"Larry Niven & Jerry Pournelle - The mote in God ' s eye" - читать интересную книгу автора (Niven Larry)

file:///F|/rah/larry%20niven/Mote%20in%20God's%20Eye%20%20(Jerry%20Pournelle%20co%20author).txt

Prologue

"Throughout the past thousand years of history it has been traditional to regard the
Alderson Drive as an unmixed blessing. Without the faster than light travel Alderson's discoveries
made possible, humanity would have been trapped in the tiny prison of the Solar System when the
Great Patriotic Wars destroyed the CoDominium on Earth. Instead, we had already settled more than
two hundred worlds.
"A blessing, yes. We might now be extinct were it not for the Alderson Drive. But unmixed?
Consider. The same tramline effect that colonized the stars, the same interstellar contacts that
allowed the formation of the First Empire, allow interstellar war. The worlds wrecked in two
hundred years of Secession Wars were both settled and destroyed by ships using the Alderson Drive.
"Because of the Alderson Drive we need never consider the space between the stars. Because
we can shunt between stellar systems in zero time, our ships and ships' drives need cover only
interplanetary distances. We say that the Second Empire of Man rules two hundred worlds and all
the space between, over fifteen million cubic parsecs.
"Consider the true picture. Think of myriads of tiny bubbles, very sparsely scattered,
rising through a vast black sea. We rule some of the bubbles. Of the waters we know nothing. .

-from a speech delivered by Dr. Anthony Horvath at the Blaine Institute, A.D. 3029.


A.D. 3017
THE CRAZY EDDIE PROBE
1 Command


"Admiral's compliments, and you're to come to his office right away," Midshipman Staley
announced.
Commander Roderick Blaine looked frantically around the bridge, where his officers were
directing repairs with low and urgent voices, surgeons assisting at a difficult operation. The
gray steel compartment was a confusion of activities, each orderly by itself, but the overall
impression was of chaos. Screens above one helmsman's station showed the planet below and the
other ships in orbit near MacArthur, but everywhere else the panel covers had been removed from
consoles, test instruments were clipped into their insides, and technicians stood by with color-
coded electronic assemblies to replace everything that seemed doubtful. Thumps and whines sounded
through the ship as somewhere aft the engineering crew worked on the hull.
The scars of battle showed everywhere, ugly burns where the ship's protective Langston
Field had overloaded momentarily. An irregular hole larger than a man's fist was burned completely
through one console, and now two technicians seemed permanently installed in the system by a web
of cables. Rod Blaine looked at the black stains that had spread across his battle dress. A whiff
of metal vapor and burned meat was still in his nostrils, or in his brain, and again he saw fire
and molten metal erupt from the hull and wash across his left side. His left arm was still bound
across his chest by an elastic bandage, and he could follow most of the previous week's activities
by the stains it carried.
And I've only been aboard an hour! he thought. With the Captain ashore, and everything a
mess, I can't leave now! He turned to the midshipman. "Right away?"
"Yes, sir. The signal's marked urgent."
Nothing for it, then, and Rod would catch hell when the Captain came back aboard. First