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Showing posts with label Soyuz. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Soyuz. Show all posts

Tuesday, 15 December 2015

Launch!


Today, 15 December we see the launch into space of the Soyuz TMA-19M spaceship, destined to rendezvous with the International Space Station that has been in operation fifteen years.



Onboard are veteran cosmonaut (six spaceflights) Yuri Malenchenko, NASA’s astronaut Tim Kopra and British Major Tim Peake. [What are the odds on two Tims being crammed into the space module!]



The blast off was perfect from the Baikonur cosmodrome in Kazakhstan. [Of interest to me, at least, Kazakhstan is where the psychic facility is situated, as featured in my 1970s spy e-books The Prague Papers and The Tehran Text, published by Crooked Cat!]
Soyuz rocket blast-off - Wikipedia commons


Coincidentally, and of much less moment, today sees the launch of the third ‘Avenging Cat’ adventure, Cataclysm.



The e-book can be ordered through this single link (that covers all countries’ sites):




The first two novels in the series are:

#1 – Catalyst

#2 – Catacomb



Interesting, that the first Briton in space was Helen Sharman, who trained as a chemist. That was way back in 1991, and she spent about eight days in the Mir space-station. Why interesting? Well, Cat Vibrissae, the heroine of the ‘Avenging Cat’ series also trained as a chemist – but then went into modelling, as it paid better, thereby funding her vendetta against Cerberus and its owner, Loup Malefice. She also happens to be pretty good at free climbing and taekwondo.



 

Sunday, 16 November 2014

'A Gigantic Leap' - part 2 of 2


Soyuz - Wikipedia commons
 
 
A GIGANTIC LEAP

Part 2 of 2

 
Nik Morton

 
Continued from yesterday…

*

‘Pure science fiction hokum,’ pronounced Tomich, the bacteriologist. ‘This sample exhibits several characteristics of bacteria, but it actually closely resembles the mitochondria.’

            ‘Really?’ Nessa said. ‘The powerhouse for life?’

            ‘So we believe.’ His arms were exceedingly long and he flapped them about quite a bit. Even as a student I was surprised he never dislodged any experimental apparatus. ‘But I’d need to do RNA and DNA tests before I could give you any reasonable answer.’

            The mitochondria are believed to be descended from free-living bacteria. I was intrigued. ‘Could this be an earlier version of life on earth?’

            Tomich shook his bald head. ‘You’re running before you can walk with this, Kolya. It’s highly unlikely that the samples we have here came from space. There has to be some other more prosaic explanation. Good God, man, they can’t have come from your father’s tomb! That would make them over three decades old!’ Tomich used to follow the Orthodox religion but something in his past turned him into an unbeliever; but he still liked to invoke his abandoned deity from time to time.

            ‘Maybe they’ve lain dormant,’ suggested Nessa. ‘And something has triggered them into life.’

            ‘Oh, right,’ Tomich scoffed. ‘Switched them on, right?’

            ‘Some plants wait seventeen years or longer to flower,’ I said in defence of Nessa. ‘Just depends on the infrequent rains. When the time is right, they blossom in the desert.’

            ‘Let me remind you, we’re not dealing with a plant here. It’s a primitive life-form, if you like, but not a plant.’

            ‘DNA could be the switch... Will you do the RNA and DNA tests?’ I asked.

            Tomich nodded. ‘It might take a week or so. Everywhere is busy-busy.’ More wild arm gestures. ‘They’re all trying to discover genetic wonders to patent and make them trillions.’

            ‘Well, there’s no urgency, is there?’ I said. Words I might regret. ‘All we’re talking about is an unsightly discolouration of my father’s tomb, after all.’

            ‘So far,’ added my daughter.

*

Two days later, I was drawn and fractious because I couldn’t sleep. I sat up in bed, sweat soaking my pyjamas. Moscow was not known for its heat-waves. But it wasn’t the climate, it was me. I was overheating like a nuclear reactor. My brief sleeping moments were besieged by images of my father’s tomb overgrown with morning glory while my mother’s grave was being consumed from within by horrendous white slugs. I woke up as the grave caved in and I found it was me in there, spluttering and fighting the downpour of soil and engorged slugs.

