The Unearthing (58 page)

Read The Unearthing Online

Authors: Steve Karmazenuk,Christine Williston

 

“Laura…” Allison whispered, pressing her hand against the cool glass of the bus window, feeling the vibration of the Shipsong against her hand. And then they were at the Ship; the bus stopped and the passengers were getting up.

 

“Oh, God,” Allison murmured, “Here we go.”

♦♦♦

Sipping her coffee the following morning, Allison stood on the small terrace of her lodgings, looking out at the vast tracts of parkland before her It reminded her strangely of the greenspace behind her apartment, back home. The Ship’s shops were located on the decks surrounding the Habitat, as were the industries and agro-centers that supplied them. A decision had been made somewhere to only allow cloned meat on board the Ship. None of the livestock aboard would be raised for anything worse than milk or eggs. Everything would be given free range either in isolated sections of the Habitat sphere or in separate preserves set up along the surrounding decks. The Ship was a veritable ark, with samples of every environment, including oceanic life, having been created within. There were Laurentian forests, tropical rain forests, deserts, the arctic and even a deck that was a perfect microcosm of the African Savannah. The Ship was a miracle, a wonder, and a frightening, fascinating place. Allison had cried herself to sleep last night for fear of what was to come; but for better or worse she was now home. There was a sudden, strange chime reminiscent of the Shipsong. Then a voice boomed over some hidden PA system throughout the Habitat. Allison recognized it almost immediately: Laura’s mother:

 

“Your attention please, your attention please. This is Colonel Margaret Bloom, Commander of the Ship. We are now commencing countdown for Shiprise. All Passengers please report to your designated emergency shelters until flight is underway. Please consult one of your house panels if you do not recall where your designated shelter is located. We are at T-Minus sixty minutes and counting. All Passengers should be at their shelters within the next fifteen minutes.” Shiprise. In one hour. Allison swallowed hard and filled herself a thermos of coffee.

♦♦♦

Walter Quincy Robertson had been a reporter with INN for almost ten years now. Any other Grid-based news network would have long since promoted Robertson to anchor or co-anchor but INN, with its virtual news anchors had no need of a human anchor. They still had need of Human news reporters. When INN perfected the technology used originally by Ananova.com to bring its virtual news service to life, the Union of Broadcast Employees had been quick to require that all other networks and news outlets have at least five live human on-air personalities. INN escaped the ruling, but it left reporters who chose to work for INN as pariahs to the rest of the industry. It made INN reporters a bit of a close-knit society. But only because there was no future reporting the news to INN; if you were lucky you'd get a job in one of the INN offices writing script for the electronic ghosts who anchored INN's several hundred news broadcasts. Robertson intended to bend the trend. He had been assigned to cover the launch of the Ship, and he was going to use this as an opportunity to get a job at another network and hopefully land an anchor chair.

 

"Walt, we're going live in sixty seconds," Laurel, his producer called.

 

"Great," Robertson said. He slipped his microphone under his collar. "What's our opening feed?"

 

"We have a wide shot of the Ship, zoomed in on from one of the low-orbit satellites. It'll show up on your monitor," Robertson looked to the monitor positioned directly under the camera facing him. He was already formulating his opening.

 

"Thirty seconds," Laurel cautioned.

 

"After the wide shot?"

 

"We cut to you on screen left with the Ship on screen right."

 

"Excellent. Let's dance."

 

"Ten seconds. Nine...eight...seven...six...five..." the last four seconds his producer counted down on the fingers of one hand so that Robertson could see.

 

"Seventy million years ago," Robertson began as the wide shot of the Ship appeared onscreen; the abandoned Village and Fort Arapaho encircled it to the southeast, the desert and mountains surrounding it everywhere else, "The Ship landed here in what would become known as the South-western Protectorate. It came in search of intelligent life; its crew looking for others of their kind out among the distant stars of lonely space." The image onscreen dissolved, showing him on the left of the screen with the Ship, kilometres distant but nonetheless dominant on the horizon, behind him. His producer gave him the thumbs up. After ten years she wanted to get the hell out of INN as well.

