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The Ice Limit

Page 18

by Douglas Preston; Lincoln Child

“Mr. Lloyd,” he heard Glinn say. “I said step back.”

  Instead, Lloyd leaned forward.

  Glinn raised his voice. “Palmer, do not do it!”

  But Lloyd had already dropped into the hole, his feet landing squarely on the surface of the meteorite. He immediately fell to his knees, allowing the tips of his gloved fingers to caress the smoothly rippled metallic surface. On impulse, he leaned down and placed his cheek against it.

  Above, there was a brief silence.

  “How does it feel?” he heard McFarlane ask.

  “Cold,” Lloyd replied, sitting up. He could hear the quaver in his voice as he spoke, feel the tears freezing on his numb cheek. “It feels very cold.”

  Isla Desolación,

  1:55 P.M.

  MCFARLANE STARED at the laptop on his knees. The cursor blinked back, reproachfully, from a nearly blank screen. He sighed and shifted in the metal folding chair, trying to get comfortable. The lone window of the commissary hut glittered with frost, and the sound of wind came through the walls. Outside, the clear weather had given way to snow. But within the hut, a coal stove threw out a wonderfully intense heat.

  McFarlane moused a command, then closed the laptop with a curse. On a nearby table, a printer began to hum. He shifted again, restlessly. Once again, he replayed the events of the morning. The moment of awestruck silence, Lloyd jumping so impulsively into the hole, and Glinn calling out to him—by his Christian name, for the first time McFarlane remembered. The triumphant christening, the torrent of questions that followed. And—overlaying everything—an overpowering sense of incomprehension. He felt that the breath had been knocked out of him, that he was struggling for air.

  He, too, had felt a sudden urge to jump in; to touch the thing, to reassure himself that it was real. But he was also slightly afraid of it. It had such a rich color, so out of place in the monochromatic landscape. It reminded him of an operating table, a vast expanse of snowy white sheets with a bloody incision at their center. It repelled and fascinated simultaneously. And it excited in him a hope that he thought had been dead.

  The door to the hut opened, admitting a howl of snow. McFarlane glanced up as Amira stepped in.

  “Finish the report?” she asked, removing her parka and shaking off the snow.

  In response, McFarlane nodded toward the printer. Amira walked to it and grabbed the emerging sheet. Then she barked a laugh. “‘The meteorite is red,’” she read aloud. She tossed the sheet into McFarlane’s lap. “Now that’s what I like in a man, succinctness.”

  “Why fill up paper with a lot of useless speculations? Until we get a piece of it for study, how can I possibly say what the hell it is?”

  She pulled up a chair and sat down beside him. It seemed to McFarlane that, beneath a forced casualness, she was eyeing him very carefully. “You’ve been studying meteorites for years. I doubt your speculations would be useless.”

  “What do you think?”

  “I’ll show you mine if you show me yours.”

  McFarlane glanced down at the pattern of ripples on the plywood table, tracing his finger along them. It had the fractal perfection of a coastline, or a snowflake, or a Mandelbrot set. It reminded him how complicated everything was: the universe, an atom, a piece of wood. Out of the corner of his eye he saw Amira draw a metal cigar tube from her parka and upend it, letting a half-burnt stogie drop into her hand.

  “Please don’t,” he said. “I’d rather not be driven out into the cold.”

  Amira replaced the cigar. “I know something is running through that head of yours.”

  McFarlane shrugged.

  “Okay,” she said. “You want to know what I think? You’re in denial.”

  He turned to look at her again.

  “That’s right. You had a pet theory once—something you believed in, despite the razzing of your peers. Isn’t that right? And when you thought you’d finally found evidence for that theory, it got you into trouble. In all the excitement you lost your usual good judgment and shafted a friend. And in the end, your evidence turned out to be worthless.”

  McFarlane looked at her. “I didn’t know you had a degree in psychiatry, along with everything else.”

  She leaned closer, pressing. “Sure, I heard the story. The point is, now you’ve got what you’ve been looking for all these years. You’ve got more than evidence. You’ve got proof. But you don’t want to admit it. You’re afraid to go down that road again.”

  McFarlane held her gaze for a minute. He felt his anger drain away. He slumped in his chair, his mind in turmoil. Could she be right? he wondered.

