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Discovery (standard:science fiction, 2623 words) [2/8] show all parts | |||
Author: Goreripper | Added: Nov 04 2000 | Views/Reads: 3219/1959 | Part vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
The crew and researchers aboard the Discovery are crushed then elated by what they find after they emerge from cryogenic suspension in a far distant solar system. | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story natural regrowth, blotting out completely any trace? Or would we find some barren desert world, laid waste by a global war, sprinkled with the remnants of its former fallen masters? Would there be any planet still there at all? Perhaps the world itself had been swallowed by its own sun as it had died and consumed its children in its final death throes? Despite decades of studying the transmissions, splitting them apart into individual streams and attempting to decode their meaning, no one had ever been able to decipher the hundreds of languages made up by each one. Certainly the images which had come to us had shown us a people of incredible invention, architecture, culture and diversity. Biologically, they appeared to resemble our own species in many respects, having a single head with a forward set face, eyes above a horizontally-set mouth and two other sensory organs which seemed to correlate with our own noses and ears. Their species was divided into several readily identifiable races, marked most obviously by striking variances in colouring, and while individual features were overall the same the various races were also marked with particular characteristics of their outward appearances. It was also evident from much of the visual data that this species was belligerent and violent, to other species co-existing on their world and particularly towards each other. War seems to have played a very large part in this people's culture. Even the visual data which we believe represents entertainment, in long-playing video form, seems preoccupied with violent acts of assault, murder and even rape, yet there was also stirring evidence of deep and devout spiritualism amongst many if not all of the people. It was also highly evident that this species had been incredibly inventive and adaptable with an ability to habit virtually any environment with which it was presented--desert, jungle, temperate, tropical, tundra and even arctic wastes. The languages themselves, however, remained a barrier to us, and without understanding even one of them it was often difficult for us to determine exactly what many of the images were attempting to show us. It was evident that some of the sounds were obviously electronic emissions made by artificial means--computers and other machines, musical instruments of various kinds--and others were definitely natural languages, and analysts had even detected various dialects within separate single languages. But what any of these languages meant had always remained a mystery to us. The last few frantic broadcasts the Discovery had intercepted failed to give us a clue as to what had befallen this immensely ancient people. Whatever had occurred, it had happened quickly, and no amount of preparation or defence had been adequate to stop it. Had the inhabitants of this planet been warned of their impending doom? In the thousands of years we know of in which they had possessed the ability to transmit radio messages, surely they had acquired the technology for deep space travel? Perhaps the younger messages our computers were now intercepting were from other colonies of this race, spread out and established across their own galaxy as the imminent destruction of their home world drew near. Our linguists had begun preliminary examination of the new signals in order to ascertain if any were like those we had received from our primary source. Some similarities had indeed been uncovered, but most of them seemed far too recent to be concurrent with any mass exodus from the home world, if one had in fact taken place. Only arrival at this enigmatic location would provide any answer to our questions, and our eagerness to arrive was renewed. Our destination lay within the system of a middle-aged medium-sized yellow star, amazingly similar to our own. As the Discovery neared, its instruments at once began to analyse the details of the star's heliosphere, and we found its influence reached far beyond the limits of the system itself. Like all stellar explorers and colony ships, the Discovery was protected by a magnetic field rivalled only by large planetary bodies, and when it become clear quite early that the star we were approaching was almost like our own, only older and slightly smaller, the engineers were quite satisfied that we were in no danger from solar wind. Our engines shut down, and as if in answer a million screens and scanners, receivers and trackers and recorders and detectors flickered and hummed into life. Teams of astronomers, astrophysicists and cosmologists glued themselves to analysis data terminals as the Discovery ran programs and collected information. It soon became apparent that the system we had entered was heavily populated with solar bodies of many kinds and sizes. Most stars either accumulate or create their own companion systems, either by way of their incredible gravitational influence or in the process of their birth. The nebula which had created this star had been a particularly productive one. Discovery located four bodies large enough to be gas giants very soon after we had entered the system; our radio source had not come from any of them, as in three hundred years of