Emma didn’t share Malenfant’s evident glee at this result.
She felt dwarfed. She imagined the world wheeling around her, spinning as it carried her through darkness around the sun, around the rim of the Galaxy — while the Galaxy itself sailed off to its own remote destination, stars glimmering like the windows of a great ocean liner.
Was Cornelius right? Right about everything? Right, too, about the Carter catastrophe, the coming extinction of them all?
It couldn’t be true. It was insanity, an infection of schizophrenia from Cornelius, that was damaging them all.
Malenfant, of course, was hooked. She knew him well enough to understand he would be unable to resist this new adventure, wherever it took him.
And how, she wondered, was she going to be able to persuade him to do any work at all, after
3753
1986
3753
1986…
Reid Malenfant:
The puzzle of the Feynman radio message nagged at Malenfant, even as he threw himself into his myriad other projects. He would write out the numbers on a pad, or have them scroll up on a softscreen. He tried taking the numbers apart: factorizing them, multiplying them, dividing one by the other. He got nowhere.
Cornelius Taine was equally frustrated. He would call Malenfant at odd time-zoned hours.
“Why?”
“Me?”
1986
3753
“Umm, 1986 could be a date.”
It had been the year of
Cornelius’s softscreen image, slightly blurred, showed him frowning
“No. Keep thinking, Cornelius.”
And Malenfant would roll up the softscreen and return to his work, or try to sleep.
Until the day came when Cornelius, in person, burst into a BDB project progress meeting.
It was an airless Portakabin at the Mojave test site. Malenfant was with George Hench, poring over test results and subcontractor sign-offs. And suddenly there was Cornelius: hot, disheveled, pink with sunburn, tie knot loosened, white gypsum clinging to the fabric of his suit pants.
Malenfant couldn’t keep from laughing. “Cornelius, at last I’ve seen you out of control.”
Cornelius was panting.
Despite the heat of the day, Malenfant felt goose bumps rise on his bare arms.
He made Cornelius sit down, take his jacket off, drink some water.
Cornelius brusquely cleared clutter from the tabletop — battered softscreens, quality forms, a progress chart labeled with bars and arrows, old-fashioned paper blueprints, sandwich wrappers, and beer cans — and he spread his own softscreen over the desk.
“It was staring us in the face the whole time,” Cornelius said. “I knew it had to be connected to
George Hench paced around the room, visibly unhappy.
Cornelius glanced up at George. “Look, I’m sorry to disrupt your work.”
George glared. “Malenfant, do we have to put up with this bull?”
“Whatever it is, it ain’t bull, George. I’ve seen the setup—”
“Malenfant, I spent my career fending off hand-waving artistes like this guy. Color coordinators. Feng Shui artists. Even astrologers, for Christ’s sake. Sometimes I think the U.S. is going tack to the Middle Ages.”
Malenfant said gently, “George, there was no U.S. in the Middle Ages.”
“Malenfant, we have a job to do here. A big job. We’re going to a fucking asteroid. All I’m saying is, you need to focus on what’s important here.”
“I accept that, George. But I have to tell you I’ve come to believe there’s
“Oh, it’s real,” Cornelius said fervently. “And what it means is that you’re going to have to redirect your mission.” Cornelius eyed George. “Away from Reinmuth.”
George visibly bristled. “Now, you listen to me—”
Malenfant held up a hand. “Let’s hear him out, George.”
Cornelius tapped at his softscreen. “When I began to wonder if the numbers referred to an asteroid, I thought 1986 might be a discovery date. So I logged on to the Minor Planet Center in Massachusetts.” A table of numbers and letters scrolled down the screen; the first column, of four digits and two letters, all began with
“What do the letters mean?”
“The first shows the half month when the asteroid was discovered. The second is the order of discovery in that half month. So 1986AA is the first asteroid to be discovered in the first half of January, 1986.”
Malenfant eyed the numbers with dismay. “Shit. There must be dozens, just for 1986.”
“More in later years; asteroid watches have gotten better.”
“So which one is ours?”
Cornelius smiled and pointed to the second column. “As soon as enough observations have been accumulated to determine the asteroid’s orbit, it is given an official designation, a permanent number, and sometimes a name.”
The official numbers, Malenfant saw with growing excitement, were in the range 3700-3800. Cornelius scrolled down until he came to a highlighted line.
1986TO 3753 0.484 1.512 0.089…
The key numbers jumped out at Malenfant: 1986 3753.
“Holy shit,” he said. “It’s there. It’s
“Not only that,” Cornelius said. “This little baby, 1986TO, is like no other asteroid in the solar system.”
“How so?”
Cornelius smiled. “It’s Earth’s second moon. And nobody knows how it got there.”
George Hench stomped out to “go bend some tin,” glaring at Cornelius as he did so.
Cornelius, unperturbed, called up more softscreen data and told Malenfant what little was known about asteroid number 3753.
“It is not in the main belt. In fact, it’s a near-Earth object, like Reinmuth. What the astronomers call an Aten.”
Malenfant nodded. “So its orbit mostly lies inside Earth’s.”
“It was discovered in Australia. Part of a routine sky watch run out of the Siding Springs observatory. Nobody’s done any careful spectral studies or radar studies. But we think it’s a C-type: a carbonaceous chondrite, not nickel-iron, like Rein-muth. Water ice, carbon compounds. It probably wandered in from the outer belt — far enough from the sun that it was able to keep its volatile ices and organics — or else it’s a comet core. Either way, we’re looking at debris left over since the formation of the Solar System. Unimaginably ancient”
“How big is it?”
“Nobody knows for sure. Three miles wide is the best guess.”
“Does this thing have a name?”
Cornelius smiled. “Cruithne.” He pronounced it
Malenfant was baffled. “What does that have to do with Australia?”
“It could have been worse. There are asteroids named after spouses, pets, rock stars. The orbit of Cruithne is what made it worth naming.” Cornelius pointed to numbers. “These figures show the asteroid’s perihelion, aphelion, eccentricity.”
Asteroid 3753 orbited the sun in a little less than an Earth year. But it did not follow a simple circular path, like Earth; instead it swooped in beyond the orbit of Venus, out farther than Mars. “And,” Cornelius said, “it has an inclined orbit.” Cornelius’ diagrams showed 3753’s orbit as a jaunty ellipse, tipped up from the ecliptic, the main Solar System plane, like Frank Sinatra’s hat.
Malenfant considered this looping, out-of-plane trajectory. “So what makes it a moon of the Earth?”
“Not a moon exactly. Call it a companion. The point is, its orbit is locked to Earth’s. A team of Canadian astronomers figured this out in 1997. Watch.”
Cornelius produced a display showing the orbits of Earth and Cruithne from a point of view above the Solar System. Earth, a blue dot, sailed evenly around the sun on its almost-circular orbit. By comparison, Cruithne swooped back and forth like a bird.
“Suppose we follow the Earth. Then you can see how Cruithne moves in relation.”
The blue dot slowed and stayed in place. Malenfant imagined the whole image circling, one revolution for every Earth year.