Creative Commons – The Plainsrunner – Chapter Thirty-Nine

Continuing the serial release of The Plainsrunner under a Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike license – (CC-BY-SA).

This one is longer than the last one. It gets us off the ground.

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rjb

Chapter Thirty-Nine – The Launch

Three weeks later Tallgrass was in his acceleration harness on top of a big rocket, ready to launch. During those three weeks he’d been involved in a constant blur of controlled panic, as they hurriedly compressed the final year of preparation down to less than a month. Everything was completed on time and to the agency’s strict standards. They might have felt that they needed to get it done fast, but they didn’t let themselves forget to do it right.

They dealt with the expected delays quickly and efficiently. All of their suppliers and sub-contractors were just as anxious to get there first as they were, so problems were rare and quickly overcome. The unexpected delays took a little longer. In fact, they weren’t unexpected or unanticipated. Not really. They expected the sabotage attempts to pick up their pace along with the program, so they prepared themselves for more shootings and bombings, and they weren’t disappointed.

None of the sabotage did any irreparable damage to their progress. Because the LLL had to rush their planning as well, their attempts were easier to detect and stop. The launch site was under heavy security. No one was getting in if they didn’t belong there. No aircraft were allowed to fly near the place, much less over it. All sites in the surrounding area that might have been used to launch long range attacks with rockets or mortars were secured.

Personnel, including the flight crew, were kept on site to avoid exposing them to attack on the outside. There were some complaints about that, notably from Blunt who claimed that he could take care of himself, but the rule stood. Security was just as good trying to get out as it was trying to get in, as Blunt discovered when he tried to sneak out for a night on the town. He was told that a second incident would mean his removal from the crew, to be replaced by one of the eager alternates. And no, it didn’t matter who his father was.

Everything got done on time and they were ready to go. The crew was in the capsule on top of the rocket, and the rocket was ready to be lit. Tallgrass had his mother’s glider tied down beside him. She had insisted he take it because she said she had a hunch, even though she couldn’t say specifically what about. “Just take it,” she’d said. “What can it hurt?”

Tallgrass was strapped in and Seagrass, who’d had his title changed from Mission Control Specialist to Mission Control Generalist, was at his station, connected to his friend by radio. He said, “Mission Generalist Tallgrass, this is Mission Control Generalist Seagrass, over.” When Tallgrass replied, he said, “All of my indicators are green here. You’re ready to go. This is your last chance to change your mind.”

Tallgrass laughed, perhaps a little too loudly. “Fat chance of that, Sea,” he said. “They just strapped me in here. I don’t think they’d be very happy if I asked them to come back.”

“Okay,” said Seagrass. “Don’t say I didn’t give you the opportunity.”

“I won’t,” said Tallgrass. “Just hurry up and light this thing, before the triple-L finds a way to stop us.”

“They’re not getting anywhere near you, T. The only way they can do anything now is if they have someone on the inside.”

“And what are the odds of that?” said Tallgrass.

“Slim to none,” said Seagrass, who shared his trust of his teammates.

So, with the confidence of those who know the quality of their own work, and that of their team, they waited for the launch. They weren’t overly worried about sabotage, and it was only one of ten thousand things that could go wrong anyway. They knew that something could happen and their years of preparation could be gone in an instant, but they also knew that the odds were in their favor.

They continued talking and joking quietly until, at last, the moment arrived. The planet’s rotation and the current position of the space station combined to give them the ideal time to launch, and they ignited the rocket.

There followed several minutes of noise and crushing weight and shaking and fear and exhilaration, and then they were on orbit. It was peaceful after the extremes of the launch, but it was still busy. They had to run down their checklists and make sure that everything was right. Was the capsule functioning properly? Were they on the right orbit? When all that was settled, they just had to catch up with the station and dock with it. They had about an hour of sightseeing.

Tallgrass leaned against his straps and craned to look out of one of their small observation ports. Even with all his training, the pictures and video, and the stories of those who’d been there ahead of him, seeing his planet from up here made him gasp.

