Leviathans of Jupiter (2 page)

BOOK: Leviathans of Jupiter
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The display obediently shifted from the approaching torch ship to show the cratered, dusty rock of the asteroid around which the habitat orbited. Largest of the 'roids in the Belt, Ceres was barely a thousand kilometers across, an oversized boulder, dusty, pitted, dead. Beyond its curving limb there was nothing but the dark emptiness of infinity, laced with hard pinpoints of stars bright enough to shine through the camera's protective filters.

Big George clasped his hands behind his back as he stared at the unblinking stars.

“I only came out here to get rich quick and then go back to Earth,” he muttered. “Never thought I'd spend the rest of my fookin' life in the Belt.”

Deirdre gave her father a sympathetic smile. “You can go back Earthside any time you want to.”

He shook his shaggy head. “Nah. Been away too long. I'd be a stranger there. Leastways, I got some friends here.…”

“Tons of friends,” Deirdre said.

“And your mother's ashes.”

Deirdre nodded. Mom's been dead for nearly five years, she thought, but he still mourns her.

“You can visit me on Earth,” she said brightly. “You won't be a total stranger.”

“Yeah,” he said, without enthusiasm. “Maybe.”

“I really have to go on this ship, Daddy. I've got to get to Jupiter; otherwise I won't get the scholarship.”

“I could send you to school on Earth, if that's what you want. I can afford it.”

“That's what I want,” she said gently. “And now I can get it without putting the burden on you.”

“That ship'll be burning out to Jupiter at one full
g,
y'know,” George said. “Six times heavier than here.”

“I've put in tons of hours in the centrifuge, Daddy. I can handle it. The station orbiting Jupiter is one-sixth gravity, just like here.”

George nodded absently. Deirdre thought he had run out of objections.

They felt the slightest of tremors and the speaker built into the overhead announced, “DOCKING COMPLETED.”

George looked almost startled. “I guess I never thought about you leavin'.”

“I'd have to go, sooner or later.”

“Yeah, I know, but…”

“If you don't want me to go…”

“Nah.” He shook his head fiercely. “You don't want to get stuck here the rest o' your life, like me.”

“I'll come back, Dad.”

George shrugged. “It's a big world out there. Lots of things to see and do. Lots of places for a bright young woman to make a life for herself.”

Deirdre didn't know what to say.

His scowl returning, George said, “Just don't let any of those sweet-talkin' blokes take advantage of you. Hear?”

She broke into a giggle. “Oh, Daddy, I know how to take care of myself.”

“Yeah. Maybe. But I won't be there to protect you, y'know.”

Deirdre grabbed him by his unkempt beard with both hands, the way she had since she'd been a baby, and pecked at his cheek.

“I love you, Daddy.”

George blushed. But he clasped his daughter by both shoulders and kissed her solidly on the forehead. “I love you, Dee Dee.”

The airlock hatch swung open with a sighing puff of overly warm air. A short, sour-faced Asian man in a deep blue uniform trimmed with an officer's gold braid stepped through and snapped, “Deirdre Ambrose?”

“That's me.”

“This way,” the Asian said, gesturing curtly toward the passageway beyond the airlock hatch.

George Ambrose watched his only child disappear into the passageway, the first step on her journey to Jupiter. And then to Earth. I'll never see her again, he thought. Never.

Then he muttered, “I still don't see why they need a fookin' microbiologist.”

FUSION TORCH SHIP
AUSTRALIA

Suppressing an impulse to look back over her shoulder for one last glimpse of her father, Deirdre stepped carefully along the curving tube that connected the
Chrysalis II
habitat to the fusion ship. She could feel her pulse thumping along her veins.
Chrysalis II
was all the home she had ever known. She was heading into the new, the unknown. It was exciting—and a little scary.

The tube felt warmer than she was accustomed to. Its walls glowed softly white, as if fluorescent, with a spiral motif threading along its length. The flooring felt slightly spongy to her tread, not hard and solid like the decks of the habitat. She knew it was her imagination, but somehow she felt slightly heavier, as if the docked torch ship had a stronger gravity field than the habitat she was leaving.

