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Donald Moffitt - Genesis 02

Donald Moffitt - Genesis 02

Titel: Donald Moffitt - Genesis 02 Kostenlos Bücher Online Lesen
Autoren: Second Genesis
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mass.
    Bram rose to his feet. “I think I’d better—”
    And then the thing struck again, knocking him off his feet.
    Nobody could miss it this time. People went sprawling, tables overturned, and drinks went flying. Some reflex screaming was going on. The Bob swung in great pendulum arcs over the heads of the crowd. Some wall torches fell to the floor, and a few quick-witted people moved to stamp out the flames. The electric lights flickered, dimmed, then grew bright again.
    And from above, where the red-shifted light had been filtering through the lenticule, there was a sudden hideous flare as great snakes of fire flashed by and dopplered through the spectrum.
    Orris, white-faced, said, “What’s happening?”
    “Everybody better stay put,” Bram said. “There’s a lot of broken glass around.” People were milling around, but the situation seemed to be coming under control again. “Orris, you look after things here. Trist, I’ll need your help.” Trist nodded and rose.
    And then, suddenly, Jao was at Bram’s elbow, his forehead bleeding from a gash where he must have fallen against something.
    “Better come to the bridge,” Jao said. “Jun Davd’s trapped in the trunk, but I’ve got him on the fiber-optic link. And Smeth’s in touch with his black gang in the engine section.”
    “What’s wrong?” Bram asked.
    “The galaxy is exploding.”
     
    Bram stared straight ahead into a representation of hell.
    The viewscreen that showed the spectrum-corrected forward view was a smear of red-hot coals punctuated by glaring white intersections and eerie violet blobs that throbbed at the headachy limits of vision.
    At the center of the screen, a multicolored vortex of fire swirled around a tiny central blaze of eye-hurting brightness. Time was speeded up enough so that Bram could see the crushed stars breaking up, lengthening, feeding their substance into the rushing swirl of light.
    Another flattened whirlpool flamed at the edge of the screen, tilted just enough to reveal a similar blinding center. The second vortex seemed even bigger, more violent, than the first.
    The whole screen pulsed. At regular intervals of a few seconds, brightness swelled, the field of coals seemed to ripple, and a dazzling shower of sparks danced in front of the view. Each time this happened, Bram felt the floor beneath him shudder, heard the vast creak and groan of the wooden worldlet around him.
    “It’s not a literal view, of course,” Jun Davd’s calm voice came over the communications link. “It’s the entire electromagnetic spectrum done in visible light. But I’ve done it in a logarithmic progression, so you can more or less trust your eyes between blue-green and yellow-orange. Then it really starts to stretch out. In the blues, you’re seeing by x-rays. In the far violet, between four thousand and forty-five hundred angstroms, you’re seeing by gamma radiation. And those dull reds are very long radio waves. I had to do it that way so you could make some sense of the view. The dust obscures everything. But infrared gets passed from particle to particle, and some of the energetic gamma punches through.”
    “Thank you, Jun Davd,” Bram said. “You must have stayed up all night to do that.”
    Jun Davd chuckled. “I don’t imagine there was much sleep for anybody.”
    That was true enough. Bram rubbed at his grainy eyes with a fist. They were red, burning. All his joints were stiff.
    The others in the long, sweeping loggia that served as this bough’s bridge had suffered equally from lack of sleep. Smeth looked bedraggled, his salt-and-pepper hair sticking up in tufts. Jao and Trist moved as if they had weights attached to their feet, and Bram could see the weary, drawn faces of the people hunched over the monitors.
    Mim gave him a wan smile. She was still in her party dress. She had stayed here through the long night, making herself useful. Marg was here, too. She had put Orris to work cleaning up the shambles of the festivities, then she had gotten busy organizing hot food and drink for those on duty.
    The bridge itself was fully functional, with everything plugged in, though a lot of unopened cases were still shoved against the rear wall, and some of the equipment was dispersed helter-skelter wherever convenient.
    A great gout of incandescence leaped out of the screen. Bram flinched. It reached toward him, a violet serpent with a beady red and orange gut showing through, and writhed offscreen. Bram

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