Blunt was piloting the capsule. Mission Specialist Blunt was the best pilot in their crew of four. At the moment he wasn’t doing much piloting, since the flight computers were controlling the spacecraft during this phase. He would take over when they got to the station and needed his oversight for docking with it. For now though, he was as much of a passenger as the rest of them. He heard Tallgrass gasp, and said, “Quite the view, eh Runny?”

The third crew member was Supervisor Steel, a working member of the crew, but invested with the final authority. He was older than the rest of them, and by his appearance and the way he carried himself, he looked as if he merited his vested authority. In his firm but quiet voice, he said, “Mission Specialist Blunt, you will address your crewmates by their correct title.”

After Blunt acknowledged the order, Tallgrass said, “It’s all right, Supervisor Steel. We’ve known each other a long time, and Blunt has always called me Runny.”

Steel looked closely at both of them, then said, “If you say so, Mission Generalist Tallgrass. It’s just that you’re the only Plainsrunner on the crew. In the program, if you want to be exact. I want to be sure that there’s no bigotry on my crew. That’s all.”

“It’s not bigotry, sir. Don’t worry about that.” Tallgrass glanced at Blunt, who was frowning at him suspiciously. Maybe he was remembering the incident that backfired on the polo pitch. “We’ve known each other a long time,” Tallgrass continued, “and it’s just part of the way we interact.”

“All right, Tallgrass,” said Steel. “If you say so.” He looked at Blunt. “If you’ve known each other for a long time, Blunt, then you must be friends with Mission Control Generalist Seagrass, too.”

Blunt’s eyes shifted between Steel and Tallgrass, who gave him a little nod. He relaxed and said, “Yes, Supervisor. Me and Seagrass go back a long way, too.”

“I see,” said Steel. “Do you have a nickname for him, too?”

“Uh, no,” said Blunt. “Just, uh, Tallgrass.”

“Okay,” said Steel. “As long as it’s all right with Tallgrass, then I don’t have a problem with it. I’d prefer you said, ‘Runner’ rather than ‘Runny’ but I’ll leave that up to you two.”

Tallgrass and Blunt were nodding when the fourth member of the crew said, “There it is!” She was leaning forward, looking out the front window. The station was visible, and now she could pick out the big robotic assembly arm behind it, and a small part of the vessels being constructed there. “There’s our ship. Can you see it?”

Steel and Tallgrass leaned forward and put their heads between the front harnesses, and Steel said, “Yes, Mission Specialist Wayfarer. I do see it. That’s where we’ll be living for the next … well, unforeseeable, really.”

“Yes, sir.” She was excited, and even her prey eyes were alight when she turned her head to look at him. “A week out and a week back, and whatever time we need to spend there.”

“Up to a month,” said Tallgrass. “Six weeks if we ration our resources.”

Wayfarer deflated a little, and beside her Blunt said, “Way to bring us down, Run- … Runner.”

Wayfarer put a hand on Blunt’s arm and said, “No, it’s all right. The important thing is the mission. This isn’t a sightseeing vacation.”

Steel said, “Well said, Wayfarer. I don’t mind a little enthusiasm. A little sense of wonder. But you’re right. Not at the expense of the job at hand.” He looked forward again and grinned. “It looks great though, doesn’t it?”

“Yeah,” she said, craning, trying to see more. “I can’t wait to get aboard.”

“Tomorrow,” said Tallgrass. “After …” He stopped when he noticed them all looking at him. “Right. You all know that.” There were drawbacks to knowing so much about so many things, one of which was the tendency to assume that you knew more than the people around you. Even worse was the habit of enlightening them, something that Tallgrass’s hunger for knowledge, and the urge to share it, made him prone to.

He was relieved when an alarm signaled their proximity to the station, and Blunt turned and put his hands on the controls. Beside him, Wayfarer faced her own set of controls, ready to jump in if necessary.

Blunt’s docking went as smoothly as the hundreds of simulations he’d done, with just the slightest bump to indicate contact. The docking clamps gave them more of a jolt, and they were louder, too. They waited for the seals to confirm they were tight, then for the station to open its door, then they opened theirs and crawled through. Supervisor Steel went first, followed by Blunt. At Tallgrass’s insistence, Wayfarer went next, and he went last.