 

"Although the Ship's original crew is now long dead, the Ship has survived to at long last fulfill their mission and realize their dream. Humanity has found the Ship, and today Humankind will join the Ship in space as it makes the long journey home." The camera closed in on Robertson.

 

"Hello," He said, "I'm Walter Quincy Robertson, and I am coming to you live from the fringes of the World Ship Preserve. Today I will be covering the launch of the Ship for the Interactive News Network."

 

Robertson didn't allow it to touch his eyes, but the reaction of his producer told him what he already knew: he had made this broadcast his own. It didn't belong to INN; it belonged to him. His heart surged. Whatever network he went to Laurel would have to be part of the deal. Whether she worked on the same show as he did or just got another production job at the same network didn't matter. They were leaving INN just as surely as the Ship was leaving Earth. It was time to fall back on the script and fill in the time for the viewers with the usual background and trivia.

 

"The Ship arrived here towards the middle of the Cretaceous period during a time when the Earth was lush with a wide variety of life. It is commonly believed that the Ship was attracted to our world because of the amount of life teeming across the globe at the time. The Ship was trapped here during the Cataclysm, when a large asteroid hit the Earth, wiping out almost all life on the planet's surface.

 

"When the Ship was discovered last year, an archaeological dig led by the late Professor Mark Echohawk helped to unearth it and reveal it to the world. Since its discovery the world has been witness to many tumultuous events, culminating with actual first contact with the Ship's control entity." On the screen before him Laurel had begun showing still images from the archaeological dig, the unearthed Ship, and famous images from the events that had led up to where they stood today.

 

"Several months ago the Ship announced that it wanted to take what it called a macrocosm, a representative sample of Humanity, with it back to its Homeworld. The Ship invited Humankind to join a League of Worlds among the stars. Since then, preparations have been underway to accomplish this, including the now-famous Ship's Lottery. The logistical nightmare and tremendous expense of fully outfitting the Ship with the necessities of life for a quarter million men, women and children began not long after. An overview of the Ship's cargo manifest includes the industrial machinery to produce the luxuries we've grown attached to and the equipment to generate the basic necessities of human life including food, medicine and clothing. Many of the world's cultural and historical archives have also been placed in the Ship, to represent all aspects of Human civilization and cultures. In exchange for this the Ship has given us access to technologies unprecedented in Human history. The resulting revenue from these technologies is expected to far exceed the multitrillion dollar expense of outfitting the Ship with the macrocosm of life on Earth that it will now take with it as it leaves."

 

The image on camera switched to another live shot: this one the vantage from the top of the Zuni Mountain range. Nothing new was happening so his producer gave him the signal to continue with the babble.

 

"Aboard Ship there will be schools, a university, houses of worship for the several religions represented by the Ship's passengers and crew, a theatre complex for motion pictures and live acts, sports arenas and recreational facilities, a hospital, and even a shopping plaza. The citizens of the Ship will occupy themselves there much the same way they did while here on Earth: vocational professionals will go to work in the hospitals, schools, agriculture centers, and other institutions; people will work in the commercial and industrial zones, their children will be in school, and other than some very obvious differences, life on Habitat inside the Ship will proceed much as it has here on Earth."

 

His producer signalled him again: a hand sign indicating they were going to overlay an audio feed on all live broadcast channels. Robertson nodded. He was the only reporter from INN live at the site. He wasn't worried about losing his moment.

 

"I've just been informed, ladies and gentlemen, that we are switching the live feed over to the INN Grid channel monitoring activities at Mission Control. We'll be going live in just a few seconds so please stay linked to this Grid Spar. I'll be reporting on the Ship's launch as it happens. This is Walter Quincy Robertson, for the Interactive News Network."

♦♦♦

"Ship Command this is Mission Control. Do you copy, over?"

 

"Mission Control, Ship Command; Colonel Bloom here. We read you loud and clear."

