Philadelphia 7.4.70 / T-28.25.03
The Liberty Bell is much larger than
he expected. Nearly fifteen feet tall, weighing over two thousand
pounds, it’s suspended by its oak arm between two cement supports,
the ceiling lights casting a dull sheen from its bronze surface.
Captain Lee stands in front of the bell, meditating upon the long
crack that runs down its side, the Biblical inscription carved
around its top: Proclaim Liberty Throughout All the Land unto All
the Inhabitants Thereof. Lev. XXV:X.
Reflected in the window behind the
bell he can see the URS lieutenant who escorted him to the pavilion.
The park ranger who met them there is young and nervous; his hand
was sweaty when Lee clasped it, and he stuttered as he commenced a
long-winded recital of the bell’s history until Lee politely asked
to be left alone. Now they wait patiently behind him, respectfully
giving him a few moments alone.
Through the pavilion window, on the
opposite side of the grassy mall, lies Independence Hall. The
reception is already underway, yet Lee’s in no hurry to join it,
even though the party is being held in honor of him and his crew.
It’s a distinct privilege to be allowed to view the Liberty Bell;
one of the first acts the government took after the Revolution was
to close this site to the public. Citing the risk of a terrorist
attack, the Internal Security Agency claimed that the bell was too
valuable to be left unguarded during a national emergency, yet it’s
been nearly twelve years since the Revolution and still the Liberty
Bell is off-limits to everyone save the party elite. Lee can’t help
but wonder if the government fears what the average citizen might
think if he saw for himself the artifact from which the Liberty
Party took its name, and read the words inscribed upon
it.
There’s still time to call it off. A
few words whispered to the right people, a couple of discreet phone
calls using innocuous code phrases, and the conspiracy would not so
much unravel as it would simply cease to exist. Everyone involved
would stop what they’re doing and assume fall-back positions, and
with any luck the prefects would never know that a plot had
transpired.
Tonight’s his last chance to back out.
After this, there’s no turning back, no acceptable alternative
except success; failure means treason and treason means death. Which
is why he’s come here, to this particular place; not as a symbolic
display of patriotism, as everyone assumes, but simply to give
himself a few minutes to think.
So is he going through with this or
not?
Lee still hasn’t answered his own
question as he turns away from the bell. The lieutenant snaps to
attention; the ranger self-consciously does the same even though it
isn’t necessary.
"All right, Lieutenant," he says
quietly, "I’m done here. Let’s go to the party."
As appropriate for the Fourth of July,
the President’s Reception is being held in the cobblestone square
behind Independence Hall. Once the guests make their way through the
security checkpoints, they find that an enormous screen has been
unfurled across the rear of the red-brick colonial courthouse, upon
which real-time images of the Alabama are being projected.
Lee ignores the screen as he saunters through the crowd, untasted
glass of champagne in his gloved left hand, his right hand held
formally behind his back. In the humid warmth of the July evening,
his white dress uniform clings to his skin. He deliberately arrived
after his senior officers; attending this fete was the thing he was
most reluctant to do, yet his appearance is mandatory. Besides,
there’s one last bit of important business that needs to be
settled.
So Captain Lee mingles with the
gentlemen in their batswing ties and frock coats and the ladies in
their bodices and gowns, smiling and bowing, pausing now and then to
shake some stranger’s hand or be photographed with another, yet
taking care to remain in motion so as not to be cornered for very
long. Along the edge of the crowd, he can see the uniforms of URS
soldiers: black berets, jodhpurs ducked into leather knee boots,
polished rifles held at parade rest. The red softball-size spheres
of surveillance floaters hover above the partygoers, watching,
listening, scanning. Security is tight; the president is supposed to
be flying up from Atlanta for the occasion, although Lee has little
doubt that he will be unavoidably detained. Philadelphia is a little
too close to the New England border for the president of the United
Republic of America to consider himself entirely safe. Indeed, very
few people ever see him outside the capital, although the news media
regularly show footage of him attending events in places as far
distant as Southern California.
Spotting another pair of white service
uniforms beneath the boughs of a walnut tree, Lee makes his way
through the crowd, and finds Tom Shapiro, the Alabama’s First
Officer, huddled with his Executive Officer, Jud Tinsley. He can’t
make out what they’re saying until he’s nearly beside them. Tinsley
sees him coming, and briefly touches Shapiro’s elbow as he
straightens his shoulders.
"Evening, Captain," Shapiro
says.
"Gentlemen . . ."
"Enjoying the party, sir?" Tinsley
raises his bare hand to stifle a burp. "Pretty nice send-off they’re
giving us."
"It’ll do." Lee knows the XO is drunk
even before he notices the empty champagne glass on the low wall
below the tree. "Just make sure you don’t enjoy yourselves too much.
Jud, button your tunic and put on your gloves. We’re in
public."
"Sorry, sir." Tinsley’s face reddens;
he digs into his trouser pockets for his gloves. "It’s kinda warm
tonight."
"Enjoy it. You’ll be cold soon
enough." Lee steps forward to fasten the top brass button of the
younger man’s uniform. Shapiro, at least, is properly dressed and
reasonably sober. "You’re not talking about anything you shouldn’t,
are you?" he murmurs when he’s close enough that only the two of
them can hear him.
Tinsley starts to mutter a
half-hearted denial. "Just a couple of details," Shapiro says
quietly. He glances up at the low tree limbs above them. "We figured
the floaters couldn’t sneak up on us over here."
Good thinking, but not good enough.
"Not the time nor place," Lee says. "Save it for . . ."
He catches himself. The next meeting,
he was about to say, yet there aren’t going to be any more meetings,
are there? After the reception they’ll be driven straight to the
airport, where they’re scheduled to board a jet to Gingrich Space
Center. By 0600 tomorrow morning they’ll be in quarantine along with
the rest of the crew, and there will be no opportunity for any of
them to have a conversation without risk of being monitored. If they
wait until they reach the Alabama, it may be too late to make
any changes. Perhaps Tom has the right idea after all.
"Has something come up?" Lee casually
gazes up at the walnut tree, just to make certain a floater isn’t
hiding among the leaves. "Anything I should know about?"
Neither of his senior officers say
anything, although they give each other a reticent look. "Nothing we
haven’t already gone over, sir," Shapiro says at last. "It’s just .
. . I mean, the ignition lock-out . . ."
"Don’t worry," Lee says. "We’re taking
care of . . ." Tinsley coughs into his fist, his right foot
innocuously prodding Lee’s shoe. The captain glances his way, sees
the XO gazing past his shoulder. A swish of a crinoline skirt from
close behind, then a soft hand touches his arm.
"If I didn’t know better, Robert,"
Elise says, "I’d swear you were avoiding me."
She’s half-right; if Lee had known she
would be here, he would have avoided her. Yet as soon as he hears
her voice, he realizes this particular encounter is inevitable: it’s
only natural that she would attend this reception, and not only
because they were once married.
Yet, as the captain turns toward Elise
Rochelle Lee, he feels no regret over having left her. Their
marriage lasted for more than seventeen years, and yet she remains
as icily beautiful as when they first met at an Academy mixer; it’s
only in the last eighteen months that he’s come to realize that he
barely knows her. The fact that she’s kept his name long after their
legal separation is yet another indication that she married him for
reasons that had more to do with social stature than love; for all
intents and purposes, she’s still the wife of Captain R.E. Lee,
commanding officer of the URSS Alabama.
"I wasn’t. I simply didn’t see you
among all these people." Lee takes her silk-gloved hand, gives her a
quick buss on the cheek. "You look splendid . . . is that a new
dress?"
"Flatterer." Elise folds her hand
around his elbow as her gaze shifts to Shapiro and Tinsley. "Pardon
me, gentlemen, but may I borrow your captain? There’s someone who
wants to meet him."
"By all means." Shapiro essays a
formal bow as he steps back. Tinsley does the same, and Lee can’t
help but notice that his eyes never leave Elise’s cleavage. Those
breasts once attracted him, too; it took him a long time to discover
that the heart beneath them was cold. "Captain, Madame . .
."
"Your father?" Lee murmurs as Elise
escorts him away. "I figured he would send you to find
me."
"Perhaps." Her smile becomes enigmatic
as they stroll through the crowd. "Why, is it such a burden for you
to see him one last time? After all, he had quite a bit to do with
your selection."
A soft purr from somewhere just above
his head. A floater has picked them up; now it’s following them as
they move through the reception. Even if he was inclined to give a
candid answer–thank you, but I’ve accomplished this on my
own–now isn’t the time. "For which I’m grateful," Lee says. "And
no, it isn’t a burden."
"Good. I rather hoped not." Her hand
slides down to take his own. "Besides, he has a treat for
you."
They find Joseph R. Rochelle, the
Senator from Virginia, standing in front of the screen, surrounded
as always by aides, Liberty Party apparatchiks, local political
cronies, and sycophants of one sort or another. A short, avuncular
man for whom somatotropin therapy has erased nearly twenty years
from his real age, he now looks only slightly older than his former
son-in-law. His back is turned as they approach; he must have just
finished another one of his anecdotes, for everyone laughs out loud.
Senator Rochelle rarely lacks for an audience, in or out of
Atlanta.
"Oh, very good! You’ve found him!"
Senator Rochelle beams as his daughter leads Captain Lee into the
midst of the circle, then he half-turns to make an expansive gesture
at the screen looming above them. "I was just saying that someone .
. . I won’t say whom, of course . . . in Atlanta had insisted upon
christening your ship the Virginia." A broad wink that
everyone understands. "But of course, that particular someone didn’t
have quite as much clout as the gentleman from another
state."
More laughter from the senator’s
entourage, and Lee forces himself to smile appreciatively. While the
Alabama was still under construction, there had been
considerable in-fighting within Congress over which state the vessel
would be named after. In the end, the president settled the dispute
by christening it in honor of the state whose NASA center had been
most responsible for its research and development. An ironic choice,
since NASA itself no longer exists; it’s now yet another civilian
agency dismantled under the National Reform Program, its primary
functions folded into the Federal Space Agency, an arm of the United
Republic Service.
But Lee doesn’t say anything, nor does
he need to; it’s only necessary for him to smile and bow as the
senator introduces him to a dozen or so men and women whose names he
forgets as soon as he shakes their hands, while Elise stands between
them, playing the role of the loyal daughter and loving wife. When
all was said and done, this was about appearances; once again, Lee
realizes that he hadn’t chosen his wife so much as she had chosen
him, and then only with her father’s pragmatic approval. The senator
needed a son-in-law from the Academy of the Republic, an
up-and-coming URS officer whose career he could advance from a
discreet distance in order to further his own political ambitions.
Tonight’s the big payoff for everyone.
As the senator begins telling another
one of his stories, Lee’s attention drifts to the screen towering
above them. The Alabama hangs suspended in low orbit above
Earth, the spotlights of its skeletal dry-dock reflecting dully off
the ship’s light-grey fuselage. A tug gently maneuvers a cylindrical
barge into position below the ship’s spherical main fuel tank, in
preparation for onloading another ten thousand tons of deuterium and
helium-3 strip-mined from the mountains of the Moon. Fueling
operations will continue non-stop right up until ten hours before
the beginning of Alabama’s scheduled launch at 2400 tomorrow
night.
Once again, Lee finds himself
wondering if he should call it off. Everything depends upon the
timetable being kept. Nothing can be allowed to go wrong between now
and then . . . and yet there are a hundred different ways it could
all fall apart.
"Why the long face, Captain?" One of
the nameless men to whom he has just been introduced nudges his left
shoulder. "Concerned about the mission?"
"No, not at all." Out of the corner of
his eye, Lee catches Elise studying him. "Just observing the
fuel-up, that’s all."
"Robert doesn’t worry. He’s the
coolest officer the Academy has ever produced." Senator Rochelle
favors his son-in-law with a something that might resemble fondness
unless one happened to look closely at his eyes. "He just wants to
get out of here and see to his ship. Isn’t that right,
Bob?"
"Anything you say, Duke." Lee
addresses the senator by his nickname, and this elicits more
laughter from the cronies. No one ever says no to the Senator from
Virginia; by much the same token, Duke knows that Lee doesn’t like
to be called Bob. Tit for tat.
Rochelle chuckles as he pats Lee on
the shoulder, then he takes him by the arm. "If you’ll excuse us,"
he says to the others, "I’d like to have a few words with the
Captain." They nod and murmur as Rochelle leads Lee away, Elise
falling in behind them. "This will take just a moment," Rochelle
says softly once they’re out of earshot. "There’s someone here who
wants to meet you."
Believing the senator wants to
introduce him to yet another politician, Lee suppresses a sigh as he
lets Rochelle walk him past the edge of the crowd. Yet Duke
surprises him; instead, he takes him behind the screen, toward the
back entrance of Independence Hall. A pair of soldiers stands guard
near the door, their rifles at ready; behind them is a prefect,
wearing the calf-length dark grey overcoat and braided cap that is
the uniform of ISA officers. The soldiers step aside when they see
the senator, but the prefect doesn’t budge. He silently waits as
Rochelle produces his I.D. folder; Elise reluctantly does the same,
giving the intelligence officer a haughty glare as she holds her
card out to him to inspect. Only Lee is spared; apparently the
prefect recognizes him, for he shakes his head as Lee reaches into
his pocket. Satisfied, the officer turns and opens the narrow wooden
door leading into the building.
The hallway is silent, vacant save for
another soldier inside the entrance. Their footsteps echo faintly
off the old plaster walls as Rochelle beckons Lee and his daughter
toward a double door to the right; he gives them a quick look-over
as if to check their appearance, then he quietly taps on the door. A
moment passes; the door clicks as it’s unlocked from within, then
it’s opened by yet another soldier standing just inside.
Lee immediately recognizes this place
from history texts he’s studied since childhood: the Assembly Room,
where the Declaration of Independence was signed and the First
Constitution debated and framed. Small wooden desks, each with its
inkpot and quill pen, arranged in semi-circular rows around a low
platform on which a long table has been placed in front of three
high-backed chairs. And here, in the middle of the oak-paneled room
with his back turned toward them, stands Hamilton Conroy, the
President of the United Republic of America.
Senator Rochelle stops at the wooden
railing at the back of the room. "Mr. President," he says formally,
"may I present to you Captain Robert E. Lee, commander of the United
Republic Service Spaceship Alabama."
Hearing the senator, President Conroy
turns away from the gaunt middle-aged man with whom he had been
conversing. Rotund and short of stature, with narrow brown eyes set
in a broad face, the president is smaller than he seems on
government netv; now he seems diminished by the room itself. A
pretender to history, Lee reflects. A charlatan aspiring to
greatness.
"Indeed." The president smiles briefly
as he walks toward the railing, his hands clasped together behind
his frock coat. "I’ve been looking forward to meeting you, Captain.
Your father-in-law has told me great things about you."
"Thank you, Mr. President." Lee
doesn’t relax from the rigid stance he automatically assumed the
moment he saw the Commander-in-Chief. "I hope I live up to your
expectations."
The president laughs dryly, without
much humor. "At ease, Captain. You’re among friends here." He
glances at Senator Rochelle. "Duke, you should have let him know I
would be here. This reception is in his honor, after all. No need
for surprises."
"The ISA requested I keep your
presence secret," Rochelle says. "Security
considerations."
"Yes, of course." The president
dismisses the senator with scarcely a nod, his attention solely
focused upon Lee. "Sorry to take you away from the party, Captain. I
only wished to meet you in person. I haven’t had a chance to do so
before, and after tonight I’ll never have an opportunity to do so
again."
"Yes sir, Mr. President." Lee clasps
his hands behind him. From the corner of his eye he sees Elise doing
a slow burn. She’s probably been awaiting this moment for several
weeks; now she’s being ignored, with no one bothering to introduce
her to the president. "I apologize if I’ve taken you away from
urgent business."
The smile fades from the president’s
face. "Only matters of state." He turns toward the man with whom he
had been speaking. "I don’t know if you’ve ever met our Director of
Internal Security before . . . Mr. Shaw, Captain Lee."
