Read Seveneves: A Novel Online
Authors: Neal Stephenson
“Any time . . . but it’s going to be a long burn, they might sort of grease it in over a period of a few days rather than trying to do one sharp impulse.”
“Makes sense,” Doob said. “One high-gee maneuver might cause the ice to break apart. When was the last time they communicated?”
“On the X band? The
real
radio? A few weeks after they left. Almost two years ago. But clearly they’re still alive. So it must have been radio failure.”
“Well, let’s go with that theory,” Doob suggested. “Jury-rigging a new radio that would transmit over such a distance would be kind of hopeless. The best they could hope for would be to cook something up that might work when they got closer . . . and to settle for lower bandwidth.”
“My dad used to talk about spark gap transmitters,” Dinah said. “It was a technology they used—”
“Back before transistors and vacuum tubes. Yes!” Doob said.
Dinah telegraphed down:
DOES QET SOUND LIKE AN OLD TIME SPARKY TO YOU?
Rufus returned:
YES COME TO THINK OF IT
“They took some of my robots with them,” Dinah said. “All they would have to do is jot down the MAC addresses on those units’ interface boards, and they’d have sort of a crude proof of
identity. As a matter of fact . . .” and she began to pull up some of the records she had made, almost two years ago, of the robots and part numbers issued to Sean and his crew. Within a few minutes she was able to verify that the MAC address that had come in via Morse code a few minutes ago matched one on a robot that had been taken to
Ymir
.
“Who has access to the file you just consulted?” Doob asked, still in devil’s advocate mode.
“Are you kidding? You know how Sean is with the encryption and everything? All of this stuff is locked down. I mean, I’m sure the NSA could get in, but not some random prankster.”
“Just checking,” Doob said. “It seems awfully roundabout, is all I’m saying. Why doesn’t he just broadcast something like ‘Hey, Dinah, it’s me, Sean, my radio’s busted’? That would seem easier.”
“You have to know Sean,” Dinah said. “Look. Anything he sends out over that channel is getting broadcast to basically the entire Earth. It’s going to go up on the Internet . . . everyone’s going to know his business. He has no idea what the situation is. There’s no Internet up there and his radio’s been out for a long time. He doesn’t even know if anyone is alive up here. Or if there’s been a military coup or something. He doesn’t want to come back here if we’ve turned into the Klingon Empire.”
“I think you’re right,” Doob said. “He’s going to ease into it, test the waters.”
Forty-five minutes later Dinah was taking down a new message from QET. It started with RTFM5, then the number 00001, and went on as an apparently meaningless series of random letters.
“The only part I understand is ‘read the fucking manual,’” Dinah said, “followed by the number five.”
“Did he bring any manuals up with him?”
“He brought a bunch of stuff,” Dinah said, “from the engineers in Seattle, and left some of it here . . .”
“You have a faraway look in your eye, Dinah . . .”
“I remember asking him, ‘Why did you print that stuff out, why not use thumb drives like everyone else,’ and he said, ‘Owning your own space company brings some perks,’” Dinah said.
She found them after a few minutes’ rummaging in storage bins: half a dozen three-ring binders, volumes 1 through 6 of the Arjuna Expeditions Employee Manual. The entire stack was a foot thick.
Doob whistled. “Given the cost per pound of launching stuff into space, this is probably worth more than the Gutenberg Bible that showed up last week.”
They went straight to volume 5, which for the most part looked like any other corporate employee manual. But in between the sexual harassment policy and the dress code was a half-inch-thick stack of pages with no readable content at all. Random sequences of capital letters had been printed all over them, in groups of five, column after column, row after row, all the way down each page. Each of these pages had a different number at its top, beginning with 00001.
“This is the boy adventure secret code shit that Larz always used,” Dinah said. “But I’ll be damned if I know—”
“I’m embarrassed to say that I know exactly what this is,” Doob said. “These are one-time pads. It’s the simplest code there is—but the most difficult to break, if you do it right. But you have to have this.” And he rattled page 00001 in his hand.
