Voyagers I Read online
Page 10
“Watch the skies,” Rev. Wilson told a rapt audience of nearly 1,000 at the Hyatt Regency Hotel. “No one on Earth will be the same after this great and powerful change sweeps over the world.”
Rev. Wilson refused to give specifics on the nature of the change, stating only that “Christians and non-Christians alike should prepare their souls for a new world, through prayer and good works.”
The evening revival meeting, held in the futuristic atrium of the Hyatt Regency, was part of a nation-spanning “crusade” that Rev. Wilson is making, which will take him to seventeen major American cities over the next six months.
Appearing with Rev. Wilson last night were…
* * *
CHAPTER 13
Ramsey McDermott swiveled his creaking old leather chair back and forth as he puffed steadily on his pipe, thinking, worrying, trying to plan out the best course of action.
Suppose he’s right? the old man asked himself. If it really is extraterrestrial intelligence, there could be a Nobel in it for me. After all, I’m the head of the project. I’m the one who brought Stoner into the observatory. He was just a washed-out astronaut before I asked NASA for him.
The office was dark in the late afternoon. Outside, the sun was already down behind the red brick buildings that lined the Yard.
They’ll put a plaque on the building after I’m gone, McDermott told himself. Professor Ramsey McDermott, the discoverer of extraterrestrial life. He pictured the Nobel Prize ceremony, the speech he would give in Stockholm, the interviews with the press. Frowning, he realized that he would have to share the prize with Stoner and Thompson, perhaps one or two others.
Stoner will make trouble, he knew. The man’s a born troublemaker.
Maybe it isn’t ETI, he thought. It’s most likely just some natural object, maybe a new comet or a captured meteor that’s been pulled into an orbit around Jupiter.
But what about the radio pulses? How do you account for them? Coincidence? Some influence between this object Stoner’s found and Jupiter’s radio emissions, like the moon Io affects the radio bursts?
His pipe had gone out. McDermott took it from between his teeth, never noticing the thick clouds of blue-gray smoke that hung in layers through the office, permeating the books, the stacks of papers, the drapes on the window.
It was dark. He switched on the goosenecked desk lamp. And saw the report from Washington again.
Damn that man! He rapped the pipe bowl sharply against the big, dottle-filled ashtray on his desk. The aged, brittle stem snapped.
Double damn him! McDermott snapped to himself. And where the hell is that girl? She should be here by now.
As if in answer, there was a knock on the door. Without waiting for him to answer, Jo opened the door and stepped into Professor McDermott’s office.
“You’re late,” he growled.
“I just got out of class,” she replied.
“Oh, you’re attending classes these days,” he shot back sarcastically.
“When I can.”
She seemed completely unflustered. She kept her coat on and her books in her lap as she sat in the chair before his desk. With a disapproving frown, she waved her free hand to push some of the smoke away.
“Having a good time in New Hampshire? I understand you spend every weekend up there with Stoner.”
“That’s my business,” she said.
“I’m making it mine,” McDermott snapped. “It’s Project JOVE business, you know.”
Her back stiffened. “You told me to do what I could to make certain he stays at the house up there without making any more trouble. So I’m doing what I can.”
McDermott drummed his fingers on the report resting on his desktop. “Does that include mailing letters overseas for him?”
She hesitated for just a fraction of a second. “What do you mean?”
“Somehow, Stoner got a letter out. To Russia, no less. To some Russian linguist, according to Washington.”
“I don’t know anything about that,” Jo said.
“You’re the only one who could have smuggled a letter out for him.”
She shook her head stubbornly. “I didn’t mail any letters to Russia for him or anyone else. I wouldn’t do that.”
“You’re certain?”
“How does Washington know he sent a letter to this Russian?”
McDermott chuckled. “They don’t tell me where their information comes from. I imagine we have spies in the Kremlin, just as they have spies in Washington.”
“What’s in the letter?”
“Enough to put Stoner into a federal prison for a long, long time.” McDermott realized that it was true, as he spoke the words. His heart lightened. With Stoner out of the way…
“You wouldn’t do that!” she said.
He shrugged. “It’s not up to me. It’s a Navy problem.”
“But…you said you need him for the project.”
Smiling, McDermott said, “I imagine we can get along without him now. He’s been more trouble than he’s worth, actually.”
“No. You can’t.”
Her voice was almost pleading. McDermott realized that she was suddenly tense, leaning forward in the chair, her face tight with concern.
“Stoner did it to himself,” he said, as he felt his blood stirring, the heat starting to build inside him.
“He wouldn’t do anything wrong,” she was saying. “This must be some kind of misunderstanding…”
But McDermott was barely listening. He heard the tone of her voice, saw the anxiety in her eyes, and realized with an inward shock of discovery that he wanted her for himself. Very much. For himself and no one else.
“There must be something you can do!” Jo begged.
He still had the broken stem of his pipe in his hand. Dropping it into the ashtray, he took another pipe and wordlessly began to fill it, working methodically, silently, watching her watching him, waiting for her to break the stretching silence.
“Couldn’t you…do something? Help him?”
