Free Novel Read

Tales of the Vuduri: Year Two Page 12


  There ain't nobody who is going to hang around for 80,000 years to see if Voyager reached the next star system over. If you thought that Voyager 2 would go farther and faster than Voyager 1, forget it. Voyager 2 is only traveling at 16 km/sec. There was a time when Voyager 2 was farther away since it was launched August 20, 1977. Voyager 1 was launched a few weeks later on September 5, 1977. It has a higher net speed so once Voyager 1 pulled ahead, it pulled ahead for good.

  Here's the bottom line: if we are going to travel to the stars, we are going to have find a better, faster way. The PPT star drive which goes around space, rather than through it, seems like the only reasonable way to proceed. Well, until we get the Null Fold X-drive which has no upper speed limit!

  Entry 2-096: April 1, 2014

 

  Character Fusion

  I was in the middle of building the plot for The Milk Run and I came to a juncture point. It is necessary for the plot to proceed that Planet OMCOM upload a much greater portion of his consciousness into Junior's memron storage to help Aason solve the mystery of where the Creatures of Light have taken his sister Lupe.

  I am going back and forth. OMCOM's livetar is always pure white and represents OMCOM's imperial presence. In this story, which takes place 17 years after Rome's Evolution, Junior's livetar is now jet black. My initial thought was to have OMCOM upload his consciousness into Junior and have the two fuse into a single entity called OMCOM, Jr. This livetar would be gray and would represent the synthesis of two personalities.

  Here are a few problems with that. First, I don't know this new character. I know OMCOM. I know Junior. I can write their characters and their dialog from experience. Also, with fewer people (maybe entities?) in the room, there is less diversity of opinion, fewer opportunities for banter.

  I discussed this with Denise and she felt there was no question. OMCOM and Junior should remain separate characters with their own livetars, personalities and approach toward life. I guess I have to yield to this viewpoint because my gut tells me that is right, too.

  So goodbye, OMCOM, Jr. Never born, never built, never to be realized but still fascinating nonetheless.

  Entry 2-097: April 2, 2014

  Cutting off the hand

  For some reason, I seem to have a fascination with cutting off people's hands. This has happened more than once in the Rome's Revolution saga.

  This exact dramatic scene made an impression on everybody in The Empire Strikes Back when Luke had his light saber fight with Darth Vader:

  For my career as a writer, it all started at the end of The Ark Lords when MINIMCOM sliced off Nick Greer's hand before he could shoot Rome.

  Of course, the loss of Greer's hand and MINIMCOM restoring it was an important plot point in Rome's Evolution in that it laid down the roadmap to Greer's rehabilitation. Later in that book, Dan Steele sliced his own hand off by accident when he plunged his knife into Rei's chest. Unfortunately for Steele, Rei was protected by a miniature PPT tunnel and when Rei twisted, Steele's hand was cut off by a blade sharper than any in the universe.

  However, it was my point with restoring Nick Greer's hand that Steele could find salvation as well. Here is Virga's take on it:

  “How is Nick Greer doing?” Rei asked Virga as he stared out the window at the craggy mountains below.

  “He is settling in,” Virga said. “When you gave him his hand back, it is like he became a different person. He appears to have given up his resentment and violent tendencies. He had a very strong wish to work out in the fresh air. I believe your expression is, he will be OK.”

  “That’s great,” Rei said. “Maybe you could have him go visit Steele some day and explain what happened to him.”

  “Why?” Virga asked.

  “Because, well, Steele ended up losing a hand as well. Maybe it will appeal to him.”

  “How did he lose his hand, if I may ask?”

  Rei looked at Rome. “Well, after we hunted him down, he tried to kill me and, well, I accidentally cut it off.”

  Rome leaned forward. “He pretends he doesn’t care but I sense that he does. Perhaps if he sees hope of repair in exchange for his cooperation, it will turn out the same way as Greer.”

  “It is worth a try,” Virga said. “We will give him a little time to consider his circumstances and then we will broach the subject.”

  Why do I bring this all up? It's because I think Aason is going to get his hand cut off in The Milk Run. No big deal in the Rome's Revolution universe but disturbing nonetheless. You'll find out why when the book is done but right now, I can't find a way around it.

  Entry 2-098: April 3, 2014

 

  Living crystals

  Everybody knows there are three basic divisions of matter in our world: animal, vegetable and mineral. However, will this always be true on other worlds? In other galaxies?

  In the upcoming novel The Milk Run, Aason Bierak has to travel to a star system which has not one but two habitable worlds circling the primary star in the Nu2 Lupi system. So what does that mean?

  One of the worlds, the one farther out, is very cold. So cold that the inhabitants called it Hades. Everybody thinks of Hell as fire and brimstone and sulfur but the Greeks imagined Hell as a cold and dark place.

  But as cold as Hades is, there is a second, warmer world, much closer to their sun called Ay'den. Ay'den is very hot, humid, smelly and the primary sentient species is plant-based, not animal-based. In fact, there are no animals on that world. So if plants are the people, what are the plants?

