Rendezvous with Rama by Arthur C Clarke CHAPTER ONE - Spaceguard Sooner or later, it was bound to happen. On 30 June 1908, Moscow escaped destruction by three hours and four thousand kilometres - a margin invisibly small by the standards of the universe. Again, on 12 February 1947, yet another Russian city had a still narrower escape, when the second great meteorite of the twentieth century detonated less than four hundred kilometres from Vladivostok, with an explosion rivalling that of the newly invented uranium bomb. In those days, there was nothing that men could do to protect themselves against the last random shots in the cosmic bombardment that had once scarred the face of the Moon. The meteorites of 1908 and 1947 had struck uninhabited wilderness; but by the end of the twenty- first century, there was no region left on Earth that could be safely used for celestial target practice. The human race had spread from pole to pole. And so, inevitably. At 09.46 GMT on the morning of 11 September, in the exceptionally beautiful summer of the year 2077, most of the inhabitants of Europe saw a dazzling fireball appear in the eastern sky. Within seconds it was brighter than the sun, and as it moved across the heavens - at first in utter silence - it left behind it a churning column of dust and smoke. Somewhere above Austria it began to disintegrate, producing a series of concussions so violent that more than a million people had their hearing permanently damaged. They were the lucky ones. Moving at fifty kilometres a second, a thousand tons of rock and metal impacted on the plains of northern Italy, destroying in a few flaming moments the labour of cen- turies. The cities of Padua and Verona were wiped from the face of the earth; and the last glories of Venice sank for ever beneath the sea as the waters of the Adriatic came - thundering landwards after the hammer-blow from space. Six hundred thousand people died, and the total damage was more than a trillion dollars. But the loss to art, to history, to science - to the whole human race, for the rest of time - was beyond all computation. It was as if a great war had been fought and lost in a single morning; and few could draw much pleasure from the fact that, as the dust of destruction slowly settled, for months the whole world witnessed the most splendid dawns and sunsets since Krakatoa. After the initial shock, mankind reacted with a determination and a unity that no earlier age could have shown. Such a disaster, it was realized, might not occur again for a thousand years - but it might occur tomorrow. And the next time, the consequences could be even worse. Very well; there would be no next time. A hundred years earlier a much poorer world, with far feebler resources, had squandered its wealth attempting to destroy weapons launched, suicidally, by mankind against itself. The effort had never been successful, but the skills acquired then had not been forgotten. Now they could be used for a far nobler purpose, and on an infinitely vaster stage. No meteorite large enough to cause catastrophe would ever again be allowed to breach the defences of Earth. So began Project SPACEGUARD. Fifty years later - and in a way that none of its designers could ever have anticipated - it justified its existence. CHAPTER TWO - Intruder By the year 2130, the Mars-based radars were discovering new asteroids at the rate of a dozen a day. The SPACE- GUARD computers automatically calculated their orbits, and stored away the information in their enormous mem- ories, so that every few months any interested astronomer could have a look at the accumulated statistics. These were now quite impressive. It had taken more than a hundred and twenty years to collect the first thousand asteroids, since the discovery of Ceres, largest of these tiny worlds, on the very first day of the nineteenth century. Hundreds had been found and lost and found again; they existed in such swarms that one exasperated astronomer had christened them 'vermin of the skies'. He would have been appalled to know that SPACEGUARD was now keeping track of half a million. Only the five giants - Ceres, Pallas, Juno, Eunomia and Vesta - were more than two hundred kilometres in dia- meter; the vast majority were merely oversized boulders that would fit into a small park. Almost all moved in orbits that lay beyond Mars; only the few that came far enough sunwards to be a possible danger to Earth were the concern of SPACEGUARD. And not one in a thousand of these, during the entire future history of the solar system, would pass within a million kilometres of Earth. The object first catalogued as 31/439, according to the year and the order of its discovery, was detected while still outside the orbit of Jupiter. There was nothing un- usual about its location; many asteroids went beyond Saturn before turning once more towards their distant master, the sun. And Thule II, most far-ranging of all, travelled so close to Uranus that it might well have been a lost moon of that planet. But a first radar contact at such a distance was un- precedented; clearly, 31/439 must be of exceptional size. From the strength of the echo, the computers deduced a diameter of at least forty kilometres; such a giant had not - been discovered for a hundred years. That it had been overlooked for so long seemed incredible. Then the orbit was calculated, and the mystery was resolved - to be replaced by a greater one. 31/439 was not travelling on a normal asteroidal path, along an ellipse which it retraced with clockwork precision every few years. It was a lonely wanderer between the stars, making its first and last visit to the solar system - for it was mov- ing so swiftly that the gravitational field of the sun could never capture it. It would flash inwards past the orbits of Jupiter, Mars, Earth, Venus and Mercury, gaining speed - as it did so, until it rounded the sun and headed out once again into the unknown. It was at this point that the computers started flashing their 'Hi there! We have something interesting' sign, and for the first time 31/439 came to the attention of human beings. There was a brief flurry of excitement at SPACEGUARD Headquarters, and the interstellar vagabond was quickly dignified by a name instead of a mere num- ber. Long ago, the astronomers had exhausted Greek and Roman mythology; now they were working through the Hindu pantheon. And so 31/439 was christened Rama. For a few days, the news media made a fuss of the visitor, but they were badly handicapped by the sparsity of information. Only two facts were known about Rama - its unusual orbit, and its approximate size. Even this was merely an educated guess, based upon the strength of the radar echo. Through the telescope, Rama still ap- peared as a faint, fifteenth magnitude star - much too small to show a visible disc But as it plunged in towards the heart of the solar system, it would grow brighter and larger, month by month; before it vanished for ever, the orbiting observatories would be able to gather more pre- cise information about its shape and size. There was plenty of time, and perhaps during the next 'few years some spaceship on its ordinary business might be routed close enough to get good photographs. An actual rendez- vous was most unlikely; the energy cost would be far too great to permit physical contact with an object cutting across the orbits of the planets at more than a hundred thousand kilometres an hour. So the world soon forgot about Rama; but the as- tronomers did not. Their excitement grew with the pass- ing months, as the new asteroid presented them with more and more puzzles. First of all, there was the problem of Rama's light curve. it didn't have one. All known asteroids, without exception, showed a slow variation in their brilliance, waxing and waning within a period of a few hours. It had been recognized for more than two centuries that this was an inevitable result of their spin, and their irregular shape. As they toppled end over end along their orbits the reflecting surfaces they presented to the sun were continually changing, and their brightness varied accordingly. Rama showed no such changes. Either it was not spin- ning at all or it was perfectly symmetrical. Both explana- tions seemed equally unlikely. There the matter rested for several months, because none of the big orbiting telescopes could be spared from their regular job of peering into the remote depths of the universe. Space astronomy was an expensive hobby, and time on a large instrument could easily cost a thou- sand dollars a minute. Dr William Stenton would never have been able to grab the Farside two-hundred-metre reflector for a full quarter of an hour, if a more impor- tant programme had not been temporarily derailed by the failure of a fifty cent capacitor. One astronomer's bad luck was his good fortune. Bill Stenton did not know what he had caught until the next day, when he was able to get computer time to process his results. Even when they were finally flashed on his display screen, it took him several minutes to under- stand what they meant. The sunlight reflected from Rama was not, after all, absolutely constant in its intensity. There was a very small variation - hard to detect, but quite unmistakable, and extremely regular. Like all the other asteroids, Rama was indeed spinning. But whereas the normal 'day' for an asteroid was several hours, Rama's was only four minutes. Dr Stenton did some quick calculations, and found it hard to believe the results. At its equator, this tiny world must be spinning at more than a thousand kilometres an hour; it would be rather unhealthy to attempt a landing anywhere except at the poles. The centrifugal force at Rama's equator must be powerful enough to flick any loose objects away from it at an acceleration of almost one gravity. Rama was a rolling stone that could never have gathered any cosmic moss; it was surprising that such a body had managed to hold itself together, and- had not long ago shattered into a million fragments. An object forty kilometres across, with a rotation period of only four minutes - where did that fit into the astro- nomical scheme of things? Dr Stenton was a somewhat imaginative man, a little too prone to jump to conclusions. He now jumped to one which gave him a very uncom- fortable few minutes indeed. The only specimen of the celestial zoo that fitted this description was a collapsed star. Perhaps Rama was a dead sun - a madly spinning sphere of neutronium, every cubic centimetre weighing billions of tons... At this point, there flashed briefly through Dr Stenton's horrified mind the memory of that timeless classic, H. G. Wells's The Star. He had first read it as a very small boy, and it had helped to spark his interest in astronomy. Across more than two centuries of time, it had lost none of its magic and terror. He would never forget the images of hurricanes and tidal waves, of cities sliding into the sea, as that other visitor from the stars smashed into Jupiter and then fell sunwards past the Earth. True, the star that old Wells described was not cold, but incandes- cent, and wrought much of its destruction by heat. That scarcely mattered; even if Rama was a cold body, reflect- ing only the light of the sun, it could kill by gravity as easily as by fire. Any stellar mass intruding into the solar system would completely distort the orbits of the planets. The Earth had only to move a few million kilometres sunwards - or starwards - for the delicate balance of climate to be destroyed. The Antarctic icecap could melt and flood all :low4ying land; or the oceans could freeze and the whole world be locked in an eternal winter. Just a nudge in either direction would be enough Then Dr Stenton relaxed and breathed a sigh of relief. This was all nonsense; he should be ashamed of himself. Rama could not possibly be made of condensed matter. No star-sized mass could penetrate so deeply into the solar system without producing disturbances which would have betrayed it long ago. The orbits of all the planets would have been affected; that, after all, was how Neptune, Pluto and Persephone had been discovered. No, it was utterly impossible for an object as massive as a dead sun to sneak up unobserved. In a way, it was a pity. An encounter with a dark star would have been quite exciting. While it lasted... CHAPTER THREE - Rama and Sita The extraordinary meeting of the Space Advisory Coun- cil was brief and stormy. Even in the twenty-second cen- tury, no way had yet been discovered of keeping elderly and conservative scientists from occupying crucial ad- ministrative positions. Indeed, it was doubted if the prob lem ever would be solved. To make matters worse, the current Chairman of the SAC was Professor (Emeritus) Olaf Davidson, the distin- guished astrophysicist. Professor Davidson was not very much interested in objects smaller than galaxies, and never bothered to conceal his prejudices. And though he had to admit that ninety per cent of his science was now based upon observations from space-borne instruments, he was not at all happy about it. No less than three times during his distinguished career, satellites specially launched to prove one of his pet theories had done pre- cisely the opposite. The question before the Council was straightforward enough. There was no doubt that Rama was an unusual object - but was it an important one? In a few months it would be gone for ever, so there was little time in which to act. Opportunities missed now would never recur. At rather a horrifying cost, a space-probe soon to be launched from Mars to beyond Neptune could be modi- fied and sent on a high-speed trajectory to meet Rama. There was no hope of a rendezvous; it would be the fast- est fly-by on record, for the two bodies would pass each other at two hundred thousand kilometres an hour. Rama would be observed intensively for only a few min- utes - and in real closeup for less than a second. But with the right instrumentation, that would be long enough to settle many questions. Although Professor Davidson took a very jaundiced view of the Neptune probe, it had already been approved and he saw no point in sending more good money after bad. He spoke eloquently on the follies of asteroid-chas- ing, and the urgent need for a new high-resolution inter- ferometer on the Moon to prove the newly-revived Big Bang theory of creation, once and for all. - That was a grave tactical error, because the three most ardent supporters of the Modified Steady State Theory were also members of the Council. They secretly agreed with Professor Davidson that asteroid-chasing was a waste of money; nevertheless... He lost by one vote. Three months later the space-probe, rechristened Sita, was launched from Phobos, the inner moon of Mars. The flight time was seven weeks, and the instrument was switched to full power only five minutes before intercep- tion. Simultaneously, a cluster of camera pods was re- leased, to sail past Rama so that it could be photo- graphed from all sides. The first images, from ten thousand kilometres away, brought to a halt the activities of all mankind. On a bib lion television screens, there appeared a tiny, featureless cylinder, growing rapidly second by second. By the time it had doubled its size, no one could pretend any longer that Rama was a natural object. Its body was a cylinder so geometrically perfect that it might have been turned on a lathe - one with centres fifty kilometres apart. The two ends were quite flat, apart from some small structures at the centre of one face, and were twenty kilometres across; from a distance, when there was no sense of scale, Rama looked almost comic- ally like an ordinary domestic boiler. Rama grew until it filled the screen. Its surface was a dull, drab grey, as colourless as the Moon, and completely devoid of markings except at one point. Halfway along the cylinder there was a kilometre-wide stain or smear, as if something had once hit and splattered, ages ago. There was no sign that the impact had done the slight- est damage to Rama's spinning walls; but this mark had produced the slight fluctuation in brightness that had led to Stenton's discovery. The images from the other cameras added nothing new. However, the trajectories their pods traced .through Rama's minute gravitational field gave one other vital piece of information - the mass of the cylinder. It was far too light to be a solid body. To nobody's great surprise, it was clear that Rama must be hollow. The long-hoped-for, long-feared encounter had come at last. Mankind was about to receive its first visitor from the stars. CHAPTER FOUR - Rendezvous Commander Norton remembered those first TV trans- missions, which he had replayed so many times, during the final minutes of the rendezvous. But there was one thing no electronic image could possibly convey - and that was Rama's overwhelming size. He had never received such an impression when land- ing on a natural body like the Moon or Mars. Those were worlds, and one expected them to be big. Yet he had also landed on Jupiter VIII, which was slightly larger than Rama - and that had seemed quite a small object. It was very easy to resolve the paradox. His judgement was wholly altered by the fact that this was an artifact, millions of times heavier than anything that Man had ever put into space. The mass of Rama was at least ten million million tons; to any spaceman, that was not only an awe-inspiring, but a terrifying thought. No wonder that he sometimes felt a sense of insignificance, and even depression, as that cylinder of sculptured, ageless metal filled more and more of the sky. There was also a sense of danger here, that was wholly novel to his experience. In every earlier landing he had known what to expect; there was always the possibility of accident, but never of surprise. With Rama, surprise was the only certainty. Now Endeavour was hovering less than a thousand metres above the North Pole of the cylinder, at the very centre of the slowly turning disc. This end has been chosen because it was the one in sunlight; as Rama rotated, the shadows of the short enigmatic structures near the axis swept steadily across the metal plain. The north- ern face of Rama was a gigantic sundial, measuring out the swift passage of its four-minute day. Landing a five-thousand-ton spaceship at the centre of a spinning disc was the least of Commander Norton's worries. It was no different from docking at the axis of a large space-station; Endeavour's lateral jets had - already given her a matching spin, and he could trust Lieutenant Joe Calvert to put her down as gently as a snowflake, with or without the aid of the nay computer. 