“He’s broken the security laws,” McDermott said slowly. “He signed a security agreement and then dashed off a letter to Soviet Russia.”
“Maybe it’s an old letter. Maybe he wrote it before he signed the agreement.”
McDermott tamped the tobacco down and put the pipe in his mouth. “It’s still a federal crime.”
Jo glanced around the room, as if looking for help. “There must be something you can do.”
Trembling inside, McDermott heard himself tell her, “I suppose I could tell the Navy that he’s too valuable to the project to be sent to jail.”
Jo nodded eagerly.
“But why should I? Why should I risk the project’s chance of success for him? What’s in it for me?”
For several moments she said nothing. McDermott could hear his pulse pounding in his ears.
Finally he could stand it no longer. “If I…saved his neck, what would you do?”
Understanding dawned in her eyes. She sat up straighter in the chair. “What would I do?”
“For me.”
She almost smiled. “What would you want me to do?”
Taking the pipe out of his mouth, still unlit, McDermott said shakily, “Stop seeing him. Spend your time with me instead.”
She nodded slowly. “And what do I get out of that?”
He felt confused. “What do you mean…?”
“I want a letter of recommendation from you, to NASA. A letter recommending me for a position in the astronaut training corps.”
“You want…”
“I’ll give you what you want, if you give me what I want.”
“And Stoner?”
“He stays with the project. I’ll stop seeing him. You write the letter.”
Swallowing hard, McDermott answered, “When…when the project is finished. I’ll write the letter then. We have a lot of work ahead of us, you know.”
“You could still send the letter off to NASA. Now. I’ll sta
y with the project until it’s finished.”
His head was throbbing. “It’s not that simple, young lady. If you expect me to…”
“I’ll do what you want,” Jo said. “But first you write that letter.”
“I…we’ll see about that. I have to think about this.”
Jo got up from her chair and clamped the books under her arm, against her hip. “Okay, you see about it. When you give me the letter and guarantee that Dr. Stoner will stay with the project, I’ll live up to my end of the deal.”
She went to the door, turned back to him. “Uh, just so we understand each other…I’m not into bondage or S&M, but anything else you want I can give you.”
McDermott sat in a hot sweat as she left his office and shut the door firmly behind her.
Markov sat like a guilty schoolboy in the anteroom, waiting, waiting endlessly. Academician Bulacheff’s secretary, a portly woman of fifty or more, glared at him now and then. Men shuttled in and out of the academician’s office. But no one spoke to Markov.
Outside it was snowing. Markov watched the white flurries paste themselves against the windowpanes. Little by little, Moscow disappeared from sight beneath the snow-filled gusts. Even the spires and walls of the Kremlin became indistinct blurs.
A real blizzard, Markov told himself. It will be a long walk home.
Finally, when he had nearly hypnotized himself into a snow-induced slumber, the secretary’s nasal voice rasped, “Kirill Vasilovsk Markov?”
He snapped to full alertness. There was no one else in the anteroom, but still she made a question of his name.
“Yes, that’s me,” he said.
“Academician Bulacheff will see you now.”
Markov got to his feet, a trifle unsteadily, and walked to the plain wooden door of the academician’s office.
Bulacheff is the key man, he heard his wife’s voice warning him. He is the one you must satisfy. If you can convince him that the signals are not a language, then all may be well. But if he is dissatisfied with your work…. Maria had let the sentence dangle, like a noose over Markov’s head.
Bulacheff’s office was neither spacious nor imposing, but a cheerful gleaming samovar chugged away in one corner of the neat little room. And the academician came up from behind his desk and greeted Markov warmly.
“Kirill Vasilovsk! It was good of you to come in person. I hope you are not caught by the snow on your way home.”
Markov smiled and nodded and mumbled polite inanities, thinking, I had to come in person, you summoned me. And how can I avoid being caught in the snow, unless we stay here until spring?
“I have read your report,” the academician said, returning to his desk. “Most interesting. Most interesting.”
He winked at Markov, then reached down to the bottom drawer of his desk and produced a bottle of vodka and two glasses.
“It’s not iced,” he said apologetically.
Markov grinned at the old man. “Not to worry. I am already chilled quite thoroughly.”
Bulacheff gestured his guest to the worn leather sofa at the side of the room. Portraits of Mendeléev, Lobachevski, Oparin and Kapitza hung in gilt above the sofa. The inevitable portrait of Lenin was over the academician’s desk. But no contemporary politicians, Markov noted.
He accepted a thimble-sized glass of vodka. Bulacheff toasted, “To understanding.”
They both downed their drinks in a single gulp.
As Bulacheff wheeled his swivel chair to refill Markov’s glass, the linguist said, “It was good of you to find time for me. I know you must be very busy.”
Bulacheff’s bald pate gleamed in the light from the panels in the ceiling. “Actually,” he said, “I am very glad to see you. I want to discuss this Jupiter business with someone who is not in the Academy, not part of the official apparatus.”
“Oh?”
