at the size of the thing,” said Clete, interrupting. “Pete’s sake, Woody, ain’t no need for the thing to be that big, ’less it’s got somebody aboard. ’Sides, it looks like it’s got windows, and—”
“Dr. Calhoun is famous for jumping to conclusions,” said Smathers sharply. O’Brien was grinning from ear to ear—he evidently hadn’t expected to get an impromptu Siskel and Ebert of science. “But, as I was about to say, if there are alien beings aboard, then I expect them to be at least vaguely familiar in body plan, and—”
“You’re hedging now, Woody,” said Clete. “Couple years ago, I heard you give a talk arguing that the humanoid body plan would be adopted by purty near any form of intelligent life, and—”
Smathers was growing red in the face. “Well, yes, I did say that then, but—”
“But now that we’re actually goin’ to meet aliens,” said Clete, clearly enjoying himself, “you ain’t so sure no more.”
“Well,” said Smathers, “the human body plan might indeed represent an ideal for an intelligent lifeform. Start with the sense organs: two eyes are much better than one, since two give stereoscopic vision—but a third eye adds hardly any value over two. Two ears likewise give stereophonic hearing, and they’ll obviously be on opposite sides of the body, to give the best possible separation. You can go right down the human body from head to toe, and make a case why each part of it is ideal. When that spaceship opens up, yes, I’ll stand by my contention that we’ll probably see humanoids inside.”
The Clete on the TV set looked positively pained. The one sitting next to Frank aboard the Kitty Hawk shook his head. “Peckerwood Smathers,” he said under his breath.
“That’s hooey, Woody,” said the TV Calhoun. “Ain’t nothin’ optimized about our form—y’all only get optimization when you’ve got an ultimate design goal in mind, and there wasn’t one. Evolution takes advantage of what’s handy, that’s all. You know, five hundred million years ago, durin’ the Cambrian explosion, dozens o’ different body plans appeared simultaneously in
the fossil record. The one that gave rise to us—the ancestor of modern vertebrates—weren’t no better than any of the others; it was just plum lucky, is all. If a different one had survived, nothin’ on this planet would look the way it does today. No, I bet there’s some critter inside unlike anything we’ve ever seen before.”
“Clearly we have some differing points of view here,” said O’Brien. “But—”
“Well, that’s the whole point, ain’t it?” said Clete. “For decades, guys like Woody been getting grants to think about alien life. It was all a good game till today. It wasn’t real science—you could never test a one of their propositions. But now, today, it all goes from being a theoretical science to an empirical one. Gonna be pretty embarrassing if everything they’ve been saying turns out to be wrong.”
“Now, hang on, Clete,” said Smathers. “I’m at least willing to put my cards on the table, and—”
“Well, if you want to hear my—what? Crying out loud, hon, can’t you see I’m on TV?”
A muffled female voice, off camera; Frank recognized it as Clete’s secretary, Bonnie: “Clete, it’s the White House.”
“White House?” He looked directly into the camera and lifted his red eyebrows. The shot widened, showing more of Clete’s cluttered study. Bonnie crossed into the frame, holding a cordless phone. Clete took it from her. “Calhoun here. What—Frankie! How good to—no, no. Sure, yeah, I can do that. Sure, sure. I’ll be ready. Bye.” Clete put down the phone and looked into the camera again. “I gotta go, Miles—sorry ’bout this. They’re sending a car for me. I’m off to rendezvous with the alien ship.” He unclipped his microphone and moved out of the shot.
Cut back to O’Brien. “Well, obviously we’ve lost Dr. Calhoun. We’ll continue our conversation with Dr. Smathers. Doctor, can you—”
Clete hit the remote, and the TV went dead.
CHAPTER
2
There was indeed a Russian submarine present by the time the U.S.S. Kitty Hawk reached the splashdown site, and the Brazilian cruise ship was visible on the horizon, coming closer. The Kitty Hawk held station one kilometer from the alien ship, the hull of which was still flashing through the colors of the rainbow. The Russian sub was slightly farther away on the opposite side.