  She laughed. “Take the color, for example. You know why no metals are deep red?”

  “No.”

  “Objects are a certain color because of the way they interact with photons of light.” Amira shoved a hand in her pocket and took out a crumpled paper bag. “Jolly Rancher?”

  “What the hell’s a Jolly Rancher?”

  She tossed him a candy and shook another one into her hand. She held the green lozenge up between thumb and forefinger. “Every object, except for a perfect blackbody, absorbs some wavelengths of light and scatters others. Take this green candy. It’s green because its scatters the green wavelengths of light back at our eye, while absorbing the rest. I’ve run a few pretty little calculations, and I can’t find a single theoretical combination of alloyed metals that will scatter red light. It seems to be impossible for any known alloy to be deep red. Yellow, white, orange, purple, gray—but not red.” She popped the green candy in her mouth, bit down with a loud crunch, and began to chew.

  McFarlane placed his candy on the table. “So what are you saying?”

  “You know what I’m saying. I’m saying it’s made of some weird element we’ve never seen before. So stop being coy. I know that’s what you’ve been thinking: This is it: this is an interstellar meteorite.”

  McFarlane raised his hand. “All right, it’s true, I have been thinking about it.”

  “And?”

  “All the meteorites ever found have been made from known elements—nickel, iron, carbon, silicon. They all formed here, in our own solar system, out of the primordial cloud of dust that once surrounded our sun.” He paused, choosing his words carefully. “Obviously, you know I used to speculate about the possibility of meteorites coming from outside the solar system. A chunk of something that just happened to wander past and get caught in the sun’s gravitational field. An interstellar meteorite.”

  Amira smiled knowingly. “But the mathematicians said it was impossible: a quintillion to one.”

  McFarlane nodded.

  “I ran some calculations back on the ship. The mathematicians were wrong: they were working from faulty assumptions. It’s only about a billion to one.”

  McFarlane laughed. “Yeah. Billion, quintillion, what’s the difference?”

  “It’s a billion to one for any given year.”

  McFarlane stopped laughing.

  “That’s right,” said Amira. “Over billions of years, there’s a better than even chance that one did land on Earth. It’s not only possible, it’s probable. I resurrected your little theory for you. You owe me, big time.”

  A silence fell in the commissary hut, broken only by the rattle of wind. Then McFarlane began to speak. “You mean you really believe this meteorite is made of some alloy or metal that doesn’t exist anywhere in the solar system?”

  “Yup. And you believe it, too. That’s why you haven’t written your report.”

  McFarlane went on slowly, almost to himself. “If this metal did exist somewhere, we’d have found at least some trace of it. After all, the sun and the planets formed from the same dust cloud. So it must have come from beyond.” He looked at her. “It’s inescapable.”

  She grinned. “My thoughts exactly.”

  He fell silent and the two sat, absorbed for the moment.

  “We need to get our hands on a piece of it,” Amira said at last. “I’ve got the perfect tool for the
job, too, a high-speed diamond corer. I’d say five kilos would be a nice chunk to start with, wouldn’t you?”

  McFarlane nodded. “But let’s just keep our speculations to ourselves for now. Lloyd and the rest are due here any minute.”

  As if on cue, there was a stomping outside the hut, and the door opened to reveal Lloyd, even more bearlike than usual in a heavy parka, framed against the dim blue light. Glinn followed, then Rochefort and Garza. Lloyd’s assistant, Penfold, came last, shivering, his thick lips blue and pursed.

  “Cold as a witch’s tit out there,” Lloyd cried, stamping his feet and holding his hands near the stove. He was bubbling over with good humor. The men from EES, on the other hand, simply sat down at the table, looking subdued.

  Penfold took up a position in the far corner of the room, radio in hand. “Mr. Lloyd sir, we have to get to the landing site,” he said. “Unless the helicopter leaves within the hour, you’ll never get back to New York in time for the shareholders’ meeting.”

  “Yes, yes. In a minute. I want to hear what Sam here has to say.”

  Penfold sighed and murmured into the radio.

  Glinn glanced at McFarlane with his gray, serious eyes. “Is the report ready?”

  “Sure.” McFarlane nodded at the piece of paper.