She heard the airlock hatch clang shut behind her and a moment later the crabby-looking little ship's officer scurried past her without speaking a word and disappeared around the curve of the tube. He's not very friendly, Deirdre thought.

When she got to the end of the tube he was standing there, by the ship's gleaming metal airlock, glaring at her with obvious impatience.

“Embarkation desk,” he said, jabbing a thumb past the hatch.

Deirdre stepped through the open hatch into a compartment of bare metal bulkheads, not much bigger than a closet. There were three ordinary-looking doors set into the bulkhead opposite her. She hesitated, not sure of which door she was meant to take.

“Right-hand side,” the officer snapped from the other side of the hatch, pointing again.

Deirdre opened the door and immediately saw that the torch ship's interior was colorfully decorated. The compartment's walls were covered with brightly patterned fabric. The overhead glowed with glareless lighting. The deck was thickly carpeted in rich earth tones of green and brown. Carpets! she thought. Incredible luxury, compared to
Chrysalis II
's utilitarian décor. And this is just an anteroom, she realized.

In front of her there was another door, marked
EMBARKATION RECEPTION
. Deirdre tapped on it, and when no one answered, she cautiously slid it open.

A man in a white uniform was sitting behind a metal desk in the middle of the compartment. The bulkheads on both sides glowed pearl gray: smart screens, Deirdre recognized. Behind the seated officer another wall screen displayed a scene of golden-leafed trees, a forest of Earth, heartbreakingly beautiful.

The man got slowly to his feet. He, too, was Asian, and no taller than Deirdre's chin. He smiled and made a courtly little bow, fists clenched at his sides.

“Welcome to
Australia,
” he said. Gesturing to the gracefully curved chair of leather and chrome in front of the desk, he invited, “Please, Ms. Ambrose, be seated and allow me to introduce myself: I am Dr. Lin Pohan, ship's medical officer.”

Dr. Pohan was as small as the surly officer who had ushered Deirdre aboard the
Australia
. He was almost totally bald, except for a fringe of dull gray hair, but a luxuriant mustache of silver gray curled across his face. His skin was spiderwebbed with creases, and as he smiled at Deirdre his eyes crinkled with good humor. He looked like a wrinkled old gnome to Deirdre. She realized this man had never taken rejuvenation treatments. She had learned in her history classes that some people on Earth shunned rejuv on religious grounds. Could he be one of them?

“I'm pleased to meet you,” she said, a little hesitantly.

Dr. Pohan bobbed his head up and down, then replied, “We must go through the formalities of checking your boarding file and medical record.”

“That should all be in your computer,” Deirdre said.

“Yes, of course. But then I'm afraid I must subject you to a complete physical examination.”

“But my medical records—”

“Not good enough,” said Dr. Pohan, almost jovially. “You see, we have had a death aboard ship on our way out here from Earth. It is my duty to make certain we don't have any others.”

“A death? Someone died?”

“One of the passengers. Most unusual. And most puzzling. If I can't track down the reason for it, we will not be allowed to disembark our passengers. We will have made the long voyage to Jupiter for nothing.”

CAPTAIN'S QUARTERS

Australia
was a passenger vessel, designed to carry paying customers swiftly from the Earth/Moon system out to the rock rats' habitat in orbit around the asteroid Ceres. It was built like a slim tower, with a dozen decks between the bridge in the ship's nose and the fusion propulsion plant at its tail. Unlike the cumbersome ore ships that plodded across the inner solar system,
Australia
drove through space under constant acceleration, usually at one Earth-normal gravity or close to it, accelerating half the distance, then flipping over and decelerating the rest of the way. Except for the brief periods of docking or turn-around, the passengers would feel a comfortable one
g
environment for the entire voyage. Comfortable, that is, for those who were accustomed to Earth-normal gravity.

This trip was special, though. Instead of terminating at Ceres and then heading back Earthward,
Australia
was going on to the research station in orbit around the giant planet Jupiter, a journey that would take an additional two weeks from Ceres.