            Nessa stood at the bedroom door. She was fully dressed, carrying a rucksack. ‘We should check grandmother’s grave,’ she said.

            A shiver went down my spine and my head cleared. ‘Yes,’ I said, pushing the bedclothes back and swinging my legs round, toes fumbling for slippers. ‘Give me ten minutes.’

            I actually took eight. And within ten minutes we were in Nessa’s rusty old black Volga, motoring through the night towards the cemetery.

            The black wrought-iron gates were locked. Was that to keep vandals out or the dead in? I could never understand the logic of desecrating a grave. Were the idiots against the religion, whatever it was, or simply afraid of death?

            I was a bit too old for climbing cemetery gates that shook under my weight. Unfit and out of breath, my legs wobbling. Just to shame me, I reckon, Nessa made short work of it and then encouraged me from below on the other side.

            Finally, straining for breath and sure I’d strained a shoulder muscle, I landed by her side. With a hint of bravado, I wiped my hands together and said, ‘Onward, dear daughter.’ She gave me an odd look which made me feel quite small and stupid.

            Fortunately, this part of the cemetery was well lit by the street lamps outside the tall iron rails.

            Like everything else, the cemetery was neglected. Which meant that the wild flowers and weeds were thriving. Every grave we passed, the flowers of remembrance in the vases were in full bloom.

            I found my mother’s grave without any trouble, even though I hadn’t visited it for five years. Her photograph was faded, the glass cracked, the brass frame discoloured green. There was a slight hollow in the soil immediately in front of the black marble headstone which contained a quotation from the Byelorussian poet Kupala, ‘Walk the corpses who can’t die’, which mother specifically selected when she knew the end was near. Wishful thinking, perhaps, but as long as Nessa and I live, mother lives within us.

            I felt a chill breeze. It must have caught my eyes, they were streaming. I gripped Nessa’s hand. ‘This is too big for us,’ I said, turning away.

*

It took a week to arrange suitable high-level interviews, even with Nessa’s networking connections. Which, in retrospect, was good going, really. In the meantime, we noticed that my mother’s handkerchief on the mantel-shelf was discoloured too. At least the seal seemed to be holding.

            I decided to send a fax to Ray Stern in Oregon. I’d worked with him on a number of projects and I thought that he might be interested in the phenomenon. In fact he said he was fascinated and so I sent him the handkerchief, amply protected, via DHL. I also warned him to take every precaution.

            By now, Tomich had his results, which helped us corroborate our fears. On our way to Samarskaja Street, which is overlooked by the Olympic sports stadium, I leafed through Tomich’s report. It made troubling reading. Likened to a pathogen but ... doesn’t seem to inflict damage or pain. Indeed, it seems to be symbiotic... Creating additional neural pathways...

            The building was in the Stalin drab style and the elevators didn’t work. We were both out of breath by the time we got to the fifth floor. The hammered glass door was embossed with Dimitry Konstantin Andreev, OiC, IA(O). I was about to knock when the door opened. Andreev was expecting us.

            ‘Please, come in,’ he said in a deep bass voice. His forehead was corrugated with worry lines. Perhaps he had plenty to worry about. Once we were in the ante-room and the door was closed, he shook our hands. Not even an urbane Russian would risk shaking hands on the threshold for risk of offending Domovoi, the unlucky house spirit.

            Andreev was in charge of Internal Affairs (Other). I had never known about the organisation’s existence but, I was surprised to learn, Nessa had. It came into being in 1925, primarily to study the site of the 1908 Tunguska event, but it soon became the repository of all unexplained phenomena in the USSR. Since the heady days of the 1960s, when funding was generous, the organisation now relied on contributions from several fringe groups and internet contributors.