'In three minutes,' said Joe, without taking his eyes from the display, 'we'll know if it's made of anti-matter.' Norton grinned, as he recalled some of the more hair- raising theories about Rama's origin. If that unlikely speculation was true, in a few seconds there would be the biggest bang since the solar system was formed. The total annihilation of ten thousand tons would, briefly, provide the planets with a second sun. - Yet the mission profile had allowed even for this re- mote contingency; Endeavour had squirted Rama with one of her jets from a safe thousand kilometres away. Nothing whatsoever had happened when the expanding cloud of vapour arrived on target - and a matter-anti- matter reaction involving even a few milligrams would have produced an awesome firework display. Norton, like all space commanders, was a cautious man. He had looked long and hard at the northern face of Rama, choosing the point of touchdown. After much thought, he had decided to avoid the obvious spot - the exact centre, on the axis itself. A clearly marked circular disc, a hundred metres in diameter, was centred on the Pole, and Norton had a strong suspicion that this must be the outer seal of an enormous airlock. The creatures who had built this hollow world must have had some way of taking' their ships inside. This was the logical place for the main entrance, and Norton thought it might be UN- wise to block the front door with his own vessel. But this decision generated other problems. If Endive- our touched down even a few metres from the axis, Rama's rapid spin would start her sliding away from the pole. At first, the centrifugal force would be very weak, but it would be continuous and inexorable. Com- mannered Norton did not relish the thought of 'his ship slithering across the polar plain, gaining speed minute by minute until it was slung off into space at a thou- sand kilometres an hour when it reached the edge of the disc. It was possible that Rama's minute gravitational field - about one thousandth of Earth's - might prevent this from happening. It would hold Endeavour against the plain with a force of several tons, and if the surface was sufficiently rough the ship might stay near the Pole. But Commander Norton had no intention of balancing an UN- known frictional force against a quite certain centrifugal one. Fortunately, Rama's designers had provided an answer. Equally spaced around the polar axis were three low, pill- box shaped structures, about ten metres in diameter. If Endeavour touched down between any two of these, the centrifugal drift would fetch her up against them and she would be held firmly in place, like a ship glued against a quayside by the incoming waves. 'Contact in fifteen seconds,' said Joe. As he tensed him- self. above the duplicate controls, which he hoped he would not have to touch, Commander Norton became acutely aware of all that had come to focus on this instant of time. This, surely, was the most momentous landing since the first touchdown on the Moon, a century and a half ago. The grey pill-boxes drifted slowly upwards outside the control port. There was the last hiss of a reaction jet, and a barely perceptible jar. In the weeks that had passed, Commander Norton had often wondered what he would say at this moment. But now that it was upon him, History chose his words, and he spoke almost automatically, barely aware of the echo from the past: 'Rama Base. Endeavour has landed.' As recently as a month ago, he would never have believed it possible. The ship had been on a routine mission, checking and emplacing asteroid warning beacons, when the order had come. Endeavour was the only spacecraft in the solar system which could possibly make a rendezvous with the intruder before it whipped round the sun and hurled itself back towards the stars. Even so, it had been necessary to rob three other ships of the Solar Survey, which were now drifting helplessly until tankers could refuel them. Norton feared that it would be a long time before the skippers of Calypso, Beagle and Challenger would speak to him again. Even with all this extra propellant, it had been a long hard chase; Rama was already inside the orbit of Venus when Endeavour caught up with her. No other ship could ever do so; this -privilege was unique, and not a moment of the weeks ahead was to be wasted. A thousand scientists on Earth would have cheerfully mortgaged their souls for this opportunity; now they could only watch over the TV circuits, biting their lips and thinking how much better they could do the job. They were prob- ably fight, but there was no alternative. The inexorable laws of celestial mechanics had decreed that Endeavour was the first, and the last, of all Man's ships that would ever make contact with Rama. The advice he was continually receiving from Earth did little to alleviate Norton's responsibility. If split-second decisions had to be made, no one could help him; the radio time-lag to Mission Control was already ten min- utes, and increasing. He often envied the great navigators of the past, before the days of electronic communications, who could interpret their sealed orders without continual monitoring from headquarters. Why they made mistakes, no one ever knew. Yet at the same time, he was glad that some decisions could be delegated to Earth. Now that Endeavour's orbit had coalesced with Rama's they were heading sunwards like a single body; in forty days they would reach peri- helion, and pass within twenty million kilometres of the sun. That was far too close for comfort; long before then, Endeavour would have to use her remaining fuel to nudge herself into a safer orbit. They would have per- haps three weeks of exploring time, before they - parted from Rama for ever. After that, the problem would be Earth's. Endeavour would be virtually helpless, speeding on an orbit which could make her the first ship to reach the stars - in ap- proximately fifty thousand years. There was no need to worry, Mission Control had promised. Somehow, regard- less of cost, Endeavour would be refuelled - even if it proved necessary to send tankers after her, and abandon them in space once they had transferred every gramme of propellant. Rama was a prize worth any risk, short of a suicide mission. And, of course, it might even come to that. Com- mander Norton had no illusions on this score. For the first time in a hundred years an element of total un- certainty had entered human affairs. Uncertainty was one thing that neither scientists nor politicians could toler- ate. If that was the price of resolving it, Endeavour and her crew would be expendable. CHAPTER FIVE - First EVA Rama was as silent as a tomb - which, perhaps, it was. No radio signals, on any frequency; no vibrations that the seismographs could pick up, apart from the micro-tremors undoubtedly caused by the sun's increasing heat; no elec- trical currents; no radioactivity. It was almost ominously quiet; one might have expected that even an asteroid would be noisier. What did we expect? Norton asked himself. A com- mittee of welcome? He was not sure whether to be dis- appointed or relieved. The initiative, at any rate, ap peared up to him. His orders were to wait for twenty-four hours, then to go out and explore. Nobody slept much that first day; even the crew members not on duty spent their time monitoring the ineffectually probing instruments, or simply looking out of the observation ports at the starkly geometrical landscape. Is this world alive? they asked themselves, over and over again. Is it dead? Or is it merely sleeping? On the first EVA, Norton took only one companion - Lieut-Commander Karl Mercer, his tough and resource- ful life-support officer. He had no intention of getting out of sight of the ship, and if there was any trouble, it was unlikely that a larger party would be safe. As a pre- caution, however, he had two more crew members, al- ready suited up, standing by in the airlock. The few grammes of weight that Rama's combined gravitational and centrifugal fields gave them were neither help nor hindrance; they had to rely entirely on their jets. As soon as possible, Norton told himself, he would string a cat's-cradle of guide ropes between the ship and the pill-boxes, so that they could move around without wasting propellants. The nearest pill-box was only ten metres from the air- lock, and Norton's first concern was to check that the con- tact had caused no damage to the ship. Endeavour's hull was resting against the curving wall with a thrust of see- real tons, but the pressure was evenly distributed. Re- assured, he began to drift around the circular structure, trying to determine its purpose. Norton had travelled only a few metres when he came across an interruption in the smooth, apparently metallic wall. At first, he thought it was some peculiar decoration, for it seemed to serve no useful function. Six radial grooves, or slots, were deeply recessed in the metal, and lying in them were six crossed bars like the spokes of a rimless wheel, with a small hub at the centre. But there was no way in which the wheel could be turned, as it was embedded in the wall. Then he noticed, with growing excitement, that there were deeper recesses at the ends of the spokes, nicely shaped to accept a clutching hand (claw? tentacle?). If one stood so, bracing against the wall, and pulled on the spoke so... Smooth as silk, the wheel slid out of the wall. To his utter astonishment - for he had been virtually certain that any moving parts would have become vacuum- welded ages ago - Norton found himself holding a spoked wheel. He might have been the captain of some old wind- jammer standing at the helm of his ship. He was glad that his helmet sunshade did not allow Mercer to read his expression. He was startled, but also angry with himself; perhaps he had already made his first mistake. Were alarms now sounding inside Rama, and had his thoughtless action already triggered some implacable mechanism? But Endeavour reported no change; its sensors still de- tected nothing but faint thermal crepitations and his own movements. 'Well, Skipper - are you going to turn it?' Norton thought once more of his instructions. 'Use your own discretion, but proceed with caution.' If he checked every single move with Mission Control, he would never get anywhere. 'What's your diagnosis, Karl?' he asked Mercer. 'It's obviously a- manual control for an airlock - prob- ably an emergency back-up system in case of power fail- ure. I can't imagine any technology, however advanced, that wouldn't take such precautions.' 'And it would be fail-safe,' Norton told himself. 'It could only be operated if there was no possible danger to the system...' He grasped two opposing spokes of the windlass, braced his feet against the ground, and tested the wheel. It did not budge. 'Give me a hand,' he asked Mercer. Each took a spoke; exerting their utmost strength, they were unable to pro- duce the slightest movement. Of course, there was no reason to suppose that clocks and corkscrews on Rama turned in the same direction as they did on Earth... - 'Let's try the other way,' suggested Mercer. This time, there was no resistance. The wheel rotated almost effortlessly through a full circle. Then, very smoothly, it took up the load. Half a metre away, the curving wall of the pill-box started to move, like a slowly opening clamshell. A few particles of dust, driven by wisps of escaping air, streamed outwards like dazzling diamonds as the brilliant sunlight caught them. The road to Rama lay open. CHAPTER SIX - Committee It had been a serious mistake, Dr Bose often thought, to put the United Planets Headquarters on the Moon. In- evitably, Earth tended to dominate the proceedings - as it dominated the landscape beyond the dome. If they had to build here, perhaps they should have gone to the Far- side, where that hypnotic disc never shed its rays... But, of course, it was much too late to change, and in any case there was no real alternative. Whether the col- onies liked it or not, Earth would be the cultural and economic overlord of the solar system for centuries to come. Dr Bose had been born on Earth, and had not emi- grated to Mars until he was thirty, so he felt that he could view the political situation fairly dispassionately. He knew now that he would never return to his home planet, even though it was only five hours away by shut- tle. At 115, he was in perfect health, but he could not face the reconditioning needed to accustom him to three times the gravity he had enjoyed for most of his life. He was exiled for ever from the world of his birth; not being a sentimental man, this -had never depressed him unduly. What did depress him sometimes was the need for deal- ing, year after year, with the same familiar faces. The marvels of medicine were all very well, and certainly he had no desire to put back the clock - but there were men around this conference table with whom he had worked for more than half a century. He knew exactly what they would say and how they would vote on any given subject. He wished that, some day, one of them would do some- thing totally unexpected - even something quite crazy. And probably they felt exactly the same way about him... The Rama Committee was still manageably small, though doubtless that would soon be rectified. His six colleagues - the UP representatives for Mercury, Earth, Luna, Ganymede, Titan and Triton - were all present in the flesh. They had to be; electronic diplomacy was not possible over solar system distances. Some elder states- men, accustomed to the instantaneous communications which Earth had long taken for granted, had never re- conciled themselves to the fact that radio waves took minutes, or even hours, to journey across the gulfs be- tween the planets. 'Can't you scientists do something about it?' they had been heard to complain bitterly, when told that face-to-face conversation was impossible between Earth and any of its remoter children. Only the Moon had that barely acceptable one-and-a-half-second delay - with all the political and psychological conse- quences which it implied. Because of this fact of astro- nomical life, the Moon - and only the Moon - would always be a suburb of Earth. Also present in person were three of the specialists who had been co-opted to the Committee. Professor Davidson, the astronomer, was an old acquaintance; today, he did not seem his usual irascible self. Dr Bose knew nothing of the infighting that had preceded the launch of the first probe to Rama, but the Professor's colleagues had not let him forget it. Dr Thelma Price was familiar through her numerous television appearances, though she had first made her reputation fifty years ago during the archaeological ex- plosion that had followed the draining of that vast mar- ine museum, the Mediterranean. Dr Bose could still recall the excitement of that time, when the lost treasures of the Greeks, Romans and a dozen other civilizations were restored to the light of day. That was one of the few occasions when he was sorry to be living on Mars. The exobiologist, Carlisle Perera, was another obvious choice; so was Dennis Solomons, the science historian. Dr Bose was slightly less happy about the presence of Conrad Taylor, the celebrated anthropologist, who bad made his reputation by uniquely combining scholarship and eroti- cism in his study of puberty rites in late twentieth-cen- tury Beverley Hills. No one, however, could possibly have disputed the right of Sir Lewis Sands to be on the Committee. A man whose knowledge was matched only by his urbanity, Sir Lewis was reputed to lose his composure only when called the Arnold Toynbee of his age. The great historian was not present in person; he stub- bornly refused to leave Earth, even for so momentous a meeting as this. His stereo image, indistinguishable from reality, apparently occupied the chair to Dr Bose's right; as if to complete the illusion, someone had placed a glass of water in front of him. Dr Bose considered that this sort of technological tour de force was an unnecessary gim- mick, but it was surprising how many undeniably great men were childishly delighted to be in two places at once. Sometimes this electronic miracle produced comic dis- asters; he had been at one diplomatic reception where somebody had tried to walk through a stereogram - and discovered, too late, that it was the real person. And it was even funnier to watch projections trying to shake hands... His Excellency the Ambassador for Mars to the United Planets called his wandering thoughts to order, cleared his throat, and said: 'Gentlemen, the Committee is now in session. I think I am correct in saying that this is a gathering of unique talents, assembled to deal with a unique situation. The directive that the Secretary-Gen- eral has given us is to evaluate that situation, and to ad- vise Commander Norton when necessary. This was a miracle of over-simplification, and everyone knew it. Unless there was a real emergency, the Commit- tee might never be in direct contact with Commander Norton - if, indeed, he ever heard of its existence. For the Committee was a temporary creation of the United Plan- ets' Science Organization, reporting through its Director to the Secretary-General. It was true that the Space Sur- vey was part of the UP - but on the Operations, not the Science side. In theory, this should not make much differ- ence; there was no reason why the Rama Committee - or anyone else for that matter - should not call up Com- mander Norton and offer helpful advice. But Deep Space Communications are expensive. En- deavour could be contacted only through PLANETCOM, which was an autonomous corporation, famous for the strictness and efficiency of its accounting. It took a long time to establish a line of credit with PLANETCOM; some- where, someone was working on this; but at the moment, PLANETCOM's hard-hearted computers did not recognize the existence of the Rama Committee. 