Читать книгу: «The Writer», страница 2
Shuttle six â Lunar inspection
After the invisible hand of fear that had gripped his stomach, finally disappeared, leaving him in peace, Azakis had begun to pace nervously around the shuttleâs bridge muttering unintelligible phrases.
"Will you stop going around and around in circles like a spinning top?" Petri scolded him. "Youâll wear the floor out and weâll end up drifting about in space like two old disused satellites."
"But how can you be so calm? The Theos has been destroyed, weâre millions of kilometres from our own planet, we canât contact anyone and, even if we were to succeed, it would be impossible for someone to come and fetch us, and what do you do? You lay there slouched in your armchair as if you were on holiday, sitting on the cliff at the Gulf of Saraan enjoying the view at sunset."
"Calm down old chap, calm down. Weâll find a solution, youâll see."
"At the moment I can think of absolutely none whatsoever."
"Why are you so upset. Itâs the gamma waves that your poor tired brain is emitting, that are preventing you from reasoning with lucidity."
âDo you think so?"
"Of course," replied Petri with a lovely big smile. "Come and sit down beside me, take some deep breaths and try to relax. Youâll see, before long everything will seem very different."
"You may well be right, my friend" said Azakis as, following the advice of his companion, he threw himself heavily into the second pilotâs grey armchair, "but at the moment I can do everything but relax."
"If you promise to calm down, Iâll even let you smoke one of those filthy smelly things you always carry around with you."
"Well, actually that might be a good idea. Iâm sure itâd help me a bit." Having said that, he pulled a long dark hand-rolled cigar from a pocket and, after having cut the ends with a strange multicoloured contraption, put it in his mouth and lit it. He quickly inhaled several puffs letting small bluish smoke clouds disperse into the room. With a slight hiss, the shuttleâs automatic air purification system was activated. In a few moments the smoke vanished and with it also the pungent sweetish smell.
"But, this way, thereâs no fun," exclaimed Azakis who was already in a much better mood. "Iâd forgotten how efficient our purification systems are."
"You designed them," answered Petri. "They couldnât be otherwise."
The tension seemed to be slowly melting away.
"Letâs take stock of the situation," proposed Azakis as, with his cigar still between his lips, he enabled a series of holograms which positioned themselves in mid-air all around the two aliens. "Weâve got four operational shuttles including our own. The Theos-2 has now landed on Nibiru and both are outside the range of action of the optical vortices communication system." He puffed out another couple of little clouds of smoke, then he continued, "Propellant and food stocks are at ninety-nine percent."
"Well done, I see youâre taking control of the situation again. Go ahead" Petri urged, satisfied.
"All the remaining six members of the crew are in perfect condition. Shields and equipment are at maximum efficiency. The only problem is that we no longer have an H^COM to contact the Elders and report on the situation."
"And thatâs where youâre wrong" exclaimed Petri.
âWhat do you mean?â
"I mean thereâs still one working H^COM."
"But if the only one we had was destroyed with the spacecraft."
"What about the one we left with the terrestrials?"
"Gosh, youâre right! I hadnât thought of that. Weâll have to return and get them to give it to us."
"Calm down old chap, calm down. Weâve got time for that. First, Iâd go and have a look on the moon to see if we can recover anything from our beautiful ship that you merrily smashed into pieces."
âMe? What have I got to do with it? It was you who made it explode up there."
"And who was it who lost the remote-control system?"
"But that was your fault. The clasp was defective."
âAll right, all right! Whatâs done is done. Now letâs try to get to grips with this situation. Although Iâm an incurable optimist, at the moment, I canât see any brilliant solutions."
"Thatâll be the gamma waves" retorted Azakis, repaying his friend with the same currency. "Assuming of course that those four neurons lurking in your empty head are still able to emit them."
"After that pitiful joke, I can finally announce that the old Zak is once again amongst us. Welcome back."
"So, can you manage to get this shuttle to the explosion site without crashing into some lunar elevation?"
"Certainly sir. At your orders," exclaimed Petri, imitating the military ways he had often seen used by his terrestrial friends. "Destination moon" he added cheerfully, after having started the engines and set the course towards the satellite.
It took only a couple of minutes to reach the place where the Theos had disintegrated. The shuttle began to slowly fly over the area of the hidden face of the moon that had suffered the impact of the explosion. The ground, normally very bumpy and full of craters caused by ancient impacts of hundreds of meteorites that, over millions of years, had literally riddled it, now appeared incredibly smooth and flat for about six hundred square kilometres. The wave of energy generated by the explosion had swept everything away. Rocks, craters and depressions no longer existed. It was as if a giant steamroller had passed over the area, leaving behind it an endless expanse of soft grey sand.
