No Higher Ground Read online




  NO HIGHER

  GROUND

  By

  Roman Godzich

  Newer World Press

  A Division of Hellecat Publishing

  New York

  Disclaimer

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, businesses, places, events and incidents are either the products of the author’s imagination or used in a fictitious manner. Any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, or actual events is purely coincidental.

  Credits

  Edited and Copyedited by Charie D. La Marr

  Cover design by Melarts

  Book design and production by Newer World Publications

  Formatting by Travis La Marr

  Troubleshooting by Travis La Marr

  Author photograph by Peter A. Rosenberg

  Copyright © 2017 by Roman Godzich

  All rights reserved. No part of this publication may be reproduced, distributed, or transmitted in any form or by any means, including photocopying, recording, or other electronic or mechanical methods, without the prior written permission of the publisher, except in the case of brief quotations embodied in critical reviews and certain other noncommercial uses permitted by copyright law.

  Publisher’s Cataloging-in-Publication data

  No Higher Ground/Roman Godzich

  ISBN- 13-978-1979258722

  ISBN- 10-1979258724

  1. Science Fiction 2. Thriller 3. Moon 4. Aliens 5. Techno Thriller 6. Techno Horror 7. Artificial Intelligence

  Publishing Date November 1, 2017

  First Edition

  Newer World Publications

  An Imprint of Hellecat Publishing

  New York

  For Dzika, Matthieu, Oos and Julian

  The best time to plant a tree is twenty years ago. The second best time is now.

  – Chinese Proverb

  Chapter One

  University of California

  San Diego

  Death kept falling from above but Sam could not stop grinning.

  After disconnecting himself from the control system for the Narwhal Undersea Explorer, Sam Czerny checked to make sure the robotic control had stabilized itself. He kept grinning through the full ten minutes it took to remove the navigation suit that allowed him to control the explorer. It maintained a position one hundred and fifty meters above the Gakkel Ridge deep in the eastern Arctic Ocean. Then, he took a last look at the smoking underwater volcano on the display. The fuzzy yellow bacterial colony he had saved was fine.

  He blew into his cupped hands. Despite being in California, Sam still felt as cold as if he had been diving with the robot in frosty Arctic waters, but he didn’t care. After almost an entire day working the display, he was excited about what he found and what it meant for his research. Stepping out of the connection chamber, he squinted in the bright command room.

  Anders Kroon was the engineer on duty and he looked up at Sam with a scowl. “Well, you look like shit. How long have you been in there? Let's see.” He scanned his display. “Holy crap! Seventeen hours? Are you trying to break a record or something?”

  Sam grinned. “Anders, that was awesome. My first trip to the third volcano and already I've turned up more carpets of microscopic life of a type we've never seen before. I can't wait to show the vids. There's more alien-like life in the Arctic than anywhere else on this planet! This was the most thrilling dive I've ever done.” Sam stretched his arms over his head. Despite his fatigue he was buzzing with excitement.

  “Well you look like thrilled shit, then. Oh, and while you were in there, people have been trying to reach you. Some of them seemed urgent but none of them seemed dire enough to interrupt you per the instructions you left.”

  Sam raised his eyebrows showing blue eyes that were bloodshot from staring at the display for so long. “Really? Who's trying to reach me?”

  Anders swiped his hand in front of the display. “An interesting group. Someone named Trish Stern from DC. Looks like she's with Starshield-Shakelton. A Major Zhang Wei from Dongfeng City in China. A fellow by the name of Pierre Pacquelier in Florida and your better half, Helen. Each sounded urgent but none of them achieved the DIRE protocol that you defined.”

  Sam had not wanted any interruptions during the deep dive and left instructions stating anyone who didn't try to reach him at least four times in an hour was not serious enough to disturb him. They could wait. He only had an eight-hour session with the diving robot scheduled, but the researcher following him called and said he couldn’t make it. So Sam had swapped a future dive time for an uninterrupted long session. It had been well worth it.

  “Let me get to my office and I'll start by calling Helen.”

  “Smart man.” Anders smiled. “Always call the wife and the boss first. I guess it's easier if they're both the same person. When's your next shift?”

  “I'll have to check. Next week, I think.”

  “Okay, I should be on next week, too. Can you send me a copy of your report?”

  “An engineer wants to read a xenobiologist's report? Really?”

  “I might read it. But I'll certainly add it to my list of things I've helped with. You can never have too many brownie points in academia, you know?”

  “Yeah, you’re right.” Sam laughed. “I should pay more attention to that myself. I'll send you a copy. And Anders?”

  “Yeah?”

  “Thanks for all your work. You make the hard part easy so I can concentrate on the fun part. I do appreciate that.”

  “It's why I make the big bucks, man.”

  Sam left the command room and walked the hallway to the beverage station where he got himself a hot chocolate booster. With the first few sips he could feel the caffeine and taurine raise his energy level. It made him feel better than he had a right to feel after so many hours of concentration during a long remote-controlled session and the pressure of a deep-sea dive. Such a dive was hard on the body.

