The Foundations of Paradise - Arthur C. Clarke [99]
When he passed the five-hundred kilometer mark, going strong, there was a message of congratulation from the ground. “By the way,” added Kingsley, “the Game Warden in the Ruhana Sanctuary’s reported an aircraft crashing. We were able to reassure him. If we can find the hole, we may have a souvenir for you.”
Morgan had no difficulty in restraining his enthusiasm; he was glad to see the last of that battery. Now, if they could find the spinnerette—but that would be a hopeless task. . . .
The first sign of trouble came at five hundred fifty kilometers. By now, the rate of ascent should have been over two hundred klicks; it was only one nine eight. Slight though the discrepancy was—and it would make no appreciable difference to his arrival time—it worried Morgan.
By the time he was thirty kilometers from the Tower, he had diagnosed the problem, and he knew that this time there was absolutely nothing he could do about it. Although there should have been ample reserve, the battery was beginning to fade.
Perhaps those sudden jolts and restarts had brought on the malaise; possibly there was even some physical damage to the delicate components. Whatever the explanation, the current was slowly dropping, and with it the capsule’s speed.
There was consternation when Morgan reported the indicator readings back to the ground.
“I’m afraid you’re right,” Kingsley lamented, sounding almost in tears. “We suggest you cut speed back to one hundred klicks. We’ll try to calculate battery life—though it can be only an educated guess.”
Twenty-five kilometers to go—a mere fifteen minutes, even at this reduced speed! If Morgan had been able to pray, he would have done so.
“We estimate you have between ten and twenty minutes, judging by the rate the current is dropping. It will be a close thing, I’m afraid.”
“Shall I reduce speed again?”
“Not for the moment. We’re trying to optimize your discharge rate, and this seems about right.”
“Well, you can switch on your beam now. If I can’t get to the Tower, at least I want to see it.”
Neither Kinte nor the other orbiting stations could help him, now that he wished to look up at the underside of the Tower. This was a task for the searchlight on Sri Kanda itself, pointing vertically toward the zenith.
A moment later, the capsule was impaled by a dazzling beam from the heart of Taprobane. Only a few meters away—so close that he felt he could touch them—the other three guiding tapes were ribbons of light, converging toward the Tower. He followed their dwindling perspective—and there it was. . . .
Just twenty kilometers away! He should be there in a dozen minutes, coming up through the floor of that tiny square building he could see glittering in the sky, bearing presents like some troglodytic Father Christmas. Despite his determination to relax, and obey CORA’s orders, it was quite impossible to do so. He found himself tensing his muscles, as if by his own physical exertions he could help Spider along the last fraction of its journey.
At ten kilometers, there was a distinct change of pitch from the drive motor. Morgan had been expecting this, and reacted to it at once. Without waiting for advice from the ground, he cut speed back to fifty klicks. At this rate, he still had twelve minutes to go, and he began to wonder despairingly if he was involved in an asymptotic approach. This was a variant of the race between Achilles and the tortoise. If he halved his speed every time he halved the distance, would he reach the Tower in a finite time? Once, he would have known the answer instantly; now, he felt too tired to work it out.
At five kilometers, he could see the constructional details of the Tower—the catwalk and protective rails, the futile safety net provided as a sop to public opinion. Although he strained his eyes, he could not yet make out the air lock toward which he was now crawling with such agonizing slowness.
And then it no longer mattered. Two kilometers