 

"What is final status, Ship Command?" Bloom looked around her Command Deck. The deck was lit overhead by a simulation of the sky above New Mexico. The imaging system was online, showing the brilliant blue sky of morning. Castaneda, her operations chief, signalled her with a thumbs-up.

 

"All systems are go, Mission Control," Bloom said.

 

"Roger that, Ship," came the reply, "You are go on final countdown, at clock set of T-minus thirty – that’s three-zero – minutes and counting."

 

"Confirmed, Mission Control," Bloom said. She turned to Major Benedict, who was sitting at his station, on the deck below her.

 

"Major Benedict, would you do the honours?"

 

"Operations, begin final countdown," Benedict called, "Clock set T-minus thirty minutes...mark."

 

"The clock is running, Mission Control," Bloom signalled, "T-Minus thirty minutes, and counting."

 

"The Ship confirms Countdown Go," Tanaka said, "T-Minus fourteen minutes from Ramp destruction on my mark...mark!"

 

"Do you confirm that, Control?" Bloom asked, "If you have anyone on that Ramp tell them to evacuate now."

 

"Roger that Ship. We're sweeping the Ramp for stragglers now."

 

"The Ship is energizing main engines for launch," Tanaka informed Bloom.

 

"Null buoyancy field is coming online," Another operator called from their station, "Cycle at two per cent and rising."

 

"Major Castaneda, what is the Habitat status?" Bloom asked.

 

"Sunny skies, ambient temperature of twenty-three degrees Centigrade, South-westerly wind five kilometres per hour and forty-three percent humidity," Castaneda replied, "An absolutely wonderful day."

 

"Maintain safety alert warning," Bloom said, "Until we're actually airborne, I want the passengers to stay on the emergency decks."

♦♦♦

"Colonel Bloom is referring here to the emergency decks inside the Habitat Sphere, itself," Robertson said as the link switched back to him, "The Habitat Sphere is designed to be used as a giant lifeboat should anything happen to the Ship. The people on Habitat would evacuate underground to the inner decks of the sphere where they would be protected in an emergency. The emergency decks contain a vast storehouse of food and water, and a suspended animation system should it be necessary to put the passengers into hibernation until the lifeboat can autopilot to a secure location. Presently the passengers are on a standby level from which they can gain access to crash beds that will protect them if something goes wrong during launch. Colonel Bloom, I am informed, has ordered this as a precaution only."

♦♦♦

Professor Michael Andrews looked out of the observation deck windows. The Ship was the dominant feature on the horizon, this gallery having been built and positioned so that the assembled dignitaries could watch the launch. There was an eerie blue-gold halo around the Ship this morning as the bands of energy that traveled along its outer hull began glowing more brilliantly than ever, reflecting their light from the polished golden surfaces of the Ship. There were a few other former members of the Ship Survey Expedition with him; people he'd worked with but who hadn't been senior staff. They, like Andrews, had been offered Tickets aboard the Ship and had turned them down. They, like Andrews had friends and loved ones aboard. Andrews hoped the launch went well; he had said his goodbyes to Sonia but he would be on vigil until the Ship left the sky for good. Keeping the tears from his eyes would have been impossible, and so he didn't even try.

♦♦♦

Bloom crossed her hands in front of her face, leaning her chin on them. The terminal screens around her showed dozens of pieces of information covering every function necessary to the Ship's flight and the care and support of the people housed within. Everything was in optimal ranges but still, these moments before launch were critical. Counting down the minutes with regular bulletins from the eighty-plus bridge crew in the pit below was agonizing. Part of Bloom's mind screamed that nothing this big had ever been intended to fly; another part of her wanted to trust the Ship implicitly, while a third argued that no machine could be trusted to function perfectly without the assistance of a Human operator. She watched the two countdowns proceed.

 

In another few minutes the Ramp would be gone, disintegrated by the Ship; fifteen minutes after that the Ship would by airborne. Air traffic around the world was grounded so that the Ship could fly once around the globe before launching into space. If the Ship left its cradle without incident Bloom promised herself that she wouldn't worry about the rest of the pre-space flight.

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