to put controlled re-entry into the atmosphere and return to earth out of the question. Only a recovery mission by a space shuttle orbiter could effect the rescue of Colonel Wentworth and his companions, and the damage that had been done to
The Colonel’s wife Janet, a tall good-looking brunette, was with Nicholas aged ten and Pamela aged six in the light and generous living room of the Wentworth home in Monterey, California, listening to the dramatic news coming from the commentator on breakfast-time TV. The family usually had breakfast in the kitchen but they were in the living room now because the bigger TV screen was there. They had heard that the country was at war now but what was uppermost in the minds of all three was that a beloved husband and an adored father was already out there in space.
“He’ll get back all right,” said Janet, clearing the breakfast things, “just like the other times.”
She spoke with more confidence than she felt.
The telephone rang.
“Slim’s in trouble,” said a voice that Janet knew well. A close friend of them all was ringing her from Space Control.
“You’ll get it on the news any time now but I thought I’d warn you. He’s hurt, in the eyes, otherwise he’s OK. The ship is in poor shape but we’ll get him back.”
Almost at once there was some news on the TV screen. Even as Janet put down the phone, the commentator was saying: “One of our spacecraft has been damaged in an attack from a Soviet space interceptor. A rescue mission for its crew is being mounted and should soon be under way.”
“Marvellous!” said Janet to the children. “They’ll bring him back all right. You’ll see!”
There was someone at the door. An officer, who identified himself as coming on orders from Space Control, was with two Air Force men bringing in a TV set of a type Janet had not seen before. It was clearly not a model for domestic use. It looked like service equipment. The officer set it up, plugged in the power and made some adjustments.
“You can talk to Colonel Wentworth now,” he said, “when he comes up. He has been told to call you.”
What did all this mean? Janet found herself in the grip of a terrible fear.
She walked around the strange TV set, not touching it, and called the family friend in Space Control.
“There’s a shuttle going up to bring him out, isn’t there?” she asked. “They said there was.”
“I hope that’s true,” was the hesitant reply. “There aren’t many shots left right now. Everything depends on how the Joint Chiefs propose to use them.”
An hour later he called again. She had not yet been able to bring herself to touch the set.
“Janet, bad news. There’s only one rocket left that can get up there before the life support systems run out. The Joint Chiefs have ordered that shot to be used to replace a critical reconnaissance satellite taken out by Soviet interception.”
“You mean — they’re going to let Slim die, out there, when they could save him?”
“They have only one space shot left,” was the reply, “until
“But… but… the newsman said a rescue mission was being urgently prepared and would soon be on its way. He said that.”
“I am sorry, Janet, truly sorry. That’s only PR to allay public anxiety. You have to be told the truth.”
Janet was silent for a moment.
“What about the others in the crew out there?” she almost whispered. “What about them and their families too?”
“That’s being taken care of,” was the reply. “But time is running on. You can switch on the set now and pick up Slim.”
She did so. There on the screen was Slim, her beloved Slim, one of the only three people in her whole world who really mattered. He was in the cabin of the spacecraft surrounded by all the gadgetry but blundering about in his spacesuit even more than usual and uncertain in his movements. His eyes looked strange.
“Slim!” she said.
“Hello, love,” he said. “My eyes aren’t so good and I can’t see you but my God it’s good to hear you. How are things?”
“Good,” she lied. “Nicholas and Pamela are here. Say hello to daddy, children.”
“Hello, daddy,” came up in chorus.
“That’s great,” was the reply.
Janet watched a weightless, sightless spaceman fumbling about in the cabin. The voice was the same. That was Slim’s voice.
“Janet,” it said, “I love you.”
“Oh, Slim…”
“It can’t last long now, perhaps an hour or so, perhaps only minutes. I love you, Janet, I love you dearly and I am switching off.” The image vanished.
Janet, in her much loved and lived in home, sat down upon a sofa, dry-eyed and too stricken even for grief.
Suddenly a wail came from deep within her as from a dying animal.
“I hate you all!” she shouted and then in a flood of tears snatched the children to her and held them close.
When the war ended, a space mission recovered the orbiting bodies of the Captain and crew of
In the three decades before the war, with vast investment and marvellous inventiveness from the superpowers, space technology and its applications raced ahead. Apart from well-publicized programmes for peaceful purposes, there was a strong military thrust behind this effort. All space activity had some military significance but at least 65 per cent of the launches before the war were for military reasons only. By January 1985 the Soviet Union had made 2,119 launches compared with 1,387 by the United States. The latter generally used bigger launching rockets with heavier payloads and their satellites had longer lives and wider capabilities.
Among the military tasks performed by unmanned satellites were reconnaissance, by photographic, electronic, radar and infra-red means; the provision of communications, early-warning, navigational and meteorological stations; and finally there were the interceptor/destroyer (I/D) counter-satellites. Manned vehicles like the orbiter
Before the war ordinary people around the world had little idea of what was going on far above them. This was principally because much of it was shrouded in secrecy, but it was also because their attention was only drawn to space sporadically when people were shot up into it and the TV cameras followed their progress. As things turned out, heroic exploits in space did not figure much in the war. Human beings were needed in space for certain tasks and especially so in the early days of the research programme. When it came to military applications they were usually more of an encumbrance than an advantage. There were notable exceptions when multiple tasks needed direct human judgment and control. Colonel Wentworth’s tragic flight in
To appreciate what happened in space during the war a little understanding of the governing science is