Titan

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Titan Page 45

by Bova, Ben


  “I think I already do,” said Timoshenko. And he stepped quickly in front of her to tap out the code on the hatch’s keypad. The heavy hatch sighed open a crack.

  “Um … would it be all right if I asked you for a favor?” he said, his back to her.

  “A favor?”

  Turning to face her, his face looking strangely flustered, embarrassed, Timoshenko explained, “Once you are chief administrator you will have the authority to put through calls to people on Earth, no?”

  “Anybody has the right—”

  “Not exiles,” Timoshenko interrupted. “The authorities won’t allow my ex-wife to receive calls from me.”

  Understanding dawned on Holly. “So you want me to call her for you.”

  “If you could.”

  “I’d be glad to, Ilya. Maybe we can get her to come out here and be with you again.”

  Timoshenko’s face turned flame-red. But his smile was anything but sheepish. Turning quickly, he pulled the hatch all the way open.

  Holly saw the green and vibrant habitat spread out before her. Timoshenko made a little bow to usher her through the hatch and into her own domain.

  Eberly sat alone in his apartment, his uneaten lunch on the kitchen table before him.

  They voted against me, he said to himself for the thousandth time. She beat me by a landslide. They rejected me. I’m all alone now. I don’t even have a job.

  He thought of the Bible story of the unjust steward who also found himself thrown out of his job. What can I do? Eberly asked himself. To dig I am unable, to beg I am too proud.

  At that exact moment his phone chimed.

  “Phone answer,” he called out glumly.

  The kitchen cabinets to his left glowed and formed an image of Zeke Berkowitz, smiling his usual affable, avuncular smile.

  “Good morning, Malcolm,” said Berkowitz brightly.

  “It’s past noon,” Eberly replied. “And I’m in no mood for an interview about our change in administrations.”

  Berkowitz looked almost startled. “Interview? No, no. That’s not why I called you.”

  “Then what?” Crossly.

  “I figured you’ll be looking for a new job and I wanted to get my offer in ahead of all the others.”

  Eberly knew there were no others, and he suspected that Berkowitz did, too. “A new job?”

  “I’ve got an idea,” Berkowitz said, his smile widening. “How would you like to be a commentator on our news broadcasts? You know, give the people your opinions on what’s happening, your slant on the stories of the day.”

  “A video commentator?”

  “Sure. You’d be a natural. And it would keep you in front of the public every day. People would look up to you, they’d value your opinions.”

  “They’d admire me?”

  “Of course they would! You’ve served this community well. You’ve worked hard. Now you can be the voice of habitat Goddard, sharing your insights on each day’s events with your fellow citizens.”

  “Every day. I’d be seen every day.”

  Berkowitz nodded cheerfully. His broad smile was soon matched by Eberly’s own.

  Pancho sat in the front row for the swearing-in ceremony, with Jake beside her. She beamed as Holly took the oath of office from Professor Wilmot.

  Holly looked slightly nervous as she began her inauguration speech, Pancho thought, but her sister launched into it smoothly enough.

  “You ready for the big adventure?” Pancho whispered to Wanamaker.

  “Chasing comets?” he whispered back.

  “That’s only part of it.”

  “What’s the rest?”

  “Havin’ a baby.”

  Wanamaker’s jaw dropped.

  On Titan’s cold and murky surface Titan Alpha trundled across the spongy mats of dark carbonaceous soil. Its sensors were uplinking a steady stream of data to the intensely eager scientists of habitat Goddard while computer engineers labored to alter the master program’s prohibition against contamination.

  The scientists had discovered that the single-celled creatures living in those widespread mats were beginning to form colonies, taking the first step toward developing true multicellular species. In a few hundred million years, the biologists thought joyfully, Titan would begin to undergo a Cambrian Explosion and evolve true plants and animals.

  Meanwhile, a spherical shell of powerful electromagnetic pulses was expanding at the speed of light across the interstellar vastness, informing any species clever enough to decipher them that intelligent life exists on the planets circling a smallish yellow main-sequence star in the Perseus arm of the Milky Way galaxy.

  TOR BOOKS BY BEN BOVA

  The Aftermath Privateers

  As on a Darkling Plain Prometheans

  The Astral Mirror The Rock Rats

  Battle Station The Sam Gunn Omnibus

  The Best of the Nebulas (editor) Saturn

  The Science Fiction Hall of Fame, Volume Two B

  Challenges

  Colony The Silent War

  Cyberbooks Star Peace: Assured Survival

  Escape Plus The Starcrossed

  The Green Trap Tales of the Grand Tour

  Gremlins Go Home (with Gordon R. Dickson) Test of Fire

  Titan

  The Immortality Factor To Fear the Light (with A. J. Austin)

  Jupiter

  The Kinsman Saga To Save the Sun (with A. J. Austin)

  Mercury

  The Multiple Man The Trikon Deception (with Bill Pogue)

  Orion

  Orion Among the Stars Triumph

  Orion and the Conqueror Vengeance of Orion

  Orion in the Dying Time Venus

  Out of the Sun Voyagers

  Peacekeepers Voyagers II: The Alien Within

  Powersat Voyagers III: Star Brothers

  The Precipice The Winds of Altair

  SYSTEM FAULT

  Urbain stared down at her. “Titan Alpha actually fired its laser?”

  “Yes, sir, it surely did.”

  One of the engineers said, “That’s what I’ve been trying to tell you, Dr. Urbain. We’re getting telemetry from the lander. It’s sending up continuous data on its internal condition. Everything’s working fine.”

  “But it will not uplink data from its sensors.”

  “That’s the one glitch,” the engineer admitted.

  Urbain glared at him. “This glitch, as you put it, makes Titan Alpha useless, pointless, stupid.”

  Returning his glare without blinking, the engineer insisted, “I think it’s the central computer. Some kind of error in the programming. Everything is fine in the lander except for the data uplink. For some reason it’s not sending data back to us. The sensors seem to be working as designed, but the vehicle is not uplinking the data it’s collecting. It’s got to be a computer glitch.”

  “In other words,” Urbain said coldly, “you are telling me that the patient is in fine condition, except that she is catatonic.”

  This is a work of fiction. All the characters, organizations, and events portrayed in this novel are either products of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously.

  TITAN

  Copyright © 2006 by Ben Bova

  All rights reserved.

  Edited by Patrick Nielsen Hayden

  A Tor Book

  Published by Tom Doherty Associates, LLC

  175 Fifth Avenue

  New York, NY 10010

  www.tor-forge.com

  Tor® is a registered trademark of Tom Doherty Associates, LLC.

  eISBN 9781429910620

  First eBook Edition : February 2011

  First Edition: March 2006

  First Mass Market Edition: March 2007

 

 

 
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