Stephen Baxter - On the Orion Line

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2024-12-20 0 0 128.93KB 30 页 5.9玖币
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The Brief Life Burns Brightly broke out of the fleet. We were chasing down a Ghost cruiser,
and we were closing.
The lifedome of the Brightly was transparent, so it was as if Captain Teid in her big chair, and
her officers and their equipment clusters–and a few low-grade tars like me–were just floating
in space. The light was subtle, coming from a nearby cluster of hot young stars, and from the
rivers of sparking lights that made up the fleet formation we had just left, and beyond that
from the sparking of novae. This was the Orion Line–six thousand light years from Earth and
a thousand lights long, a front that spread right along the inner edge of the Orion Spiral Arm–
and the stellar explosions marked battles that must have concluded years ago.
And, not a handful of klicks away, the Ghost cruiser slid across space, running for home. The
cruiser was a rough egg-shape of silvered rope. Hundreds of Ghosts clung to the rope. You
could see them slithering this way and that, not affected at all by the emptiness around them.
The Ghosts’ destination was a small, old yellow star. Pael, our tame Academician, had
identified it as a fortress star from some kind of strangeness in its light. But up close you
don’t need to be an Academician to spot a fortress. From the Brightly I could see with my
unaided eyes that the star had a pale blue cage around it–an open lattice with struts half a
million kilometers long–thrown there by the Ghosts, for their own purposes.
I had a lot of time to watch all this. I was just a tar. I was fifteen years old.
My duties at that moment were non-specific. I was supposed to stand to, and render assistance
any way that was required–most likely with basic medical attention should we go into
combat. Right now the only one of us tars actually working was Halle, who was chasing down
a pool of vomit sicked up by Pael, the Academician, the only non-Navy personnel on the
bridge.
The action on the Brightly wasn’t like you see in Virtual shows. The atmosphere was calm,
quiet, competent. All you could hear was the murmur of voices, from the crew and the
equipment, and the hiss of recycling air. No drama: it was like an operating theater.
There was a soft warning chime.
The captain raised an arm and called over Academician Pael, First Officer Till, and Jeru, the
commissary assigned to the ship. They huddled close, conferring–apparently arguing. I saw
the way flickering nova light reflected from Jeru’s shaven head.
I felt my heart beat harder.
Everybody knew what the chime meant: that we were approaching the fortress cordon. Either
we would break off, or we would chase the Ghost cruiser inside its invisible fortress. And
everybody knew that no Navy ship that had ever penetrated a fortress cordon, ten light-
minutes from the central star, had come back out again.
One way or the other, it would all be resolved soon.
Captain Teid cut short the debate. She leaned forward and addressed the crew. Her voice, cast
through the ship, was friendly, like a cadre leader whispering in your ear. "You can all see we
can’t catch that swarm of Ghosts this side of the cordon. And you all know the hazard of
crossing a cordon. But if we’re ever going to break this blockade of theirs we have to find a
way to bust open those forts. So we’re going in anyhow. Stand by your stations."
There was a half-hearted cheer.
I caught Halle’s eye. She grinned at me. She pointed at the captain, closed her fist and made a
pumping movement. I admired her sentiment but she wasn’t being too accurate, anatomically
speaking, so I raised my middle finger and jiggled it back and forth.
It took a slap on the back of the head from Jeru, the commissary, to put a stop to that. "Little
morons," she growled.
"Sorry, sir–"
I got another slap for the apology. Jeru was a tall, stocky woman, dressed in the bland
monastic robes said to date from the time of the founding of the Commission for Historical
Truth a thousand years ago. But rumor was she’d seen plenty of combat action of her own
before joining the Commission, and such was her physical strength and speed of reflex I could
well believe it.
As we neared the cordon the Academician, Pael, started a gloomy countdown. The slow
geometry of Ghost cruiser and tinsel-wrapped fortress star swiveled across the crowded sky.
Everybody went quiet.
The darkest time is always just before the action starts. Even if you can see or hear what is
going on, all you do is think. What was going to happen to us when we crossed that intangible
border? Would a fleet of Ghost ships materialize all around us? Would some mysterious
weapon simply blast us out of the sky?
I caught the eye of First Officer Till. He was a veteran of twenty years; his scalp had been
burned away in some ancient close-run combat, long before I was born, and he wore a crown
of scar tissue with pride.
"Let’s do it, tar," he growled.
All the fear went away. I was overwhelmed by a feeling of togetherness, of us all being in this
crap together. I had no thought of dying. Just: let’s get through this.
