Test of Fire (1982) Read online
Cities became ovens. Grasslands became seas of flame. As the touch of dawn swept westward across the spinning planet Earth, its fiery finger killed everything in its path. Glaciers in Switzerland began to melt, floodwaters poured down on the burning, smoking villages dotting the Alpine meadows. Paris became a torch, then London. North of the Arctic Circle, Lapplanders in their summer furs burst into flame as their reindeer collapsed and roasted on the smoking tundra.
The line of dawn raced westward across the Atlantic- Ocean, but as it did the brightness diminished. The sun dimmed as quickly as it had brightened.
The Americas escaped the Sun's wrath. Almost.
A hard, dark book, the story of mankind after
the fall.. .compulsive reading... the battle
to rebuild Earth after its almost total destruction
by a gigantic solar flare."
Harry Harrison
After Millenium, Comes
The Test Of Fire
Ben Bova
Part of this novel was published separately, in substantially different form, as 'When The Sky Burned', copyright © 1973 by Ben Bova.
Fire is the test of gold; adversity, of
strong men.
— Seneca
PROLOGUE
It was a fine moonless night. A light summer breeze rustled through the forest, making the trees murmur in the darkness. High up on the mountaintop, far from the noise and lights of cities, the sky was deep and wondrous, sparkling with thousands of stars.
Pipe clamped tightly in his teeth, Dr. Robert J.
Lord leaned against the parapet surrounding the observatory dome. He could just make out the lovely features of the student beside him in the shadows.
"This is what your life will be like," he said to her, his voice a calculatedly soft whisper. "If you go ahead and take your degree in optical astronomy, you'll be here night after night, working 'til dawn."
Jenny Robertson tried not to show how cold she felt. It was mid-August, but up here on the mountain the New England night was almost wintry. I won't let him see that I'm freezing, she told herself.
Physical discomfort is something that astronomers have to face. And besides, one shiver and he'll try to put his arm around me.
"All night long," Lord repeated wistfully. "It gets pretty lonely."
Jenny knew about his reputation. Dr. Lord was in fairly good shape for a man of fifty, she thought, even though that age seemed ancient to her. Every female student in the department knew his statistics: married twice, divorced twice, and you could get an A from him the same way Hester Prynne got hers.
"But doesn't the computer handle the telescope once you've programmed in the coordinates for the night's observations?" she asked, clasping her arms to herself and wishing she had worn a heavier sweater. "I mean, like, you don't really have to stay up here all night, do you?"
Lord took the pipe from his mouth and fiddled with it while he arranged a reply in his mind. He wanted to impress this pert-faced, ample-bosomed graduate student with his dedication to astronomy.
"Oh, sure, you can let the computer and the image enhancers and the cameras do your work for you," he said lightly, almost carelessly. "But some of us prefer to stay on duty right here and make certain everything is going right. I'm probably old-fashioned about it, I guess."
"Oh no," she said quickly. "I think you're very . . . well, like, dedicated." And she told herself silently that the trick is to get a good grade out of him without letting him get his hands on her.
Lord shrugged modestly. "You see, there's always the chance that something unexpected might happen. Equipment glitch, maybe, or maybe something pops up there in the sky and you want to get onto it right away."
"Have you ever come across a totally unexpected phenomenon?" Jenny asked. "Something that nobody's ever seen before?"
"Well, no," he admitted. "Not yet, but . . ."
He stopped. It suddenly struck him that he could see her face clearly. Turning, he looked up at the eastern sky. It was milky white. He glanced at his wristwatch. It was bright enough to see the hands easily.
"Two-twelve," he muttered. "Dawn isn't for another five hours."
A breath of warm breeze gusted past them.
Jenny felt herself relax; her goosebumps disappeared. But Lord was staring open-mouthed at the brightening sky.
"It can't be," he said. "It can't be."
The wind rose sharply and became warmer, hot as midsummer noon. The vast forest surrounding the mountain sighed and groaned under the wind.