  Glinn glanced at it. “I’m not much in the mood for drollery, Dr. McFarlane.”

  It was the first time McFarlane had seen Glinn show irritation, or any strong emotion, for that matter. It occurred to him that Glinn, too, must have been shocked by what they found in the hole. This is a man who hates surprises, he thought. “Mr. Glinn, I can’t base a report on speculation,” he said. “I need to study it.”

  “I’ll tell you what we need,” Lloyd said loudly. “We need to get it the hell out of the ground and into international waters, before the Chileans get wind of this. You can study it later.” It seemed to McFarlane that this was the latest salvo in a continuing argument between Glinn and Lloyd.

  “Dr. McFarlane, perhaps I can simplify matters,” Glinn said. “There’s one thing I’m particularly interested in knowing. Is it dangerous?”

  “We know it’s not radioactive. It might be poisonous, I suppose. Most metals are, to one degree or another.”

  “How poisonous?”

  McFarlane shrugged. “Palmer touched it, and he’s still alive.”

  “He’ll be the last one to do that,” Glinn replied. “I’ve given orders that nobody is to come into direct contact with the meteorite, under any circumstances.” He paused. “Anything else? Could it be harboring viruses?”

  “It’s been sitting there for millions of years, so any alien microbes would have dispersed long ago. It might be worth taking soil samples and collecting moss, lichen, and other plants from the area, to see if anything’s unusual.”

  “What would one look for?”

  “Mutations, perhaps, or signs of low-level exposure to toxins or teratogens.”

  Glinn nodded. “I’ll speak to Dr. Brambell about it. Dr. Amira, any thoughts on its metallurgical properties? It is a metal, isn’t it?”

  There was another crunch of candy. “Yes, very likely, since it’s ferromagnetic. Like gold, it doesn’t oxidize. However, I can’t figure out how a metal can be red. Dr. McFarlane and I were just discussing the need to take a sample.”

  “Sample?” Lloyd asked. The room fell silent at the change in his voice.

  “Of course,” said McFarlane after a moment. “It’s standard procedure.”

  “You’re going to cut a piece off my meteorite?”

  McFarlane looked at Lloyd, and then at Glinn. “Is there a problem with that?”

  “You’re damn right there’s a problem,” Lloyd said. “This is a museum specimen. We’re putting it on display. I don’t want it chopped up or drilled.”

  “There isn’t a major meteorite found that hasn’t been sectioned. We’re only talking about coring out a five-kilogram piece. That’ll be enough for all the tests anyone could conceivably think of. A piece that large could be worked on for years.”

  Lloyd shook his head. “No way.”

  “We must do it,” McFarlane said with vehemence. “There’s no way to study this meteorite without vaporizing, melting, polishing, etching. Given the size of this thing, the sample would be a drop in the bucket.”

  “It ain’t the Mona Lisa,” Amira murmured.

  “That’s an ignorant comment,” Lloyd said, rounding on her. Then he sank back with a sigh. “Cutting it up seems like such a—well, a sacrilege. Couldn’t we just leave it a mystery?”

  “Absolutely not,” said Glinn. “We need to know more about it before I’ll authorize moving it. Dr. McFarlane is right.”

  Lloyd stared at him, his face reddening. “Before you’ll authorize moving it? Listen to me, Eli. I’ve gone along with all your little rules. I’ve played your game. But let’s get one thing straight: I’m paying the bills. This is my meteorite. You signed a contract to get it for me. You like to brag that you’ve never failed. If this ship returns to New York without that meteorite, you will have failed. Am I right?”

  Glinn looked at Lloyd. Then he spoke calmly, almost as one might speak to a child. “Mr. Lloyd, you will get your meteorite. I merely want to see you have it without anyone getting unnecessarily hurt. Isn’t that what you want, too?”

  Lloyd hesitated. “Of course it is.”

  McFarlane was amazed at how quickly Glinn had put the man on the defensive.

  “Then all I am asking is that we proceed with care.”

  Lloyd licked his lips. “It’s just that everything’s come to a grinding halt. Why? The meteorite’s red. So I ask you, what’s wrong with red? I think it’s great. Has everybody forgotten about our friend in the destroyer? Time is the one thing we don’t have here.”