They were met by three of the space station’s crew, bearing gifts and hugs and big smiles. Tallgrass knew that there were three more on board who were busy spotting for the three working outside. Normally the three who met them would be on their down shift, resting. They worked in three shifts. One was outside, working on the construction of the spacecraft. One was inside, spotting for the workers and handling the big arm. And the third shift was for rest and personal activity. This is when they would talk to people back home, or catch up on the news, and, of course, sleep. But arrivals at the station were always such a big event that they would forego all of that to make them properly welcome.

With the greeting ceremony completed, they were led into the station proper and introduced to the three working there, and by radio to the three outside. They watched them work for a few minutes on a skeletal structure that they knew would be the second ship, then they were led to another window. Out there, bright in the sunlight, was their ship, looking white and fresh. And, though Tallgrass didn’t mention it to the others, small. It was close quarters in the space station, especially now with four extra bodies, but the sphere that was to be their home for the following weeks was a lot smaller.

Here on the station, he knew, each member of the crew had their own private space. As well, there were several modules that had been joined to make the station, and each gave the illusion of being a separate space. It was possible here to go somewhere to be alone. The inside of that sphere out there was all one space, with curtains to close off their sleeping areas and the sanitation facilities. When not behind a curtain, they would all be in one room together, pretty well all within arm’s reach of one another. Something else they had on this station was a room where a person could seal themselves in and have a shower of sorts. There was no such amenity on their ship.

Tallgrass knew that under the inflated fabric of the outer hull was an inner, metal shell made of joined, curved triangles. The wide ends of the triangles met at the sphere’s equator, and the points at the poles. The multi-layered fabric would protect them from micro-meteoroids, while the metal formed a rigid foundation. The inner sphere where they would live was actually smaller than the craft appeared with its inflated outer shell. And both were dwarfed by the rocket assembly and fuel tank bolted on back. It looked small, and it looked sort of unfinished. Nothing like the smooth, polished spaceships in the books and movies he’d seen. But that didn’t matter. This spaceship was the pinnacle of his world’s achievements. And it was his spaceship. It was built for him and his three crewmates, and he would fly it with pride.

He wanted to giggle. He wanted to laugh out loud and run in a big, wide circle. But he couldn’t. He didn’t think it would be appropriate to giggle and laugh on this occasion, and there was no room to run around, even if there had been gravity. So he hung there in the air, his legs drawn up under his body and his arms bent in front of him in the classic microgravity posture, and looked very seriously at his space ship.

They would spend the rest of the day on the station, and tomorrow they would put on their pressure suits, go out the airlock, and cross over to their new home.

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Creative Commons – The Plainsrunner – Chapter Thirty-Eight


Continuing the serial release of The Plainsrunner under a Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike license – (CC-BY-SA).

Blunt’s sneery smirk is back.

Please join in the conversation. If you like this, let someone know so they can enjoy it, too.

rjb

Chapter Thirty-Eight – Sunward

The loss of five members meant that the team had to reach into the pool of backups, which is why Blunt ended up on Tallgrass’s crew. The first he knew about it was when Blunt stuck his head in the door and said, “Hey Runny!”

Tallgrass looked up from his book, and his face must have fallen because Blunt’s lit up with a sneery grin. Tallgrass said, “What are you doing here, Blunt?”

“I live here,” said Blunt, looking for signs in Tallgrass’s face. “I work here.” He moved into the room. “We’re teammates now, Runny. You’re going to be seeing a lot of me.”

“Well, come on in, teammate,” said Tallgrass. “Pull up a pad. Take a load off.” He reached for his bookmark, because he was sure he wouldn’t be getting any reading done for a while.

Blunt snatched the book out of his hand, losing his place. “Whaddaya reading?” he said, looking at the cover. “Orbital harmonics?” He sneered and tossed the book down. It bounced off the desk and hit the floor, bending some pages. As Tallgrass picked it up and straightened the pages, Blunt said, “Why bother reading that crap? The computers take care of all that.”

“I like to know,” said Tallgrass. “I like to know everything about the subject.”

“Why? You don’t need to know all that extra stuff. Or maybe you’re sucking up. Is that it, Runny? Are you still sucking up? You don’t have to, you know. You’re already in.”