'This Commander Norton,' said Sir Robert Mackay, the Ambassador for Earth. 'He has a tremendous re- sponsibility. What sort of person is he?' 'I can answer that,' said Professor Davidson, his fingers flying over the keyboard of his memory pad. He frowned at the screenful of information, and started to make an instant synopsis. 'William Tsien Norton, Born 2077, Brisbane, Oceana. Educated Sydney, Bombay, Houston. Then five years at Astrograd, specializing in propulsion. Commissioned 2102. Rose through usual ranks - Lieutenant on the Third Persephone expedition, distinguished himself dur- ing fifteenth attempt to establish base on Venus ... um um - . . exemplary record . . . dual citizenship, Earth and Mars ... wife and one child in Brisbane, wife and two in Port Lowell, with option on third...' 'Wife?' asked Taylor innocently. 'No, child of course,' snapped the Professor, before he caught the grin on the other's face. Mild laughter rippled round the table, though the overcrowded terrestrials looked more envious than amused. After a century of de- termined effort, Earth had still failed to get its popula- tion below the target of one billion ... .... appointed commanding officer Solar Survey Re- search Vessel Endeavour. First voyage to retrograde sat- ellites of Jupiter ... um, that was a tricky one.., on aster- oid mission when ordered to prepare for this operation ... managed to beat deadline...' The Professor cleared the display and looked up at his colleagues. 'I think we were extremely lucky, considering that he was the only man available at such short notice. We might have had the usual run-of-the-mill captain.' He sounded as if be was referring to the typical peg-legged scourge of the spaceways, pistol in one hand and cutlass in the other. 'The record--only proves that he's competent,' objected the Ambassador from Mercury (population: i 12,500 but growing). 'How will be react in a wholly novel situation like this?' On Earth, Sir Lewis Sands cleared his throat. A second and a half later, he did so on the Moon. 'Not exactly a novel situation,' he reminded the Her- mian, 'even though it's three centuries since it last oc- curred. If Rama is dead, or unoccupied - and so far all the evidence suggests that it is - Norton is in the position of an archaeologist discovering the ruins of an extinct culture.' He bowed politely to Dr Price, who nodded in agreement. 'Obvious examples are Scbliemann at Troy or Mouhot at Angkor Vat. The danger is minimal, though of course accident can never be completely ruled out.' 'But what about the booby-traps and trigger mechan- isms these Pandora people have been talking about?' asked Dr Price. 'Pandora?' asked the Hermian Ambassador quickly. 'What's that?' 'It's a crackpot movement,' explained Sir Robert, with as much embarrassment as a diplomat was ever likely to show, 'which is convinced that Rama is a grave potential danger. A box that shouldn't be opened, you know.' He doubted if the Hermian did know: classical studies were not encouraged on Mercury. 'Pandora - paranoia,' snorted Conrad Taylor. 'Oh, of course, such things are conceivable, but why should any intelligent race want to play childish tricks?' 'Well, even ruling out such unpleasantness,' Sir Robert continued, 'we still have the much more ominous possi- bility of an active, inhabited Rama. Then the situation is one of an encounter between two cultures - at very diff- erent technological levels. Pizzaro and the Incas. Peary and the Japanese. Europe and Africa. Almost invariably, the consequences have been disastrous - for one or both parties. I'm not making any recommendations: I'm mere- ly pointing out precedents.' 'Thank you, Sir Robert,' replied Dr Bose. It was a mild nuisance, he thought, having two 'Sirs' on one small com- mittee; in these latter days, knighthood was an honour which few Englishmen escaped. 'I'm sure we've all thought of these alarming possibilities. But if the creat- ures inside Rama are - er - malevolent - will it really make the slightest difference what we do?' 'They might ignore us if we go away.' 'What - after they've travelled billions of miles and thousands of years?' The argument had reached the take-off point, and was now self-sustaining. Dr Bose sat back in his chair, said very little, and waited for the consensus to emerge. It was just as he had predicted. Everyone agreed that, once he had opened the first door, it was inconceivable that Commander Norton should not open the second. CHAPTER SEVEN - Two Wives If his wives ever compared his videograms, Commander Norton thought with more amusement than concern, it would involve him in a lot of extra work. Now, he could make one long 'gram and dupe it, adding only brief- per- sonal messages and endearments before shooting the al- most identical copies off to Mars and Earth. Of course, it was highly unlikely that his wives ever would do such a thing; even at the concessionary rates allowed to spacemen's families, it would be expensive. And there would be no point in it; his families were on excellent terms with each other, and exchanged- the usual greetings on birthdays and anniversaries. Yet, on -the whole, perhaps it was just as well that the girls had never met, and probably never would. Myrna had been born on Mars and so could not- tolerate the high gravity of Earth. And Caroline hated even the twenty-five minutes of the longest possible terrestrial journey. 'Sorry I'm a day late with this transmission,' said the Commander after he had finished the general-purpose preliminaries, 'but I've been away from the ship for the last thirty hours, believe it or not. . . - 'Don't be alarmed - everything is under control, going perfectly. It's taken us two days, but we're almost through the airlock complex. We could have done it in a couple of hours, if we'd known what we do now. But we took no chances, sent remote cameras ahead, and cycled all the locks a dozen times to make sure they wouldn't seize up behind us - after we'd gone through... 'Each lock is a simple revolving cylinder with a slot on one side. You go in through this opening, crank the cyl- inder round a hundred and eighty degrees - and the slot then matches up with another door so that you can step out of it. Or float, in this case. 'The Ramans really made sure of things. There are three of these cylinder-locks, one after the other just in- side the outer hull and below the entry pill-box. I can't imagine how even one would fail, unless someone blew it up with explosives, but if it did, there would be a second back-up, and then a third... 'And that's only the beginning. The final lock opens into a straight corridor, almost half a kilometre long. It looks clean and tidy, like everything else we've seen; - every few metres there are small ports that probably held lights, but -now everything is completely black and, I don't mind telling you, scary. There are also two parallel slots, about a centimetre wide, cut in the walls and run- ning the whole length of the tunnel. We suspect that some kind of shuttle runs inside these, to tow equipment - or people - back and forth. It would save us a lot of trouble if we could get it working... 'I mentioned that the tunnel was half a kilometre long. Well, from our seismic soundings we knew that's about the thickness of the shell, so obviously we were almost through it. And at the end of the tunnel we were'nt sur- prised to find another of those cylindrical airlocks. 'Yes, and another. And another. These people seem to have done everything in threes. We're in the final lock chamber now, awaiting the OK from Earth before we go through. The interior of Rama is only a few metres away. I'll be a lot happier when the suspense is over. 'You know Jerry Kirchoff, my Exec, who's got such a library of real books that he can't afford to emigrate from Earth? Well, Jerry told me about a situation just like this, back at the beginning of the twenty-first - no, twen- tieth century. An archaeologist found the tomb of an Egyptian king, the first one that hadn't been looted by robbers. His workmen took months to dig their way in, chamber by - chamber, until they came to the final wall. Then they broke through the masonery, and he held out a lantern and pushed his head inside. He found himself looking into a whole roomful of treasure - incredible stuff gold and jewels ... 'Perhaps this place is also a tomb; it seems more and more -likely. Even now, there's still not the slightest sound, or hint of any activity. Well, tomorrow we should know.' Commander Norton switched the record to HOLD. What else, he wondered, should he say about the work before he began 'the separate personal messages to his families? Normally, he never went into so much detail, but these circumstances were scarcely normal. This might be the last 'gram he would ever send to those he loved; he owed it to them to explain what he was doing. By the time they saw these images, and heard these words, he would be inside Rama - for better or for worse. CHAPTER EIGHT - Through the Hub Never before had Norton felt so strongly his kinship with that long dead Egyptologist. Not since Howard Carter had first peered into the tomb of Tutankhamen could any man have known a moment such as this - yet the comparison was almost laughably ludicrous. Tutankhamen had been buried only yesterday - not even four thousand years ago; Rama might be older than mankind. That little tomb in the Valley of the Kings could have been lost in the corridors through which they had already passed, yet the space that lay beyond this final seal was at least a million times greater. And as for the treasure it might hold - that was beyond imagina- tion. No one had spoken over the radio circuits for at least five minutes; the well-trained team had not even re- ported verbally when all the checks were complete. Mercer had simply given him the OK sign and waved him towards the open tunnel. It was as if everyone real- ized that this was a moment for History, not to be spoiled by unnecessary small-talk. That suited Commander Nor- ton, for at the moment he too had nothing to say. He flicked on the beam of his flashlight, triggered his jets, and drifted slowly down the short corridor, trailing his safety line behind him. Only seconds later, he was inside. Inside what? All before him was total darkness; not a glimmer of light was reflected back from the beam. He bad expected this, but he had not really believed it. All the calculations had shown that the far wail was tens of kilometres away; now his eyes told him that this was in- deed the truth. As he drifted slowly into that darkness, he felt a sudden need for the reassurance of his safety line, stronger than any he had ever experienced before, even on his very first EVA. And that was ridiculous; he had looked out across the light-years and the megaparsecs without vertigo; why should he be disturbed by a few cubic kilometres of emptiness? He was still queasily brooding over this problem when the momentum damper at the end of the line braked him gently to a halt, with a barely perceptible rebound. He swept the vainly-probing beam of the flashlight down from the nothingness ahead, to examine the surface from which he had emerged. He might have been hovering over the centre of a small crater, which was itself a dimple in the base of a much larger one. On either side rose a complex of ter- races and ramps - all geometrically precise and obviously artificial - which extended for as far as the beam could reach. About a hundred metres away he could see the exit of the other two airlock systems, identical with this one. And that was all. There was nothing particularly ex- otic or alien about the scene: in fact, it bore a consider- able resemblance to an abandoned mine. Norton felt a vague sense of disappointment; after all this effort, there should have been some dramatic, even transcendental revelation. Then he reminded himself that he could see only a couple of hundred metres. The darkness beyond his field of view might yet contain more wonders than he cared to face. He reported briefly to his anxiously-waiting compan- ions, then added: 'I'm sending out the flare - two min- utes delay. Here goes.' - With all his strength, he threw the little cylinder straight upwards - or outwards - and started to count seconds as it dwindled along the beam. Before he had reached the quarter minute it was out of sight; when he had got to a hundred be shielded his eyes and aimed the camera. He had always been good at estimating time; ht was only two seconds off when the world exploded with light. And this time there was no cause for disappoint- ment. Even the millions of candlepower of the flare could not light up the whole of this enormous cavity, but now he could see enough to grasp its plan and appreciate its ti- tanic scale. He was at one end of a hollow cylinder at least ten kilometres wide, and of indefinite length. From his viewpoint at the central axis he could see such a mass of detail on the curving walls surrounding him that his mind could not absorb more than a minute fraction of it.; he was looking at the landscape of an entire world by a single flash of lightning, and he tried by a deliberate effort of will to freeze the image in his mind. All round him, the terraced slopes of the 'crater' rose up until they merged into the solid 'wall that rimmed the sky. No - that impression was false; he must discard the instincts both of earth and of space, and reorientate him- self to a new system of coordinates. He was not at the lowest point of this strange, inside- out world, but the highest. From here, all directions were down, not up. If he moved away from this central axis, towards the curving wall which he must no longer think of as a wall, gravity would steadily increase. When he reached the inside surface of the cylinder, he could stand upright on it at any point, feet towards the stars and head towards the centre of the spinning drum. The con- cept was familiar enough; since the earliest dawn of spaceflight, centrifugal force had been used to simulate gravity. It was only the scale of this application which was so overwhelming, so shocking. The largest of all space- stations, Syncsat Five, was less than two hundred metres in diameter. It would take some little while to grow ac- customed to one a hundred times that size. The tube of landscape which enclosed him was mottled with areas of light and shade that could have been for- ests, fields, frozen lakes or towns; the distance, and the fading illumination of the flare, made identification im- possible. Narrow lines that could be highways, canals, or well-trained rivers formed a faintly visible geometrical network; and far along the cylinder, at the very limit of vision, was a band of deeper darkness. It formed a com- plete circle, ringing the interior of this world, and Nor- ton suddenly recalled the myth of Oceanus, the sea which, the ancients believed, surrounded the Earth. Here, perhaps, was an even stranger sea - not circular, but cylindrical. Before it became frozen in the inter- - stellar night, did it have waves and tides and currents - and fish? The flare guttered and died; the moment of revelation was over. But Norton knew that as long as he lived these images would be burned on his mind. Whatever discov- eries the future might bring, they could never erase this first impression. And History could never take from him the privilege of being the first of all mankind to gaze upon the works of an alien civilization. CHAPTER NINE - Reconnaissance 'We have now launched five long-delay flares down the axis of the cylinder, and so have a good photo-coverage of its full length. All the main features are mapped; though there are very few that we can identify, we've given them provisional names. 'The interior cavity is fifty kilometres long and sixteen wide. The two ends are bowl-shaped, with rather compli- cated geometries. We've called ours the Northern Hemi- sphere and are establishing our first base here at the axis. 'Radiating away from the central hub, 120 degrees apart, are three ladders that are almost a kilometre long. They all end at a terrace or ring-shaped plateau, that runs right round the bowl. And leading on from that, continuing the direction of the ladders, are three enorm- ous stairways, which go all the way down to the plain. If you imagine an umbrella with only three ribs, equally spaced, you'll have a good idea of this end of Rama. 'Each of those ribs is a stairway, very steep near the axis and then slowly flattening out as it approaches the plain below. The stairways - we've called them Alpha, Beta, Gamma - aren't continuous, but break at five more circular terraces. We estimate there must be between twenty and thirty thousand steps . . . presumably they were only used for emergencies, since it's inconceivable that the Ramans - or whatever we're going to call them - had no better way of reaching the axis of their world. 'The Southern Hemisphere looks quite different; for one thing, it has no stairways, and no flat central hub. Instead, there's a huge spike - kilometres long - jutting along the axis, with six smaller ones around it. The whole arrangement is very odd, and we can't imagine what it means. 'The fifty-kilometre-long cylindrical section between the two bowls we've called the Central Plain. It may seem crazy to use the word "plain" to describe something so obviously curved, but we feel it's justified. It will appear flat to us when we get down there - just as the interior of a bottle must seem flat to an ant crawling round inside it. 'The most striking feature of the Central Plain is the ten-kilometre-wide dark band running completely round it at the half-way mark. It looks like ice, so we've christ- ened it the Cylindrical Sea. Right out in the middle there's a large oval island, about ten kilometres long and three wide, and covered with tall structures. Because it reminds us of Old Manhattan, we've called it New York. Yet I don't think it's a city; it seems more like an enorm- ous factory or chemical processing plant. 