            I honestly thought we were wasting our time. ‘Shouldn’t the military be told?’ I said. ‘And the medical academies?’

            Lifting up the telephone, Andreev said, ‘Be my guest. They won’t listen, though, as they’re not conditioned to handle bad news. Chernobyl was an aberration. We’re a very secretive lot, we Russians.’

            I leaned forward. ‘If my father’s tomb and my mother’s grave are affected, how many more are actual hosts to this stuff?’

            ‘Stuff?’ echoed Andreev.

            ‘Technical term,’ Nessa said, shrugging. I wasn’t amused.

            Andreev sighed. ‘Since Nessa told me about it a few days back, I sent out a couple of investigators. Good people.’ His forehead creased, the lines deepening. ‘The man who gave your father CPR died two years ago. His grave site is showing similar symptoms.’

            I didn’t like where this was leading. Not one bit.

            ‘Does this symbiosis or whatever only affect the dead?’ Nessa asked.

            ‘I somehow doubt it.’ Andreev studied me, his dark brown eyes quite piercing. ‘How do you feel, in yourself?’

            My heart sank as I realised the truth. If my mother was affected, then I probably was too. ‘You’re right. I need a medical check-up at once!’

            ‘And Nessa,’ Andreev said.

            ‘Yes, of course.’

            ‘It so happens I have some people standing by in a medical centre.’ He stood up abruptly. ‘Shall we go?’

*

They were thorough, I’ll give them that. It took several days. I slept badly, waking with the horrible suffocating conviction that my body was clogged with the insidious growth, whatever it was, smothering me; Nessa’s rationalisation, that the growth was only evident when the hosts were dead, did little to calm my sleep patterns. Those days were a blur of scanners, blood tests, x-rays, ECGs and cardiograms; the list seemed endless.

            More than once I remember a medic expressing surprise at the results. I don’t know when, but at some point all the medical staff involved in the tests started wearing protective suits and Nessa and I were isolated. At least they kept us together. It was obvious that both Nessa and I were now considered different. Other.

            At about the same time I was handed an email from Ray in the States. The handkerchief contained a fledgling organism that was growing at an exponential rate; the plastic container had burst under its pressure to expand. I immediately authorised the exchange of results between his laboratory and our medical facility.

            Inevitably, anti-terrorist surveillance uncovered our email traffic and within a matter of days we were absorbed into the military machine. If they could determine a combat use for the symbiont, then that would be useful. Fortunately, they left our resident medical team to continue with the tests, while they ‘supervised’. I heard later that a similar response had overtaken Ray’s facility. Land of the Free, indeed!

            Everyone agreed that Nessa and I were hosts to a symbiont that had so closely integrated itself into our systems that there seemed no possibility of its removal. Yet we felt nothing untoward. ‘Not even a tickle,’ as Nessa said.

            It was too early to determine what kind of symbiont we harboured. As far as I was concerned, the symbiosis was not mutually beneficial as I felt that I hadn’t changed. If the organism had been dormant within us for so long, what had triggered it? And when? It seemed likely that it woke up, for want of a better term, on June 30 this year, on the anniversary of my father’s death, and since then I had experienced no change in my health or personality. I was still me. That was encouraging. It meant that my symbiont probably wasn’t parasitic. That left several other kinds, though. Mutual, where we both benefited from the association; commensal, where one benefited while the other was unaffected; amensal, where one was disadvantaged by the association while the other was unaffected; neutral, where both organisms would be unaffected; and competitive, where both of us would be harmed by the relationship. It was too early to call.

            ‘You know,’ Nessa said in one of our quieter moments, ‘recent studies say that symbiosis is a major driving force behind evolution.’

            ‘You’re saying we’re the next stage of evolution?’

            She shrugged. That action had always irritated me. Now I was furious. ‘Is that all you can do, shrug?’

            ‘Father, we’re experiencing no ill effects. Where’s the harm?’ She shrugged again. ‘We carry viruses and thousands of bugs around with us every day. It isn’t the end of the world as we know it, you know?’

