Read Parker's Folly Online

Authors: Doug L Hoffman

Tags: #Fiction, #General, #Science Fiction

Parker's Folly (4 page)

BOOK: Parker's Folly
10.85Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

“The presence of muonium, which is essentially a hydrogen molecule with the single nucleus proton replaced by a positive muon, is an indication that the muon generator is making both positive and negative muons. As a result, the reactor is making power but not at peak efficiency and there may be other side effects if allowed to run under these conditions.”

“And have your adjustments fixed the problem, Rajiv?” Gretchen knew he liked it when she used his first name.

“I hope so,” he said, turning back to the battery of displays, “I truly hope so.”

“So I can tell the Captain to run the test?”

“Yes, yes. By all means, I was ready to suggest running another test myself.”

* * * * *

On the bridge, the Captain was making ready to power up the ship's main systems. They had gone through this several times before, but had never reached full sustained power without an alarm sounding or a cluster of warning lights flashing.

“Bridge, Engineering.”

“Go Engineering.”

“Captain, we are ready for a full-power system test. Dr. Gupta has recalibrated some of the reactor settings and is hopeful that the previous problem has been corrected.”

“Affirmative, Engineering. Test commencing in 10.”

The Captain activated the exterior PA system. “Attention, all personnel in the hanger space. Please proceed immediately to the closest radiation shelter, there will be an engine check in 10, repeat, 10 minutes.” The ship's power system was not supposed to produce any detectable radiation, but the last two tests had resulted in small bursts of gamma rays and some errant neutrons. Everything inside the ship was well shielded, but those outside could be exposed. The levels were probably not high enough to be dangerous but there was no sense taking any chances.

“Attention Control,” he said, activating the ship's voice command system. “Prepare for full-power system test in 10 minutes. Verbal notifications at five and one minutes prior to test.”

“Yes, Captain,” came the immediate reply in the androgynous voice used by the ship's computer.

Outside, technicians and construction workers rapidly evacuated the platform surrounding the ship. Looking forward, through the ship's transparent nose, a vertical line of light could be seen marking the crack between the two closed hangar doors. The hangar was originally constructed during WWII to house Navy lighter-than-air craft. Made mostly of wood, the egg-shaped arch of the roof shell was stiffened with a series of transverse metal ribs. The building was 525 feet long, 148 feet wide and 87.5 feet high, a half scale version of similar structures built at Tillamook, Oregon, and Tustin, California.

The huge pair of doors opened by sliding sideways in the overhead tracks that they hung from. Aside from the light leaking in from the doors, the only natural light came from the twin rows of vents along the peak of the roof.
A large, imposing man-made space, housing a mysterious, otherworldly machine—a scene worthy of a James Bond movie villain,
he thought to himself.

TK in his hot-rod wheelchair might just fit that image, but Jack could not see himself in the role of Captain Nemo or Dr. Evil. His life had been full of adventures, and not a few misadventures, but he never thought that he would command a spaceship, even one sitting in a construction hangar on good old Mother Earth.

On a whim, he addressed the ship's computer again, “Control, would it be possible for me to give you an alternate name?”

“Of course, Captain, you may call me anything you like.”

“I would like you to respond to the name 'Folly' from now on, if you don't mind.” Why not he thought, even TK had used the name, and it would be a lot more natural than using 'Control'.

“Very well, you can address me as 'Folly' from now on. It does seem quite apropos.”

Apropos? That darn computer was acting more human every day.
Both sailors and airmen claimed their vessels developed their own unique personalities over time. This, however, was taking things to an extreme.

“Attention all personnel, five minutes to power system test” the  PA announced.

Chapter 2
Upton County, Texas, Near the Parker Ranch

The KWTEX news van pulled up at the gate to TK Parker's ranch. In front of the idling van was a nondescript but sturdy looking gate. Beyond the gate was a dirt road that showed little sign of maintenance. Off in the distance there appeared to be a low ranch style house and farther beyond that, obscured by haze and blowing dust, a much larger structure.

“You want to get out and look for a doorbell or should I,” asked JT, flexing his arms and back against the seat and steering wheel.

“I'll do it,” Susan replied, “I see a box on the gate poll on my side. Besides, I need to get the kinks out of my back and stretch my legs.”

