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Read book online ยซThe Twins Paradox by Alan Gasparutti (best classic novels txt) ๐Ÿ“•ยป.   Author   -   Alan Gasparutti



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โ€œHeโ€™ll probably take some Generals along to assess our resources.โ€
โ€œYou not have resource to destroy asteroid?โ€ queried Mr Boritzov.
โ€œNo, I didnโ€™t say that,โ€ replied the President. โ€œThey do have resources at NASA but we have to assess what are the best resources to use in this instance, and to plan how best to use those resources. Can you help us in any way?โ€
โ€œWe have rockets. We may find undiscovered nuclear bombs,โ€ hinted Mr Boritzov.
โ€œI donโ€™t know if nuclear missiles will be of any use on this occasion,โ€ said the President. โ€œDo you have anything else which may be of use?โ€
โ€œI speak to Russian Space Federation,โ€ replied Mr Boritzov.
โ€œYouโ€™ll have to excuse me as I must go now, but please keep me informed, Mr Borisov,โ€ the President requested.
โ€œBoritzov,โ€ said the Russian President. โ€œCall me Boritzov.โ€
โ€œOh yeah, yeah, sorry about that, Mr Botritzov,โ€ said the President. โ€œYou can call me George. It's been nice talking to you but I must go now. Good day.โ€
The president then went to his secretaries.
โ€œGet me the Vice President and my Secretary for Defence,โ€ he ordered.
โ€œMr Bilton was trying to call you, sir,โ€ replied one of his secretaries. โ€œHe's on his way here now, sir.โ€
โ€œI'm afraid we haven't been able to get Mr Luddolmans as yet,โ€ said another secretary. โ€œHe's in Florida at the moment, sir, and his mobile's engaged.โ€
โ€œWell keep trying,โ€ the President told her. โ€œWhen you get him put his call through to my office. And if anyone else asks for me, tell them I'm otherwise unobtained.โ€
โ€œYou mean otherwise engaged, sir?โ€ queried one secretary.
โ€œOr should that be unobtainable, sir? queried another secretary.
โ€œYeah whatever,โ€ replied the President. โ€œJust tell them I'm busy.โ€
The President then went back to his office. He was rather anxious and deep in thought when his phone rang.
โ€œMr Luddolmans is on the line, sir,โ€ said a secretary. โ€œโ€™Putting him through now, sir.โ€
โ€œHi, Fred,โ€ said the president as he picked up his phone. โ€œI need you to go to Houston, Texas, tomorrow.โ€
โ€œI presume it's about this asteroid,โ€ asked Mr Luddolmans. โ€œI've just had some man from Houston on to me about an asteroid. Is it true?โ€
โ€œI'm afraid it looks like it,โ€ said the President. โ€What's the earliest you can get there?โ€
โ€œI can get there this evening, but I would prefer to take a military leader,โ€ replied Mr Luddolmans.
โ€œThat's fine by me,โ€ said the President. โ€œJust be there by tomorrow morning.โ€
โ€œIs this asteroid public knowledge?โ€ asked Mr Luddolmans.
โ€œNot yet,โ€ replied the President. โ€œAs far as I'm concerned, I'd like it to stay that way.โ€
โ€œI think the Russian President may already know about this,โ€ said Mr Luddolmans.
โ€œI know, I know,โ€ replied the President. โ€œI spoke to him earlier, and asked this to be kept secret.โ€
โ€œIs Gordon Bear aware of this?โ€ asked Mr Luddolmans.
โ€œNo,โ€ replied the President. โ€œI don't think we should involve Mr Bear just at the moment. If word gets out about this in the UK, it will spread to France, and all over Europe, and all panic will break loose. Besides, this ain't something we need any public relations exercise for.โ€
โ€œWhat should I say to my Generals, then,โ€ queried Mr Luddolmans.
โ€œTell them what you have to, but don't say too much,โ€ ordered the President. โ€œThey'll find out from NASA what's going on. I've ordered NASA to maintain silence over this.โ€
โ€œOkay George, I'll get on to my Generals right away,โ€ said Mr Luddolmans.
The President had just put the phone down when there was then a knock on the door of his office door. It was the Vice President, Ray Bilton.
โ€œHi Ray, I presume you've heard about the asteroid,โ€ the President asked to him.
