"Blish, James - Seeding Program" - читать интересную книгу автора (Blish James)BOOK ONE SEEDING PROGRAM The spaceship resumed humming around Sweeney without his noticing the change. When Capt. Meikiejon's voice finally came again from the wall speaker, Sweeney was still lying buckled to his bunk in a curious state of .tranquility he had never known before, and couldn't possibly have described, even to himself. Though he had a pulse, he might otherwise have concluded that he was dead. It took him several minutes to respond. "Sweeney, do you hear me? Are you all right?" The brief hesitation in the pilot's breathing made Sweeney grin. From Meikiejon's point of view, and that of most of the rest of humanity, Sweeney was all wrong. He was, in fact, dead. The heavily insulated cabin, with its own airlock to the out- side, and no access for Sweeney at all to the rest of the ship, was a testimonial to his wrongness. So was Meikiejon's tone: the voice of a man addressing, not another human being, but something that had to be kept in a vault. A vault designed to protect the universe outside it not to protect its contents from the universe. . ' sitting up. He checked the thermometer, which still registered its undeviating minus 194 F.the mean surface temperature of Ganymede, moon number III of Jupiter. "I was- dozing, sort of. What's up?" "I'm putting the ship into her orbit; we're about a thousand miles up from the satellite now. I thought you might want to take a look." "Sure enough. Thanks, Mickey." The wall speaker said, "Yeah. Talk to you later." Sweeney grappled for the guide rail and pulled himself over to the cabin's single bull'seye port, maneuvering with considerable precision. For a man to whom 1/6 Earth gravity is normal, free fall -a situation of no gravity at all-is only an extreme case. Which was what Sweeney was, too. A human being -but an extreme case. He looked out. He knew exactly what he would sec; he had studied it exhaustively from photos, from teletapes, from maps, and through telescopes both at home on the Moon and on Mars. When you approach Ganymede at inferior conjunc- tion, as Meikiejon was doing, the first thing that hits you in the eye is the huge oval blot called Neptune's Trident so named by the earliest Jovian explorers because it was marked with the Greek letter psi on the old Howe composite map. The name had turned out to have been well chosen: that blot is a |
|
|