"Never before now, Mr. President."
Roland Shaw glides down the aisle to extend his hand. "However, I
believe we have a meeting at the Cape tomorrow morning."
"Yes, sir, we do." Lee clasps Shaw’s
hand. "A last-minute detail before the shuttle launch. Security
procedures . . ."
"Of course." The left corner of Shaw’s
mouth tics upward. "We were just discussing a similar sort of
thing."
"Really?" Senator Rochelle tries to
reinsert himself in the conversation. "Anything you care to share
with us?"
Shaw frowns. "Not much to talk about,"
he says, and for a moment his eyes meet Lee’s. "A round-up of
dissidents who may be opposed to this mission. Simply a
precaution."
"A wise idea." Rochelle quickly voices
his approval. "I’m glad we were able to renew the Alien and Sedition
Act in the last session. It only seemed prudent, given our current
situation."
The current situation. As always, the
Republic is under constant siege by its enemies, both abroad and
within. The Commonwealth of New England, which still maintains armed
troops at the borders of Connecticut, Massachusetts, and Vermont.
Pacifica, whose guerrilla army wages daily skirmishes with URS
forces over disputed territory in the northern Sierra Nevada range.
The European Commonwealth, which continues to enforce trade
embargoes until the Republic agrees to remove its nukes from
geostationary orbit. Meanwhile, alleged spies were being arrested
every day, in cities and towns all over the country. Last night a
high-school teacher was publicly hanged in Houston. One of her
former students claimed that she was using a satphone to transmit
information to France; although the accused repeatedly claimed
innocence during her trial and the satphone was never found, the
student was the son of a prominent Liberty Party official, and
therefore his word was beyond question. The teacher’s execution was
carried out a few hours after the trial’s completion and shown live
on Govnet.
The president acknowledges the senator
with only a vague nod; for the moment, he’s disinterested in
politics. He steps a little closer to the railing, his solemn eyes
casually examining the gold braid on Lee’s epaulets. "We have
something in common, Captain," he quietly observes. "We’re both
named after famous ancestors."
"Yes sir, Mr. President." Lee
continues to stare straight ahead. "Robert E. Lee was my
great-grandfather, three gernerations removed." Or at least, so he’s
been told; in Virginia, nearly everyone whose last name is Lee
presumes to be descended from the general who led the Confederate
Army during the Civil War. Lee’s claim to family ancestry is no more
or less valid than anyone else’s.
"Just as I’m descended from Alexander
Hamilton, yes." The president reaches up to smooth a minute wrinkle
on the left shoulder of Lee’s uniform. "I’m curious . . . is there
anything that General Lee ever said that strikes a chord with you?
Something that has carried you to this place?"
Warmth curls around Lee’s neck.
Although the president doesn’t look directly at him, he feels the
eyes of everyone else in the room. Behind the president, Shaw
watches him silently, his gaze never leaving his face.
"Yes, sir, he did." Lee’s mouth is
dry. " ‘Duty is the sublimest word in our language. Do your duty in
all things. You cannot do more. You should never wish to do less.’
"
President Conroy raises his eyes to
meet Lee’s. For a few seconds that seem much longer he regards him
with cool appraisal. A small vein pulses in his neck below his right
ear; Lee finds himself watching it with an abstract sort of
fascination.
Does he suspect? Has he learned of the
conspiracy? Two days ago, Lee wrote a letter, addressed to both
Elise and her father, which he stored in his desk’s memory. The desk
was instructed not to release its contents until after 2400 hours
tomorrow night, but someone–Elise, the senator, the ISA–might have
decrypted it. If they did . . .
" ‘Let Americans disdain to be the
instruments of European greatness,’ " the president says at last. "
‘Let the thirteen States, bound together in a dissoluble Union,
concur in erecting one great American system, superior to the
control of all transatlantic force or influence, and able to dictate
the terms of the connection between the old and the new world.’ " He
pauses. "Do you understand, Captain?"
"Yes sir, Mr. President."
"My great-grandfather, also several
generations removed, wrote those words almost three hundred years
ago, not long after this great country was founded in this very same
room." The president speaks as if Lee hasn’t said anything. "The
conflicts were different then, but yet they remain much the same
today. America is destined for greatness, and it’s our
responsibility to achieve its destiny in the stars themselves. Out
there, the Republic shall become ageless. Immortal."
"Yes sir, Mr. President."
The president slowly nods. "You’re
doing a great service to this country, Captain. For this, the
Republic owes its gratitude." His left hand moves from behind his
back, extends across the railing. "God bless you, son. Good
luck."
Lee has a sudden impulse to spit in
his face. No one could have stopped him, not even the soldier
standing behind him. Instead, he clasps the president’s hand. His
palm feels small and limp within his linen glove; Lee can’t resist
the impulse to give his a little more pressure than
usual.
"Thank you, sir," he says. "I’ll do my
best."
The president winces, but smiles back
at him, and it’s in that instant Lee’s last remaining doubts vanish.
No more hesitation, no more second thoughts . . .
Tomorrow, he’s going to steal the
Alabama.
Huntsville 7.4.70 /
T-26.30.38
The first fiery red chrysanthemum has
just exploded above the Tennessee River when Jorge Montero’s desk
buzzes. Jorge doesn’t hear it at first; he’s out on the balcony with
his family, enjoying the cool breeze that has come with the passing
of the day, watching the skyrockets as they soar upward from the
riverside several miles away. The delayed boom of the fireworks
almost drowns out the phone from inside the house; it’s his son who
notices it first.
"Call, Papa." Carlos barely looks away
as an orange blossom opens in the sky, its iridescent petals
coruscating down around the holo of the single-star Republic flag
looming above the modest Huntsville skyline.
Jorge grunts, pushes himself out of
his chair. Rita gives him a little smile as he tromps past her to
the glass-paneled door leading into the spare bedroom he’s converted
into a office; Marie is curled up in her lap, her head nestled
against her mother’s shoulder. "Hurry back," Rita murmurs. "You’re
going to miss it."
"It’ll take just a second." Jorge had
switched off the inside lights so that their eyes would become
night-adapted; he almost tells the room to turn them back on again,
but thinks better of it as he gropes his way through the dark
office. A blue flash through the window illuminates his desk, making
it a little easier to find, and he picks up the phone just as it
buzzes a fourth time. "Hello?"
An anonymous voice. "Excuse me, is
this the Jackson residence?"
Ice tickles the nape of his neck. "I’m
sorry, no. You’ve got the wrong number."
"My mistake. Sorry." There’s a click,
then the dial tone.
Jorge’s hand trembles as he puts down
the phone. He stands alone in the office for a few moments, staring
at nothing in particular, feeling his heart beat against his chest.
Then he turns away from the desk, walks to the office door and opens
it. Light from the upstairs hallway causes him to squint; he
deliberately shuts his eyes as he quickly moves across the hall to
Carlos’s room. Fortunately, the kid has switched off the lights;
Jorge goes to the window next to the bed and touches the stud that
deopaques the glass.
Several coupes are parked on the street in front of
their apartment house, yet none look unfamiliar or out of place. As
he watches, though, a dark blue midi cruises down St. Clair. It
slows to a crawl as it comes within sight of his building; as it
passes beneath a street lamp he catches a brief glimpse through the
windshield of two men. They’re peering up at his
apartment.
The midi pulls over to the curb. Its
rear lights flash and its fan skirts billow as it settles to the
ground, but the doors don’t open. The car remains still, as if its
driver is waiting for something.
Jorge opaques the window, takes a deep
breath. Then he hurries back across the hall to his office. Another
pyrotechnic flash from across the city, followed several seconds
later by distant thunder. "Hello, desk," he says, careful to keep
the office lights off. "I.D. Jorge, password totem pole."
"Good evening, Jorge." The wall behind
the desk briefly displays the start-up screen before replacing it
with a picture he had taken of Marie and Carlos in Big Spring Park
one autumn afternoon last year. "Would you like to read your
mail?"
"No." Jorge opens the closet, pulls
out the canvas duffel bag he packed nearly a month ago. "Locate all
files prefixed zero-two and erase. Password
one-nine-gamma."
"Files located and erased." A pause.
"You have a phone subroutine attached to this command. Do you wish
for me to activate it now?"
"Yes, please. Password
two-nine-epsilon." The desk would now place a call to the next
person in the chain and repeat the same sequence of code-words he
had heard only a couple of minutes ago, alerting that individual in
the same way he had been warned. Jorge hopes that the person who
called him had been able to make a clean getaway, and that the next
guy in line will receive the signal in time.
No time to worry about that now. "Make
another call. Phonebook number twelve, password six-zero-six. Send
voxcard in memory, attach encrypted file prefixed zero-three-zero.
Then erase all data from memory. That’s all, desk." Without waiting
for an acknowledgment, Jorge drops the bag on top of the books and
disks stacked on his desk and crosses the room to the balcony. His
wife and children are still watching the fireworks. Rita looks
around as he opens the door.
"It’s time," he says
quietly.
Her mouth falls open and fear briefly
crosses her face, then she quickly puts a clamp on her emotions
before Marie notices. "All right, kids," she says, swinging their
daughter off her lap as she stands up, "that’s enough fireworks.
Papa’s got a big surprise for you."
"But I want to watch!" Marie wails. In
the far distance, skyrockets sail upward two and three at a time,
their crackling detonations overlapping one another: poom!
poppa-poppa-poom! poom! "I don’t wanna go!"
"It’s almost over. Now we’re going out
for ice cream." Rita picks Marie up again, turns to Carlos. "C’mon,
you too. We’re all going."
Carlos looks away from the city,
stares across the balcony at his father. Their eyes meet, and in
that instant Jorge knows that the boy has guessed the truth. His son
may only be thirteen, but he’s far more mature than his years; a few
weeks ago, Jorge had told him everything–at least, everything that
he needed to know–and warned him that this moment might come. Now
Carlos simply nods. "Sure," he says softly. "Sounds like
fun."
Jorge gives him a reassuring nod as he
steps aside to let Rita carry Marie through the door. The little
girl’s still fussing over missing the rest of the fireworks, but
there’s no time to comfort her now. He walks to the edge of the
balcony, glances over the side. No one in the courtyard behind the
apartment house, and his coupe is still parked in front of its
recharger. "Seen anyone down there?" he murmurs as Carlos joins him
at the railing.
"I haven’t really been looking. No, I
don’t think so." The teenager is shaking. "Papa, that call . .
."
"It’s begun." It figures the ISA would
pick this day for their next crackdown; the mass-arrest of
D.I.’s–"dissident intellectuals," to use a favorite Party
expression–on the Fourth of July is sure to make every patriotic
heart swell with pride. "We’ve got to hurry. Help Mama with Marie,
will you?"
"Okay." Carlos hesitates. "Can we take
anything?"
"Only the clothes on your back.
Sorry." Carlos nods gravely, then heads for the balcony door. Jorge
is about to follow him when an oval shadow passes across the
balcony.
He looks up just in time to spot a
floater moving past a floodlight on the cornice of the apartment
house next door.
They’re already too late. The prefects
are closing in.
Rita has taken a moment to open the
hall closet and wrap a light nylon jacket around Marie’s shoulders.
His daughter is on her own two feet now, but as petulant as only a
five-year-old can be, stamping angrily and insisting that she
doesn’t want ice cream. His wife stares at Jorge as he comes out of
the office, the canvas bag dangling from his left shoulder. Carlos
emerges from his bedroom; he’s grabbed a vest from his room, and
Jorge catches a glimpse of something as he hides it in his pocket.
Probably his pad; Carlos never goes anywhere without it. Jorge hopes
it doesn’t contain any incriminating information. Not that it
matters; the court tends to reach a verdict first, then examine the
evidence later, and then only if it cares to obey the letter of the
Revised Constitution.
"All right." Jorge tries hard to sound
carefree, if only for Marie’s sake. "Let’s go get some ice cream."
Then he leads the way down the stairs to the entrance
foyer.
The midi is still parked in front of
the building, but now two men stand on the sidewalk in front of the
vehicle. Neither wear the long grey coats of prefects, yet they
silently observe the Montero family as they walk down the front
steps and turn toward the alley leading to the rear courtyard. Just
as they’re about to walk around the side of the building, a police
HV glides down the street.
"C’mon now. We don’t want to be late."
Jorge sweeps Marie off her feet, and the child giggles with delight
as her daddy places her on his shoulders. "Ice cream . . . we’re
gonna have ice cream . . . ."
It’s at that moment when the
floodlights hit them, both in front and from behind.
"Stop!" The loudspeaker voice seems to
come from all directions at once. "Don’t move!"
Jorge raises a hand against the
white-hot glare. From her perch, Marie screams: "Papa. . .
!"
"Raise your hands! Don’t try to
run!"
Rita huddles against his side. "Jorge.
. . !"
Beyond the harsh light, the
silhouettes of men running toward them, their footsteps loud against
the pavement. From behind, a siren whoops as the HV rushes into the
alley.
"Papa! What are they doing. . .
?"
Above him, the windows of the
apartment house deopaque. Figures appear at the windows: their
neighbors, whom Jorge knows by face but not by name, staring down at
them. Then the windows go dark once more.
"Let me have her!" Rita claws at
Marie’s jacket. "Let me have her!"
Marie howls in terror as Jorge lifts
her off his shoulders. Her left foot lightly kicks him in the face,
and he barely has time to deposit his daughter in his wife’s arms
before someone grabs his wrist and twists it behind him.
"Wait a minute!" He instinctively
yanks his arm free. "Hold on! My kids. . . !"
A baton slaps his stomach just above
his kidney. A moment of exquisite pain as an electrical current
passes through him, then all his muscles relax and he collapses. The
back of his head strikes the cracked asphalt and now he lies in the
driveway, paralyzed and dazed, watching with a distant sort of
fascination as one of the men from the midi moves in upon Carlos.
The kid tries to punch him, but he misses; the scuffle moves beyond
his range of vision and all he sees are dark forms looming above
him.
"Jorge. . . !"
One of the figures crouches closer,
and the baton moves toward him again, the red light on its handle
strobing against the night. Rita’s screaming, Marie’s screaming, and
he can’t see or hear Carlos any more.
The baton touches the side of his
neck, and he plummets into black silence.
URSS Alabama 7.4.70 /
T-24.01.00
She can’t see the stars. The
spotlights arrayed along the open trusswork of the dry-dock are too
bright, and the only thing beyond them is the matte-black expanse of
space. Even Earth itself is invisible; it’s somewhere below the long
cylindrical boom of the ship’s primary structure, which stretches
away until it meets the enormous drum of the main engine. A shame;
there won’t be many more opportunities for her to be alone before
launch, and she would like to see Earth one last time.
Dana Monroe hovers in front of the
broad window of Deck H5, watching service pods and dock workers in
hardsuits as they move along the Alabama, making their
inspections of the starship’s five-hundred-foot hull. The window is
situated on the lowest deck of the hub module, just below the
primary airlocks and docking ports, and it’s the only porthole that
faces backward. All the other windows in the payload section,
including those in the seven ring modules that encircle the hub,
offer only side views, and none look forward: the view would have
been blocked by the main fuel tank and the vast cone of the Bussard
ramscoop.
Yet even as she surveys the prelaunch
operations, Dana knows she’s only killing time. As Chief Engineer,
her list has a couple of hundred different duties–two hundred
thirty-nine, to be exact–that she needs to perform over the next
twenty-four hours, half of which have to be completed within the
next twelve. Through her headset, she hears the mingled voices of
her team murmuring to one another over the primary com channel. For
the time being, though, she holds in place, awaiting one single
message that will lead her to one all-important job. . .
.
Dana switches her grip on the window
rung from her left hand to her right. No sun-shadows on the dry-dock
scaffolds; that means Highgate’s equatorial orbit has taken it
within Earth’s night once more. If she was doing EVA right now and
on tether outside the dock, she might be able to make out the Ursa
Major constellation. If she couldn’t see the place she was about to
leave, then at least she could see where she was going. . .