  Sam found his office and plopped into the chair behind his desk. He cleared off a few empty cups and brushed a bit of dust from the desktop before logging in and initiating the call to Helen.

  “Ah! I see you’re still alive.” Helen was in her home office. Sam recognized the six-foot rendering of the great wave of Kanagawa on the wall behind her bright red hair. She was wearing a bottle-green blouse that matched her eyes and flashing the smile that always made him happy. “Did you find any alien polar bears yet?” This was her standard question to him ever since he first started studying the unusual life forms at the bottom of the eastern Arctic Ocean.

  “Still no polar bears. But I did find what I think are at least nine new bacterial colonies. One of them is along a vent that’s spewing a mix of arsenic and sulfur thick enough to kill just about anything on the surface. Some of these will have us rethinking what type of life forms we may find on the Jovian Moons when we get around to exploring them.”

  “Honey, I’m glad to see you're having a good time, but I need to put on my boss’s hat for a minute. Your presentation is still not available for the funding meeting and the deadline is tomorrow morning. It makes me look bad when the other participants have sent theirs in and my own dear husband is late.”

  Sam brushed his hand through his wavy black hair. “I’m not late. You just said the deadline is tomorrow morning. I have the rest of the day to finish it.”

  “So give me a preview. What's the gist of it? Can you send me an outline?”

  “Er, not really.” Sam grinned. “I want to include some of what I found today to make it as fresh as possible.”

  Helen folded her arms across her chest. “Samuel Czerny, you know I can tell when you're making things up as you go along. This is why I've been trying to reach you. I know that if I'm not on your back, you'll be off on some other fascinating bit of research and never complete the presentation on time. And much as I love that boyish grin of yours, it's not going to get you off the hook.”

  Sam looked down at his keyboard like a guilty child.

  Helen continued. “Don’t you give me that sad puppy look either. You know I fall for it every time. But this is too important. If we don't get the funding, your projects are the ones that get cut first. Remember, studying alien life forms when none have been found is hard to justify. The people who give us the funds tend to be an unimaginative bunch. Lose the few supporters we have and we'll have to find another line of work for you. I can't defend your work if you won't.”

  Sam could see how upset she was. “You can't tell me Rothlesberger's Zombie Preparedness studies are more important or useful.”

  “Rothlesberger delivers well-told stories about how a zombie threat could spread. And he does it with charm and even scares the living crap out of the financiers. That gets them to bring out the checkbooks and shower him with money. You need to work harder at getting them to understand astrobiology is worth studying. Maybe even put a little fear into them. Warn them that we need some sort of protocol for when we encounter little green men or little green viruses. And if we don't have one, we may lose precious time needed to defend life on our planet.”

  Leaning forward, he shook his head. “Helen, we've gone through that scenario a dozen times. Fear mongering may get us funding but it sets a bad direction for real research. Pretty soon it turns into funding defense projects rather than pure science. Astrobiology is still a young enough field and it shouldn't have that type of thinking corrupt it.”

  “Sam, that's exactly my point. If you’re not making the effort to get funding for your research a
s pure science, nobody else will. Do you think it would be better to have them go and fund Ledbetter's work?”

  Sam straightened up in his seat. “Ledbetter? That hack! He's still out there saying we should be looking for robotic explorers from other planets! How likely is that? Even if they do exist, the odds of finding them are so tiny that it would be like net fishing for trout in the Sahara.”

  He paused and then grinned widely. “You did it again didn't you? You got me to take your side and then cornered me into agreeing I have to finish this presentation tonight. I never should have married the boss.”

  “I wasn't your boss when we got married, Sam, and I have to say I have no regrets.” Helen's smile made his face light up as well. Every day he remembered why he’d fallen in love with her. She always knew how to get him to do the right thing, the thing that was best for him. Sam knew without Helen looking over his shoulder, he would be doing some type of menial research he hated.

  “Okay, Helen. I'll spend the rest of the day putting together a fantastic presentation that will have them begging to shower us with money. Promise.”

  “When you put your mind to it, you can convince anyone of anything. Remember; you got me to marry you. That was no mean feat. By the way, there have been a few other people trying to reach you. First of all, Trish Stern from Starshield-Shakelton. They're one of the companies that have been steady as far as funding us goes. You should see what she wants. Might be important. And a Major Zhang in China. I looked him up and he’s a bigwig involved with the base they’re building in the Fermi Crater. And some guy with a heavy French accent by the name of Pacquelier. He said he knows you and sounded all hyped up about something. Who is he?”

  Sam started to say he wasn't sure. Then he remembered Pierre Pacquelier, a larger than life French scientist. They had been on a panel together at a science fiction convention a few years earlier. Some kind of a rocket propulsion specialist. They hit it off and had a few too many drinks after the panel. Pierre was a funny guy. His English was not just accented but also laced with literal French idioms that sometimes made him hard to understand.

  “Okay, I guess I should call Stern from Starshield first since she has funding influence. The rest can wait until I have my presentation wrapped up and on your computer.”

  “Good idea. I’ll be waiting for it. Later!” she said.