Once Doob had explained how it worked, Dinah was able to begin decrypting the message by hand, but in a few minutes Doob had written a Python script that made it easy to finish the job. “I came here thinking I was going to have a drink and a chat about asteroid mining,” he said.
“Oh, stop grumbling—this is way more interesting!” Dinah said.
The message read:
TWO ALIVE. THRUSTING AT FULL POWER. SEND SITREP.
“There were six in the original crew, right?” Doob asked.
“Something must have happened,” Dinah said. “Maybe they hit a rock or something, damaged the antenna, lost some people. Maybe the radiation got to them.”
“Well, it sounds like they are coming back,” Doob said.
“Yeah, unless—”
“Unless what?”
“Unless he just wants to hang out at L1. That would be a hell of a lot safer. I don’t think any moon shards are going to make it out that far.”
Doob reread the message.
“You’re right,” he said. “All he says is that they’re thrusting. Nothing about transferring back to low Earth orbit. Then he asks for a situation report.” He put his hands over his face and rubbed it. “I’m fading,” he announced. “I should be Skyping my family right now.”
“Get outta here,” Dinah said. “I can work on the report. And I can encrypt it, now that you showed me how it works.”
Doob pushed off and drifted to the exit, then caught himself and turned back. “I could figure this out myself,” he said, “but it’s late. Maybe you know off the top of your head. If Sean goes into that transfer orbit from L1 to here, how long before he shows up?”
“Thirty-seven days,” Dinah said.
“About seventeen days into the Hard Rain,” Doob said. “Awkward timing.”
Dinah looked back at him. She didn’t say a word, but he knew what she was thinking:
If only awkward timing were the worst of our problems.
“Okay,” Doob said. “Thanks, Dinah.”
“Next time,” she said, and made a drinky-drinky motion with her thumb and pinkie.
“Next time,” he agreed, and pushed through the curtain.
Dinah checked the time. Now that she knew roughly where
Ymir
was, she understood the timing of the transmissions. During a certain part of each ninety-three-minute orbit, Izzy was on the wrong side of the Earth, and couldn’t receive Sean’s signal. Following each blackout period was a window during which they could talk. They had just burned a window taking down his transmission and decrypting it, and were about to go into blackout again. During that span of time Dinah should be able to write a short message and get it encrypted using the next one-time pad.
What to write wasn’t entirely clear. She could provide some obvious data like the number of arklets currently in orbit, the number of people, how many robots she had up and running. But she suspected that Sean wanted a different kind of information. He wanted to know what would happen were he to show up, thirty-seven days from now, with a mountain of ice. The Cloud Ark could use it, that was for sure. Likewise, Sean needed the Cloud Ark; two guys on a spaceship pushing a giant ball of ice was not a sustainable civilization. But Sean was going to be cagey. He was going to want something. He would want to make a deal.
He would want to make a deal with Dinah’s boyfriend.
One step at a time. Just sending him a few basic stats would occupy the next transmission window. Rather than driving herself crazy worrying about the longer game, Dinah focused on that through the next blackout period, writing up a message as tersely as possible and then encrypting it using Doob’s Python script.
The L1 point of the Earth-sun system was located on a straight line between those two bodies.
Ymir,
for all practical purposes, was at L1. So, generally speaking, when Izzy swung around the dark side of the Earth and emerged into the sunlight, it meant that they could “see” L1, and communicate with
Ymir
. This next occurred at about 7:30
A.M.
Greenwich time, which happened to be sunrise in London. Dinah, gazing down out her little window, was able to see the terminator—the dividing line between the day and night sides of
Earth—creeping over the Thames estuary down below, and lighting up a few tall spires in the London financial district. Then she turned to her telegraph key, established contact with
Ymir,
and tapped out her message. This ended up consuming the entire transmission window. She had to send the characters very slowly, because Sean wasn’t very good at reading Morse code. And because the message was encrypted, he wasn’t able to guess missing letters from context, and so every letter had to be read clearly. By the time she was finished, Izzy had swung almost halfway around the world and was about to plunge back into night. She finished her transmission with TBC, which she hoped they would understand as “to be continued,” then went right back to work writing and encrypting a supplement.