"Incredible," exclaimed Petri. "Itâs like flying over the immense Sihar desert on Nibiru."
"Weâve made a big mess" said Azakis dejectedly.
"No. Canât you see how beautiful the view is now? Before the surface had more wrinkles than our Supreme Elder, now instead itâs as smooth as a babyâs skin."
"I donât think thereâs much of our beloved spacecraft left."
"I'm running a full in-depth scan of the area, but the biggest piece Iâve found is approximately a few cubic centimetres."
"Thereâs no denying it. The self-destruct system worked really well."
"Hey Zak" exclaimed Petri suddenly. "In your opinion, what's that?â and he pointed to a dark spot on the main screen.
"I wouldn't know... You canât see it very well. What do the sensors say?"
"Theyâre not picking anything up. According to them thereâs nothing but sand there, but I think I can see something else."
"Itâs impossible that the sensors canât pick something up. Try doing a calibration test."
"Just give me a second." Petri fiddled with a series of holographic controls then sentenced, "The parameters are within normal range. Everything seems to be working properly."
"Strange ... Letâs try and get a little closer."
Shuttle number six moved slowly in the direction of that strange object that seemed to emerge from the layer of dust and grey sand.
"Maximum magnification" Azakis ordered. âBut what is it?â
"From the little I can see, it looks like part of an artificial structure" Petri tried venturing.
"Artificial? I donât think any of us have ever installed anything on the moon."
"Perhaps it was the terrestrials. I seem to have read somewhere that theyâve completed several expeditions to this satellite."
"What is decidedly strange is that the sensors are not picking up anything of what our eyes instead are seeing."
"I donât know what to say. Perhaps the explosion has damaged them."
"But if you just ran a test and everything is working," answered Azakis perplexed.
"Then that stuff weâre seeing must be made of some material that is unknown to us and therefore that our sensors are unable to analyse."
"Are you trying to tell me that the terrestrials have managed to invent a compound that not even we know about, theyâve brought it up here and theyâve built a base or something with it?"
"And, moreover, now weâve even destroyed it for them," commented Petri dejectedly.
"Our friends never cease to amaze us, do they?"
âThatâs true... Well, weâve had a look around here. Iâd say we should leave it for the moment. Weâve got rather more important things to do right now. What do you say boss?"
"Iâd say youâre absolutely right. Considering that there doesnât seem to be anything usable left of the Theos anymore, I think we can leave."
"Heading for earth?"
"Letâs return to Elisaâs camp and try using her H^COM to contact Nibiru."
"And our travelling companions? We canât just leave them up here" said Petri.
"Weâll have to organise a support base on earth. We could set up a sort of camp close to that of our friends."
âSounds like a good idea to me. Shall I inform the rest of the crew?"
âYes. Give them the coordinates of the excavation site and ask them to organise the preparation of an emergency structure. Weâll go down there first, and weâll set about contacting the Elders."
âLetâs goâ said Petri cheerfully. "And to think that, until a little while ago, I was getting worried about how I was going to overcome the boredom of the return journey."
At the same time, at a distance of about 500 U.A. from our sun, a strange ovoid shaped object appeared practically out of nowhere, preceded by a streak of bluish lightning that tore through the absolute blackness of space. It moved in a straight line for almost a hundred thousand kilometres at an incredible speed before disappearing again, swallowed up by a sort of huge silvery vortex with golden reflections. The whole action lasted only a few seconds and then, as if nothing had happened, that place so remote and desolate, deep in space, plunged back into the total quiet in which it had been immersed until then.
Tell-el-Mukayyar â Contact with Nibiru
"Yes, Colonel," said a very refined voice on the other end of the phone. "We have received reports, from several observation points on earth, of an unnatural flash presumably given off by the moon."
âBut the moon doesnât give off âflashesâ,â said Jack vexed.
âYouâre right there, Sir. All I can tell you is that our scientists are still analysing the data weâve received in order to identify who or what caused it."
"So basically, you havenât the faintest idea what it was.â
"Well, I wouldn't have put it quite that way, but I think your inference can be considered a fair one.â
âJust listen to this guyâ said Jack, turning to Elisa who had joined him, as he covered the microphone of his mobile phone with his hand. âOkay. Thank you for the information,â he continued. "As soon as you have further news kindly contact me immediately.'
"Yes Sir, with pleasure. Goodbye have a good day," and he ended the conversation.
"What did they say?" asked the doctor.
"Well, it looks as though something strange actually happened up there, but nobody has found a decent explanation yet.â
"Iâm increasingly convinced that something happened to our friends."
"Come on, donât say that. With their fantastic spacecraft who knows where theyâll have got to by now.â
"I really hope so, with all my heart, but I still have a strange premonition."
