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3001 The final Odissey Печать
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3001 The final Odissey
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had never been...
The petabyte tablet was waiting for him, with a group of Europs
standing around it, demonstrating the first sign of curiosity that Poole had
ever observed in them. He wondered if Halman had somehow told them to watch
over this gift from space, until he came to collect it.
And to take it back, since it now contained not only a sleeping friend
but terrors which some future age might exorcise, to the only place where it
could be safely stored.

40 Midnight: Pico

It would be hard, Poole thought, to imagine a more peaceful scene --
especially after the trauma of the last weeks. The slanting rays of a nearly
full Earth revealed all the subtle details of the waterless Sea of Rains --
not obliterating them, as the incandescent fury of the Sun would do.
The small convoy of mooncars was arranged in a semicircle a hundred
metres from the inconspicuous opening at the base of Pico that was the
entrance to the Vault. From this viewpoint, Poole could see that the
mountain did not live up to the name that the early astronomers, misled by
its pointed shadow, had given to it. It was more like a rounded hill than a
sharp peak, and he could well believe that one of the local pastimes was
bicycle-riding to the summit. Until now, none of those sportsmen and women
could have guessed at the secret hidden beneath their wheels: he hoped that
the sinister knowledge would not discourage their healthy exercise.
An hour ago, with a sense of mingled sadness and triumph, he had handed
over the tablet he had brought --never letting it out of his sight -- from
Ganymede directly to the Moon.
`Good-bye, old friends,` he had murmured. `You`ve done well. Perhaps
some future generation will reawaken you. But on the whole -- I rather hope
not.`
He could imagine, all too clearly, one desperate reason why Halman`s
knowledge might be needed again. By now, surely, some message was on its way
to that unknown control centre, bearing the news that its servant on Europa
no longer existed. With reasonable luck, it would take 950 years, give or
take a few, before any response could be expected.
Poole had often cursed Einstein in the past; now he blessed him. Even
the powers behind the Monoliths, it now appeared certain, could not spread
their influence faster than the speed of light. So the human race should
have almost a millennium to prepare for the next encounter -- if there was
to be one. Perhaps by that time, it would be better prepared.
Something was emerging from the tunnel -- the track-mounted,
semi-humanoid robot that had carried the tablet into the Vault. It was
almost comic to see a machine enclosed in the kind of isolation suit used as
protection against deadly germs and here on the airless Moon! But no one was
taking any chances, however unlikely they might seem. After all, the robot
had moved among those carefully sequestered nightmares, and although
according to its video cameras everything appeared in order, there was
always a chance that some vial had leaked, or some canister`s seal had
broken. The Moon was a very stable environment, but during the centuries it
had known many quakes and meteor impacts.
The robot came to a halt fifty metres outside the tunnel. Slowly, the
massive plug that sealed the Vault swung back into place, and began to
rotate in its threads, like a giant bolt being screwed into the mountain.
`All not wearing dark glasses, please close your eyes or look away from
the robot!` said an urgent voice over the mooncar radio. Poole twisted round
in his seat, just in time to see an explosion of light on the roof of the
vehicle. When he turned back to look at Pico, all that was left of the robot
was a heap of glowing slag; even to someone who had spent much of his life
surrounded by vacuum, it seemed altogether wrong that tendrils of smoke were

 
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