“Is that what you did?” asked Tallgrass. “Did you suck up to get in?”

Blunt’s insinuating smirk was replaced by a frown. “No!” he said. “I didn’t have to suck up. My father knows people.”

“So, you’re here because your father knows people.”

“That’s not the only reason,” shouted Blunt. “He got me in, but I know my stuff. I just don’t bother with the useless extras.”

“I guess that’s where we differ, Blunt. To me, knowledge isn’t useless.” He put the book on his desk, bookmark firmly in place. “Besides, I’m helping Seagrass, too.”

“Yeah. That was too bad. It’s too bad your cripple friend can’t be here, Runny. But on the bright side, you got me.” Blunt got up and walked to the door. “I’ll be seeing you around,” he said as he left.

Tallgrass sat and thought for a long time, then he sighed, shook his head, and picked up his book.

Sunward asked Grasswind to use focused beam radio when communicating, as they had done with their first message. They said they didn’t want to risk the “destroying angels” picking up their signals and coming back to punish them again.

That was interesting. Grasswind asked Sunward if they had a record of the first attack. Did they have solid evidence of what happened?

Sunward replied that they had accounts of the events as written down by their prophets and seers in the sacred language of the Great Mystery.

Okay, said Grasswind. So no actual data, then.

The heavenly inspired word is better than your base data, was the reply.

There wasn’t much to say to that, so Grasswind allowed that they had legends of their own, which bore some loose similarities to the picture they were putting together out of the facts. Sunward told them bluntly that their legends were wrong and that they would be straightened out in time.

Over the months, talk eventually came around to Grasswind’s L1 Lagrange point, and its odd behavior. Sunward said that they had noticed it too, and they were going to fly out there and investigate it.

Grasswind was surprised and pleased to discover that their sister planet also had a space program. They marveled at the coincidental timing after all these millennia. Sunward told them that it was no coincidence. They’d had a stable civilization with moderate technology for centuries, and they only began the space program when Grasswind’s promiscuous use of radio alerted them to the danger. What danger? Why, that the venal people from the wrong planet might get there first.

When asked tactfully why they had radio technology in the first place, they replied that it was to monitor for just such a situation as this.

“We can’t let them get there first,” said Tallgrass, his voice rising. He was in Trueway’s office, with the early morning sun beating off the sea and streaming in the window.

Trueway, surprised by the early visit and still waiting for his cup of tea to cool down enough for the first sip, said, “Why not?”

Tallgrass hesitated. “I don’t know,” he said. “I just know we can’t.”

Trueway smiled and raised his cup. His top lip quivered tentatively over the hot liquid before withdrawing. He lowered the cup to his desk. “I know what you mean,” he said. “I don’t want them to get there first either. But we need more than our feelings if we want people to change the schedule and speed up the program.” He eyed the tea again.

Tallgrass’s cup was steaming on his side of the desk, ignored. “We don’t have to speed it up much,” he said. “We’re almost ready to go now.”

“No we’re not. We’ve barely finished the first vessel, and we’ve hardly begun on the second one.”

“We don’t need to take both of them. We can have the first one checked out, stocked and ready to go in a couple of weeks.”

“A couple of weeks?” Trueway picked up his cup again and took a drink, flinching when it burned him. “That seems hasty. I don’t want to send people out there unprepared.”

“Okay, three weeks then. That’s plenty of time to finalize the planning, program the computers with the flight parameters, prepare the vessel and complete our training.”

“But your training isn’t nearly complete. There’s still another year of it scheduled.”

“That’s just repetition. We know everything we need to know. I’m telling you, we’re ready to go.” He picked up his cup as Trueway turned to gaze out the window. They both sipped and thought for a few minutes, then Trueway turned back.

“I agree with you,” he said, making Tallgrass grin. “But we need to convince everybody else. The Director. The governments. It won’t be easy.”

It turned out it wasn’t that difficult after all. The Director had been preparing to call him that morning, and was pleasantly surprised by his call. Representatives of all the governments had already called her, urging her to bring the launch forward as much as possible. “So Deputy Director,” she said, “what can you do to satisfy their wishes?”

