Read The Traveler Online

Authors: David Golemon

The Traveler (33 page)

“I appreciate the attempt to soften anything you have to report, but we are precariously short of time, gentlemen,” Compton said as he rubbed the bridge of his nose.

“Yes, of course. It seems Mr. Everett may have far more trouble than originally thought, if that's possible,” Morales said. “Europa, report number 45454, please.”

On the second largest of the newly installed monitors a map showed the current status of Antarctica. Europa then focused more specifically on the southern region of the frozen continent.

“Ross Island, its current state. Home of Mount Erebus, an active volcano.”

“Yes, it's been active continuously throughout recorded history,” Niles said.

“Yes, it has, but very active since 1972. The problem here is”—he looked away momentarily—“Europa, next slide please.” The picture changed to show Ross Island without the ice covering. All eyes saw immediately that Mount Erebus had been joined by three other volcanoes.

“Four volcanoes in the same area?” Mendenhall asked from his chair next to Jason Ryan.

“Yes, and through deep ice core drilling and back-scanner ice intrusions we are more than sure these four volcanoes were extremely active during the time frame we may be looking at. So much so that three of the volcanoes, Mounts Terror, Bird, and Terra Nova, vented so heavily they became extinct. Mount Erebus is the only one to survive and live on.”

“What are you saying, Doctor?” Niles asked, becoming increasingly angry at his head of the geology department for not reporting this herself. Yes, he was angry with Sarah just as much as Collins.

“Europa estimates that all four volcanoes were in eruption in the same time frame as Mr. Everett's disappearance.”

“How does this affect the survival possibilities for a man?” Jack asked.

“Not very good,” Morales said, and they could all see he was a patient and knowing teacher who answered in a way that the simplest mind could understand. The Event Group would have to be patient with the new man. “Europa does not agree with the proposed speculation of other noted geologists. She believes this eruption of four volcanoes simultaneously brought on a massive ice age the world over. The world as we know was mostly a barren landscape of ice and snow. What Mount Erebus did was deliver the coup de gras to not only the more exposed northern land masses, but effectively killed the entire continent of Antarctica. This killer eruption was the death sentence for the continent and its overabundance of animal life, which conservative estimates place at ten thousand times the amount of life in Africa at its height.”

“Jesus,” Jenks said, whistling.

“The air will become poisonous and the world will turn freezing if it hadn't already by the time of Admiral Everett's arrival there. We just don't have enough information to go on.”

“So, if Carl survived the exit through the wormhole, and also the reentry of the escape pod, his chances of surviving the animal life and the eruption of these four monstrous volcanoes are not very good.”

Morales nodded sadly into the television monitor at Compton. “Europa estimates the odds of survival at”—Morales changed tack when he saw the expectant and knowing faces around the table—“well, you said it yourself, Director Compton: not very good.”

The room was quiet enough that most could hear Alice Hamilton as she tapped her notes on her electronic pad.

“Colonel,” Niles said, trying to get the room back to some form of activity to keep them from thinking about the possible horrible fate of their friend, “how are you and Colonel Farbeaux coming with your team?”

“They're assembling now,” he said with his eyes carefully avoiding Jason and Will, who exchanged concerned looks. Was the colonel really considering leaving the two men behind on this one?

“Master Chief, are the components ready for the portable doorway?” Compton asked, knowing Collins had some explaining to do to his security department over the choices for the doorway mission team.

“Two complete sets. I have to admit that Slim's, er, uh, I mean, Dr. Pollock … her division has been pretty damned impressive as far as reverse-engineering that damn time machine. Of course, it was my newly acquired engineering staff that pieced the portable doorway together in record time. But that is not my concern.” The master chief pulled the unlit cigar from his mouth and looked at the director. “I'll say this, though, if anything happens to our only portable power unit, we've all had it. We'd end up dining with the cavemen if that power generator is lost”—he looked over at the monitor and Dr. Morales—“and I guess choking on volcano farts also.”

“Well-worded, Master Chief,” Morales said with a smile.

“That cannot be helped. The only other portable power generator is owned by the Russians and I don't think they have a current superpower loan department,” Compton said, losing patience with the same arguments from the master chief.

Jenks was about to say something when he saw Collins lightly shake his head, telling Jenks that he had said enough for the time being.

“Niles,” came the voice, and the image of Virginia appeared on the monitor next to Morales. “We're as ready as we'll ever be for the power-up and test. Europa has reworked the old programming and brought it into this century. We are now completely digital. Power source is hooked up and the
Los Angeles
is capable of giving us one hundred and fifteen percent of her reactor power.”

“Very good.”

Niles stood with difficulty and then placed his hand on Jack's shoulder and with a final look at Mendenhall and Ryan, nodded his good luck.

“Let's adjourn and see if we have a mission or not, shall we?”

As the group filed out to witness history, again, Jack waited on Will and Jason as he gathered his notes.

“No,” was all he said when they approached him. He finally looked up and into the angry faces. “The team has been set and you two are sitting this one out.”

“Look, we—”

“Sitting it out,” Collins said with a stern look at Ryan.

“No disrespect, Colonel, but we have a right to go,” Will said.

Jack placed his case down and then fixed the men with the look that said, “The order has been given, and that's that.”

“If no disrespect is intended, why are you doing it? You have your orders, both of you. You will secure the building and the grounds. If that's too much then I'll assign Sergeant Rodriguez to the job and then send you two back to Nellis.”

“Sir,” Mendenhall said when he saw Ryan was too angry to say anything.

“Look, the odds are not that good for a return trip on this one. You two are not essential to the team and will therefore stay behind. We'll only be risking personnel that we feel can be lost without it devastating the Group.”

