The Arwen Book two: Manifest Destiny
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The Arwen: Book two: Manifest Destiny
by
Timothy P. Callahan
Amazon.com Edition
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PUBLISHED BY:
Timothy P. Callahan on Amazon.com
The Arwen Book two: Manifest Destiny
Copyright © 201 3 by Timothy P. Callahan
Amazon Edition License Notes
This ebook is licensed for your personal enjoyment only. This ebook may not be re-sold or given away to other people. If you would like to share this book with another person, please purchase an additional copy for each person you share it with. If you're reading this book and did not purchase it, or it was not purchased for your use only, then you should return to amazon.com and purchase your own copy. Thank you for respecting the author's work.
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Chapter one
Captain Marjorie Cook, hero during the Gyssyc war, Captain of the most decorated ship in the Corps, a woman with countless articles written about her courage under the worst of circumstances, stood in a lecture hall and tried not to hyperventilate. The backstage did her no favors in calming her racing heart. Around her were several discarded props from either cheaply produced plays or cheaply produced presentations. Some sort of foam rubber tree leaned against the grey brick wall. To her left was a small hologram projector stacked on top of a pile of data-pads. Next to that was a rolled-up flat screen computer, when unrolled it would be bigger than the curtain on the stage. The red rug beneath her feet was worn down to the wooden floor. She wondered if it had ever been replaced in the schools 300 plus year history.
The speaker on the other side of the curtain, a scientist who was explaining something about supernovas and dark matter, sounded as if he were wrapping up. With a shaky hand she held up her data pad and looked through her notes for the three hundredth time. They were no different than the last time she spoke and probably wouldn’t change the next time she spoke but seeing the familiar words distracted her enough to calm her nerves.
Captain Cook wore a dark-blue jacket with a wrinkle proof material that highlighted the many medals she wore over her left breast. Most of the awards she received simply because she was lucky enough to survive a battle. Her white pants made her hips seem wider than she would have liked and could only image what they did to her rump. She made sure to wear the white gloves given to her a few weeks ago at some sort of tribute ceremony. She had been to so many of them over the past three months she’d forgotten exactly where she got them from, she just knew they made her hands look nice by hiding the ever darkening liver spots.
She heard some polite applause from the other side of the dark-blue curtain. The speaker before her had finished. She felt the electric shock of nervous energy shoot through her body before settling onto her stomach. She closed her eyes and took a deep breath. She focused on a calming image: her sitting in her Captain’s chair during an easy shift reading a novel while the crew around her worked happily. No worries. No orders. Just her and her crew working in the everyday. It could be boring but boring was sometimes nice. It calmed her.
“You are Captain Cook, correct?”
She opened her eyes to see a tall man standing in front of her. He wore a suede brown suit with a neat bow tie. He was older than she was, maybe in his late 70s or early 80s. He wore a pair of skinny glasses, an artifact that had been out of date a hundred years before he could have even been born. Everything about him told her he was old school, set in his ways, someone who didn’t care about how he presented himself. Behind his eyes, she saw an intelligence that, quite frankly, intimidated her. “Yes.”
“Hmm,” he said looking her over.
“What?” She asked wondering what he was looking at. People dismissed her because of her height, because of her age, because she was a woman in a field still dominated by men. Marjorie sometimes felt she needed to work twice as hard as men just to get to the same place they occupied.
“You seem nervous.”
“I’m not great at public speaking.” She replied pushing some of her graying hair behind her ear, a habit she got into when she was younger.
“Ah, it’s nothing.” He said with a dismissive wave. “No different than running a ship I’m sure. It’s an honor to meet you. I've been reading up on your adventures for some time now. I have to admit, I only took this speaking engagement because I heard you were going to be here as well.”
This was something Marjorie still hadn’t gotten used to. People thought they knew more about her than she was comfortable with. She’d always been a popular figure that would occasionally be recognized on the streets but after the wars she became something of a celebrity. “Thank you, Professor?”
“Professor James Pine.”
“Professor Pine, thank you.”
“I know you need to go out there; the crowd is waiting for you, but I was wondering if after your talk, we could get some coffee. I’d love to talk about your adventures.”
Marjorie couldn’t help but smile. This wasn’t the first man to ask her out since she got back to Earth. The first time it happened she didn’t know how to react, didn’t know a good way to say no.N ow she got very good at it. “No, thank you Professor Pine. After this I need to head back to the Arwen, then I’m off on another mission.”
“Ah,” he replied without a hint of disappointment. “If you ever come back to Penn State, please look me up, we can have our coffee then.”
“It’s a deal, Professor Pine.” She held her hand out and he shook it. She watched as he walked away leaving her once again alone waiting to give her talk.
A blond woman poked her head through the curtain and asked, “Captain Cook, are you ready?”
Marjorie nodded a yes and then took a deep breath. Her heart raced as if she were about ready to drive the Arwen herself into the sun. She closed her eyes again and tried to picture the bridge of her ship, the same image that had calmed her earlier wasn’t working this time, and she eventually gave up.
