When Karl returned on the last shuttle flight, five hours later, he was
drawn and pale, and had lost all 50 his usual vivacity. Without a word, he had handed Duncan a small package, wrapped in brightly colored paper, and bearing the inscription LOVE FROM
CALINDY.
Duncan had opened it with trembling fingers; a bubble stereo was inside. It was a long time before he was able to see, through the mist of tears, the image it contained.
Much later that same day, as they clung together in mutual misery, an obvious question had suddenly occurred to Duncan.
“What did she give you, Karl?” he had asked.
There was a sudden pause in the other’s breathing, and he felt Karl’s body tense slightly and draw away from him. It was an almost imperceptible gesture; probably Karl was not even aware of it.
When he answered, his voice was strained and curiously defensive.
“It’s-it’s a secret. Nothing important; perhaps one day I’ll tell you.”
Even then, Duncan knew that he never would; and somehow he already yealized that this was the last night they would ever spend together.
WORLD’S END
Ground Effect Vehicles were very attractive in a low-gravity, dense-atmosphere environment, but they did tend to rearrange the landscape, especially when it consisted largely of fluffy snow. That was only a problem, however, to anyone following in the rear. When it reached its normal cruising speed of two hundred kilometers an hour, the hover sled left its private blizzard behind it, and the view ahead was excellent.
But it was not cruising at two hundred klicks; it was flat out at three, and Duncan was beginning to wish he had stayed home.
It would be very stupid if he broke his neck, on a mission where his presence was quite unnecessary, only two days before he was due to leave for
Earth.
Yet there was no real danger. They were moving over smooth, flat ammonia snow, on a terrain known to be free from crevasses. Top speed was safe, and it was fully justified. This was too good an opportunity to miss, and he had waited for it for years. No one had ever observed a wax worm in the active phase, and this one was only eighty kilometers from Oasis. The seismographs had spotted its characteristic signature, and the environment computer had given the alert. The hover sled had been through the airlock within ten minutes.
Now it was approaching the lower slopes of Mount Shackelton, the well-behaved little volcano which, after much careful thought, the original settlers had decided to accept as a neighbor. Waxworms were almost always associated with volcanoes, and some were festooned with them “like an explosion in a spaghetti factory,” as one early explorer had put it. No wonder that their discovery had caused much excitement; from the air they looked very much like the protective tunnels built by termites and other social insects on Earth.
To the bitter disappointment of the exobiologists, they had turned out to be a purely natural phenomenon-the equivalent, at a much lower temperature, of terrestrial lava tubes. The head of a wax worm moved, judging from the seismic records, at up to fifty kilometers an hour, preferring slopes of not more than ten degrees. They had even been known to go uphill for short distances, when the driving pressure was sufficiently high. Once the core of hot petrochemicals had passed along, what remained was a hollow tube as much as five meters in diameter. Waxworms were among Titan’s more benign manifestations; not only were they a valuable source of raw materials, but they could be readily adapted for storage space and even temporary surface housing-if
one could get used to the rich orchestration of alliphatic smells. The hover sled had another reason for speed; it was the season of eclipses.
Twice every Saturnian year, around the equinoxes, the sun would vanish behind the invisible bulk of the planet for up to six hours at a time.
There would be no slow waning of light, as on Earth; with shocking abruptness, the monstrous shadow of Saturn would sweep across Titan, bringing sudden and unexpected night to any traveler who had been foolish enough not to check his calendar.
Today’s eclipse was due in just over an hour, which, unless they ran into obstacles, would give ample time to reach the wax worm The sled was now driving down a narrow valley flanked by beautiful ammonia cliffs, tinted every possible shade of blue from the palest sapphire to deep indigo. Titan had been called the most colorful world in the Solar System-not excluding
Earth; if the sunlight had been more powerful, it would have been positively garish. Although reds and oranges predominated, every part of the spectrum was available somewhere, though seldom for long in the same place. The methane storms and ammonia rains were continually sculpting the landscape.
“Hello, Sled Three,” said Oasis Control suddenly. “You’ll be out in the open again in five kilometers less than two minutes at your present speed.
Then there’s a ten-kilometer slope up to the Amundsen Glacier. From there, you should be able to see the worm. But I think you’re too late-it’s almost reached World’s End.”
“Damn,” said the geologist who had been handling the sled with such effortless skill. “I was afraid of that. Something tells me I’m never going to catch a worm on the run.”
He cut the speed abruptly as a flurry of snow reduced visibility almost to zero, and for a few minutes they were navigating on radar alone through a shining white mist. A film of sticky hydrocarbon slush started to build up on the forward windows, and would soon have covered them completely if the driver had not taken remedial action A high-pitched whine filled the cabin as the sheets of tough plastic started to oscillate at near ultrasonic frequencies, and a fascinating
pat53 tern of standing waves appeared before the obscuring layer was flicked away.
Then they were through the little storm, and the jet-black wall of the
Amundsen Glacier was visible on the horizon. In a few centuries that creeping mountain would reach Oasis, and it would be necessary to do something about it. During the years of summer, the viscosity of the carbon-impregnated oils and waxes became low enough for the glacier to advance at the breath-taking speed of several centimeters an hour, but during the long winter it was as motionless as rock.
Ages ago, local heating had melted part of the glacier and formed Lake
Tuonela, almost as Stygian black as its parent but decorated by great whorls and loops where lighter material had been caught in patterns of turbulence, now frozen for eternity. Everyone who saw the phenomenon from the air for the first time thought he was being original when he exclaimed:
“Why, it looks exactly like a cup of coffee, just after you’ve stirred in the cream!”
As the sled raced over the lake, the pattern flickered past in a few minutes, too close for its swirls to be properly observed. Then there was another long slope, dotted with large boulders which could be avoided only by the full thrust of the under jets This cut speed to less than a hundred klicks, and the sled labored up toward the crest in zigs and zags, the driver cursing and looking every few seconds at his watch.
“There it is!” Duncan shouted.
Only a few kilometers away, coming out of the mist that always enveloped the flanks of Mount Shackelton, was a thin white line, like a piece of rope laid across the landscape. It stretched away downhill until it disappeared over the horizon, and the driver swung the sled around to follow its track.
But Duncan already knew that they were too late to achieve their main objective; they were much too close to World’s End. Minutes later, they were there, and the sled came to a stop at a respectful distance.
“That’s as close as I’m getting,” said the driver. “I wouldn’t like a gust to catch us when we’re skirting the edge. Who wants to go out?