  He gave her a virtual good-bye kiss and disconnected the link, only to have it immediately light up with another call. The display showed the call was coming from Starshield offices in DC. Sam brushed his hand through his hair and wished he’d taken the time to freshen up a bit. Putting a big money-raising smile on his face, he answered the call.

  The display turned bright blue and a message indicating a secure encryption was in place. Sam found that surprising, as standard encryption made all calls secure many years earlier. He wondered if Starshield-Shakelton was doing more than space mining.

  A few moments later the display resolved itself into a mustachioed face with black eyes squinting beneath a tussle of black hair. Sam always thought Pierre Pacquelier looked like Salvador Dali with the ends of his mustache cut off.

  “Sam? This is you?” A thick French accent came from Pierre's image. He broke into a smile. “It is good to see you again, my friend.”

  He liked Pacquelier, “Pierre! How are you? I heard you've been trying to reach me. When was the last time we saw each other, the Sci-fi convention about a year and a half ago?”

  “Yes, my friend. We were on some panel together, but I don't remember what it was. I do remember drinking and talking afterward. Anyway I am calling to apologize and to receive your thanks.”

  "Huh?" Sam grunted. Pierre's habit of translating French word for word into English often confused him. “I don't understand what you mean.”

  “Of course you do not because I have not told you. But when I tell you, you will have to forget, or at least pretend it is a surprise when they contact you.”

  “What's a surprise?”

  “Okay, I am sorry. I am putting the cart before the oxen,” He paused for effect. “Let me begin again.”

  “Yes, go on . . . ”

  “An alien artifact. Something made by aliens. Do you see what this means?”

  Sam sighed. “Pierre, I've heard this a dozen times before. People think they’ve found an object that didn't come from Earth and it always turns out to be some natural or man-made thing.”

  Pierre smiled and shook his head. “I do not think this is one of those cases. For one thing, the artifact is much too big and regular to be a natural object. It is as large as a big building Sam, and it appears to be very, very old.”

  Sam frowned. “How old?'

  Pierre took a breath. “First estimates date it to be about sixty-five to seventy million years old.”

  “Pierre, what on earth are you saying? Where is this thing?”

  “Not on Earth, Sam. We found it in the Fermi Crater on the far side of the Moon.”

  Pierre suddenly looked to his left and then back at the screen. “O la! I must go now. See you soon.”

  The screen went blank as the call ended.

  Chapter Two

  University of California

  San Diego

  Lacing his fingers and placing his hands behind his head, Sam leaned back in his chair thinking about the call with Pierre. He knew Pierre tended to be enthusiastic about projects in general. He was the kind of guy who would take off at a gallop without ever looking at a map or plugging an address into a GPS. But to claim an alien artifact was on the far side of the Moon was pretty outrageous, even for Pierre.

  More information was needed before Sam could even consider such a possibility. He woke his display and began asking questions. As he worked, he began to create a data map of answers. His focus was on projects on the far side of the Moon. In a matter of minutes, he had a document containing all the details available on current and past Moon missions. In addition, he had a list of white papers outlining future possibilities for lunar exploitation.

  It added up to over four hundred and fifty screens of data. There was no way he could get through all of it at that moment. Helen was waiting for his presentation. She had given him five hours to come up with something. However, the summary of the data he had gathered was only thirty-seven pages. Reading that wouldn’t take much time at all, and would leave him plenty of time to finish the report for Helen. The problem was that it was likely the summary would leave him with more questions than answers. But those questions would have to wait. He couldn’t let Helen down. The future of his project depended on it.

  Twenty minutes later a new call interrupted him. This one also said it was from Starshield-Shakelton in DC and showed the same encryption message. Sam welcomed the break in his work. There were many questions he wanted to ask Pierre—beginning with exactly who discovered the artifact. But instead of Pierre, the face of a woman with long blonde hair looked back at him out of wolf gray eyes.

  Startled, he said, “Hi? I'm Sam Czerny, can I help you?”

  “Mr. Czerny, my name is Patricia Stern, but please call me Trish. Everyone does. Mr. Czerny, as you know I'm with Starshield-Shakelton. I'm sure you know we're the organization responsible for funding your research at Gakkel Ridge.”

  Sam relaxed. He figured this had to do with his presentation. Maybe this person wouldn’t be able to make the event and wanted an inside scoop. “Yes, yes, I can tell you I'm very grateful. We've made some interesting discoveries and the rest promises to be even more . . .”

  Trish Stern interrupted him. “I'm not calling to discuss that particular project. I’m calling you about another project. If you recall the terms of the funding agreement, we can call on your expertise in regards to any project we may want you to work on.”

  “What?” Sam scrunched his eyebrows in confusion. Everything seemed to be taking him by surprise this day. “I'm not sure I follow.” Something about her demeanor told him Ms. Stern was all business despite having asked him to call her Trish.

  “Mr. Czerny, our contract states we have the liberty to pull you off of your current research project and put you on another one we deem more important and that would benefit from your special skill set. We can also exercise a clause stating you can't share any of what you learn without our authorization. We are now exercising that option, Mr. Czerny. I’m sending a copy of the agreement for your reference.” She stared into the camera, studying his response.