Hopping out of the van, she arched her back and then twisted her torso from side to side.
This is truly the back-end of nowhere,
she thought,
what would motivate a billionaire to buy such a place, let alone live here? I guess you couldn't build a space ship in your backyard in Austin or Dallas without the neighbors complaining, no matter how rich you were.

The box had a grill, presumably hiding a speaker, and a single large button. “Here goes nothing,” she called to JT, then pressing the button and speaking loudly into the box: “Hello, anyone there?”

“Hola, who is there?” came the answer in a female voice with a pronounced Spanish accent.

“Hola
Señora
, this is Susan Write with KWTEX news. I called earlier and made an appointment to see Mr Parker.”

“Si, please drive up to the house. I will tell Señor Parker that you are here.”

“Thank you,” Susan said, but the only answer was a burst of static. “OK, now what happens?” she shouted to JT on the other side of the still idling van. With a clank, the gate opened and swung smoothly, almost silently aside.

“That gate may look like crap, but it is obviously well maintained,” JT observed, adding with mock seriousness, “perhaps things around here are not what they seem.”

“If you mean a broken down ranch in the middle of the West Texas desert scrub, I reserve judgment until we see the inside of the house. Now drive, before the gate swings back shut.”

* * * * *

As they pulled up to the front of the ranch house the front door opened. A middle aged Hispanic woman wearing a kitchen apron appeared in the doorway and beckoned them in. Exiting the van, JT went around to the back to get his camera rig. Then, together they approached the portal.

“Hi, I'm Susan Write and this” Susan said, motioning to her partner, “is JT, my camera man.”

“Welcome,” the woman said, “I am Maria, Señor Parker's housekeeper and cook. Please follow me. Señor Parker is in his study.”

Maria led them through the living room, past a breakfast nook and adjoining family room and to the door of Parker's study. The house was much larger than it appeared from the outside, probably around 4,000 sq ft. They also noticed that all of the doors were  wider than normal and that all the sills in the doorways were almost flat.

Knocking on the study door, then opening it without waiting for a response, Maria announced them. “
Señorita
Write and party, Señor Parker.”  Smiling, she turned and motioned them inside.

An old man with an unruly shock of white hair looked up from the papers on his desk and waved with one hand. “Welcome” he said. There was a muted whine of electric motors and the man pivoted sideways. Then he smoothly moved around the heavy wooden desk, rolling forward to greet them. If that was not enough of a shock—they had not been warned that TK Parker was wheelchair bound—when the chair stopped in front of them Parker, wheelchair and all, stood up and extended his hand.

Susan, news professional that she was, didn't miss a beat. She grasped the proffered hand with a firm grip and shook it, the way Texan's do. The firm handshake was something she had learned early in life. Some women just stick their hand out like a limp, dead fish when shaking hands. Susan shook hands like she meant it, like she was the other man's equal. She could see Parker sizing her up, with a twinkle in his pale blue-gray eyes.

“Mr. Parker, I'm Susan Write from KWTEX News, and this is my cameraman Jim Taylor,” she said motioning to JT who was standing  behind her, camera dangling from his left hand.

“Nice to meet you, Jim,” Parker said. As he leaned forward to shake JT's hand the motorized chair, now balancing on two wheels, moved closer to him as if by telepathic control. “Welcome to my spread, have a seat. As you can see, I already have one.”

As he uttered the last sentence, his wheelchair collapsed on itself, lowering him back to a seated position. Parker whirled about and reclaimed his position behind the desk.

“Call me JT, Mr. Parker,” said the camera man. “That's some wheelchair you have there. I've never seen anything like it.”

“Call me TK, son, everybody does. Yeah, this little beauty is an iBot. It was design back in the 00s by Dean Kamen, same guy who designed the Segway.”

“Segway, that two wheeled, standup scooter you see mall cops whizzing around on?” asked Susan, trying to reclaim control of the conversation. It was obvious that Parker was a gear-head and JT loved gadgets. If they started talking about technology they could be here for hours.

“Yes indeed. He made a bunch of these things—an electric, motorized wheelchair that can go from four wheels to two wheels lifting the rider in the process, and it can climb stairs too. Unfortunately, the damn things cost a fortune and they discontinued making them in 2009. Insurance companies and Medicaid didn't want to foot the bill, cheap bastards.”