            ‘But there’s no Wellsian microbe solution to this. From what we’ve learned so far, we’re stuck with our unwelcome little guests.’

            ‘Let’s wait and see,’ she counselled. Sometimes she was wiser than all my years.

 *

Now, we are all aliens. Without exception. By the time that the symbiont was detected, it was too late. It waited thirty-nine years to reveal itself. Not that it counted time like us. Perhaps a decade might be a fleeting moment in its scheme of things. It had spread around the world in those thirty-nine years, lying dormant.

            Waiting for what?

            We Russians are very sensitive to the idea of fate. And we got part of our answer only a few months later.

            A joint Russian-American moon mission encountered serious trouble two days into its mission encircling our beautiful satellite where a crater is named after my father and his comrades.

            Loss of oxygen and pressure meant the entire crew would die. But they didn’t. Because they had ‘evolved’ – some extraordinary property of the symbionts within them made it possible for them to survive.

            The investigation into the Soyuz 11 crew’s asphyxiation pointed to a valve that was jolted open as the descent module separated from the service module. The jolt was beyond the normal tolerances on this occasion because both explosive bolts that separated the service and descent modules fired simultaneously instead of sequentially. The valve was intended to equalise pressure inside the capsule in the final moments before landing but instead leached the cosmonauts’ air into space, barely fifteen minutes before touchdown.

            A serious design flaw was that the valve was sited under their couches. My father’s friend Patsayev must have attempted to block or shut off the valve manually because his hands were terribly bruised. He lost consciousness before he could accomplish the awkward task.

            It is too early to know yet, but it is probable that either the polluted atmosphere they found in Salyut 1 was contaminated with the dormant spores of the symbiont; or the leaking valve not only expressed air into space, it also allowed ingress of the symbiont.

            Whatever the cause, I feel that my father and his comrades did not die in vain. They made it possible for mankind to take a truly gigantic step. In a sense, June 30 is the anniversary of our rebirth.

            Space is not the final frontier, after all. It is only the beginning in our evolution.

 

K. Volkov, Moscow, October 30, 2010

* * *
Author’s dedication and declaration

‘A Gigantic Leap’ is dedicated to those brave souls who gave their lives in the tragic accident of June 30, 1971. The story is a work of fiction and, while it hinges on a real event, all the characters depicted are figments of my imagination and bear no resemblance to any person, living or dead. There’s no significance in the fact that my birthday is on June 30. Nik Morton

 
Previously published in Midnight Street, 2009.

Copyright Nik Morton, 2014

 
If you enjoyed this short story, you might like my collection Spanish Eye, published by Crooked Cat Publishing, featuring Leon Cazador, private eye in 22 cases.

 

 

Friday, 14 November 2014

Saturday Story - 'A Gigantic Leap' - 1 of 2

As we get pictures from the Rosetta mission, relaying details of the remarkable landing of its probe Philae on comet Churyumov–Gerasimenko, I thought it might be appropriate to feature this previously published sci-fi story.  Full details on the historic Rosetta mission can be gleaned from here 

 
Soyuz - Wikipedia commons
 

A GIGANTIC LEAP

 

Nik Morton

 
 

I remember the date well - June 30, 1971 – as that was when my world changed forever. 

            A little less than a month earlier, I, Kolya Volkov, had been one of the proudest children in the Soviet Union.  Anxious but proud. My father, Vladislav Volkov, was a cosmonaut.  Now, it is hard to comprehend the primitive nature of our nation’s space-craft in those days.  As my father joked once over dinner, ‘we went into space by the seat of our pants!’  He was a charming handsome man with gentle features, small eyes and dark hair.

            An indescribable mixture of emotions ran through me when my mother and I learned that the designated crew for Soyuz 11 had to step down as one of them had suspected tuberculosis.  My father, with Georgi Dobrovolski and Viktor Patsayev, were the stand-by crew.  Four days before the launch, they took over the mission.

