Janus 2

Home > Other > Janus 2 > Page 1
Janus 2 Page 1

by S. D. Falchetti




  Janus 2

  A Hayden’s World Novella

  S.D. Falchetti

  Contents

  1. Fairway Cove

  2. Washington

  3. The Blue Room

  4. Down the Rabbit Hole

  5. Balloon Animals

  6. Romeo One

  7. Stardust

  8. Divergence

  9. Threading the Needle

  10. Penitente

  11. Twenty Minutes

  12. Freeze Frame

  13. Adrift

  14. Departure

  15. Goose Egg

  16. Rendezvous

  17. Runway 30

  Author’s Message

  The Science of the Story

  The Hayden’s World Series

  About the Author

  1

  Fairway Cove

  Late-day sun drenches asphalt as the motorcycle winds along the coastal highway. James banks right and the sky leans left. Kate’s arms encircle his waist, her chest rising and falling with each breath. To their left, the Pacific is a tapestry of shining diamonds with a single sailboat silhouetted against a goldenrod horizon. They watch the boat bob against the waves for a moment before James rotates the throttle, the motorcycle’s engine whining, veering them off the highway onto a dust-soaked road.

  “Going somewhere?” Kate asks over her helmet mic.

  James glances back over his shoulder. “I want to show you something.”

  The landscape flattens as the bike clears the crest. Two buildings stand to the right, the first a long-abandoned convenience store with sand-blasted lettering. Dirty windows show hints of counters and chairs inside. The second is a twenty-meter rectangle with a girder roof and two huge sliding white doors. Parallel one-kilometer roads run in front of the buildings, the closest overgrown with dirt and grass, and the furthest paved and clear with white dashed lines and huge block numbers reading 30. James pulls the bike beside the sliding white doors.

  Kate removes her helmet and runs her fingers through her blonde hair. A silver ring dangles on a chain from her neck. She’s eighteen, same age as James. “Why do I get the feeling we’re trespassing?”

  James grins and waves a hand. “No worries. I got permission from the owner.”

  She arches an eyebrow. “You asked permission for something?”

  He motions to the door and walks over towards the handle. “Don’t you want to see what’s inside?”

  Her eyes dart to the structure. “Okay, now I’m curious.”

  James anchors himself and tugs with both hands. As the sunlight spills into the hangar, the white wings and black propeller appear. Gold glares from chrome accents on the nose and the livery is marine blue with brick-red stripes stenciled with N147CP.

  “Woah,” Kate says. “Will you look at that?” She walks over and runs her hand along the airplane’s cowl. “It’s a classic. Did you…did you buy it?”

  James nods. “Found it in a salvage yard. Bought what was left, pieced it back together. Purrs like a kitten.”

  “What’s it run on?”

  “Good old gasoline. Nineteen-ninety-two Piper Arrow Three. They only built six that year.” He moves to the passenger-side. A foot-step juts out from the fuselage and the wing has a black non-slip surface next to the door. James leans over, opens the door, and steps up. He extends his hand and Kate accepts. They slip into the cockpit and settle into their seats. “What do you think?” James says.

  She sets her hands on the yoke and turns it slightly. He points over her shoulder at the right wing and she watches the aileron move up and down. “Oh, this is awesome. I love it.”

  James flicks the red battery switch on. Indicator lights illuminate. “Would you latch that door?”

  She pauses a moment, a smile creeping across her face, and pulls the door closed. Without saying a word she slides the seatbelt across herself. “Where are we going?”

  He hands her a headset and motions towards the plane’s nose. Rich blue sky awaits. “You know, that-a-way, just higher,” he says over his mic. When he flips the beacon switch, red light spins in the hangar. Leaning towards the window, he says, “Clear prop!”

  The propeller sputters to life when he turns the starter. He adjusts the throttle and turns on the avionics and navigation lights.

  Kate taps the Garmin in front of her. The individual pixels of the airplane stick figure are visible. “Oh, wow, look at this navcon. That’s….is that even a computer?”