“If they were discontinued in 2009 you must have owned it for some time.”

“No, when they were for sale I hadn't had my accident yet, but you can find nearly anything on the Internet. Managed to pick up a couple of busted ones on eBay. And given a boot full of cash, I managed to get one of the original engineers to build me a working one using the broken chairs for parts. Had him hop it up a little bit, too.

“I'm one of the few people in the world that has a hot rod four wheel drive without owning a truck,” TK chuckled, “but I don't think you're here to talk about my wheelchair.”

“Well, no sir,” started Susan.

“I said call me TK, girl. No need bein' so formal.”

“TK then. We got a tip that your wheelchair is not the only futuristic vehicle you own. Word on the street is that you are building a rocket ship in your barn.”

“Ain't a barn, its a dirigible hanger. And it ain't a rocket ship, it's a spaceship.”

“Dirigible hanger?” said JT.

“Not a rocket ship?” said Susan.

“Right” said TK.

 

On Board Parker's Folly, Parker Ranch, Texas

“Attention, power system test commencing,” announced the ship's voice, followed almost immediately by a cascade of flashing red lights and blaring klaxons.

“Excessive radiation emissions detected, test terminated,” said the unruffled ship's voice.

Well, at least the warning system works,
thought Jack. “Engineering, Bridge. Dr. Gupta, what just happened?”

“Well, it would appear that something different happened this time. My readings no longer indicate an excess of muonium. There is, however, a very strange indication of some anomalously heavy hydrogen atoms poisoning the fusion reaction and causing the quantum grid to generate an excess of radiation.”

“Heavy hydrogen? I was under the impression that the ship's engines required deuterium and tritium to run.”

“Oh no, this is much heavier than tritium,” said the ship's engineer. “This seems to be heavy enough to be hydrogen 4, quadrium. Or an atom of helium. Really quite fascinating.”

The Captain sighed silently. To Jack it was a failed system test, to Gupta it was an interesting experimental result. “The fusion process normally makes helium, correct? And you're telling me we are now making heavier hydrogen isotopes instead?”

“Highly unstable nuclei—hydrogen 4 through hydrogen 7—have been synthesized in the laboratory but their half-lives are on the order of a few picoseconds. What we are seeing are much longer lived atoms. I know the muon beam initiators are not making  positively charged muons anymore, this new problem makes little sense.”

“Dr. Gupta, could you tell me about the radiation emissions? What effect did this test have on the people in the area and on board?”

“What? Oh, the radiation—anyone who was in one of the shelters or inside of the ship should be perfectly safe. Beyond a hundred meters it would not be dangerous either.”

“That's a relief, Doctor. I take it we cannot run the ship under these conditions, could you please get back to me when we are ready for the next attempt? Bridge out.”
Great,
Jack thought,
another delay. TK will not be pleased.

* * * * *

In the engineering compartment, Lt. Curtis stood staring at the flashing warning indicators and scrolling columns of numbers on the monitor readouts. Gupta was pacing back and fourth, obviously in deep thought. As she understood the problem, each muon needed to catalyze a few thousand fusion reactions to generate a usable amount of power. Since muons only lived a couple of microseconds this meant channeling the muons so they struck a sufficient number of hydrogen atoms.

Since muons had a tendency to “stick” to the resulting helium atoms it was also a good idea to remove the helium byproduct from the reactor area as soon as possible. All of this was the job of the quantum grid matrix. Somehow things were going wrong inside the grid—power was way down and excessive amounts of neutrons and gamma rays were being emitted. From what they had seen in earlier tests, it was like the waste helium was not getting removed.

“Rajiv, this seems similar to the helium removal problems we were having earlier,” she ventured.

It took Gupta a few seconds to realize that someone had spoken to him. “Yes, yes it does Gretchen. But we eliminated that problem and the readings are not showing any helium buildup in the reaction matrix. It is so strange... OF COURSE!”

BOOK: Parker's Folly
10.85Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Witch Interrupted by Wallace, Jody
The Secret Fiend by Shane Peacock
Infected by Anthony Izzo
Soul Crossed by Lisa Gail Green
Lexi's Tale by Johanna Hurwitz
BuckingHard by Darah Lace