Gone – is a serial short story that will be released here over the next several weeks. I hope you enjoy it. Feel free to follow my blog in order to get the latest. - Peter-John Campbell
If you would haven't read chapter 2 feel free to click here.
Chapter
3
In the quiet endless night of
space, a small constellation of dust particles danced slowly in the
red glow of refracted light from the Martian day. Deimos, the outer
guard, crept silently by like a watchmen on patrol. Rounding the
crimson planet he looked on and spotted, far off, the small familiar
pale azure sphere of Earth somberly drifting on in the blackness.
Then to his surprise a blue spark
flashed, a twinkle, almost unseen to those not watching closely. A
moment later, in a wink, with fit-filled speed a strange creature
passed by. The dance of dust scattered here and there, forming new
ballets in the void.
Deimos, fearing nothing, looked on
unscathed by the small voiceless disturbance. But wondered, “To
what end does Terra plot? A Griffin, perhaps? Carrying a message to
her ringed son? That voyager in far desolate reaches?” For this was
not the first time Deimos had seen a messenger of Terra flung to the
stars. All this he would have thought, if not a rock, and silently he
crept on his watch once more.
Inside the Sphinx was another tale
all together, as silence was a forgotten sound. Every light on the
control panels was lit. Every alarm sounded with a piercing shrilling
beat. “Warning: System Overload” blinked in red on all the
screens.
Jackson swore. His fingers flew on
the key pad, but the computer would not respond. “Come on! Come
on!” He threw his fist down. “Ethel, disengage Burt!”
Ethel did not respond.
“Ethel!”
Jackson only then realized that a moment before he had turned the
voice command off. Quickly he flipped the switch on.”Ethel,
disengage the light speed engine!” The interior lights blinked off
and on.
“Un..a....le...c....ply”
Ethel's voice broke in and out. Then, without warning, the ship went
completely dark and everything shut down. Hurling through
frictionless space, the Sphinx, now dead, was set adrift at an
incalculable and uncontrollable speed.
At this speed, the light of the
distant stars do not bend into elongated beams as one might assume.
But rather the small glowing dots of the stars grow brighter and
brighter. And as the Sphinx passed by particles reached they pealed
away almost without notice. And if one were to turn and look back
behind while traveling, they would see nothing of these lights, but
only that of the quickly fading radiance of the sun.
Jackson
had no time to observe any of this. Frantically he unbuckled himself
from his seat and tore his helmet off. Feeling in the darkness he
found the storage compartment and pulled out a small flashlight. Then
pushing himself down the long thin channel behind the cockpit, he
opened panels on the walls and the floor, exposing the mainframe.
Gripping a handle he steady himself and, reaching in, pushed the Hard
Reset
button. Nothing. The ship did not respond.
Looking
in, Jackson could see that the main circuitry was fried. “You got
to be kidding me.” Thinking fast he turned and began pulling parts
from the landing system.
The
Sphinx began to rattle, like turbulence on a plane. Jackson anxiously
looked around but had no time to consider what was causing this.
Ripping the burnt out cards he quickly reset the parts borrowed. Then
looking over the rest of the systems and seeing no other visible
damage he skittishly put his finger on the red reset button again. He
took a long nervous breath and depressed it.
Click.
A moment passed; Jackson sat in the darkness. His air would run out
soon enough and he would either die on the edge of the solar system
of suffocation, or be struck and blown apart by the first object
whose path he crossed. The next few seconds seemed like an eternity
for Jackson, and just when he was about to begin coming to terms with
his fate, the faint small whistle of the computer booting up begin to
sing.
The
interior lights blinked on. And one by one the various systems began
beeping and ticking away. Burt was back on, and the petals were
humming
again.
Jackson
leaped from his spot and pushed himself back to the captain's chair.
“Ethel, are you with me?'
“Affirmative.”
“Then
disengage the light speed engine!”
“Confirm.”
The lights on Burt immediately powered down and the soft oscillating
woop-woop-woop
of the petals were no longer heard.
“Ethel,
all reverse full.” Blue flames fired from the front of the Sphinx,
the petals illuminated once more, only this time from the front.
“Bring her to a full stop, Ethel.” Quickly Jackson rebooted the
secondary systems, starting with the short range scanner.
“Confirm.
Full stop in five-thousand meters.” The
Sphinx, in full reverse, quickly brought itself to a hard stop.
Petals Four and Seven flickered in and out and then went dark. “We
have stopped, Sir.”
On
a monitor to Jackson's right, a radar-like screen appeared and began
displaying objects within range on the three-dimensional grid. “Where
are we?”