"Yes, sir!"
Pael finished his countdown.
All the lights went out. Detonating stars wheeled.
And the ship exploded.
I was thrown into darkness. Air howled. Emergency bulkheads scythed past me, and I could
hear people scream.
I slammed into the curving hull, nose pressed against the stars.
I bounced off and drifted. The inertial suspension was out, then. I thought I could smell
blood–probably my own.
I could see the Ghost ship, a tangle of rope and silver baubles, tingling with highlights from
the fortress star. We were still closing.
But I could also see shards of shattered lifedome, a sputtering drive unit. The shards were bits
of the Brightly. It had gone, all gone, in a fraction of a second.
"Let’s do it," I murmured.
Maybe I was out of it for a while.
Somebody grabbed my ankle and tugged me down. There was a competent slap on my cheek,
enough to make me focus.
"Case. Can you hear me?"
It was First Officer Till. Even in the swimming starlight that burned-off scalp was
unmistakable.
I glanced around. There were four of us here: Till, Commissary Jeru, Academician Pael, me.
We were huddled up against what looked like the stump of the First Officer’s console. I
realized that the gale of venting air had stopped. I was back inside a hull with integrity, then–
"Case!"
"I–yes, sir."
"Report."
I touched my lip; my hand came away bloody. At a time like that it’s your duty to report your
injuries, honestly and fully. Nobody needs a hero who turns out not to be able to function. "I
think I’m all right. I may have a concussion."
"Good enough. Strap down." Till handed me a length of rope.
I saw that the others had tied themselves to struts. I did the same.
Till, with practiced ease, swam away into the air, I guessed looking for other survivors.
Academician Pael was trying to curl into a ball. He couldn’t even speak. The tears just rolled
out of his eyes. I stared at the way big globules welled up and drifted away into the air,
glimmering.
The action had been over in seconds. All a bit sudden for an earthworm, I guess.
Nearby, I saw, trapped under one of the emergency bulkheads, there was a pair of legs–just
that. The rest of the body must have been chopped away, gone drifting off with the rest of the
debris from Brightly. But I recognized those legs, from a garish pink stripe on the sole of the
right boot. That had been Halle. She was the only girl I had ever screwed, I thought–and more
than likely, given the situation, the only girl I ever would get to screw.
I couldn’t figure out how I felt about that.
Jeru was watching me. "Tar–do you think we should all be frightened for ourselves, like the
Academician?" Her accent was strong, unidentifiable.
"No, sir."
"No." Jeru studied Pael with contempt. "We are in a yacht, Academician. Something has
happened to the Brightly. The ’dome was designed to break up into yachts like this." She
sniffed. "We have air, and it isn’t foul yet." She winked at me. "Maybe we can do a little
damage to the Ghosts before we die, tar. What do you think?"
I grinned. "Yes, sir."
Pael lifted his head and stared at me with salt water eyes. "Lethe. You people are monsters."
His accent was gentle, a lilt. "Even such a child as this. You embrace death–"
Jeru grabbed Pael’s jaw in a massive hand, and pinched the joint until he squealed. "Captain
Teid grabbed you, Academician; she threw you here, into the yacht, before the bulkhead came
down. I saw it. If she hadn’t taken the time to do that, she would have made it herself. Was
she a monster? Did she embrace death?" And she pushed Pael’s face away.
For some reason I hadn’t thought about the rest of the crew until that moment. I guess I have a
limited imagination. Now, I felt adrift. The captain–dead?
I said, "Excuse me, Commissary. How many other yachts got out?"
"None," she said steadily, making sure I had no illusions. "Just this one. They died doing their
duty, tar. Like the captain."
Of course she was right, and I felt a little better. Whatever his character, Pael was too valuable
not to save. As for me, I had survived through sheer blind chance, through being in the right
place when the walls came down: if the captain had been close, her duty would have been to
pull me out of the way and take my place. It isn’t a question of human values but of
economics: a lot more is invested in the training and experience of a Captain Teid–or a Pael–
than in me.
But Pael seemed more confused than I was.
First Officer Till came bustling back with a heap of equipment. "Put these on." He handed out
pressure suits. They were what we called slime suits in training: lightweight skinsuits, running
off a backpack of gen-enged algae. "Move it," said Till. "Impact with the Ghost cruiser in four
minutes. We don’t have any power; there’s nothing we can do but ride it out."
I crammed my legs into my suit.
Jeru complied, stripping off her robe to reveal a hard, scarred body. But she was frowning.
