Chapter One
Ambush!
Rawling McTigre, the director of the Mars Project, had
warned me that, on this practice run in the Hammerhead space torpedo, I
wouldnt be alone in the black emptiness 3,500 miles above the planet. But Id
already circled Phobos, one of the Martian moons, twice and seen nothing, so it
was a complete surprise when my heat radar buzzed with movement from below.
Actually, its wrong to say I had seen nothing.
What Id really seen was the silver glint of sunlight
bouncing off Phobos. To do that, Id raced at the moon with the sun behind me.
At the speed I moved in the Hammerhead, the moon was almost invisible coming
from any other angle. It was so tiny, and the backdrop of deep space so totally
dark, except for the pinpoints of stars.
Without the sun at my back, straining for visual contact
with Phobos was like trying to see a black marble hanging in front of a black
velvet curtain.
It was also wrong to say the movement came from below.
In space, there is no up and down. Its difficult, though,
not to think that way because Im so used to living in gravity, weak as it is
on Mars. So I thought of the Hammerheads stabilizer fin as the top.
When the movement came from the belly side of the space
torpedo, my mind instinctively told me it was below.
Just like my mind instinctively told me to roll the
Hammerhead away from the movement.
In one way, rolling my space torpedo was as easy as
thinking it should roll. Its similar to how you move your arms or your legs.
Your brain wills it to happen, and the wiring of your nervous system sends a
message to your muscles. Then chemical reactions take place in your muscles
cells and they burn energy, causing you to move.
It was the same way with the Hammerhead. My mind,
connected to the computer, willed it to roll and it obeyed instantly. But it
was really the computer on board that did all the hard work. It ignited a
series of tiny flares along the stabilizer nozzles, allowing the torpedo to
react as though it were flying through the friction of an atmosphere, not the
vacuum of outer space.
I rolled hard to my right, then hard left, then downward in
a tight circle that brought the giant crescent of Mars into my visual.
The top of the massive red ball shimmered with an eerie
whiteness, the thin layer of carbon dioxide that covered the planet. And behind
it was the glow of the sun.
But I didnt have time to admire this beauty. The planet
was getting closerfast.
I told myself I wouldnt crash, that its closeness was
just an illusion because it filled so much of my horizon. After all, the top of
the Martian atmosphere was still over 3,000 miles away.
But I was moving at over four miles per second. That meant
if I didnt change direction within the next 10 minutes, Id get fried to a
crisp upon reentry.
I rolled upward, back toward Phobos, hoping to buy some
time.
I didnt even bother trying to get a visual confirmation
of my pursuer. Because of Rawlings earlier warning, I didnt need to see what
was chasing me to know it was another space torpedo. This was the ultimate test
of my pilot skills. Against another pilot.
I knew if I looked, I wouldnt be able to see the other
space torpedo anyway. My Hammerhead was hardly longer and wider than a human
body. Plus, space torpedos are painted black, so theyre almost impossible to
detect visually in space from more than a hundred yards away.
Right now, with the other pilot chasing me, I was locked
in a whirling dance with another space torpedo a hundred miles away, with both
of us ducking and bobbing at around 15,000 miles per hour. Not even the best
eyes in the universe would be able to watch this dogfight.
No, the only way I could detect the other space torpedo
was with heat radar. Tiny as the vent flares were, the heat they produced
showed up on radar like mushrooms as big as thunderstorms. Especially in the
absolute cold of outer space.
That was good for me, being able to track the other space
torpedo as easily as watching a storm cross the sky. But it also meant the
pilot of the other torpedo could follow my movement too.
And my Hammerhead was the lead torpedo, a sitting duck in
the computer target sights of the pilot behind me.
I made a quick decision. I flared all of my vents equally
for an instant. I knew my direction wouldnt change. But it would cause a big
blast of heat, hopefully blinding the pilot behind me.
An instant later, I shut down all my vents, knowing my
Hammerhead was now shooting through the mushroom of heat Id just created.
I exited the other side of the heat mushroom with no power
or flares to give away my presence. To the heat radar of the pilot behind me,
my Hammerhead was as black and cold as outer space itself. I was now invisible.
I congratulated myself for my smart move.
Then I panicked. There was no heat mushroom on my radar
either. The pilot behind me must have done the same thingshut down all vent
flares.
It could only mean one thing. The pilot had guessed my
move and taken a directional reading of my flight path just before I shut down
my vents.
I knew I was dead. Without vent flares to control the
direction of my Hammerhead, I wouldnt be able to change direction until I
reactivated them. It would take my computer 30 seconds to run through its
preignition checklist. In space warfare, 30 seconds was eternity, because
torpedo computers reacted much more quickly than human brains.
In 30 seconds, the computer of the torpedo behind me would
figure out my line of travel and shoot me with a laser before I could
reactivate and change direction.
Only 20 seconds left.
White flashed over my visual from the other torpedos
target scanner. I was dead center in the laser target controls.
I swallowed hard, preparing myself for the red
killer-flash that would follow in an instant, blowing my spacecraft to shreds.
The explosion of my Hammerhead torpedo would be soundless since you cant hear
screams in the vacuum of outer space.
Another white flash hit me instead.
I jumped. The target scanner behind me didnt need
confirmation.
A third white flash.
There was still no red laser to superheat the fuel tanks
and blow the Hammerhead apart.
I didnt understand. Three times Id been right in the
other pilots sights. Why hadnt the other pilot fired the laser pulse?
Without warning, my vents reactivated at the 30-second
mark. I rolled, safely out of the way.
I looped, scanning my heat radar again to find the other
space torpedo.
Then my visual and my consciousness melted into black
nothingness.