The Krone Experiment k-1
Page 40
EPILOGUE: Three Years Later
Alex Runyan responded groggily to the rap on his cabin door. I’m getting too old for this, he thought to himself. Then the significance of the day awoke in him like a spreading spark. He sat up, fumbled for the light, switched it on and fell back on the bunk, eyes in a tight squint, the light filtered blood-red through his lids. He lay for a moment feeling the gentle roll of the ship, to which he had never gotten quite accustomed. The USS Bradford, a Navy frigate, single shaft, displacing twelve hundred tons and rigged for research duty, had been his home for six weeks. He estimated he had logged a total of eight months of sea duty in bits and pieces since the project had gotten into full swing. He still preferred a floor that stayed where you aimed when you took a step. He swung his legs over the side of the bunk, grabbed his pants off the floor where he had discarded them only a scant few hours before and stood up. He leaned over and picked up one foot, preparing to thrust it into the trouser leg, but the slow tilt of the deck threw him off balance. He braced himself with one arm on the bulkhead and struggled awkwardly, failing to get a foot in the floppy denims while he held them with just one hand. He grabbed the trousers with both hands, lifted a foot, and was tilted off balance again. This time he was slow to drop the pants and reach for support. He smacked his head against the shelf over his bunk.
“Goddamnit!” he swore at the offending protrusion. Chagrined, he sat down on the bunk to put the pants on like any landlubber. ‘Everything’s tougher at sea,’ he laughed to himself as he stood to hoist the pants, zip the fly, and fasten his belt. Then he sat again to shove his feet into sneakers and lace them up. That was one of the first things the Navy types told him when he came aboard. More the miracle that they were ready a bit ahead of schedule, if not on budget. He looked at his watch, 4:07, shrugged a light jacket on over his T-shirt, scratched his beard mightily with both hands, ran fingers quickly through his hair, then opened the door and stepped into the passage.
He made his way toward the galley, his eyes feeding him the jumpy images of sleep deprivation. He joined the small queue at the urn, grabbed a cup, filled it with steaming black coffee, scalded his tongue, and carried the cup out, swearing to himself, alternately blowing on the coffee and trying to sip as he walked. He negotiated the steep stairs with one hand on the railing, then walked back on the main deck toward the stern. The chopper was already warming up on the pad, lit by spotlights, harsh grey and shadow, its rotors driving cold moist air down along the deck. Runyan shivered and clasped the neck of his jacket with his free hand. He spied Viktor Korolev in the small knot of scientific advisors and lifted the cup in salute. Damn Russian, he muttered to himself, doesn’t he know what it means to run out of steam?
Korolev met him with a smile, jacket open, oblivious to the prop wash.
“Ho, Alex! So today is our big day, eh?”
“You look disgustingly chipper for someone who’s about to seal the fate of the world,” Runyan grinned, “particularly at this ungodly hour.”
“Ungodly?” Korolev’s smile faded a bit. “Not at all, in fact the whole thing is now in God’s hands, don’t you think, and those of all these superb engineers we’ve worked with. Certainly not mine.”
“You don’t want your government to hear you invoking deities at this stage, do you?”
“Maybe they won’t arrest me for a little generic prayer, you think?” Korolev chuckled and slapped Runyan on the shoulder, causing him to slosh coffee on his hand.
“Time to get on,” Korolev said, jerking his chin toward the helicopter where people were starting to clamber aboard.
Runyan transferred the cup to his other hand, licked his fingers, dried them on his jeans, took a last, long swallow of coffee and then handed the cup to a young ensign.
“Run this stolen property back to the galley for me, won’t you?” he asked the young man and then jogged to the hatch of the helicopter as the rotors began to pick up speed.
The last one in, Runyan sat near the small port. They lifted quickly and the Bradford rapidly disappeared beneath them, but as it did Runyan could see the faint lights of other ships come into view, scattered sparsely over the ocean as far as he could see in any direction. He did not bother to count them; he knew it was pointless since there were over a thousand, ranging from small craft like the Bradford to a handful of hulking carriers. He settled in for the familiar, minimally comfortable half-hour ride.