The woman introduced Marjorie. “She single handedly destroyed a star base without losing one crew member. She discovered the Gyssyc comet and save the planet of Regal from destruction. She led the assault on Merriam and saved Ulliam from his tyranny. Her bold plan and leadership saved us all from a combined armada of warships who were hell-bent on killing every human and Ulliam in known space. It would take me hours to rattle off all the metals and awards she’s been given over her 35 years of service protecting us from hostel aliens. It is an honor to welcome her to Penn State. Ladies and Gentlemen, Captain Marjorie Cook!”
She parted the curtain and stood there for a moment looking out into the crowd. It was a packed house of about three hundred young people. Lights mounted above blinded her for a moment as she walked up to the podium. The cheering embarrassed and yet thrilled her at the same time. She stood there, nodding her head in acknowledgment and one by one, the audience stood. She continued to smile and waited for them to stop. It seemed to last forever but eventually the cheers subsided, and everything got quiet. She leaned closer to the microphone. “Thank you for coming and thank you that wonderful reception.” She never got used to the echo a large silent room made. Hers was the only voice being heard by the group. She’s made announcements over the speaker of the Arwen but she never had to hear what she sounded like. Her publicist convinced her to take some voice lessons. The only thing it helped her with was getting rid of her slight northeastern accent.
She placed the data pad on the podium. All she needed to do was look at the first line to remember the speech. She talked for a good twenty minutes; each word practiced a hundred times before being perfected through dozens of speaking engagements. As
she moved from city to city and from college to college, she thought of more things to add. Her first few speaking engagements were quick. It wasn’t until about the third month in before she noticed that each engagement lasted longer. Her publicist said that was okay, most of the people had paid to hear her talk and the more she gave them the more they could charge.
She finished the way she regularly did by saying in a cheerful voice, “It’s not always a glamorous life out there. Sometimes I get so bored I wonder why I’m there but there are other times, times when I’m looking onto a new world, or facing down a new enemy, that I know I’ve found my place. Maybe one day you’ll find yours too. Thank you. I’ll now open the floor for any questions.”
Marjorie stood there waiting for the people to line up in front of a microphone. The faces were so young she felt a bit guilty for trying to take them away from their lives and into a new, dangerous world, but they were rebuilding and the young men and woman standing before her were the future.
The first question was from a smallish woman who shyly told Marjorie she was her hero and would follow her into the corps. She didn’t really have a question and instead talked about how inspirational Marjorie was. When she was finished Marjorie said, “Thank you dear, I hope to see you in the fleet when you graduate.”
Marjorie noticed the next man a few moments earlier and had hoped he wouldn’t have time to ask any questions. He held in his left hand a data-pad which he held up as if wanting her to see what was on the tiny screen. He had the look of a denier, the self-proclaimed group of people who questioned pretty much everything the Corps did. She tried not to stereotype the man but most deniers she knew, or had read about, wore the same kinds of clothes. Black shirt, black jeans with a white, logo less, baseball cap on his head, turned backwards of course. She suspected it was a conscience attempt of the deniers to form a collective and this look was their uniform. Marjorie braced herself and knew she was about to be asked a question she would have to dance around to answer. He cleared his throat and held up the data pad. “Is it true that we haven’t been told everything about the ‘impending destruction’ of Ulliam? That the planet is in more dire straits than we have been led to believe and, instead of it plunging into the sun in a hundred standard years, it will plunge into the sun in less than twenty?”
Marjorie cleared her throat and replied the way she did every time she was asked this question. “When Ulliam’s moon was destroyed during the war it caused an unpredictable chain reaction. Our first calculation said it would take a few thousand years, then that was reduced to a few hundred once we understood the orbital changes better. It wouldn’t surprise me if you found a different figure or a different timetable. It seems most scientist have a theory and a different timetable for Ulliam’s destruction. However, the official Corps estimate is about four hundred and twenty three standard years.”
The reply seemed to surprise him. Marjorie quickly tagged him as an amateur, someone who probably read all the literature, maybe even attended a few meetings, but never actually had to confront someone of authority. They briefed her on these kinds of zealots. The best way to appease them was to tell them the truth, or at least a version of the truth that was Corps approved.
He looked at his data pad. The person behind him tapped him on his shoulder trying nicely to tell to him to move. The man held his hand up and said, “Where do you get your information? The Corps? Your supervisors? How do I know you’re not just toting the message like a good soldier?”
“I get all my information from Professor Theo Ricter, the lead scientist of finding a way to stabilize Ulliam’s orbit. He works very closely with both Ulliam and Gyssyc professionals.”
If there was one thing no one could argue against it was Professor Theo Ricter’s word. He’d gained a reputation for telling the truth no matter how bad the news was. He had no allegiance to anyone other than himself. He didn’t care nor worry about what others thought of him and his ideas. He was a man known for his integrity. He was also Captain Cook’s most trusted friend. It was a relationship well known to everyone, apparently even to this man because all he did was nod and walk away.