            He was confident and never doubted his ability as the flight engineer. After all, this wasn’t his first journey into space as he’d been there before in Soyuz 7. 

            The preceding mission, in Soyuz 10, had been a failure as they had been unable to dock with Salyut 1, the world’s first space station.  Now that honour rested with Soyuz 11 and my father. 

            My mother and I were transfixed as we watched from the secure buildings of Baikonur Cosmodrome.  She nervously twisted her lace-bordered cotton handkerchief with one hand, a habit I had observed more than once. She had a box of these handkerchiefs and I recalled her saying in exasperation, ‘My grandmother gave them to me. She laughed at what she called our silly village superstitions.  Remember, Kolya, you never give handkerchiefs or knifes as a gift.’ 

            There were other odd things she inculcated into me, such as never celebrating a birthday early – as if you would; and never show your newborn baby to a stranger until it’s forty days old. (I abided by that with my little baby Nessa, foolish man that I am.)

            My mother gripped my arm tightly with her free hand as the blast off turned our vision red and yellow.  I felt my insides surging with joy and immense pride as the spectacular flame rose into the sky on that day on June 6.  D-Day, they call it in the West. Was that for ‘Doom’, ‘Destiny’ or something else?  I’m sure I knew but now I forget.

            The day following the launch, Soyuz 11 successfully docked with Salyut 1. How the cheers exploded around the mission planning centre.  I know now that you must grasp those moments of body-thrumming pleasure because they are rare. The effusive joy was short-lived as bad news came into the centre and within seconds everyone’s face looked downcast.

            Clambering inside the space station, the crew had encountered a smoke-filled atmosphere.  They reported that the air was clogged with the raw metallic stench of burnt electrics.  Undaunted and using oxygen cylinders while they worked, the crew replaced part of the ventilation system and then patiently waited in Soyuz 11 until the air had cleared.  Even then, I remember thinking that they were every bit as resourceful as the Apollo 13 crew a year earlier.

            Once back inside the space station, my father and his comrades occupied their time with minor experiments. They also tested the exercise treadmill, but desisted after a couple of attempts as its use seemed to seriously destabilise the station itself.

            The highlight for my mother and me - and the other families - was that we were able to speak to and view the crew through a television link.  The picture was poor and the sound scratchy at times, but we didn’t know any better. It was wonderful to us at the time. So much to say, yet I was tongue-tied when it was my turn to talk to my father.  I remember blushing and saying something inane.  I promised to keep up with my studies.

            On the eleventh day a fire broke out in the space station but quick action brought it under control. After that scare, groups of mission planners seemed to be constantly huddled together. Sometimes I think my mother had a sixth sense or was at least prescient. There were strange stories she would tell me of her childhood village in Byelorussia. Somehow, she snatched whispers out of the ether and she said that the controllers were actually considering the abandonment of Salyut 1. 

            Naturally, being a child, I didn’t appreciate that such a decision would have been a serious setback to our space conquest. And it would have been a terrible embarrassment. I think we have inherited the concept of ‘face’ from the East.  We Russians don’t like to be seen to fail or lose. To counter this, the crew argued that it was safe enough for them to stay and they did, establishing a space endurance record of twenty-two days, which wasn’t bettered until the Americans’ Skylab 2 mission two years later.

            After a normal re-entry, Soyuz 11 landed at Karaganda in Kazakhstan on June 30. We families watched from an accompanying coach.  With its enormous parachute trailing in the dust, the capsule looked like a bathyscaphe or some contraption out of Jules Verne. What kind of pummelling did my father and the crew get when it hit terra firma?  I was brimful with admiration for him and his brave comrades.

            All smiles, the recovery team rushed over from their support vehicle and moved their mobile ladders to the side of the globe-shaped module. Two of them clambered up the ladders and opened the capsule with practised ease; it was obvious that they’d done this many times before.  Small, vital cogs in our mighty machine. 

