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"Takes care of that. We'll have a crew come take it apart later. Now for you.
I'll carry your luggage."
He reached down and pulled the safety line out of the reel on Aeneas' belt and
clipped it to his own. "Now you're tethered to me, but if you drift off and I
have to pull you in, I'll charge extra for the ride. Follow me, and the trick
is, don't move fast. Keep it slow and easy."
They pulled themselves across the wire cage. It looked like ordinary chicken
wire to Aeneas, a more or less sphere of it a hundred meters in diameter.
There were other blobs of wire cage floating around the station. When they got
to the side of the cage facing Heimdall, Aeneas saw a thin line running from
the cage to the nonrotating hub between the cylinders. Up close the rotating
cylinders on their cables and inflated tunnel looked much larger than before;
twenty meters in diameter, and made of segments, each segment at least twenty
meters long. They pulled themselves gingerly along the tether line to an
opening ahead.
There was no air in the part of the hub they entered. Penrose explained that
the interface between rotating and nonrotating parts was kept in vacuum. Once
inside, Aeneas felt a gentle tug as the long tube, leading to the capsules at
the end of the tether line pushed against him until he was rotating with it.
Before Aeneas could ask, Penrose pointed up the tube away from the direction
they were going.
"Counterweights up there," he said. "We run them up and down to conserve
angular momentum. Don't have to spend mass to adjust rotation every time
somebody leaves or comes aboard. Course we have to use mass to stop ourselves
rotating when we leave, but I've got an idea for a way to fix that too."
As they descended, Aeneas felt more weight; it increased steadily. They passed
into the first of a series of multiple airlocks. Then another, and another.
"Hell of a lot easier than pumping all this gup every time," Penrose said.
"Feel pressure now?"
"A little. It's easier to exhale."
"You could breathe here. Not well." They passed through another set of
airlocks and felt increasing weight; after that it was necessary to climb down
a ladder. The walls of the silo they were descending were about three meters
in diameter. They stood out stiffly from the pressure and seemed to be made of
the same rubberized cloth as his pressure suit, but not porous or permeable as
his suit was.
Eventually they reached a final airlock, and below that the silo had metallic
walls instead of the inflated nylon. The final airlock opened onto a circular
staircase and they climbed down that into the cylindrical structure of the
station itself.
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Dr. Herman Eliot was a thin man, no more than thirty-five years old, with
bifocal spectacles and long hair that curled at his neck; it was cut off short
in front and at the sides so that it wouldn't get in his eyes, and it was
uncombed: a thoroughly careless appearance. He had a harried expression, and
his desk was littered with ledgers, papers, books, two pocket computers, and a
dozen pencils. There were compartments in the desk for all that gear, but
Eliot didn't use them.
Kit Penrose clucked his tongue as they entered. "Sloppy, Herman. Sloppy.
Suppose I had to take spin off?"
Eliot looked annoyed. "You'd like to make up production schedules, then?" he
demanded. He did not smile.
Penrose did. He recoiled in mock horror. "Easier to keep spin." He pulled off
his helmet and turned to Aeneas. "Want some help with that?"
Page 64
ABC Amber Palm Converter, http://www.processtext.com/abcpalm.html
"Thank you." There had been little time for practice with the suit on Earth,
but the procedure seemed simple enough; still, there was no harm in getting
assistance. Aeneas worked slowly and carefully to undog the helmet and
disconnect it from the neckseal. He lifted it off.
Penrose stared. "MacKenzie, eh?" he said sourly. His friendly expression was
gone, replaced by a mask of emotional control that couldn't conceal dislike.
His voice was strained and overmodulated.
"Aeneas MacKenzie. If you'd told me that, I'd have left you out there."
Aeneas said nothing.
"He is the owners' agent," Eliot said.
"I doubt it." Penrose curled his lip into a twisted sneer. "I never did
believe that lot about his break with Tolland. I think he is another goddamn
CIA man."
"Then why would Miss Hansen send him?" Eliot asked. His voice and gestures
were very precise, in contrast to the litter on his desk.
"Probably had to. Tolland can get to her partners. God knows what kind of
deals he's made."
"I do not think anyone has ever accused Aeneas MacKenzie of personal
corruption," Eliot said.
"Precisely the opposite, in fact."
"I still think he belongs to Tolland." Penrose stalked to the door. "Tolland
and MacKenzie tried to break Miss Hansen with legal tricks. That didn't work,
so they're trying something else. I'll leave you with your little pet, Herman.
Mind he doesn't bite you. And keep these doors closed." He swung the
lightweight oval airtight door closed behind him.
There were chairs bolted to the deck opposite Eliot's desk. Aeneas sat in one
of them. He felt a peculiar sensation each time he moved up or down, but he
was growing accustomed to it.
Experimentally he took a pencil from Eliot's desk and dropped it to the floor.
It followed a lazy, curved arc and landed inches away from where his eye
expected it to fall. He nodded to himself and turned to Dr. Eliot. "I don't
bite," he said.
"That's about the only thing I know about you, then. Just what are you doing
here, Mr. MacKenzie?
You're no spaceman."
"Of course not. Was everyone here experienced in space when he first arrived?"
"No. But they had some technical value. We knew what they would do here." [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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