“And just who in the hell would that be?” Ryan asked not too politely.

“Dismissed, gentlemen.”

“Jack—” Ryan said, but stopped when Collins turned back to face them.

“We've already lost too much. You two are far more than just men in my department, you're my friends, and Carl would never allow that friendship to be placed in jeopardy to get him home. This is my job and yours, gentlemen, is to make sure everything you have learned from the both of us is carried on at Group. We've come too damn far to lose what we've learned over our years together. I'm sorry. And, Jason, you were right the other day, you did exactly as I would have done in Mexico.”

They watched Collins walk from the room, leaving them standing and looking like schoolboys who had just received corporal punishment.

The same question came to each man simultaneously. Just who did the colonel think was expendable?

 

13

As the nonessential personnel gathered inside the observation room, Virginia went from one of her nuclear science technicians to the other, making sure their safeguards were in place. In case of any power fluctuation, especially when high-powered lasers were concerned, she wanted the ability for each team member to have the wherewithal to shut the test run down. The last item on her list were the power couplings that snaked in through the exterior conduit through the basement. The four-inch thick cables were strong enough to carry the current that would illuminate all of Chicago. The three power lines hummed with power from the nuclear plant generated by the USS
Los Angeles
.

Master Chief Jenks sat at the main control console with Moira Mendelsohn. The old woman was excited and near giddiness to see her doorway once again becoming ready for operations. She received the old butterfly feeling as she thought about her own heady and far-too-adventurous transports back into a world that no longer existed. With eyes smiling the old woman lifted a cigarette to her mouth and lit it. Just as one of his staff was going to inform Madam that there was no smoking, Niles shook his head. He was not about to tell one of the most brilliant people in world history that she couldn't smoke a cigarette—it was time to stop being ridiculous.

“It amazes me that anyone would have trusted this thing enough to go through it,” the master chief mumbled.

Moira, with the cigarette dangling from her red lips, reached out and brought down the intensity of the floodlights that illuminated the large doorway. The ceramic composite material used in this second doorway was an advancement that Moira was unfamiliar with but she immediately saw the benefits of the material. Whoever the traitorous element in her company consisted of they had done a remarkable job duplicating her original doorway. She could not fathom how they reengineered the Welsian Doorway in the first place, but she did have suspicions that she kept to herself for the time being.

“This new material will have a far better effect at conducting the electrical charge suffered by the Traveler through their system without the pain associated with entering the field. Marvelous engineering.”

“Painful, was it?” Jenks asked as he watched the Traveler sitting as calm as if she were at the opera. “The early experiments, I mean?”

She smiled and turned the rheostat for the lowest lighting mark. She turned to Jenks. “It was as if someone were drilling into your bones with a red-hot poker. And you asked why would someone go through an untested apparatus such as the doorway. Some of us had very little choice in that decision.”

“Nazis, huh?” Jenks asked with an admiration he had yet to show for the woman.

“Yes, Nazis.”

“Now those are some fellas I would have liked to meet up with.”

“No, Master Chief Jenks”—Moira turned away—“you would not.” She stubbed out her cigarette and then faced the doorway once more.

Jenks was about to say something when Virginia nudged him aside as she slid into her chair.

“Excuse the hell out of me,” he said.

“Is he bothering you?” she asked Moira.

“No, just answering some of the master chief's naiveté.”

“God, we'll be here all night,” Virginia said as she hurriedly spoke into her walkie-talkie before Jenks could retort with something idiotic.


Los Angeles,
let's start off with only fifty percent power profile. We'll start here at twenty-five percent.”

“Reactor is at redline—fifty minus.”

“Thank you
Los Angeles
. Emergency shutdown on my command.”

“Roger, control has the scram call.”

*   *   *

“This is so far beyond my basic understanding of the universe and how it works,” Ellenshaw said as he watched the glimmering square with the ceramic doorway in its circular form in the middle. The doorway was capable of fitting six men side by side and large enough for a tracked vehicle to traverse.

“Don't feel alone, Professor,” Compton agreed.

“In essence the lasers engage a form of disintegration on the subject matter?” Charlie asked.

“It's a form of light transfer of solid material. The subject is basically sectioned by Europa. Back in 1942 it was a program that guessed at the reconstruction of the Traveler upon arriving in the chosen dimension and then reformed the subject, or the Traveler. The applications for this technology are far more than just dimensional shifting,” Niles said as he watched below as a technician adjusted the focus of the sixty-five laser apertures lining the doorway.

“Are you talking about transport?” Jack asked as he watched Jason and Will walk in and set down at the far end of the room. They had just checked on security but he knew they were far from happy with him and his decision making of late. When the door opened he had hoped it would have been Sarah and Anya.

“Yes, real
Star Trek
stuff, I know, but there you have it.”

“Doctor, we have discussed this before in our ‘what if' sessions. This technology cannot be allowed to—”

Niles held up a hand, staying Jack's argument before it could be voiced, only because it was his
own
argument to begin with.

The lights dimmed and then flashed on and off as the
Los Angeles
sent the small percentage of power coursing through the building's old wiring system. The test was starting.

The protective glass shield below that fronted the technician's consoles that fed telemetry to the doorway's geopositioning system, a program hurriedly designed by Virginia and Jenks with the assistance of Europa, slid up from the rubber-lined flooring. The specialized glass was treated with gold shavings that assisted the electrical charge to disburse more evenly to protect the control personnel. As Moira watched on she saw many of the same design characteristics of her own doorway in building 117. But whoever built this had spared no expense, which gave her pause as she thought of possible suspects in the copying of her technology. The prohibitive cost alone eliminated most everybody in her sphere of influence—almost.

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