"Jean and Jeff Sutton - Alien From The Stars" - читать интересную книгу автора (Sutton Jean and Jeff)Alien From The Stars -- Jean and Jeff Sutton -- (1970)
(Version 2002.09.13 -- Done) ONE A VIOLENT WARNING light flashed furiously. The strident voice of a horn blared through the audiocoms. Echoing throughout the lower decks and passageways and cavernous quarters of the big ship, the horn held the lonely muffled sound of a drum-beat rolling upward from a deep well -- a sound heavy with doom. Barlo, the planetary archeologist, reacted swiftly. Empty-handed, he sprang toward the door of his small cabin. The long corridor, dimly lit during the sleep cycle, was deserted as he burst from his room. A secondary buzzer signaled the beginning of transition from Q space -- a warning that the huge Zemm liner faced imminent disaster. The knowledge speeded his steps. Racing into an intersecting passageway, he hurriedly entered a launch well, slipped through a hatch into a small scout pod, pressed a button, and called the ops bridge. "Pods away, pods away." The crisp response held a controlled tautness. Barlo didn't ask questions. Swiftly yet calmly he punched a button that sealed the pod's well from the ship, another that opened a disc door and left the well exposed to the awful emptiness of space. A lever caused a thick elastic mesh to enfold his slight body; a switch sent the pod shooting out into the from Q space, the harsh glitter of stars, seen through the ports, was reassuring. He moved another switch. Sledgehammer forces generated by the maximum acceleration crushed his short, thin body against the elastic meshing. His long, prehensile fingers grasped another control and turned it; a beam of electromagnetic energy leaped from the pod, tying it to the huge starliner. "Pods away, pods away..." A voice tolled sepulchrally from a speaker above him. Barlo punched a button, and a screen glowed to life. Its light, amplified a thousand times, displayed the huge ship as a graceful needle poised against the fiercely burning stars. The sight filled him with sorrow. Rapidly diminishing in size, the liner suddenly erupted into a colossal ball of flame that for a brief moment held the awesome brilliance of a nova. The illumination of the screen was blinding. The harsh flare almost as quickly subsided, dwindling into a small, dull ember before winking into nothingness in the great black sea of space. With the calm efficiency characteristic of his kind -- a cerebral activity unhampered by emotions -- Barlo activated the pod detectors and called into a transmitter, "Scout pod four three seven calling survivors. Scout pod four three seven..." He repeated the call several times. Although the detector readouts covering the sector of the disaster were going wild, he realized they registered only debris; the silence on the call circuit told him he was alone. Alone! Of more than thirteen thousand passengers and crew members, he |
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