“Well Director,” he said, “as Mission Generalist Tallgrass says, we can be ready to launch in three weeks. Two if we decide to push it.”

“I see,” said Director Allbright. “Tallgrass is there, is he?”

“Yes. He came first thing to try to get the program accelerated.”

“Good man,” she said. “Does he happen to have an estimate for how long it will take the Sunwardians to get there?”

Trueway switched the phone to speaker and repeated the question to Tallgrass, who said, “Yes, Director. It depends on many factors, of course, but our best guess is six weeks, if they left right when we got the message.”

“Six weeks,” she said. “And if we launch in three weeks, we can be there four weeks from now. Are you sure about these numbers?”

“Yes,” he said, “depending on when they launched, of course. I made some estimates, but Seagrass confirmed them with solid calculations.”

“Seagrass,” she said. “Your friend. Of course. Very sad.” They shared a short silence, then she said, “I visited him in the hospital shortly after the incident, and was very impressed. When I tried to congratulate him for his unselfish act – saving you – he wouldn’t have any of it. He only wanted to tell me how important you are to the program. You have quite the friend there, Mission Generalist Tallgrass.”

“I know, Director, but he’s the one who’s important to the program. He knows more about it than anybody.”

“Okay,” she said. “We obviously have a case of mutual admiration here. But from where I stand, you’re both important. That’s why you will be on the flight crew, and Seagrass will be in Mission Control. Be ready to launch in three weeks.”

“Yeah!” said Tallgrass, taking a large swig of his tea. He couldn’t wait to tell Seagrass.

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Creative Commons – The Plainsrunner – Chapter Thirty-Seven


Continuing the serial release of The Plainsrunner under a Creative Commons Attribution Share-Alike license – (CC-BY-SA).

Grasswind replies to Sunward’s message.

Please join in the conversation. If you like this, let someone know so they can enjoy it, too.

rjb

Chapter Thirty-Seven – The Reply

Long before they were ready to launch, Seagrass was back and working in the mission control division. It was his body that was damaged, not his mind, and he was fully capable of doing the duties of a Mission Control Specialist. Thanks to Tallgrass he was more capable than most, if not all, of his co-workers. The time the two of them spent on the material ensured that Seagrass was well abreast of developments on the whole, and well ahead in many cases.

The murderer, who was taken alive, claimed to be working alone, and there was no way they could prove otherwise. So, while he didn’t kill and injure those young people at the request of anyone, he did claim to have done it in honor of one of the groups opposed to the space program. There were several of those, and most of them caused trouble and some delays, but only one of them was truly dangerous. Only one of them swore to bring down the space program by whatever means necessary, including all forms of violence. They were linked to numerous attempts, including bombings, successful and aborted. They were totally committed to the exhortations of their leader, willing to take suicide missions to fulfill his ambitions. There were no pictures of him, and no one knew his name, but everyone knew the name of the LLL. The Living Lesson League.

The Living Lesson League believed the legends about destruction falling out of the sky, and they believed that it would happen again if they didn’t learn their lesson from the first time. They believed that it happened all those thousands of years ago because they got above themselves. They built their civilization too high, and their buildings too tall. They used too much technology and removed themselves too far from their natural path. They relied too much on machines and made things too easy for themselves. They presumed to lift themselves into space, which was obviously the domain of the mysterious, all-powerful force that knocked them back down. The League believed all that and its members were willing to sacrifice themselves to save their world from another catastrophe.

It is very hard to fight people who are unselfishly dedicated to an altruistic cause. You can’t talk to them because the only time you see them is when they’re trying to kill you or destroy your work. If you could talk to them you couldn’t reason with them because to them you are at least deluded, and possibly evil, and you are an impediment to their cause. All you can do is try to anticipate and prevent their incursions. When that fails, you just have to hope you can react well enough to minimize the damage, and that you can learn something for next time.

