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John Sandford: Saturn Run

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John Sandford Saturn Run

Saturn Run: краткое содержание, описание и аннотация

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“Fans of Lucas Davenport and Virgil Flowers will eat this up.” —Stephen King For fans of THE MARTIAN, an extraordinary new thriller of the future from #1 –bestselling and Pulitzer Prize–winning author John Sandford and internationally known photo-artist and science fiction aficionado Ctein. Over the course of thirty-seven books, John Sandford has proven time and again his unmatchable talents for electrifying plots, rich characters, sly wit, and razor-sharp dialogue. Now, in collaboration with Ctein, he proves it all once more, in a stunning new thriller, a story as audacious as it is deeply satisfying. The year is 2066. A Caltech intern inadvertently notices an anomaly from a space telescope—something is approaching Saturn, and decelerating. Space objects don't decelerate. Spaceships do. A flurry of top-level government meetings produces the inescapable conclusion: Whatever built that ship is at least one hundred years ahead in hard and soft technology, and whoever can get their hands on it exclusively and bring it back will have an advantage so large, no other nation can compete. A conclusion the Chinese definitely agree with when they find out. The race is on, and an remarkable adventure begins—an epic tale of courage, treachery, resourcefulness, secrets, surprises, and astonishing human and technological discovery, as the members of a hastily thrown-together crew find their strength and wits tested against adversaries both of this earth and beyond. What happens is nothing like you expect—and everything you could want from one of the world’s greatest masters of suspense. REAL SPACE REAL SCIENCE REAL ADVENTURE

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“Tough day?” Tomaselli asked, when Fang-Castro dumped her briefcase.

“Too long, too messy. It was a nibbled-to-death-by-ducks day.” She yawned, stretched, and said, “Smells terrific.”

“It is terrific,” Tomaselli said. “Want a drink?”

“I’ll get it—maybe a margarita. You want one?”

“Sure, but take it easy on the salt. The last time—”

The security phone in the bedroom pinged; that almost always meant trouble. “Ah, really…?”

“Go get it, I’ve got some work to do here yet,” Tomaselli said. “Won’t be ready for ten minutes, anyway.”

“I’m sorry, dear, I’ll make it quick.”

“What if the station’s ass just fell off?”

“Then it’ll be even quicker.”

____

Fang-Castro stepped into the bedroom and called up the screen, expecting to see the watch commander and the control deck. Instead, she saw the Oval Office, Jacob Vintner, and Gene Lossness. The President was there, too, in the background, reading something. Before they could ask, she hit the door-close and privacy firewall buttons on her slate.

“Captain Fang-Castro, Gene and I need to talk to you about a new assignment,” Lossness said. “The President is here, too.”

The President lifted a hand in the direction of the camera, without looking up from what she was reading.

Fang-Castro was careful: “Okay.” Something serious was up. She did not travel in this bureaucratic stratum.

“We’re about to ask you some big questions. We’re on a tight deadline, and we’re going to need an answer right now. And when I say ‘now,’ I mean, this minute.”

“Quickly, then. Dinner’s waiting.”

Vintner looked momentarily nonplussed and then plunged in. “We need to repurpose the station for interplanetary flight. Rework the habitats, strip off the physical plant, add engines and reaction-mass tanks and a new command section. We’d like your opinion on the feasibility of doing this in the next twenty-two months. We’d also like you to take on the assignment of mission commander.”

“Can I give a quick call to my chief engineer?”

“Absolutely not. We need your assessment, and only yours, right now.”

Fang-Castro looked down at her hands, thinking. “Okay,” she said again. Stalling, as her mind ran through the possibilities and implication. “Engineering could probably cope, but life support won’t handle a long-duration mission.”

“This won’t be long. A year at most, and your life support’ll be beefed up along with everything else.”

Fang-Castro said, “I can see where this is going. You want to beat the Chinese to Mars. But we’ll need to do this in a lot less than twenty-two months, and we’ll need some kind of landing craft, not to mention…”

In the background, the President reached away from her reading, touched something, and her face suddenly dominated the view screen: she was looking straight at Fang-Castro.

“Captain, this isn’t a Mars mission. You’ll be going to Saturn.”

“What? Excuse me, ma’am, but that’s… What happened?”

