2061: Odissey three by Arthur C. Clarke

‘Yes, I’ve been thinking along the same lines. I’ve already told Galaxy to watch out for any – let’s say manifestations – in case he tries to make contact.’

‘Of course,’ said Yva, ‘he may be dead by now – if ghosts can die.’

Not even Mihailovich had a suitable comment to this, but Yva obviously sensed that no-one thought much of her contribution.

Undeterred, she tried again.

‘Woody, dear,’ she said. ‘Why don’t you simply give him a call on the radio? That’s what it’s for, isn’t it?’

The idea had occurred to Floyd, but it had somehow seemed too na�ve to take seriously.

‘I will,’ he said. ‘I don’t suppose it will do any harm.’

42

Minilith

This time, Floyd was quite sure he was dreaming…

He had never been able to sleep well in zero gravity, and Universe was now coasting, unpowered, at maximum velocity. In two days it would start almost a week of steady deceleration, throwing away its enormous excess speed until it was able to rendezvous with Europa.

However many times he adjusted the restraining straps, they always seemed either too tight or too loose. He would have difficulty in breathing – or else he would find himself drifting out of his bunk.

Once he had awoken in mid-air, and had flailed away for several minutes until, exhausted, he had managed to ‘swim’ the few metres to the nearest wall. Not until then had he remembered that he should merely have waited; the room ventilating system would have soon pulled him to the exhaust grille without any exertion on his part. As a seasoned space-traveller, he knew this perfectly well; his only excuse was simple panic.

But tonight, he had managed to get everything right; probably when weight returned, he would have difficulty in readjusting to that. He had lain awake for only a few minutes, recapitulating the latest discussion at dinner, and had then fallen asleep.

In his dreams, he had continued the conversation around the table. There had been a few trifling changes, which he accepted without surprise. Willis, for example, had grown his beard back – though on only one side of his face. This, Floyd presumed, was in aid of some research project, though he found it difficult to imagine its purpose.

In any event, he had his own worries. He was defending himself against the criticisms of Space Administrator Millson, who had somewhat surprisingly joined their little group. Floyd wondered how he had come aboard Universe (could he possibly have stowed away?). The fact that Millson had been dead for at least forty years seemed much less important.

‘Heywood,’ his old enemy was saying, ‘the White House is most upset.’

‘I can’t imagine why.’

‘That radio message you’ve just sent to Europa. Did it have State Department clearance?’

‘I didn’t think it was necessary. I merely asked permission to land.’

‘Ah – but that’s it. Who did you ask? Do we recognize the government concerned? I’m afraid it’s all very irregular…

Millson faded away, still tut-tutting. I’m very glad this is only a dream, thought Floyd. Now what?

Well, I might have expected it. Hello, old friend. You come in all sizes, don’t you? Of course, even TMA 1 couldn’t have squeezed into my cabin – and its Big Brother could easily have swallowed Universe in one gulp.

The black monolith was standing – or floating – only two metres from his bunk. With an uncomfortable shock of recognition, Floyd realized that it was not only the same shape, but also the same size, as an ordinary tombstone. Although the resemblance had often been pointed out to him, until now the incongruity of scale had lessened the psychological impact. Now, for the first time, he felt the likeness was disquieting – even sinister. I know this is only a dream – but at my age, I don’t want any reminders…

Anyway – what are you doing here? Do you bring a message from Dave Bowman? Are you Dave Bowman?

Well, I didn’t really expect an answer; you weren’t very talkative in the past, were you? But things always happened when you were around. Back in Tycho, sixty years ago, you sent that signal to Jupiter, to tell your makers that we’d dug you up. And look what you did to Jupiter, when we got there a dozen years later!

What are you up to now?

VI

HAVEN

43

Salvage

The first task confronting Captain Laplace and his crew, once they had grown accustomed to being on terra firma, was to re-orient themselves. Everything on Galaxy was the wrong way round.

Spaceships are designed for two modes of operation – either no gravity at all, or, when the engines are thrusting, an up-and-down direction along the axis. But now Galaxy was lying almost horizontally, and all the floors had become walls. It was exactly as if they were trying to live in a lighthouse that had toppled on to its side; every single piece of furniture had to be moved, and at least fifty per cent of the equipment was not functioning properly.

Yet in some ways this was a blessing in disguise, and Captain Laplace made the most of it. The crew was so busy rearranging Galaxy’s interior – giving priority to the plumbing – that he had few worries about morale. As long as the hull remained airtight, and the muon generators continued to supply power, they were in no immediate danger; they merely had to survive for twenty days, and salvation would come from the skies in the shape of Universe. No-one ever mentioned the possibility that the unknown powers that ruled Europa might object to a second landing. They had – as far as anyone knew – ignored the first; surely they could not interfere with a mission of mercy…

Europa itself, however, was now less cooperative. While Galaxy had been adrift on the open sea, it had been virtually unaffected by the quakes which continually racked the little world. But now that the ship had become an all too permanent land structure, it was shaken every few hours by seismic disturbances. Had it touched down in the normal vertical position, by now it would certainly have been overturned.

The quakes were unpleasant rather than dangerous, but they gave nightmares to anyone who had experienced Tokyo ‘33 or Los Angeles ‘45. It did not help much to know that they followed a completely predictable pattern, rising to a peak of violence and frequency every three and a half days when Io came swinging past on its inner orbit. Nor was it much consolation to know that Europa’s own gravitational tides were inflicting at least equal damage on Io.

After six days of gruelling work, Captain Laplace was satisfied that Galaxy was as near shipshape as was possible in the circumstances. He declared a holiday – which most of the crew spent sleeping – and then drew up a schedule for their second week on the satellite.

The scientists, of course, wanted to explore the new world they had so unexpectedly entered. According to the radar maps that Ganymede had transmitted to them, the island was fifteen kilometres long and five wide; its maximum elevation was only a hundred metres – not high enough, someone had gloomily predicted, to avoid a really bad tsunami.

It was hard to imagine a more dismal and forbidding place; half a century of exposure to Europa’s feeble winds and rains had done nothing to break up the pillow lava which covered half its surface, or to soften the outcropping of granite that protruded through the rivers of frozen rock. But it was their home now, and they had to find a name for it.

Gloomy, downbeat suggestions like Hades, Inferno, Hell, Purgatory… were firmly vetoed by the Captain; he wanted something cheerful. One surprising and quixotic tribute to a brave enemy was seriously considered before being rejected thirty-two to ten, with five abstentions: the island would not be called ‘Roseland’..

In the end, ‘Haven’ won unanimously.

44

Endurance

‘History never repeats itself – but historical situations recur.’

As he made his daily report to Ganymede, Captain Laplace kept thinking of the phrase. It had been quoted by Margaret M’Bala – now approaching at almost a thousand kilometres every second – in a message of encouragement from Universe which he had been very happy to relay to his fellow castaways.

‘Please tell Miss M’Bala that her little history lesson was extremely good for morale; she couldn’t have thought of anything better to send us.

‘Despite the inconvenience of having our walls and floors switched around, we’re living in luxury compared to those old polar explorers. Some of us had heard of Ernest Shackleton, but we had no idea of the Endurance saga. To have been trapped on ice floes for over a year – then to spend the Antarctic winter in a cave – then to cross a thousand kilometres of sea in an open boat and to climb a range of unmapped mountains to reach the nearest human settlement!

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