  James taps the power button off. “We don’t need it. Guys flew for half-a-century with nothing but eyeballs and radios.”

  “You sure this is safe?”

  “Safe as anything else in life. Wanna go?”

  She eyes the crystal sky and glances back. “Yeah. A little different than your dad’s planes, huh?”

  James snorts. “You’re just along for the ride in those. This…” He turns the yoke. “…this is real.” He clicks the thumb button. “Fairway Cove Traffic, Piper one four seven charlie papa at east hangar taxiing to runway three zero.”

  Kate quirks her head. “Who are you talking to?”

  “Whoever’s out there. Maybe there’s another James and Kate puttering around in a seventy-year old plane. Gotta do it right.”

  She sets her hand on his. “I think the universe can only handle one James Hayden.”

  He winks at her and edges the throttle forward. “Well, I’m lucky this one found his Kate.”

  James at forty-one doesn’t look much different than he did at eighteen, one of the fortunate blessed with a baby face and sandy hair hiding any hint of gray. He taps the Sandpiper’s controls and watches Earth’s blue marble spin away. As the star field pans, Hayden-Pratt’s MEO2 shipyard swings into view, a brightly-lit lattice cradling a sixty-two meter wedge. Gold interior light glows from the wedge’s cockpit and spotlights illuminate patches of the fuselage. Black registry letters read HP-G01 Gossamer Goose. In the ship’s aft, robotic arms spin hull plates into place.

  Ananke is beside James, her slate affixed to the dash. Blue ripples spill across her screen. “I remember the first time I saw Gossamer. I was so proud to be a part of fulfilling Bernard’s dream. With her ivory white paint, she reminds me of a spinnaker, catching starlight.”

  James smiles. “I think that’s the perfect description of Goose.” As the shipyard grows, filling the cockpit windows, he stretches forward and examines the aft construction. “Looking good. On track for end of week.”

  “Any word on launch authorization?”

  A quirk of his head. “Larson wants to meet one-on-one.”

  Ananke’s screen splashes orange. “Well, that should be interesting.”

  “Yeah, curious what he’ll say when it’s off-the-cuff. I kind of like it. Two guys sorting it out, no audience.”

  Green ripples slide across Ananke’s face. After a pause, she says, “If I could offer an observation.”

  James arches an eyebrow. “Shoot.”

  “Two guys sorting it out is often more brawn than brain, so to speak.”

  He chuckles. “You think I’m going to deck him?”

  “No. But ego might overtake intellect.”

  A shrug. “I think I can handle it. Anyway, it’s a negotiation. He wants something. If it was just him digging in his heels there’d be no need to meet.”

  “Agreed.”

  James taps the comm. “MEO Control, Sandpiper four four three, ready to dock.”

  A synthetic voice replies, “Cleared to dock Sandpiper four four three.”

  A tap on the arm panel and the ship spins ninety-degrees. Thrusters hiss with corrections as the Sandpiper settles into the umbilical with a clank and a jolt. James picks up Ananke and tethers her to his flight suit belt loop, then pushes out of his chair and sails to the belly
hatch. When it opens, he ascends through the umbilical to Gossamer’s starboard entry, emerging into the passenger cabin and a din of conversation. Hitoshi is here, peering through augmented glasses. Six other techs have bits and pieces of the cabin disassembled.

  “Hey, boss,” Hitoshi says. “Don’t mind the mess. So, what’d you think on approach?”

  “Cargo area looks good. Saw the new ventral heat shielding. Black, kind of like an old NASA shuttle.”

  “Yeah, I thought you’d like that. Got confirmation that the last Bernard’s repair parts are fabbed and loaded.” He motions around the room. “You now have a level two starship. Plus five hit points, plus three dexterity.” A pause as he waits for a response. “And you’ve never played a video game in your life, have you?”

  James holds up his hands. “Sorry.”

