"Janet & Chris Morris - Threshold" - читать интересную книгу автора (Morris Janet E) THRESHOLD
Janet and Chris Morris Copyright ┬й Paradise Productions, 1990 ISBN: 0-451-45084-1 e-book ver. 1.0 This novel is dedicated to Herbert L. OrtтАФmentor, business manager, spiritual guideтАФwith love and respect: Without your wisdom, kindness, and unceasing care, Herb, life would not be half so sweet. CHAPTER 1 Deja Vu Past a sprinkle of asteroids in the foreground of his synthetic-aperture lidar screen, beyond a red crescent that ought to b Mars, was the blue-green dot of Earth. Or so the pilot's astronics were indicating. Captain Joseph South, U.S. Space Command, had learned to distrust his artific intelligent "expert" astrogation system on this bad-luck test flight. Nothing had gone as planned during the maiden interstella spongejump of the X-99A testbed he was piloting, beyond the mission beingтАФso farтАФsurvivable. But the X-99A had never outright lied to him. And lidar returns, any test pilot knew, were as trustworthy as radar return South shook his helmeted head and rubbed his eyes under his raised visor. Better rephrase that, since radar and lidar could you if you let them, and South was fresh from a jump through a spongelike space whose prolonged effects on human being were part of what this test flight was testing. The laser-driven imaging system could only show him what was out there to bounce light back. of the home solar system for the next five hundred years. The AI-expert had been giving South enough trouble on this flight that he'd promised himself, when he got home, to pull i of the X-99A STARBIRD so that he could take it up into the hills around Vandenberg and shoot it with Grandpa's six-gun. Since it was too soon to put a lead slug through its charge-coupled brain, and he didn't like the readout below his lidar scr South did what any red-blooded American test pilot would do in his situation: he whacked the offending meter, hard, with t of his gloved hand. The digital readout didn't even shiver. The date on the meter didn't change. The heads-up display reflecting it on STARB windscreen didn't, either. With a sigh, South slapped down his helmet's visor and pulled up all the relevant data through his suit's system, reading th results of his Extravehicular Mobility Unit's redundant command and control display. The projections on the inside of his vi showed him the same pictures and numbers that the master system had, only now he had to scroll and tap and voice-comm his way through a full astro error search, because the suit's helmet could show him only four data pulls at a time and still gi him a vision window in the center of his visor. And South needed to keep an eye on his flight deckтАФ especially on the lidar screenтАФto see if anything changed while h doing the equivalent of telling STARBIRD's AI that it had its silicon head wedged up its outputs. But nothing changed. The planets on his lidar were still telling STARBIRD they were five hundred years decayed in their from project ETA, this system. South pulled up a standard return template and superimposed it on the realtime lidar return. didn't look that damned different to him. So maybe the AI itself was out of kilter. He hoped not. STARBIRD was going to be a real handful to dock if he had to do it from his suit's astronicsтАФor manually Still, he had to do it. "Give me the quickest plot to docking, Birdy. Send it with ETA, our call signs, to Station." He flipped monitoring mode. STARBIRD's AI would run the message by him before it burst it by laser carrier toward the U.S. Space Station in orbit around the earth. The AI's voice once gave him the creeps, but now he was used to it. The mission had eaten fourteen months out of Joe South's life. Even with STARBIRD's capabilities, it would eat four more before he docked. There were better than twenty |
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