.
"Charlie Eagle, Charlie Eagle, this is
Lima Oklahoma Ten. Do you copy?"
Dana gives her headset a gentle tap.
"Charlie Eagle here. What’s up?"
Lima Oklahoma is Launch Operations,
the pillbox-shaped superstructure outside the main bay; Lima
Cherokee Ten is the call-sign for the duty officer for this shift.
"Dana, we just received a squib from Houston. A voxcard forwarded to
you from someone in Pensacola, name of Arthur Monroe."
Dana’s left eyebrow involuntarily
tics. An old boyfriend once told her that it did that when she’s
nervous. "That’s my uncle. Sure, put it through . . . vox only,
please."
A moment passes, then she hears a
reedy old man’s voice: "Dana, it’s your Uncle Art. I know you
haven’t heard from me in a long while, but I just wanted to let you
know how proud I am of you, and that your family is wishing you all
the best of luck. You’re probably very busy just now, so you don’t
need to call back if you don’t have to, but just remember that we
love you very much . . . and that’s all I wanted to say. Oh, and I’m
sending you a picture to take with you. Goodbye, and may God be with
you."
A brief pause, then the duty officer
comes back online. "That’s it. Do you want me to open the
card?"
Dana’s breath shudders as she let it
out. "No thanks. Just download it to my pad. I’ll look at it the
next chance I get."
"Will do. Lima Cherokee Ten
over."
"Thanks. Charlie Eagle out." She
clicks off, borrows another moment to gaze through the window. Uncle
Art’s the family patriarch; her late mother’s youngest brother, old
enough to remember when black people in the South were sometimes
called bad names. He’s still alive, yet only a small handful of
family members and close friends know that he now lives in a hospice
in Pensacola. He’s barely able to remember his own name, let alone
send a lucid voxcard to his favorite niece.
Dana glances at a wall chronometer:
2400 EST, exactly as she anticipated. All the proper code phrases
had been used. Best of luck. Don’t call back. File attached.
Goodbye.
Goodbye, indeed. One way or another,
she’s committed now.
She pushes away from the window,
glides across the compartment to a ceiling hatch. She enters the hub
access shaft, barely touching the ladder rungs as she floats upward
through the ship’s core. She passes Deck H4, where the command deck
is located, and H3, the life-support center, and H2, the engineering
section where her own team would be going about their business,
until she reaches the hatch leading to H1, at the top of the
shaft.
The outer pressure door is already
open; Dana presses a stud on the bulkhead and the inner hatch
bisects, revealing a short corridor leading to another hatch. She
pauses to touch her headset again. "I’m in the ring, going off-line
for a few minutes," she announces on the common frequency. "Be right
back." She switches off the headset. No further explanation is
necessary; everyone will assume that she’s visiting the
head.
The corridor takes her to a circular
passageway that leads to the ring modules. Dana floats to a hatch
marked C2. Opening it, she glides through a manhole in the
module.
C2 is one of the Alabama’s two
hibernation modules: four decks stacked one atop the other, each
deck containing fourteen biostasis cells. Folded down from their
wall niches, their lids open, the fiberglass cells faintly resemble
coffins, a similarity Dana finds unnerving. Through a window on the
opposite side of the deck, Dana can see the dry-dock bay.
No time to waste; if she remains
off-line for too long, someone in Launch Control might get
suspicious. She moves to a console beneath the window, pulls out the
recessed keypad, quickly taps instructions into the module’s
secondary computer system. A flatscreen lights, displaying the main
menu; she touches the button marked Program Install and the
screen shows a list of options beneath a password prompt. Dana
enters her clearance number, then reaches into her pocket and pulls
out her pad.
As she hoped, the duty officer has
already downloaded the voxcard she received from "Uncle Art." She
clips the pad against the console’s serial port, then opens the
photo that came attached to the voice-mail message. The picture that
appears on the pad’s screen is of Uncle Art’s family, taken during a
reunion picnic several years ago in Pensacola; what the casual
viewer wouldn’t know is that the digital image contains an encrypted
file.
A few deft strokes and the information
is fed into the computer’s backup memory. Once it’s in, Dana takes a
few moments to decrypt the file and double-check its contents. Long,
dense lines of information appear on the screen. Satisfied that the
info is secure, she saves it in the system under a password, then
unclips the pad from the console, stows away the keypad and shuts
down the board. With luck, no one will ever know she’s been
here.
Dana climbs head-first down a ladder
to the deck below, then enters a horizontal tunnel leading to the
next module. C3 is one of the two modules devoted to crew quarters:
racks of narrow bunks, tightly packed together between storage
lockers. She’s not looking forward to sharing close confines with a
hundred and three other crew members; with luck they won’t remain
aboard the Alabama for very long after they come out of
biostasis. She locates the head, takes a moment to flush its
zero-gee commode. The minute change in water pressure will indicate
to the duty officer that someone has just used the toilet on Deck
C3B; this will help substantiate her alibi.
She lets out her breath. One more task
completed. There will be more over the course of the next
twenty-four hours, some even more difficult than this, but for now .
. .
A sharp double-beep in her headset;
someone’s trying to page her. She switches the comlink back on.
"Charlie Eagle, we copy."
"Charlie Eagle, Lima Cherokee Ten.
Where are you right now?"
"Charlie Three Baker. Is there a
problem?"
An uncertain pause. "Ahh . . . yeah,
there is. We’ve detected a glitch in Charlie Two’s backup computer.
You know anything about this?"
Southern Georgia 7.5.70 /
T-20.42.45
Gliding a couple of inches above its
elevated track, the maglev passenger train races through the
forested hill country south of Macon, its spotlight piercing the
thin haze above the superconductive monorail. As it rushes past one
of the innumerable shanty towns that fester in the countryside, a
squatter warming himself by a trash can fire notices that the train
has only two cars, and that they have steel slats bolted against
their windows. He stares at the train long after it has vanished,
silently reflecting on the fact that, as hard as his life has
become, it could be much worse.
A sudden vibration awakens Jorge from
his restless slumber. Raising his head from where he had propped it
between the edge of the seat and the window, he studies the
compartment with weary eyes. Crammed together in every available
seat are men, women, and children. Most are asleep–wives huddled
against husbands, kids dozing in their parents’ laps–but some are
awake. Staring through the window slats, they watch the occasional
lights that swiftly pass by, their faces taut with anxiety,
exhaustion, hopelessness. Precious little baggage in the overhead
racks; only a handful managed to take anything when the prefects
came for them. Judging from what precious little conversation Jorge
has overheard, some of these people were taken off the street,
arrested while leaving restaurants, shops, even their own
homes.
D.I.’s, each and every one.
Scientists, for the most part–Jorge knows most of these people by
face if not by reputation–although scattered among them are also a
few writers, artists, students, and various other individuals who
present "a clear and present danger to national security," to use
the ISA’s favored term. There must be a couple of hundred people
packed into this train; the prefects were busy this Fourth of
July.
Marie’s head lies cradled in Jorge’s
lap, her jacket wadded around her shoulders as a makeshift blanket.
He tries not to disturb her as he raises his arm to glance at his
watch. Almost 3:45 a.m.; they’ve been on the train for nearly five
hours now, ever since they left Huntsville along with a few dozen
other D.I.’s and their kin. No trial, no hearing; only a ride in the
back of a government midi to the maglev station, where they were
ushered aboard by armed soldiers. The train wasn’t crowded until it
reached Atlanta, then it made a long stop while more than a hundred
more detainees were herded aboard, the grey-coated prefects on the
platform carefully checking off each name on their pads. Now a
soldier stands guard at each end of the compartment, rifle in hand,
forbidding anyone to speak aloud. Nothing to do except sleep, and be
afraid.
Camp Buchanan is their destination.
Just north of the Florida state line in Valdosta is the Patrick J.
Buchanan Education Center. Jorge has seen the Govnet propaganda for
Camp Buchanan: clean, well-lighted dormitories where D.I.’s are
allowed to live while they take classes intended to broaden their
political awareness. Happy, well-nourished children playing tag
while their parents sit at benches, eagerly asking questions of
patient teachers. People in blue paper pajamas standing in line in
the mess hall, patiently waiting for healthy food served up by
smiling cooks. Heartfelt testimonials by former D.I.’s proclaiming
the worthiness of the re-education program, repeatedly stating they
were well-treated during their stay. But Jorge knows three former
colleagues who were sent to Camp Buchanan, and he hasn’t seen any of
them since.
Across the aisle, Rita stirs, opens
her eyes. Carlos is curled up next to her, his head on her shoulder.
His wife looks around, sees Jorge, gives him a wan smile that he
knows she doesn’t feel. He wants to whisper something to her–an
apology? a little late for that now!–but the last thing they need is
to have one of the soldiers shouting at him, so all he can is give
her is what he hopes is a comforting nod. Everything will be all
right, everything’s going to work out just fine. . . .
But it isn’t. He knows that now. The
ISA must have tumbled to the conspiracy. Why else would they have
been arrested?
The train lurches again, a little
harder this time, and now there’s a gradual sense of deceleration.
Are they already coming into Valdosta? Jorge peers through the
window slats. Nothing except darkness, yet Valdosta is a large
enough city that he should be able to see its lights. Nonetheless,
the train is slowing down. . . .
Other passengers are waking up. Jorge
catches the eye of an old friend seated two rows up: Henry Johnson,
an astrophysicist who also used to work at Marshall Space Flight
Center. He’s known Henry since they were postgrad students at MIT,
long before the Second Revolution; after that, they worked together
on the Starflight Project, or at least until they signed a petition
protesting the National Reform Program. The new government let them
keep their jobs until the Alabama was finished, then they
were publicly denounced as D.I.’s and cast out of the Federal Space
Agency. Shortly after that, their citizenship was suspended, their
voting rights revoked. They became non-citizens, left to fend for
themselves as best they could.
Now Henry’s on the train to Camp
Buchanan, along with everyone else from Marshall who stood up to the
Liberty Party and its social agenda. Six rows back is Bernie Cayle
and his wife Vonda, and Jorge spotted Jim Levin on the platform at
Huntsville just before he and his family were marched into the next
car down. Henry silently gazes back at him, and as the train makes
another lurch he slowly nods his head. Henry is more closely
involved in the conspiracy than Jorge; the whole thing has been kept
compartmentalized, so that if one person was arrested and
interrogated by the prefects, he wouldn’t be able to reveal all the
details. Jorge isn’t sure, but he believes Henry may be the leader.
If he is, then . . .
"Papa? Are we stopping?" Marie has
woken up; she raises her head from his lap, knuckles her
sleep-wizened eyes.
"Shh. It’s all right, sweetie. Just be
quiet." Jorge strokes her hair, glances over his shoulder to see if
the guard has heard them. Not that it matters; although passengers
softly murmur to one another as they stare through the windows, for
the moment the soldiers aren’t paying attention. The one in the back
of the train, a kid not very much older than Carlos, grabs a
seatback to steady himself as he bends over to the nearest window.
The soldier up front spreads his feet a little further apart; he
yells at everyone to shut up, but there’s a baffled expression on
his face.
The train slows to a crawl, coasts
down an incline. A series of metronomic bumps against the
undercarriage as its wheels engage the track; now Jorge can see a
sparse handful of lights from directly ahead. Warehouses trundle
past the windows; they’re coming into an industrial park somewhere
north of Valdosta, a rail yard meant for freight trains. Perhaps
they’re taking aboard more D.I.’s. Yet when he glances at Henry
again, his friend’s face is carefully neutral. Jorge has seen that
secretive look before. He knows something. . . .
The train comes to a halt. "Shut up!"
the soldier up front yells. "Stay where you are! Don’t move!" He
gestures for the other soldier to come forward; the kid walks to the
center of the compartment, his rifle at ready, as his sergeant
retreats into the accessway. A faint thump, then a blast of cool air
from outside. The passengers on the other side of the compartment
watch through the windows as the sergeant steps off the
train.
Marie looks at Jorge, her eyes wide with fear.
What’s going on? she silently mouths. Carlos is awake now,
his gaze flitting between the window and the soldier standing only a
few feet away. The soldier turns his back to him, and, for an
instant, Jorge sees a wild impulse dart through his son’s eyes. He
urgently shakes his head, and the boy reluctantly settles
down.
A minute passes, then another. Three,
four. . . . Footsteps on the stairs, and the sergeant steps back
into the compartment, followed by a prefect. Young, tall, fit;
callous eyes in a handsome face. The ISA officer studies the
passengers with much the same sort of loathing a chef would feel
toward cockroaches he’s found in his kitchen, then he pulls out a
pad and flips it open.
"The following individuals and their
families will accompany me," he says. "Exit from the rear, and no
talking. Abbott, Francis K. . . . Arnold, Alice C. . . . Burstein,
David C. . . ."
One by one, people rise and stagger
down the center aisle, their legs cramped and numb. Bernie and Vonda
Cayle leave the train; a minute later, Henry Johnson follows them.
Everyone on the list is a former Marshall scientist, so it’s no
surprise when, just a few seconds after the Levins have been called,
Jorge hears his own name.
"Papa, where are we going?" Marie’s
hand is tiny within his own, terribly vulnerable.
"Shh. I’ll tell you later." Jorge lets
Marie and Carlos get in front of them, then he reaches up to pull
his heavy bag down from the overhead rack. The young soldier sneers
at him as he picks Marie up and carries her down the
aisle.
The night is colder than he expected,
dark save for the lights above the warehouses. An unmarked
government maxvee is parked next to the train, a loading ramp
lowered from its rear cargo door. Two soldiers stand near the
vehicle, silently watching the D.I.’s as they line up to board the
vehicle. Still holding Marie in his arms, Jorge nervously looks
around, spots Jim and Sissy Levin standing a few yards behind them,
their children between them.
The prefect who called their names
steps down off the train. He walks over to the max, glances at the
D.I.’s already inside, then does a quick head-count. Jorge estimates
that about forty-five people have been taken off the maglev,
including spouses and children. Just about everyone who had boarded
in Huntsville, plus a few from Atlanta. The remaining hundred or so
passengers stare at them through the windows. They’re destined to
continue south to Camp Buchanan; it’s impossible to tell whether
they envy the ones who’ve been pulled from the train or pity
them.
Another prefect disembarks from the
second car. He walks over to his companion; they compare their
lists, murmuring quietly to one another. The line shuffles slowly
forward, the people in front ducking their heads as they march up
the ramp into the max.
The vehicle is even more cramped than
the train; everyone squeezes together on its hard plastic benches.
No windows. Through a grate-covered window in the front of the
compartment they can see the back of the driver’s head; he glances
around once to watch the people coming aboard, then looks away
again. Rita puts Marie in her lap to make a little more
room.
When the last D.I. has finally come
aboard, the prefect who called their names from the train marches
into the vehicle. Pulling a stunner from within his coat, he regards
everyone with cold scrutiny, as if challenging them to attack him.
When no one says anything, he takes an empty seat at the rear, then
motions for the soldiers to close the rear hatch. They hesitate,
then pick up the ramp and shove it back into its slot. The hatch
slams shut.
Long silence, then the maxvee whines
to life. Everyone is jostled against one another as the vehicle
picks itself off the ground. Jorge can’t see the rail yard as the
max coasts away
"All right," the prefect says quietly.
"I think we’re safe."
Everyone stares at him. What did he
just say? Then Henry Johnson clears his throat. "Did it work?" he
asks quietly.
Jorge looks first at him, then at the
prefect. Incredibly, he’s putting away his gun. Rita’s mouth is wide
open; she doesn’t know what to make of this any more than anyone
else in the max . . . all save Henry, who briefly favors Jorge with
a broad grin.
"Well done, everyone," he says.
"Especially you. Nice performance." The prefect nods, trying not to
smile, then Henry sharply claps his hands to break through the
cacophony of voices all around them. "Okay, everyone calm down, take
it easy. Sorry we had to put you through this. . . ."
"What the hell are you trying to do?"
This from Bernie Cayle, sitting near the front of the vehicle.