They did not approach it on a direct line, probably because of other air traffic, Runyan mused, and he could begin to make it out when it was still some ten miles away—a floating behemoth extravagantly lit, a sparkling diamond, a cross section of L.A. from Mulholland Drive. They hovered nearby while another helicopter landed and took on a load of people.
Runyan marveled again at the structure below. It was patterned after an oil drilling rig, but was specially constructed in almost every detail. It spanned a hundred meters on a side and was covered with a complex superstructure dominated by the central dome, two and a half billion dollars of floating technology. The helicopter spun and settled toward the pad, a white circle surrounding a stark black letter K, the only hint of the prime contractor: Krone Industries.
Runyan jumped out and walked off the pad, thankful for the firmness beneath his feet. The platform was anchored by a dozen telescoping floodable legs that extended deep down to the stable layers beneath the ocean swells that rocked the Bradford. It felt as solid as St. Paul. Here was a place where a man could put on his pants in civilized fashion, thought Runyan, rubbing the bruise on his forehead. Behind him the helicopter filled with departing personnel and lifted off.
Korolev assembled the small group of men.
“Okay,” he said, “you know your tasks. You are to oversee the last minute checks and then, most importantly, make sure every member of your crew gets off the platform. You all know your scheduled departure times?” He looked around the group, satisfied at their affirmative nods. “Okay, I will see you back on the Bradford.”
Runyan knew that he should go immediately to the computer room, but he was confident that his people would have everything under control, and he wanted a last look. As he made his way through the corridors, he noticed how empty they felt. The platform had bustled with a thousand souls for a year, but now was down to a skeleton crew. He stepped into the central dome. The wave of deja vu was stronger than ever, amplified by the tension of this last morning. The device that loomed in the center of the room was more polished, but resounded with echoes of the machine Paul Krone had constructed that had brought them to this pass—a hedgehog array of gigantic lasers all focused into a central chamber where the hole would make its appearance in a little over two hours.
Unlike Krone’s original, this one was designed not to create and support, but to track and destroy. It was mounted on powerful hydraulic gimbals that allowed it to lift and settle, rotate and track. Each laser was individually aimed, controlled through an elaborate computer-driven feedback process. Although it weighed hundreds of tons and should have been ponderous, it was quick as a gunfighter. Runyan watched in awe as the device was put through its final paces, leaping and slurring with blurring speed. In principle it could follow the hole even though the platform were buffeted by gale force winds. This day was carefully chosen, however, the weather monitored for weeks, and all the device needed to do was follow a simple parabolic trajectory. Runyan shook his head as one would at the imminent death of a magnificent animal.
He left the dome and descended to the computer complex. He paused inside the door of the operations room and glanced through the window of the cubicle where the central computer stood. It was not much bigger than two men back-to-back, but was the state of the art parallel processing machine. In turn, it communicated with twenty-odd smaller dedicated machines scattered about the platform. Runyan made a silent tour of the room, pausing behind each of the half dozen operators at their terminals who made final cross checks before turning the whole operation over to the central c
omputer. Signals from special seismic and sonar monitoring stations throughout the world were fed by satellite relay, so the computer could register the location of the hole instant by instant. Any perturbation in the orbit was translated into a signal to the powerful turbines in the bowels of the platform. These could drive the platform at a maximum speed of ten knots and represented the coarse guidance adjustment. Peering at one terminal, Runyan saw that the turbines were engaged to combat a small drift due to ocean currents. Another operator was checking the program that predicted the precise path of the hole as it rocketed up a reinforced shaft into the dome so the device there could anticipate how to move. Yet another tested the operation of the gravity detectors that would enable the lasers to focus their blast in the precise fashion to stimulate the hole to emit an even greater rocketing burst of energy. That release would reduce the mass of the hole and boost it, however minutely, further out of the Earth, closer to the sanctuary of space.
