Читаем Going Interstellar (collection) полностью

Alan Bond and Tony R. Martin, “Project Daedalus Reviewed”, JBIS, V39, pp. 385-390, 1986.

A. Bond & A. Martin, Project Daedalus: The Final Report on the BIS Starship Study, JBIS, special Supplement, S1-S192, 1978.

Terry Kammash, “Fusion Energy in Space Propulsion”, Progress in Astronautics and Aeronautics, V167, 1995.

<p><strong>DESIGN FLAW</strong></p><p>Louise Marley</p>

Proceed as far into the future as you like, possibly even to the glorious day when we are wandering quietly around the solar system, basking in its wonders, and we will undoubtedly discover that some of the worst aspects of our tribal instincts are still with us, especially the one that divides people by religious belief, ethnic background, or even the baseball team they root for. One particularly irritating aspect that promises to resist going away may well be the way in which males with ego problems treat women. After all, it’s probably the only thing they have.

* * *

“Hey, Itty Bit! Haul ass, would ya?”

Isabet floated up into the maintenance tube, pushing with her feet until she could grasp the first hand rung. “You think you could do it faster, Tie Dye?”

He gave an irritated grunt. “That’s Mr. Dykens to you, Tech.”

“Yeah,” she muttered, wriggling herself further along the tube. “When you call me by my name, I’ll call you Mister. Maybe.”

“What was that?” he shouted behind her.

“Or maybe not,” she added, under her breath. “Fat bastard.”

It wasn’t as if he—or any of the other engineers—could come after her. The tube was no more than twenty inches in diameter, and Dykens wore an extra-large utility suit. The other engineers were not as big as he was, but not one of them could have squeezed into the tube, and certainly not with a tool belt strapped around him. It was up to her and the other ring techs, Ginger and Skunk and Happy and the others, to slither along the maintenance tubes, to check the joints and monitor the ’stats and the flow meters. Tie Dye could yell at her all he wanted to, but if anything went wrong with the containment ring, the North America would be dead in space, antimatter leaking out every which way. Dykens’s big butt would be as dead as anyone else’s, stuck out here halfway to the habitat, in orbit around Ganymede, whining as their food and air ran out. It was obvious he had never huddled in a shelter for days without food.

She sure as hell had.

Isabet blew out an angry breath as she slid deeper into the tube. She kept telling herself it didn’t do any good to be pissed at him. It was just the way he was. He wasn’t the only one, either. It was true of a lot of the crew. For one thing, most of them thought ring techs were superfluous. They conveniently forgot the failure of the North America’s first containment ring and the resulting discharge of expensive antimatter, all because the mechanical sensors were off by a fraction of a millimeter. And then, leaving aside their short memories, the other crew members seemed to think that because ring techs were small, they could push the techs around. Crew members grinned when they saw them, as if the ring techs were kids playing grown-up. The other crew members patted their heads and made jokes about their extra-extra-small utility suits. Ring techs were housed in quarters barely big enough to stand up in. They slept in cots so cramped the techs called them coffins. They were allowed only three showers a week, while the rest of the crew got five.

Command didn’t seem to particularly care that three hundred crew depended on six techs. It was Government that insisted on the use of human monitors as backup. Command had to do as it was told, but as far as Isabet and the others could tell, once the ship was under way, the ring techs had been all but forgotten.

It made her blood pound to think about it, but then, a lot of things made her blood pound.

Перейти на страницу:

Похожие книги

Спецназ
Спецназ

Части специального назначения (СпН) советской военной разведки были одним из самых главных военных секретов Советского Союза. По замыслу советского командования эти части должны были играть ключевую роль в грядущей ядерной войне со странами Запада, и именно поэтому даже сам факт их существования тщательно скрывался. Выполняя разведывательные и диверсионные операции в тылу противника накануне войны и в первые ее часы и дни, части и соединения СпН должны были обеспечить успех наступательных операций вооруженных сил Советского Союза и его союзников, обрушившихся на врага всей своей мощью. Вы узнаете:  Как и зачем в Советской Армии были созданы части специального назначения и какие задачи они решали. • Кого и как отбирали для службы в частях СпН и как проходила боевая подготовка солдат, сержантов и офицеров СпН. • Как советское командование планировало использовать части и соединения СпН в грядущей войне со странами Запада. • Предшественники частей и соединений СпН: от «отборных юношей» Томаса Мора до гвардейских минеров Красной Армии. • Части и соединения СпН советской военной разведки в 1950-х — 1970-х годах: организационная структура, оружие, тактика, агентура, управление и взаимодействие. «Спецназ» — прекрасное дополнение к книгам Виктора Суворова «Советская военная разведка» и «Аквариум», увлекательное чтение для каждого, кто интересуется историей советских спецслужб.

Виктор Суворов

Документальная литература