"Goddammit, Hank, you scared the shit out of . . ."
"Bernie, please," Henry says. "Watch
your language. There’re children present."
Laughter, relieved and out of place,
ripples through the max. Oddly enough, only the handful of kids seem
unruffled. Maybe they’re still half-asleep, or perhaps they figured
out this was a hoax long before the adults did.
"Like Dr. Johnson says, I’m sorry we .
. . I had to do this." Everyone quiets down as the prefect stands up
in the back of the vehicle. "If more of you had known about this in
advance, it wouldn’t have worked. We had to find a way to collect
everyone on short notice, and this was the best way we could manage.
This way, we’re perfectly legit."
"What do you mean, legit?" someone in
the back demands. "What are you. . . ?"
"Right now, y’all are being taken to
Little Rock, where you’re scheduled for ISA interrogation. That’s
our alibi for taking you off the train." The prefect raises a hand.
"It’s complicated, I know. Just bear with us."
Silence now, as everyone takes this
in, yet Jorge is beginning to understand. There’s aspects of the
plot of which he hasn’t been informed, but now it’s all coming
together. . . .
"So where are we going?" Rita looks
first at the prefect, then Henry, then finally Jorge. "If it’s not
Camp Buchanan or Little Rock . . ."
"A lot further than you think," Jorge
says quietly.
Merritt Island 7.5.70 /
T-17.10.39
The rising sun has painted the sky
with shades of magenta and burnt orange, lening a silver tint to the
blue-grey surf rushing against the beaches of Merritt Island.
Closer, the Alabama’s shuttles await takeoff on their
concrete launch pads; fuel trucks are parked nearby, while ground
crew makes final inspections on the twin delta-winged
spaceplanes.
Captain Lee takes in the view from a
wall screen in a briefing room within the Crew Training Facility,
wishing he could be out there right now, if only for one last taste
of salt air. But that’s clearly out of the question; the sea breeze
is filthy with microorganisms, and he’s already undergone
decontamination procedures. The world is now beyond his reach,
behind the hermetically sealed doors of the quarantine area. In a
few minutes he’s to join the rest of his crew; right now, though, he
has one last duty to perform on Earth.
A soft click from behind him, then the
faint whoosh of pressurized air as the door glides open. Lee
reluctantly turns from the wallscreen as two men enter: Ben Aldrich,
closely followed by Roland Shaw. They’re wearing white paper
coveralls and caps, their hands covered with latex gloves; both men
had to be decontaminated before they were allowed to pass through
two sets of airlocks leading to this bare, unfurnished room. His
last face-to-face contact with anyone from Earth who doesn’t wear a
helmet.
"Morning, Robert," Aldrich says.
"Ready for the big day?"
Lee gives the Launch Supervisor a
tight smile. "That’s not for another 226 years. Ask me again when I
get to 47 Uma B."
Aldrich grins back at him. "Maybe
it’ll be only 226 years for you, but it’ll feel like 230 for me." He
turns to the Republic’s Director of Internal Security. "Not that it
makes much difference, but if he’d made that sort of mistake during
training, I would’ve found someone else for the job."
Shaw barely acknowledges the jest;
indeed, Lee wonders if he fully appreciates the effects of time
dilation. Once the Alabama achieves its maximum cruise
velocity of .2c, time aboard the starship will slow relative
to the rest of the universe. Add three months for acceleration to
20-percent light-speed after leaving Earth and another three months
for magsail deceleration into the 47 Ursae Majoris system, and the
ship’s internal chronometers will record a passage of little more
than 226 years, while back home the voyage will have lasted nearly
four years longer. The Lorentz factor will matter very little to him
or anyone else aboard the Alabama, since they’ll be in
biostasis during most of the journey, but it’s highly doubtful that
Shaw will still be alive by then, even with the benefit of
life-extension treatments.
"I don’t think you could have found
anyone better." Once again, Shaw’s manner is as stiff as it had been
last night when Lee saw him with the president. "I’m sure the
captain wants to be with his people right now. Perhaps we should get
along with our business."
"Yes, of course." Aldrich is clearly
nervous in the presence of the Director of Internal Security. He
reaches into a pocket of his coveralls, pulls out his pad, flips
open the cover. "Okay, then . . ."
The briefing is a routine run-down of
the major events of the next seventeen hours. At 1000 EDT, the URSS
Jesse Helms, piloted by First Officer Shapiro and carrying
the forty-five members of the Alabama’s flight team not
already aboard the starship, is scheduled to lift off from Pad 10,
with an ETA of 1230 with the Alabama. Pending successful
rendezvous and docking of the Helms, the George
Wallace will launch at 1300 from Pad 11, carrying the 51 members
of the Alabama’s colonization team, with Captain Lee himself
as pilot. Its anticipated rendezvous and docking is scheduled for
1430; by then fuel load-up will have been completed by 1400. At 1500
the main hatches will be sealed, and the crew will go through
prelaunch procedures until 2345, when the president will publicly
address the nation via netv from Atlanta. Following the president’s
speech, final countdown will commence at 2350; if all goes well,
primary booster ignition will be at 2400.
"We had a small problem early this
morning." Aldrich studies his pad. "Launch Control detected an error
in the backup computer system in Module C2 shortly after 2400 last
night. . . ." Lee feels his heart skip a beat. ". . . but the Chief
Engineer checked it out and found that it was just a faulty program
alarm. It’s been fixed and countdown was resumed at
0014."
"Good. Glad to hear it." Lee pretends
a calmness he doesn’t feel. Something must have gone wrong, but it
sounds as if Dana managed to take care of it without tipping her
hand. "Anything else?"
"Nothing. We’re right on schedule."
Aldrich closes his pad, looks at Shaw. "Your turn, Mr.
Shaw."
"Thank you." The DIS has remained
quiet through all this; now he unzips the black plastic pouch he
carried into the room, pulls out a small object wrapped in clear
cellophane. "Captain Lee, I don’t think I have to tell you what this
is."
"No, sir." Lee takes the packet, opens
it, pulls out a large chrome-plated key on a neck chain: the launch
key for the Alabama’s primary ignition system. Without it,
the ship’s main engines cannot be fired. A security precaution to
prevent the Alabama from being launched without direct
authorization from the president.
"Thank you, sir." Lee clips the chain
around his neck, lets the key slide down the front of his jumpsuit.
It’s only now that the ISA has seen fit to entrust it to the Mission
Commander; during dress rehearsals in orbit, a prefect has always
been in the Alabama’s command deck to insert the key and turn
it, even though the main engines were never started. Yet this is
supposed to be a symbolic moment, so Lee snaps to attention and
salutes Shaw.
Shaw responds with a salute of his
own, then offers his hand. "Good luck, Captain. All our prayers go
with you."
Lee looks straight at Shaw as he
clasps his hand, yet there’s nothing in his expression that the
captain can read. Shaw simply nods, ever so slightly, then he turns
to Aldrich. "I believe you have something to add. . . ."
"Yes, sir, there is." As Aldrich steps
forward again, he pulls from beneath his arm a large parcel sealed
in plastic. Through the transparent wrapping, Lee can see a single
white star embroidered on a field of dark blue canvas, bordered by
red and white horizontal stripes. The flag of the United Republic of
America.
Aldrich handles it reverently, almost
as if reluctant to give it up; when he looks up at Lee, his eyes are
moist. "I know you’ve already got one of these aboard," the Launch
Supervisor says quietly, his voice raw at the edges, "but this one
comes from all of us here at the Cape. If you wouldn’t mind,
Captain, we’d like for you to raise it on the new world once you get
there . . . in our honor, please."
Lee feels a hollow sensation in the
pit of his stomach. Ben means well, and Lee has nothing against him,
yet the last thing he ever wants to see again is this flag: a symbol
of a totalitarian government that has taken everything America once
stood for and twisted it beyond recognition. One star to signify one
people, or so it has been stated; what it really stands for is one
party, one political ideology. The purpose of this mission isn’t
exploration, as originally intended before the Second Revolution,
but conquest. He’s being sent to 47 Ursae Majoris not to expand the
horizons of humankind, but to establish an interstellar colony which
will insure the immortality of the Republic. Millions of people now
live in shacks made of discarded junk and cook squirrel stew over
manure fires because so much of his country’s resources have been
diverted to the construction of a starship. One of humankind’s most
noble dreams, now perverted. . . .
"Robert?" Aldrich stares at him. "Is
there something wrong?"
"Sorry." Lee takes a deep breath.
"Just thinking about this moment, that’s all." He accepts the
wrapped flag from Aldrich, bows slightly, gives him what he hopes
the other man will interpret as a modest smile. "Thank you. I’ll put
this in a place of honor."
Aldrich bows formally. "Thank you,
Captain. May God be with you."
Lee gives the Launch Supervisor a
farewell handshake, lets him enjoy this last moment of pride. And
all the while, he feels Roland Shaw’s eyes upon him.
Titusville 7.5.70 /
T-14.00.05
Three seconds before the countdown
reaches zero, reddish-orange flames erupt from the shuttle’s ascent
engines, followed by billowing brown plumes that quickly envelop the
spacecraft. For a second the spaceplane can barely be seen, then the
Jesse Helms slowly rises from the thick haze. Microphones
pick up the sound of people cheering, then the crackling thunder
ripples across the VIP viewing area three miles from the launch pad,
drowning out their voices as the camera pans upward, tracking the
white-glare. A thousand feet above the ground, the shuttle’s nose
tilts upward, then its NIF main engines kick in and the spacecraft
suddenly vaults into the blue heavens above the Atlantic.
"The g’s will still be nominal at this
point." Henry Johnson nods toward the dusty old flatscreen above the
bar. "There’ll be some discomfort once they reach seven g’s, but
that lasts for only about a minute or so."
"You don’t think the kids will be
hurt?" Jim Levin glances uncertainly across the closed-down
restaurant. His two children, David and Chris, are sitting on the
floor with Carlos and Marie Montero; they’re playing
scissors-rock-paper, from the looks of it. "My youngest gets
motion-sickness when he’s on the plane."
"I’m sure a lot of us are going to be
throwing up." Jorge is still watching the screen. The Helms
itself is now visible only as a tiny white spot at the head of a
long contrail. He’s tempted to step outside to see if he can spot it
with the naked eye, but the rules are firm; no one leaves the
restaurant until they’re ready to go. "Don’t worry about it. I’ve
been up before. It’s an easy ride."
The screen switches to a young woman
standing at the press site: a Govnet correspondent, delivering a
recount of what they’ve just seen, the liftoff of the shuttle
carrying the members of the Alabama’s flight team. The volume
is turned down low, so only a handful of the people gathered in the
abandoned restaurant on the outskirts of Titusville can hear her.
"Just as long as we’ve got a vomit bag for my boy," Jim murmurs.
"Otherwise we’re going to have a hell of a . . ."
"Hush," Henry says as the image
changes once more. "Here it comes. . . ."
A video replay from an hour ago: the
walkout from the Crew Training Facility within the Gingrich Space
Center. A door opens, then the flight team walks out. Striding
single-file past the journalists and cameramen gathered behind a
rope, they wear one-piece isolation suits, their features barely
visible through the faceplates of their fabric helmets. Among the
adults are several children of various ages, distinguishable as
minors only because of their shorter stature. They wave to the
bystanders as they stroll past the camera toward the white FSA
maxvee parked less than thirty feet away.
"See?" Henry murmurs. "No questions,
no interviews. . . ."
"No I.D. checks." Jorge glances over
his shoulder at him, sees Bernie Cayle gnawing at a fingernail. Of
all the people gathered in what used to be called the Lamplighter
Grill, he’s the most nervous. As if any of them could be described
as calm. "But what if someone recognizes . . . I mean, if they don’t
recognize. . . ?"
"Look how they’re dressed." Jim
gestures to the screen. "You can barely see their faces."
"Uh-huh. So long as everyone stays in
motion, it’ll be over and done in just a few seconds." And just as
Henry says, the last crew member boards the maxvee less than a
minute after the first one emerged from the building. A soldier
shuts the door behind him, and a moment later the vehicle rises from
the ground, turns away from the camera, and skims down the road
leading to the launch pad. "See? Easy."
"So why can’t we. . . ?" Bernie
hesitates, trying to articulate his thoughts. "I mean, can’t we just
head straight for the pad? We’ve got our own suits, so why do we
have to go through. . . ?"
"Bernie . . ." Jim lets out an
impatient breath. He’s already explained everything to everyone, but
for some reason Bernie still doesn’t get it. "Look . . . for one
thing, if we don’t do the walkout, everyone will wonder why the
colonists haven’t appeared. Second, we have to ride that particular
max out to the pad. We can’t take the one we have, because . .
."
Jorge has heard this before. He
excuses himself to check on his family. The restaurant smells of
mildew and rotting wood; the windows have been long-since boarded
up, so the only light comes from the camp lanterns scattered around
the dining room where locals used to enjoy Friday night
all-you-can-eat buffet dinners. He wonders again how the underground
managed to gain access to this condemned highway inn, but decides
it’s one more question better left unasked. Even now, no one wants
to divulge secrets. Further evidence that more people are involved
in this conspiracy than he realized.
He finds Rita seated at the folding
table at the far end of the room, her face scrunched up as she
receives one of the antibiotic injections everyone has to take.
Jorge knows the doctor giving the shots: Kuniko Okada, formerly the
senior space medicine researcher at Marshall before she, too, signed
the petition which got her labeled as a D.I. There’s no way a
clean-room facility can be set up here, but at least they can make
sure no one carries any viruses aboard the
Alabama.
"Okay, you’re done," Dr. Okada says,
and Rita sighs as she pulls down the sleeve of her shirt. "Bring
your children over, and I’ll do them next." Then she looks up and
sees Jorge. "Wait a minute . . . I haven’t taken care of you yet,
have I?" When Jorge shakes his head, Kuniko turns back to Rita. "On
second thought, let Jorge go first. If your kids see their dad doing
this, maybe they’ll take it a little easier."
"Good idea." Carlos won’t mind a few
shots, but Marie has always been a problem at the pediatrician’s
office. Jorge sits down in the chair Rita has just left and rolls up
his right sleeve. "Of course, it might help if you’ve got a sucker.
My daughter expects one when she goes to the doctor."
Kuniko shakes her head as she fits a
clean needle and another cartridge into her syringe gun. "Sorry. No
food for anyone from here on out. I don’t like it either . . . I
could use a cup of coffee right now." She checks Jorge’s name on her
list. "After this, you can help your wife get the kids in their
isolation suits."
Jorge nods. The crowd in the dining
room has gradually thinned over the last hour; after they’ve
received their shots, everyone has gone into the kitchen nearby.
When he peered through the swinging doors a few minutes ago, he saw
that shower curtains had been draped from the ceiling pipes, forming
makeshift changing rooms. One by one, people took folded garments
behind the partitions, and emerged a few minutes later wearing
one-piece coveralls. Whoever made the isolation suits had done their
job well; they’re identical to the ones he had just seen the flight
crew wearing during walkout, right down to the Republic shoulder
flag and the Alabama mission patch.
"You managed to send the medical data,
didn’t you?" Kuniko asks quietly as she dabs alcohol on his
biceps.
"Just before we left." The voxcard
sent to Houston from his desk contained encrypted medical records
for everyone gathered in this room; Kuniko would need them to
reprogram the Alabama’s biostasis cells. "It should have been
received and downloaded by now."
"Should be." Kuniko sighs, massages
her eyelids. "Just one more thing that could go wrong between . .
."
"Look! Papa’s getting his shots!"
Jorge turns around, sees Rita shepherding their children to the end
of the table. Carlos looks bored, but Marie’s eyes are wide with
terror. "See how easy it is?"
"Sure, there’s nothing to . . ." Jorge
starts to say, then Kuniko takes that moment to jab the barrel of
the syringe-gun against his arm and squeeze the trigger. Jorge tries
not to wince as he feels the sting of the needle, and he forces a
smile as he looks back at her. "Hey, did you just do something? I
didn’t feel anything!"
