Chapter 1
      The girl from the future told me that the sky is full of dying worlds.
    You can spot them from far off, if you know what you’re looking for. When  a star gets old it heats up, and its planets’ oceans evaporate, and   you can see the clouds of hydrogen and oxygen, slowly dispersing. Dying  worlds cloaked in the remains of their oceans, hanging in the Galaxy’s  spiral arms like rotten fruit: this is what people will find, when they  move out from the Earth, in the future. Ruins, museums, mausoleums.
    How strange. How wistful.
    My name is Michael Poole.        
    I have come home to Florida. Although not to my mother’s house, which is  in increasing peril of slipping into the sea.
    I live in a small apartment in Miami. I like having people around, the  sound of voices. Sometimes I miss the roar of traffic, the sharp scrapings  of planes across the sky, the sounds of my past. But the laughter of  children makes up for that.
    The water continues to rise. There is a lot of misery in Florida, a lot of  displacement. I understand that. But I kind of like the water, the gentle  disintegration of the state into an archipelago. The slow rise, different  every day, every week, reminds me that nothing stays the same, that the  future is coming whether we like it or not.
    The future, and the past, began to complicate my life in the spring   of 2047, when I got an irate call from my older brother, John. He was  here, in our Miami Beach house. I should “come home,” as he put it, to  help him “sort out Mom.” I went, of course. In 2047 I was fifty-two years  old.
    I had been happy in Florida, at my parents’ house, when I was a kid. Of  course I had my nose in a book or a game most of the time, or I played at  being an “engineer,” endlessly tinkering with my bike or my in-line roller  skates. I was barely aware of the world outside my own head. Maybe that’s  still true.
    But I particularly loved the beach out in back of the house. You  understand this was the 1990s or early 2000s, when there still was a beach  in that part of Florida. I remember I would walk from our porch, with its   big roof-mounted swing chairs, and go down the gravel path to the low  dunes, and then on to the sandy beach beyond. Sitting there you could  watch space shuttles and other marvels of rocketry from Cape Canaveral  rising into the sky like ascending souls.
    Mostly I’d watch those launches alone. I was out of step with my   family over that one. But once, I believe around 2005, my uncle George, my  mother’s brother visiting from England, walked out with me to watch a  night launch. He seemed so stiff and old, barely able to make it down to  sit on the scrubby dune grass. But I guess he was only in his forties  then. George was an engineer, of sorts, in information technology, and so  a kindred spirit.
    Of course that’s all gone now, thanks to the Warming, the rising sea  levels, the endless Atlantic storms; Canaveral is a theme park behind a  sea wall. I guess I was lucky to be ten years old and able to watch such  things. It was like the future folding down into the present.
    I wonder what ten-year-old Michael Poole would have thought if he could  have known what the girl from the future told me, about all those old and  dying worlds out there waiting for us in space.
    And I wonder what he would have thought about the Transcendence.        
    I think over those strange events, my contact with the Transcendence, one  way or another, all the time. It’s like an addiction, something you’re  aware of constantly, bubbling beneath the surface level of your mind, no  matter how you try to distract yourself.
    And yet I can remember so little of it. It’s like chasing a dream after  waking; the more you focus on it, the more it melts away.
    Here’s what I make of it now.
    The Transcendence is our future—or a future, anyhow. A far future. The  Transcendents had made (or will make) themselves into something  unimaginably powerful. And now they were on the cusp, the cusp of a step  to change into something new altogether.
    After this point they would transcend to what we would think of as  godhood—or they would subside to defeat, at the hands of a foe I barely  glimpsed. Either way they would no longer be human.
    But at this point, on this side of the cusp, they were still human. And  they were tortured by a very human regret, a regret that had to be  resolved now, before they proceeded and shed their humanity for good. This  was what I was drawn into, this strange inner conflict.
    Everybody knows about my work on the climate disaster. Nobody knows about  my involvement in something much larger: the agonies of a nascent  superhuman mind of the far future, in the culminating logic of all our  destinies.
    The future folding down into the present. That ten-year-old on the beach  would probably have loved it, if he’d known. It still scares me to death  in retrospect, even now.
    But I guess even then I had my mind on other things. For the most  remarkable thing I saw on that beach wasn’t a spaceship being launched.        
    The woman who came to the beach was slim and tall, with long,   strawberry-blond hair. She would wave and smile to me, and sometimes call,  though I could never make out what she said for the noise of the waves and  the gulls. She always seemed to stand at the edge of the sea, and the sun  was always low, so the sea was dappled with sunlight like burning oil, and  I had to squint to make her out—or she would show up in some other equally  difficult place, hidden by the light.
    When I was a kid she visited occasionally, not regularly, maybe once a  month. I was never frightened of her. She always seemed friendly.  Sometimes when she called I would wave back, or yell, but the crashing  waves were always too loud.
    I would run after her sometimes, but running in soft wet sand is hard work  even when you’re ten. I never seemed to get any closer, no matter how hard  I ran. And she would shrug, and step back, and if I looked away she was  gone.
    It was only much later that I worked out who she was, how important she  would become to me.
    Uncle George never saw her, not during his one and only viewing of a  spaceship launch from the beach. I wish he had. I’d have appreciated  talking it over with him. I didn’t know much about ghosts when I was ten;  I know only a little more now. George knew a lot of things, and he had an  open mind. Maybe he could have answered a simple question: can you be  haunted by spirits, not from the past, but from the future?
    For, you see, the mysterious woman on the beach, who visited me  intermittently all my young life, was another visitor from the future. She  was Morag, my dead wife.
    The future folding down into the present.								
									 Copyright © 2005 by Stephen Baxter. All rights reserved. No part of this excerpt may be reproduced or reprinted without permission in writing from the publisher.