Missile
I just lay there, spread out on the
floor in front of the fan. It was just too hot to get anything done,
even though I had a list of chores. It was sweltering, all I was
wearing was underwear and I was still covered in sweat. The air from
the fan hitting this perspiration felt good, I had to admit, but that
was less than half of me at any given time.
-beep-
I turned my head toward the sound. My
little notebook was set with reminders and I was supposed to be
watering the peach trees at that point. Poor peach trees out in the
sun, poor little peaches getting cooked before they are even ripe.
Poor me for having to save them in this heat.
I rolled over with a grunt and located
a pair of shorts and sandals. After getting them on I walked out the
back door. I grabbed the watering hose and dropped it, it was
blisteringly hot. Everything was too hot! I hit the knob on the
faucet and the water flowed, it would soon cool off the hose enough
for me to pick it up.
I pull the hose to the peach trees and
begin spraying them down from top to bottom, I wanted as many leaves
as possible to feel like it was raining. This might be a waste of
precious water but I felt like the trees enjoyed it. Finally I began
to fill up the little depression we had dug around the base of the
trees.
After I was done I assumed my location
in front of the fan. Just as I got comfortable another beep from my
notebook alerted me. I glance in that direction to see that I had
mail.
“Open mail.” I say to the ceiling.
The computer opened the mail and displayed it. The story I had sent
in was rejected. I sighed. There was no way that my story wasn't
better than the one they had on their site today. None. Such is life
for a noob like me.
-beep-
I see my next chore. I groaned before I
finally stand up. I had to open the large, heavy door at the end of
the hall. It was carefully balanced to be easy to open and shut,
although it weighed about two tons. After I entered the other side I
turned on the lights, a tight spiral staircase descended more than
two hundred feet below.
I put my head on the palm scanner and
then allowed the retina scan to see my iris. After the computer was
completely sure that I was indeed me, the metal door unlocked. I
ignored the small control room and went out another door and down
some small metal steps. Once I was at the bottom I crossed underneath
the intercontinental ballistic missile and checked the gauges on the
fueling system.
It only took two minutes to confirm
that everything looked perfectly in order. The fuel line pressure was
exactly zero, because nothing was supposed to be happening. I opened
an access panel and turned a primer knob a few times to flush the
fuel line assembly. The pressure gauge hit 0.2 before it dropped
again after I stopped.
Nothing wrong with it. Just another
boring, routine system check. I looked up at the missile, the top of
its 122-foot structure was shrouded in darkness. It sat there
quietly, innocently not hurting anyone despite being a mass-killing
machine.
The Sabre-3 Missile carried six
independently targeted stealth warheads and could reach anywhere on
Earth or in orbit out to 290 miles in altitude. It could take out the
new Chinese Shingyan space station and five of their cities all by
itself. If it were called upon to do so. Even with the heightened
tensions in the Spratleys and the Taiwan Straights, there was really
no reason it had to be used.
More than likely it would never be
fired. History suggests that one day it would all be dismantled, the
nuclear material buried deep in Nevada somewhere. Out of the many
thousands of nuclear weapons built in the world, many had been
decommissioned or put away from active duty. In human history atomic
weapons had only been used five times, after all.
Almost two centuries in existence and
only used “in anger” five times. Each time the world was shocked
into not wanting to use the terrible instruments ever again, but
keeping them ready just in case “they” saw weakness and attacked.
In three weeks the technicians would
show up to inspect and make sure the missile would operate perfectly
if needed. This was an annual thing. Like a ritual of some kind,
maybe for the Church of Self-Immolation. Militarily it was outdated
but, then again, they still used bayonets. In the modern battlefield
this missile and its would be lucky to reach their targets.
Anti-missile technology would alost assure they were destroyed around
the time they reached orbit.
Then again maybe it is only a weapon of
mutual destruction for a country like China that can called a “peer
competitor”. Maybe this weapon would work fine against one of the
lesser tyrannical nations, but history shows we don't pay them much
attention until they get nukes at which point they are “safe”.
It's enough to make one cynical.
I start the long climb back to the
surface after doing all of the checks. Just then I see red flashes of
light and the two-ton door was slammed shut. The deafening alarm
finally reached my ears or finally registered. I turn around and get
back to the tiny control room. I see the terminals are already on and
the launch sequence was ready.
I put my palm on the scanner and the
missile was soon being fueled automatically. The six warheads were
being programmed with target coordinates. The missile itself was
being fed it's trajectory and launch vectors.
It dawned on me that I had nothing to
do with any of this. My job was over. It also occurred to me that the
enemy, whoever it was, probably knew exactly where this missile silo
was located. The thought didn't bother me because we had the most
advanced anti-missile technology of them all.
Unless the Shenyang space station had
taken out our early warning and defense satellites. Surely they could
not take them all down. I couldn't escape my little prison until the
launch was complete, maybe I would have time to reach the hover-car
and escape any return fire. Or I might actually be safer here.
With an astounding noise and bright
flame the missile rose from the bottom of the silo, seemingly in slow
motion at first. The little windows of the control room looking into
the launch tube looked like the sun was pouring in for a moment.
After the smoke cleared there really was some diffused sunlight from
way up top.
I wasn't in any hurry as I climbed the
stairs and palmed the scanner. The door opened for me this time and I
was on the surface. The cabin was still there, I picked up the
notebook computer and turned the fan off. Then I walked outside and
pulled a couple of the peaches from the trees before I turned toward
my hover-car.
The roaring of the missile was dying
down to background noise. The line of smoke into the sky was fading,
there were a few more missile trails on the horizon. For some reason
I was totally at peace and I felt no worries as I climbed into the
vehicle. Whether it was the end of the world or whether the territory
being fought over was won or lost, it just did not matter to me.
_____
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