โ€œYeah, NASA contacted me earlier,โ€ replied Mr Bilton. โ€œI tried to contact you but you were engaged, so I decided to come here straight away. I've not mentioned this to anyone.โ€
โ€œGood, Ray,โ€ replied the President. โ€œI've ordered NASA to keep me informed of any developments,โ€ the President told Mr Bilton.
โ€œI think we should order NASA to contact you each morning as soon as they receive any update on the matter,โ€ suggested Mr Bilton. โ€œAnd they should then update me each evening on the day's events, too.โ€
โ€œThat's fine,โ€ agreed the President. โ€œI've ordered complete secrecy regarding this. Only a few people are aware, including Mr Boritzov. I've asked he maintain silence too.โ€
โ€œDoes Grizzly know about this?โ€ asked Mr Bilton.
โ€œNo,โ€ replied the President. โ€œI don't want Gordon Bear or any other European leaders to know about this.โ€
โ€œHow about the European Space Agency?โ€ asked Mr Bilton.
โ€œIf the European Space Agency find out they can inform Gordon Bear and the others,โ€ said the President.
โ€œHave you put together a strategy yet?โ€ Mr Bilton then asked the President.
โ€œNo not yet,โ€ he replied. โ€œThat's why I'm glad you've come here, so we can discuss how to proceed and put some sort of a plan together.โ€
โ€œI think we should continue our current schedules, as it may seem odd if we both pull out of arrangements,โ€ suggested Mr Bilton.
โ€œAgreed,โ€ replied the President.
โ€œCan Russia help in any way?โ€ asked Mr Bilton.
โ€œI doubt it,โ€ muttered the President. โ€œMr Boritzov isn't too sure either, though I've asked him to check on what the Russian Space Federation can muster.โ€
โ€œHow do you think we should react, if and when this does get out?โ€ asked Mr Bilton.
โ€œI think we should remain quiet about this until it's all over,โ€ said the President. โ€œThat way no-one will blame us if we fail.โ€
โ€œI shouldn't think there'd be anyone left to blame us if we fail to destroy the asteroid,โ€ replied Mr Bilton.
โ€œWhat bothers me is that the only publicity we seem to get is bad publicity,โ€ said the President
โ€œI don't think we should worry about publicity, George,โ€ replied Mr Bilton. โ€œIt might even do our reputation some good.โ€
โ€œOh yeah, I can see them in Damascus and Tehran cheering the US and waving the stars & stripes,โ€ the President said sarcastically.
โ€œI don't think we should worry about how the Middle-East reacts to this,โ€ suggested Mr Bilton. โ€œTehran would probably claim the asteroid was a missile from Mohammed, and was meant to destroy the US.โ€
โ€œYeah, and wouldn't it be good if we could destroy Mohammed's missile,โ€ the President sniggered.
โ€œLet's forget the Middle-East for a moment, George,โ€ said Mr Bilton. โ€œIf this does get out perhaps we'd better just say we're looking into the matter. Perhaps we'd better bring Grizzly' in on this, see what he suggests.โ€
โ€œIf this gets out Gordon Bear will know anyway,โ€ said the President. โ€œI donโ€™t think we should worry about Europe.โ€
โ€œI think we should maintain good communications with the media, and with the embassy in London,โ€ suggested Mr Bilton. โ€œWe can then get an early warning if London, or the Europeans, get to find out about this.โ€
โ€œAgreed,โ€ said the President.
โ€œDo you think we could cope with any after-effects from the asteroid?โ€ asked Mr Bilton.
โ€œWhat sort of after-effects do you mean, Ray?โ€ queried the President.
โ€œThis asteroid's huge, George. Even if we destroy it, there's always the possibility that some scattered fragments will hit the Earth at some later date,โ€ said Mr Bilton.
โ€œHhmmmm,โ€ muttered the President as he thought for a moment.
โ€œThis sound as large as the meteorite that killed the dinosaurs,โ€ said Mr Bilton. โ€œA 100 foot boulder smashing on the planet would probably be enough to wipe us all out.โ€
โ€œWe're going to have to divert the asteroid, and hope it doesn't break up as a result,โ€ said the President. โ€œI think we still have some underground bunkers from World War 2 scattered about the US. Some people could go into caves, and we can then seal them off before any fragments smash into the planet.โ€
โ€œWe could, but the people would then need cat's eyes to see in the darkness of the caves, as no light would be able to get in,โ€ replied Mr Bilton.