            Then the speaker system in our coach suddenly went into overload and just as abruptly stopped, to be replaced by silence. Ominous silence. The looks on the faces of the recovery team told us that something was amiss.

            Wiping her eyes with that old lace handkerchief, my mother whimpered, ‘Oh, Kolya, they’re pulling them out.’  I could have been mistaken but I thought I saw her fleetingly cross herself. I never again saw her make such a pious and dubious expression until she was on her death-bed.

            The recovery crew handled the cosmonauts like shop dummies, hauling them onto the hard unforgiving ground. Medics rushed forward and one man knelt over my father, performing resuscitation, alternately pumping his chest and then breathing into his airway.  My heart pounding, I stared, not aware that I was breathing.  My mother’s hand almost crushed mine as it flexed repeatedly. After about fifteen minutes, the team stopped and slumped back, exhausted.

            Later, back at the base, my mother and I were allowed to see him.  His face was still drawn in the horrible rictus of asphyxiation.  Mother leaned over and kissed his forehead and tenderly held her handkerchief over my father’s lips and intoned some ancient words from the Steppes; probably some superstitious ritual.  I dutifully kissed his cheek and was surprised how cold he felt.  I was twelve.

            The rest is a hazy slide-show of memories. The state funeral. Thousands of people lining the streets. An American astronaut was one of the pall-bearers, but I forget his name. 

            My father and his fellow crewmen were buried in Red Square’s Kremlin Wall Necropolis.

            Over the years, I tried to visit this tomb at least once a year. But life got in the way.  Now, I have a busy international career as a microbiologist.

            So, to my eternal mortification, five years passed before my most recent visit.  I was taken aback by the state of the marble blocks.  They were stained brown, as if with rust, and lichen grew in the small cracks, radiating outwards.  I wasn’t too surprised; much had fallen into disrepair since the USSR collapsed.  But I felt shame, too.  I spent an hour or so finding a shop where I could buy bleach and rubber gloves. It was the least I could do for my father’s memory, I thought, as I dabbed bleach on the cloth and rubbed at the lichen. 

            It had no effect.  I knew that there were plenty of fake products on the market. Was this yet another one?  I fished in my pocket and pulled out a red paper serviette – as a young man I’d made a habit of pocketing my serviette when leaving a restaurant.  Waste not, want not, my mother taught me. An insubstantial handkerchief compared to my mother’s lace ones.  I dabbed the serviette and the colour drained from the tissue.  The bleach worked, then.  But it didn’t have any effect on the growth that discoloured my father’s tomb.

            An armed sentry marched over to me and asked politely, ‘What are you doing, comrade?’

            I smiled. ‘Not a lot,’ I answered truthfully enough. ‘This is my father’s tomb and I was trying to clean it. But with little success.’

            The soldier saluted me. ‘An honour to meet you, comrade.’ He eyed the three names on the tomb. Which one is your father?’

            I told him, gesturing with the bottle of bleach.  ‘Do you know how long it’s been like that?’

            He shouldered his weapon. ‘I was here on sentry duty last week and I can assure you the marble was as new then.’  His face showed concern. Maybe he was worried he would get the blame. ‘Comrade, let me contact City Maintenance for you.’

            ‘No,’ I said, astonished at my response.  ‘I’m sure they have enough to do these days.’  With the new freedoms came the freedom to drop litter and spread graffiti. It was easy to understand that many old Muscovites pined after the old days.  ‘But thank you for your concern.’

            The soldier saluted and marched off. 

            By then it was getting late so I walked back to my apartment.  Twenty years ago it had been shared with two other families. Even the family of a dead hero of the Soviet had to suffer privations for the cause.  Now, though, I had recovered it for myself and my daughter Nessa.  She was twenty-two and helped me with my work. My wife ran off with a ballet dancer when Nessa was eight.

            Sometimes I think Nessa is psychic.  She opened the door as I stopped to insert my key.  ‘You look troubled, father,’ she observed as I entered.  She closed the door and bolted it.