"Why not heavier armor?"
For answer, Till picked out a gravity-wave handgun from the gear he had retrieved. Without
pausing he held it to Pael’s head and pushed the fire button.
Pael twitched.
Till said, "See? Nothing is working. Nothing but bio systems, it seems." He threw the gun
aside.
Pael closed his eyes, breathing hard.
Till said to me, "Test your comms."
I closed up my hood and faceplate and began intoning, "One, two, three . . ." I could hear
nothing.
Till began tapping at our backpacks, resetting the systems. His hood started to glow with
transient, pale blue symbols. And then, scratchily, his voice started to come through. ". . .
Five, six, seven–can you hear me, tar?"
"Yes, sir."
The symbols were bioluminescent. There were receptors on all our suits–photoreceptors,
simple eyes–which could "read" the messages scrawled on our companions’ suits. It was a
backup system meant for use in environments where anything higher-tech would be a
liability. But obviously it would only work as long as we were in line of sight.
"That will make life harder," Jeru said. Oddly, mediated by software, she was easier to
understand.
Till shrugged. "You take it as it comes." Briskly, he began to hand out more gear. "These are
basic field belt kits. There’s some medical stuff: a suture kit, scalpel blades, blood-giving sets.
You wear these syrettes around your neck, Academician. They contain painkillers, various
gen-enged med-viruses . . . no, you wear it outside your suit, Pael, so you can reach it. You’ll
find valve inlets here, on your sleeve, and here, on the leg." Now came weapons. "We should
carry handguns, just in case they start working, but be ready with these." He handed out
combat knives.
Pael shrank back.
"Take the knife, Academician. You can shave off that ugly beard, if nothing else."
I laughed out loud, and was rewarded with a wink from Till.
I took a knife. It was a heavy chunk of steel, solid and reassuring. I tucked it in my belt. I was
starting to feel a whole lot better.
"Two minutes to impact," Jeru said. I didn’t have a working chronometer; she must have been
counting the seconds.
"Seal up." Till began to check the integrity of Pael’s suit; Jeru and I helped each other. Face
seal, glove seal, boot seal, pressure check. Water check, oh-two flow, cee-oh-two scrub . . .
When we were sealed I risked poking my head above Till’s chair.
The Ghost ship filled space. The craft was kilometers across, big enough to have dwarfed the
poor, doomed Brief Life Burns Brightly. It was a tangle of silvery rope of depthless
complexity, occluding the stars and the warring fleets. Bulky equipment pods were suspended
in the tangle.
And everywhere there were Silver Ghosts, sliding like beads of mercury. I could see how the
yacht’s emergency lights were returning crimson highlights from the featureless hides of
Ghosts, so they looked like sprays of blood droplets across that shining perfection.
"Ten seconds," Till called. "Brace."
Suddenly silver ropes thick as tree trunks were all around us, looming out of the sky.
And we were thrown into chaos again.
I heard a grind of twisted metal, a scream of air. The hull popped open like an eggshell. The
last of our air fled in a gush of ice crystals, and the only sound I could hear was my own
breathing.
The crumpling hull soaked up some of our momentum.
But then the base of the yacht hit, and it hit hard.
The chair was wrenched out of my grasp, and I was hurled upward. There was a sudden pain
in my left arm. I couldn’t help but cry out.
I reached the limit of my tether and rebounded. The jolt sent further waves of pain through my
arm. From up there, I could see the others were clustered around the base of the First Officer’s
chair, which had collapsed.
I looked up. We had stuck like a dart in the outer layers of the Ghost ship. There were shining
threads arcing all around us, as if a huge net had scooped us up.
Jeru grabbed me and pulled me down. She jarred my bad arm, and I winced. But she ignored
me, and went back to working on Till. He was under the fallen chair.
Pael started to take a syrette of dope from the sachet around his neck.
Jeru knocked his hand away. "You always use the casualty’s," she hissed. "Never your own."
Pael looked hurt, rebuffed. "Why?"
摘要:

TheBriefLifeBurnsBrightlybrokeoutofthefleet.WewerechasingdownaGhostcruiser,andwewereclosing.ThelifedomeoftheBrightlywastransparent,soitwasasifCaptainTeidinherbigchair,andherofficersandtheirequipmentclusters–andafewlow-gradetarslikeme–werejustfloatinginspace.Thelightwassubtle,comingfromanearbycluster...

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分类:外语学习 价格:5.9玖币 属性:30 页 大小:128.93KB 格式:PDF 时间:2024-12-20

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