The Beacon: Hard Science Fiction Brandon Morris (love story novels in english .txt) đ
- Author: Brandon Morris
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But he was now well-informed about all the risks and side effects. It had been made clear that Virgin envisioned purely passive roles for the passengers. They were allowed to look at the Earth from every angle, take selfies, and buckle up again when the seatbelt signs lit up.
This time, however, it would be different. It had to be. But he alone knew how different!
âA Parasol, please!â
He recognized that accent. Peter turned around, and there was Francesca. The waiter greeted her with kisses on both cheeks, making it clear she was a regular here. She went to the bar to buy her drink, and only after she sat down did she look in Peterâs direction.
Francesca hesitated briefly. She was apparently uncomfortable, and he could sympathize. After all, she was off work, but knew the German was likely to approach her. The bartender brought his beer and set it in front of him. Peter raised it in a silent toast to Francesca. She nodded in acknowledgement. He could imagine how she was feeling. After all, he was a customer, and even though she was off duty, it would be rude of her to ignore him.
âA Parasol Golden Ale?â she asked.
Peter nodded.
âI drink that too, whenever they have it available.â
âSo you come here often?â asked Peter.
âAn Italian in a beer bar... does that surprise you? I was in Germany for a fairly long time during astronaut training, in Cologne, so I got used to drinking beer.â
He took a sip, then another. Something was missingânot enough hops for his liking.
âPretty good,â he said.
If it was Francescaâs favorite beer, heâd better stifle the criticism.
âI like it because itâs not too hoppy,â she said. âYouâre not going back to El Paso or Albuquerque?â
Francesca didnât strike the buddy-like tone sheâd used at the Spaceport, so he responded in kind.
âNo, I found Truth or Consequences more interesting.â
âMost of our passengers prefer to stay overnight in a bigger city.â
âWhat about you? I would have thought you lived in the Spaceport.â
âThat would be terrible. No, I have a small bungalow here. Iâm quite happy to have my peace and quiet after work.â
âI see. Iâll leave you alone.â
âNo, thatâs not what I meant. How did you get on board with us in the first place? You donât seem like the typical space tourist. I mean, you have to be able to afford it, first. Sorryâplease donât take this the wrong way.â
âThatâs alright. I sold my motherâs house to pay for it.â
âShe died? Iâm sorry to hear that.â
âItâs been a while. Donât worry.â
âAnd then why go to space of all places? For the money, you could have traveled around the world. Five times. In first class. Excuse meâfor some odd reason, I have the financial questions in mind today. You donât have to answer.â
âNo problem. Iâm a teacher, math and physics, and an amateur astronomer.â
âSo thatâs where the connection to space comes from. Then I donât have to explain that this flight doesnât bring us much closer to the stars and planets. There really are people who expect to see Mars as a sphere up there. Or even the stars.â
âNo, I donât expect anything like that.â
He paused. Peter wondered if he could talk to her about his true motives. Francesca was the pilot, and tomorrow he would see her for the last time in his life. It didnât matter if she thought he was a lunatic. And heâd acted normal enough today that she wouldnât report him yet for his weird ideas.
âStrictly speaking, I booked the flight because of a pretty serious problem that I hope to solve while weâre up there.â
âInteresting. Whatâs it about?â
âItâs a long story. Do you really want to hear it?â
âYou have as much time as it takes for me to drink two beers. After that, I have to go to bed. Youâll need a well-rested pilot tomorrow.â
Francesca had just ordered her third beer when he finished his saga about the satellite alignment problems.
âSo since yesterday, the beacon has been losing altitude?â asked Francesca.
âYes. You donât think Iâm crazy?â
âYouâre not exactly normal, thatâs for sure. You have to be crazy to put all your eggs in one basket like you did. Iâm just wondering how youâre expecting to solve the problem...?â
Iâm sure she already suspects it, even though she hasnât said it.
âI want to try to hijack the space glider.â
Francesca laughed heartily. âWith that rubber gun in your luggage? I was in the military long enough to recognize such an obvious fake.â
âHow do you know whatâs in my luggage?â
âThe bags are all x-rayed, along with the vehicles as they drive onto the Spaceport site. At the guard house as well! The guard probably thought you were training with it.â
âThat probably wouldnât have worked then,â he said.
âAnd you would have gone to jail for a few years, Peter, even with a fake. Everything that happens in that cabin is recorded. I would have knocked you out and strapped you down in your seat.â
âThen itâs a good thing we talked about it.â
âBut the solar system is going to be destroyedââ
ââif Iâm right. Unfortunately, my evidence is pretty thin. The main problem is that there is no physical process whatsoever that could just âblow outâ a star without leaving a trace.â
âThat which cannot be, must not be.â
âWell...â
âI could help you.â
âWhat? That would be great. You believe me?â
âI didnât say that. I donât know if your theory is correct. But if it is correct, no matter how small the odds, the consequences would be deadly. So Iâm inclined to take the low .â
âLow risk?â
âI am the pilot. I donât have to hijack the VSS Astra to change its
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