Brahms’s competition had resulted in some innovative designs for Ramis’s passage. It was only after the director had realized that some of his brighter engineers might use their designs personally that Brahms had called a halt to the contest.
Ramis’s spacesuit made him appear much larger than he was, insect-like. He was dwarfed by the Manned Maneuvering Unit strapped to his back and the harness carrying the half-dozen air bottles he would need for the long journey.
In case he couldn’t find any food on the Soviet station, Karen had helped him lash some supplies and a sealed container of wall-kelp to his waist. Despite Brahms’s sour protests, Ramis had insisted the gift from the
Aided by the MMU, Ramis would Jump the fifty-odd miles of deep, bottomless space across the L-5 zone. The idea didn’t seem to bother him, and that concerned Karen. The
If nothing else, Karen hoped she had managed to impress on him the extreme danger from the trailing weavewire on his back. The single-molecule-thick strand was sharper than the sharpest razor in the world. A nick could just as easily cut off an arm or a leg, or sever an air tank in two and make it explode. The other Orbitech engineers were scared silly of the lifeline fiber, and they had been reluctant to help Ramis prepare, though Karen had made the first hundred feet of fiber a million braided strands thick, so it posed no greater danger than any fine wire.
Finally, Karen had volunteered herself, though she hated to suit up. She felt obligated to give him the best possible safety factor. The odds against him seemed bad enough to start with.
Karen felt herself sweating inside the snug, temperature-monitored environment of her suit. But Ramis’s breathing came over her headphones—slow, measured breaths, with no sense of excitement. She knew his greatest emotion right now would be relief at escaping the sharp eyes of Curtis Brahms, if only for a time.
Karen scanned the diagnostic on the outside of the dispensing cavity mounted to the hull of
Ramis tugged at the belt that connected the weavewire fiber to him. “Is it all ready for me?” He pushed closer to the dispensing outlet, moving slowly in his huge suit, and studied the apparatus.
The thick, braided weavewire trailed from Ramis’s belt, which had also been woven from the fiber to give an anchoring point. The tail-end of the weavewire showed thin and faint, Day-Glo orange but visible only when he knew exactly where to look. The remainder in the dispensing cavity would be completely invisible in its double strand when Ramis reeled it out behind him.
Karen still felt the tightness in her stomach, but she forced herself to speak. “It’s ready to go. Just be careful not to start spinning. If you get tangled in it—” Her voice trailed off.
“I will be like a fish that has been filleted!” Ramis said, then laughed over the intercom. “But I want you to think good thoughts, Karen. Your fiber is making this journey possible. If I needed to bear a steel cable behind me, I would have so much inertia I could never stop my Jump. I would be a yo-yo between these two colonies.”
She wasn’t sure if she should feel proud or guilty.
Ramis spoke optimistically, as if he knew that Brahms, and most of
Before
Ramis swung around to face Karen. By his cautious movements, she knew he remained conscious of the weavewire. He held out both his hands, as if to ask a question. Karen shook her helmet slowly. Seemingly satisfied, Ramis spoke over the radio, “I am ready, Mr. Brahms.”
Karen reached out and grasped his space-suited arm, but the padding was so thick she couldn’t tell if he felt her reassuring squeeze.