“Unknown,
Sir. The long range sensor is damaged.” Ethel was silent for a
moment. “But my current estimate is we are somewhere in the edge of
the Oort Cloud.”
Startled,
Jackson looked up from his screen and out the window. “What?” The
endless blackness, sprinkled with the light of distant stars and
galaxies, gleamed with a clarity never before seen with human eyes.
Jackson, overwhelmed, looked on with wide-eyed wonder.
Finally,
coming to his senses, he spoke. “Are we recording?”
“Twenty-eight seconds after the re-boot we began recording all functioning sensors.”
“Good...good.”
Jackson, memorized, pulled himself away from the sight, knowing that
he couldn't last long in his present condition. “Ethel, run full
diagnostic. I'm going to take a look at the long range sensor.”
“Confirm.”
A day passed, in Earth time, as
Jackson repaired the essential parts of the ship with Ethel's help.
Finding
that the long range sensor was beyond fixing, Jackson eventually gave
up. He opened a small hatch and
slid himself down into the lower deck below the cockpit. A small
narrow cove which hardly had enough space for Jackson to breath, let
alone turn around. This was the heart of the Burt. Floating down to a
computer station, Jackson reported to Ethel. “Well, the primary
core is shot. We'll need to switch to the backup.” Jackson booted
down the primary core. The glowing red box to his left powered down
and the light faded.
“Sir,
the secondary core has not been fully tested.” Ethel protested.
“We're
gonna have to risk it.” Pulling himself up a few feet, he opened
the secondary core. Reaching in, Jackson manually turned it on. Then
shutting the door he pushed himself back down to the computer
station. “Initiating secondary core.” The red light from the core
filled the chamber. The oscillating sound of the machine begin to
humm. Woop-woop-woop.
“I'll
start calibrating. How are those coordinates coming?”
“I
have generally estimated our position based on our relation to the
sun. But without our long range scanners I am unable to truly judge
our distance.”
Jackson powered up the first
petal. “Then I guess we'll have to eyeball it.”
“I'm
sorry, Sir, but I do not understand the phrase eyeball
it.
Can you please restate.” Ethel replied.
Jackson smiled, thinking how to
explain it to a computer. “Uh, it just means we'll have to take our
best guess.”
“You
have not programmed me to guess.”
Jackson continued calibrating the
first petal. “Well, then I'll do the guessing and you can keep me
honest--”
Suddenly Ethel interrupted.
“Excuse me, Sir, but we are receiving a message.”
“What?”
Confused and concerned. “From who?”
“Stand
by....stand by...” she said.
Jackson pulled himself out of the
hatch and back into the cockpit. His heart began to race a little.
Ethel spoke slowly, almost as if
questioning her own words. “It appears... to be a message... from
Pioneer 10.”
Jackson, perplexed, “Come
again?”
“The
American space probe Pioneer 10, launched on March 3, 1972--” Ethel
respond.
http://science1.nasa.gov/missions/pioneer-10-11/ |
“Yeah,
I know what it is,” Jackson said cutting her off. “How is that
even possible?” He climbed back into the pilot's seat and begin
reviewing his
monitors. “Where is it?”
“Short
range sensors place it approximately sixty-five hundred meters off
the starboard bow.” On the monitor a small green dot blipped.
Jackson sat up and peered out the window.
“Can
I see it?”
“No
Sir, it's too far. The signal is faint. Do you wish for me to
download the message?”
“Yes,
yes. Of course.”
The information poured in;
readings of temperature, radiation, magnetics and more appeared on
the screen, along with several pictures. Jackson, scanning through
the report, smiled from this unexpected encounter with history. “How
did they ever pull this off back then?” he thought to himself.
“Sir,”
Ethel spoke. “I believe using these rudimentary coordinates from
the probe, I would be able to calculate a path home. Without the long
range sensor.”
Jackson didn't respond. He was
lost in thought, not of going back but of pressing onward to explore.
His stomach growled in protest at the idea. It was a foolish thought;
there was, at most, two days of water on the ship and no food.
Jackson was kicking himself for being so unprepared.
“Sir,
shall I calculate a path?” Ethel asked again.
“Yes.”
He answered grievously.
An hour later, the test and
re-calibration were complete. Unsure of his work Jackson tenuously
engaged Burt for a brief low power burn. The petals performed without
error. Left with no other options than to trust his instruments and
his work, Jackson set his course. He looked out once more on the
canopy of stars that laid before him, wishing. And then with a small
simple press of a button, the blue spark flashed.
Tearing
back into the solar system, the light of the sun grew larger and
brighter.