  Well, I decided to build silicon-based life-forms, living crystals, as the next level down. Everybody remembers the Horta from Star Trek, the Original Series:

  They were shown to be incredibly long-lived, sentient, and while protective of their young, they were not inherently evil.

  On Ay'den, the living crystals are more diabolical. They do not like the plant-based life-forms and have no experience with animals whatsoever. Unfortunately for Aason Bierak, they have a natural ability to conquer animals which he is going to have to overcome.

  Entry 2-099: April 4, 2014

 

  To Infinity and Beyond

  Everybody loves Buzz Lightyear. I mean, how could you not?

  Buzz's catch phrase was "To Infinity and Beyond" which was fun and may seem vague but is actually quite deep. How could something be beyond infinity?

  Take the simplest of cosmological questions. If there was a Big Bang when our universe started, what came before the Big Bang? If the universe is doomed to eventually contract back down to nothing, sometimes called the Big Crunch, what comes after? It hurts the head. What came before the beginning? What comes after the end? This means the beginning is not really the beginning, is it?

  This is where science runs into religion head on. When did it all start? In my opinion, it never started. It has always been. Therefore you don't have to figure out what comes after the end because it never ends.

  To me, our universe is just one tiny node of a hyper-cube network going off to infinity both in dimension and time. Kind of like Tinkertoys but infinitely extended:

  And if this is true, what is between the spaces?

  I don't know the answer. Nobody does. So in the upcoming novel The Milk Run, we find out one possible answer. After all, if Heaven is real, it has to be somewhere.

  Entry 2-100: April 5, 2014

 

  Dimensions

  Everybody knows about the first three dimensions: length, width and height. Everybody knows about the fourth dimension: time. If you know the spatial and temporal coordinates of an object or event, you can track it precisely. Four dimensions was good enough for Einstein to develop the Special Theory of Relativity.

  But are there other dimensions? Ones that we don't know about? String theory, or more specifically superstring theory postulates there are no less than 10 dimensions.

  Superstring theory is a possible unified theory of all fundamental forces, but superstring theory require
s a 10 dimensional space-time, or else bad quantum states called ghosts with unphysical negative probabilities become part of the spectrum.

  But what are those other dimensions? Do they have a name or even any meaning in our lives?

  I read a novella once called Flatland: A Romance of Many Dimensions by Edwin A. Abbott. It was about a world which consisted only of two dimensions (length and width) and of course time. The residents of Flatland had no knowledge of height and navigation around their world was somewhat difficult. Very similar to a puzzle where you rearrange pieces to form a coherent view:

  Flatland consisted of women who were simple line-segments and gentlemen were polygons. Their world was visited by a sphere whose third dimension was incomprehensible by the masses until the protagonist saw "spaceland" for himself.

  So too it will be in the upcoming novel The Milk Run. What if those other dimensions had simple names like Ambition or Desire or Purity? Ever since the first part of Rome's Revolution came to a close, we have been wondering what has OMCOM been up to all these years. Well, finally, we will get to find out. It may not be as nice as you would like.

  Entry 2-101: April 6, 2014

 

  The gift of humor

  Rome, the heroine of Rome's Revolution is an innocent soul. She is struggling to find her way in Vuduri society when a chance meeting with an Essessoni named Rei Bierak knocks her from her orbit and puts her on a trajectory for the unknown.

  After her rebirth, she must come to grips with a bewildering number of topics, only the simplest being an emotional response to situations. A more sophisticated matter is humor. Rei tried to explain it to her when she was still ensconced within the Overmind but she never "got it" until she was Cesdiud (cast out). When she decided to assert herself and demand that the Vuduri give Rei the space tugs and the MINIMCOM unit to facilitate their trip to Deucado, she was granted the opportunity to take Rei up into space to train him on space tug operations.

  When they were first seated in the cockpit, after Rome allowed them to remove their helmets, she was instructing Rei on how to get situated. This gave Rome her first opportunity to show him that she finally understood the concept of humor.

  “You sit in the pilot’s seat, on the left,” Rome said pointing there.

  “OK,” Rei replied and made his way forward and sat down. Rome sat down on the seat to the right.

  “Now you buckle yourself in, like so…” She reached behind her and brought one of the two straps over her shoulder. She showed him how to insert the tongue into the hasp. “When it clicks, the latch is fastened.”

  “Yeah, that’s the way our seatbelts worked too,” Rei said.

  “You must attach both straps to be safe,” she said affixing the other belt over the other shoulder.

  “What happens if I don’t,” Rei asked with a smile on his face.

  “You die,” said Rome with a straight face.

  Rei was stunned. He watched her glowing eyes then a smile crept onto that beautiful face.

  “I am teasing you,” she said. “But please do it, though. It is safer.”

  “Yes sir, captain, sir,” Rei said and he did as he was told.

  While I cannot say for sure that I have mastered the concept, at least Rome, my heroine, seems to have done so. She has a very dry sense of humor but a sense of humor nonetheless.