Everything looked in order, but Runyan felt a sickening knot in his stomach anyway. He and hundreds of others had worked very hard to determine the orbit of the hole. This site in the mid-Pacific had been selected with careful attention to the sub-mantle rock distribution to minimize any final perturbations to the hole’s orbit. He was too close to this aspect of the project, though, and knew that despite all their care, this was the weak link. A small last second nudge, a drift in the orbit, one that was a bit too large for the huge turbines and the snake-fast device overhead to accommodate, and the whole gigantic enterprise could backfire, sending the hole deeper into the Earth, beyond reach. Everything had seemed to function perfectly in half a dozen dry runs in which they had ambushed the hole, but allowed it to pass through their floating trap unmolested. This time they would pull the trigger. Their aim had to be true.
Runyan watched quietly for several minutes and then announced, “It’s 5 o’clock. Our ride leaves in ten minutes. Let’s button it up.”
The operators glanced at him and then finished their tasks, logging out, turning their functions over to the computer and the remote monitors. One by one they sighed, pushed back from their terminals and left the room. The last one leaned over and gave his terminal a perfunctory kiss and a pat. Runyan smiled, clapped him on the shoulder in sympathy, and followed him out.
They gathered by the pad and the helicopter dropped down out of the dark sky right on schedule. Runyan knew each of the men intimately, but went through the formality of checking each off on a list as they boarded the helicopter, attesting that they were safely off the platform. Then he climbed aboard himself and didn’t look back.
Back on the Bradford, Runyan stopped in the galley to choke down a doughnut and sip another cup of coffee. Then he joined the gathering crowd on the deck, their backs to the rosy dawn, their eyes on that which they couldn’t see, a hundred miles away across the flat ocean expanse. Runyan sought out Korolev. The Russian turned to face him, and they shook hands mutely, somberly, and then leaned on the rail staring like all the others.
After a while Korolev grumbled.
“I saw a report the other day.”
Runyan listened in silence.
“Seismic activity along the trajectory,” the Russian continued. “Just statistical. Not a strong signal. But real, I think.”
He took a sheet of note paper from his pocket and slowly and methodically tore it into strips, and the strips into bits. When he finished, he spoke again.
“A definite increase in Earthquake activity. No big quakes, but a larger number of small tremors. A weakening of the Earth. The first small signs.”
Runyan nodded.
“Nervous?” He asked, gesturing at the scraps in the Russian’s gnarled fist.
“Yes,” Korolev smiled, “but no, this is something else. A little trick your Mr. Fermi taught us years ago. The Manhattan Project. If we see nothing, we have a dud. If it works,” he lifted his fistful of confetti, “we have a little hint of how well.”
At a pre-arranged time they put on dark goggles. All was silent on the Bradford. Runyan thought briefly of his wife.
Then a new star was born.
After the initial flash, Runyan whipped off his goggles.
The fireball grew rapidly, expanding along the horizon, blasting upward. Outward it rushed, silently, painfully white, looming, violent, menacing. No, Runyan heard himself telling it, no, that’s big enough. He had to crane his neck to see the top. No. No. It was impossibly big, and still it spread, implacable, ravishing the sky. They were safe at a hundred miles, Runyan thought, they had to be. But in a detached way he could feel a primal force gathering in his belly, forcing a scream toward his throat.
Then it paused, sated, halted its outward rush, and began to billow even taller.
They watched quietly, all diminished by the horrifying splendor. After long minutes, Runyan could make out the shock ripping toward them at unbelievable speed across the surface of the water.
“Hold on,” he heard Korolev mutter.
The Russian grabbed the railing with his free hand. His lips moved as he counted to himself, watching the shock front and tracing its path. Then he threw the shards of paper in the air between himself and Runyan. The shock arrived with the roar of an express train, and the bits of confetti leapt sideways. Korolev watched them continue their wafting fall to the deck.