She answered questions for the next hour before no one had anything else to ask. She once again thanked everyone, bowed, saluted, and then left the stage. Exhaustion overcame her when she disappeared behind the curtain. She had to lean against a table to catch her breath. It was always like that when she finished, as if all the nervous energy she had bottled up during the talking released itself all at once.
*****
Marjorie always loved taking the maglift train. She looked out the window lost in her thoughts. Now that most of the world's foods was grown on farms in orbit the landscapes around the cities opened up for massive expansion. With a growing population, aliens’ moving to Earth and the human lifespan averaging 120 years space was at a premium. She wasn’t even close to large city and yet she could easily see large steel towers that housed thousands of people along with all the basic facilities that allowed them to live. It was only half a joke when someone would say you could live your entire life in one of those buildings and have all your needs taken care of. Marjorie had never lived on one but she did visit a few when she was younger. The memories were mostly pleasant, spending time with her grandparents, but a few weren’t so great and she shook those memories from her mind.
Her data-pad beeped. It was stuck inside the pocket of her uniform and she struggled to pull it out. When she looked at the message she smiled. It was from Professor Ricter. She hadn’t heard from him in over six months. Her smile faded when she realized he was probably contacting her to ask her for a favor. That seemed to be how their friendship worked after he was assigned to the Ulliam Moon project. She opened the message and his scowling face appeared on the screen. She noticed he looked older and bit heavier. His face had a fullness to it she hadn’t ever seen. Had he given up working out? She knew he studied some martial arts in his spare time and would try to run at least a mile every morning. His hair was also a thinner and grey. It was impeccably styled and looked good but there was definite some thinning that wasn’t there the last time she saw him. He had on a very nice and probably expensive suit and tie. On his lapel he wore one of the civilian metals he had won after the Gyssyc war. She recognized it was from the Ulliam government.
He looked up at the camera and started speaking. “A few weeks ago while doing a sweep of the sky we detected a powerful magnetic pulse. At first, we thought it was from a star but when we studied the evidence we discovered it was from a planet. After some further scanning we discovered this might be the planet we’re looking for. It’s got the right density, the right size and is too close to the parent star to sustain any life. Of course, our instruments can’t tell us all we need to know so we need to get to that planet to study it. I’m asking permission to take the Arwen and since haven’t refused my past requests I’m going to assume you won’t refuse this one.”
She sat back and laid the data-pad on her lap. The Professor always requested the Arwen for his trips and the Corps always let him borrow it. The higher ups knew about her relationship with him and they knew about his relationship with most other Captains. She was the only one who got along with him so it was natural they would pair them up whenever he requested it.
Her data-pad beeped again. She looked at it, saw who the message was from and shook her head. She opened the message and a different looking Professor Ricter appeared on the screen. He was wearing a lab coat this time and his face wasn’t nearly as serious. His hair wasn’t as grey as it was before and she wondered if he dyed it. His face, however, was even fuller than the last message. “Marjorie, I’m sure you got the message I sent the Corps. I sent that a few months ago, not knowing the Arwen was in dry dock being upgraded. They were going to give me another ship but I declined and decided to wait for the Arwen. As I’m sure you know, breaking in a new Captain is hard and very time consuming.”
Marjorie rolled her eyes and laughed at the
remark. It was a very old, private joke between the two of them. He’d made it a hundred times and yet it still made her laugh when he said it. He continued. “The good news is that extra time gave me a chance to study the planet further. Our first reports suggested it was too close to the parent star to support any life; however, as more data came in it appears the planet is cooler than we first thought. We also detected a massive ocean, so large the entire planet might actually be covered in water. Warm planet plus lots of water could equal life, so we need to bring a biologist along with us. Normally, I wouldn’t even bother to tell you who is on my team, but you’d want to know that I chose Doctor Fran Lipton to accompany me.”
Marjorie paused the message. Of course he’d pick Fran; she was very good at what she did and the Professor worked with her many times in the past. But, she and Fran had a long history that was defined by a single moment; the moment Captain Cook ordered Kel, her former second in command before being promoted to Captain, and Fran’s husband, into a battle he had no chance of winning. It needed to be done. She needed his ship to provide cover for the Arwen while she attacked the Gyssyc ship. It wasn’t just him that she ordered to their deaths; it was a few dozen captains. Fran blamed the Captain for his death. It would be difficult to see her again.
She turned the message back on and let him continue. “As always, I look forward catching up with your adventures. I’ve seen you on the net a few times, mostly as a consultant with a few interviews here and there, and I have to say, you look good. One day we’ll have to be on the same panel discussing our mutual exploits but, until then, we’ll have to keep those conversations private. Also, I know your birthday will have passed by the time you get here so I’ll be sure to have a nice gift waiting when you arrive. I’m looking forward to see you again Marjorie.” The image faded leaving behind an icon filled desktop screen.