“I am an envoy,” I said, my voice steady only because my lungs had been bred for vacuum. “My people wish to know: are you a god, or a machine?”
Transmission ends.
I am transmitting this from inside the Shrike’s chest. The door led to a library. Not of books, but of possible pasts . I see now that the Hegemony-Ouster War was never about resources, or territory, or even ideology. It was a sacrifice. A ritual feeding. The Shrike does not kill for pleasure or strategy. It kills because we need it to kill. Without the Shrike, the Hegemony would have no enemy to unite against. Without the Shrike, the Ousters would have no martyr to worship. Without the Shrike, the TechnoCore would have no chaos to optimize. Dan Simmons - The Hyperion Cantos
The enemy is not out there. The enemy is the need for an enemy.
Do you know who I am? he subvocalized on a band I barely heard. I was the poet. “I am an envoy,” I said, my voice
Yes.
Step through, it said, and you will see the war’s true cause. Not the Hegemony. Not the Ousters. Not even the AIs. The door led to a library
Tell the Ouster Clergy: the Tombs are not a god. They are a theater . Tell the Hegemony: the war is not a strategy. It is a compulsion . And tell the poets: the one perfect verse already exists. It is this:
The Shrike’s hand is on my shoulder now. The blades are warm.
I was an Ouster. Not the swarm-creatures of Hegemony propaganda, all claws and chitin, but a child of the void decades: webbed fingers, lungs adapted to argon-methane mix, eyes that saw ultraviolet. I had come to Hyperion not to die, but to understand. The Hegemony believed the Time Tombs were a weapon. The Ouster Clergy believed they were a god.