Тесс Герритсен – Gravity (страница 16)
‘We’ve already lost.’
‘No. No, you can
Sullivan rubbed his eyes. The aspirin was wearing off, and his head pounded. He was sick of begging. He was an engineer and a pilot, and he’d happily spend the rest of his life with his hands blackened by engine grease. But it would not happen, not without new investors. Not without new cash.
He turned and walked back to the visitors. To his surprise, both men seemed to regard him with wary respect. Perhaps because he had told the truth.
‘Okay,’ said Sullivan, emboldened by the fact he had nothing to lose. He might as well go down like a man. ‘Here’s the deal. We can back up everything we’ve said with one simple demonstration. Are the other companies ready to launch at the drop of a hat? No, they are not. They need
Casper turned as white as a—well, a ghost. And not a friendly one. Sullivan had just taken them so far out on a limb they were clawing at thin air.
‘In fact, I’m so confident she’ll pass muster,’ said Sullivan, raising the stakes even higher, ‘I’ll ride in the pilot’s seat myself.’
Casper clutched his stomach. ‘Uh…that’s just a figure of speech, gentlemen. She can be flown perfectly well unmanned—’
‘But there’s no real drama in that,’ said Sullivan. ‘Let me take her up. It’ll make it more interesting for everyone. What do you say?’
The two businessmen exchanged looks, a few whispered words. Then Lucas said, ‘We’d be very interested in a demonstration. It will take us time to round up all our partners. Coordinate travel schedules. So let’s say…a month. Can you do it?’
They were calling his bluff. Sullivan merely laughed. ‘A month? No problem.’ He looked at Casper, who now had his eyes closed as though in pain.
‘We’ll be in touch,’ said Lucas, and turned toward the door.
‘One last question, if I may,’ said Mr Rashad. He pointed to the orbiter. ‘I notice the name on your prototype is
Casper and Sullivan looked at each other.
‘Uh, yes,’ said Casper. ‘There was…’
‘And what happened to her?’
Casper went mute.
‘She crashed and burned,’ he said. And walked out of the hangar.
Crashed and burned. That was the only way to describe what had happened on that cold, clear morning a year and a half ago. The morning his dreams had crashed and burned as well. Sitting at his battered desk in the company office, nursing his hangover with a cup of coffee, he couldn’t help replaying every painful detail of that day. The busload of NASA officials pulling up at the launch site. His brother, Gordie, grinning with pride. The air of celebration among the dozen Apogee employees and the score of investors who had assembled under the tent for prelaunch coffee and doughnuts.
The countdown. The liftoff. Everyone squinting up at the sky as
Then the flash of light, and it was all over.
Afterward, his brother had not said very much, barely a few words of condolence. But that’s how it was with Gordon. All their lives, whenever Sullivan screwed up—and it seemed to happen all too often—Gordon would just give that sad and disappointed shake of the head. Gordon was the older brother, the sober and reliable son who had distinguished himself as a shuttle commander.
Sullivan had never even made it into the astronaut corps. Though he, too, was a pilot and an aerospace engineer, things never seemed to go Sullivan’s way. If he climbed into the cockpit, that was precisely the moment a wire would short out or a line would rupture. He often thought the words
‘Why don’t you call him?’ said Bridget.
He looked up. She was standing by his desk, her arms crossed like a disapproving schoolteacher’s. ‘Call who?’ he asked.
‘Your brother, who else? Tell him we’re launching the second prototype. Invite him to watch. Maybe he’ll bring the rest of NASA.’
‘I don’t want anyone from NASA.’
‘Sully, if we impress them, we’ll turn this company around.’
‘Like the last time, huh?’
‘A fluke. We’ve fixed the problem.’
‘So maybe there’ll be another fluke.’
‘You’re gonna jinx us, you know that?’ She shoved the phone in front of him. ‘Call Gordon. If we’re gonna roll the dice, we might as well bet the whole house.’
He eyed the phone, thinking about
‘Sully?’
‘Forget it,’ he said. ‘My brother’s got better things to do than hang out with losers.’ And he tossed the newspaper into the rubbish can.
July 26
Aboard
‘Hey, Watson,’ Commander Vance called down to the middeck. ‘Come up and take a look at your new home.’
Emma floated up the access ladder and emerged on the flight deck, right behind Vance’s seat. At her first glimpse through the windows, she inhaled a sharp breath of wonder. This was the closest she had ever come to the station. During her first mission, two and a half years ago, they had not docked with ISS, but had observed it only from a distance.
‘Gorgeous, isn’t she?’ said Vance.
‘She’s the most beautiful thing I’ve ever seen,’ Emma said softly.
And she was. With her vast solar arrays fanning out from the massive main truss, ISS looked like a majestic sailing ship soaring through the heavens. Built by sixteen different countries, the components had been delivered into space on forty-five separate launches. It had taken five years to assemble her, piece by piece, in orbit. Far more than merely a marvel of engineering, she was a symbol of what man can achieve when he lays down his weapons and turns his gaze skyward.
‘Now, that’s a nice piece of real estate,’ said Vance. ‘I’d call that a view apartment.’
‘We’re right on the R-bar,’ said shuttle pilot DeWitt. ‘Nice flying.’
Vance left the command seat and stationed himself at the flight deck’s overhead window for visual approach as they neared the ISS docking module. This was the most delicate phase in the complicated process of rendezvous.
‘Look,’ said DeWitt. ‘There’s that solar array that got dinged last month.’ He pointed to one of the solar panels, scarred by a gaping hole. One of the inescapable perils of space is the constant rain of meteorites and manmade debris. Even a tiny fragment can be a devastating missile when it’s hurtling at thousands of miles per hour.
As they drew closer and the station filled the window, Emma felt such overwhelming awe and pride that tears suddenly flashed in her eyes.
The air-lock hatch swung open, and a wide brown face grinned at them from the other end of the vestibule connecting
‘NASA home delivery service,’ deadpanned Commander Vance. ‘Your groceries have arrived.’ Bearing a nylon sack of fresh fruit, Vance floated through
It had been a perfect docking. With both spacecrafts traveling at a speed of 17,500 miles per hour above the earth, Vance had approached ISS at the delicate rate of two inches per second, lining up
Now the hatches were open and
Emma was the fifth to cross into the station. She popped out of the vestibule and inhaled a mélange of scents, the slightly sour and meaty odors of humans confined too long in a closed space. Luther Ames, an old friend from astronaut training, was the first to greet her.