The turbulence rattled the ship as the Sphinx passed through the Bow
Shock. The next several hours passed while Jackson closely monitored
their position and speed as he reentered the heliosphere. With every
orbital threshold passed, Jackson breath a little easier.
“Sir,
we have reached the orbital plain of Mars,” Ethel reported.
“Excellent,
now take us home.” The ship pitched ever so slightly to the left
and headed inward towards the sun. As they approached the
coordinates, Jackson looked up from his monitors to take a look upon
his home. But what he saw was nothing; not an azure blue dot
glistening in the distance, only endless blackness. “Ethel...”
Jackson looked back at his screens, but the green dot blinked
steadily, indicating that they should be within range of the Earth.
“What's happening?” Jackson powered Burt down and brought the
ship to a halt.
“Stand
by, Sir. Calculating... calculating... calculating.” Ethel was
quiet for a moment. The screen from the short range sensor glitched
off and on several times. “Rebooting the short range sensor,” she
reported. The screen reappeared giving a localized view of the inner
solar system. “I'm sorry sir, it appears that I miscalculated. We
are approximately five and one quarter months off of the Earth's
rotation.”
Jackson, anxious, “So you know
where it is?”
“Affirmative.”
The screen adjusted indicating the new coordinates of the Earth. A
yellow line appeared showing the path past Venus and the Sun.
Jackson reengaged the engine and
quickly made his way around the sun. The blistering light poured into
the cockpit from his left. “Ethel, dim the windshield.”
“Confirm.”
Gradually the windshield darkened from a billion little pixels within
the window.
It was not long after this that
Jackson could see the blaring white shine of the far side of the moon
in the distance. “Hello there, old friend,” he said smiling. Then
turning into the Moon's orbit, the Sphinx rounded the sphere and, on
the quarter edge, the Earth rose into full sight.
Jackson's eyes widened and his
mouth fell open at the startling scene. For what was before him was
not the planet he left; blue, green, and white. Now shrouded from
pole to pole in blackness, the entire globe seemed to be covered in
one massive storm. Lighting jumped here and there, snaking it's way
across the blanket of gray.
With a press of the button Jackson
called out, “Ground, this is Sphinx, come in.” The channel
fuzzed. “Ground, this is Sphinx.” His voice was tense and
anxious. “Ground?” He looked down over his instruments. “Ethel,
are we on the right channel?”
“Affirmative.
You are broadcasting at 125.463 Megahertz.” Ethel replied.
Jackson quickly looked over his
screens. “Ground, this is Sphinx. Do you copy?” Static was the
only response. “Elise, can you hear me?” A snap of lighting
flicked across the clouds. “Ethel, prepare to orbit.”
“Confirm.”
The ship rolled until the cockpit
faced downward towards the planet, exposing the underside of the
ship. Blue flames ignited from all sides, guiding the Sphinx into a
stable orbit. “Orbit complete.”
“Ethel,
scan all known broadcast frequencies, and put it through to my
earpiece so I can hear.”
“Confirm.”
Static click after static click, the numbers quickly sailed upwards
across the screen as Ethel tuned through the light spectrum,
listening for any sign of communication. Jackson listened
impatiently. His heart beginning to pound. Finally, “I'm sorry,
Sir, but I am unable to find an active channel.”
Jackson
closed his eyes, not sure what to fear. “Then let's fire a Spurts.”
“If
I may protest,” Ethel returned. “It is illegal to broadcast on
every known frequency. You would be in violation of at least fifty
U.S. Laws alone, not to mention breaking the WIOP treaty--”
“Well,
they can come and get me,” Jackson said anxiously as his typed on
the keyboard. Then hitting the enter key, Jackson opened his
com-link. “This is Jackson Price sending a full spectrum broadcast.
My primary channel is 125.463 Mhz. I have lost contact with my ground
crew am an in need of assistance. I am currently orbiting at
approximately 30,000 kilometers above sea level. Just now passing
over...” Turning to his screen, he discovered it was an empty
sphere as the patterns of the continents jumped about. “Ethel,
where are we?”
“Unknown sir. At this point I am unable to find any identifiable landmarks to gauge our position.”
“Unknown sir. At this point I am unable to find any identifiable landmarks to gauge our position.”
“Switch
to the thermal scanners.” The screen flipped displaying the Earth
with various shades of red.
“Confirm.
The thermal scanners are reading an extortionately high radiation
count in the atmosphere. Higher than the sensors are even calibrated
to register. Which would account for our inability to penetrate.”
Exhausted
Jackson sat back in his chair and took a long nervous breath. “What
is happening?” he whispered to himself. His mind raced. He thought
of Elise, Danny, and the billions of people who lay beneath the veil.
