EARTH
Trevize was hot and annoyed. He and Pelorat were sitting in the small dining area, having just completed their midday meal.
Pelorat said, "We've only been in space two days and I find myself quite comfortable, although I miss fresh air, nature, and all that. Strange! Never seemed to notice all that sort of thing when it was all round me. Still between my wafer and that remarkable computer of yours, I have my entire library with me - or all that matters, at any rate. And I don't feel the least bit frightened of being out in space now. Astonishing!"
Trevize made a noncommittal sound. His eyes were inwardly focused.
Pelorat said gently, "I don't mean to intrude, Golan, but I don't really think you're listening. Not that I'm a particularly interesting person always been a hit of a bore, you know. Still, you seem preoccupied in another way. - Are we in trouble? Needn't be afraid to tell me, you know. Not much I could do, I suppose, but I won't go into panic, dear fellow."
"In trouble?" Trevize seemed to come to his senses, frowning slightly.
"I mean the ship. It's a new model, so I suppose there could be something wrong:" Pelorat allowed himself a small, uncertain smile.
Trevize shook his head vigorously. "Stupid of me to leave you in such uncertainty, Janov. There's nothing wrong at all with the ship. It's working perfectly. It's just that I've been looking for a hyper-relay."
"Ah, I see. - Except that I don't. What is a hyper-relay?"
"Well, let me explain, Janov. I am in communication with Terminus. At least, I can be anytime I wish and Terminus can, in reverse, be in communication with us. They know the ship's location, having observed its trajectory. Even if they had not, they could locate us by scanning near-space for mass, which would warn them of the presence of a ship or, possibly, a meteoroid. But they could further detect an energy pattern, which would not only distinguish a ship from a meteoroid but would identify a particular ship, for no two ships make use of energy in quite the same way. In some way, our pattern remains characteristic, no matter what appliances or instruments we turn on and off. The ship may be unknown, of course, but if it is a ship whose energy pattern is on record in Terminus - as ours is - it can be identified as soon as detected."
Pelorat said, "It seems to me, Golan, that the advance of civilization is nothing but an exercise in the limiting of privacy."
"You may be right. Sooner or later, however, we must move through hyperspace or we will be condemned to remain within a parsec or two of Terminus for the rest of our lives. We will then be unable to engage in interstellar travel to any but the slightest degree. In passing through hyperspace, on the other hand, we undergo a discontinuity in ordinary space. We pass from here to there - and I mean across a gap of hundreds of parsecs sometimes - in an instant of experienced time. We are suddenly enormously far away in a direction that is very difficult to predict and, in a practical sense, we can no longer be detected."
"I see that. Yes."
"Unless, of course, they have planted a hyper-relay on board. A hyperrelay sends out a signal through hyperspace - a signal characteristic of this ship - and the authorities on Terminus would know where we are at all times. That answers your question, you see. There would be nowhere in the Galaxy we could hide and no combination of jumps through hyperspace would make it possible for us to evade their instruments:"
"But, Golan," bald Pelorat softly, "don't we want Foundation protection?"
"Yes, Janov, but only when we ask for it. You said the advance of civilization meant the continuing restriction of privacy. - Well. I don't want to be that advanced. I want freedom to move undetected as I wish - unless and until I want protection So I would feel better, a great deal better, if there weren't a hyper-relay on board."
"Have you found one, Golan?"
"No, I have not. If I had, I might be able to render it inoperative somehow."
"Would you know one if you saw it?"
"That's one of the difficulties. I might not be able to recognize it. I know what a hyper-relay looks like generally and I know ways of testing a suspicious object - but this is a late-model ship, designed for special tasks. A hyper-relay may have been incorporated into its design in such a way as to show no signs of its presence."
"On the other hand, maybe there is no hyper-relay present and that's why you haven't found it."
"I don't dare assume that and I don't like the thought of making a jump until I know."
Pelorat looked enlightened. "That's why we've just been drifting through space. I've been wondering why we haven't jumped. I've heard about jumps, you know. Been a little nervous about it, actually - been wandering when you'd order me to strap myself in or take a pill or something like that."
Trevize managed a smile. "No need for apprehension. These aren't ancient times. On a ship like this, you just leave it all to the computer. You give it your instructions and it does the rest. You won't know that anything has happened at all, except that the view of space will suddenly change. If you've ever seen a slide show, you'll know what happens when one slide is suddenly projected in place of another. Well, that's what the jump will seem like."
"Dear me. One won't feel anything? Odd! I find that somewhat disappointing."
"I've never felt anything and the ships I've been in haven't been as advanced as this baby of ours. - But it's not because of the hyperrelay that we haven't jumped. We have to get a bit further away from Terminus - and from the sun, too. The farther we are from any massive abject, the easier to control the jump, to make re-emergence into space at exactly desired co-ordinates. In an emergency, you might risk a jump when you're only two hundred kilometers off she surface of a planet and just trust to luck that you'll end up safely. Since there is much mete safe than unsafe volume in the Galaxy, you can reasonably count on safety. Still, there's always the possibility that random factors will cause you to re-emerge within a few million kilometers of a large star or in the Galactic core - and you will find yourself fried before you can blink. The further away you are from mass, the smaller those factors and the less likely it is that anything untoward will happen."