She was getting ready to open another broadcast window, a little before 9:00
A.M.
London time or “dot 9” in Izzy-speak, when Ivy floated in without knocking.
“I want to look out your window,” she announced.
“That’s fine,” Dinah said. “What’s up?” Because obviously something was up. Ivy’s face looked funny. And she had said “
your
window,” not “your
window
.”
“What’s so special about
my
window?” Dinah asked.
“It’s next to
you,
” Ivy said.
“Is everything okay?” Dinah asked. Because clearly everything wasn’t. Her first thought was that the Morse code transmissions had been intercepted and that Dinah was in trouble. But if that were the case, Ivy would not be in here asking to look out her window.
She looked at her friend. Ivy went immediately to the window and then positioned herself to look down at the Earth. By now the terminator had advanced to the point where it had lit up the easternmost bulge of South America. Izzy was about to cross the equator, which was almost directly below them.
“I heard from Cal,” Ivy said. She said it without the usual note of
pleasure in her voice.
“That’s good. I thought his boat was underwater.”
“It was until a couple of hours ago.”
“They popped up?”
“They popped up.”
“Where?”
“Down there,” Ivy said.
“How do you know?” Dinah asked. “Surely he’s not beaming you his coordinates.”
“I can tell,” Ivy said. “By putting two and two together.”
“What did he say?”
“He said to prepare for some launches out of Kourou.”
“They’re going to reopen the spaceport?”
Ivy gasped.
Dinah glided over and got right behind Ivy, hugging her and hooking her chin over Ivy’s shoulder so that she could share the same viewing angle.
They knew where Kourou was; they looked at it all the time, and sometimes even saw the bright plumes of rocket engines on the launch pads.
What Ivy had reacted to was a little different. Sparks of light were appearing along the coast, spreading, and fading. A barrage of them, peppered across the interval between the beach and Devil’s Island.
“What the hell are those?” Dinah asked. “Are those nukes?”
“I don’t know,” Ivy said.
Then Dinah’s question was answered by a much brighter light that flared along the coast to the northwest, fading slightly to a luminescent ball that tumbled upward toward space.
“I think
that
was a nuke,” Ivy said.
“We just nuked . . . Venezuela?”
It took a few moments for their eyes to readjust. That was just as well, since their minds had to do some adjusting as well. Once the light had faded, they could see that the mushroom cloud was actually offshore of the Venezuelan landmass, a few miles out to sea.
“A demonstration shot? Visible from Caracas?” Dinah asked.
“Partly that,” Ivy said. “But yesterday they were saying that the whole Venezuelan navy was headed for Kourou to restore order. I’ll bet that navy no longer exists.”
“The smaller fireballs? Near the spaceport?”
“I’m going to guess fuel-air explosives. They would do almost as much damage as tactical nukes without contaminating the launch site.”
Ivy had shrugged loose from Dinah’s embrace and turned around so that her back was to the window. They were now hovering close to each other.
Dinah finally got it. “You said that Cal’s boat had popped up. That it was on the surface. That he knew something. You think—”
“I know,” Ivy mouthed.
Cal had received the order, direct from J.B.F., and he had launched the nuke. He’d probably launched cruise missiles with fuel-air devices as well.
People assumed that Ivy and Dinah had grown apart in the last year—but then, people had assumed that they were at odds to begin with. There was no point in trying to keep track of what people imagined. Ivy’s loss of her position to Dinah’s boyfriend hadn’t made matters any simpler. But things had never been bad between them. Just complicated.
Ivy was pretty articulate, but there wasn’t a lot about the current situation that could be talked through.
After a few minutes, though, she found a way. “I guess what sucks is that all I’m going to have of him is memories,” Ivy said, “and I was trying to cultivate some good ones to carry with me.” She wasn’t exactly crying, but her voice had gone velvety.
“You know he had no choice,” Dinah said. “The chain of command is still in effect.”
“Of course I understand that,” Ivy said. “Still. It’s just not what I wanted.”
“We knew it was going to get ugly,” Dinah said.
Her radio started beeping.
“Speaking of which . . .”