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directions.
Sandy looked uncertainly at the platform as Kalor gestured. "What do I
do?" she asked.
"To take a tube anywhere, just climb aboard," Merglis said. "VISAR will take
you to your chosen destination." So saying, he stepped off the platform and
hung suspended on an invisible cushion of force.
"It couldn't be simpler," Kalor said, gesturing again.
"Just what we need under New York," Hunt told her.
Sandy drew a breath, then shrugged resignedly and followed after
Merglis, who was floating a few feet from the platform, waiting for them. One
by one the others did likewise, with Kalor bringing up the rear, and seconds
later they found themselves being carried into the labyrinth as a group, close
enough together to be able to talk easily. The field molded itself comfortably
around their bodies. They entered a wide, vertical shaft walled by tiered
galleries, which somehow transformed itself into an avenue of shining walls
and huge windows of what seemed to be stores of every kind, amusement centers,
offices, and eating places. It resembled an enclosed city street more than
anything Hunt had ever pictured as a thoroughfare inside a spacecraft. Then
they came out into a larger, open space like a plaza, but three-dimensional,
with concourses and floors going off at all angles, and he completely lost
what little sense of direction he had managed to retain. Like a bushman
grappling with a modern-day city, he didn't have the conceptual knack for
interpreting the geometry.
But when the party arrived at the Terran section of the ship, they found that
the layout there confined itself to one recognizable plane where "up" was up
and stayed that way, and everybody walked. There were reassuringly familiar
sleeping cabins, a cafeteria modeled on the facilities in UNSA's mission
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ships, and a common mess area, complete with bar and white-jacketed bartender.
And the chairs, tables, and other fittings were made to human proportions, not
Ganymean.
Each of the passengers had a personal suite located along a corridor a short
distance from the mess area and consisting of a bedroom, a sitting area with
robot kitchen unit, and a bathroom, "I trust these will be comfortable enough
for the two days," Kalor said, showing Hunt his quarters.
"They'd be comfortable for months," Hunt assured him.
"Very good. Then we'll be in touch later for you to meet Captain Fytom and his
staff. Is there anything else we can do in the meantime?"
"I don't think so...is there, Chris?" Hunt looked at Danchekker.
"No -- oh, there is some equipment that we'll be taking with us. But then I
suppose that if it hasn't all arrived, there's not much that can be done about
it now."
"If you think of anything, just let VISAR know," Kalor said. He turned to
Danchekker. "Your cabin is this way, Professor."
The door closed, leaving Hunt alone to unpack his few items of carry-on
baggage and inspect the surroundings. The suite was spacious and comfortable.
A bathrobe and slippers were provided. There was a dish of fruit on the table,
including some strange forms that Hunt did not recognize as terrestrial, some
candylike concoctions, and a box of his regular brand of cigarettes.
"Nothing to drink, VISAR?" he murmured, selecting one of the cigarettes.
"Tch, tch. The service is slipping. I'd have expected a six-pack of Coors and
a bottle of Black Label at least."
"In the cold compartment, below the autochef," VISAR replied.
Hunt sighed. As usual, the Ganymeans had thought of everything.
CHAPTER ELEVEN
Hunt was still in his cabin a little over an hour later, poring over an
English translation of a Ganymean introductory text on the properties of i-
space. In the realm beyond the transition boundary represented by the aperture
of an entry port, the usual relationships of time and space were reversed:
instead of three spatial dimensions and a unidirectional dimension of time,
there existed three time dimensions in which it was possible to move freely,
and a single spatial direction along which movement could only be one-way.
Hunt was still struggling to visualize what that might mean when VISAR
informed him that the TWA shuttle from the West Coast had docked. Shortly
afterward, Gina called to say that she was aboard the Vishnu. VISAR presented
her as a head and shoulders superposed into Hunt's visual system against the
background of the cabin.
"Welcome aboard," Hunt greeted. "I see you've got your Thurien communicator."
"It's incredible. Ma Bell's going to have to learn some new tricks."
"I didn't hear from you, so I assumed everything was going smoothly,"
Hunt said. In fact, Mitzi, Caldwell's secretary, had checked discreetly to
make sure that Gina was booked on the flight.
"It was a busy couple of days, but it went just like you said. You didn't warn
me that this would be like walking into a kaleidoscope."
"You get used to things like that with the Thuriens."
"Who else did you manage to get along, finally?"
"Chris Danchekker, as hoped. And we've got two others: Duncan Watt, my deputy [ Pobierz całość w formacie PDF ]
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