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Discovery (Part Three) (standard:science fiction, 1113 words) [3/8] show all parts | |||
Author: Goreripper | Added: Nov 06 2000 | Views/Reads: 2964/1908 | Part vote: 0.00 (0 votes) |
The spaceship Discovery finally arrives at its destination, and the people aboard are amazed at what they find there. | |||
Click here to read the first 75 lines of the story supported an array of satellites. Not all of them had been accounted for yet, but the team had already counted more than ten, some a few spans in diameter, and others which were huge. One was so large it was almost a full-fledged planet itself. This mammoth object and its family circled immediately beyond the small ringed world we had recently passed but was much further from it than the little planet was to the one Discovery was now above. Just as they were reporting to us the team was preparing to dip the atmospheres of both the planet and its largest moon. The central recording core of our spaceborne university was in overdrive. We heard no message from the other three teams for some time, but as they were now so far away this did not concern us. Our staff took stock of what we had learned so far of this extraordinary and vast solar system. So far we had found four gas giants, innumerable minor planetary bodies and four smaller rocky worlds. Two of these were in inferior orbits to our current location, and the innermost was very close to the central sun. That sun was quite similar to our own, but the similarities to our own planet that were so visibly evident below us was the most incredible discovery so far. Even the fact that its companion moon was almost one-fifth its size was a coincidence againt which no gambler would have laid a bet. People had already begun to call the star Neffergi, much to the Professor's chagrin, and the planet we orbited N3. Both seemed appropriate for the time being, though the Professor would not permit the application of his name to the star or its children in his presence and referred to it himself simply as NW1, for New World. He was an eminent scientist, after all, and not given to romanticism. He argued that it was not he who had discovered the star at all, and that naming it should be left to the Institute on our return. There were few of us, however, who were prepared to leave it at that. END OF PART THREE Tweet
This is part 3 of a total of 8 parts. | ||
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