  “Mr. Lloyd!” Penfold said, holding up the radio appealingly, like a beggar might hold up an alms cup. “The helicopter. Please!”

  “God damn it!” Lloyd cried. After a moment, he spun away. “All right, for chrissakes, take your sample. Just cap the hole so it isn’t visible. And do it fast. By the time I get back to New York, I want that son of a bitch on the move.”

  He stomped out of the hut, Penfold at his heels. The door banged shut behind them. For a minute, maybe two, the room was still. Then Amira rose to her feet.

  “Come on, Sam,” she said. “Let’s drill this sucker.”

  Isla Desolación,

  2:15 P.M.

  AFTER THE warmth of the hut, the wind felt keen as a knife. McFarlane shivered as he followed Amira to tech stores, thinking longingly of the dry heat of the Kalahari.

  The container was longer and wider than the rest, dingy on the outside, clean and spacious on the inside. Monitors and rack-mounted diagnostic tools, powered by the central generator in a neighboring hut, glowed in the dim light. Amira made for a large metal table, which held a collapsed tripod and a high-speed portable mining drill. If it weren’t for the leather sling around the drill, McFarlane would never have suspected it of being particularly “portable.” It looked like a twenty-first-century bazooka.

  Amira patted the drill affectionately. “Don’t you just love high-tech toys that break things? Look at this mother. Ever seen one of these before?”

  “Not one so big.” McFarlane watched as she expertly broke the drill down and examined its components. Satisfied, she slapped it back together, plugged the end of a heavy cord into a socket, and ran the machine through its diagnostics.

  “Check this out.” She hefted a long, cruel-looking shaft of metal, one end bulbous and pocked like a club, with a hollow core. “Ten carats of industrial diamond in the bit alone.” She pressed a button and the electronic chuck loosened with a snap. She slung the drill over her shoulder with a grunt and pressed its trigger, filling the room with a deep-throated growl. “Time to make a hole,” she said, grinning.

  They left the equipment hut and headed out into the gloom, McFarlane playing out the electrical cord behind them. A sho
ddy-looking maintenance shack had been erected over the exposed meteorite, concealing it from view. Inside, banks of halogen lights bathed the shallow cut in a cool glow. Glinn was already standing at the edge of the hole, peering down, radio in one hand, his small frame set into sharp relief by the light.

  They joined Glinn at the edge of the hole. In the white light, the meteorite below their feet glowed almost purple, like a fresh bruise. Pulling off her gloves, Amira took the tripod from McFarlane, quickly set its legs, and fitted the drill into its housing. “This thing has a terrific vacuum system,” she said, pointing to a narrow manifold that curved beneath the bit. “Sucks up every particle of dust. If the metal’s poisonous, it won’t matter.”

  “Even so, I’m evacuating the area,” said Glinn, who raised the radio and spoke rapidly into it. “And remember, keep well back. Do not touch it.” He motioned for the workmen to leave.

  McFarlane watched as Amira snapped on the power switch, checked the indicator lights along the drill’s flank, and deftly positioned the bit above the meteorite. “Looks like you’ve done this before,” he said.

  “Damn right. Eli here put me through this a dozen times.”

  McFarlane looked at Glinn. “You rehearsed this?”

  “Every step,” Amira said as she pulled a large remote from her pocket and began calibrating it. “And not just this. Everything. He plans all our projects like an invasion. D-Day. You practice your ass off, because you only get one shot at the real thing.” She stepped back and blew on her hands. “Man, you should’ve seen the big ball of iron Eli made us dig up and schlepp all over creation, again and again. We called it Big Bertha. I really learned to hate that damn rock.”

  “Where did you do this?”

  “Up at the Bar Cross Ranch near Bozeman, Montana. You didn’t really think this was a first run, did you?”

  With the remote calibrated and the drill fixed into position over the naked surface of the meteorite, Amira turned to a nearby case and snapped its hinges open. Pulling out a small metal can, she tore off its lid and—keeping well back—upended it over the meteorite. A black, gluey substance poured out, spreading over the red surface in a viscous layer. With a small brush, she applied the remainder to the end of the diamond bit. Then, reaching into the case again, she pulled out a thin sheet of rubber and gingerly pressed it down over the sealant.

 

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