“It was a big one, Alex,” the Russian growled over the continuous rumble, “a very big one. Pray the recoil was in the right direction.”[1]
Disclaimer
All characters and incidents in this book are purely fictitious and products of the imagination of the author and are not to be construed as real. Any resemblance to actual events or persons, living or dead, is coincidental. Nothing in this book should be interpreted as a representation of views of any department or agency of any government body.
Acknowledgements
I am grateful for the valuable editorial help of Lucille Enix, Denise Brink, and David Hartwell. Special thanks go to Peter Sutherland and Linda Mills for reading and commenting on an early draft, to Hugo Bezdek for sharing insights into the workings of government agencies, and especially to my wife for her keen critical eye. Finally, I thank anonymous colleagues and their institutions who played host to me over several years, thus providing stolen moments in airplanes, motels, and restaurants, to add a few more paragraphs.
History of Publication
The Krone Experiment was published in original hardcover in November 1986 by Pressworks, Inc., Dallas. The U.S. paperback appeared in November 1988 as an Onyx imprint of the New American Library, New York. A British hardback edition was published in July 1988 by Souvenir Press, London, a Japanese translation in August 1988 by Kobun Sha, Tokyo, and a British paperback edition in June 1989 by Grafton, London. The Krone Experiment is available in print from http://www.thekroneexperiment.com/. Look for the sequel, Krone Ascending, in E-book format. Follow The Krone Experiment series on Facebook.
Here is the cover from the Japanese edition, an orbiting, laser-blasted sheep, that combines several of the technical themes in the book in a stupifyingly inappropriate combination.
About the Film
The Krone Experiment was made into an independent film in Austin, Texas. The movie is available on DVD at http://www.thekroneexperiment.com/. The author plays the perpetrator of The Krone experiment, who is mostly brain dead throughout the film. Look for vignettes showing the film’s characters 10 years later, a bridge to Krone Ascending, on YouTube. Follow The Krone Experiment on Facebook.
About the Author
J. Craig Wheeler is the Samuel T. and Fern Yanagisawa Regents Professor of Astronomy at the University of Texas at Austin, where he is a member of the Academy of Distinguished Teachers at the University of Texas and recipient of a Regents Outstanding Teaching Award from the University of Texas System. His research interests are supernovae, black holes, gamma-ray bursts and astrobiology. He has published about 300 papers in refereed journals, numerous conference proceedings, and edited
five books. He served on the Space Studies Board of the National Research Council from 2002–2006 and was co-Chair of the NRC Committee on the Origin and Evolution of Life from 2002–2005. He served a two-year term as President of the American Astronomical Society from 2006 to 2008. Follow J. Craig Wheeler on Twitter @ast309.
Other Books by the Author
In addition to The Krone Experiment and its sequel, Krone Ascending, he has plans for a third book in the trilogy. His popular-level book, Cosmic Catastrophes: Supernovae, Gamma-Ray Bursts and Adventures in Hyperspace (Cambridge University Press 2000) won an award in a University of Texas faculty book competition. The second edition, Cosmic Catastrophes: Exploding Stars, Black Holes, and Mapping the Universe (Cambridge University Press 2007), was named one of the top astronomy books of 2007 by CHOICE magazine. This book also appears in a Polish translation, Kozmiczne Katastrofy, and a Hungarian translation, Kozmikus Katasztrófák. See http://ebooks.cambridge.org/ebook.jsf?bid=CBO9780511536625.
Praise for The Krone Experiment
“A thriller, a detective story and a brilliant piece of scientific speculation; this is a uniquely intelligent novel.”
—Tom Clancy, author of The Hunt for Red October.
“A world expert on black-hole astrophysics, Craig Wheeler gives us here an off-hours gripping adventure story.”
—John Archibald Wheeler, theoretical physicist, author of Geons, Black Holes, and Quantum Foam: A Life in Physics.
“Exciting… fast-paced… A whopping good story that leaves you on the edge of your seat!”