โ€œPerhaps we should forget that option for now,โ€ agreed the President. โ€œLet's just hope our boys can divert the asteroid onto another course.โ€
โ€œDo you know how many underground bunkers we have throughout the US?โ€ asked Mr Bilton. โ€I know I've got a special bunker.โ€
โ€œNo idea, George,โ€ replied the President. โ€œFred Luddolmans may have a better idea of that.โ€
โ€œWhatโ€™s Fred up to at the moment?โ€ asked Mr Bilton.
โ€œFred Luddolmans is going to be busy over the next week,โ€ said the President. โ€œI'll ask all district authorities about any underground bunkers and where they're located. I'll arrange to send a copy to Fred's department.โ€
โ€œIs Fred going to Houston?โ€ queried Mr Bilton.
โ€œI've sent him to meet NASA scientists about this tomorrow to discuss our resources and what would be the best course of action,โ€ replied the President. โ€œI believe he's taking some generals with him, too.โ€

Delayed Report

It was 9.45 am at Houston Lakeside Airport. Fred Luddolmans had just arrived and was walking through the Arrivals lounge when he saw Air Commander Clint Williams, whom he had instructed to meet, ahead. The Air Commander noticed Fred Luddolmans too, and walked over to greet to him.
โ€œHi Clint, glad you could make it,โ€ said Fred.
โ€œHello Mr Luddolmans, pleased to meet you once again,โ€ replied the Air Commander. โ€œIs anybody else coming to meet us here today?โ€
โ€œYes, I've also ordered Major General Cornelius Smith to meet us here,โ€ said Mr Luddolmans. โ€œHe won't be here for a while, as he's flying from New York.โ€
โ€œThere's an arrival due from JFK soon,โ€ said Clint Wiliams.
โ€œOh he shouldn't be on that plane,โ€ said Fred. โ€œGeneral Smith is flying from New York State, Buffalo, to be precise.โ€
โ€œI see there's a plane' due in from Buffalo at 10.15,โ€ Clint Williams stated as he looked up at the arrivals board.
โ€œHe should be on that flight,โ€ Fred replied.
โ€œShall we go somewhere quiet for the moment?โ€œ suggested Clint.
โ€œDo you know where we can find a quiet room around here?โ€ asked Fred.
โ€œI'm not sure myself, but there's an airport police office around the corner,โ€ Clint pointed out.
โ€œGood, good, we'll see if they know somewhere we can wait,โ€ replied Fred. โ€œIf we can't find anything else at least we can get an interview room to ourselves.โ€
Fred Luddolmans and Clint Williams went to the police office. As Fred was asking about a quiet room, his mobile rang.
โ€œHi Mr Luddolmans, it's Professor Marshall here,โ€ he heard on the other end of the line, before asking him to hold for a few seconds.
Mr Luddolmans then asked Clint Williams to consult the police while he spoke to the Professor.
โ€œThanks for calling Professor,โ€ said Fred. โ€œI'm at Lakeside airport at the moment with one of my military staff. Is someone from NASA coming to meet us here?โ€
โ€œI'm about to come there myself,โ€ replied the Professor. โ€œAre you expecting any more personnel?โ€
โ€œI'm expecting one of my Generals on the next flight from Buffalo,โ€ replied Fred. โ€œIt's not due in until 10.15, though.โ€
โ€œOkay, Mr Luddolmans, I'll be there at about 10.30,โ€ said Professor Marshall.
โ€œBefore you go, Professor, have there been any further developments with the asteroid overnight?โ€ asked Fred.
โ€œThere are no significant developments yet,โ€ replied the Professor. โ€œI'm waiting for the latest report from the space station. I hope to receive it in the next 30 minutes, so I'll tell you more when I see you.โ€
Mr Luddolmans then went back to the police office to meet Air Commander Williams. They then went into an interview room, where Fred explained why he had called him and Major General Smith to NASA HQ.
โ€œI'm sorry sir, but Iโ€™m not sure I'm really the person you're looking for,โ€ said Clint.
โ€œYou've flown many fighters, and various wars and
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