This story was written for the 2019 Geek Pride Event.
It's mostly non-erotic but it has some sex-talk and lots of physics.
The story is set in the same narrative universe as
Every Man's Fantasy
and takes place five years before the start of chapter 1. It describes an event in the early career of one of that story's geekiest heroines.
I hope you enjoy it. I welcome all comments.
Best wishes,
Erinaceous.
*
1Rigging team B
Danielle Goldrick, astrophysical engineer to a six-man space rigging team, stood at the aft observation deck on-board the Oakshott Engineering survey ship and took a long last look at the space station as it receded into the distance.
They were accelerating away from the newly-commissioned station, in orbit three-thousand miles above an Earth-sized planet, heading to a hyperspace beacon in geosynchronous orbit. Rigging team B had certified the station safe to be handed over to the terraforming engineers, who were preparing the planet for human habitation.
Aged twenty-three, with a Master's from Cambridge, a Ph.D. from Caltech, and an ambition as big as the planet, Danielle knew she could do the engineering tasks in her sleep, yet she felt a profound satisfaction from a job well done.
The small yellow star, no bigger than her thumb, emerged from the planet's shadow, making the silver space station glint for a second as it shrank to a dot. The survey ship's ion drive left a long stream of faintly-glowing particles below her, as Danielle gazed at the diminishing planet. A sandy world of vast deserts, desiccated highlands and blue oceans, it was being turned living-green by uncountable legions of nanobots and a man-made invasion of plants.
During her week on the space station, Danielle was sure she could see the vegetation spreading daily over the bare yellow deserts, expanding inward from the coasts, as the molecular nanobots ate the silicate surface rocks to release oxygen and nutrients, transpiring to convert atmospheric methane and ammonia into carbon-dioxide, water and nitrogen. When the nanobots wore out, their components would become mulch for the roots of the encroaching plants.
She stood by the triangular plastiglass window until the planet was as small as a billiard ball. Danielle reached out to hold the globe in her hand: a sentimental act of possession she could not resist.
"Princess?"
The bass voice with a soft lilting accent from the Welsh valleys belonged to a giant red-haired man, more than seven feet tall, crouching by the hatchway. His tone apologised for interrupting her.
"Yes, Geraint?"
"There's a comms. It's the boss."
"Not her!"
"It's Mister Oakshott."
"Oh, right. Thanks. I'm coming."
The boss of the rigging teams was Ellen Carswell. Danielle hated her; but Stephen Oakshott, owner of Oakshott Engineering, was Ellen's boss. Danielle liked him very much.
She climbed half-a-dozen ladders the length of the ship - past the engine room, store rooms, sleeping quarters, galley, and canteen - to the bridge, where Geraint held open the hatch for her to clamber up through.
On the bridge was the piloting console and the navicomms system. The other five men of the rigging team were already in their flight seats. Projected over the instrument panel of the navicomms system was a hazy pink-tinged hologram of Stephen Oakshott.
It was a recording sent by a communications probe through the hyperspace beacon from Earth. Communication through hyperspace was done by comms probes that emerged from a beacon, burst out a compressed message, sniffed for new messages, and bounced back through the beacon.
Instant communication was impossible by such a system, so senders put as much information into each message as they could. This happened to be Stephen Oakshott's natural method of communicating. He always spoke in short bursts.
"Well done, team," said the image of the robust red-faced, sandy-haired man, whom Danielle always likened to a big puppy-dog: all bark and no bite. "Sorry to ask. Now you're coming home. You're needed. Emergency. Asteroid-mine in Carina sector. Engineering station in danger. Briefing follows.
"One thing first. Doctor Goldrick's new. Can't risk her life. Drop her off on the way. Good luck."
Stephen Oakshott gave way to an engineer from the laboratory, a man Danielle worked with on Earth when she joined the company eight months before.
Oakshott Engineering was a small specialist firm with five astrophysical engineers, of which Danielle was the only woman, and three rigging teams, all men. She spent her first six months in the laboratory before being assigned to the space rigs. Now, having completed her third mission, she was so firmly (and unexpectedly) in love with being an engineer to a rigging team that she had no intention of letting the lads leave her somewhere safe.
"Pause the comms, please," Danielle said.
Geraint did so.
"Mister Oakshott is kind to worry about me," she said, "but I'm going where the team goes, regardless of the risk. I'm not scared. Maybe I can help."
She looked at the six men in the room and defied any of them to suggest leaving her out. They were big brawny men. The smallest was more than twice her weight. Tough, skilled and careless of danger, they would say 'No' if they thought bringing her on the mission was a danger.
But she was their engineer, their 'Princess', and her work on the last three missions proved she deserved her place. Even if her inexperience increased the risk, it was their job to protect her.
Geraint nodded to Danielle, conveying the unspoken resolution of the men. He resumed the comms.
Eddie Vane, the engineer who gave the briefing, was a serious young man who spoke earnestly and used lots of diagrams. He began by showing a map of a star system.
"This is Mu Carinae," he said, pointing at a big orange star. "It's very active with a few giant gaseous planets and a thick asteroid belt. The belt has been mined for its mineral content for decades. There's also an engineering station, marked here on the map."
He tapped a red circle. The ship's computer showed Mu Carinae on the star map, holoprojected in three dimensions by the guidance system. The image zoomed in to show the engineering station. It was a rotating wheel, on which men worked and lived, and a long spindle with ports for spaceships to dock.
"The engineering station is called 'Carina Sunspark'," Eddie said. "It orbits Mu Carinae at 120 million miles, about five million miles sunside of the asteroid belt, serving the miners and the freighter ships that visit the asteroid-mines."
"Two hyperspace beacons share the same orbit. One links toward Earth. The other links to the Hydrus solar system, which you can reach in one jump from your current location."
Hyperspace beacons were at the ends of hyperspace pathways, allowing quick travel across the settled galaxy between relatively fixed points. Because beacons used prodigious amounts of power, they were constructed near stars, where vast umbrella-shaped solar collectors beamed energy to them in gamma streams. The same power-sources fed space stations and engineering stations, where spaceships docked to refuel.
Eddie expanded the map to show the asteroid belt around Mu Carinae in more detail, pointing to a dot. Again, the navicomms system magnified the image, zooming in on an asteroid.
"This is MC10. It's an asteroid-mine about a mile in diameter and a billion tons in mass. Robot mining machines and a few human miners work it, excavating minerals. Now rigging team A is there with Ellen Carswell.
"Mu Carinae sometimes has small electromagnetic eruptions. Normally, they're nothing to worry about. The solar collectors near the star are simple robust technology. Not much hurts them. They just turn off for a while. Carina Sunspark has radiation shielding. And a nickel-iron asteroid acts as a Faraday cage. But ten days ago, a series of unusually powerful eruptions fritzed the electronic circuits on Carina Sunspark.
"The eruptions continued for days, causing severe damage and magnetising the asteroids. MC10 was set spinning quickly. Now the residual magnetism of Mu Carinae is pulling MC10 out of the asteroid belt, making it spiral inward half-a-million miles a day. It's on course to cross the path of Carina Sunspark. They're very likely to collide.
"When the eruptions died down, Oakshott Engineering received a request to help. Rigging team A was nearby. Ellen was with them at the time.
"Our men helped Sunspark get its power back on, so the team went to help on MC10; but there was another big eruption and now the engineering station is crippled again. About twenty men are trapped on Sunspark.