3001: THE FINAL ODYSSEY by Arthur C. Clarke
Publication date: March 1997 in hardcover
Copyright ©1997 by Arthur C. Clarke
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Chapter 1: Comet Cowboy
Captain Dimitri Chandler
[M2973.04.21/93.106//Mars//SpaceAcad3005//*//]--or "Dim" to his very best
friends--was understandably annoyed. The message from Earth had taken six
hours to reach the spacetug Goliath, here beyond the orbit of Neptune; if
it had arrived ten
minutes later he could have answered "Sorry--can't leave now--we've just
started to deploy the
sun-screen."
The excuse would have been perfectly valid: wrapping a comet's core in a
sheet of
reflective film only a few molecules thick, but kilometers on a side, was
not the sort of job you
could abandon while it was half-completed.
Still, it would be a good idea to obey this ridiculous request: he was
already in disfavor
sunwards, through no fault of his own. Collecting ice from the rings of
Saturn and nudging it
towards Venus and Mercury, where it was really needed, had started back
in the 2700's--three
centuries ago. Captain Chandler had never been able to see any real
difference in the "before and
after" images the Solar Conservers were always producing, to support their
accusations of
celestial vandalism. But the general public, still sensitive to the
ecological disasters of
previous centuries, had thought otherwise, and the "Hands off Saturn!"
vote had passed by a
substantial majority. As a result, Chandler was no longer a Ring Rustler,
but a Comet Cowboy.
So here he was at an appreciable fraction of the distance to Alpha
Centauri, rounding up
stragglers from the Kuiper Belt.
There was certainly enough ice out here to cover Mercury and Venus with
oceans
kilometers deep, but it might take centuries to extinguish their
hell-fires and make them suitable
for life. The Solar Conservers, of course, were still protesting against
this, though no longer
with so much enthusiasm. The millions dead from the tsunami caused by the
Pacific asteroid in
2304--how ironic that a land impact would have done much less
damage!--had reminded all
future generations that the human race had too many eggs in one fragile
basket.
Well, Chandler told himself, it would be fifty years before this
particular package
reached its destination, so a delay of a week would hardly make much
difference. But all the
calculations about rotation, center of mass, and thrust vectors would have
to be redone, and
radioed back to Mars for checking. It was a good idea to do your sums
carefully, before nudging
billions of tons of ice along an orbit that might take it within hailing
distance of Earth.
As they had done so many times before, Captain Chandler's eyes strayed
towards the
ancient photograph above his desk. It showed a three-masted steamship,
dwarfed by the iceberg
that was looming above it--as, indeed, Goliath was dwarfed at this very
moment.
How incredible, he had often thought, that only one long lifetime spanned
the gulf
between this primitive Discovery and the ship that had carried the same
name to Jupiter! And
what would those Antarctic explorers of a thousand years ago have made of
the view from his
bridge?
They would certainly have been disoriented, for the wall of ice beside
which Goliath
was floating stretched both upwards and downwards as far as the eye could
see. And it was
strange-looking ice, wholly lacking the immaculate whites and blues of the
frozen Polar seas. In
fact, it looked dirty--as indeed it was. For only some ninety percent was
water-ice: the rest was a
witches'-brew of carbon and sulphur compounds, most of them stable only at
temperatures not
far above absolute zero. Thawing them out could produce unpleasant
surprises: as one
astrochemist had famously remarked: "Comets have bad breath."
"Skipper to all personnel," Chandler announced. "There's been a slight
change of
program. We've been asked to delay operations, to investigate a target
that Spaceguard radar
has picked up."
"Any details?" somebody asked, when the chorus of groans over the ship's
intercom had
died away.
"Not many, but I gather it's another Millennium Committee project they've
forgotten to
cancel."
More groans: everyone had become heartily sick of all the events planned
to celebrate the
end of the 2000's. There had been a general sigh of relief when 1 January
3001 had passed
uneventually, and the human race could resume its normal activities.
"Anyway, it will probably be another false alarm, like the last one.
We'll get back to
work just as quickly as we can. Skipper out."
This was the third wild-goose-chase, Chandler thought morosely, he'd been
involved
with during his career. Despite centuries of exploration, the Solar
System could still produce
surprises, and presumably Spaceguard had a good reason for its request.
He only hoped that
some imaginative idiot hadn't once again sighted the fabled Golden
Asteroid. If it did exist--
which Chandler did not for a moment believe--it would be no more than a
mineralogical
curiosity: it would be of far less real value than the ice he was nudging
Sunward, to bring life to
barren worlds.
There was one possibility, however, which he did take quite seriously.
Already, the
human race had scattered its robot probes through a volume of space a
hundred light-years
across--and the Tycho Monolith was sufficient reminder that much older
civilizations had
engaged in similar activities. There might well be other alien
artifacts in the Solar System, or
in transit through it. Captain Chandler suspected that Spaceguard had
something like this in
mind: otherwise it would hardly have diverted a Class I space-tug to go
chasing after an
unidentified radar blip.
Five hours later, the questing Goliath detected the echo at extreme
range; even allowing
for the distance, it seemed disappointingly small. However, as it grew
clearer and stronger, it
began to give the signature of a metallic object, perhaps a couple of
meters long. It was traveling
on an orbit heading out of the Solar System, so was almost certainly,
Chandler decided, one of
the myriad pieces of space-junk that Mankind had tossed towards the stars
during the last
millennium--and which might one day provide the only evidence that the
human race had ever
existed.
Then it came close enough for visual inspection, and Captain Chandler
realized, with
awed astonishment, that some patient historian was still checking the
earliest records of the
Space Age. What a pity that the computers had given him the answer,
just a few years too late
for the Millennium celebrations!
"Goliath here," Chandler radioed Earthwards, his voice tinged with pride
as well as
solemnity. "We're bringing aboard a thousand-year-old astronaut. And I
can guess who it is."
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