Solar Express (25 page)

Read Solar Express Online

Authors: Jr. L. E. Modesitt

BOOK: Solar Express
8.36Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub

How could they do that?
Tavoian fed the figures into the AI. As he'd guessed, the Sinese longliner was moving almost twice as fast as he was.
A hundred and seventy-five percent, roughly.

“How soon before they catch us?” he asked the AI. “Or how long will we have at the target destination before they arrive?”

WITHOUT ADDITIONAL DATA, PROJECTION IS IMPOSSIBLE.

“Assume a one-gee deceleration for us, and a deceleration pattern for the Sinese ship that matches the acceleration pattern outbound from Earth. Assume both ships are within one hundred fifty thousand kays of the target at the end of deceleration.”

THE SINESE VESSEL WILL ARRIVE AT THE OBJECT BETWEEN FIFTY AND FIFTY-TWO HOURS AFTER RECON THREE.

Belatedly, Tavoian turned to read the remainder of the message from Donovan Base.

Ship and acceleration parameters strongly suggest that Sinese longliner is uncrewed and AI-directed. Preparations of a second and larger craft suggest crewed vessel to follow once the target is farther in-system and the uncrewed longliner is in position close to the target.

That
answered his question about the acceleration and fuel requirements. Without habitability concerns, the Sinese could pack more fuel into the hull … and they had a larger platform to begin with. They also had better drives—or at least more durable ones—and that was another worry, both for him and for Space Command. He continued reading.

Do not make contact with Sinese vessels unless contacted first or unless such vessels act in a fashion hazardous to you or your vessel.

Request daily reports, commencing immediately.

That would be easy enough to do, considering he'd done little except watch screens, exercise, study AI documentation, and send a few messages. In roughly eighteen hours that would all change once Recon three began its decel and approach to the asteroid or artifact.

Then he read the Space Service news summary. His own summary of that was that matters were slowly degrading, but no one was shooting, launching missiles, or moving troops.
Yet.
He was much more interested in the message from Alayna.

Chris—

I know you can't tell me precisely where you are and what you're doing, but I'm fairly certain I know what it is. It sounds like it could be hazardous, especially if others get involved. Maybe I'm reading too much into how you said what you did and what you didn't say, but I'm concerned. Now that I've said that … I am glad to hear from you, and I hope you'll be able to send messages on a more frequent basis, for more than the selfish reason that I like hearing from you.

There's not been that much progress on the multi-fractal mini-granulations. I feel that I'm on the edge of something, that if I could only see just a shade—or a fraction of another layer deeper—into the sun I might find a hint of what I'm looking for. I can't believe that the fact that the smaller areas of convection have multi-fractal properties while the larger granulations are essentially regular and Gaussian in distribution and field pattern is merely an affect of deeper solar mechanics. At the same time, the history of science shows how misguided belief can be. Einstein insisted that God did not play dice with the universe. We know what quantum mechanics and subsequent developments did to that belief.

Tavoian smiled at those words. They called up his image of Alayna, both incredibly earnest and focused, yet with a wry cynicism beyond her years—or his, he realized.
Aren't you the one who never thought that the military nature of being a pilot would ever be exploited? That people would learn?
He paused.
No one's fired any missiles yet. It's not too late.
Rather than dwell on that, he went back to reading what Alayna had written.

I can also hear, in my mind, Professor Janes saying something like, “
Merely
an affect of solar mechanics, Miss Wong-Grant?” That might be like saying Newton's apple's falling was merely an affect of gravity.

The unique asteroid that's behaving like a comet and is possibly neither remains on course for a sun-grazing pass in late December. One of my colleagues at another well-known observatory can't believe that there's been
no
media or obvious government interest. She wonders if someone is keeping it quiet. I'm getting that feeling myself, but now that it's in range of amateurs with telescopes with enough resolution to determine some of its unique features, I don't think it can be kept hidden much longer …

What Alayna was saying, as much to the colonel as to Tavoian, was that her discovery appeared likely to explode through the media at any moment, if it hadn't already, since he was getting messages but not media, except for the Space Service news summary, which hadn't reported anything about it.

