Song of the
World's End
The life of
one humpback whale, or two, was as nothing compared to the span of the ancient
song. Very-long-ago, when whales were little more than mute beasts, the Beyond
Ones reached from the heavens to bestow the gift of song and thought. The
celestial music stabbed through sky and sea with its anguished melody, lashing
the waves to a fierce pitch of destruction. For forty days and forty nights
the rain fell, until almost nothing of life remained on the surface of Earth's
continents.
Then the
whales braved the song. The voices of the Ancestors rose in harmony throughout
the oceans, taking the distant pain of the Beyond Ones into their own souls,
taming wind and waves until silence fell and the sun shone brightly once more.
And for uncounted generations thereafter, each year at the appointed time and
place, the whales gathered to give voice and honor to the Song of the World's
End and to remember.
Even when
humans began to sail the oceans in their whaling boats, wreaking inescapable
ruin and terror, the song continued without pause. As always, it changed
slightly each year as the names of the dead were sung and honored. To the few
surviving whales, the ritual singing became an invocation, a prayer that the
Beyond Ones would intercede to bring either salvation or a merciful end to all
created things.
For a
captive whale, or two, the hope of such intervention seemed remote indeed. The
male of the captive pair had once been called Mistwanderer when there had been
others to accord him virtue and name. Now he was nameless and without honor,
reduced to a mere curiosity for the amusement of humans. Although he had a
mate to share his meaningless existence, he still felt very much alone, for he
could not join the others in the singing. And what, after all, was a male
humpback whale without his song?
In the open
sea other whales still sang the ancient music, although they were now very
few. Soon all would be gone to the Ancestors, and there would be no singers to
honor their spirits and preserve their memory.
When a
strange human with a strip of white cloth tied tightly around his head climbed
into the tank one day, Mistwanderer thought little of it. He certainly didn't
expect to be able to hear the human's thoughts as the pale fingers touched him,
but somehow the words came across clearly.
-- You must
sing, or we will be destroyed. Will you help us?
He saw and
heard images flickering within the human's mind. The ancient song, impossibly
powerful in the ocean of space where the Beyond Ones swam. Wind and waves
screaming in the final fury of destruction. But even if the myth were true, no
human would know of these things . . .
-- Will you
help us?
Perhaps the
Beyond Ones were returning to inflict a terrible vengeance upon the humans,
after all. If so, that was condign, and it was certainly not a whale's place
to interfere with divine retribution. Let the humans try to sing their own
answer to the heavens, if their small throats and smaller souls could even
understand the concept. The Beyond Ones would judge them accordingly.
He could
feel the human's presence as a gentle touch within his mind, resting lightly
upon the memories of the whales' dead and the manner of their dying. No anger
at his refusal, but an incredible depth of controlled emotion, finding sudden
expression in unspoken music that burned through Mistwanderer's brain. A new
song, a worthy song, to honor the dead. He would never have believed a human
to be capable of such.
There were
other images in the human's thoughts as well, of travel to impossibly distant
places and the bending of time itself, but these Mistwanderer neither
understood nor sought to understand. Some mysteries were best left alone.
Later,
aboard the humans' ship with his mate, he experienced the abrupt shudder of
disorientation as time shattered around the ship and recrystallized into a new
pattern. All around him, Mistwanderer could now feel the vibration of the song
as the Beyond Ones reached into the center of his being. Perhaps this was what
it felt like to die, he thought, as the ship plunged into a dark and tormented
ocean.
He did not
need to be told that no humpback whales had survived into this new time. Why
else would there be no answer to the song?
In the
empty ocean, Mistwanderer hesitated as the enormity of what he had been asked
to attempt overwhelmed him. How could one whale adequately render a
performance in which thousands normally took part? The Beyond Ones would not
even notice his feeble whisper of song in this barren world that seemed so
deserving of destruction.
He found
himself thinking of the Ancestors. They would have had no assurance, when they
first ventured to answer the song, that they would be found worthy by the
Beyond Ones. The singing, even then, must have begun with a solitary and
uncertain voice. And to give honor to that one brave voice of a distant
ancestor, Mistwanderer set all other thoughts aside and began the Song of the
World's End.
His
rendering of the ancient music seemed no more than a broken fragment, lacking
the other whales' harmony, the precise interweaving of melody and response that
was the very heart of the song. Then another voice rose beside his own,
answering each note in perfect counterpoint.
A female
singer: his mate. Impossible, Mistwanderer thought as his song faltered for a
moment. Such a thing could not be. Females did not sing the World's End;
theirs were the mysteries of creation, not destruction. As he continued the
singing, he almost expected the Beyond Ones to obliterate them both in an
instant for such blasphemy.
But the
music from above ended, signifying that the Earth had been found worthy of life
after all. Perhaps the song now spoke of creation and hope, Mistwanderer
thought, in which a female could rightly share. With the Beyond Ones'
blessing, he and his mate would bring forth a new race of whales in a world
free from fear.
There
remained one more task first, to praise the Ancestors with the new song he had
been given, so that the spirits of the dead would not be forgotten. Again
Mistwanderer began to sing, and the clear notes of the ancient Vulcan chant of
remembrance filled the bay.
*****
Several of
the Enterprise's officers noticed tears in the corners of Spock's eyes, but no
one said a word.