"Listen, to get rid of any doubts, why donât we use that thing they left us and try to contact them?"
âI don't know ... They said we would only be able to use it after they arrived back on their planet ... I donât think ...â
âJust go and get it,â the Colonel cut her short. Then realising he had perhaps been a little too abrupt, he added a gentle âpleaseâ, followed by a dazzling smile.
âOkay. At worst it wonât work,â said Elisa as she set off to retrieve the portable H^COM. She returned almost immediately and, after rearranging her long hair slightly, she put on the kind of weird and bulky helmet.
"He said to press that button there," said Jack indicating the button. "Then the system would do everything by itself."
âWhat shall I do, shall I press it?â asked Elisa hesitating.
"Go on, what do you think is going to happen?â
The archaeologist pushed the button and, perhaps exaggerating the words a little too much, said "Hello? Anybody there?â
She waited but didnât receive an answer. She waited a little longer, then tried again. âHello... Hello... Petri, are you there? I canât hear anything.â
Elisa waited a few more seconds then spread her arms and shrugged.
âPress the button again,â suggested the Colonel.
They tried repeating this process several times, but the communication system failed to give them even a measly rustle.
âNothing doing. Perhaps something really did happen to them,â whispered Elisa as she removed the H^COM from her head.
âOr perhaps they still havenât arrived within this thingâs range of action.â
The Colonel hadnât finished his last sentence when a strange noise from outside caught their attention.
âJack, lookâ exclaimed Elisa amazed as she looked out of the tent. âThe spheres... Theyâre being reactivated.â
With their hearts in their mouths, they both ran outside and, to their amazement, saw the virtual landing pyramid that was again taking shape. Their friends were returning.
"See they didnât explode," said Jack greatly cheered-up.
"Perhaps they forgot something.â
"The important thing is that they're okay. Letâs try and keep calm. Weâll soon find out what really happened.â
The landing procedure went ahead without problems and, in no time at all, the large figures of the two aliens appeared on the descending platform.
âHello guys,â bellowed Petri, waving his big hand above his head.
"What on earth are you doing here again?" asked Jack, as the two aliens were carried down to ground level by the moving structure.
"We were missing you," replied Petri jumping down from that sort of lift, even before it had touched the ground, immediately followed by his travelling companion.
"We were worried" said Elisa finally reassured. "We witnessed a strange event that occurred on the moon a little while ago and we seriously feared that something terrible had happened to you.â
"Unfortunately, my dear, something terrible really did happen," said Azakis with a forlorn air.
"There you are, I knew it," exclaimed Elisa. âA little voice inside me kept telling me so. But what happened?"
"It all happened really suddenly.â
âSo, are you going to tell us? Come on, donât keep us on tenterhooks. Just tell us everything, now.â
"Our spacecraft no longer exists," Azakis announced all in one breath.
The two terrestrials looked at one another for a moment, absolutely stunned. Then Jack spoke, saying "Are you joking? What does âno longer existsâ mean?â
"It means that, right now, the biggest piece of the Theos could quite easily fit on the tip of your index finger.â
"But what happened? And the rest of the crew, where are they? Are they all well?"
"Yes, they're fine, thank you. Right now, theyâre on the other three shuttles and very soon theyâll be here too. If you don't mind, we will set up an emergency structure around here and weâll try to organise ourselves somehow."
"But of course, that's not a problem," said Jack. "Weâll give you all the help we can. You don't even need to ask."
âSo,â blurted out Elisa who could no longer hold back her curiosity. "Are you going to tell us yes or no what the devil happened up there?"
"It's rather a long story," said Azakis seating himself on an upturned tin pail. âMake yourselves comfortable.â
After about ten minutes, the alien had pretty much told them the whole story. From the loss of the remote-control system, to the attempt to deactivate it. From the recklessness of having given up on its recovery, up to the sudden reactivation of the instrument which had then caused the launching of the self-destruction process.
"But thatâs shocking," said Elisa appalled. âWhoever can have caused a disaster like that?â
"Probably," said Azakis, âsomebody must have found that strange object and began to study its features. Then they must have found some information among all the data we downloaded onto your servers and, somehow, managed to turn it back on, so causing the result we now know.â
"For crying out loud!" exclaimed the Colonel upset. "It seems such an absurd story... And, knowing the danger of a device like that, you didnât do anything to recover it?â
"It was my fault," said Petri, joining in the discussion. âI thought Iâd completely deactivated it and that no terrestrial, even if somebody did find it, would be able to reactivate it.â
âAnd yet it happened,â said Jack. "Do you have any idea where it was lost?â
"We honestly thought weâd lost it while retrieving the Zenio crystal but, most probably, it must have ended up somewhere else, that was much more crowded. There was no one at all down there.â
âZak, Iâve had an idea,â said Petri standing up. "I think that if I worked on it a bit, I might be able to backtrack and trace the moment the remote control was unhooked from your belt."