Captain Tomas Guerra's quarters were up at the top of the stack, within a few steps of the bridge. The rooms were comfortable without being overly sumptuous. Guerra did not believe in showy displays of privilege: He kept the décor of his quarters quite simple, almost minimalist. Bulkheads covered in brushed aluminum. A few silk screen paintings of misty mountains and terraced rice paddies on the display screens. Spare, graceful Scandinavian furniture. His one obvious display of luxury was his set of solid gold cups in which he served sherry to special guests.

Katherine Westfall was indeed a very special guest. Reputedly the wealthiest woman in the solar system, she was a member of the powerful governing council of the International Astronautical Authority, the agency that controlled all spaceflight and much of the scientific research done off-Earth. Rumor had it that she was being considered for the chairmanship of the council.

“It's very good of you to invite me to dinner,” said Katherine Westfall, in a hushed, little-girl voice.

Captain Guerra dipped his gray-bearded chin once. “It is very good of you to take the time to join me.”

Katherine Westfall was as slender and petite as a ballerina, and like a dancer she calculated virtually every move she made far in advance—as well as every word she spoke. She should have been at ease in the comfortably upholstered recliner in the captain's sitting room, but as she smiled demurely at the man he got the impression from her steel gray eyes that she was wary, on guard.

“I hope you weren't inconvenienced by the lower gravity while we were docked with
Chrysalis,
” the captain said politely. “The rock rats keep their habitat at lunar
g
.”

Katherine Westfall thought a moment, then replied, “It was rather exhilarating, actually.”

“Low
g
can be stimulating, can't it?” the captain said. “But we make better time under a full gravity. Once I had to make an emergency high-thrust run to the research station in Venus orbit: two
g
.” He shook his head. “Not comfortable at all. Good thing it was only for a few days.”

Captain Guerra had lived on his ship since receiving his commission from the IAA many years earlier. The ship was home, his life, his reason for existence. Rarely did he go down dirtside at the Moon or Earth. He had never deigned to set foot on the
Chrysalis II
habitat orbiting Ceres in the Asteroid Belt or the
Thomas Gold
research station at Jupiter. Nor the scientific bases on Mars, or orbiting Venus. To say nothing of the massive habitat in orbit around Saturn, which he regarded as little more than a penal colony. Mercury he had visited once, briefly, because he had to oversee the unloading of a cargo of construction materials there. But most of his time he spent aboard his ship, his mistress, the love of his life.

Of course, he did not lead a completely celibate life. Sometimes very attractive women booked passage on
Australia,
and rank has its privileges. He wondered if Katherine Westfall would succumb to the romance of interplanetary flight. She hadn't given a hint of such interest over the weeks since they'd left the Earth/Moon system, but still it was a pleasant possibility.

He had once been lean and sinewy, but the years of easy living as he ran
Australia
across the solar system had plumped his wiry frame. Now, as he sat facing the IAA councilwoman, he looked as well padded as the seat he reclined in.

Guerra poured two heavy gold cups of sherry, handed one to Mrs. Westfall, then touched the rim of his cup to hers.

“To a pleasant journey,” he said.

“It's been quite pleasant so far,” Katherine Westfall said, with a smile. She sipped delicately.

“I am curious,” said the captain, “as to the reason for your traveling all the way out to Jupiter.”

For a moment she did not reply, simply gazed at the captain with her gray eyes half closed, obviously thinking about what her answer should be. Her face was long and narrow, with a pointed chin and nose so perfect it could only be the product of cosmetic surgery. Her hair was the color of golden brown honey, stylishly cut to frame her face like a tawny helmet. She wore a pale blue business suit, simple and unadorned, except for an egg-sized sapphire brooch on its lapel.

“As a member of the International Astronautical Authority governing council,” she said at last, so softly that the captain had to lean toward her to hear her words, “I feel it's my duty to personally review each major research facility the IAA is supporting throughout the solar system.”

Captain Guerra nodded. “Starting with Jupiter?”

“Starting with the
Gold
station,” Katherine Westfall concurred. Then a slightly impish smile curved her lips. “I feel one should always go for the gold.”

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