            No matter how much I tried, I saw my wife in Nessa’s high cheekbones and bright grey eyes.  She had the poise of her grandmother and the strange characteristic of occasionally rubbing her lower lip with the end of her thumb, just like my father.

            I shrugged off my jacket and loosened my tie and sank into a leather armchair.  ‘No, just perplexed a little, that is all.’ 

            Our apartment was snug and homely. Most of the furniture had belonged to my parents.  Dark wood. Creased and worn leather. Threadbare rugs.  It still smelled of them, too. Warm and welcoming; the people who shared with us long ago left no impression. Although I owned an apartment in London and another in New York, only this place was home. 

            Nessa was psychic: she placed a tumbler of vodka and ice in my hand and I sipped it gratefully. ‘Thank you, dear.’

            On the mantel-shelf resided a sealed clear square plastic container.  Inside it was my mother’s lace handkerchief. She’d never used it again after touching my father’s lips with it.  A piece of band-aid was stuck on the top and in her spidery handwriting was the faded date of his death.  The container was flanked on either side by photographs of my parents.   My father still looked a handsome thirty-six-year-old in his uniform and medals; my mother’s picture was more recent and the years had not been kind towards the end, draining the colour from her hair and face.

            I explained to Nessa about the state of my father’s tomb.

            ‘Is the fungi just isolated to his tomb?’

            I shook my head. ‘No, it radiates from all three of them.’  I pictured the Necropolis again. Black marble, austere stonework, but no evidence that any other tomb was in such a poor state.  ‘None of the others seem affected.’

            ‘Yet,’ she said, prophetically.

            The sky was grey and downcast, reflecting my mood, as I returned to the Necropolis the next day, this time with Nessa. The fungal outgrowth from the three tombs was worse. 

            ‘I don’t like this.’ Nessa shuddered.

            I’d looked after her long enough to trust her body’s reactions to places and people; if she shuddered, then there was a good reason for it. Kneeling down, I took out from my jacket pocket my pen-knife and scraped a sample of the growth into a paper tissue since I was out of serviettes.

            ‘Let’s get away,’ Nessa urged, tugging my arm. 

            At first I thought she was being melodramatic. But I trusted her feelings.

            ‘We need to talk to Federov,’ she said decisively. ‘He’s the expert on fungi.’

*

Anton Federov was an old student friend and we’d kept in touch over the years. Now he was a perplexed mycologist.  He squinted at the sample under his microscope and then straightened, a hand going to his back.  ‘None of us are getting any younger,’ he smiled, withdrawing his spectacles. ‘How old do you think this stuff is?’

            ‘Stuff?’ I said.  ‘You’re not usually so imprecise.’

            He shook his head and scratched his unruly greying hair. ‘It isn’t any kind of plant life I’ve come across, Kolya.’ 

            ‘As for its age,’ I added, ‘judging by the growth rate, I’d estimate it only started being visible about a week ago.’ I didn’t register the significance of the date then. ‘The sentry tends to confirm that, too.’

            Federov gestured at the microscope. ‘A week... It’s like bacteria, reproducing at a phenomenal rate. Cells splitting every few seconds. This isn’t my field, Kolya. You need to show these slides to a bacteriologist – Tomich will be intrigued, I imagine.’

            ‘But why is it only to be found at the tomb of the Soyuz 11 cosmonauts?’

            Federov pulled a face.   ‘If I didn’t know better, I’d say the craft brought the spores from space...’

            ‘But there were quarantine regulations,’ I said.  ‘I remember waiting ten days to see my father after he came down in Soyuz 7.’ 

            ‘Really, that’s an arbitrary duration. Different viruses have different incubation periods. Exposure risks vary. As for something from space – nobody actually knows...’

            I glanced with concern at Federov and Nessa. ‘Could we have been so unprepared?’

            ‘Our so-called experts thought that no pathogens could live in the vacuum of space or survive the heat of re-entry. If you believe the Americans, they thought differently and were ultra careful.’