"In that case, I commend your caution. We're not in a tearing hurry,"
"Exactly. - Especially since I would dearly love to find the hyperrelay before I make a move. - Or find a way of convincing myself there is no hyper-relay."
Trevize seemed to drift off again into his private concentration and Pelorat said, raising his voice a little to surmount the preoccupation barrier, "How much longer do we have?"
"What?"
"I mean, when would you make the jump if you had no concerns over the hyper-relay, my dear chap?"
"At our present speed and trajectory, I should say on our fourth day out. I'll work out the proper time on the computer."
"Well, then, you still have two days for your search. May I make a suggestion?"
"Go ahead."
"I have always found in my own work - quite different from yours, of course, but possibly we may generalize - that zeroing in tightly on a particular problem is self-defeating. Why not relax and talk about something else, and your unconscious mind - not laboring under the weight of concentrated thought - may solve the problem for you."
Trevize looked momentarily annoyed and then laughed. "Well, why not? - Tell me, Professor, what got you interested in Earth? What brought up this odd notion of a particular planet from which we all started?"
"Ah!" Pelorat nodded his head reminiscently. "That's going back a while. Over thirty years. I planned to be a biologist when I was going to college. I was particularly interested in the variation of species on different worlds. The variation, as you know - well, maybe you don't know, so you won't mind if I tell you - is very small. All forms of life throughout the Galaxy - at least all that we have yet encountered - share a water-based protein/nucleic acid chemistry."
Trevize said, "I went to military college, which emphasized nucleonics and gravities, but I'm not exactly a narrow specialist. I know a bit about the chemical basis of life. We were taught that water, proteins, and nucleic acids are the only possible basis for life."
"That, I think, is an unwarranted conclusion. It is safer to say that no other form of life has yet been found - or, at any rate, been recognized - and let it go at that. What is more surprising is that indigenous species - that is, species found on only a single planet and no other - are few in number. Most of the species that exist, including Homo sapiens in particular, are distributed through all or most of the inhabited worlds of the Galaxy and are closely related biochemically, physiologically, and morphologically. The indigenous species, on the other hand, are widely separated in characteristics from both the widespread forms and from each other."
"Well, what of that?"
"The conclusion is that one world in the Galaxy - one world - is different from the rest. Tens of millions of worlds in the Galaxy - no one knows exactly how many - have developed life. It was simple life, sparse life, feeble life - not very variegated, not easily maintained, and not easily spread. One world, one world alone, developed life in millions of species - easily millions - some of it very specialized, highly developed, very prone to multiplication and to spreading, and including us. We were intelligent enough to form a civilization, to develop hyperspatial flight, and to colonize the Galaxy - and, in spreading through the Galaxy, we took many other forms of lifeforms related to each other and to ourselves - along with us."
"If you stop to think of it," said Trevize rather indifferently, "I suppose that stands to reason. I mean, here we are in a human Galaxy. If we assume that it all started on some one world, then that one world would have to be different. But why not? The chances of life developing in that riotous fashion must be very slim indeed - perhaps one in a hundred million - so the chances are that it happened in one life-bearing world out of a hundred million. It had to be one."
"But what is it that made that particular one world so different from the others?" said Pelorat excitedly. "What were the conditions that made it unique?"
"Merely chance, perhaps. After all, human beings and the lifeforms they brought with them now exist on tens of millions of planets, all of which can support life, so all those worlds must be good enough."
"No! Once the human species had evolved, once it had developed a technology, once it had toughened itself in the hard struggle for survival, it could then adapt to life on any world that is in the least hospitable - on Terminus, for instance. But can you imagine intelligent life having developed on Terminus? When Terminus was first occupied by human beings in the days of the EncycIopedists, the highest form of plant life it produced was a mosslike growth on rocks; the highest forms of animal life were small coral-like growths in the ocean and insectlike flying organisms on land. We just about wiped them out and stocked sea and land with fish and rabbits and goats and grass and grain and trees and so on. We have nothing left of the indigenous life, except for what exists in zoos and aquaria."
"Hmm," said Trevize.
Pelorat stared at him for a full minute, then sighed and said, "You don't really care, do you? Remarkable! I find no one who does, somehow. My fault, I think. I cannot make it interesting, even though it interests me so much."
Trevize said, "It's interesting. It is. But - but - so what?"
"It doesn't strike you that it might be interesting scientifically to study a world that gave rise to the only really flourishing indigenous ecological balance the Galaxy has ever seen?"
"Maybe, if you're a biologist. - I'm not, you see. You must forgive me."
