It didn’t hurt as much as he would have expected, which just meant he was finally succumbing to the smoke. He wasn’t feeling much of anything anymore except—he had a book in his hand. He felt the narrow spine. A paperback, one of the old ones he could tell by the semi-matte finish, the curled edges and the size. It was small. Not even two hundred pages. It didn’t have a chance but he gave it a flick anyway spinning it, using the spine the way a baseball pitcher uses the raised stitches.
It flew.
Irwin heard it flap, like wings on a bird, freed at last. He waited for it to strike the wall, or the ceiling. It didn’t. A perfect swish. Nothing but air.
And outside the wind howled, and wailed, wailed and howled.
The little house burned, a bright spot in an endless void of black. Snow hissed as it said hello to the now adult flame and the two did battle. Elements wrestling in an empty world that man had stepped out of. In the flicker of that fight, on its back in the snow lay a single book. The wind, now a spectator in a fight it helped provoke, brushed the pages that fanned out and closed again, fanned and closed, as if the whispering wind was trying to read the words there.
On the cover, a stylistic impression of flames was dominated by three numbers.
Four, five, one.
LIAM BALDWIN
Silver Sky
It was midnight and the sky was silver. It shone from horizon to horizon in a single gleaming blue-white sheen. Beyond the mountains, a cobweb of ice gleamed; delicate, bright, brittle gossamers that spread, as they rose, fanning out and thinning to invisibility; at the zenith, a small, warm, fuzzy reddish blur, Earth’s shadow.
“My God…” Clara Letoza said, her voice small in the stillness of the night. Though she had worked on the Project all her professional life this was her first visit. The first time she had seen it. Allan had timed her first sight of the Sail perfectly, keeping her indoors, tied up with endless technical details, till the moment was right. He had waited till midnight, then suggested they take a break. “Let’s get some fresh air, take a stroll outside,” he had said casually. There wasn’t a cloud in the sky.
Clara stood and stared upwards, gazing awestruck at this beautiful, sky-spanning wonder she had helped build. It was minutes before she spoke. “I’ve seen the simulations and I saw it from the ship as we docked. It was just a structure up there, vast, but still a construct… all beams and engineering and stresses. I never…” Reverentially, she said, “I never thought it would be so… so beautiful.”
“I never thought it would be finished,” said Allan.
She laughed, the moment gone. “You are a pessimist.”
“Maybe. But I’m also a politician. It’s part of my job as Coordinator to make sure—” He paused, looking past her at something far away. She followed his gaze. “What’s that?” he said, and pointed skyward to the south. Something bright. A fading flash. “What the hell was that?” he repeated.
They stared at the disappearing light till it was no more than a faint after-image.
“There’s another!” she said and pointed. “Off to the left! See it?” For a moment a sharp yellowy brightness lit the sky like summer lightning, before leaving an expanding, fading core at its centre. An explosion of some kind.
“And another!” Clara pointed again.
“What the hell?”
They stood looking at the fading lights.
“Whatever they were, they were a long way up,” Allan said.
“Big too, if we could see them from down here.”
“We need to get back inside.” His voice was cold.
It was three in the morning when communications with Top Side were finally re-established. They were in Allan’s office. Allan, coffee mug in hand, switched from one news channel to another in frustration; Clara, calm and composed, sifted through what little hard data they had and tried to relate it to a schematic model of the Sail. It had become clear, very quickly, that someone had tried to destroy the Sail with nuclear bombs. Five of them, in a coordinated attack. What no one knew was who had done it and how much damage had been caused.