How
did this happen? What could have done this? I was only gone a day.
Are they alive? Elise...
He thought all this and more as he
stared out onto the once vibrate globe, now nothing more than a
darkened shell of its former self. Life, snuffed out under the
seething, twisting, raging storm.
In the quietness of space, the
Sphinx passed over the endless sea of swirling black and gray. Licks
of lighting and exploding pops skipped across the roiling wake as the
ship sail above the tempest's squall, when upon the the belly of the
Sphinx a shadow fell.
“Standby,
receiving transmission.” Ethel announced.
Jackson jerked his head up and
looked at the screen. “Where?”
“It's
from a communication satellite, AMC-3. We are passing directly under
it.”
Jackson turned to the
geo-positioning screen and, using the the position of AMC-3,
calibrated the map. The continents displayed in yellow outlines
overtop of the churning red thermal array. Jackson could now at least
make a general estimate of where they were.
“There
is a fair amount of data, would you like me to download it?” Ethel
asked.
“Yes,
yes, go ahead.” Jackson turned to monitor the download when
unexpectedly the interior lights blinked off and on. “Ethel? What's
going on?”
“I'm
sorry sir,” Ethel's voice spoke slowly and deliberately. With each
word her voice became deeper and less understandable, “the
down...load... see...ms... to... be... ov...er... loa...d...ing...
my... sssss....ystem....s.” With that the Sphinx went dark, again.
“Crap!”
Jackson leaped from his seat and quickly found the reset button. Hard
booting the Sphinx was never Jackson's intention when he designed the
ship. He reached the button and depressed it, then pushing himself he
floated back to the pilot's seat. One by one the systems turned on.
Suddenly he heard a voice. It was
a women screaming, “Are we still on!? Are we on? New York I don't
know if you can hear me but I'll keep going.” Jackson pulled up the
screen and a second later the video feed appeared. A news reporter,
covered in dirt, bruised, and bleeding, spoke quickly into the
camera. “We are live here covering the Philadelphia marathon when
just a moment ago a flash of light from the north filled the sky.
Followed by a percussive shock... As you can see behind me, all of
the windows in this neighborhood are shattered. I was literally
knocked to the ground by the blast. I have no idea if this was from a
gas explosion or--” she stopped at the sound of the air raid siren.
Looking up the camera followed a trail of white smoke in the sky; an
object, high up, was approaching. “Oh God! Oh God! Bobby, Bobby we
got to run! We got to run! Run!” The camera dropped, shaking every
which way, catching glimpses of a crowd running, pushing, fleeing,
screaming. A deep fierce rumble overwhelmed the cries. Then a moment
later the signal froze, clicked in and out, and then disappeared.
Jackson watched, breathless; hand
over his mouth, heart pounding, body trembling. Reaching with his
right forefinger, he timidly clicked the button to view the next
file. The image was of that of a burning city; red and black filled
the screen and sirens echoed at a distance. Jackson played the next
file.
Two news anchors spoke, terrified,
from their news desk attempting to remain calm as images of more
carnage poured in from around the world. “If you are just now
joining us, we are broadcasting to you live from our Houston offices.
New York has been attacked. We have lost all communication from our
network offices there. If you would bear with us, we are attempting
to piece together what has happened. But it appears that New York is
again the victim of a terrorist attack. Pardon me...one moment, my
producer is saying something....We have conformation that Los
Angeles, Baltimore, and Boston, have also been attacked. And we are
getting a report now that London has also been attacked. It is now
seeming to be a coordinated attack. By whom we don't know, but we
will stay here live as long as we can, bringing the information as it
comes in. Right now we turn to--” The file ended.
Jackson watch as file after file
played out the horrifying truth. The sum of all fears of generations
had come to pass. A world torn apart by madness was all that remained
below. The never ending feed of destruction played out thirty seconds
at at time. Shaking with fear, tears blinked from Jackson's eyes and
floated about the cockpit. His stomach was in knots, sickened by
guilt and regret of not being there for Elise.
His head hung low and, playing the
next file, a familiar voice cut through, “--if you can hear me--”
The voice broke in and out. “Sphinx, this is ground...” Jackson
looked up at the sound of Elise's voice. It was an audio feed, the
file marked 125.463, “Jackson, if you read me, please respond,
over?” Jackson sat up, watching the curser pass over the waveform.
“Something's happened...an... at...ork.”
Jackson reached forward and turned
up the volume. “--not sure how... but... think... it's our fault.”
---
To read Chapter 4 click here.Would you like to learn more about how our Solar System works? Then Check out this interactive map by following this link. http://www.solarsystemscope.com
Gone by Peter-John Campbell @2014