Kuniko gives him a faint smile as she
changes needles and cartridges again. "As painless as can be." Marie
hides her face against her mother’s side, and Jorge decides not to
press the issue. Marie will just have to suffer through this, that’s
all. . . .
The prefect who had taken them off the
train outside Valdosta emerges from the kitchen. He’s no longer
wearing his grey overcoat, and his tie is askew around the collar of
his shirt. He whistles sharply between his fingers, then claps his
hands for attention. "Listen up!" he yells, and the room goes quiet
as everyone looks toward him. "We’ve only got twenty minutes before
we’ve got to be out of here, and we still haven’t taken care of half
of you. If you haven’t had your shots, form a line behind the table,
then proceed to the kitchen for suit-up. We’re running out of time,
so let’s get going here, okay?"
Rita gives the prefect a cold glare.
"He could be a little more . . ."
"Honey," Jorge murmurs, then clenches
his teeth as Kuniko hits him with another shot. Marie seems a little
less afraid; now she watches with morbid fascination as Kuniko
exchanges needles and cartridges one more time. The prefect crosses
the room to where Henry, Bernie, and Jim are gathered in front of
the screen. He says something to them, and Jim and Bernie leave the
bar to join the line forming behind Rita, yet Henry stays behind. As
Jorge watches, his friend pulls out his pad and opens it. The
prefect steps around behind him to peer over his shoulder.
Something’s going on. . . .
Another swift jab, and he’s done.
"Boy, that was great!" he exclaims as he stands up from the chair.
"Thanks, Doc! I feel better already!" He bends over to Marie, slaps
his hands against his thighs. "C’mon, you gotta try
this!"
The dubious expression on his
daughter’s face tells him that she isn’t buying any of it, but she
allows Rita to escort her to the chair. Jorge waits until Kuniko
swabs her arm, then asks her if she can spell her mother’s name
backward. Marie is still working on the second letter when the
doctor gives her the first shot. She yelps, but more out of surprise
than from actual pain; Jorge decides that Rita can handle things
from here, then he quietly slides away and heads over to the
bar.
"If they’re coming, they’d be here by
now," Henry says to the prefect as Jorge draws closer. "But we’ve
still got twenty minutes. . . ."
"We’ve got twenty minutes, but you know as well as I
do that . . ." The prefect looks up, sees Jorge approaching. "Can I
help you?"
"Who’s coming?" Jorge asks, keeping
his voice low. "Is there someone else?"
Henry hesitates, then shows the pad to
Jorge: a long list of names, nearly every one highlighted, yet a few
remain unlit. "We’ve got forty-five," he says quietly. "There’s
supposed to be fifty. Five remain unaccounted for. They were
supposed to be on the train, but it doesn’t look like they were
picked up."
"Or they were picked up, but weren’t
taken to the train. And that’s what worries me." The prefect
absently rubs the beard stubble on his chin. "Not good. Not good at
all. . . ."
"They wouldn’t break . . ."
"Anyone can be broken. Trust me on
that one." The prefect glances at the line of people standing in
front of the table. From behind him, Jorge hears Marie’s
high-pitched scream as she’s given another injection. "Never mind.
Let’s just get these people out of here."
"You don’t think. . . ?"
"Just hope no one does a head-count
during the walkout." The prefect shakes his head, turns away.
"C’mon. The clock’s running out."
"He shouldn’t mind," Jorge murmurs
once he’s out of earshot. "He’s getting a seat, after
all."
Henry doesn’t look up from his pad.
"He’s not coming with us," he says very quietly. "We gave him a
chance, but he opted to stay behind . . . he has to, the way all
this is planned." Then his eyes meet Jorge’s. "When . . . if his
people find out what he’s done, they’ll put him on trial for
treason."
Jorge stares at him. "But why would
he. . . ?"
"Asked him that once myself. He
wouldn’t tell me." Henry slaps the pad shut, turns to join the line
at the table. "Don’t say anything about it, though, to him or anyone
else. It’s something personal."
Rita has already escorted the kids
into the kitchen; Jorge can hear her behind one of the curtains,
coaxing Marie into one of the child-size isolation suits. Almost
everyone has had their shots and donned their garments; now they’re
crowded together in the pantry, gazing through the restaurant’s rear
door. Just outside is the government maxvee that had picked them up
in southern Georgia. The driver stands next to the vehicle, and
Jorge notices that he’s changed clothes; now he’s wearing the
uniform of a URS lieutenant. Another nameless man facing death for
what he’s doing today. . . .
Sissy Levin hands Jorge a folded suit,
motions him toward the nearest changing room. Just as he’s about to
enter, Carlos comes out from behind the curtain. He’s put on his
isolation suit, and carries his helmet under his arm. "How do I
look?"
"Fine. Just great." Jorge gives his
son a quick inspection. "How’re you holding up there,
muchacho?"
"Okay, I guess." Yet his face is pale,
his shoulders visibly shaking beneath the coveralls. "I don’t know
about this. . . ."
"I know. I’m not crazy about it
either." Jorge bends down on one knee, looks Carlos straight in the
eye. He’s never lied to his boy before, and he isn’t going to start
now. "It sounded like a good idea when we were putting it together,
but that was kind of in the abstract. Now we’re here, and . . .
well, it’s going to be tougher than I thought."
"Then . . ." Carlos glances at the
people waiting by the delivery entrance. For a moment, they’re
alone; no one is paying attention to them. "We don’t have to do
this, do we? I mean, we don’t have to get to go . . ."
"You know of another way out of this?"
Carlos’s mouth trembles, but he doesn’t say anything. "Son, we’re
escaped criminals now. The government’s undoubtedly frozen my credit
account, so we’ve got no money, and we can’t go home even if we
could. If we turn ourselves in . . ."
"I know that!" Carlos’s voice rises,
and several people standing nearby turn to look their way. Jorge
hastily shushes him. "Papa . . . it’s forty-six light-years away. .
. ."
"I know, I know. . . ." Jorge shakes
his head, then grasps his son by the shoulders. "But it’s either
this, or we spend the rest of our lives in a D.I. camp. You, me,
your mother, your little sister . . . you want to see Marie in Camp
Buchanan?" Carlos snuffles back tears, looks down at the floor.
"Believe me, there’s no other way. If there were, I’d . .
."
A sharp whistle from behind them.
"Hey, someone leave something behind?"
Jorge glances over his shoulder, sees
the prefect standing in the doorway of the dining room. He’s holding
aloft Jorge’s duffel bag. "Someone dropped this," he calls out. "Who
does it belong to?"
Damn. He had almost forgotten it.
Jorge raises his hand. The prefect sees him, then marches across the
kitchen to where he’s crouched with Carlos. "If it’s yours, you
can’t bring it with you," he says, still swinging the bag by its
strap. "Sorry, no personal belongings."
"Those aren’t personal belongings.
It’s something we need."
Surprised at having his authority
challenged, the prefect stares back at him. Out of the corner of his
eye, he sees Rita and Marie coming out from behind the curtain.
Marie’s suit is a size too large for her; its leggings rumple down
around the tops of her boots, and it seems as if she could crawl out
from within the loose collar.
"Something you need. Man, everyone has
something they need." The prefect drops the bag on the floor. "Okay,
open ’er up, let’s see what you’ve got."
Jorge hesitates, then unzips the bag
and pulls it open, revealing its contents.
The prefect bends down, studying
what’s inside. He frowns, looks up at Jorge. "You really thought
about this, didn’t you?" he asks, his voice now so low only Jorge
and Carlos can hear him. Jorge doesn’t say anything, and the prefect
reluctantly nods. "Okay, you can take it," he says quietly. "When we
do the walk-out, sling it over your right shoulder, so that it’s
away from the people standing behind the rope. If someone notices
and asks you what you’ve got, pretend you didn’t hear. Just keep
walking. Got it?"
Jorge nods, and the prefect checks his
watch. "Hurry up and get dressed. We leave in six minutes." Then he
turns away, clapping his hands once more. "C’mon, people, hustle . .
. !"
Carlos stares at his father as he zips
the bag shut again. "Papa, what did you. . . ?"
"Never mind. Just go help your mother
and sister." Jorge hands the bag to his son. "Keep an eye on this,
will you? It’s important . . . but don’t show it to
anyone."
Carlos takes the bag by its strap,
pulls it over his shoulder. He slumps a little beneath its weight,
and his expression changes from fear to puzzlement. For a moment
Jorge wonders whether he’s going to open it, but the boy obeys him.
Jorge gives him a smile, then steps behind the curtain.
Alone for the moment, he sags against
the cinder-block wall. He shuts his eyes, takes a deep breath, tries
to will his heart to stop pounding. This is the first time since he
received the phone call at his apartment that he’s been out of sight
of his family; until now, he hasn’t allowed himself to show fear,
let alone feel it. Yet deep down inside, he’s just as terrified as
Carlos. How can Rita accept all this so calmly, when she didn’t know
what was happening until. . . ?
No. He doesn’t have time for this now.
Jorge opens his eyes, takes another deep breath, then sits down on
the plastic chair and begins removing his shoes. Beyond the curtain,
he hears Rita begging Marie to stay still and stop fidgeting so
much.
No choice. They’re committed now. All
of them.
URSS Alabama 7.5.70 / T
-11.41.12
"He wants to what?" Dana stares
at the com officer in disbelief. "You mean now?"
"Nothing I can do about it, Chief."
Les Gillis carefully keeps a hand cupped around his headset mike.
"He’s already on the way over."
"For the love of . . ." Dana turns to
another officer seated a few feet away. "Can you confirm
that?"
"See for yourself." Sharon Ullman has
already punched up a real-time image on the nav table; a holographic
wire-model of the Alabama appears above the table, surrounded
by Highgate’s skeletal bay. Most of the service pods have already
moved away from the ship, although a fuel barge still holds position
beneath the main tank. As Dana watches, a small cylindrical craft
moves through the bay, heading toward Alabama.
"OTV has requested clearance for
docking at SC2," Gillis says. "I don’t think the colonel’s going to
take no for answer."
Not now, God. Please, for the love of
all that’s holy, don’t do this to me now. Dana and Les share a wary
look; Sharon’s one of the handful of crew members who isn’t in on
this, so they can’t talk freely. "What’s the present ETA for the
Helms?" she asks.
"ETA at 1230, on schedule." Sharon
expands the holo to display the distant shuttle on final approach
for low-orbit rendezvous with the Alabama. "They’re docking
at SC2 in ten minutes."
"Okay." Dana takes a deep breath,
tries to calm herself down. "Les, inform the OTV driver I want him
in and out by 1225 max, and if he hits my ship I’m going to . . .
never mind. Just remind him that the Helms needs to use SC2,
and any delay is going to screw up the countdown." She releases the
ceiling rail, pushes herself toward the deck hatch. "If you need me,
I’ll be in H5."
The orbital transfer vehicle has
arrived by the time she makes it to the EVA ready-room; through the
window next to the egress hatch she watches as the craft gently
moves into the shuttle cradle. A slight bump as its blunt forward
end mates with the docking collar; a half-minute later the
tiger-striped inner hatch irises open. The five men who emerge wear
URS military fatigues, their flechette rifles strapped to their
shoulders. One by one, they push themselves into the EVA
compartment, clamping the toes of their boots within the foot
restraints. Although Dana is herself an Academy graduate, she never
saw combat duty before she transferred to the Federal Space Agency.
These men, she knows just from looking at their faces, are seasoned
pros, hardened by tours in Cuba and the Sierra Nevadas. Bad mofos
and proud of it.
The last man through the hatch is Col.
Gilbert "Gill" Reese, something of a legend within the service and
now leader of the URS security detachment aboard Highgate. Reese is
built like a bull: thick arms, thick legs, thick neck. Thick head,
too, or at least that’s Dana’s private opinion after having dealt
with him several times already.
Seeing her, Reese gives Dana a smile
that borders on being a smirk. Before she can say anything, he turns
to the soldier nearest to the hatch and cocks his thumb at it. The
soldier closes the outer hatch and dogs it tight, pounds his fist
against it twice, then stabs the button that seals the inner hatch.
A hollow thump, then the deck shudders slightly as the OTV
disengages from the docking collar. Through the window, Dana catches
a glimpse of the ferry moving away. Reese makes a show of checking
his watch.
"It’s 1225 on the nose," he says, not
looking at her. "Satisfied, Chief Engineer?"
A snicker from one of the soldiers
behind her. Dana pretends not to notice. "No, Colonel, I’m not. In
fact, I want you to bring that OTV back here and put your men
aboard."
Reese raises an eyebrow. "Wouldn’t
that throw you off schedule?"
"We’ll make up for it." She stares
straight back at him, refusing to give an inch.
Reese shrugs. "Then you won’t mind if
we stay awhile. Wouldn’t want you to leave us without a proper
farewell."
Again, the smirk. More muffled
laughter from his troops. The colonel gives them a stern look, yet
there’s dark amusement in his eyes. Dana feels her face growing
warm. "Why are you here, Colonel?"
"Glad you asked. Saves us a lot of
time." The smile disappears. "We’ve received word that there may be
a conspiracy against this mission."
Dana feels her left eyelid
involuntarily twitch. "A conspiracy? Where have you heard. . .
?"
"I’m not at liberty to discuss the
details, ma’am. All I can say is that my orders come from the top.
My people are to remain aboard the Alabama until its entire
complement has arrived and prevent any unauthorized personnel from
entering the ship." Reese never looks away from her. "I hope you
don’t mind, considering the circumstances."
It takes all of her willpower to keep
her voice even. "Yes, sir, I do mind. These people coming aboard
have been under strict quarantine since 0600, with no outside
contact permitted with anyone. Your men haven’t been sterilized,
have they?"
Reese’s face stiffens. The soldiers
aren’t chuckling now. "Chief, my orders . . ."
"And my orders are to get the
Alabama safely underway, on time, on schedule. This entire
ship has just undergone a twenty-four-hour decontamination
procedure. No one except the flight crew has been permitted through
that hatch. The moment your men came aboard, they broke quarantine."
Despite her fear, Dana is surprised to find a thin current of anger
rising up from deep within her. "You want authorization? Let’s get
authorization. Put a call through to Houston and talk to the Flight
Director. Or better yet, let’s call Atlanta and get the president on
the phone."
Dana can’t believe she’s doing this.
For all she knows, Reese’s orders could be coming straight from
Peachtree House. Yet even as she throws the challenge at the
colonel, she knows the bluff worked; Reese stares at her in mute
surprise, and his squad has become dead silent. For a moment he
doesn’t say anything; when he does, his voice is low. "I don’t think
that’ll be necessary. But my orders . . ."
"Fine. I understand." All at once, a
new thought occurs to her. "I respect your concerns, Colonel," she
says, softening her tone a little. "Really, I do . . . just as I
hope you respect mine."
As if on cue, there’s another dull
impact against the outer hull. She doesn’t have to look around to
know that the Helms has just hard-docked with the
Alabama. Good. "Your guys can remain here until 1500," she
continues. "That’s when we close the hatches. But they can’t leave
this deck, and they can’t make physical contact with anyone coming
aboard. Agreed?"
Dana knows what Reese really wants to
do: place his men throughout the Alabama, and not remove them
until a few minutes before the ship is ready to launch. Indeed,
whatever information he’s received may justify that course of
action. Yet she has to gamble on his unwillingness to be officially
reprimanded by someone farther up the chain of command.
"All right," Reese says, "we’ll play
it your way." He turns to his men. "Boone, Schmidt, remain here.
Carruthers, Lucchesi, go over to the other hatch. Stay at arm’s
length from anyone coming aboard, and don’t leave this deck unless I
give a direct order." The soldiers salute him as they move into
position, and Reese looks back at Dana. "Okay?"
"Yes, sir, it is. Thanks for your
cooperation." Reese gives her a perfunctory nod and pushes himself
over to join Boone and Schmidt by the airlock.
