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3001 The final Odissey Печать
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3001 The final Odissey
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experiments started so many ages ago.
But no longer were they always obedient to the mandates of their
creators; like all material things, they were not immune to the corruption
of Time and its patient, unsleeping servant, Entropy.
And sometimes, they discovered and sought goals of their own.

I STAR CITY


1 Comet Cowboy

Captain Dimitri Chandler [M2973.04.21/93.106//Mars//I SpaceAcad3005] --
or `Dim` to his very best friends -- was understandably annoyed. The message
from Earth had taken six hours to reach the space-tug Goliath, here beyond
the orbit of Neptune; if it had arrived ten minutes later he could have
answered `Sorry -- can`t leave now -- we`ve just started to deploy the
sun-screen.`
The excuse would have been perfectly valid: wrapping a comet`s core in
a sheet of reflective film only a few molecules thick, but kilometres on a
side, was not the sort of job you could abandon while it was half-completed.
Still, it would be a good idea to obey this ridiculous request: he was
already in disfavour sunwards, through no fault of his own. Collecting ice
from the rings of Saturn, and nudging it towards Venus and Mercury, where it
was really needed, had started back in the 2700s -- three centuries ago.
Captain Chandler had never been able to see any real difference in the
`before and after` images the Solar Conservers were always producing, to
support their accusations of celestial vandalism. But the general public,
still sensitive to the ecological disasters of previous centuries, had
thought otherwise, and the `Hands off Saturn!` vote had passed by a
substantial majority. As a result, Chandler was no longer a Ring Rustler,
but a Comet Cowboy.
So here he was at an appreciable fraction of the distance to Alpha
Centauri, rounding up stragglers from the Kuiper Belt. There was certainly
enough ice out here to cover Mercury and Venus with oceans kilometres deep,
but it might take centuries to extinguish their hell-fires and make them
suitable for life. The Solar Conservers, of course, were still protesting
against this, though no longer with so much enthusiasm. The millions dead
from the tsunami caused by the Pacific asteroid in 2304 -- how ironic that a
land impact would have done much less damage! -- had reminded all future
generations that the human race had too many eggs in one fragile basket.
Well, Chandler told himself, it would be fifty years before this
particular package reached its destination, so a delay of a week would
hardly make much difference. But all the calculations about rotation, centre
of mass, and thrust vectors would have to be redone, and radioed back to
Mars for checking. It was a good idea to do your sums carefully, before
nudging billions of tons of ice along an orbit that might take it within
hailing distance of Earth.
As they had done so many times before, Captain Chandler`s eyes strayed
towards the ancient photograph above his desk. It showed a three-masted
steamship, dwarfed by the iceberg that was looming above it -- as, indeed,
Goliath was dwarfed at this very moment.
How incredible, he had often thought, that only one long lifetime
spanned the gulf between this primitive Discovery and the ship that had
carried the same name to Jupiter! And what would those Antarctic explorers
of a thousand years ago have made of the view from his bridge? They would
certainly have been disoriented, for the wall of ice beside which Goliath
was floating stretched both upwards and downwards as far as the eye could
see. And it was strange-looking ice, wholly lacking the immaculate whites
and blues of the frozen Polar seas. In fact, it looked dirty -- as indeed it
was. For only some ninety per cent was water-ice: the rest was a witch`s
brew of carbon and sulphur compounds, most of them stable only at

 
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