  Thank you, Rome, it makes the whole series when you can break the tension once in a while.

  Entry 2-102: April 7, 2014

 

  Electrogravity

  One of the cornerstones of Vuduri transportation are the EG lifters featured prominently in Rome's Revolution, The Ark Lords and Rome's Evolution. EG stands for electrogravity but is it real? Did I make it up?

  No, I didn't make it up. However it has never been proven. There is no repeatable experimental data to support it. Some people think that the technology was lifted from the remains of the Roswell UFO. Others believe it is utilized in the B2 Stealth Bomber to explain some inconsistencies in its power to lift ratio.

  Regardless of whether it's real, for my purposes, it's not that important. I needed a way to move things around that didn't require fossil fuels. So you rotate a room-temperature superconducting magnet at high-speed and voila! electrogravity. In Vuduri universe, electrogravity (EG) is only a repulsive force, not an attractive one. So it was only good for pushing against gravity. Works great at sea level. Not so good once you reach the upper atmosphere and useless outside of a gravity well.

  As long as I had to build in a rotating superconducting magnet, I used it to clamp the space tugs to the body of the Ark II which was made of pig iron so it was magnetic. I also created some shields to cover the EG lifters so it "reflected" the repulsor field backwards and created artificial gravity. Rei and Rome needed this for their year-long journey to Deucado so their bodies did not atrophy.

  I also had MINIMCOM use the EG lifters as a super-duper PA system upon occasion.

  Very convenient for the story but unlikely to be too useful any time soon.

  Entry 2-102 (extra): April 7, 2014

 

  Indiegogo campaign starts today

  I am going to try and get Rome's Revolution made into an audio book. I am going to use the Indiegogo crowd-sourcing platform to fund this venture. Here is the link:

  https://www.indiegogo.com/projects/rome-s-revolution-the-audio-book.

  Here is a short link in case you need it: https://igg.me/at/RRAudio/x/4972686

  If you could spread the word, I'd really appreciate it. Here is what their widget looks like:

  Every little bit helps.

  Entry 2-103: April 8, 2014

 

  Infinite fuel

  While the whole Rome's Revolution universe is based upon carefully researched science, there are times when I have to wave my hands so that I can get on with the story.

  For example, when Rome is training Rei on the starship controls on his first trip in a space tug, she mentions that the trim-jets can be used in space or within the atmosphere. But what is the fuel that powers the trim-jets?

  I posted an article some time back which explained that the by-product of the Casimir Pump was positive energy which could then be converted into matter, specifically plasma. However, this same method could be used to create hydrogen or helium or even higher elements.

  So I think I'll just say that the PPT star-drive produces matter as a by-product and some of that matter is helium gas. It is placed in reservoirs and kept under intense pressure so that the trim-jets can shoot it out into space (or the atmosphere) with tremendous momentum thus generating thrust.

  This is similar to the Reaction Control System (RCS) used by the Space Shuttle and other air and spacecraft as well as geosynchronous satellites to maintain proper attitude. Cold gas thrusters use carbon dioxide or nitrogen as their base propellant but these molecules would require more construction in a Vuduri spacecraft so I think I'll stick with helium.

  Entry 2-104: April 9, 2014

 

  No instruments

  The Vuduri space tug, first introduced in Rome's Revolution has no actual instrumentation. Instead, all instrumentation is virtual and displayed on a large flat-screen panel built into the console in the cockpit.

  This concept has become increasingly popular even in today's airships culminating in the cockpit instrumentation for Boeing's 777 commercial jets.

  As you can see, most of the readouts are just screens. There still a few mechanical dials left. These dials would be autonomous, analog instrumentation such as an altimeter, fuel gauge, horizon/attitude wheel and perhaps a compass. You would want these as a backup in case the electronics failed.

  The Vuduri spacecraft have no such backups. I guess they figured if the electronics went out, you were doomed anyway so why bother building in mechanical instrumentation? We already know the Overmind was too cheap to build probes to search for the cause of the stars disappearing. If it wouldn't spring for something to save the entir
e Solar System, why would it spend money on a measly person or two?

  Entry 2-105: April 10, 2014

 

  More on Dara

  In Rome's Revolution, Rei Bierak questioned Rome several times as to why they elected to build their starbase on a moon instead of free-floating in space. To him, building a base at the bottom of a gravity well was counter-intuitive. It required energy to go into space, energy that could have been preserved if you were up there in the first place.

  In an earlier post, I explained that the thin atmosphere of Dara was sufficient to allow for aerobraking. Rome also explained that building the star base within an atmosphere made it easier to secure and maintain. However, there was one more reason which Rei only learned about when he and Rome were taking their first training flight together. It went something like this:

  Rei felt a vibration as the massive hangar doors pulled open allowing him to look at the surface of Dara for the first time. The pressure differential caused air from the hangar to rush out, creating swirling eddies of dust and dirt during the process. Beyond that, the ground was brown and reddish, illuminated by the lights of the hangar bay.