Read Pegasus in Space Online

Authors: Anne McCaffrey

Pegasus in Space (58 page)

With a slightly possessive and very loverly arm about Ceara’s shoulders, Peter lifted his glass.

“A man’s reach must exceed his grasp,” he said, grinning at everyone in the room.

EPILOGUE:
FOURTEEN YEARS LATER

T
he bottles of champagne, carefully imported from Earth, were chilling in buckets full of Callisto’s ice: undrinkable, of course, but capable of cooling wine.

The same cast of characters with a few important additions, Peter thought, glancing around those standing and sitting in the control Tower of the Federated Telepath and Teleport installation on Tithonus, now a satellite of Jupiter’s tenth moon, Callisto. He was even getting accustomed to the great mottled orange Jovian bulk that was seldom missing from the thick wraparound windows.

Callisto Tower, as the Tithonus installation was called, was ready for this historic moment. Admiral Dirk Coetzer, silver-haired and bursting with pride, was seated at one console. He was to have the honor of issuing the command to the Tower team to begin the
ISS Bradbury
’s historic teleportation to its destination, Capella.

For this great endeavor, Lance was tuning the great Tower’s Gadriel generators, buried deep in the core of Tithonus. Peter could hear them singing in his favorite key, C major.

On one screen, former Commander Dash Sakai had the massive bulk of the
Bradbury
at her mooring off Padrugoi. On the other, he was getting the highest possible resolution on the visual of the M-5 planet in the Capella system. Madlyn, his wife of many years, sat beside him, beaming proudly at him.

Among the spectators specially invited for this occasion were Rhyssa and Dave Lehardt, though their teenage sons, Eoin and Chester, were beginning to fidget. Also present were Sascha and Tirla Roznine, Shandin Ross, the Admiral’s longtime aide and telepath, and Nicola Nizukami, now
a chief petty officer. To one side was Amariyah Bantam, chief hydroponics engineer and emergency medic, with an imperious tilt to her determined chin, at the fore of the rest of the Tower staff. More than half of the forty men and women had some psychic ability—Talent, Peter liked to call it, with a capital
T!
Only Dorotea Horvath and Professor Gadriel were missing from those whom Peter had assembled for this occasion. Peter smiled in sad remembrance of how proud Dorotea had been when he had placed Tithonus perfectly at its Lagrange point above Callisto.

“And now you have the right place to stand, don’t you, Peter?” Dorotea had murmured for his ears alone.

Peter shook himself loose from the memories, and concentrated on the task to hand. Johnny Greene, in the informal AirForce blue coverall he preferred, occupied one of the three conformable couches. Sally, his wife, stood proudly beside him. On the second couch was Scott Gates, looking just a trifle nervous about his part in the imminent ceremony. Peter would occupy the third and now his wife, Ceara, smilingly beckoned for him to take his place.

The comunit bleeped.

“Callisto Tower, this is Captain Gale Johnson of the colony ship
Bradbury
, all systems are green for lift.” The captain used the new term Peter had selected to replace “teleportation,” a lengthy and somewhat daunting word.

“Very good, Captain Johnson,” Admiral Coetzer said, nodding significantly to Peter who stretched out on the third couch. “Are you ready, Tower Prime?”

Peter took a deep breath, looked over at Johnny’s wicked expression and Scott’s rather apprehensive one.

“We are indeed, Admiral,” he said, closing his eyes and “feeling” for the support of the other two minds. “Initiating the merge.” He reached out for Johnny’s mind, suddenly as professionally alert as Scott Gates’s. “Admiral Coetzer, do the honors!”


Bradbury
, this is Callisto Tower, initiating lift.”

The generators peaked, keening under the strain as Peter Reidinger, John Greene, and Scott Gates hurled the million-tonne ship out to the stars. Everyone inhaled sharply as the
Bradbury
disappeared from the Padrugoi screen.

“Well,” Admiral Coetzer said with a tight smile. “That’s that.”

Johnny Greene looked sharply at him but it was Peter who spoke. “Admiral, I think we need to talk about our contract.”

Dirk laughed. “It seems we’re always talking contracts!” But he shook his head, pointing to the monitor showing where the
Bradbury
had been. “You’ve proven that you can send the
Bradbury
somewhere—but it’ll be another forty years before even that pet SPOT of yours will see the light of that starship shining back from Capella.”

Peter’s eyes gleamed. “So you’re saying, Admiral, that until we can prove that we have lifted the
Bradbury
the forty-five light years to Capella, we will have a hard time revising your contract with FT&T?”

Dirk Coetzer nodded. “I’m afraid so. I
know
you can do it but others are going to want to see proof.”

“I told you so,” Johnny muttered to himself smugly.