 … we've done some recalculations based on better data and more observations. It looks like the “asteroid” has an extremely long period, somewhere in the vicinity of eleven thousand years since the last time it made a pass at the sun, which I think, although I can't prove it, might have been its first pass.

Tavoian frowned. That meant, if it were an alien artifact, whatever was there was
old
. On the other hand, things didn't deteriorate that much in conditions of cold and vacuum, at least not after the initial decompression, assuming that it had been an artifact and pressurized.

 … From the time the object passes Mars's orbit to reach Earth's orbit will take about three weeks, and from there to Venus's orbit will take less than two weeks, and from there to the averaged orbit of Mercury will be six days, possibly less. That's not much time for something this unique, and our projections show it's going to pass close to the Roche Limit. If it does, it may not survive perihelion, and that would be a great loss to science …

Seven weeks from now, and she's sending a not-so-veiled warning to me and the colonel not to stay around too long.
Tavoian wanted to tell her that matters were under control, but he wasn't in a position to do so, and even if he did, the colonel or whoever was reviewing his messages would not allow anything that definite to go through.

I've attached the latest data and observations. We're getting some clearly defined images. I don't know how it could be, but I'd say that the silver-white side might be as polished as a mirror. How that could have occurred, considering that there are no visible craters, scarring, or abrasion, leaves me speechless. That's a poor statement of fact. As you know, I'm seldom speechless.

Responding in kind to your last quote, I have another from
The Passion of Science:

As an astronomer, you'd better be passionate; a billion stars aren't even a significant faction of our own galaxy, let alone the visible universe. Most people can't comprehend what a million of anything means, except in devalued currencies. They toss around millions and billions as if they understood. A scientist has to understand what numbers mean, what they represent, and how to use them accurately and not dishonestly. In our ever-more complex world, the only thing that can fuel such dedication is the passion for knowledge, in and of itself, and not in pursuit of material gain.

Passion for what we do takes us to the strangest places. Why else am I on Farside, hundreds of kilometers from the nearest other human, and hundreds of thousands from friends and family—except you, and at the closest, you're still thousands of kilometers away? Because I can't do what I love doing without being here. While I'm speaking for you, and that's always dangerous and often self-deceiving, I would think you must feel the same way.

Do you? Do you feel as passionate as she does about what you do?
Tavoian had his doubts. He liked piloting. He liked being good at it, and he especially liked it when he could actually handle the ship, rather than oversee the AI. He also realized that he hadn't hesitated in the slightest to take on a mission that could easily go wrong and kill him when he'd found out that he would be the first to see and explore, even if only through cubesats and remote AIs, what might be an alien artifact.

He sat for a time, loosely strapped in the control couch, thinking,
Why are you here?
It certainly wasn't for duty. Or patriotism. Who could feel that patriotic about a nation cobbled together from necessity and for survival some forty years earlier?
You're going to have to think about that.

A sardonic smile crossed his lips as he considered that he and Alayna were roughly the same age. He might be several years older chronologically, but she was far older in every other way.

I look forward to hearing from you as you're able to message.

After several moments, he accessed the next message—from Kit. It was short.

Dear Chris,

I was afraid that you wouldn't be able to get back here, especially with what the media news is spouting. It's frightening. Neither the Sinese nor the Indians want to back down, and President Yates appears to be totally ineffectual at calming the situation. I want to ask if they're all idiots, but after working with politicians for the last year, I'm afraid I already know the answer to that question.

Mom and Dad did get your message. They were happy to hear you're fine, but they worry. So do I. I know you can't say much. That's obvious. We just hope that you'll come through whatever you're doing.

All my love, little brother!

He half grinned, knowing how much love was contained in the words “little brother.”

