Тесс Герритсен – Gravity (страница 15)
Squinting against the morning light, he confirmed that there was indeed a woman lying in bed with him. A blonde. Snoring. He closed his eyes, hoping that if he just went back to sleep, she would be gone when he woke up again.
But he could not sleep now. Not with the voice yelling from the fallen receiver.
He fished around at the side of the bed and found the phone. ‘What, Bridget?’ he said. ‘What?’
‘Why aren’t you here?’ Bridget demanded.
“Cause I’m in bed.’
‘It’s ten-thirty! Hel-
Sullivan sat up and clutched his head, waiting for the dizziness to pass.
‘Look, just leave the bimbo and get over here,’ said Bridget. ‘Casper’s already walking them over to the hangar.’
‘Ten minutes,’ he said. He hung up and stumbled to his feet. The bimbo didn’t stir. He had no idea who she was, but he left her asleep in his bed, figuring he had nothing worth stealing, anyway.
There was no time to shower or shave. He tossed back three aspirins, chased them with a cup of nuked coffee, and roared off on his Harley.
Bridget was waiting for him outside the hangar. She
‘They’re about to leave,’ she hissed. ‘Get your butt in there.’
‘Who are these guys again?’
‘A Mr Lucas and a Mr Rashad. They represent a consortium of twelve investors. You blow this, Sully, and we’re toast.’ She paused, eyeing him in disgust. ‘Ah, hell, we’re already toast. Look at you. Couldn’t you at least have shaved?’
‘You want me to go back home? I can rent a tuxedo on the way.’
‘Forget it.’ She thrust a folded newspaper into his hand.
‘What’s this?’
‘Casper wants it. Give it to him. Now get in there and convince ‘em to write us a check. A big check.’
Sighing, he stepped into the hangar. After the harsh desert glare, the relative darkness was a comfort to his eyes. It took him a moment to spot the three men, standing by the black thermal barrier tiles of the orbiter
‘Good morning, gentlemen!’ he called. ‘Sorry I’m late, but I got hung up on a conference call. You know how things can drag on…’ He glimpsed Casper Mulholland’s warning look of
‘Mr Obie knows every nut and bolt of this RLV,’ said Casper. ‘He used to work with the old master himself, Bob Truax out in California. In fact, he can explain the system better than I can. Around here, we call him our Obie-Wan.’
The two visitors merely blinked. It was not a good sign when the universal language of
Sullivan shook hands, first with Lucas, then with Rashad, grinning broadly even as his hopes sank. Even as he felt a surge of resentment toward these two well-dressed gentlemen whose money he and Casper so desperately needed. Apogee Engineering, their baby, the dream they had nurtured for the past thirteen years, was about to go under, and only a fresh infusion of cash, from a new set of investors, could save it. He and Casper had to make the sales pitch of their lives. If it didn’t work, they might as well pack up their tools and sell off the orbiter as a carnival ride.
With a flourish, Sullivan waved his arm at
‘I know she may not look like much,’ he said, ‘but what we’ve built here is the most costeffective and practical reusable launch vehicle now in existence. She uses an assisted SSTO launch system. After vertical takeoff, upon climbing to twelve kilometers, pressure-fed rockets accelerate the vehicle to a Mach four staging point at lowdynamic pressures. This orbiter is fully reusable, and weighs only eight and a half tons. It fulfills the principles we believe are the future of commercial space travel. Smaller. Faster. Cheaper.’
‘What sort of lift engine do you use?’ asked Rashad.
‘Rybinsk RD-38 air-breathing engines imported from Russia.’
‘Why Russian?’
‘Because, Mr Rashad—between you, me, and the wall—the Russians know more about rocketry than anyone else on earth. They’ve developed dozens of liquid-fueled rocket motors, using advanced materials which can operate at higher pressures. Our country, I’m sorry to say, has developed only one new liquid-fueled rocket motor since Apollo. This is now an international industry. We believe in choosing the best components for our product—wherever those components may come from.’
‘And how does this…
‘Well, that’s the beauty of
‘You like that old Russki technology, huh?’ said Lucas.
Sullivan stiffened. ‘I like technology that works. Say what you want about the Russians, they knew what they were doing.’
‘So what you have here,’ said Lucas, ‘is something of a hybrid.
‘A very
‘How small are we talking about, Mr Obie? What’s your payload capacity?’
Sullivan hesitated. This was the point where they might lose them. ‘We can launch a payload of three hundred kilograms, plus a pilot, to low earth orbit.’
There was a long silence.
Mr Rashad said, ‘That’s all?’
‘That’s almost seven hundred pounds. You can fit a lot of research experiments in—’
‘I know how much three hundred kilos is. It’s not much.’
‘So we make up for it by more frequent launches. You can almost think of it as an airplane to space.’
‘In fact—in fact, we’ve already got NASA’s interest!’ Casper interjected with a note of desperation. ‘This is just the kind of system they might purchase for quick hops to the space station.’
Lucas’s eyebrow shot up. ‘NASA is interested?’
‘Well, we have something of an inside track.’
‘Show them the newspaper, Sully.’
‘What?’
Sullivan looked down at the L.A.
Casper snatched the paper and showed it to their visitors. ‘See this man here, standing next to Leroy Cornell? That’s the director of Flight Crew Operations. Mr Obie’s brother.’
The two visitors, obviously impressed, turned and looked at Sullivan.
‘Well?’ said Casper. ‘Would you gentlemen care to talk business?’
‘We might as well tell you this up front,’ said Lucas. ‘Mr Rashad and I have already taken a look at what other aerospace companies have in development. We’ve looked over the Kelly Astroliner, the Roton, the Kistler K-1. We were impressed by all of them, especially the K-1. But we figured we should give your little company a chance to make a pitch as well.’
‘Tell us why we should bet on your horse,’ said Lucas. ‘What makes Apogee our best choice?’
‘Frankly, gentlemen, I don’t think we are your best choice,’ Sullivan answered bluntly. And he turned and walked away.
‘Uh—excuse me,’ said Casper, and he went chasing after his partner. ‘Sully!’ he whispered. ‘What the hell are you doing?’
‘These guys aren’t interested in us. You heard them. They love the K-1. They want
‘Don’t screw this up! Go back and talk to them.’
‘Why? They’re not writing us any checks.’
‘We lose them, we lose everything.’