The shooting in the auditorium wasn’t the largest loss of life in a single attack. There were incidents that killed more people, as well as seriously damaging property and equipment. Even so this became the worst attack in the popular imagination, partly because it was so public, and partly because of the important people involved. Dignitaries and other public figures were injured, and it became a very big story. For practical purposes, though, it was the deaths and injuries among the flight crew trainees that made it the worst attack ever. These were special people whose qualifications and training made them almost irreplaceable. So, while their lives weren’t more important than any of the lives lost in other attacks, their loss was harder to overcome.

Because of the nature and the timing of the shooting, the Director never got to make her announcement, and that story was buried for a while by the more violent one. Some people thought that must have been part of the LLL’s plan. Whether or not it was, the effect was the same. The story of the message got lost in the turmoil, and their response to it was delayed.

It wouldn’t stay that way for long, though. The Unified Grasswind Space Program, other scientific bodies, and all the world’s governments had to begin thinking about it, almost before the smell of gun smoke had left the auditorium. Was the message genuine? What did it mean? Should they reply? What should the reply say?

In all it took less than a week to decide. By the end of the fourth day after the shooting they were ready to transmit a reply.

“What does it say?” asked Seagrass. He was lying on his side on a raised pad, tubes and wires running to the devices surrounding it. His voice was weak and he didn’t open his eyes. This was the first time Tallgrass was allowed to visit, and he wouldn’t be staying long. Seagrass had interrupted his commiserations to ask about the message.

Tallgrass didn’t waste time fussing after that. From then on his visits were almost all business. In the early days, news and gossip from the outside world, and especially from the project. Later on, almost all work-related, as he strove to keep Seagrass up-to-date. On this day, though, there was just time for the message. Tallgrass cleared his throat and said, “It’s short, like theirs. It says, ‘Greetings to the people of Sunward. The people of Grasswind received your message with joy. We hope all is well with you.’“

Seagrass was quiet for a moment, then he chuckled softly, wincing with pain as he did. When Tallgrass asked, he said, “Twenty-two words. They sent twenty-three, and we sent twenty-two.” He kept chuckling and wincing.

Tallgrass laughed too, and said, “I wonder if their next message will be twenty-one.” He struggled to keep his laughter quiet.

“Ow, ow, ow,” said Seagrass, helpless to stop laughing in spite of the pain. He opened his eyes and looked at his friend, his expression mixing mirth with agony. “Ow, ow, ow.”

Tallgrass tried to choke down his laughter. He got up and walked over to the window to break the contagious feedback. Behind him he heard Seagrass slowly get control. He stopped saying “ow” and settled into a series of soft moans. When those stopped, Tallgrass walked back to the bedside. “I’m sorry about that,” he said carefully.

Seagrass shifted gingerly on his pad and said, just as carefully, “Don’t be sorry. This is the best I’ve felt in days.”

A nurse came in then and bustled over to read the instruments. He glowered at Tallgrass and said, “You weren’t supposed to get him agitated. You’ll have to leave now.”

“But …” said Tallgrass as he was herded toward the door.

“Keep moving,” said the nurse. “I can’t allow you to disturb my patients.”

Tallgrass gave up and let himself be herded. At the door he stopped and looked back at Seagrass, who was smiling, even though he looked awful. “I’ll come back tomorrow, Sea,” he said.

“Okay,” said Seagrass, flinching from the effort of raising his voice. “Hold on,” he said to the nurse. They waited by the door while he collected himself. Finally he said, “Thanks for coming, T. I’m glad you’re okay.” Then he dropped his head on the pillow and closed his eyes.

As the nurse ushered Tallgrass out of the room, he said, “You two must be good friends. When he woke up after the surgery, the first thing he wanted to know was if you were all right.” He stopped in the hallway and faced Tallgrass. “Usually they want to know what happened. Then they want to know if they’re going to be all right. But this one asked after you.” He looked hard into Tallgrass’s eyes. “You have a very special friend there,” he said.

Tallgrass nodded. “I know,” he said. “I’ve always known that, but now, with all this, I really know.” He looked at the closed door. “I could have lost him,” he said. “He threw himself in front of those bullets, and I could have lost him.”

The nurse’s eyes softened and he said, “Maybe he’s chosen a good one. You must have done something right to have a friend like that.”

“Thank you,” said Tallgrass. He nodded to the nurse, took a last look at the door, then walked out of the hospital.

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