'But there are some cities - or at any rate, towns. At least six of them; if they were built for human beings, they could each hold about fifty thousand people. We've called them Rome, Peking, Paris, Moscow, London, Tokyo... They are linked with highways and something that seems to be a rail system. 'There must be enough material for centuries of re- search in this frozen carcass of a world. We've four thou- sand square kilometres to explore, and only a few weeks to do it in. I wonder if we'll ever learn the answer to the two mysteries that have been haunting me ever since we got inside; who were they - and what went wrong?' The recording ended. On Earth and Moon, the mem- bers of the Rama Committee relaxed, then started to ex- amine the maps and photographs spread in front of them. Though they had already studied these for many hours, Commander Norton's voice added a dimension which no pictures could convey. He had actually been there - had looked with his own eyes across this extraordinary inside- out world, during the brief moments while its age-long night had been illuminated by the flares. And he was the man who would lead any expedition to explore it. 'Dr Perera, I believe you have some comments to make?' Ambassador Bose wondered briefly if he should have first given the floor to Professor Davidson, as senior scien- tist and the only astronomer. But the old cosmologist still seemed to be in a mild state of shock, and was clearly out of his element. All his professional career he had looked upon the universe as an arena for the titanic impersonal forces of gravitation, magnetism, radiation; he had never believed that life played an important role in the scheme of things, and regarded its appearance on Earth, - Mars and Jupiter as an accidental aberration. But now there was proof that life not only existed out- side the solar system, but had scaled heights far beyond anything that man had achieved, or could hope to reach for centuries to come. Moreover, the discovery of Rama challenged another dogma that Professor Olaf had preached for years. When pressed, he would reluctantly admit that life probably did exist in other star systems - but it was absurd, he had always maintained to imagine that it could ever cross the interstellar gulfs... Perhaps the Ramans had indeed failed, if Commander Norton was correct in believing that their world was now a tomb. But at least they had attempted the feat, on a scale which indicated a high confidence in the outcome. If such a thing had happened once, it must surely have happened many times in this Galaxy of a hundred thou- sand million suns ... and someone, somewhere, would eventually succeed. This was the thesis which, without proof but with con- siderable arm-waving, Dr Carlisle Perera had been preach- ing for years. He was now a very happy man, though also a most frustrated one. Rama had spectacularly confirmed his views - but he could never set foot inside it, or even see it with his own eyes. If the devil had suddenly appeared and offered him the gift of instantaneous tele- portation, he would have signed the contract without bothering to look at the small print. 'Yes, Mr Ambassador, I think I have some information of interest. What we have here is undoubtedly a "Space Ark". It's an old idea in the astronautical literature; I've been able to trace it back to the British physicist J. D. Bernal, who proposed this method of interstellar colon- ization in a book published in 1929 - yes, two hundred years ago. And the great Russian pioneer Tsiolkovski put forward somewhat similar proposals even earlier. 'If you want to go from one star system to another you have a number of choices. Assuming that the speed of light is an absolute limit - and that's still not completely settled, despite anything you may have heard to the con- trary' - there was an indignant sniff, but no formal pro- test from Professor Davidson - 'you can make a fast trip in a small vessel, or a slow journey in a giant one. 'There seems no technical reason why spacecraft can- not reach ninety per cent, or more, of the speed of light. That would mean a travel time of five to ten years be- tween neighbouring stars - tedious, perhaps, but not impracticable, especially for creatures whose life spans might be measured in centuries. One can imagine voyages of this duration, carried out in ships not much larger than ours. 'But perhaps such speeds are impossible, with reason- able payloads; remember, you have to carry the fuel to slow down at the end of the voyage, even if you're on a one-way trip. So it may make more sense to take your time - ten thousand, a hundred thousand years... 'Bernal and others thought this could be done with mobile worldlets a few kilometres across, carrying thou- sands of passengers on journeys that would last for gen- erations. Naturally, the system would have to be rigidly closed, recycling all food, air and other expendables. But, of course, that's just how the Earth operates - on a slightly larger scale. 'Some writers suggested that these Space Arks should be built in the form of concentric spheres; others pro- posed hollow, spinning cylinders so that centrifugal force could provide artificial gravity - exactly what we've found in Rama-' Professor Davidson could not tolerate this sloppy talk. 'No such thing as centrifugal force. It's an engineer's phantom. There's only inertia.' 'You're quite right, of course,' admitted Perera, 'though it might be hard to convince a man who'd just been slung off a carousel. But mathematical rigour seems unneces- sary- 'Hear, hear,' interjected Dr Bose, with some exaspera- tion. 'We all know what you mean, or think we do. Please don't destroy our illusions.' 'Well, I was merely pointing out that there's nothing conceptually novel about Rama, though its size is start- ling. Men have imagined such things for two hundred years. 'Now I'd like to address myself to another question. Exactly how long has Rama been travelling through space? 'We now have a very precise determination of its orbit and its velocity. Assuming that it's made no navigational changes, we can trace its position back for millions of years. We expected that it would be coming from the direction of a near-by star - but that isn't the case at all. 'It's more than two hundred thousand years since Rama passed near any star, and that particular one turns out to be an irregular variable - about the most unsuit- able sun you could imagine for an inhabited solar system. It has a brightness range of over fifty to one; any planets would be alternately baked and frozen every few years.' 'A suggestion,' put in Dr Price. 'Perhaps that explains everything. Maybe this was once a normal sun and be- came unstable. That's why the Ramans had to find a new one.' Dr Perera admired the old archaeologist, so he let her down lightly. But what would she say, he wondered, if he started pointing out the instantly obvious in her own speciality... 'We did consider that,' he said gently. 'But if our pre- sent theories of stellar evolution are correct, this star could never have been stable - could never have had life- bearing planets. So Rama has been cruising through space for at least two hundred thousand years, and per- haps for more than a million. 'Now it's cold and dark and apparently dead, and I think I know why. The Ramans may have had no choice - perhaps they were indeed fleeing from some disaster - but they miscalculated. 'No closed ecology can be one hundred per cent effici- ent; there is always waste, loss - some degradation of the environment, and build-up of pollutants. It may take bil- lions of years to poison and wear out a planet - but it will happen in the end. The oceans will dry up, the at- mosphere will leak away... 'By our standards, Rama is enormous - yet it is still a very tiny planet. My calculations, based on the- leakage through its hull, and some reasonable guesses about the rate of biological turnover, indicate that its ecology could only survive for about a thousand years. At the most, I'll grant ten thousand... 'That would be long enough, at the speed Rama is travelling, for a transit between the closely-packed suns in the heart of the Galaxy. But not out here, in the scat- tered population of the spiral arms. Rama is a ship which exhausted its provisions before it reached its goal. It's a derelict, drifting among the stars. 'There's just one serious objection to this theory, and I'll raise it before anybody else does. Rama's orbit is aimed so accurately at the solar system that coincidence seems ruled out. In fact, I'd say it's now heading much too close to the sun for comfort: Endeavour will have to break away long before perihelion, to avoid overheating. 'I don't pretend to understand this. Perhaps, there ma be some form of automatic terminal guidance still oper- ating, steering Rama to the nearest suitable star ages after its builders are dead. 'And they are dead; I'll stake my reputation on that. All the samples we've taken from the interior are absol- utely sterile - we've not found a single micro-organism. As for the talk you may have heard about suspended animation, you can ignore it. There are fundamental reasons why hibernation techniques will only work for a very few centuries - and we're dealing with time spans a thousand-fold longer. 'So the Pandorans and their sympathizers have nothing to worry about. For my part, I'm sorry. It would have been wonderful to have met another intelligent species. 'But at least we have answered one ancient question. We are not alone. The stars will never again be the same to us: CHAPTER TEN - Descent into Darkness Commander Norton was sorely tempted - but, as captain his first duty was to his ship. If anything went badly wrong on this initial probe, he might have to run for it. So that left his second officer, Lieut-Commander Mer- cer, as the obvious choice. Norton willingly admitted that Karl was better suited for the mission. The authority on life-support systems, Macer had writ- ten some of - the standard textbooks on the subject. He had personally checked out innumerable types of equip- ment, often under hazardous conditions, and his biofeed- back control was famous. At a moment's notice he could cut his pulse-rate by fifty per cent, and reduce respiration to almost zero for up to ten minutes. These useful little tricks had saved his life on more than one occasion. Yet despite his great ability and intelligence, he was almost wholly lacking in imagination. To him the most dangerous experiments or missions were simply jobs that had to be done. He never took unnecessary risks, and had no use at all for what was commonly regarded as courage. The two mottoes on his desk summed up his philos- ophy of life. One asked WHAT HAVE YOU FORGOTTEN? The other said HELP STAMP our BRAVERY. The fact that, he was widely regarded as the bravest man in the Fleet was the only thing that ever made him angry. Given Mercer, that automatically selected the next man - his inseparable companion Lt Joe Calvert. It was hard to see what the two had in common; the lightly- built, rather highly strung navigating officer was ten years younger than his stolid and imperturbable friend, who certainly did not share his passionate interest in the art of the primitive cinema. But no one can predict where lightning will strike, and years ago Mercer and Calvert had established an appar- ently stable liaison. That was common enough; much more unusual was the fact that they also shared a wife back on Earth, who had borne each of them a child. Commander Norton hoped that he could meet her one day; she must be a very remarkable woman. The triangle had lasted for at least five years, and still seemed to be an equilateral one. Two men were not enough for an exploring team; long ago it had been found that three was the optimum - for if one man was lost, two might still escape where a single survivor would be doomed. After a good deal of thought, Norton had chosen Technical Sergeant Willard Myron. A mechanical genius who could make anything work - or design something better if it wouldn't - Myron was the ideal man to identify alien pieces of equipment. On a long sabbatical from his regular job as Associate Pro- fessor at Astrotech, the Sergeant had refused to accept a commission on the grounds that he did not wish to block the promotion of more deserving career officers. No one took this explanation very seriously and it was generally agreed that Will rated zero for ambition. He might make it to Space Sergeant, but would never be a full professor. Myron, like countless NCOs before him, had discovered the ideal compromise between power and responsibility. As they drifted through the last airlock and floated out along the weightless axis of Rama, Lt Calvert found him- self, as he so often did, in the middle of a movie flash- back. He sometimes wondered if he should attempt to cure himself of this habit, but he could not see that it had any disadvantages. It could make even the dullest situa- tions interesting and - who could tell? - one day it might save his life. He would remember what Fairbanks or Connery or Hiroshi had done in similar circumstances... This time, he was about to go over the top, in one of the early-twentieth-century wars; Mercer was the sergeant leading a three-man patrol on a night raid into no-man's land. It was not too difficult to imagine that they were at the bottom of an immense shell-crater, though one that had somehow become neatly tailored into a series of ascending terraces. The crater was flooded with light from three widely-spaced plasma-arcs, which gave an al- most shadowless illumination over the whole interior. But beyond that - over the rim of the most distant ter- race - was darkness and mystery. In his mind's eye, Calvert knew perfectly well what lay there. First there was the flat circular plain over a kilo- metre across. Trisecting it into three equal parts, and looking very much like broad railroad tracks, were three wide ladders, their rungs recessed into the surface so that they would provide no obstruction to anything sliding over it. Since the arrangement was completely symmetri- cal, there was no reason to choose one ladder rather than another; that nearest to Airlock Alpha had been selected purely as a matter of convenience. Though the rungs of the ladders were uncomfortably far apart, that presented no problem. Even at the rim of the Hub, half a kilometre from the axis, gravity was still barely one thirtieth of Earth's. Although they were carry- ing almost a hundred kilos of equipment and life-support gear, they would still be able to move easily hand-over- hand. Commander Norton and the back-up team accompan- ied them along the guide ropes that had been stretched from Airlock Alpha to the rim of the crater; then, beyond the range of the floodlighis, the darkness of Rama lay before them. All that could be seen in the dancing beams of the helmet lights was the first few hundred metres of the ladder, dwindling away across a flat and otherwise featureless plain. And now, Karl Mercer told himself, I have to make my first decision. Am I going up that ladder, or down it? The question was not a trivial one. They were still essentially in zero gravity, and the brain could select any reference system it pleased. By a simple effort of will, Mercer could convince himself that he was looking out across a horizontal plain, or up the face of a vertical wall, or over the edge of a sheer cliff. Not a few astronauts had experienced grave psychological problems by choosing the wrong coordinates when they started on a compli- cated job. Mercer was determined to go head-first, for any other mode of locomotion would be awkward; moreover, this way he could more easily see what was in front of him. For the first few hundred metres, therefore, he would im- agine he was climbing upwardsd: only when the increasing pull of gravity made it impossible to maintain the illu- sion would he switch his mental directions one hundred and eighty degrees. He grasped the first rung and gently propelled himself along the ladder. Movement was as effortless as swim- ming along the seabed - more so, in fact, for there was no backward drag of water. It was so easy that there was a temptation to go too fast, but Mercer was much too ex- perienced to hurry in a situation as novel as this. In his earphones, he could hear the regular breathing of his two companions. He needed no other proof that they were in good shape, and wasted no time in conver- sation. Though he was tempted to look back, he decided not to risk it until they had reached the platform at the end of the ladder. The rungs were spaced a uniform half metre apart, and for the first portion of the climb Mercer missed the alter- nate ones. But he counted them carefully, and at around two hundred noticed the first distinct sensations of weight. The spin of Rama was starting to make itself felt. At rung four hundred, he estimated that his apparent weight was about five kilos. This was no problem, but it was now getting hard to pretend that he was climbing, when he was being firmly dragged upwards. The five hundredth rung seemed a good place to pause. He could feel the muscles in his arms responding to the unaccustomed exercise, even though Rama was now doing all the work and he had merely to guide him- self. 'Everything OK, Skipper,' he reported. 'We're just pass- ing the halfway mark. Joe, Will - any problems?' 'I'm fine - what are you stopping for?' Joe Calvert an- swered. 'Same here,' added Sergeant Myron. 'But watch out for the Coriolis force. It's starting to build up.' So Mercer had already noticed. When he let go of the rungs he had a distinct tendency to drift off to the right. He knew perfectly well that this was merely the effect of Rama's spin, but it seemed as if some mysterious force was gently pushing him away from the ladder. Perhaps it was time to start going feet-first, now that 'down' was beginning to have a physical meaning. He would run the risk of a momentary disorientation. 