A minute passes, then the inner hatch
cycles open again; a figure wearing an isolation suit pushes himself
through. He’s already removed his helmet: Tom Shapiro, the
Alabama’s First Officer. Tom grins when he sees Dana, but his
expression changes when he sees the soldiers.
"Welcome aboard, sir," Dana says.
"Hope you had a good ride."
"We did, thanks." Tom’s gaze moves
across the troopers. Behind him, Jud Tinsley has already poked his
head and shoulders through the hatch; his eyes widen as he catches
sight of the soldiers. "What’s this, an honor guard?"
"I think we should take it that way."
Dana stares him square in the eye. "Apparently Colonel Reese here
has just received word that there’s someone wants to sabotage the
launch."
"Really?" The First Officer turns to
Reese. "Colonel, would you like to explain what you’re doing aboard
my ship?" Before he can answer, Shapiro raises his hand to Tinsley.
"Hold the line, Jud. We’ve got a problem."
The Executive Officer nods and remains
where he is, half-in and half-out of the hatch. It’s Reese’s turn to
look uncomfortable: now that he’s aboard the Alabama, Shapiro
outranks him. "My apologies, sir," Reese says, giving Shapiro an
untidy salute. "We’ve received word from the ground that the ISA
have arrested some D.I.’s who they believe are linked to a plot to
sabotage this mission."
"Really?" Shapiro frowns. "And how do
they intend to do that?"
Reese hesitates. "We’re . . . I mean,
they’re not certain, sir. It seems that they may try to smuggle
someone aboard this ship. Possibly more than one person."
"And you’ve been sent to make sure no
one gets aboard." The colonel nods, and Tom slowly shakes his head.
"I respect your concern, Colonel, but I find that highly unlikely.
When I left GSC only ninety minutes ago, it was under strict
lockdown . . . just as this ship is supposed to be." He glares at
Dana. "Why have you let these people aboard, Chief?"
"Sorry, sir. I was trying to
accommodate the Colonel."
"Well, keep ’em here. I don’t want to
scrub the launch just because we have to sterilize the ship again."
Then he looks back at Tinsley. "Jud, tell everyone behind you to put
their helmets back on. They can take ’em off once they’re through
this compartment."
"Aye, sir." The XO disappears from the
hatchway.
"Pain in the ass," Shapiro mutters
angrily as he pushes himself toward the access shaft. "Sorry if I
don’t shake your hand, Colonel, but I don’t want to catch whatever
it is you’re carrying." He pauses by the ceiling hatch. "I know
you’re just doing your job, and I appreciate it. But don’t touch my
people, okay?"
"Yes, sir." Again, Reese salutes him.
"Sorry."
"Very good. Carry on." Shapiro returns
the salute, then looks back at Dana. "Chief. . . ?"
"Yes, sir." Dana lets Tom lead her
through the manhole leading upward into the ship. Once they’re out
of earshot, she taps his ankle. "Nice catch," she
whispers.
"We’re not out of it yet." Shapiro
glances up and down the shaft to make sure they’re not being
overheard. "Get in touch with the skipper, let him know what’s going
on."
Dana glances at her watch: 1229 EST.
"Too late," she murmurs. "They’re on their way."
Merritt Island 7.5.70 /
T-11.31.43
The roadsides along the causeway
crossing the Banana River are jammed with coupes and midis of every
make and color; tens of thousands of people have crowded themselves
onto the narrow sandbars linking the bridges. Tents are scattered
all across the narrow beaches, and the aroma of hamburgers and hot
dogs rising from barbecue braziers mixes with the salt
breeze.
Unimpeded by traffic, the government
maxvee cruises straight down the causeway, the swirling red and blue
lights on its roof rack clearing the way. The driver ignores the
bystanders who stare curiously at the vehicle as it sweeps past
them. In the back of the max, though, no one can see any of this.
Crammed together on the hard plastic benches, they silently stare at
one another, beads of sweat rolling down their faces. Most of their
perspiration comes from the stifling heat within the vehicle, but
Jorge can’t help but wonder if much of it is due to fear.
Everyone’s suddenly jostled as the
maxvee begins to slow down. The nameless prefect at the back of the
van cups his hand over his earpiece. "Okay, we’re coming up on the
checkpoint," he says loudly. "Everyone, helmets on. People with
children, lean forward a little to hide them. No matter what
happens, don’t say anything. Just keep your mouths shut." He reaches
beneath his seat, picks up his uniform cap. "Don’t worry. It’ll all
be over and done with in a minute."
Jorge glances at Rita and the kids one
last time, then pulls the loose hood over his head. Now he perceives
the world only through a curved pane of transparent plastic; every
time he exhales, the bottom of the faceplate fogs up. Next to Rita,
Marie begins to protest–"Mama, I can’t breathe!"–until her mother
quickly shushes her. Beside him, Carlos sits up a little straighter,
trying to make himself look more like an adult. With his hood on, he
could almost pass for a grown-up, but Jorge isn’t taking any
chances; as the vehicle glides to a halt, he gently pushes his son
back against the bench, then he moves forward on his hips to hide
him as best as he can.
Time passes. How long, Jorge can’t
tell; perhaps it’s only a minute, but it seems much longer. Muffled
voices from the front, but he can’t make out any words. The driver
talking with the guard at the gatehouse, showing him his I.D.
Something that sounds like laughter. Then, all of a sudden, the rear
hatch opens, and he squints against the midday sun to see an armed
soldier staring at them.
"What the hell are you doing?" The
prefect stands up, blocks the hatch. "Shut the door, you idiot!
These people are in quarantine!"
The soldier stares back at him, then
he hastily reaches up to close the hatch. Jorge lets out his breath
as it bangs shut, briefly closes his eyes in a silent prayer of
thanks. A few people around him start to murmur, but the prefect
hastily gestures for everyone to remain quiet. A few seconds pass,
then they’re thrown against each other once more as the max surges
forward again.
"Okay, they bought it." The prefect
looks as relieved as anyone else. "We’re in."
Cheers ring through the vehicle; all
around him, people start to remove their helmets. "Keep ’em on!"
Henry shouts. "We’ll be there in just a couple of
minutes."
Jorge reluctantly leaves his helmet in
place. The cover story worked: the people in the maxvee are members
of the back-up crew, being brought in at the last minute from a
remote location just in case the Wallace suffers a
catastrophic launch failure.
Minutes pass, then the maxvee
downshifts again. It makes an abrupt turn to the right, slows to a
crawl, then coasts to a stop. People shift nervously in their seats,
but the prefect holds up his hand, silently gesturing for everyone
to remain where they are. One hand cupped over his earpiece, he
keeps an eye on his watch, as if waiting for something. Another
minute goes by, then he looks up at them.
"Okay, we’re ready," he says.
"Remember, do just as you were told. Don’t stop for anything, don’t
talk to anyone. Just keep moving."
The rear hatch opens; just outside are
two men in white FSA coveralls. They quickly lower the ramp, then
urgently motion everyone to get out. The passengers rise, start
shuffling down the ramp. Jorge picks up his bag, pulls it over his
right shoulder, glances over his shoulder to make sure his family is
with him. Carlos is directly behind him, leading Marie by the hand,
with Rita bringing up the rear.
Their vehicle is stopped in a garage.
Another max, this one painted white with FSA markings, is parked
nearby, yet the area is vacant save for the two workmen helping them
out of the max and a third standing at the top of a short flight of
steps leading to a closed metal door. "Hurry up, hurry up," the
prefect snaps. "C’mon, folks, we’re running out of time! Go, go, go.
. . !"
Now they’re heading up the steps to
the landing where the third workman is waiting for them. The prefect
trots past them to the front of the line; a quick look back, then he
nods to the workman. He swings opens the door and steps aside to
hold it open, and the prefect ushers them into a narrow
corridor.
A lone figure wearing an isolation
suit comes out of a doorway halfway down the hall. He and the
prefect exchange a hand-signal, then the prefect steps away, holding
open the door and motioning for everyone to follow the man he’s just
met. "Keep going, keep going," he says quietly as they file past
him. "Don’t stop, just keep going. . . ."
Another short corridor, then a left
turn through the double doors of an airlock. Jorge passes through
the door, finds himself in a long room lined with chairs and tables.
A thin yellowish haze hangs in the air, floating a couple of feet
above the tile floor, yet that isn’t what he notices
first.
Throughout the room, men, women, and
children dressed in isolation suits are sprawled everywhere: lying
across tables, collapsed in chairs, fallen face-down on the floor.
None of them wear helmets.
They were gassed, Jorge realizes with
horror. Whatever was introduced into the quarantine facility’s air
system knocked these people down so quickly, they didn’t have a
chance to reach their helmets lying nearby. The Alabama’s
colonization team: fifty URS officers and their families, bowled
over within seconds. Jorge sincerely hopes they’re not dead. They’re
so still, it’s hard to tell . . . but no, they’re still breathing;
he can see their chests moving, their eyelids twitching ever so
slightly.
The figure at the head of the line
turns, makes a hasty gesture: come on, come on, don’t stop, keep
moving! Jorge follows the procession down the center aisle. His
faceplate fogs up and he feels light-headed; he has an impulse to
drop the bag, turn around and run for the door. Too late. For the
sake of his wife and children, he has to keep going. . .
.
At the far end of the room is a second
airlock. The figure at the head of the line stops to twist open the
lockwheel, then quickly gestures for someone behind him to grab a
chair and prop it open. Caught by a draft of fresh air moving
between the two open doors, the yellow haze drifts toward the second
hatch. The line starts moving again, heading toward the
exit.
Another short corridor, this one
leading to a new pair of double-doors. A URS soldier lies face-down
just inside the doors. Someone stunned him while he was standing
guard. The leader gets someone else behind him to take care of the
sentry; he grabs the soldier under his shoulders, drags him back
into the quarantine room. Their leader waits until the soldier has
been taken away and the volunteer has returned; another quick look
to make sure that everyone is with him, then he turns and opens the
door.
Raw sunlight, hot and blinding, floods
the corridor, and now they’re walking into it, a procession of
anonymous figures in isolation suits. Beyond the door, upraised
voices, the staccato clicking of camera shutters, loud applause . .
.
And now they’re striding single-file
past a dense crowd of journalists and cameramen, all gathered behind
a red velvet rope to bear witness as the Alabama’s
colonization team emerges from the Crew Training
Facility.
Everything seems so surreal, as if
he’s walking through a weird dream, yet Jorge feels his fear
suddenly leave him, replaced by a strange dissonance. Somehow, it
seems to him that this is the way it should be, the way it was meant
to be. On the other side of those lenses are hundreds of millions of
eyes, watching as he begins his journey to the future. Still
remaining in step with the man just in front of him, he can’t help
himself . . .
Jorge raises his hand to wave goodbye,
and the mob straining against the rope roars its approval. Then
microphones and cameras are shoved toward him, and he remembers who
he really is, what he’s doing. Jorge feels his knees become weak; he
drops his arm and looks away, deliberately focusing on the white
maxvee parked only a few yards away.
A soldier stands in front of the max,
and standing next to him is the prefect who had helped them get this
far. He glares at Jorge as he steps onto the ramp. Embarrassed,
Jorge doesn’t dare meet his angry gaze as he boards the
vehicle.
He takes a seat on the bench, moves
over a little to make room for Carlos. Through the faceplate, he
catches a brief glimpse of his son’s face–Papa, you
moron!–then he takes the bag and shoves it beneath his legs as
Marie and Rita sit down next to them.
The last person aboard is the man who
met them outside the quarantine facility. He turns to wave to the
press, then takes a seat at the back of the vehicle. The prefect
turns his back to them as a soldier pushes the ramp back in place.
The rear hatch slams shut; a few seconds later, the maxvee rises
from its pads and starts to glide away.
The man who led them through the CTF
ducks his head, pulls off his helmet. When he looks up at them, his
eyes are cold and hard.
"Gentlemen, ladies," he says quietly,
"I’m Captain Robert E. Lee, commanding officer of the
Alabama. From this moment on, you’ll do exactly what I tell
you to do. . . ."
Merritt Island 7.5.70 /
T-11.10.52
Fifty years ago, Pad 11 was Shuttle
Launch Complex 39-B, the point of departure for NASA’s
first-generation space shuttles. The enormous launch tower and
service structure, however, have long since been dismantled to make
room for single-stage orbital transports that require none of the
old hardware. Virtually the only things that remain from the former
site are the high security fence that encircles the base of the
mound, and the broad concrete road leading across the surrounding
marshlands to the pad.
The URSS George Wallace rests
on its tricycle landing gear, tended to by a half-dozen pad
technicians who now wait near the gangway lowered from beneath the
spaceplane’s fuselage. Wisps of supercooled hydrogen drift from the
blowoff vents of the transport’s nuclear indigenous fuel engines,
curl upward around the raked edges of its twin vertical stabilizers.
The pad crew watches as the maxvee, escorted by a pair of security
HVs, passes through the fence gate and glides to the top of the
mound.
The max comes to a halt, and two
workers open the rear hatch and pull down the ramp. Captain Lee is
the first to emerge; peering through his helmet, he takes a moment
to gaze at the Wallace, then he turns to salute the pad crew
gathered nearby. They grin and break into applause; he stands aside
and watches as the colonization team disembarks from the maxvee and
marches toward the shuttle.
Most of the passengers have already
trooped up the gangway when Lee notices a couple of pad workers
looking away from the spacecraft. He turns to see a black coupe
gliding down the service road from the distant launch control
center. The security officers walk over to meet the car as it moves
through the gate and up the hill. It comes to a halt next to the
maxvee, then its doors slide open.
Lee feels a twinge of unease when he
sees the prefect who shepherded the D.I.’s from southern Georgia;
there’s no reason why he should be here now. When Roland Shaw climbs
out of the car, something clutches at the back of his throat;
despite the heat of the day, the DIS is wearing his uniform grey
overcoat and cap. Yet Lee’s unprepared for the woman in the hooded
travel cape who gets out of the back of the coupe. For a few moments
he doesn’t recognize her, then she comes closer and lowers her hood,
and he finds himself gazing upon the face of the last person he ever
expected to see again: Elise Rochelle Lee.
Lee’s still staring at Elise as Shaw
and the prefect approach him. "Captain Lee," Shaw says quietly, "my
apologies, but there’s a matter of utmost importance we need to
discuss with you."
"I . . . I don’t understand." Lee’s
mouth is dry. "Is there a problem?"
A grim smile appears on his former
wife’s face, yet Elise remains quiet, her hands clasped together
within her cape. "I’m sorry, sir, but I’m afraid there is," the
prefect replies. "We have to speak with you immediately."
The security officers step closer,
their hands never far from their holstered sidearms. Confused, the
pad techs hover nearby, murmuring to one another. The last handful
of men and women boarding the Wallace watch from the bottom
of the gangway; Lee can’t see their faces, but he knows that they
must be frightened. "Yes, of course. By all means. What is it that
you want?"
Elise opens her mouth as if to say
something, but she’s cut off by Shaw. "Perhaps we should do this in
private." He gestures to the max. "In there?"
Lee nods within his helmet, and the
prefect turns to lead them up the ramp into the back of the vehicle,
signaling for the two security officers to shut the hatch behind
them. Once they’re alone, Shaw looks at Lee. "Would you take off
your helmet, sir? I think we’ve minimized the risk of contamination,
and it would make this conversation easier."
Lee reluctantly removes his helmet.
His hair is soaked with sweat; he pushes it with his gloved hand as
he steps back, trying to keep the others at arm’s distance. "If this
is supposed to be a last-minute send-off, your timing is . .
."
"Sorry, Captain, but it’s a little
more serious than that." Shaw glances at Elise. "Your wife . .
."
"Former wife," Elise interrupts. "For
the record, we’re married in name only."
"We’re not on the record, but I’ll try
to remember that." Shaw’s eyes never leave Lee’s. "Ms. Lee has
alerted the ISA to a . . . well, certain improper actions on your
part. She claims she’s found a letter. . . ."