The sky turned molten copper, the stars faded from sight. Birds began chirping in the trees below.
And still Lord stared at the glowing sky. "Oh my god," he whispered. "Oh my god . . ."
In Rome the sun had been up for more than an hour and the city was alive with honking, beeping automobiles driven by impatient, excitable Romans who banged on their horns and leaned out of their car windows to hurl imprecations at each other.
Without warning the air suddenly became unbearably bright and hot, as if giant floodlamps had been turned on everywhere. Traffic crawled to a halt, people stared in fright, drivers clawed their way out of jam-packed cars, sweating, staggering, and still the light became brighter and hotter, intolerably white-hot like a vast burning iron pressed down everywhere. Women screamed and fainted. Men collapsed onto bubbling asphalt streets. Trees began to smolder along the sidewalks as people ran shrieking indoors. Awnings burst into flame. The Vatican gardens blossomed into a firestorm. Fountains turned to steam. The entire city began to smoke and flame under the burning sky.
All of Italy, all of Europe, Africa, Asia burst into flame. Wherever the sunlight touched, flame and death blossomed. By the millions, by the hundreds of millions, people died in their tracks. Whole forests of equatorial Africa blazed as animals panicked blindly, racing for shelter where there was no shelter. Human animals panicked too: pygmy hunters deep in the burning forests and western-dressed businessmen in modern cities, they all died, their clothing bursting into fire where the sun touched them, or suffocating in the firestorms that swept whole continents as they tried to hide from the sun inside their white-hot buildings.
Cities became ovens. Grasslands became seas of flame. As the touch of dawn swept westward across the spinning planet Earth, its fiery finger killed everything in its path. Glaciers in Switzerland began to melt, floodwaters poured down on the burning, smoking villages dotting the Alpine meadows. Paris became a torch, then London.
North of the Arctic Circle, Lapplanders in their summer furs burst into flame as their reindeer collapsed and roasted on the smoking tundra.
The line of dawn raced westward across the Atlantic Ocean, but as it did the brightness diminished. The Sun dimmed as quickly as it had brightened. The flare was over. It had lasted less than an hour, and on the scale of the Sun's seething furnace of energy it had been little more than a minor disturbance. But it left half the planet Earth a pyre. Smoke covered Asia from Tokyo to the Urals, all of Europe and Africa and Australia.
The Americas escaped the Sun's wrath. Almost.
Deep underground, beneath the solid granite of the Ural Mountains, Vasily Brudnoy stared at his communications screen in horror.
His was the biggest screen in the missile control center, a full fifteen meters across. It showed the entire Soviet Union, with white lights for each major city, red lights for military centers, and clusters of orange lights for the missile silos that held the ICBMs.
Vasily, a captain after ten years of service in the Red Army, could feel General Kubacheff's gasping breath on his neck.
"Try Moscow again," the general commanded.
Vasily touched the proper buttons on his keyboard console. He pressed his free hand against the earphone cl
amped to the left side of his head, leaning forward intently as if he could make Moscow reply by sheer force of his will.
Nothing. Only the hum of the carrier wave.
"They don't reply, sir."
General Kubacheff put a brown Turkish cigarette to his lips. "Leningrad," he snapped. And when Vasily told him again that there was no answer, the general puffed out a cloud of gray smoke.
"Rostov. Gorki. Someone must answer!"
Vasily tried. In vain. He kept his eyes focused on his screen, wanting to see nothing of the men and women behind his back. But he could not escape the phantom images of their reflections against the screen's glass. Already they look like ghosts, he thought. He heard their whispers, their frightened murmurings. He felt the cold, clammy fear that gripped the underground command center.
"Vorkuta doesn't answer either?" the general asked, his harsh voice almost pleading.
"No sir."
"Bratsk?"
"No."
Vasily heard a woman sob. General Kubacheff laid a weary hand on the captain's shoulder.