  “You know, between you and Sarah, it’s like you two were separated at birth. She’s been very helpful, by the way, doing telepresence uplinks for questions. I know she’s supposed to be on leave, but she knows all of Gossamer’s quirks.”

  James raises his eyebrows slightly. “Goose will always be her ship.”

  Hitoshi extends his slate. “I’ve got something for you, Ananke.”

  Ananke’s screen pulses orange. “Ah, beautiful! The new Boseman interference patterns, like peaks and valleys beating in a symphony. Ready for the low-power test?”

  “With your approval, Friday.”

  “Yes. It’s perfect.”

  “Alright, you got it.” He shows the slate to James. “This started as a permanent fix for the strangelet event from the last mission, but Ananke ran with it. Some adjustments to the wave generator placements and parameter tweaks will give us a big efficiency boost. We’ll hit ninety-nine point nine six percent light-speed. Had to carve out more fuel space for the reactor. Best part is that it’s reapplicable to Bernard’s.”

  “That’s fantastic,” James says.

  “Told you. Plus three dexterity.”

  2

  Washington

  The auburn-haired assistant opens the mahogany door and leans in. “Senator, James Hayden.”

  Senator Larson is visible through the door’s breach, sitting at his desk while circling notes on a paper stack. Silver reading glasses rest perched on his nose. “Thanks, Cynthia, send him in.”

  Cynthia smiles to James and steps aside.

  The office interior is spacious, wood-paneled, with a full wall of books. The far side has tall windows overlooking Washington at sunset. As James crosses to the desk, Larson stands.

  “Senator,” James say, extending his hand.

  Larson leans forward and shakes his hand firmly, looking him in the eye. “Please, call me Charles.”

  A smile back. “James.”

  Charles crosses over to a shelf with an illuminated frosted-glass door. When he opens it, a crystal decanter and two faceted cocktail glasses appear. “You look like a bourbon man. Bookers?”

  James watches him splash the bourbon into a glass with a pinch of water. “No. Thanks.”

  The senator swirls the liquor. “You know what they say about a man who doesn’t drink.”

  James turns his attention away a moment, inspecting the wall behind the desk. Dozens of framed pictures rest here. Larson shaking hands with three different Presidents. Photos of him beside CEOs and generals.

  James summons his best grin. “I’m charming enough already.”

  Larson follows his gaze to the picture wall. A cluster of naval ships cover the upper right wall. Nestled in there is a buzz-cut thirty-something with the Senator’s eyes wearing dress Navy blues adorned with ribbons. “Ah, see,” he says, motioning his drink towards the photo, “I didn’t always look like scuffed leather. That’s back in fifty-six. You served…Air Force, right?”

  “In the sixties.” He motions towards the Navy picture. “You made Commander, impressive.”

  Larson waves a hand. “Drone squadron. Wish I’d been alive back in the day of carriers and fighter pilots. Toured the George H.W. Bush when I was a kid. Over three-hundred meters long. Sight to see.”

  James weighs his comment. “I’ve got a wall of twentieth-century aviators. Guys flying planes by touch. Real seat-of-your-pants flying.”

  “Yeah, that’s how it should be done.” He raises his glass. “Old school.” After a second, he moves over to his desk and sits. James mirrors him. “Which is what I wanted to talk about.”

  James leans an elbow on the chair arm and waits.

  Larson takes a sip of the bourbon and points with the glass. “Your guys work out anything more on that probe?”

  “Yeah, we’ve gone through the vid frame-by-frame. There’s small twists and turns, not just in the probe but what’s behind it. Gravitational lensing, similar to what we see when we turn on the Riggs drive.”

  Larson sets down his drink. “So, you’re telling me the green guys have a Riggs drive?”

  James shakes his head. “Profile’s all wrong. But they are bending space. And they’re doing it in a strong mass field, which is impossible for us.”

  “Well that’s just peachy.”

  A shrug. “They’re interstellar. No surprise they can do things we can’t.”