With an almost sheepish smile, Bulacheff eased back in his chair. “It is only too easy to become isolated in a position such as mine. The people I see are all members of the Academy or the government. Sometimes we become too ingrown; we lose sight of the important things because we are so concerned with the immediate problems of the moment.”
Holding his refilled glass in front of him, Markov nodded. “I see.”
“It is good to discuss this matter of”—Bulacheff inadvertently glanced ceilingward—“of ETI with a man of science, rather than an apparatchik.”
Is he looking to the heavens or for microphones in the ceiling, Markov wondered. He said, “It’s a matter of grave importance, true enough.”
“Yes,” Bulacheff agreed. “And the Americans are a jump ahead of us—as usual.”
“What do you mean?”
“This man Stoner…this idealist who wrote you that letter—do you know who he is?”
Markov shook his head.
“Our embassy in Washington reports that he was one of the astronomers who helped design and build the orbiting telescope that the Americans launched recently: they call it the Big Eye.”
“A telescope in orbit? Like a sputnik?”
“Exactly. No doubt the Americans are using it to study Jupiter very closely…much more closely than we can, since we have no such equipment in orbit.”
Markov stroked his beard with his free hand. “So they have found things that we cannot see.”
“Exactly! They have eyes and we are blind.”
“That’s…too bad.”
Bulacheff knocked back his vodka and put the glass carefully on his desk. “Science depends on politics. It has always been so. Capitalist or socialist, it makes no difference. We want to study the universe but we must beg for the money from the politicians.”
Markov agreed. “Even in the beginnings of science, great men such as Galileo and Kepler had to cast horoscopes for their patrons if they wanted to be supported for their true work.”
“Yes. And nowadays we have to invent weapons for them.”
Peering ceilingward himself, Markov said, “But that is necessary for the defense of the Motherland.”
“Of course,” Bulacheff said brusquely. Then he added, “And for the triumph of socialism.”
“It’s too bad we don’t have an orbiting telescope of our own,” Markov said.
“It would take ten years to get one into space—nine of them wheedling and begging.”
“I wonder…is there any way we can get to use the American telescope? Or to see the photographs they have taken?”
Bulacheff fixed him with a beady look. “When they won’t even admit publicly that they’ve discovered something? When they’re keeping the entire matter secret?”
“H’mm. Yes. That would be difficult.” Markov took half his drink down, felt the vodka burning its way through him.
“If it wouldn’t lead to war, I’d be tempted to ask our Cosmonaut Corps to seize the Big Eye,” Bulacheff muttered.
Markov almost laughed, but managed to control himself.
“No,” Bulacheff said gloomily. “Our only chance is co-operation with the Americans. But with the international situation the way it is, our political leaders will never accept being forced to ask favors from Washington.”
“It would be humiliating,” Markov agreed.
“But there must be some way to do it!”
Markov looked closely at the bald little man. Frail though he appeared, Bulacheff’s voice had iron in it. His eyes were glowing, and not merely from the vodka.
“About my report,” Markov began slowly, waiting to be interrupted.
“Yes?”
“I presume you’ve read it?”
“Thoroughly.”
Markov nodded. “If these radio signals from Jupiter are not a language, doesn’t that mean that the chances of there being intelligent life there are rather…well, nonexistent?”
“I would agree, certainly,” Bulacheff said, hunching his shoulders in something approximating a shrug, “except that the Americans are working like fiends on the problem.”
�
��They are?”
Bulacheff began ticking points off on his fingers. Markov noted that they were long, slender, delicate hands: pianist’s hands.
“First, your friend Stoner is working on the problem. He has left the American space agency to work for a small, out-of-date radio telescope facility.”
Markov began to say, “He is not a friend of…”
But Bulacheff went on, “Second, Stoner has influence with the space agency people who run the Big Eye. It seems that they are processing photographs from the orbital telescope and sending them to Stoner, through secure channels.”
Markov nodded.
“Third, the entire staff of this radio telescope facility—including your friend Stoner—has been forced to sign new security oaths by the United States Navy…”
“Navy?”
Bulacheff smirked. “The Americans are very sloppy administrators. Somehow their Navy is in charge of this project.”
“I don’t understand.”
“It makes no difference. The conclusion is that they are working on the Jupiter problem in secrecy. It seems that they have put a code name to their work: Project JOVE. They have told their NATO apparatus about the problem, apparently.”
“Maybe they will make a public announcement, once they have proof…”
Bulacheff shook his head. “No. They will want to make contact with the aliens. And keep the information from us.”
“Then perhaps we should announce to the world that we have received their signals, also!”
Again Bulacheff flicked his eyes ceilingward. “That would be against our government’s policy.”
“But we can’t keep it a secret forever,” Markov insisted. “And since the Americans already know, and are ahead of us, it would be to our advantage to make the whole thing public and force a worldwide co-operative program.”
“I agree, Kirill Vasilovsk,” Bulacheff said. “I have considered that possibility.”
Markov nodded eagerly.
“Our ambassador to the United Nations could reveal our discovery of the radio signals,” Bulacheff said, steepling his fingers, “and then we would get credit all around the world for discovering intelligent life.”