Shakily, he said, "There's no one left. It's up to us. Send out the strike order. Keep sending it until every missile is launched. Every last one of them!"
"My mother," someone was saying, in a dazed voice. "She lived in Rostov."
Lived. Already they were thinking in the past tense. Vasily Petrovich Brudnoy unlatched the safety cover over the red button, his teeth clenched together so hard that he could feel the pain in his jaws. He leaned his thumb on the red button and looked up at his screen. If the Americans have knocked out our silos, he told himself, we have lost everything. But almost immediately the clusters of orange lights began to change to green.
General Kubacheff grunted behind him. "At least the automatic controls still work. Not even direct hits could knock them out, we buried them so deep." Vasily smelled, almost tasted, the general's final puff on his cigaret. "Well, that's the end of it all. At least the American bastards won't live to enjoy their victory."
* * *
Human life also existed precariously on the Moon, buried under the sheltering rock of the huge crater Alphonsus. Airless, almost waterless, the Moon was a harsh habitat for the few hundred engineers and technicians who lived and worked there.
Douglas Morgan was also sitting at a console, watching a monitoring screen, deep beneath the 80-mile-wide crater. On the screen he saw three people in stark white hardsuits working up on the surface. The instruments flanking his screen on either side told him every detail of information about his three charges: their heartbeats, breathing rates, internal temperatures, blood pressures, more. Other digital readouts told him the temperature of the Sun-scorched lunar rocks, the levels of radiation out on the surface, the number of days to go until sunset.
Morgan was a big man, with broad shoulders and a thick chest, heavy strong arms and a shock of sandy hair that he kept brushing back from his Nordic blue eyes. He chafed at being confined to the monitoring task. He was happier up on the surface, out in the open, even if it meant being sealed into a cumbersome hardsuit.
The screen seemed to brighten all of a sudden, and he blinked at the unexpected increase in light.
Automatically he reached for the brightness control knob, but as he did three separate alarm buzzers came to life. His thick-fingered hands froze in mid-air.
"Lisa, Fred, Martin . . . get inside the airlock!" he shouted into the microphone set into the console.
"Now! Move it!"
The three figures in the screen hesitated, looked up, as if someone had tapped them on their shoulders.
Behind the heavily-mirrored curve of their visors, their faces could not be seen. No one could tell what expressions of surprise, or annoyance, or terror crossed their features.
But Douglas Morgan was no longer watching the monitor screen. With a single sweeping punch at the general alarm button, he bolted from his chair and raced from the monitoring room toward the powerlift that went up to the airlock on the surface.
The three figures on the screen brightened, the suddenly intense sunlight glinting off their hardsuits with wild ferocity. Harsh claxons sounded throughout the underground community, startling everyone, as Douglas Morgan loped in long, low-gravity strides through the corridors that led to the airlock.
By the time he got to the airlock and pulled on an emergency pressure suit, two of the hardsuited figures were already stumbling through the inner airlock hatch. He could not tell who they were.
"Lisa?" he called his wife's name. "Lisa?"
"I'm here, Doug." Her voice sounded frightened in his helmet earphones. But she was safe, inside, alive, sheltered from the fierce radiation of the flaring Sun.
"Fred's still out there," said Martin Kobol, the second of the hardsuited figures. "I saw him go down as we ran for the airlock."
Lisa pushed her visor up into the top of her helmet, revealing an aristocrat's fine-boned face.
But her dark eyes were wide with terror.
"We've got to get him!" she said, her voice low and urgent. "Doug ... do something!"
But Douglas was staring at the radiation dosimeter on the chest of her suit. It had gone entirely black. Turning, he saw that Martin Kobol's badge was black too.
"It's too late," he said, the realization of it making his insides flutter. "You barely made it back in time. He's dead by now."
"No!" Lisa snapped. "Get him! Save him!"
She started to pull the visor down again.
Douglas grabbed at her but she twisted free. It took the two men to hold her back from the airlock hatch.