            ‘The Americans – I’ve worked with them, Anton – they go over the top. Always have. You know that.’

            Federov chuckled. ‘But rumours get out, don’t they? Their Operation Wildfire in Nevada was a failure, by all accounts.’

            ‘That was fiction.’  I caught The Andromeda Strain film on a hotel television once, years after its release date of 1971.  Life’s full of coincidences that mean nothing except to the conspiracy theorists.

            ‘Fact dressed up as fiction, I heard.’  Even in our new so-called free society, we’re not immune from the rumour-mongers. Some of them are quite plausible, too. That’s what comes of having a secretive society – the truth is as hidden as the falsehoods. Next, they’ll be telling us the Pope’s assassination attempt was engineered by a secret psychic group in Kazakhstan.  Just because the demented fool was hearing voices in his head. The Kennedy assassination conspiracies prove that – nineteen theories at the last count. America kids itself that it’s the land of the free. A great many of the people with power and knowledge may be free, but the majority are not.  They are not free to know; that privilege is denied them. I’ve been there, seen it at work.

To be concluded tomorrow…

Previously published in Midnight Street, 2009.

Copyright Nik Morton, 2014
 

Author’s dedication and declaration

‘A Gigantic Leap’ is dedicated to those brave souls who gave their lives in the tragic accident of June 30, 1971. The story is a work of fiction and, while it hinges on a real event, all the characters depicted are figments of my imagination and bear no resemblance to any person, living or dead.

Thursday, 3 December 2009

Midnight Street



A new story of mine - 'A Gigantic Leap' is featured in Midnight Street magazine #13. It can be obtained at:
http://www.midnightstreet.co.uk/

The story begins:

I remember the date well - June 30, 1971 – as that was when my world changed forever.

A little less than a month earlier, I, Kolya Volkov, had been one of the proudest children in the Soviet Union. Anxious but proud. My father, Vladislav Volkov, was a cosmonaut. Now, it is hard to comprehend the primitive nature of our nation’s space-craft in those days. As my father joked once over dinner, ‘we went into space by the seat of our pants!’ He was a charming handsome man with gentle features, small eyes and dark hair.

An indescribable mixture of emotions ran through me when my mother and I learned that the designated crew for Soyuz 11 had to step down as one of them had suspected tuberculosis. My father, with Georgi Dobrovolski and Viktor Patsayev, were the stand-by crew. Four days before the launch, they took over the mission.
He was confident and never doubted his ability as the flight engineer. After all, this wasn’t his first journey into space as he’d been there before in Soyuz 7.

The preceding mission, in Soyuz 10, had been a failure as they had been unable to dock with Salyut 1, the world’s first space station. Now that honour rested with Soyuz 11 and my father.

My mother and I were transfixed as we watched from the secure buildings of Baikonur Cosmodrome. She nervously twisted her lace-bordered cotton handkerchief with one hand, a habit I had observed more than once. She had a box of these handkerchiefs and I recalled her saying in exasperation, ‘My grandmother gave them to me. She laughed at what she called our silly village superstitions. Remember, Kolya, you never give handkerchiefs or knifes as a gift.’

There were other odd things she inculcated into me, such as never celebrating a birthday early – as if you would; and never show your newborn baby to a stranger until it’s forty days old. (I abided by that with my little baby Nessa, foolish man that I am.)

My mother gripped my arm tightly with her free hand as the blast off turned our vision red and yellow. I felt my insides surging with joy and immense pride as the spectacular flame rose into the sky on that day on June 6. D-Day, they call it in the West. Was that for ‘Doom’, ‘Destiny’ or something else? I’m sure I knew but now I forget.

The day following the launch, Soyuz 11 successfully docked with Salyut 1. How the cheers exploded around the mission planning centre. I know now that you must grasp those moments of body-thrumming pleasure because they are rare. The effusive joy was short-lived as bad news came into the centre and within seconds everyone’s face looked downcast.
...

Nik