  The senator levels a stare. “You got any theories what they want?”

  “Wouldn’t call ‘em theories. More like brainstorming. Our astrophysicist pointed out that it makes no sense to spy on Earth from Janus. Why go planetside when you can just hang out in space and watch. It’s not like we’d spot a four-meter probe a light-week away.”

  Larson shifts uncomfortably. “Okay.”

  “So, best guess is that there’s something on Janus that interests them.”

  A grimace pulls across Larson’s face. “And your crashed Riggs ship is just sitting there waiting from them to pick apart. Learn everything about our tech, comb its computers.”

  James shifts forward. “Yeah.” He waits.

  Larson takes another sip of his bourbon and thinks. “So you want to send your new ship out, load it up with repair parts, and bring back the crashed ship?”

  “That’s right. Ready for flight in fourteen days.”

  “Yeah, alright, but what’re you going to do about your green buddies?”

  “They seemed as startled by me as I was by them. I don’t think they’ll be back.”

  “But you’re going back.”

  “That’s right, and we’ve created some first-contact protocols if we find them.”

  Larson takes a deep breath and exhales. “And, James, what’s your protocol if they’re hostiles?”

  “I’ve got a Riggs ship. We’d get the hell out of there.”

  A long pause.

  James waits.

  “You know,” starts Larson, “it’s good to talk like this. No cameras. No opinion polls. Just two men talking straight.” He leans in. “So, here’s the deal. I’m going to summon you next week to present everything you’ve got before the Space sub-committee.”

  James nods slowly. “Alright.”

  “Off the record, this probe business has me scared spitless. We’re kicking a bee’s nest here. It’s like putting a big neon arrow pointing to Earth.”

  “Senator, I assure you anyone within a hundred-and-fifty light years with a radio knows about Earth.”

  “There’s an order here, and this’ll flip it on its head.”

  “Well, they might come back even if we choose the do nothing option. Do you want to control where that happens, or do you want them to?”

  Larson shifts.

  “There’s also the possibility,” James continues, “that we repair Bernard’s Beauty before they return.”

  The senator drums his finger on his desk. “Your new ship seats, what, six?”

  “That’s right.”

  “You’re piloting?”

  “Yeah, my regular pilot’s on leave.”

  Larson points with his thumb over a closed first. “Here’s how it’s going to go with the sub-committee. Four of th
ose six seats are going to our guys, military experts capable of assessing threats, and one seat is for a first-contact specialist. You fly, we command.”

  James laughs. “Senator, put on a parka because hell will freeze over before I agree to that.”

  Larson grins. “Now we’re talking.”

  “First of all, I already have a crew, and they’re all needed. It takes more than a pilot to fly a Riggs ship, plus I need my engineer if I’m going to put Bernard’s back together.”

  “Well, I suggest you figure out who you really need, because you’re not going to get clearance otherwise.”

  “Since I have the only ship capable of reaching Erebus, then no one is going unless we reach an agreement.”

  He takes a sip of his bourbon. “And one more thing. Don’t bring along that AI of yours.”

  James squeezes his hand into a fist. “Ananke is no one’s AI. C’mon Charles, get with the times.”

  “I don’t trust ‘em. At least you know where a man’s coming from.”

  “Ananke’s put her life on the line twice for me. There is no way I’m flying a hundred-and-eighty-billion clicks without her.”

  Larson stands and extends his hand. His smile is forced, artificial. “Thank you for your time, Mr. Hayden. I’ll see you at the hearing.”

  It’s twilight when James slips into the car, Washington’s streets alive with color and light. “Airport,” he says, and the car accelerates. He looks over at the slate mounted on the dash. Blue waves ripple across Ananke’s face.

  “Did you deck him?” she asks.

  “Thought crossed my mind.”

  Orange mixes with the blue. “So, what did he want?”

  “He’s worried. He wants to control the probe situation. He tossed out an offer he knew I’d never agree to.”

 

‹ Prev