Читаем Звезда Пандоры полностью

Results from the sensors were building up in grids across Ozzie’s virtual vision. He ignored them to give the boy a reassuring hug. “No way, man.”

“Okay.”

Ozzie turned his attention back to the sensor results. He noticed that Tochee had switched on several electronic units. His own scans showed the alien’s systems to be sensors and processor units not entirely dissimilar to his own. Apart from that, there was little for his own units to go on. Strangely, this planet seemed to have no magnetic field. The general neutrino level was above average, though. Local quantum field readings were fractionally different to standard, though nothing like enough to produce the kind of warping necessary to open a wormhole—he thought it might be a residual from the electron damping effect. “Weird, but not weird enough,” he said quietly.

“Ozzie, what’s that in the sky?”

The handheld array flashed the question up for Tochee as well. The alien put aside its own gadgets to follow Orion’s pointing arm. Ozzie followed the boy’s gaze, narrowing his eyes as he squinted almost directly into the vivid sunlight. It looked as if there was some kind of silver cloud at very high altitude, a thin curve that stretched across the sun. When his retinal inserts brought their high-intensity filters on-line and zoomed in he changed his mind. No matter what magnification he used, the little strip of shimmering silver didn’t change. The planet had a ring. He tracked along it, using both array memories to file the image. The scintillations he could see coming from within the cloud were actually tiny motes. There must have been thousands of them. He wondered briefly how their composition differed from the rest of the ring. Then he came to where it crossed in front of the sun. It didn’t. And the scale shifted again, to a terrifying degree.

“Christ fuck a duck,” Ozzie mouthed.

What he could see was a halo of gas that went right around the star. Which meant the planet they were standing on was orbiting right inside it.

“I know this place,” he said in astonishment.

“What?” Orion blurted. “How could you?”

Ozzie gave a very twitchy laugh. “I was told about it by someone else who walked the Silfen paths. He said he visited artifacts called tree reefs. They floated in a nebula of atmospheric gas. Wow, whatta you know, and I always thought his story was mostly bullshit. Guess I owe him an apology.”

“Who was it, Ozzie? Who’s been here?”

“Some dude called Bradley Johansson.”

After a five-minute trip, the train from Oaktier pulled up to platform twenty-nine in the Seattle CST station’s third passenger terminal. Stig McSobel stepped out and asked his e-butler to find the platform where he could catch a standard-class loop train to Los Angeles, which was the next stop on the trans-Earth line. It told him the loop trains all left from terminal two, so he hopped on the little monorail car that carried people between the terminals. He slid smoothly along the elevated rail as it took him out over the vast marshaling yard that had spread out over the land to the east of Seattle, while two-kilometer-long goods trains pulled by hulking great Damzung T5V6B electric engine units passed underneath him as they rolled out of the bulk-freight gateway to Bayovar, the Big15 connected directly to Seattle. While trans-Commonwealth express trains flashed along on their magrails like aircraft flying at zero altitude. Down to the south he could see a long line of gateway arches throwing off a pale blue light that produced long shadows across the weed-colonized concrete ground. The Seattle CST station was a junction for over twenty-seven phase one space worlds in addition to Bayovar, routing all of the freight and passengers that flowed among them. Thousands of trains a day trundled across the station, providing the huge web of commercial links that helped maintain Seattle’s high-tech research and industry base.

Stig sat at one end of the tubular monorail car, quickly scanning his fellow travelers and transferring the images into files. His wrist array ran comparisons with the thousands of visual files he’d accumulated since he began working in the Commonwealth itself. Seven of the people in the monorail had been on the train from Oaktier, which was only normal. If one of them was following him, they had reprofiled their face since the last time they’d shared a train together.

Перейти на страницу:

Похожие книги

Смерти нет
Смерти нет

Десятый век. Рождение Руси. Жестокий и удивительный мир. Мир, где слабый становится рабом, а сильный – жертвой сильнейшего. Мир, где главные дороги – речные и морские пути. За право контролировать их сражаются царства и империи. А еще – небольшие, но воинственные варяжские княжества, поставившие свои города на берегах рек, мимо которых не пройти ни к Дону, ни к Волге. И чтобы удержать свои земли, не дать врагам подмять под себя, разрушить, уничтожить, нужен был вождь, способный объединить и возглавить совсем юный союз варяжских князей и показать всем: хазарам, скандинавам, византийцам, печенегам: в мир пришла новая сила, с которую следует уважать. Великий князь Олег, прозванный Вещим стал этим вождем. Так началась Русь.Соратник великого полководца Святослава, советник первого из государей Руси Владимира, он прожил долгую и славную жизнь, но смерти нет для настоящего воина. И вот – новая жизнь, в которую Сергей Духарев входит не могучим и властным князь-воеводой, а бесправным и слабым мальчишкой без рода и родни. Зато он снова молод, а вокруг мир, в котором наверняка найдется место для славного воина, которым он несомненно станет… Если выживет.

Александр Владимирович Мазин , Андрей Иванович Самойлов , Василий Вялый , Всеволод Олегович Глуховцев , Катя Че

Фантастика / Фэнтези / Современная проза / Научная Фантастика / Попаданцы