"You know the one I’m talking about,
don’t you?" Elise indicts him with her gaze. "The letter you left in
your desk, the one which I wasn’t supposed to find until after the
Alabama launched. . . ."
"The one I addressed to you and your
father, yes." Lee slowly lets out his breath. "My mistake. I thought
you’d wait until I was gone before you decrypted the password to see
what I might have left behind." He can’t help but smile. "No bank
codes, sorry. I left everything to charity."
Her face darkens. "After all my
father’s done for you. . . ."
"The senator did nothing for me. It
was all for himself. Maybe for the Republic, too, but that’s almost
as low." Despite his fear, Lee gives her a defiant smile. "As far as
I’m concerned, I don’t give a damn about the Republic or your
father."
Elise’s eyes widen. A confession is
the last thing she expected. Indeed, Lee is shocked by his own
words. Yet if they’ve read the letter, they already know everything;
denying it now would be pointless. Shaw steps a little closer, his
right hand moving to the front of his coat. "Then you admit you’re
involved in a plot to hijack the Alabama, that you’re
planning to smuggle D.I.s aboard. . . ?"
"Absolutely. Everything in my letter,
it’s all true." Lee barely glances at Shaw. "In fact, they’re
already aboard the shuttle." Although he speaks to the DIS, he
continues to stare straight at Elise. "And so you’ll know, I’m not
just involved in this . . . it’s my plan, has been from the very
beginning."
Elise’s mouth falls open; she recoils
as if he’s slapped her. "How. . . ? When did. . . ?"
"From the moment I was selected as
mission commander." Lee savors her horror, even as from the corner
of his eye he sees Roland Shaw slowly draw a stunner from within his
coat. "Perhaps even before then. Maybe I got the idea even while I
was in the Academy and saw what was being done to Project
Starflight. Or maybe it was while we were married, and I got to
watch from close range while your father and his cronies ruined the
country. In any case, I’ve had a long time to learn to hate the
Republic . . . and you too, for that matter."
Elise can’t speak. Lee isn’t
surprised; for the first time, at least in his memory, someone close
to her has uttered seditious thoughts about the government. Now he
knows for certain that she never suspected what he was planning,
even during the years that they shared the same bed. More evidence
of the fact that their marriage was a sham. "But I have to thank you
for one thing," he continues. "Your father’s connections enabled me
to establish a few of my own. Through him, I met some people without
whom none of this would have been possible."
Then he looks at Shaw. "Are we all
set?"
"Yes, Captain, we are." The Director
of Internal Security nods his head. "Just one last detail. . .
."
Elise turns to stare at Shaw. "What. .
. ?"
Shaw squeezes the trigger. There’s a
soft thufft of compressed air, then Elise collapses as the
charged dart strikes her. She almost falls against the side of the
van, but the prefect grabs her by the shoulders, gently lowers the
unconscious woman onto a bench.
Lee lets out his breath. "Bad luck,"
he says quietly. On the one hand, he’s glad Shaw used a nonlethal
weapon; as much as he despises this woman, he has no desire to see
her dead. On the other hand, she knows too much. "What are you going
to do with her?"
"We can keep her down for a couple of
hours, at least." Shaw tucks the stunner back in his shoulder
holster. "By the time she wakes up, she’ll be in Valdosta, awaiting
trial on sedition charges. Don’t worry, we’ll find a way to make ’em
stick, father or no father. But we’ve still got a problem. . .
."
"Let me guess. She told someone else
at ISA."
"Uh-uh . . . fortunately she called me
first. I heard from her just after our briefing, and by then she was
already flying down here. She wanted to confront you personally, and
I told her to keep it to herself." Shaw glances warily at the closed
hatch of the van. "But some of your people were arrested earlier
this morning, apparently while trying to make it to the rendezvous
point. One of them cracked under interrogation and my people tipped
off Highgate, and now there’s a service squad on your ship, checking
everyone who comes aboard. Sorry, Robert, but I didn’t learn about
it until right after I got the call from your wife. . .
."
"Please don’t call her my wife." Lee
picks up his helmet, juggles it in his hands. "And you can’t order
the squad to leave without raising suspicions, right?" Shaw shakes
his head. "Okay. I’ll deal with it somehow. At least cover for us
until we lift off."
"That, I can do." Shaw looks at the
prefect. "Ms. Lee is under arrest. Keep her sedated, and don’t let
anyone see her when she wakes up. I’ll deal with this later." Then
he takes Lee by the arm, leads him toward the hatch. "You’ve just
had a long, tearful farewell visit with your loving wife, and now
you and I are going to walk out there. . . ."
Security officers and pad workers
silently watch as the commanding officer of the Alabama and
the Director of Internal Security emerge from the back of the max
and quickly walk across the launch pad to the Wallace. The
colonists have already boarded the shuttle; now only the captain
needs to walk up the gangway.
One of the pad workers has a camera.
He uses it to catch a final snapshot of the two men as they formally
salute each other at the bottom of the shuttle gangway. Many years
later, historians will study this picture, and wonder what final
words were exchanged by the two greatest traitors the United
Republic of America has ever known.
"Good luck, Captain," Shaw says
quietly. "I hope you find what you’re looking for."
"Thank you, sir." Lee holds the
salute. "And good luck to you, too."
Shaw nods ever so slightly. "We’ll
both need it."
URSS Wallace 7.5.70 /
T-11.00.00
Jorge winces as an awesome roar rips
through the passenger compartment, accompanied by a prolonged
shudder that seems to go straight to the roots of his teeth.
Scowling against the overpowering sound and vibration, he can barely
hear Marie’s frightened scream above the engines, but he clamps his
hand over his daughter’s.
"It’s okay," he murmurs even though he
knows she can’t hear him. "It’s all right . . . It’s okay . . .
everything’s going to be all right. . . ."
No windows back here in the passenger
compartment, only two long rows of narrow acceleration couches; his
only view is past the shoulders of the passengers seated in front of
him, through the latticed bubble window of the forward cockpit.
Jorge catches a final glimpse of flat Floridan landscape falling
away, then cloudless sky fills the window, more blue and clear than
any sky he’s ever seen before.
The deck tilts backward, pushing him
further into the foam padding of his couch. Jorge turns his head,
gazes at his family strapped into the seats next to him. Rita’s eyes
are closed tight and Marie’s face is screwed up in mortal terror,
but Carlos wears a huge grin; all his fears have vanished, and now
he relishes every moment of this. Jorge feels a surge of paternal
pride. His son . . .
Then the main engines howl into life,
and Jorge has only a moment to turn his head forward again before
his body is slammed back. Weight descends upon his body; his lungs
fight for every breath he takes. Marie isn’t screaming anymore, but
the nails of her small hand dig into his palm. He wants to say
something to her, but he can’t. The g-force is incredible. Henry,
you bastard, you lied. . . .
The sky turns dark purple, starts
fading to black.
URSS Alabama 7.5.70 /
T-10.47.12
"Incoming OCN from the Wallace,
sir. Captain Lee."
"Thank you, Mr. Gillis, I’ll take it
here." Shapiro rotates the command chair seat away from the status
board, taps his headset. "Wallace, this is Alabama, do
you copy?"
"We copy, Alabama." Lee’s voice
comes clearly over the orbital communications network, the satellite
system that permits spacecraft to radio one another without having
to use ground-based systems. "Sorry for the delay, Tom. The ride up
was a little bumpy, but we cleared the pad without any difficulties.
LEO achieved and we’re headed for Highgate rendezvous, ETA
1430."
Shapiro closes his eyes in relief.
Good. Lee spoke of himself in the plural, which means he’s managed
to get everyone aboard the Wallace. The line about having a
bumpy ride up, though, is a signal that not everything went well.
"Sorry to hear that you picked up some chop, sir. Maybe I can narrow
your ETA if you’ll feed me your numbers on the GI."
"We copy, Alabama. Thanks, I’d
appreciate it."
"Stand by, Wallace." Shapiro
unbuckles the seat harness, pushes himself across the deck to the
com station. Several other members of the bridge crew are gathered
in the semi-circular compartment, but not all of them are involved;
he has to be careful what he says and does. Les Gillis punches up
the OCN graphic interface; glancing over his shoulder at Shapiro,
the com officer briefly holds up three fingers, then lowers one.
Shapiro nods, then taps his headset again. "Captain, we’re patching
the GI into OCN-3. I hope this isn’t too much trouble."
A brief pause. "Roger that,
Alabama," Lee says. "No, it’s not too much
trouble."
Shapiro and Gillis trade a knowing
look: Lee understands the double-talk. Although they’re using OCN-3
to exchange data regarding orbital coordinates, at the same time
they’d be patched into OCN-2, a seldom-used extra-low frequency band
they’ve established for covert print-only communications. Although
flight controllers in Houston may be monitoring OCN-3, they won’t be
looking for ELF transmissions carried over OCN-2. Or at least so
they hope.
Leslie taps at his keyboard, and the
small flatscreen in front of him divides in half. The top half
depicts a global map of Earth’s surface, with the curved
ground-tracks of Highgate and the Wallace projected above it.
The shuttle is halfway through its first orbit, now passing through
the night terminator somewhere above the Indian Ocean; meanwhile
Highgate, in a higher orbit, is coming up on the northern California
coast. Numbers to the right of the map display the exact coordinates
of both spacecraft. All very routine. The bottom half of the screen,
though, displays a decrypted ELF message from the
Wallace:
ISA CAUGHT 5 HERE–1 TALKED–GSC
SECURITY ALERT
Shapiro swears beneath his breath. If
there was a security alert at the Cape, then Lee was lucky to get
the Wallace off the ground. Feet dangling in midair, he leans
across Gillis to type a response:
5 URS ABOARD WAITING FOR YOU–WEAR
SUITS W/ HOODS
A long pause. Shapiro glances over his
shoulder, spots Dana Monroe watching him from the engineering
station. He cocks his head toward the screen; she nods, then pushes
off to glide toward them. When he looks back, Lee’s response has
already appeared:
WILL DO–1ST OPTION OUT–GO TO OPT.
2
Gillis hisses between his teeth. "He
can’t be serious," he whispers, so low Shapiro can barely hear him.
Tom feels a soft hand grip his
shoulder. Looking around, he finds Dana behind him. Her eyes widen
as she reads the screen. "Oh, God. . . ."
Shapiro twists around to examine the
status board. All systems are in the green, and the final stage of
the fuel load-up is almost complete. Through the windows on the
other side of the deck, he can see the aft end of the fuel barge
parked beneath the main tank. At 1400, forty-four minutes from now,
the last few tons of the helium-3 and deuterium necessary for the
primary boost phase will have been pumped aboard. Thirty minutes
later, at 1430, the Wallace is scheduled to dock with the
Alabama. After that . . .
"Can we do this?" Tom whispers. Dana
hesitates, gives a reluctant nod. "Okay," he murmurs, then he taps
his headset again. "We’ve got your numbers, Wallace, and they
look good to us. Concur with your projected ETA."
"We copy, Alabama," Lee
replies. "Wallace out."
Shapiro sighs, then he looks at
Gillis. "Tell the others to get ready . . . and for God’s sake, do
it quietly." The com officer is ashen, but he nods his head. Shapiro
gives him a gentle pat on the back, then he turns again to Monroe.
"Can you get us ready for a quick-start?"
"I . . . sure, no problem. We’ll be
there." Shapiro starts to push away, but she stops him. "One thing .
. . what about the lock-out?"
"I don’t know," he mutters. "Better
just hope the right man made it aboard."
URSS Wallace 7.5.70 /
T-9:32:14
Gazing up through the canopy, Lee
watches as the Alabama fills the cockpit windows. The shuttle
cradle is only a few yards away; with deft movements of the hand
controller, occasionally glancing down at the instrument panel to
make sure the upper fuselage hatch is properly aligned with the
docking collar, he gently coaxes the Wallace closer toward
the enormous ship as the spaceplane’s blunt shadow falls across its
hull. The shrill beep of contact probe, and he relaxes his grip on
the stick. Another moment passes, then the hard thump of the hatch
mating with the collar.
"Alabama, we’re in," he says.
"Secure shuttle, please."
"Roger that, Wallace." Tom
Shapiro’s voice. "The XO’s waiting for you. He’ll help you bring
your party aboard."
"Very good, Alabama, thank
you." As he switches off the main systems he feels a soft jar pass
through the shuttle as the cradle closes around the Wallace
and locks it in place. Another quick look across the board to make
sure the engines are safed and the wings have been properly folded,
then Lee shrugs out of his harness, picks up his helmet, and pushes
himself out of his seat and moves from the narrow cockpit into the
aft passenger compartment.
A few of the hardier ones are already
unbuckling their straps, but many remain in their seats, their faces
queasy and pale. The air is rank with the odor of vomit; quite a few
of these people got sick as soon as the Wallace entered
orbit, and some didn’t find the puke bags in time. Globular flecks
of bile float through the compartment, but there’s nothing that can
be done about that now. Lee whistles sharply between his fingers,
and everyone looks up at him.
"Okay, listen up," he says loudly once
he has their attention. "You know what the situation is, so make
sure your hoods are on when you leave the shuttle. Don’t stop for
anyone, just head straight for the hatch . . . we’ve got someone
there to show you the way. Go straight up the ladder until you reach
Deck H1, and follow First Officer Shapiro to your bunks. Is that
clear?"
Murmurs of assent, a few wary nods.
Lee scans the compartment, sees dozens of nervous faces. "Everyone
just relax," he adds, doing his best to calm them. "You did fine on
the ground. Play it the same way here, and we’re home free. Now . .
. is there a Jorge Montero aboard?"
A pause, then a hand rises from three
rows back on the right: a middle-aged man, seated with a woman, a
young girl, and a teenage boy. Lee tries not to show his relief; he
wasn’t one of those who was apprehended by the prefects. "Jorge,
please follow me. We need you right away."
Jorge nods his head, then hastens to
unbuckle his daughter’s harness. Judging from her pale expression,
she was one of those who got spacesick. His son stares back at Lee
with incredulity, wide-eyed with the notion that they’ve been
singled out. "Just you, sir," Lee quickly adds. "I’m sorry, but your
family has to leave with everyone else."
Jorge hesitates. "Yes, sir. Of
course." He looks at his wife and kids, murmurs something to them,
then struggles with a canvas duffel bag he has stuffed beneath his
seat. Lee moves forward to catch it before it hits another passenger
in the back of the head.
"You brought it?" he quietly asks.
Jorge nods again, and Lee looks past him toward his children. "I’m
going to need your father for awhile, so I want you to follow your
mother. She’ll take you where you’re supposed to go,
okay?"
His wife gives her husband an
uncertain glance, but his son has a broad grin. The little girl,
though, has a frightened look on her face. "Is my Papa in trouble?"
she asks uncertainly.
"Not at all, sweetie." Jorge gives her
a smile. "Don’t worry. I’ll be back with you quick as a flash." He
takes the bag from Lee, pulls its strap across his shoulders.
"Ready. Let’s go."
Behind them, the rest of the
passengers are opening their harnesses, pulling on their helmets.
These people have been through a lot in the last eighteen hours; he
can only pray they can keep it up just a little while
longer.
"Good luck, everyone," he says, then
he pushes himself to the ceiling hatch.
URSS Alabama 7.5.70 /
T-9.28.04
The inner hatch hisses as it irises
open, then Captain Lee pushes himself through it, the soles of his
shoes nearly touching the faceplate of Jorge’s helmet. Jorge tries
to follow him through the manhole, but something pulls at him from
behind. Looking back, he sees that his duffel bag has snagged on the
edge of the hatch.
Cursing under his breath, Jorge yanks
the bag free, hauls it over his shoulder as he scrambles the rest of
the way through the hatch. A moment of disorientation–everyone seems
to be standing on the walls–eclipsed by fear as he spots URS
soldiers within the narrow compartment.
Say nothing, do nothing. Jorge
pretends not to notice the troopers as Lee salutes a senior officer
wearing a colonel’s insignia. Past them, on the other side of the
deck only a few yards away, a young man in an FSA jumpsuit floats
near a ceiling hatch. He gives Jorge an impatient gesture, and he
obediently moves toward him. . . .