'Watch out - I'm going to swing round.' Holding firmly on to the rung, he used his arms to twist himself round a hundred and eighty degrees, and found himself momentarily blinded by the lights of his companions. Far above them - and now it really was above - he could see a fainter glow along the rim of the sheer cliff. Silhouetted against it were the figures of Com- mander Norton and the back-up team, watching him in- tently. They seemed very small and far away, and he gave them a reassuring wave. He released his grip, and let Rama's still feeble pseudo- gravity take over. The drop from one rung to the next required more than two seconds; on Earth, in the same time, a man would have fallen thirty metres. The rate of fall was so painfully slow that he hurried things up a trifle by pushing with his hands, gliding over spans of a dozen rungs at a time, and checking himself with his feet whenever he felt he was travelling too fast. At rung seven hundred, he came to another halt and swung the beam of his helmet-lamp downwards; as he had calculated, the beginning of the stairway was only fifty metres below. A few minutes later, they were on the first step. It was a strange experience, after months in space, to stand up- right on a solid surface, and to feel it pressing against one's feet. Their weight was still less than ten kilogrammes, but that was enough to give a feeling of stability. When he closed his eyes, Mercer could believe that he once more had a real world beneath him. The ledge or platform from which the stairway des- cended was about ten metres wide, and curved upwards on each side until it disappeared into the darkness. Mer- cer knew that it formed a complete circle and that if he walked along it for five kilometres he would come right back to his starting-point, having circumnavigated Rama. At the fractional gravity that existed here, however, real walking was impossible; one could only bound along in giant strides. And therein lay danger. The stairway that swooped down into the darkness, far below the range of their lights, would be deceptively easy to descend. But it would be essential to hold on to the tall handrail that flanked it on either side; too bold a step might send an incautious traveller arching far out into space. He would hit the surface again perhaps a hundred metres lower down; the impact would be harmless, but its consequences might not be - for the spin of Rama would have moved the stairway off to the left. And so a falling body would hit against the smooth curve that swept in an unbroken arc to the plain almost seven kilometres below. That, Mercer told himself, would be a hell of a tobog- gan ride; the terminal speed, even in this gravity, could be several hundred kilometres an hour. Perhaps it would be possible to apply-enough friction to check such a head- long descent; if so, this might even be the most con- venient way to reach the inner surface of Rama. But some very cautious experimenting would be necessary first. 'Skipper,' reported Mercer, 'there were no problems getting down the ladder. If you agree, I'd like to continue towards the next platform. I want to time our rate of descent on the stairway.' Norton replied without hesitation. 'Go ahead.' He did not need to add, 'Proceed with cau- tion.' It did not take Mercer long to make a fundamental discovery. It was impossible, at least at this one-twentieth- of-a-gravity level, to walk down the stairway in the nor- mal manner. Any attempt to do so resulted in a slow- motion dream-like movement that was intolerably tedi- ous; the only practical way was to ignore the steps, and to use the handrail to pull oneself downwards. Calvert had come to the same conclusion. 'This stairway was built to walk up, not down!' he exclaimed. 'You can use the steps when you're moving against gravity, but they're just a nuisance in this direc- tion. It may not be dignified, but I think the best way down is to slide along the handrail.' 'That's ridiculous,' protested Sergeant Myron. 'I can't believe the Ramans did it this way.' - 'I doubt if they ever used this stairway - it's obviously only for emergencies. They must have had some mech- anical transport system to get up here. A funicular, per- haps. That would explain those long slots running down from the Hub.' 'I always assumed they were drains - but I suppose they could be both. I wonder if it ever rained here?' 'Probably,' said Mercer. 'But I think Joe is right, and to hell with dignity. Here we go.' The handrail - presumably it was designed for some- thing like hands7 was a smooth, flat, metal bar supported on widely-spaced pillars a metre high. Commander Mer- cer straddled it, carefully gauged the braking power he could exert with his hands, and let himself slide. Very sedately, slowly picking up speed, he descended into the darkness, moving in the pool of light from his helmet-lamp. He had gone about fifty metres when he called the others to join him. None would admit it, but they all felt like boys again. sliding down the banisters. In less than two minutes, they had made a kilometre descent in safety and comfort. Whenever they felt they were going too fast,. a tightened grip on the handrail provided all the braking that was necessary. 'I hope you enjoyed yourselves,' Commander Norton called when they stepped off at the second platform. 'Climbing back won't be quite so easy.' 'That's what I want to check,' replied Mercer, who was walking experimentally back and forth, getting the feel of the increased gravity. 'It's already a tenth of a gee here - you really notice the difference.' He walked - or, more accurately, glided - to the edge of the platform, and shone his helmet-light down the next section of the stairway. As far as his beam could reach, it appeared identical with the one above - though careful examination of photos had shown that the height of the steps steadily decreased with the rising gravity. The stair had apparently been designed so that the effort required to climb it was more or less constant at every point in its long curving sweep. Mercer glanced up towards the Hub of Rama, now al- most two kilometres above him. The little glow of light, and the tiny figures silhouetted against it, seemed hor- ribly far away. For the first time, he was suddenly glad that he could not see the whole length of this enormous stairway. Despite his steady nerves and lack of imagina- tion, he was not sure how he would react if he could see himself like an insect crawling up the face of a vertical saucer more than sixteen kilometres high - and with the upper half overhanging above him. Until this moment, he had regarded the darkness as a nuisance; now he al- most welcomed it. 'There's no change of temperature,' he reported to Commander Norton. 'Still just below freezing. But the air-pressure is up, as we expected - around three hundred millibars. Even with this low oxygen content, it's almost breathable; further down there will be no problems at all. That will simplify exploration enormously. 'What a find - the first world on which we can walk without breathing gear! In fact, I'm going to take a sniff.' Up on the Hub, Commander Norton stirred a little uneasily. But Mercer, of all men, knew exactly what he was doing. He would already have made enough tests to satisfy himself. Mercer equalized pressure, unlatched the securing clip of his helmet, and opened it a crack. He took a cautious breath; then a deeper one. The air of Rama was dead and musty, as if from a tomb so ancient that the last trace of physical corruption had disappeared ages ago. Even Mercer's ultra-sensitive nose, trained through years of testing life-support systems to and beyond the point of disaster, could detect no re- cognizable odours. There was a faint metallic tang, and he suddenly recalled that the first men on the Moon had reported a hint of burnt gunpowder when they repres- surized the lunar module. Mercer imagined that the moon-dust-contaminated cabin on Eagle must have smelled rather like Rama. He sealed the helmet again, and emptied his lungs of the alien air. He had extracted no sustenance from it; even a mountaineer acclimatized to the summit of Ever- est would die quickly here. But a few kilometres further down, it would be a different matter. 'What else was -there to do here? He could think of nothing, except the enjoyment of the gentle, unaccust- omed gravity. But there was no point in growing used to that, since they would be returning immediately to the weightlessness of the Hub. 'We're coming back, Skipper,' he reported. 'There's no reason to go further - until we're ready to go all the way.' 'I agree. We'll be timing you, but take it easy.' As he bounded up the steps, three or four at a stride, Mercer agreed that Calvert had been perfectly correct; these stairs were built to be walked up, not down. As long as one did not look back, and ignored the - vertiginous steepness of the ascending curve, the climb was a delight- ful experience. After about two hundred steps, however, he began to feel some twinges in his calf muscles, and decided to slow down. The others had done the same; when he ventured a quick glance over his shoulder, they were considerably further down the slope. The climb was wholly uneventful - merely an- appar- ently endless succession of steps. When they stood once more on the highest platform, immediately beneath the ladder, they were barely winded, and it had taken them only ten minutes. They paused for another ten, then started on the last vertical kilometre. Jump - catch hold of a rung - jump - catch - jump - catch... it was easy, but so boringly repetitious that there was danger of becoming careless. Halfway up the ladder they rested for five minutes: by this time their arms as well as their legs had begun to ache. Once again, Mercer was glad that they could see so little of the vertical face to which they were clinging; it was not too difficult to pre- tend that the ladder only extended just a few metres be- yond their circle of light, and would soon come to an - end. Jump - catch a rung - jump - then, quite suddenly, the ladder really ended. They were back at the weightless world of the axis, among their anxious friends. The whole trip had taken under an hour, and they felt a sense of modest achievement. But it was much too soon to feel pleased with them- selves. For all their efforts, they had traversed less than an eighth of that cyclopean stairway. CHAPTER ELEVEN - Men, Women and Monkeys Some women, Commander Norton had decided long ago, should not be allowed aboard ship; weightlessness did things to their breasts that were too damn distracting. It was bad enough when they were motionless; but when they started to move, and sympathetic vibrations set in, it was more than any warm-blooded male should be asked to take. He was quite sure that at least one serious space accident had been caused by acute crew distraction, after the transit of a well-upholstered lady officer through the control cabin. He had once mentioned this theory to Surgeon-Com- mander Laura Ernst, without revealing who had inspired his particular train of thought. There was no need; they knew each other much too well. On Earth, years ago, in a moment of mutual loneliness and depression, they had once made love. Probably they would never repeat the experience (but could one ever be quite sure of that?) because so much had changed for both of them. Yet whenever the well-built Surgeon oscillated into the Com- mander's cabin, he felt a fleeting echo, of an old passion, she knew that he felt it, and everyone was happy. 'Bill,' she began, 'I've checked our mountaineers, and here's my verdict. Karl and Joe are in good shape - all indications normal for the work they've done. But Will shows signs of exhaustion and body-loss - I won't bother about the details. I don't believe he's been getting all the exercise he should, and he's not the only one. There's been some cheating in the centrifuge; if there's any more, heads will roll. Please pass the word.' 'Yes, Ma'am. But there's some excuse. The men have been working very hard.' 'With their brains and fingers, certainly. But not with their bodies - not real work in kilogramme-metres. And that's what we'll be dealing with, if we're going to ex- plore Rama.' 'Well, can we?' 'Yes, if we proceed with caution. Karl and I have worked out a very conservative profile - based on the assumption that we can dispense with breathing gear be- low Level Two. Of course, that's an incredible stroke of luck, and changes the whole logistics picture. I still can't get used to the idea of a world with oxygen... So we only need to supply food and water and thermosuits, and we re in business. Going down will be easy; it looks as if we can slide most of the way, on that very convenient banister.' 'I've got Chips working on a sled with parachute brak- ing. Even if we can't risk it for crew, we can use it for stores and equipment.' 'Fine; that should do the trip in ten minutes; otherwise it will take about an hour. 'Climbing up is harder to estimate; I'd like to allow six hours, including two one-hour periods. Later, as we get experience - and develop some muscles - we may be able to cut this back considerably.' 'What about psychological factors?' 'Hard to assess, in such a novel environment. Darkness may be the biggest problem. 'I'll establish searchlights on the Hub. Besides its own lamps, any party down there will always have a beam play- ing on it.' 'Good - that should be a great help.' 'One other point: should we play safe and send a party only halfway down the stair - and back - or should we go the whole way on the first attempt?' 'If we had plenty of time, I'd be cautious. But time is short, and I can see no danger in going all- the way - and looking around when we get there.' 'Thanks, Laura - that's all I want to know. I'll get the Exec working on the details. And I'll order all hands to the centrifuge - twenty minutes a day at half a gee. Will that satisfy you?' 'No. It's point six gee down there in Rama, and I want a safety margin. Make it three quarters-' 'Ouch!' '-for ten minutes-' I'll settle for that-' '-twice a day.' 'Laura, you're a cruel, hard woman. But so be it. I'll break the news just before dinner. That should spoil a few appetites.' It was the first time that Commander Norton had ever seen Karl Mercer slightly ill at ease. He had spent the fifteen minutes discussing the logistics problem in his usual competent manner, but something was obviously worrying him. His captain, who had a shrewd idea of what it was, waited patiently until he brought it out. 'Skipper,' Karl said at length, 'are you sure you should lead this party? If anything goes wrong, I'm considerably more expendable. And I've been further inside Rama than anyone else - even if only by fifty metres.' 'Granted. But it's time the commander led his troops, and we've decided that there's no greater risk on this trip than on the last. At the first sign of trouble, I'll be back up that stairway fast enough to qualify for the Lunar Olympics.' He waited for any further objections, but none came, though Karl still looked unhappy. So he took pity on him and added gently: 'And I bet Joe will beat me to the top.' The big man relaxed, and a slow grin spread across his face. 'All the same, Bill, I wish you'd taken someone else.' 'I wanted one man who'd been down before, and we can' t both go. As for Herr Doctor Professor Sergeant Myron, Laura says he's still two kilos overweight. Even shaving off that moustache didn't help.' 'Who's your number three?' 'I still haven't decided. That depends on Laura.' 'She wants to go herself.' 