The camera’s view angle slipped back and focused on Vintner, who filled her in on the previous day’s events.

Fang-Castro gaped: “A starship?”

“Exactly,” Vintner said. “Will you take the assignment? You know the station, you know how to work with both military and civilians. This will not be a military operation. There’ll be a modest complement of military on board, but fundamentally this is a science mission and Gene says you’re very good with scientists.”

“I need to discuss this with my fiancée.”

“Sorry, but this is most secret. You can’t discuss it with anyone.”

“Then I have to say this: if I can’t tell her what’s up, I’d have to decline. We’re planning to get married two months from now. We don’t keep secrets from each other, and we don’t lie to each other.”

Vintner looked at Lossness, who shrugged, and suddenly the President’s face was back. “What if it was me who told the lie? You’d only have to… prevaricate. All married people do that, as you must know—I see you were married once before.”

“I’m not sure I understand…”

“What if you told her that I was going to make a big speech tomorrow—about how we were going to Mars, to assist the Chinese in their Mars mission, if needed, and to do our own orbital surveys.”

“But we’re not…”

“No, but that’s what I’m going to say tomorrow. To everybody on the planet. Eventually, the secret will leak, and then… you’ll have to deal with it when it happens. But there’s not much difference between a long, slow trip to Mars and a long, fast one to Saturn. And your little prevarication wouldn’t look like much, next to my big one.”

“That seems pretty technical, I mean, on an emotional level.”

“Screw a bunch of emotions. If your relationship can’t survive a little white lie, then it probably can’t survive, anyway,” Santeros said. “Might as well get it over with.”

Fang-Castro had a snappy comeback to that, but suppressed it. Santeros’s husband was known as Happy Frank, as was his penis, which had reportedly traveled to places it shouldn’t have. Instead, Fang-Castro said, “Listen… I, uh…” She put a finger to her lips, thought for a few seconds, realized that she desperately wanted to go. She said, “I’ll take it. I’ll go.”

The President smiled and said, “Excellent. We want you pretty badly.” And she was gone again.

Vintner said, “I apologize if I seemed a little… pushy, but we’ve been under a lot of pressure with very little sleep for the past couple days.”

“Apology accepted,” Fang-Castro said. “Let’s get down to it. What kinds of mods are we talking about? What’s our propulsion system going to be? Who is handling recruiting of the ship’s complement and scientists? I have some current personnel I’d like to have vetted for this, particularly my Number Two…”

Ninety minutes later—it seemed like ten—Fang-Castro closed the screen, raised the security firewall, and took a deep breath. Ruined dinners were a point of discord in their relationship and there was some making-nice to be done: Tomaselli took her cooking seriously, and this wouldn’t be their first ruined dinner.

Back in the common room, Tomaselli was immersed in a book. She didn’t look up. The window shade was drawn. Not good signs.

Fang-Castro said, “I need to tell you something that falls under your top secret clearance. It comes with a warning from the President: you’ll be prosecuted if you say a word about this to anyone but me, before tomorrow at one o’clock.”

Tomaselli was pissed, but she wasn’t stupid: some things were more important than dinner. “What?”

“The President says we’re going to Mars,” Fang-Castro said. “I made them agree that I could tell you, before the announcement. They want me to take the job, and I accepted. I’d never dictate to you, Llorena, and I know this will be a long separation… but it wouldn’t start for a couple of years. I would be desperately sad to… leave you behind.”

“Mars? You made who agree?”

“Santeros… and a couple of high-level bureaucrats,” Fang-Castro said. “That’s who I was talking to.” And, “Listen, I’m really sorry about your dinner.”

“Oh, fuck the beans, Naomi,” Tomaselli said. “What in God’s name just happened?”

Fang-Castro said, “I don’t have the details, because nobody does. All I got was a lot of engineering questions. Maybe we’ll get some details tomorrow, when Santeros makes her big speech.”

Little white lies.

5.

Sandy let the van’s nav take him home; it was quicker that way, locking into fast-lane traffic across town to Pasadena. Zuma Beach had been a bust, with too many people, too few decent waves. And he’d been distracted: couldn’t be thinking about alien starships when your board was trying to kick your ass into the deep.

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