deep space exploration no significant lifeform of any measurable intelligence has ever been found on a gas giant. Locked into its terminal trajectory, the Discovery could not be redirected to examine these worlds directly. Their orbits and distances were established, and within hours eager teams of young scientists had taken to stellar explorers to study them more closely. The Discovery's main mission had been to track down and contact those alien beings responsible for the intergalactic transmissions. But there were dozens of satellite teams aboard, and each had their own field of study which was separate from, but in some way still pertained to, that of Professor Neffergi and the team of which I was a member. We had entered the system at an angle which corresponded to -23º to the equator of the central sun, and our initial observations suggested that, like most planetary systems, most of the main bodies circled within a solar equatorial plane only a few degrees wide, almost directly in line with each other. Unless one or more of the inner planets moved in a drastically eccentric orbital plane, which was possible but unlikely--only one system so far discovered has a major planet which acts in this way--the Discovery would pass beneath the southern hemisphere of all of them with-out risk of a collision. It was impossible for the ship to collide with anything more substantial than a cloud of cosmic dust in any case, but it meant that there would be no need for course adjustment. The initial observations proved to be correct as further information came to hand. The major planets of the system did not exhibit signs of drastic orbits, although large numbers of smaller bodies which were identified as possible comet masses and rogue asteroids most certainly did. There seemed to be an inordinate number of these objects, far more than any system had any right to, although the space around our own world of course can hardly be referred to as empty. Still, this was a particu-larly crowded solar family. Not only did the system appear to abound in planets, the planets abounded in moons. A day after they had departed, the first stellar explorer crew reported contact with the gas giant which had been nearest the Discovery. Enormous, though fairly average in size for a gaseous world, it was unremarkable and typical in its aspect: fast-spinning and lifeless, an atmosphere topped with dense, thick cloud formations which moved at great speed and possessed of a dark, almost invisible ring system. In all these factors it resembled a hundred other similar planets dotted about the universe, but for its collection of moons. Though most were quite tiny in area and virtually all were irregular in shape, they were undoubtedly in captured orbits. And there were eleven of them! This planet was a system of its own! It would be days and weeks before the other explorer craft reached the other giant planets we had detected, two of which appeared to be very large indeed, and we could barely con-tain our curiosity as to what sort of worlds they would be. Indeed the excitement of these findings almost overrode our anticipation of finally reaching our true destination, which, as the Discovery was travelling at a far greater speed than the smaller explorers, was only a few days away. Preliminary study of the inner reaches of this system found another four planets, rocky and much smaller, orbiting quite closely together, separated by only a few light minutes. To our incredible surprise, as Professor Neffergi and I checked the trajec-tory path late in the sixth evening of our journey in this system, we discovered that it was leading us to the planet third from the sun. A planet with a single satellite whose size ratio compared to its parent was almost enough to make it a binary planet. There should be no reason to explain to the reader why this astonished us so: the similarity to our own warm and cosy home world so remote to us now simply on this score alone was almost incomprehensible. From the third planet from our sun we had journeyed 100,000 light years to another planet third from its sun, where life, intelligent and advanced, had once thrived. The odds against this were astronomi-cal of course, but there it was. When the findings were announced, the atmosphere aboard Discovery reached fe-ver pitch. No one could sleep, instead gluing themselves to monitors, screens, and windows, for the first glimpse of this world. Some hours later, Dr Guillamo Cathariat, an astrophysicist, barked an excited cry and dragged me toward a visual unit. The Discovery's trajectory had brought us within close viewing distance of the first of the inner planets, and our telescopes had zoomed in. "It's a dead world," she said, "long dead. But amazing!" I nodded in agreement. It was a cold, dead world, quite small and circled by a min-ute, dark moon which by the look of its shape may once have been an asteroid. But remarkably the planet was ringed at an incredibly low altitude by what the sensors were indicating as small particles of iron-based rock. This was indeed an amazing find. The woman grabbed my sleeve earnestly. "We simply must go there!" she said excitedly, and I agreed, though I needed to gain the approval of Professor Neffergi. With four teams already gone and not due back for some months, would it be practicable to send one more? I was doubtful, but when I suggested it he had no hesitation, and within hours, another stellar explorer had departed our ship. Those who remained could do nothing but wait. END OF PART TWO. Tweet
This is part 2 of a total of 8 parts. | ||
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