'Who doesn't? But if she turns up at the top of her own fitness list, I'll be very suspicious. As Lieut-Commander Mercer gathered up his papers and launched himself out of the cabin, Norton felt a brief stab of envy. Almost all the crew - about eighty-five per cent, by his minimum estimate - had worked out some sort of emotional accommodation. He had known ships where the captain had done the same, but that was not his way. Though discipline aboard the Endeavour was based very largely on the mutual respect between highly trained and intelligent men and women, the com- mander needed something more to underline his posi- tion. His responsibility was unique, and demanded a cer- tain degree of isolation, even from his closest friends. Any liaison could be damaging to morale, for it was almost impossible to avoid charges of favouritism. - For this rea- son, affairs spanning more than two degrees of rank were firmly discouraged; but apart from this, the only rule regulating shipboard sex was 'So long as they don't do it in the corridors and frighten the simps'. There were four superchimps aboard Endeavour, though strictly speaking the name was inaccurate, be- cause the ship's non-human crew was not based on chim- panzee stock. In zero gravity, a prehensile tail is an enormous advantage, and all attempts to supply these to humans had turned into embarrassing failures. After equally unsatisfactory results with the great apes, the Superchimpanzee Corporation had turned to the monkey kingdom. Blackie, Blondie, Goldie and Brownie had family trees whose branches included the most intelligent of the Old and New World monkeys, plus synthetic genes that had never existed in nature. Their rearing and education had probably cost as much as that of the average spaceman, and they were worth it. Each weighed less than thirty kilos and consumed only half the food and oxygen of a human being, but each could replace 2.75 men for house- keeping, elementary cooking, tool-carrying and dozens of other routine jobs. That 2.75 was the Corporation's claim, based on in- numerable time-and-motion studies. The figure, though surprising and frequently challenged, appeared to be ac- curate, for simps were quite happy to work fifteen hours a day and did not get bored by the most menial and repeti- tious tasks. So they freed human beings for human work; and on a spaceship, that was a matter of vital importance. Unlike the monkeys who were their nearest relatives Endeavour's simps were docile, obedient and uninquisi- tive. Being cloned, they were also sexless, which elimi- nated awkward behavioural problems. Carefully house- trained vegetarians, they were very clean and didn't smell; they would have made perfect pets, except that nobody could possibly have afforded them. Despite these advantages, having simps on board in- volved certain problems. They had to have their own quarters - inevitably labelled 'The Monkey House'. Their little mess-room was always spotless, and was well- equipped with TV, games equipment and programmed teaching machines. To avoid accidents, they were absol- utely forbidden - to enter the ship's technical areas; the entrances to all these were colour-coded in red, and the simps were conditioned so that it was psychologically im- possible for them to pass the visual barriers. There was also a communications problem. Though they had an equivalent IQ of sixty, and could understand several hundred words of English, they were unable to talk. It had proved impossible to give useful vocal chords either to apes or monkeys, and they therefore had to ex- press themselves in sign language. The basic signs were obvious and easily learned, so that everyone on board ship could understand routine mes- sages. But the only man who could speak fluent Simpish was their handler - Chief Steward McAndrews. It was a standing joke that Sergeant Ravi McAndrews looked rather like a simp - which was hardly an insult, for with their short, tinted pelts and graceful movements they were very handsome animals. They were also affec- tionate, and everyone on board had his favourite; Com- mander Norton's was the aptly-named Goldie. But the warm relationship which one could so easily establish with simps created another problem, often used as a powerful argument against their employment in space. Since they could only be trained for routine, low- grade tasks, they were worse than useless in an emerg- ency; they could then be a danger to themselves and to their human companions. In particular, teaching them to use spacesuits had proved impossible, the concepts in- volved being quite beyond their understanding. No one liked to talk about it, but everybody knew what had to be done if a hull was breached or the order came to abandon ship. It had happened only once; then the simp handler had carried out his instructions more than adequately. He was found with his charges, killed by the same poison. Thereafter the - job of euthing was transferred to the chief medical officer, who it was felt would have less emotional involvement. Norton was very thankful that this responsibility, at least, did not fall upon the captain's shoulders. He had known men he would have killed with far fewer qualms than he would Goldie. CHAPTER TWELVE - The Stairway of the Gods In the clear, cold atmosphere of Rama, the beam of the searchlight was completely invisible. Three kilometres down from the central Hub, the hundred-metre wide oval of light lay across a section of that colossal stairway. A brilliant oasis in the surrounding darkness, it was sweep- ing slowly towards the curved plain still five kilometres below; and in its centre moved a trio of ant-like figures, casting long shadows before them. It had been, just as they had hoped and expected, a completely uneventful descent. They had paused briefly at the first platform, and Norton had walked a few hun- dred metres along the narrow, curving ledge before start- ing the slide down to the second level. Here they had discarded their oxygen gear, and revelled in the strange luxury of being able to breathe without mechanical aids. Now they could explore in comfort, freed from the great- est danger that confronts a man in space, and forgetting all worries about suit integrity and oxygen reserve. By the time they had reached the fifth level, and there was only one more section to go, gravity had reached al- most half its terrestrial value. Rama's centrifugal spin was at last exerting its real strength; they were surrender- ing themselves to the implacable force which rules every planet, and which can exert a merciless price for the smallest slip. It was still very easy to go downwards; but the thought of the return, up those thousands upon thou- sands of steps, was already beginning to prey upon their minds. The stairway had long - ago ceased its vertiginous downward plunge and was now flattening out towards the horizontal. The gradient was now only about s in 5; at the beginning, it had been 5 in i. Normal walking was now both physically, and psychologically, acceptable; only the lowered gravity reminded them that they were not descending some great stairway on Earth. Norton had once visited the ruins of an Aztec temple, and the feelings he had then experienced came echoing back to him - amplified a hundred times. Here was the same sense of awe and mystery, and the sadness of the irrevocably van- ished past. Yet the scale here was so much greater, both in time and space, that the mind was unable to do it justice; after a while, it ceased to respond. Norton wondered if, sooner or later, he would take even Rama for granted. And there was another respect in which the parallel with terrestrial ruins failed completely. Rama was hun- dreds of times older than any structure that had survived on Earth - even the Great Pyramid. But everything looked absolutely new; there was no sign of wear and tear. Norton had puzzled over this a good deal, and had arrived at a tentative explanation. Everything that they had so far examined was part of an emergency back-up system, very seldom put to actual use. He could not imag- ine that the Ramans - unless they were physical fitness fanatics of the kind not uncommon on Earth - ever walked up and down this incredible stairway, or its two identical companions completing the invisible Y far above his head. Perhaps they had only been required during the actual construction of Rama, and had served no purpose since that distant day. That theory would do for the moment, yet it did not feel right. There was some- thing wrong, somewhere... They did not slide for the last kilometre but went down the steps two at a time in long, gentle strides; this way, Norton decided, they would give more exercise to muscles that would soon have to be used. And so the end of the stairway came upon them almost unawares; sud- denly, there were no more steps - only a flat plain, dull grey in the now weakening beam of the Hub searchlight, fading away into the darkness a few hundred metres ahead. Norton looked back along the beam, towards its source up on the axis more than eight kilometres away. He knew that Mercer would be watching through the telescope, so he waved to him cheerfully. 'Captain here,' he reported over the radio. 'Everyone in fine shape - no problems. Proceeding as planned.' 'Good,' replied Mercer. 'We'll be watching.' There was a brief silence; then a new voice cut in. 'This is the Exec, on board ship. Really, Skipper, this isn't good enough. You know the news services have been screaming at us for the last week. I don't expect deathless prose, but can't you do better than that?' 'I'll try,' Norton chuckled. 'But remember there's nothing to see yet. It's like - well, being on a huge, dark- ened stage, with a single spotlight. The first few hundred steps of the stairway, rise out of it until they disappear into the darkness overhead. What we can see of the plain looks perfectly flat - the curvature's too small to be vis- ible over this limited area. And that's about it.' 'Like to give any impressions?' 'Well, it's still very cold - below freezing - and we're glad of our thermosuits. And quiet of course; quieter than anything I've ever known on Earth, or in space, where there's always some background noise. Here, every sound is swallowed up; the space around us is so enormous that there aren't any echoes. It's weird, but I hope we'll get used to it.' 'Thanks, Skipper. Anyone else - Joe, Boris?' Lt Joe Calvert, never at a loss for words, was happy to oblige. 'I can't help thinking that this is the first time - ever - that we've been able to walk on another world, breath- ing its natural atmosphere - though I suppose "natural" is hardly the word you can apply to a place like this. Still, Rama must resemble the world of its builders; our own spaceships are all miniature earths. Two examples are damned poor statistics, but does this mean that all in- telligent life-forms are oxygen eaters? What we've seen of their work suggests that the Ramans were humanoid, though perhaps about fifty per cent taller than we are. Wouldn't you agree, Boris?' Is Joe teasing Boris? Norton asked himself. I wonder how he's going to react? ... To all his shipmates, Boris Rodrigo was something of an enigma. The quiet, dignified communications officer was- popular with the rest of the crew, but he never en- tered fully into their activities and always seemed a little apart - marching to the music of a different drummer. As indeed he was, being a devout member of the Fifth Church of Christ, Cosmonaut. Norton had never been able to discover what had happened to the earlier four, and he was equally in the dark about the Church's rituals and ceremonies. But the main tenet of its faith was well known: it believed that Jesus Christ was a visitor from space, and had constructed an entire theology on that assumption. It was perhaps not surprising that an unusually high proportion of the Church's devotees worked in space in some capacity or other. Invariably, they were efficient, conscientious and absolutely reliable. They were univers- ally respected and even liked, especially as they made no attempt to convert others. Yet there was also something slightly spooky about them; Norton could never under- stand how men with advanced scientific and technical training could possibly believe some of the things he had heard Christers state as incontrovertible facts. As he waited for Lt Rodrigo to answer Joe's possibly loaded question, the commander had a sudden insight into his own hidden motives. He had chosen Boris be- cause he was physically fit, technically qualified, and completely dependable. At the same time, he wondered if some part of his mind had not selected the lieutenant out of an almost mischievous curiosity. How would a man with such religious beliefs react to the awesome reality of Rama? Suppose he encountered something that con- founded his theology ... or, for that matter, confirmed it? But Boris Rodrigo, with his usual caution, refused to be drawn. 'They were certainly oxygen breathers, and they could be humanoid. But let's wait and see. With any luck, we should discover what, they were like. There may be pic- tures, statues - perhaps even bodies, over in those towns. If they are towns.' 'And the nearest is only eight kilometres away,' said Joe Calvert hopefully. Yes, thought the commander, but it's also eight kilo- metres back - and then there's that overwhelming stair- way to climb again. Can we take the risk? A quick sortie to the 'town' which they had named Paris had been among the first of his contingency plans, and now he had to make his decision. They had ample food and water for a stay of twenty-four hours; they would always be in full view of the back-up team on the Hub, and any kind of accident seemed virtually impos- sible on this smooth, gently curving, metal plain. The only foreseeable danger was exhaustion; when they got to Paris, which they could do easily enough, could they do more than take a few photographs and perhaps collect some small artifacts, before they had to return? But even such a brief foray would be worth it; there was so little time, as Rama hurtled sunwards towards a perihelion too dangerous for Endeavour to match. In any case, part of the decision was not his to make. Up in the ship, Dr Ernst would be watching the outputs of the bio-telemetering sensors attached to his body. If she turned thumbs-down, that would be that. 'Laura, what do you think?' 'Take thirty minutes' rest, and a five hundred calorie energy module. Then you can start.' 'Thanks, Doc,' interjected Joe Calvert. 'Now I can die happy. I always wanted to see Paris. Montmartre, here we come.' CHAPTER THIRTEEN - The Plain of Rama After those interminable stairs, it was a strange luxury to walk once more on a horizontal surface. Directly ahead, the ground was indeed completely flat; to right and left, at the limits of the floodlit area, the rising curve could just be detected. They might have been walking along a very wide, shallow valley; it was quite impossible to be- lieve that they were really crawling along the inside of a huge cylinder, and that beyond this little oasis of light the land rose up to meet - no, to become - the sky. Though they all felt a sense of confidence and subdued excitement, after a while the almost palpable silence of Rama began to weigh heavily upon them. Every footstep, every word, vanished instantly into the unreverberant void; after they had gone little more than half a kilo- metre, Lt Calvert could stand it no longer. Among his minor accomplishments was a talent now rare, though many thought not rare enough - the art of whistling. With or without encouragement he could re- produce the themes from most of the movies of the last two hundred years. He started appropriately with Heigh- ho, heigh-ho, 'tis off to work we go, found that he couldn't stay down comfortably in the bass with Disney's marching dwarfs, and switched quickly to River Kwai. Then he progressed, more or less chronologically, through half a dozen epics, culminating with the theme from Sid Krassman's famous late-twentieth-century Napoleon. It was a good try, but it didn't work, even as a morale- builder. Rama needed the grandeur of Bach or Beet- hoven or Sibelius or Tuan Sun, not the trivia of popular entertainment. Norton was on the point of suggesting that Joe save his breath for later exertions, when the young officer realized the inappropriateness of his efforts. Thereafter, apart from an occasional consultation with the ship, they marched on in silence. Rama had won this round. On his initial traverse, Norton had allowed for one de- tour. Paris lay straight ahead, halfway between the foot of the stairway and the shore of the Cylindrical Sea, but only a kilometre to the right of their track was a very prominent, and rather mysterious, feature which had been christened the Straight Valley. It was a long groove or trench, forty metres deep and a hundred wide, with gently sloping sides; it had been provisionally identified as an irrigation ditch or canal. Like the stairway itself, it had two similar counterparts, equally spaced around the curve of Rama. The three valleys were almost ten kilometres long, and stopped abruptly just before they reached the Sea - which was strange, if they were intended to carry water. And on the other side of the Sea the pattern was re- peated: three more ten-kilometre-trenches continued on to the South Polar region. They reached the end of the Straight Valley after only fifteen minutes' comfortable walking, and stood for a while staring thoughtfully into its depths. The perfectly smooth walls sloped down at an angle of sixty degrees; there were no steps or footholds. Filling the bottom was a sheet of flat, white material that looked very much like ice. A specimen could settle a good many arguments; Norton decided to get one. With Calvert and Rodrigo acting as anchors and pay- ing out a safety rope, he rapelled slowly down the steep incline. When he reached the bottom, he fully expected to find the familiar slippery feel of ice underfoot, but he was mistaken. The friction was too great; his footing was secure. This material was some kind of glass or trans- parent crystal; when he touched it with his fingertips, it was cold, hard and unyielding. Turning his back to the searchlight and shielding his eyes from its glare. Norton tried to peer into the crystal- line depths, as one may attempt to gaze through the ice of a frozen lake. But he could see nothing; even when he tried the concentrated beam of his own helmet-lamp. he was no more successful. This stuff was translucent, but not transparent. If it was a frozen liquid, it had a melting- point very much higher than water. He tapped it gently with the hammer from his geology kit; the tool rebounded with a dull, unmusical 'dunk'. He tapped harder, with no more result, and was about to exert his full strength when some impulse made him de- sist. It seemed most unlikely that he could crack this mat- erial; but what if he did? He would be like a vandal, smashing some enormous plate-glass window. There would be a better opportunity later, and at least he had dis- covered valuable information. It now seemed more un- likely than ever that this was a canal; it was simply a peculiar trench that stopped and started abruptly, but led nowhere. And if at any time it had carried liquid, where were the stains, the encrustations of dried-up sedi- ment, that one would expect? Everything was bright and clean, as if the builders had left only yesterday... Once again he was face to face with the fundamental mystery of Rama, and this time it was impossible to evade it. Commander Norton was a reasonably imaginative man, but he would never have reached his present posi- tion if he had been liable to the wilder flights of fancy. Yet now, for the first time, he had a sense - not exactly of foreboding, but of anticipation. Things were not what they seemed; there was something very, very odd about a place that was simultaneously brand new - and a million years old. Very thoughtfully, he began to walk slowly along the length of the little valley, while his companions. still holding the rope that was attached to his waist, followed him along the rim. He did not expect to make any further discoveries, but he wanted to let his curious emo- tional state run its course. For something else was worry- ing him; and it had nothing to do with the inexplicable newness of Rama. He had walked no more than a dozen metres when it hit him like a thunderbolt. He knew this place. He had been here before. Even on Earth, or some familiar planet, that experience is dis- quieting, though it is not particularly rare. Most men have known it at some time or other, and usually they dismiss it as the memory of a forgotten photograph, a pure coincidence - or, if they are mystically inclined, some form of telepathy from another mind, or even a flashback from their own future. But to recognize a spot which no other human being can possibly have seen - that is quite shocking. For sev- eral seconds, Commander Norton stood rooted to the smooth crystalline surface on which he had been walk- ing, trying to straighten out his emotions. His well-ordered universe had been turned upside down, and he had a dizzying glimpse of those mysteries at the edge of exist- ence which he had successfully ignored for most of his life. Then, to his immense relief, common sense came to the rescue. The disturbing sensation of déjà-vu faded out, to be replaced by a real and identifiable memory from his youth. It was true - he had once stood between such steeply sloping walls, watching them drive into the distance until they seemed to converge at a point indefinitely far ahead. But they had been covered with neatly trimmed grass; and underfoot had been broken stone, not smooth crys- tal. It had happened thirty years ago, during a summer vacation in England. Largely because of another student (he could remember her face - but he had forgotten her name) he had taken a course of industrial archaeology, then very popular among science and engineering gradu- ates. They had explored abandoned coal-mines and cot- ton mills, climbed over ruined blast-furnaces and steam- engines, goggled unbelievingly at primitive (and still dan- gerous) nuclear reactors, and driven priceless' turbine- powered antiques along restored motor roads. Not everything that they saw was genuine; much had been lost during the centuries, for men seldom bother to preserve the commonplace articles of everyday life. But where it was necessary to make copies, they had been re- constructed with loving care. And so young Bill Norton had found himself bowling along, at an exhilarating hundred kilometres an hour, while he furiously shovelled precious coal into the firebox of a locomotive that looked two hundred years old, but was actually younger than he was. The thirty-kilometre stretch of the Great Western Railway, however, was quite genuine, though it had required a good deal of excavat- ing to get it back into commission. Whistle screaming, they had plunged into a hillside and raced through a smoky, flame-lit darkness. An aston- ishingly long time later, they had burst out of the tunnel into a deep, perfectly straight cutting between steep grassy banks. The long-forgotten vista was almost identi- cal with the one before him now. 