"Kristine Kathryn Rusch - The Room of Lost Souls" - читать интересную книгу автора (Rusch Kristine Kathryn) THE ROOM OF LOST SOULS
by Kristine Kathryn Rusch Kristine Kathryn RuschтАЩs latest novel is The Recovery Man (Roc 2007), the latest stand-alone book in the award-nominated Retrieval Artist series. The author just completed a book tour of France for her Kris Nelscott mystery series. Yet, with all this novel writing, she still finds time for shorter works. Recent tales include novellas in Mike ResnickтАЩs Alien Crimes and Lou AndersтАЩ upcoming Sideways in Crime, along with stories for AsimovтАЩs, and other SF and mystery magazines. In тАЬThe Room of Lost Souls,тАЭ Kris presents us with a deep-space mystery. This tale revisits the milieu of her December 2005 ReadersтАЩ Award winning novella, тАЬDiving Into the Wreck.тАЭ **** The old spacerтАЩs bar on Longbow Station is the only bar there that doesnтАЩt have a name. No name, no advertising across the door or the back wall, no cute little logos on the magnetized drinking cups. The door is recessed into a grungy wall that looks like itтАЩs temporary due to construction. To get in, you need one of two special chips. The first is hand-heldтАФgiven by the station manager after careful consideration. The second is built into your ID. You get that one if youтАЩre a legitimate spacer, operating or working for a business that requires a pilotтАЩs license. crew on an until-then male only freighter. I was just eighteen years old. IтАЩve been using the chip more and more these last few years, since I discovered a wrecked Dignity Vessel that I thought I could mine for gold. Instead, that ship mined me. Now I take tourists to established wrecks all over this sector. I coordinate the trip, collect the money and hire the divers whoтАЩll make those tourists believe theyтАЩre doing real wreck-diving. Tourists never do real wreck diving. ItтАЩs too dangerous. The process gets its name from the dangers: in olden days, wreck diving was called space diving to differentiate it from the planet-side practice of diving into the oceans. We donтАЩt face water hereтАФwe donтАЩt have its weight or its unusual properties, particularly at huge depths. We have other elements to concern us: No gravity, no oxygen, extreme cold. Those risks exist no matter what kind of wrecks we dive. So I minimize everything else: I make sure the wrecks are known, mapped, and harmless. I havenтАЩt lost any tourists. But I have lost friends to real wreck diving. And several times, IтАЩve almost lost myself. |
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