Ben Bova - The Silent War

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The Silent War: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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When corporations go to war, standard business practice goes out the window. Astro Corporation is led by indomitable Texan Pancho Lane, Humphries Space Systems by the rich and ruthless Martin Humphries, and their fight is over nothing less than resources of the Asteroid Belt itself. As fighting escalates, the lines between commerce and politics, boardroom and bedroom, blur—and the keys to victory will include physics, nanotechnology, and cold, hard cash.
As they fight it out, the lives of thousands of innocents hang in the balance, including the rock rats, who make their living off the asteroids, and the inhabitants of Selene City on Earth’s moon. As if matters weren’t complicated enough, the shadowy Yamagata corporation sets its sights on taking advantage of other people’s quarrels, and space pirate Lars Fuchs decides it’s time to make good on his own personal vendetta…
It’s a breakneck finale that can end only in earth’s salvation—or the annihilation of all that humankind has ever accomplished in space.

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As he pushed the door open he added, “But she’s not the only nanotech genius in the world, y’know. We’ve got a few of our own, right here.”

The nanotechnology lab was eerily quiet. Pancho saw gleaming cabinets of white and stainless steel lining the walls, and a double row of workbenches that held more metal boxes and instruments. She recognized the gray metal tubing of a scanning field microscope off in one corner, but the rest of the equipment was unfamiliar to her.

“Is anybody working here?” she asked. The lab seemed empty of people, except for the two of them.

“Should be,” George said, frowning slightly. “I told ’im we’d be here.”

“Excuse me,” said a soft voice behind them.

Pancho turned to see an overweight young man with dark hair tied back in a ponytail, a neatly trimmed beard, and a slightly bemused expression on his roundish face. His thick dark brows were raised, as if he were puzzled. His lips were curled slightly into a half smile that seemed apologetic, defensive. He was wearing plain gray coveralls, but had a bright plaid vest over them. No tattoos or jewelry, except for a heavy square gold ring on his right hand.

“I had to take a break,” he said in a gentle, almost feminine voice. “I’m sorry I wasn’t here when you came in.”

George clapped him on the shoulder lightly, but it was enough to make the young man totter. “That’s okay, Lev. When you gotta go, you gotta go.”

He introduced Pancho to Levi Levinson, then added, “Lev here’s from MIT. Brightest lad we’ve got. Boy genius and all that.”

Levinson didn’t seem at all embarrassed by George’s praise. “I learned a lot from Dr. Cardenas before she left.”

“Such as?” Pancho challenged.

Levinson’s smile turned slightly superior. “I’ll show you. I’ve got a demonstration all set up.” He gestured toward the nearer of the two workbenches.

George dragged over a couple of high stools and offered one to Pancho as he explained, “I was after Kris for years to figure out how we could use nanomachines to separate metals from the ores in the asteroids. Lev here thinks he’s solved the problem.”

Pancho felt impressed. Turning to Levinson, she asked, “Have you?”

He looked quietly confident, almost smug. All he said was, “Watch.”

Pancho watched. Levinson took a dark, lumpy, potato-sized chunk of a metallic asteroid and deposited it into one of the big metal cubicles on the workbench. Half a dozen transparent plastic tubes led from the container to smaller bins farther down the bench. Pancho saw that a digital timer started counting seconds when Levinson clicked the lid closed.

“It’s not much of a trick to program nanomachines to separate a specific element from a gross sample,” he said. “Nanos are quite capable of taking specific atoms from a sample of material. It’s just a matter of programming them properly.”

“Uh-huh,” said Pancho.

“The problem’s always been to separate all the different elements in a Void simultaneously, without the nanos interfering with one another.”

“And in a high-UV environment,” George added.

Levinson shrugged his rounded shoulders. “That part was easy. Just harden the nanos so UV won’t dissociate them.”

Pointing to the sealed container, Pancho asked, “You mean these nanomachines won’t be knocked out by ultraviolet light?”

“That’s why I keep them sealed inside the container,” Levinson answered. “If they got loose they’d start taking the habitat apart, atom by atom.”

“Jeeps,” Pancho muttered.

“It’s perfectly safe,” Levinson calmly assured her. “The container is lined with diamond surfaces and none of the nanos are programmed to separate carbon.”

“So they can’t attack people,” George said.

Levinson nodded, but Pancho thought that people also contain iron, phosphorus and a lot of other elements that those nanomachines were programmed to separate. Maybe that’s why Kris dragged her feet on this project, she thought.

A bell pinged. An electric motor whirred. Pancho saw little trickles of what looked like dirt or dust sliding down the six transparent tubes toward the bins on the workbench. As she looked closer, though, several of the growing piles seemed to glitter in the light from the overhead lamps. “The transport tubes are also pure diamond,” Levinson said. “Just a precaution, in case a few of the nanomachines are still present in the differentiated samples.”

Pancho nodded wordlessly.

Levinson applied a handheld mass spectrometer to each of the piles of dirt, in turn. Pure iron, pure nickel, gold, silver, platinum and lead.

With a wave of one hand, he said, “Voila!”

George clapped his beefy hands together. “Y’see, Pancho? With nanomachines we can mine the metals outta the ’roids easy as pie. All the slugwork gets done by the nanos. All the miners hafta do is sit back and let the little buggers do all the fookin’ work!”

“It can be done for minerals, too,” Levinson said, in an offhand manner. “Easier, in fact. The nanos work at the molecular level there, rather than atomic.”

Pancho looked at each of them in turn. She stood up and planted her hands on her hips. “Fine work,” she said. “Only one problem I can see.”

“What’s that?”

“This’ll knock the price of metals and minerals down pretty close to zero.”

“Huh?” George grunted.

“You’re gonna make it so easy to mine the asteroids that we’ll get a glut on the market,” Pancho said. “And most of the miners will be thrown out of work, to boot.”

George frowned. “I didn’t think of that. I was just tryin’ t’make their work easier.”

“Too easy,” said Pancho.

Levinson looked completely unconcerned. “New technology always brings some economic dislocations. But think of the benefits of cheaper raw materials.”

“Yeah, sure,” said Pancho. Then it hit her with the force of a body blow. “Holy cripes! Once Humphries finds out about this there’s gonna be hell to pay!”

“Whattaya mean?” George asked.

“Once this nanotechnology starts being used, there won’t be room for two competing companies in the Belt. The only way to make economic sense out of this is for one company to run the whole damned Belt, keep production of raw materials under control and set prices for the buyers. That’s what he’s after!”

“But Humphries doesn’t know anything about this,” George said.

“Wanna bet?” Pancho snapped.

HUMPHRIES MANSION

“It really works?” Humphries asked. “They’ve done it?”

“It really works,” said Victoria Ferrer, his latest administrative assistant. “Their top nanotech expert, this man Levinson, demonstrated it to Ms. Lane two days ago. She’s on her way back here with him now.”

Ferrer was a small, light-boned young woman with large, limpid eyes, full sensuous lips and lovely large breasts. When he had first interviewed her for the job, Humphries had wondered if her breasts were siliconed. They seemed oversized for the rest of her. Soon enough he found that they were natural, although enhanced by a genetic modification that Victoria’s stagestruck mother had insisted upon when she was pushing her teenaged daughter into a career in show business. Young Vickie went to university instead, and earned honors in economics and finance. Eventually Humphries learned that, as good as Victoria was in bed, she was even better in the office. Ferrer’s best asset, he eventually realized, was her brain. But that didn’t prevent Humphries from bedding her now and then.

At the moment, though, she was bringing him disturbing news about the nanotechnology work going on at the rock rats’ habitat in the Belt.

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