Hinterlands (short story)
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Author | William Gibson |
---|---|
Country | Canada |
Language | English |
Series | Burning Chrome |
Released | |
Preceded by | The Belonging Kind |
Followed by | Red Star, Winter Orbit |
"Hinterlands" is a William Gibson short story written in 1981 and published in his short fiction collection Burning Chrome in 1986. The story is a fable about the 'cargo cult' mentality. "Hinterlands" explores the consequences for cultures and civilisations when confronted with inexplicable evidence - from an unknown but likely superior source - that is dangerous but is nonetheless of value. The word Hinterland is German and means upstate or outback (literally country or land behind).
[edit] Plot summary
The narrative of the story is presented below in chronological order which is not necessarily the way it is presented in the story:
The story begins with Soviet cosmonaut Olga Tovyevsky who is on a flight to Mars when she disappears off the radar shortly after a routine exercise involving flares. She returns into the same space-time two years later and her spacecraft is towed back to Earth orbit. She is alive but insane. In her hands she has a seashell the like of which is unknown in Earth's biosphere. The only two possible explanation are: She has either travelled to another star or come in contact with a civilisation that is capable of making the journey to Earth's solar system. Tovyevsky never regains her sanity and the scientists cannot induce a coherent explanation from her to understand what has happened.
The Russians send out another probe to the same coordinates in space. The solo astronaut, Major Grosz disappears at precisely the same point and returns dead 234 days later. He has committed suicide before anyone can reach him. Many more astronauts are lost in the same way. The place when these events occur is called the Highway. It is not until a dead Frenchman brings back a code in a ring of steel, which turns out to be the Rosetta Stone for cancer, that these trips take on true importance. Already the astonishing frequencies of the events create a cargo cult mentality around the Highway. Here, for the small price of a dead or insane astronaut one could get the future without waiting for it to happen on Earth.
Corporate interests want to know what else they can find out there. The powers-that-be use the CIA for their beautiful spoken Russian to advise the Reds that the West would join them at the Toyvesky Anomaly Coordinates. They would provide the best minds in psychiatry to cure the cosmonauts who came back alive but insane. As a result, they built a space station, Tsiolkovsky 1 (named after Konstantin Tsiolkovsky) to sort out this complicated, albeit profitable, situation. They build Heaven, the craft for dealing with returned "cargo". The narrator, Toby Halpert, is a failed astronaut, who had volunteered to go to the Highway but to his shame and disappointment did not hitch a lift from whatever is out there. The same fate befell his girlfriend Charmian and this is what bonds them.
His job is now to retrieve astronauts who were taken but return alive. While with them, he also passes on the instructions given to him by various authorities through the use of an implant. Once the handler-surrogate Gestalt is in place, he is ready to enter the capsule of the latest returned astronaut. She is Leni Hofmannstahl and to the trade she is a confirmed meatshot - a fresh returnee who is also possibly alive.
As Toby waits in the biosphere of Heaven with fake birdsongs (real birds cannot handle the centrifugal forces of Heaven due to the lack of true gravity) Charmian is there to share a drug tea-break before the operation.
Their small talk is interrupted by his handler Hiro. Hiro has an intuition: He doesn't like this one. Toby has the same intuition; something he calls The Fear. It amounts to a paralyzing sense that something intensely powerful is close by. To overcome this, Hiro remotely cattle-prods Toby into action. Toby then rushes into the capsule. After a frantic search of the craft he finds her in the medical bay and he is too late. Leni had fooled her robot surgical manipulator (which she calls "Beautiful Machine") into dissecting her arm and allowing her to bleed to death.
The mission is over and Toby returns to his abode where he talks about his day with Charmian.
[edit] External links
- Hinterlands accessed Oct-30, 2005.
Novels: The Sprawl Trilogy: Neuromancer, Count Zero, Mona Lisa Overdrive • The Difference Engine (with Bruce Sterling) • The Bridge Trilogy: Virtual Light, Idoru, All Tomorrow's Parties • Pattern Recognition • Spook Country
Short stories Johnny Mnemonic • The Gernsback Continuum • Fragments of a Hologram Rose • The Belonging Kind • Hinterlands • Red Star, Winter Orbit • New Rose Hotel • The Winter Market • Dogfight • Burning Chrome • Skinner's Room
Film adaptations: Johnny Mnemonic • New Rose Hotel • Pattern Recognition
Miscellanea: Agrippa (A Book of the Dead) • No Maps for These Territories • X-Files episodes