"Hold it." Someone grabs at his bag,
nearly pulling it off his shoulder. Jorge turns, sees one of the
soldiers, his hand wrapped around its strap. His name strip reads
Carruthers, and his eyes are suspicious. "What d’ya got in
there?"
Jorge feels his heart pounding in his
mouth. Past Carruthers, Captain Lee and the colonel–Reese, from the
name on his uniform–turn to stare at him. "Nothing . . . I mean,
it’s just . . ."
"Open it." Carruthers releases the
bag, but his hands fall upon his rifle.
Lee turns toward Reese. "Gill, this is
unnecessary. We’re already behind. . . ."
"Let my people do their job." Reese
gives Carruthers a brief nod. "Open it for him."
One hand still on his weapon,
Carruthers takes the bag from Jorge, lets it dangle in mid-air while
he unzips its flap. He peers at its contents, then he looks up at
Jorge. "Lemme guess . . . scientist, right?"
Jorge nods, unable to speak. "Yeah,
okay. . . ." Carruthers zips the bag shut, looks back at his
superior officer. "Safe."
Reese acknowledges his man with a
small nod, and Carruthers returns the bag to Jorge. His pulse still
hammering, Jorge pulls the bag back over his shoulder, moves toward
the hatch. When he glances back, he sees that Captain Lee is behind
him, and more passengers are emerging from the shuttle hatch. No one
else is getting harassed.
Yet the third soldier . . . his right
hand is raised, his index finger wagging a little. Jorge realizes
that he’s counting everyone who leaves the Wallace. Four,
five, six . . .
What happens when he gets to
forty-seven, and discovers that the crew roster is short by five?
The crewman near the access hatch
silently urges him toward the ladder. Jorge grasps the bottom rung,
pushes himself upward into the shaft. He looks back, sees Captain
Lee coming up the ladder. "Get to the command deck," he whispers.
"Next deck up. C’mon, move!"
Two crew members float unconscious on
Deck H4, a man and a woman, their arms limp at their sides, their
heads thrown back. A young woman hovering near the hatch aims a
stunner straight at Jorge; he raises his hands, then Lee appears
behind him. "Stand down, Dana," he says calmly. "He’s with us." Dana
lowers the weapon as the captain glances at the crewmen. "Is this
everyone?"
"On this deck, yes sir. Our people are
taking care of the rest now. Some resistance in H3. Someone tried to
shut down the life-support system, but they’ve been taken down. No
casualties reported."
"Well done, Chief." Lee turns to
another officer, points to the unconscious crewmen. "Put them where
they won’t cause any trouble when they wake up. The nearest head
should do." Then he looks back at Dana. "Here’s our man. He knows
what needs to be done."
"Aye, skipper." She tucks the stunner
in her belt, gestures to Jorge. "This way . . . what’s your
name?"
"Jorge. Jorge Montero." He grabs the
ceiling rail, follows Dana across the deck to the main control
console. "Electrical systems engineer . . . I designed the wiring
for this place, when I was with . . ."
"Right. The service panel you want is
down here." She lowers herself to the floor, thrusts her head and
shoulders beneath the console. "You know where you’re supposed to
go?"
Jorge quickly scans the complex array
of buttons, toggle switches and digital readouts until he finds a
key slot covered with a transparent plastic cover. "Uh-huh. Main
engine ignition system’s here, which means the lock-out should be
just beneath. . . ."
"Don’t explain it to me. Just do it."
Dana unlatches the service panel, impatiently shoves the cover
aside. She pulls herself out from beneath the console, nods toward
the open bay. "Whatever it is, make it quick."
"I know. Hold this." Jorge thrusts the
duffel bag into Dana’s arm. He pulls open the zipper, then begins
pulling out its contents. Her eyes widen as books, many of them
dating from the last century, spill forth from the bag: Skills
For Taming The Wilderness, The Foxfire Book, Survival
With Style, Bartlett’s Famous Quotations . . .
.
"What did you do, bring a library?"
Dana snatches a frayed oversize paperback before it floats away,
glances at the title: The Boy Scout Handbook.
Jorge grins despite himself. "Sort of.
I picked some things I thought we’d need when we . . . here we are!"
The hardcover copy of J. Brownowski’s The Ascent of Man is
nearly a century old; it took years of searching before he
discovered a copy in an antiquarian bookstore outside Atlanta. Jorge
opens the book to the back cover. "Got a knife? Something
sharp?"
Dana reaches into a thigh pocket,
pulls out a small penknife. Jorge takes it from her, opens its small
blade, carefully slices the endpaper straight down the center of the
inside binding. She watches in fascination as Jorge slowly peels
back the false endpaper glued over the back cover, revealing a
hidden pocket. Concealed within the book is a paper-thin plastic
sheet: a fiberoptic circuit board. Dana smiles at Jorge with
newfound respect. "Sneaky. Very sneaky."
"Figured someone might search me. It
never came to that, but . . ." Withdrawing the circuit board from
the pocket, Jorge gingerly holds it by its edges as he bends down to
the open service panel. "Okay, look in there and find the
electronics bay marked 2-304."
Dana pulls out a penlight, squeezes in
past Jorge. After a few moments, she slides out a slender metal
case. "Take out the board that’s in there," Jorge says, and she
removes the thin sheet contained within the drawer. As Jorge
delicately places the substitute board within the drawer, he hears
voices from across the compartment:
"Captain! Chief Tinsley reports
Reese’s men have discovered we’re short!"
"Where’s Tinsley now?"
"Access shaft just outside H5!" A
pause. "He’s shut the hatch, sir. The last of the passengers are
aboard."
"Good. Tell the XO to stand by. Chief
Monroe, where are we?"
Jorge slides the drawer shut, twists
around within the cramped space to give the Dana a thumbs-up. She
raises her head above the console. "We’re clear, skipper!" Then she
looks back down at Jorge. "I hope this works," she
whispers.
"You and me both." Ten months of
effort went into devising a bypass for the main engine ignition
system that would not require code authorization from the ground,
yet there was no certain way of testing it before now. Jorge barely
has time to climb out from the console before Captain Lee pushes him
out of the way. He’s already removed his isolation suit, and now he
yanks the chrome launch key from around his neck. Without any
hesitation, Lee flips open the cover above the ignition system,
shoves the key into the slot, gives it a one-quarter
turn.
For a half-second, nothing happens;
Jorge feels his heart skip a beat. Then diodes across the console
flash from red to green, and a flatscreen in the center of the
console lightens to display bars of alphanumeric code. Dana glances
at the screen, then quickly types an instruction into a nearby
keyboard. The screen changes, displaying a schematic of
Alabama’s fusion reactor.
"Lock-out is down!" she shouts. "We’ve
got the ship!"
Everyone in the command center yells
at once, and Jorge feels the strength leave his body; gasping for
breath, he lets his head fall back. It worked . . . oh, God, it
worked . . . then, through the laughter and applause, he hears a
voice from the other side of the command deck:
"Skipper! Message from Launch
Operations . . . !"
7.5.70 /
T-9.10.32
"They’ve ordered us to open the
hatch!"
Holding onto a ceiling rail, Lee
stares at the launch key half-turned in its slot. For a few seconds,
everything seems frozen in time, Gillis’s voice a distant echo from
across a vast chasm. At the edge of his vision he sees Dana just
beginning to react; next to her, Jorge Montero turns toward them,
fear beginning to register on his face. . . .
It’s got to be now, he realizes. Now,
or never.
"Inform Ops we’ve got a ship
emergency." Lee snaps back to full awareness. "Tell ’em . . .
whatever. An electrical fire somewhere in the hub. Buy us some
time." He glances at the chronometer above the console, then turns
to Dana. "Put everything on line, Chief. We launch in
five."
Dana’s expression changes to
astonishment. For a moment it seems she’s about to protest, then she
quickly nods her head. "Right away, sir," she says, then she pitches
herself across the deck to the engineering station. "Paine! Jessup!
Pressurize liquid fuel tanks, initiate primary ignition sequence!
We’re restarting the clock at minus-oh-five!"
The bridge crew stares at them, not
quite believing what they’ve just heard. "Let’s go, people!" Lee
yells. "You know what to do!" That’s all it takes; suddenly,
everyone is in motion, nearly colliding with each other as they rush
for their stations. The only person who seems confused is Jorge
Montero; still holding onto the console, he stares about the
compartment in confusion, not knowing what to do.
"Mr. Montero, get out of here." Lee
points to the hatch as he pushes himself toward the command chair.
"Find your family and tell them to get ready." Montero nods dumbly,
then heads for the access shaft. Lee taps his headset. "Mr. Shapiro,
where are you?"
"Deck C3B, skipper." Lee can hear
voices in the background. "What’s going on?"
"We’re moving up the countdown.
Zero-five and counting. Get those people strapped down, then get
back here." Without waiting for a response, Lee turns toward Gillis.
"Les! Put me through to Colonel Reese!"
The com officer slaps buttons on his
board; a moment later, Reese’s angry voice comes through Lee’s
headset. "Captain, what are you. . . ?"
"Ship emergency, Colonel." Lee tries
to keep an even tone. "A fire has broken loose in Deck H3, and we’re
working to contain it, but I have to ask that you and your men leave
the Alabama at once. Use the EVA suits in the lockers. . .
."
"Lee, there’s no fire. The master
alarm hasn’t gone off." Reese isn’t buying it; Lee can tell from the
sound of his voice. "Your exec lit out of here when we informed him
that the head-count was short by five persons, and now he’s sealed
the hatch. Either you let us in, or we’re going to have to shoot our
way through."
Reese is bluffing. The access shaft
hatch on Deck H5 is built to withstand a full-scale decompression
accident, and the rounds from a URS flechette rifle are specifically
designed not to be able to penetrate bulkheads. There’s no way the
soldiers can enter the shaft. "Colonel Reese," Lee says calmly,
"please take your men off the ship within four minutes. That’s an
order."
"I’ve already got my orders." A long
pause. "Lee . . . I know what you’re planning to do. We can’t allow
this. Surrender yourselves now, and you might get out of this
without . . ."
"Sorry, Colonel, we’re way beyond
that." No sense in keeping up the pretense; Reese has figured out
the truth. "Four minutes, then you’re stowaways. Your
choice."
Lee has just clicked off when he hears
Gillis again. "Skipper, I’ve got Houston. They . . ."
"Mr. Gillis . . ." He takes a deep
breath. "You have my permission to tell them to go straight to
hell."
"Yes, sir!"
"Secondary engines pressurized,
ignition systems armed." From her station, Dana keeps up a steady
drone as she moves down the checklist. Lee absently gnaws at a
knuckle as he watches her people flip switches, enter commands in
their keyboards. "Main engine reactor on standby . . . navigation
interface, checked and ready. . . ."
"You’re sure you’re ready to do this?"
Tom Shapiro has returned to the command deck without Lee noticing;
he rests his hand on the captain’s shoulder. "Another ten minutes .
. ."
"Another ten minutes, and they may
find a way to stop us." Lee shakes his head. "We get out now, and
they can’t do anything. We’ll complete flight procedures once we’re
underway." He looks up at Shapiro. "Agreed?"
The First Officer hesitates, slowly
lets out his breath. "Yes, sir. Understood."
"Are the passengers strapped down?"
Shapiro nods reluctantly, and Lee points to the vacant seat at the
main console. "Okay, take the helm. You’ll have to fly until we’ve
had a talk with Mr. McDowell."
Shapiro doesn’t immediately obey his
order; instead he lingers by the command chair, gazing through the
windows at the dry-dock surrounding them. Lee looks up at him; for a
moment neither man says anything. Shapiro waits for an answer to his
unspoken question, when he doesn’t receive one, he lets out his
breath, then he moves to the helm, straps himself in, punches
commands into his keyboard. "Main nav systems online," he murmurs.
"Primary AI interface, green for go. . . ."
Now Lee’s all alone. Voices in his
headset ask questions; he answers yes or no, never once removing his
gaze from the status board above the console. The last few minutes
drift by. He rests his right elbow on the armrest, feels
Alabama tremble beneath him: eighty thousand tons of metal,
plastic, ceramic alloy, and flesh, waiting to be fired into the
cosmos.
"Captain?" Gillis’s voice is hesitant.
"President Conroy online. He wants to speak with you."
Lee feels eyes upon him. Everyone
waits for him to say something. A final denunciation? A curse upon
the Republic? Perhaps haughty laughter from a trusted senior officer
who has stolen the crowning achievement of a corrupt government and
transformed it into an expression of freedom?
"Switch off the comlink, Mr. Gillis."
Lee unfastens his seat belt, pushes himself over to the main
console. "We’re ready for launch."
Then he grasps the silver key, twists
it the rest of the way to the right. A green light flares above it.
"Disengage mooring lines," he says. "Fire main
thrusters."
7.5.70 / T -0.00.00
Pyros silently ignite along the
Alabama’s hull as the mooring cables are jettisoned, then the
four maneuvering engines blaze to life and the starship slowly
begins to move forward.
Ponderously, like a leviathan
awakening within its grotto deep beneath the sea, the enormous
vessel glides through the dry-dock, the red strobes of its running
lights casting shadows along the trusswork of Highgate’s central
bay.
A service pod unlucky enough to be
flying past Alabama at that moment turns on its axis, its
RCRs flaring as it maneuvers wildly to avoid collision with the
gaping maw of the ramscoop. Breath caught in his throat, the pilot
watches through the cockpit as the five-hundred-foot length of the
starship passes above him.
Within the EVA compartment, URS
soldiers clutch the ceiling rails with both hands, their feet
dangling in midair as they yell obscenities. A rifle skitters across
a bulkhead, slams against the floor. Colonel Reese loses his grip,
falls to the deck; there’s a sharp pain in his left ankle as it
twists; he ignores it as he tries to crawl toward the nearest suit
locker. Yet he knows it’s a futile effort; even if he were able to
put on a suit and get to the airlock, Alabama is under
thrust. Any attempt now to escape the ship would most certainly be
fatal. Like it or not, he’s going where it’s going. . . .
On Deck C4A, Jorge Montero lies prone
on his bunk; weight descends upon him, pushing his body flat against
the narrow mat. Within the cramped confines of the crew compartment,
he can hear people cheering, laughing, sobbing with relief. Turning
his head, he glances across the narrow aisle. Rita meets his gaze,
then looks away. She’s frightened: not of this, but of what lies
before them.
"Goodbye, Earth!" From the bunk above
him, Carlos yells against the dull creak of the bulkheads, the
distant hollow thrum of the engines. "Goodbye, URS! We are
history!"
Jorge grins. The kid’s right. They’ve
become history. . . .
Eyes half-shut, arms and legs relaxed,
Captain Lee lets his body collapse against the soft membranes of his
chair. All around him, he hears the low voices of the command crew
as they murmur to one another; the quiet tapping of fingers against
keyboards, the subdued chitter and occasional electronic beep of
instruments. Studying the status board, he sees that all is well:
Alabama is behaving just as it should, its complex systems
all working well within their parameters.
Everyone’s going about their work with
quiet stoicism, just as they were trained. Dana looks around at him,
meets his eye; she gives him a smile, a silent thumbs-up. He returns
the gesture, then shifts his gaze to the windows.
Highgate can no longer be seen. It’s
already many miles away, falling away behind him. In a couple of
minutes he’ll give the order for main engine ignition, the beginning
of the three-month boost phase that will gradually accelerate the
Alabama to cruise velocity. Long before then everyone aboard
will be in hibernation; virtually immortal, they’ll sleep for the
next two and a quarter centuries, and when they awaken . .
.
No. Now’s not the time for this. Ursae
Majoris 47 can wait a little while longer.
Lee watches as the silver-blue
curvature of the Earth gracefully drifts past the command deck
windows. No one says anything; the bridge team falls silent as they
look upon their home world for the last time. For a moment, there is
only the silence of the stars.
Peace. Liberty. Freedom.