I, Robot - Isaac Asimov [70]
“Here it is! It admits it controls the ship itself entirely. It is definitely optimistic about their safety, but without details. I don’t dare press it. However, the center of disturbance seems to be about the interstellar jump itself. The Brain definitely laughed when I brought up the subject. There are other indications, but that is the closest it’s come to an open abnormality.”
She looked at the others, “I refer to hysteria. I dropped the subject immediately, and I hope I did no harm, but it gave me a lead. I can handle hysteria. Give me twelve hours! If I can bring it back to normal, it will bring back the ship.”
Bogert seemed suddenly stricken. “The interstellar jump!”
“What’s the matter?” The cry was double from Calvin and Lanning.
“The figures for the engine The Brain gave us. Say . . . I just thought of something.”
He left hurriedly.
Lanning gazed after him. He said brusquely to Calvin, “You take care of your end, Susan.”
Two hours later, Bogert was talking eagerly, “I tell you, Lanning, that’s it. The interstellar jump is not instantaneous—not as long as the speed of light is finite. Life can’t exist . . . matter and energy as such can’t exist in the space-warp. I don’t know what it would be like—but that’s it. That’s what killed Consolidated’s robot.”
Donovan felt as haggard as he looked. “Only five days?”
“Only five days. I’m sure of it.”
Donovan looked about him wretchedly. The stars through the glass were familiar but infinitely indifferent. The walls were cold to the touch; the lights, which had recently flared up again, were unfeelingly bright; the needle on the gauge pointed stubbornly to zero; and Donovan could not get rid of the taste of beans.
He said, morosely, “I need a bath.”
Powell looked up briefly, and said, “So do I. You needn’t feel self-conscious. But unless you want to bathe in milk and do without drinking—”
“We’ll do without drinking eventually, anyway. Greg, where does this interstellar travel come in?”
“You tell me. Maybe we just keep on going. We’d get there, eventually. At least the dust of our skeletons would—but isn’t our death the whole point of The Brain’s original breakdown?”
Donovan spoke with his back to the other, “Greg, I’ve been thinking. It’s pretty bad. There’s not much to do—except walk around or talk to yourself. You know those stories about guys marooned in space. They go nuts long before they starve. I don’t know, Greg, but ever since the lights went on, I feel funny.”
There was a silence, then Powell’s voice came thin and small, “So do I. What’s it like?”
The redheaded figure turned, “Feel funny inside. There’s a pounding in me with everything tense. It’s hard to breathe. I can’t stand still.”
“Um-m-m. Do you feel vibration?”
“How do you mean?”
“Sit down for a minute and listen. You don’t hear it, but you feel it—as if something’s throbbing somewheres and it’s throbbing the whole ship, and you, too, along with it. Listen—”
“Yeah . . . yeah. What do you think it is, Greg? You don’t suppose it’s us?”
“It might be.” Powell stroked his mustache slowly. “But it might be the ship’s engines. It might be getting ready.”
“For what?”
“For the interstellar jump. It may be coming and the devil knows what it’s like.”
Donovan pondered. Then he said, savagely, “If it does, let it. But I wish we could fight. It’s humiliating to have to wait for it.”
An hour later, perhaps, Powell looked at his hand on the metal chair-arm and said with frozen calm, “Feel the wall, Mike.”
Donovan did, and said, “You can feel it shake, Greg.”
Even the stars seemed blurred. From somewhere came the vague impression of a huge machine gathering power with the walls, storing up energy for a mighty leap, throbbing its way up the scales of strength.
It came with a suddenness and a stab of pain. Powell stiffened, and half-jerked from his chair. His sight caught Donovan and blanked out while Donovan’s thin shout whimpered and died in his ears. Something writhed within him and struggled against a growing blanket of ice, that thickened.