“Well, how about we step over here,” Peter said, motioning the admiral toward Dash’s monitors, “so we can discuss proof more objectively.”

Dirk sighed. “Peter, I don’t think there’s much more to—” His eyes latched onto the telescope’s image of Capella’s M-5 planet. “What’s that?” the admiral pointed to the glittering speck now visible.

“That’s the
Bradbury
orbiting Capella,” Dash Sakai said, somehow managing to keep his voice steady as if he were reporting no more than a normal arrival.

Dirk’s jaw dropped and he turned first to Johnny, then to Peter, raising a finger accusingly. “You knew! You lifted it back in time. Why didn’t you tell me? Do you know what that means? Do you know how this will speed up our explorations? How did you do it?”

It was Peter who answered him. “In order, yes, we did know—or at least we were pretty sure. We didn’t tell you because we only had the one lift to Mars to go by and there was enough time between our lift and their getting those critical replacement units that it could have been a normal space translation. We know that without this sort of timely transportation and communication, all the colony worlds will be doomed to lag technically behind Earth—because it will take at least as many years as they are light-years distant for news and inventions to travel to them.

“And how did we do it?” Peter finished with a smile, “We do it naturally.”

Dirk quirked his eyebrows at this confident and oh, so powerful, young man.

“Remember,” Peter said softly, “we have to ‘see’ what we’re lifting—at both ends. Then we ‘tune’ ourselves to do the job.”

“Peter—no, Mr. Reidinger,” Dirk’s face burst into a huge grin and he grabbed Peter’s hand, pumping it fiercely, “you’ll get that new contract. Hell, you’ll get ’em all.” He dropped Peter’s hand, shook his head in awe, and thrust his big fist upward in triumph. “Yes! The stars are ours!”

Peter felt his heart about to burst; Ceara’s reassuring hand gripped his shoulder, her empathic bond telling her how deeply he was moved by this moment.

He had so wanted to be a part of Earth’s Space Program. Now he
was
the Space Program.

Softly to himself he said: “Or what’s a heaven for?”

HISTORICAL NOTES
2082

The second A-ship, the
Arrakis
, was launched from Padrugoi with a complement of four thousand colonists and crew, bound for a “likely” planet in Procyon, eleven light years away. As with the
Andre Norton
, most of the passengers would remain in cryogenic suspension.

The keel for the third projected A-ship, the
Avalon
, was laid in the construction facility at Padrugoi Space Station.

2084

The first Mars colony was established at the former Space Authority Marspolar site near the southern pole where sufficient water had been discovered to sustain a colony. This installation would also supply and assist Asteroid Mining, a branch of the Space Authority, which started “claiming” the suitably named and numbered asteroids they would use. If the person named on the IAU files was still alive, they received royalties. There is no record of any such transactions in the last decade of the twenty-first century.

2086

Using the highly specialized Gadriel Gestalt Generators, the Talents moved the asteroid Tithonus from the Patroclus cluster to a new orbit around Callisto by kind permission of Space Authority and with a deed of grant
in perpetua
, for services rendered by an organization known as Federated Telepath and Teleport. FT&T was registered with a board of directors including managing directors, Peter Reidinger and John Greene (retired U.S. SpaceForce). Also listed were Lance Baden, Madlyn Luvaro Sakai,
Amariyah Bantam, and Scott Gates. Rhyssa Owens Lehardt, David Lehardt, Professor Emil Gadriel, and Sascha Roznine were listed as consultants.

2088

Construction began for an atmosphere dome on the former asteroid Tithonus, now Callisto’s satellite in a stable orbit about its adopted primary. Immense generators were buried deep in the asteroid while a blunt structure rose above the surface. Miners seeking supplies or just a change of scenery called it the “Tower”—or Callisto Tower.

2090

Federated Telepath and Teleport was licensed by the World Congress and the Space Authority to become formally chartered as communicators and transporters on a first-come, first-served basis. FT&T guaranteed the training and supervision of all its parapsychic talents who were graded from Talent 1, or Prime, since the recipient of that title had to be both a strong telepath and telekinetic, down to minor abilities at Talent 12.

2100

The first B-type ship, the
Bradbury
, was teleported by Callisto Tower forty-five light years away, guided by the time-resolved imaging spectropho-topolarimetric of their destination in Capella.

Other books

The Pale House by Luke McCallin
Things Invisible to See by Nancy Willard
Exultant by Stephen Baxter
Sweet Surrender by Steel, Angel
The Collective by Hillard, Kenan
Joan Wolf by Lord Richards Daughter
The Stranger Beside You by William Casey Moreton
The Voyeur by Alain Robbe-Grillet
Siren's Fury by Mary Weber