"Itâs not all that important now, but I must admit I too am a little curious about it."
âGood. So first of all, letâs try and inform the Elders about our situation and as soon as we're organised a little, I'll try and retrieve this information."
âElisa,â said Azakis. "Unfortunately, the only H^COM we had was destroyed with the Theos. Would you kindly lend us the one we left you before we took off?â
"Do you mean the helmet? But of course. Iâll get it for you straight away."
"Unfortunately, the situation is serious,â whispered Azakis turning to the Colonel, as soon as Elisa had moved far enough away to be out of earshot. "Even if we do manage to contact the Elders, the chances we can get back to our own planet are virtually nil now. "
âBut canât they send someone to pick you up? Hasnât Zaneki also got a ship like yours?â
"Unfortunately, the engines installed on his ship are considerably less powerful than the ones we had on ours. Thatâs why he had to leave almost immediately after Kodonâs passage. If he hadn't, he wouldnât have been able to reach Nibiru anymore, because it was moving rapidly away. We were able to stay here much longer precisely by virtue of our experimental engines. Unfortunately, the Theos was the only ship in our fleet with that type of engine. The production and installation of two more new ones like that could take a lot of time. A lot of âourâ time."
"You mean you might have to stay here until Nibiruâs next passage?â
"Here it is," said Elisa as she came hurrying back towards them.
"Unfortunately, yes Jack," said Azakis in a whisper, as he rose to take the H^COM helmet that the archaeologist was holding out to him.
âThank you, Elisaâ said the alien as he put it on. âLetâs see if it works.â
"Actually, we tried it ourselves, but we didn't manage to talk to anyone."
"Thatâs my friendâs work," commented Azakis looking towards Petri. âNothing he does ever works.â
âNice as always,â said Petri with a serious air. "I'll remember that when you ask me to fix your bathroom.â
âOh yes,â exclaimed Elisa smiling. âI remember only too well how your bathrooms work. A truly unforgettable experience."
All four broke out into a roar of laughter at the end of which Petri slipped the helmet out of Azakisâ hands and said, "Wait, you ungrateful old thing. First, I need to change a setting. The system was programmed to call us on the poor old Theos and I donât think anybody will answer you there now.â
The alien fiddled around for a bit with the controls of the portable H^COM then, when he was satisfied with his work, he passed it back again to his companion saying "Try now. Hopefully my memory hasnât betrayed me, and Iâve been able to configure it to connect you to the right person.â
Azakis didnât doubt his friendâs memory even for one moment and put the helmet on. He pressed the start button and waited patiently. Almost a minute went by before the three-dimensional image of the bony face of his direct line Elder was projected directly onto the retina of his rather tired eyes.
âAzakis, how nice to see you,â said his white-haired contact, raising his slender right arm in greeting. "But where are you calling me from? Your picture looks a little strange and rather distorted."
"It's a long story," answered the alien. âI'm using a makeshift device for long distance communication."
"But arenât you on your ship? Donât tell me you still haven't left. You know that your time limit for reaching us has almost run out now, donât you?"
"That is exactly what I wanted to talk to you about.â He paused briefly to try and find the most appropriate words then continued saying, "Thereâs been a setback... Our spacecraftâs gone."
âGone? What do you mean?"
âIt exploded. The self-destruct system was activated, and we only just made it to safety in time, before everything exploded into thousands of pieces."
âBut only you could activate that procedure with your personal remote-control system. How could something like this happen?â asked the stunned Elder.
"Let's say there were a series of particular events, and I must have dropped it.â
"And someone else found it and activated it for you?â
"We still haven't been able to determine what really happened but that's a distinct possibility."
âAnd now? How do you plan to get back here?â
"That's exactly why we're contacting you. We could do with a nice quick solution to this little problem.â
âLittle?â replied the Elder jumping to his feet with surprising nimbleness. âDo you realize what you're saying? Your time frame is already almost at its maximum limit. You should have already left and youâre telling me that the Theos no longer exists and youâre pretty much stuck on earth. What are we supposed to do now?"
âWell, I don't really know. You're the Elders. Weâre trusting that, with your experience and your infinite wisdom, youâll be able to help us out of this unfortunate situation."
The old man sat down again, letting himself fall heavily into his soft grey chair, then he leant his elbows on the table in front of him and put his hands in his long white hair, remaining in complete silence. He remained still for a few seconds then he lifted his gaze again and said, "Iâll try summoning the Council urgently and Iâll put all our best Experts to work. I hope to be able to give you good news very soonâ and he ended the communication.