'What is it, Skipper?' called Lt Rodrigo. 'Have you found something?' As Norton dragged himself back to present reality, some of the oppression lifted from his mind. There was mystery here - yes; but it might not be beyond human understanding. He had learned a lesson, though it was not one that he could readily impart to others. At all costs, he must not let Rama overwhelm him. That way lay failure - perhaps even madness. 'No,' he answered, 'there's nothing down here. Haul me up - we 11 head straight to Paris.' CHAPTER FOURTEEN - Storm Warning 'I've called this meeting of the Committee,' said His Ex- cellency the Ambassador of Mars to the United Planets, 'because Dr Perera has something important to tell us. He insists that we get in touch with Commander Norton right away, using the priority channel we've been able to establish after, I might say, a good deal of difficulty. Dr Perera's statement is rather technical, and before we come to it I think a summary of the present position might be in order; Dr Price has prepared one. Oh yes - some apologies for absence. Sir Lewis Sands is unable to be with us because he's chairing a conference, and Dr Taylor asks to be excused? He was rather pleased about that last abstention. The anthropologist had rapidly lost interest in Rama, when it became obvious that it would present little scope for him. Like many others, he had been bitterly disappointed to find that the mobile worldlet was dead; now there would be no opportunity for sensational books and viddies about Raman rituals and behavioural patterns. Others might dig up skeletons and classify artifacts; that sort of thing did not appeal to Conrad Taylor. Perhaps the only discovery that would bring him back in a hurry would be some highly explicit works of art, like the notorious fres- coes of Thera and Pompeii. - Thelma Price, the archaeologist, took exactly the oppo- site point of view. She preferred excavations and ruins uncluttered by inhabitants who might interfere with dis- passionate, scientific studies. The bed of the Mediter- ranean had been ideal - at least until the city planners and landscape artists had started getting in the way. And Rama would have been perfect, except for the madden- ing detail that it was a hundred million kilometres away and she would never be able to visit it in person. 'As you all know,' she began, 'Commander Norton has completed one traverse of almost thirty kilometres, with- out encountering any problems. He explored the curious trench shown on your maps as the Straight Valley; its purpose is still quite unknown, but it's clearly important as it runs the full length of Rama - except for the break at the Cylindrical Sea - and there are two other identical structures 120 degrees apart round the circumference of -the world. 'Then the party turned left - or East, if we adopt the North Pole convention - until they reached Paris. As you'll see from this photograph, taken by a telescope camera at the Hub, it's a group of several hundred build- ings, with wide streets between them. 'Now these photographs were taken by Commander Norton's group when they reached the site. If Paris is a city, it's a very peculiar one. Note that none of the build- ings have windows, or even doors! They are all plain rectangular structures, an identical thirty-five metres high. And they appear to have been extruded out of the ground - there are no seams or joints - look at this close- up of the base of a wall - there's a smooth transition into the ground. 'My own feeling is that this place is not a residential area, but a storage or supply depot. In support of that theory, look at this photo 'These narrow slots or grooves, about five centimetres wide, run along all the streets, and there's one leading to every building - going straight into the wall .There's a striking resemblance to the street-car tracks of the early twentieth century; they are obviously part of some trans- port system. 'We've never considered it necessary to have public transport direct to every house. It would be economically absurd - people can always walk a few hundred metres. But if these buildings are used for the storage of heavy materials, it would make sense. 'May I ask a question?' said the Ambassador for Earth. 'Of course, Sir Robert.' 'Commander Norton couldn't get into a single build- ing?' 'No; when you listen to his report, you can tell he was quite frustrated. At one time he decided that the build- ings could only be entered from underground; then he discovered the grooves of the transport system, and changed his mind.' 'Did he try to break in?' 'There was no way he could, without explosives or heavy tools. And he doesn't want to do that until all other approaches have failed.' 'I have it!' Dennis Solomons suddenly interjected. 'Co- cooning!' 'I beg your pardon?' 'It's a technique developed a couple of hundred years ago,' continued the science historian. 'Another name for it is moth-balling. When you have something you want to preserve, you seal it inside a plastic envelope, and then pump in an inert gas. The original use was to protect military equipment between wars; it was once applied to whole ships. It's still widely used in museums that are short of storage space; no one knows what's inside some of the hundred-year-old cocoons in the Smithsonian base- ment.' Patience was not one of Carlisle Perera's virtues; he was aching to drop his bombshell, and could restrain himself no longer. 'Please, Mr Ambassador! This is all very interesting, but I feel my information is rather more urgent.' 'If there are no other points - very well, Dr Perera.' The exobiologist, unlike Conrad Taylor, had not found Rama a disappointment. It was true that he no longer expected to find life - but sooner or later, he had been quite sure, some remains would be discovered of the creatures who had built this fantastic world. The ex- ploration had barely begun, although the time available was horribly brief before Endeavour would be forced to escape from her present sun-grazing orbit. But now, if his calculations were correct, Man's contact with Rama would be even shorter than he had feared. For one detail had been overlooked - because it was so large that no one had noticed it before. 'According to our latest information,' Perera began, 'one party is now on its way to the Cylindrical Sea, while Commander Norton has another group setting up a sup- ply base at the foot of Stairway Alpha. When that's estab- lished, he intends to have at least two exploratory mis- sions operating at all times. In this way he hopes to use his limited manpower at maximum efficiency. • 'It's a good plan, but there may be no time to carry it out. In fact, I would advise an immediate alert, and a preparation for total withdrawal at twelve hours' notice. Let me explain... 'It's surprising how few people have commented on a rather obvious anomaly about Rama. It's now well inside the orbit of Venus - yet the interior is still frozen. But the temperature of an object in direct sunlight at this point is about five hundred degrees! 'The reason of course, is that Rama hasn't had time to warm up. It must have cooled down to near absolute zero - two hundred and seventy below - while it was in inter- stellar space. Now, as it approaches the sun, the outer hull is already almost as hot as molten lead. But the inside will stay cold, until the heat works its way through that kilometre of rock. 'There's some kind of fancy dessert with a hot exterior and ice-cream in the middle - I don't remember what it's called-' 'Baked Alaska. It's a favourite at UP banquets, unfor- tunately.' 'Thank you, Sir Robert. That's the situation in Rama at the moment, but it won't last. All these weeks, the solar heat has been working its way through, and we ex- pect a sharp temperature rise to begin in a few hours. That's not the problem; by the time we'll have to leave anyway, it will be no more than comfortably tropical.' 'Then what's the difficulty?' 'I can answer in one word, Mr Ambassador. Hurri- canes.' CHAPTER FIFTEEN - The Edge of the Sea There were now more than twenty men and women in- side Rama - six of them down on the plain, the rest ferry- ing equipment and expendables through the airlock sys- tem and down the stairway. The ship itself was almost deserted, with the minimum possible staff on duty; the joke went around that Endeavour was really being run by the four simps and that Goldie had been given the rank of Acting-Commander. For these first explorations, Norton had established a number of ground-rules; the most important dated back to the earliest days of man's space-faring. Every group, he had decided, must contain one person with prior experi- ence. But not more than one. In that way, everybody would have an opportunity of learning as quickly as pos- sible. And so the first party to head for the Cylindrical Sea, though it was led by Surgeon-Commander Laura Ernst, had as its one-time veteran Lt Boris Rodrigo, just back from Paris. The third member, Sergeant Pieter Rousseau, had been with the back-up teams at the Hub; he was an expert on space reconnaissance instrumentation, but on this trip he would have to depend on his own eyes and a small portable telescope. From the foot of Stairway Alpha to the edge of the Sea was just under fifteen kilometres - or an Earth-equi- valent of eight under the low gravity of Rama. Laura Ernst, who had to prove that she lived up to her own standards, set a brisk pace. They stopped for thirty min- utes at the mid-way mark, and made the whole trip in a completely uneventful three hours. It was also quite monotonous, walking forward in the beam of the searchlight through the anechoic darkness of Rama. As the pool of light advanced with them, it slowly elongated into a long, narrow ellipse; this foreshortening of the beam was the only visible sign of progress. If the observers up on the Hub had not given them continual distance checks, they could not have guessed whether they had travelled one kilometre, or five, or ten. They just plodded onwards through the million-year-old night, over an apparently seamless metal surface. But at last, far ahead at the limits of the now weaken- ing beam, there was something new. On a normal world, - it would have been a horizon; as they approached, they could see that the plain on which they were walking dame to an abrupt stop. They were nearing the edge of the Sea. 'Only a hundred metres,' said Hub Control. 'Better slow down.' That was hardly necessary, yet they had already done so. It was a sheer straight drop of fifty metres from the level of the plain to that of the Sea - if it was a sea, and not another sheet of that mysterious crystalline material. Al- though Norton had impressed upon everyone the danger of taking anything for granted in Rama, few doubted that the Sea was really made of ice. But for what conceiv- able reason was the cliff on the southern shore five hun- dred metres high, instead of the fifty here? It was as if they were approaching the edge of the world; their oval of light, cut off abruptly ahead of them, became shorter and shorter. But far out on the curved screen of the Sea their monstrous foreshortened shadows had appeared, magnifying and exaggerating every move- ment. Those shadows had been their companions every step of the way, as they marched down the beam, but now that they were broken at the edge of the cliff they no longer seemed part of them. They might have been crea- tures of the Cylindrical Sea, waiting to deal with any in- truders into their domain. Because they were now standing on the edge of a fifty- metre cliff, it was possible for the first time to appreciate the curvature of Rama. But no one had ever seen a frozen lake bent upwards into a cylindrical surface;, that was distinctly unsettling, and the eye did its best to find some other interpretation. It seemed to Dr Ernst, who had once made a study of visual illusions, that half the time she was really looking at a horizontally curving bay, not a surface that soared up into the sky. It required a deliber- ate effort of will to accept the fantastic truth. Only in the line directly ahead, parallel to the axis of Rama, was normalcy preserved. In this direction alone was there agreement between vision and logic. Here - for the next few kilometres at least - Rama looked flat, and was flat... And out there, beyond their distorted shadows and the outer limit of the beam, lay the island that dominated the Cylindrical Sea. 'Hub Control,' Dr Ernst radioed, 'please aim your beam at New York.' The night of Rama fell suddenly upon them, as the oval of light went sliding out to sea. Conscious of the now invisible cliff at their feet, they all stepped back a few metres. Then, as if by some magical stage transformation, the towers of New York sprang into view. The resemblance to old-time Manhattan was only super- ficial; this star-born echo of Earth's past possessed its own unique identity. The more Dr Ernst stared at it, the more certain she became that it was not a city at all. The real New York, like all of Man's habitations, had never been finished; still less had it been designed. This place, however, had an overall symmetry and pattern, though one so complex that it eluded the mind. It had been conceived and planned by some controlling intelli- gence - and then it had been completed, like a machine devised for some specific purpose. After that, there was no possibility of growth or change. The beam of the searchlight slowly tracked along those distant towers and domes and interlocked spheres and criss-crossed tubes. Sometimes there would be a brilliant reflection as some flat surface shot the light back towards them; the first time this happened, they were all taken by surprise. It was exactly as. if, over there on that strange island, someone was signalling to them... But there was nothing that they could see here that was not already shown in greater detail on photographs taken from the Hub. After a few minutes, they called for the light to return to them, and began to walk eastwards along the edge of the cliff. It had been plausibly theor- ized that, somewhere, there must surely be a flight of steps, or a ramp, leading down to the Sea. And one crew- man, who was a keen sailor, had raised an interesting conjecture. 'Where there's a sea,' Sergeant Ruby Barhes had pre- dicted, 'there must be docks and harbours - and ships. You can learn everything about a culture by studying the way it builds boats.' Her colleagues thought this a rather restricted point of view, but at least it was a stimulating one. Dr Ernst had almost given up the search, and was pre- paring to m4e a descent by rope, when Lt Rodrigo spot- ted the narrow stairway. It could easily have been over- looked in the shadowed darkness below the edge of the cliff, for there was no guard-rail or other indication of its presence. And it seemed to lead nowhere; it ran down the fifty-metre vertical wall at a steep angle, and disappeared below the surface of the Sea. They scanned the flight of steps with their helmet- lights, could see no conceivable hazard, and Dr Ernst got Commander Norton's permission to descend. A minute later, she was cautiously testing the surface of the Sea. Her foot slithered almost frictionlessly back and forth. The material felt exactly like ice. It was ice. When she struck it with her hammer, a familiar pat- tern of cracks radiated from the impact point, and she had no difficulty in collecting as many pieces as she wished. Some had already melted when she held up the sample holder to the light; the liquid appeared to be slightly turbid water, and she took a cautious sniff. 