Then he checked the monitors. There was no sign of the Sinese longliner, but then, given the limits of the ship's detection systems, the first time he should be able to detect it would be once he reached the target, possibly not until it was almost there.

At least he had three messages to respond to … and there was always the AI programming and documentation. But first … Alayna.

 

36

HOTNEWS!

6 N
OVEMBER
2114

[Image Deleted For Off-Earth Transmission]

A space race! For real. A Noram FusEx burner is blasting outsystem. A Sinese fusionjet's two days behind. There's nothing where they're headed except a recently discovered asteroid. Word is it
might
not be an asteroid at all, but something old and alien. Sinese Space Minister Wong—all he'll say is that the Sinese space program is proceeding according to plan. Noram DOEA Director Luvalle won't comment at all. He must be imitating Prexy Yates. As for EC Chancellor Rumikov, he's demanding sharesies from Noram and the Sinobloc. That man-dexer wants shares of everything, especially women. Does he think there's an alien beauty out there?

[Image Deleted]

Don't miss
Seduced and Screwed
 … most tre-awesome realie of the fall, the true story of Vikson Brady's seduction of former Noram Pres Robby Sawyer, and what happened at the Top of Ottawa the night before Sawyer sent Army spec-ops against the Idaho Libertarians.

[Image Deleted]

Double, no triple, brace yourself for the spectacle of fall,
Patsy!
The docu-realie about the sexyist enviro ever to assassinate a politician and get away with it. Loosely based on Patrice Kennedy-Harper's involvement with Senator Steven Bush during the last days of the sovereign USA.

[Image Deleted]

One big chill's going to boil India's Mars plans! India's Prime Minister Ravindra claims that the ice asteroid the Sinese have sent careening toward the Red Planet will impact the meridian lowlands. That's where India has just finished its multi-dome geo-forming project. Sinese Space Minister Wong claims Ravindra's all wet. That's left Ravindra steaming.

[Image Deleted]

Noram Border Security agents patrolling the New Orleans wetlands made a really big find yesterday—crocodile style—and almost didn't live to tell about it. The eight-meter-long saltwater crocodile nearly upended their hovercraft as they patrolled the abandoned sections of the submerged city. No one could explain how the monster croc—native to Southeast Asia—ended up in the ruins of New Orleans unless it was a survivor of a southern water park destroyed decades ago.

 

C
LOSE
E
NCOUNTERS

 

37

R
ECON
T
HREE

8 N
OVEMBER
2114

At 0743 UTC, the AI began deceleration, following the same pattern used to accelerate Recon three to the greatest real velocity Tavoian had ever experienced, not that he had experienced much of anything at all. With vacuum beyond the ship, unless something pinged the shields hard enough for the vibration to get through the graphene and shields to the inner hull, the only sounds were those generated inside, and the screens gave no indication of the speed.
Over a million kays per hour, and there's no real indication of it at all.

After two hours of deceleration and two of waiting for the drives to recover, Tavoian was relieved when, shortly after the AI resumed decel, it also announced,
TARGET LOCATED ON PLOTTED COURSE. CURRENT DISTANCE IS FIVE POINT FOUR MILLION KAYS.

The AI didn't have to say more, but Tavoian knew that even after two hours of decel Recon was still headed outward at more than 245 kps, and with the inbound speed of the asteroid/alien object, the distance between the two was shrinking by something like 280 kps.

He also wasn't looking forward to thirteen more hours of alternating decel and zero gee, while wondering the entire time how long the FusEx “booster” would last.

Some twenty minutes into the second two-hour stint of deceleration, the day's messages arrived. The first, as always, was official.

Tavoian, Christopher A.

Other books

Burning Time by Glass, Leslie
The Bullwhip Breed by J. T. Edson
The Manner of Amy's Death by Mackrodt, Carol
Claire De Lune by Christine Johnson
Craving by Sofia Grey
A Golden Web by Barbara Quick
Maid of Murder by Amanda Flower