"It's no use, Lisa!" Douglas bellowed at his wife.
"The radiation! He's fried by now."
"No! Let me go! Let me go to him!" she screamed.
Others were racing up toward the airlock hatch now. Douglas and Kobol held Lisa grimly while she kicked and struggled in their arms. Slowly they backed her away from the hatch, while two technicians swung the heavy steel door shut manually and a third hovered helplessly, his head pivoting from the hatch to the two men struggling with Lisa Morgan.
BOOK ONE
Chapter 1
One man died on the Moon when the Sun emitted its superflare. Billions died on Earth. The Sun returned to normal, shining as steadily and peacefully as if nothing unusual had happened. It had spewed out such flares before, in the distant past, before human civilization had covered the Earth with villages and farms and cities. In another hundred thousand years or so it might emit such a flare again.
The entire Old World was a scorched ruin, burned to a smoldering black wasteland. From Iceland to the easternmost tip of Siberia there was nothing but silent, smoking devastation. All the proud cities of human history were pyres, choked with the dead. The Eiffel Tower stood watch over a charred Paris. The cliff of the Acropolis was surrounded by a scorched Athens; the stench of rotting bodies rose past the shattered remains of the Parthenon, which had finally collapsed in the unbearable heat from the flare.
Moscow, Delhi, Peking, Sydney were no more.
For a thousand unbroken miles the tundra of high Asia was blackened, and the only animals that had survived were those who had been burrowed deep enough underground to escape the heat and the suffocating firestorms that followed the flare.
The whole of Africa was a vast funereal silence.
Men, elephants, forests, insects, veldts were nothing more than brittle blackened corpses, slowly turning to dust in the gentle summer breezes. The ancient Pyramids stood undamaged by the scorching flare, but the Western Desert beyond them had been turned into hundreds of miles of glittering glass.
The Americas had escaped the Sun's momentary outburst, but not the rage of terrified men. Nuclear- tipped missiles had pounded North America.
Almost every city had been blown into oblivion under a mushroom cloud, and the radioactive fallout smothered the continent from sea to sea, from the frozen muskeg of Canada to the jungles of Yucatan. Alaska received its share of nuclear devastation; even Haw
aii was bombed and sprayed with deadly radiation.
Latin America survived almost untouched, but cut off from the rest of the world by oceans and the radioactive wasteland that blocked migration northward. The great cities of Rio de Janiero, Sao Paolo, Buenos Aires, Lima, soon began to disintegrate as their swollen populations drifted back to the subsistance farming that would feed them — some of them. Even in the lucky South, without the commerce of a worldwide civilization, the cities died. The old ways of life reaffirmed themselves: dawn-to-dusk toil with hand-made implements were necessary to raise enough food to survive.
The veneer of civilization cracked and peeled away quickly.
The few hundred men and women living on the Moon watched with growing horror as their mother world died. They were safely underground, buried protectively against even the normal glare of the powerful Sun. In their telescopes they saw the Old World disappear under continent-wide clouds of smoke and steam. From their radio receivers they heard the cries of the dying. Then came the pinpoint bursts of light that marked the nuclear deaths of the cities of North America.
They watched, they listened, in silence. Numbly.
And their horror began to turn into guilt. Everyone on Earth was dying. The human race was being flensed from the surface of its mother world. But they were here on the Moon, inside its protective rocky shell. They were safe. They lived while their mothers, brothers, friends, lovers died.
After three days of numb horror and mounting guilt they looked at each other and began to wonder: How long can we keep ourselves^ alive without Earth to supply us with food, equipment, medicine?
The guilt was there, in each man and woman's mind. The horror went beyond words; none of them could voice what they truly felt. The nights were filled with nightmare screams. But surmounting it all was the drive to live. Deep within each of them was the burning secret: I'm alive and I'm glad of it No matter what happened to all the others, I'm glad it wasn't me.