'Is that safe?' Rodrigo called down, with a' trace of anxiety. 'Believe me, Boris,' she answered, 'if there are any pathogens around here that have slipped through my de- tectors, our insurance policies lapsed a week ago. But Boris had a point. Despite all the tests that had been carried out, there was a very slight risk that this substance might be poisonous, or might carry some un- known disease. In normal circumstances, Dr Ernst would not have taken even this minuscule chance. Now, how- ever, time was short and the stakes were enormous. If it became necessary to quarantine Endeavour, that would be a very small price to pay for her cargo of knowledge. 'It's water, but I wouldn't care to drink it - it smells like an algae culture that's gone bad. I can hardly wait to get it to the lab.' 'Is the ice safe to walk on?' 'Yes, solid as a rock.' 'Then we can get to New York.' 'Can we, Pieter? Have you ever tried to walk across four kilometres of ice?' 'Oh - I see what you mean. Just imagine what Stores would say, if we asked for a set of skates! Not that many of us would know how to use them, even if we had any aboard.' 'And there's another problem,' put in Boris Rodrigo. 'Do you realize that the temperature is already above freezing? Before long, that ice is going to melt. How many spacemen can swim four kilometres? Certainly not this one...' Dr Ernst rejoined them at the edge of the cliff, and held up the small sample bottle in triumph. 'It's a long walk for a few cc's of dirty water, but it may teach us more about Rama than anything we've found so far. let's head for home.' They turned towards the distant lights of the Hub, moving with the gentle, loping strides which had proved the most comfortable means of walking under this re- duced gravity. Often they looked back, drawn by the hid- den enigma of the island out there in the centre of the frozen sea. And just once, Dr Ernst thought she felt the faint sus- picion of a breeze against her cheek. It did not come again, and she quickly forgot all about it. CHAPTER SIXTEEN - Kealakekua 'As you know perfectly well, Dr Perera,' said Ambassador Bose in a tone of patient resignation, 'few of us share your knowledge of mathematical meteorology. So please take pity on our ignorance.' 'With pleasure,' answered the exobiologist, quite un- abashed. 'I can explain it best by telling you what is go- ing to happen inside Rama - very soon. 'The temperature is now about to rise, as the solar heat pulse reaches the interior. According to the latest in- formation I've received, it's already above freezing point. The Cylindrical Sea will soon start to thaw; and unlike bodies of water on Earth, it will melt from the bottom upwards. That may produce some odd effects; but I'm much more concerned with the atmosphere. 'As it's heated, the air inside Rama will expand - and will attempt to rise towards the central axis. And this is the problem. At ground level, although it's apparently stationary, it's actually sharing the spin of Rama - over eight hundred kilometres an hour. As it rises towards the axis it will try to retain that speed - and it won't be able to do so, of course. The result will be violent winds and turbulence; I estimate velocities of between two and three hundred kilometres an hour. 'Incidentally, very much the same thing occurs on Earth. The heated air at the Equator - which shares the Earth's sixteen-hundred-kilometres-an-hour spin - runs into the same problem when it rises and flows north and south.' 'Ah, the Trade Winds! I remember that from my geography lessons' 'Exactly, Sir Robert. Rama will have Trade Winds, with a vengeance. I believe they'll last only a few hours, and then spine kind of equilibrium will be restored. Meanwhile, I should advise Commander Norton to evac- uate - as soon as possible. Here is the message I propose sending.' With a little imagination, Commander Norton told him- self, he could pretend that this was an improvised night camp at the foot of some mountain in a remote region of Asia or America. The clutter of sleeping pads, collapsible chain and tables, portable power plant, lighting equip- ment, electrosan toilets, and miscellaneous scientific ap- paratus would not have looked out of place on Earth - especially as there were men and women working here without life-support systems. Establishing Camp Alpha had been very hard work, for everything had had to be man-handled through the chain of airlocks, sledded down the slope from the Hub, and then retrieved and unpacked. Sometimes, when the brak- ing parachutes had failed, a consignment had ended up a good kilometre away out on the plain: Despite this, sev- ual crew members had asked permission to make the ride; Norton had firmly forbidden it. In an emergency, however, he might be prepared to reconsider the ban. Almost all this equipment would stay here, for the lab- our of carrying it back was unthinkable - in fact, impos- sible. There were times when Commander Norton felt an irrational shame at leaving so much human litter in this strangely immaculate place. When they finally departed, he was prepared to sacrifice some of their precious time to leave everything in good order. Improbable though it was, perhaps millions of years hence, when Rama shot through some other star system, it might have visitors again. He would like to give them a good impression of Earth. Meanwhile, he had a rather more immediate problem. During the last twenty-four hours he had received almost identical messages from both Mars and Earth. It seemed an odd coincidence; perhaps they had been commiserat- ing with each other, as wives who lived safely on different planets were liable to do under sufficient provocation. Rather pointedly, they had reminded him that even though he was now a great hero, he still had family re- sponsibilities. The Commander picked up a collapsible chair, and walked out of the pool of light into the darkness sur- rounding the camp. It was the only way he could get any privady, and he could also think better away from the turmoil. Deliberately turning his back on the organized confusion behind him, he began to speak into the re- corder slung around his neck. 'Original for personal file, dupes to Mars and Earth. Hello, darling - yes, I know I've been a lousy correspond- ent, but I haven't been aboard ship for a week. Apart from a skeleton crew, we're all camping inside Rama, at the foot of the stairway we've christened Alpha. 'I have three parties out now, scouting the plain, but we've made disappointingly slow progress, because every- thing has to be done on foot. If only we had some means of transport! I'd be very happy to settle for a few electric bicycles ... they'd be perfect for the job. 'You've met my medical officer, Surgeon-Commander Ernst-' He paused uncertainly; Laura had met one of his wives, but which? Better cut that out-- Erasing the sentence, he began again. 'My MO, Surgeon-Commander Ernst, led the first group to reach the Cylindrical Sea, fifteen kilometres from here. She found that it was frozen water, as we'd expected - but you wouldn't want to drink it. Dr Ernst says it's a dilute organic soup, containing traces of almost any carbon compound you care to name, as well as phos- phates and nitrates and dozens of metallic salts. There's not the slightest sign of life - not even any dead micro- organisms. So we still know nothing about the biochemis- try of the Ramans ... though it was probably not wildly different from ours. Something brushed lightly against his hair; he had been too busy to get it cut, and would have to do some- thing about that before he next put on a space-helmet ... 'You've seen the viddies of Paris and the other towns we've explored on this side of the Sea ... London, Rome, Moscow. It's impossible to believe that they were ever built for anything to live in. Paris looks like a giant stor- age depot. London is a collection of cylinders linked to- gether by pipes connected to what are obviously pumping stations. Everything is sealed up, and there's no way of finding what's inside without explosives or lasers. We won t try these until there are no alternatives. 'As for Rome and Moscow-' 'Excuse me, Skipper. Priority from Earth.' What now? Norton asked himself. Can't a man get a few minutes to talk to his families? He took the message from the Sergeant, and scanned it quickly, just to satisfy himself that it was not immediate. Then he read it again, more slowly. What the devil was the Rama Committee? And why had he never heard of it? He knew that all sorts of associations, societies, and professional groups - some serious, some completely crackpot - had been trying to get in touch with him; Mission Control had done a good job of protection, and would not have forwarded this message unless it was considered important. 'Two-hundred-kilometre winds - probably sudden on- set' - well, that was something to think about. But it was hard to take it too seriously, on this utterly calm night; and it would be ridiculous to run away like frightened mice, when they were just starting effective exploration. Commander Norton lifted a hand to brush aside his hair, which had somehow fallen into his eyes again. Then he froze, the gesture uncompleted. He had felt a trace of wind, several times in the last hour. It was so slight that he had completely ignored it; after all, he was the commander of a spaceship, not a sailing ship. Until now the movement of air had not been of the slightest professional concern. What would the long-dead captain of that earlier Endeavour have done in a situation such as this? Norton had asked himself that question at every mo- ment of crisis in the last few years. It was his secret, which he had never revealed to anyone. And like most of the important things in life, it had come about quite by acci- dent. He had been captain of Endeavour for several months before he realized that it was named after one of the most famous ships in history. True, during the last four hun- dred years there had been a dozen Endeavours of sea and two of space, but the ancestor of them all was the 370-ton Whitby collier that Captain James Cook, RN, had sailed round the world between 1768 and 1771. With a mild interest that had quickly turned to an absorbing curiosity - almost an obsession - Norton had begun to read everything he could find about Cook. He was now probably the world's leading authority on the greatest explorer of all time, and knew whole sections of the Journals by heart. It still seemed incredible that one man could have done so much, with such primitive equipment. But Cook had been not only a supreme navigator, but a scientist and - in an age of brutal discipline - a humanitarian. He treated his own men with kindness, which was unusual; what was quite unheard of was that he behaved in ex- actly the same way to the often hostile savages in the new lands he discovered. It was Norton's private dream, which he knew he would never achieve, to retrace at least one of Cook's voy- ages around the world. He had made a limited but spectacular start, which would certainly have astonished the Captain, when he once flew a polar orbit directly above the Great Barrier Reef. It had been early morning on a clear day, and from four hundred kilometres up he had had a superb view of that deadly wall of coral, marked by its line of white foam along the Queensland coast. He had taken just under five minutes to travel the whole two thousand kilometres of the Reef. In a single glance he could span weeks of perilous voyaging for that first Endeavour. And through the telescope, he had caught a glimpse of Cooktown and the estuary where the ship had been dragged ashore for repairs, after her near- fatal encounter with the Reef. A year later, a visit to the Hawaii Deep-Space Tracking Station had given him an even more unforgettable ex- perience. He had taken the hydrofoil to Kealakekua Bay, and as he moved swiftly past the bleak volcanic cliffs, he felt a depth of emotion that had surprised and even dis- concerted him. The guide had led his group of scientists, engineers and astronauts past the glittering metal pylon that had replaced the earlier monument, destroyed by the Great Tsunami of '68. They had walked on for a few more yards across black, slippery lava to the small plaque at the water's edge. Little waves were breaking over it, but Norton scarcely noticed them as he bent down to read the words: NEAR THIS SPOT CAPTAIN JAMES COOK WAS KILLED 14 FEBRUARY, 1779 ORIGINAL TABLET DEDICATED 28 AUGUST, 1928 BY COOK SESQUICENTENNIAL COMMISSION. REPLACED BY TRICENTENNIAL COMMISSION 14 FEBRUARY, 2079 That was years ago, and a hundred million kilometres away. But at moments like this, Cook's reassuring pres- ence seemed very close. In the secret depths of his mind, he would ask: 'Well, Captain - what is your advise?' It was a little game he played, on occasions when there were not enough facts for sound judgement, and one had to rely on intuition. That had been part of Cook's genius; he always made the right choice - until the very end, at Kealakekua Bay. The Sergeant waited patiently, while his Commander stared silently out into the night of Rama. It was no longer unbroken, for at two spots about four kilometres away, the faint patches of light of exploring parties could be clearly seen. In an emergency, I can recall them within the hour, Norton told himself. And that, surely, should be good enough. He turned to the Sergeant, 'Take this message. Rama Committee, care of Spacecom. Appreciate your advice and will take precautions. Please specify meaning of phrase "sudden onset". Respectfully, Norton, Commander, En- deavour.' He waited until the Sergeant had disappeared towards the blazing lights of the camp, then switched on his re- corder again. But the train of thought was broken, and he could not get back into the mood. The letter would have to wait for some other time. It was not often that Captain Cook came to his aid when he was neglecting his duty. But he suddenly re- membered how rarely and briefly poor Elizabeth Cook had seen her husband in sixteen years of married life. Yet she had borne him six children - and outlived them all. His wives, never more than ten minutes away at the speed of light, had nothing to complain about... CHAPTER SEVENTEEN - Spring During the first 'nights' on Rama, it had not been easy to sleep. The darkness and the mysteries it concealed were oppressive, but even more unsettling was the silence. Ab- sence of noise is not a natural condition; all human senses require some input. If they are deprived of it, the mind manufactures its own substitutes. And so many sleepers had complained of strange noises - even of voices - which were obviously illusions, because those awake had heard nothing. Surgeon-Commander Ernst had prescribed a very simple and effective cure; during the sleeping period, the camp was now lulled by gentle, unobtrusive background music. This night, Commander Norton found the cure in- adequate. He kept straining his ears into the darkness, and he knew what he was listening for. But though a very faint breeze did caress his face from time to time, there was no sound that could possibly be taken for that of a distant, rising wind. Nor did either of the exploring parties report anything unusual. At least, around Ship's midnight, he went to sleep. There was always a man on watch at the communications console, in case of any urgent messages. No other precau- tions seemed necessary. Not even a hurricane could have created the sound that did wake him, and the whole camp, in a single in- stant. It seemed that the sky was falling, or that Rama had split open and was tearing itself apart. First there was a rending crack, then a long-drawn-out series of crystalline crashes like a million glass-houses being de- molished. It lasted for minutes, though it seemed like hours; it was still continuing, apparently moving away into the distance, when Norton got to the message centre. 'Hub Control! What's happened?' 'Just a moment, Skipper. It's over by the Sea. We're getting the light on it.' Eight kilometres overhead, on the axis of Rama, the searchlight began to swing its beam out across the plain. It reached the edge of the Sea, then started to track along it, scanning around the interior of the world. A quarter of the way round the cylindrical surface, it stopped. Up there in the sky - or what the mind still persisted in calling the sky - something extraordinary was happening. At first, it seemed to Norton that the Sea was boiling. It was no longer static and frozen in the grip of an eternal winter; a huge area, kilometres across, was in turbulent movement. And it was changing colour; a broad band of white was marching across the ice. Suddenly a slab perhaps a quarter of a kilometre on a side began to tilt upwards like an opening door. Slowly and majestically, it reared into the sky, glittering and sparkling in the beam of the searchlight. Then it slid back and vanished underneath the surface, while a tidal wave of foaming water raced outwards in all directions from its point of submergence. Not until then did Commander Norton fully realize what was happening. The ice was breaking up. All these days and weeks, the Sea had been thawing, far down in the depths. It was hard to concentrate because of the crashing roar that still filled the world and echoed round the sky, but he tried to think of a reason for so dramatic a convulsion. When a frozen lake or river thawed on Earth, it was nothing like this... But of course! It was obvious enough, now that it had happened. The Sea was thawing from beneath as the solar heat seeped through the hull of Rama. And when ice turns into water, it occupies less volume ... So the Sea had been sinking below the upper layer of ice, leaving it unsupported. Day by day the strain bad been building up; now the band of ice that encircled the equator of Rama was collapsing, like a bridge that had lost its central pier. It was splintering into hundreds of floating islands, that would