"Of course, dear fellow. It's just that I never found any biologists who were interested, either. I told you I was a biology major. I took it up with my professor and he wasn't interested. He told me to turn to some practical problem. That so disgusted me I took up history instead - which had been rather a hobby of mine from my teenage years, in any case - and tackled the 'Origin Question' from that angle."
Trevize said, "But at least it has given you a lifework, so you must be pleased that your professor was so unenlightened."
"Yes, I suppose one might look at it that way. And the lifework is an interesting one, of which I have never tired. - But I do wish it interested you. I hate this feeling of forever talking to myself."
Trevize leaned his bead back and laughed heartily.
Pelorat's quiet face took or: a trace of hurt. "Why are you laughing at me?"
"Not you, Janov," said Trevize. "I was laughing at my own stupidity, Where you're concered, I am completely grateful. You were perfectly right, you know,"
"To take up the importance of human origins?"
"No, no. - Well, yes, that too. - But I meant you were right to tell me to stop consciously thinking of my problem and to turn my mind elsewhere. It worked. When you were talking about the manner in which life evolved, it finally occurred to me that I knew how to find that hyperrelay - if it existed."
"Oh, that!"
"Yes, that! That's my monomania at the moment. I've been looking for that hyper-relay as though I were on my old scow of a training ship, studying every part of the ship by eye, looking for something that stood out from the rest. I had forgotten that this ship is a developed product of thousands of years of technological evolution. Don't you see?"
"No, Golan."
"We have a computer aboard. How could I have forgotten?"
He waved his hand and passed into his own room, urging Pelorat along with him.
"I need only try to communicate," he said, placing his hands onto the computer contact.
It was a matter of trying to reach Terminus, which was now some thousands of kilometers behind.
Reach! Speak! It was as though nerve endings sprouted and extended, reaching outward with bewildering speed - the speed of light, of course - to make contact.
Trevize felt himself touching - well, not quite touching, but sensing - well, not quite sensing, but - it didn't matter, for there wasn't a word for it.
He was aware of Terminus within reach and, although the distance between himself and it was lengthening by some twenty kilometers per second, contact persisted as though planet and ship were motionless and separated by a few meters.
He said nothing. He clamped shut. He was merely testing the principle of communication; he was not actively communicating.
Out beyond, eight parsecs away, was Anacreon, the nearest large planet in their backyard, by Galactic standards. To send a message by the same light-speed system that had just worked for Terminus - and to receive an answer as well - would take fifty-two years.
Reach for Anacreon! Think Anacreon! Think it as clearly as you can. You know its position relative to Terminus and the Galactic core; you've studied its planetography and history; you've solved military problems where it was necessary to recapture Anacreon (in the impossible case - these days - that it was taken by an enemy).
Space! You've been on Anacreon.
Picture it! Picture it! You will sense being on it via hyper-relay.
Nothing! His nerve endings quivered and came to rest nowhere.
Trevize pulled loose. "There's no hyper-relay on board the Far Star, Janov. I'm positive. - And if I hadn't followed your suggestion, I wonder how long it would have taken me to reach this point."
Pelorat, without moving a facial muscle, positively glowed. "I'm so pleased to have been of help. Does this mean we jump?"
"No, we still wait two more days, to be safe. We have to get away from mass, remember? - Ordinarily, considering that I have a new and untried ship with which I am thoroughly unacquainted, it would probably take me two days to calculate the exact procedure - the proper hyperthrust for the first jump, in particular. I have a feeling, though, the computer will do it all."
"Dear me! That leaves us facing a rather boring stretch of time, it seems to me."
"Boring?" Trevize smiled broadly. "Anything but! You and I, Janov, are going to talk about Earth."
Pelorat said, "Indeed? You are trying to please an old man? That is kind of you. Really it is."
"Nonsense! I'm trying to please myself. Janov, you have made a convert. As a result of what you have told me, I realize that Earth is the most important and the most devouringly interesting object in the Universe."
It must surely have struck Trevize at the moment that Pelorat had presented his view of Earth. It was only because his mind was reverberating with the problem of the hyper-relay that he hadn't responded at once. And the instant the problem had gone, he had responded.
Perhaps the one statement of Hari Seldon's that was most often repeated was his remark concerning the Second Foundation being "at the other end of the Galaxy" from Terminus. Seldon had even named the spot. It was to be "at Star's End."
This had been included in Gaal Dornick's account of the day of the trial before the Imperial court. "The other end of the Galaxy" - those were the words Seldon had used to Dornick and ever since that day their significance had been debated.
What was it that connected one end of the Galaxy with "the other end"? Was it a straight line, a spiral, a circle, or what?
And now, luminously, it was suddenly clear to Trevize that it was no line and no curve that should - or could - be drawn on the map of the Galaxy. It was more subtle than that.
It was perfectly clear that the one end of the Galaxy was Terminus. It was at the edge of the Galaxy, yes - our Foundation's edge - which gave the word "end" a literal meaning. It was, however, also the newest world of the Galaxy at the time Seldon was speaking, a world that was about to be founded, that had not as yet been in existence for a single moment.