• Complain

Stephen Baxter - Flux

Here you can read online Stephen Baxter - Flux full text of the book (entire story) in english for free. Download pdf and epub, get meaning, cover and reviews about this ebook. year: 1995, publisher: Eos, genre: Science fiction. Description of the work, (preface) as well as reviews are available. Best literature library LitArk.com created for fans of good reading and offers a wide selection of genres:

Romance novel Science fiction Adventure Detective Science History Home and family Prose Art Politics Computer Non-fiction Religion Business Children Humor

Choose a favorite category and find really read worthwhile books. Enjoy immersion in the world of imagination, feel the emotions of the characters or learn something new for yourself, make an fascinating discovery.

No cover

Flux: summary, description and annotation

We offer to read an annotation, description, summary or preface (depends on what the author of the book "Flux" wrote himself). If you haven't found the necessary information about the book — write in the comments, we will try to find it.

A race of microscopic beings, who were genetically engineered to survive on the turbulent mantle of a neutron star and who vividly remember their superbeing creators, prepare for the biggest family reunion in history.

Stephen Baxter: author's other books


Who wrote Flux? Find out the surname, the name of the author of the book and a list of all author's works by series.

Flux — read online for free the complete book (whole text) full work

Below is the text of the book, divided by pages. System saving the place of the last page read, allows you to conveniently read the book "Flux" online for free, without having to search again every time where you left off. Put a bookmark, and you can go to the page where you finished reading at any time.

Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Flux

by Stephen Baxter

To my nephew James Baxter

1

Dura woke with a start.

There was something wrong. The photons didnt smell right.

Her hand floated before her face, dimly visible, and she flexed her fingers. Disturbed electron gas, spiraling dizzily around the Magfield lines, sparkled purple-white around the fingertips. The Air in her eyes was warm, stale, and she could make out only vague shapes.

For a moment she hung there, curled in a tight ball, suspended in the elastic grip of the Magfield.

She heard voices, thin and hot with panic. They were coming from the direction of the Net.

Dura jammed her eyes tight shut and hugged her knees, willing herself to return to the cool oblivion of sleep. Not again. By the blood of the Xeelee, she swore silently, not another Glitch; not another spin storm. She wasnt sure if the little tribe of Human Beings had the resources to respond to more disruption nor, indeed, if she herself had the strength to cope with fresh disaster.

The Magfield itself trembled now. Encasing her body, it rippled over her skin, not unpleasantly, and she allowed it to rock her as if she were a child in its arms. Then not so pleasantly it prodded her more rudely in the small of the back

No, that wasnt the Magfield. She uncurled again, stretching against the confines of the field. She rubbed her eyes the fleshy rims of the cups were crusted with sleep-deposits and felt sharp against her fingers and shook her head to clear the clouded Air out of the cups.

The prod in her back was coming from the fist of Farr, her brother. Hed been on latrine duty, she saw; he still carried his plaited waste bag, empty of the neutron-rich shit hed taken out away from the Net and dumped in the Air. His skinny, growing body trembled in response to the instabilities in the Magfield and his round face was upturned to her, creased with an almost comical concern. In one hand he gripped a fin of his pet Air-pig a fat infant about the size of Duras fist, so young that none of its six fins were yet pierced. The little animal, obviously terrified by the Glitch, struggled to escape, feebly; it pumped out superfluid jetfarts in thin blue streams.

His fondness for the animal made Farr seem even younger than his twelve years a third of Duras age and he clung to the piglet as if clinging to childhood itself. Well, Dura thought, the Mantle was huge and empty, but there was precious little room in it for childhood. Farr was having to grow up fast.

He was so like their father, Logue.

Dura, still misty with sleep, felt a surge of affection and concern for the boy and reached out to stroke his cheek, to run gentle fingers around the quiet brown rims of his eyes.

She smiled at her brother. Hello, Farr.

Sorry for waking you.

You didnt. The Star was kind enough to wake me, long before you got around to it. Another Glitch?

The worst one yet, Adda says.

Never mind what Adda says, Dura said, stroking his floating hair; the hollow tubes were, as always, tangled and grubby. Well get by. We always do, dont we? You get back to your father. And tell him Im coming.

All right. Farr smiled at her again, twisted stiffly, and, with his Air-pigs fin still clutched tight, he began to Wave awkwardly across the Magfields invisible flux paths toward the Net. Dura watched him recede, his slim form diminished by the shimmering, world-filling vortex lines beyond him.

Dura straightened to her full length and stretched, pressing against the Magfield. She kept her mouth wide open as she worked stiffness out of her limbs and back. She felt the feathery ripple of the Air as it poured through her throat to her lungs and heart, rushing through superleak capillaries and filling her muscles; her body seemed to tingle with its freshness.

She gazed around, sniffing the photons.

Duras world was the Mantle of the Star, an immense cavern of yellow-white Air bounded below by the Quantum Sea and above by the Crust.

The Crust itself was a rich, matted ceiling, purple-streaked with grass and the hairlike lines of tree trunks. By squinting distorting the parabolic retinas of her eyes she could make out dark motes scattered among the roots of the trees fixed to the underside of the Crust. Perhaps they were rays, or a herd of wild Air-pigs, or some other grazing creatures. It was too distant to see clearly, but the amphibian animals seemed to be swirling around each other, colliding, confused; she almost imagined she could hear the cool sound of their distress.

Far below her, the Quantum Sea formed a purple-dark floor to the world. The Sea was mist-shrouded, its surface indistinct and deadly. The Sea itself, she saw with relief, was undisturbed by the Glitch. Only once in Duras memory had there been a Glitch severe enough to cause a Seaquake. She shuddered like the Magfield as she remembered that ghastly time; she had been no older than Farr, she supposed, when the neutrino founts had come, sweeping half the Human Beings including Phir, Duras mother and Logues first wife away and on, screaming, into the mysteries beyond the Crust.

All around her, filing the Air between Crust and Sea, the vortex lines were an electric-blue cage. The lines filled space in a hexagonal array, spaced about ten mansheights apart; they swept around the Star from far upflux from the North arced past her like the trajectories of immense, graceful animals, and converged into the red-soft blur that was the South Pole, millions of mansheights away.

She held her fingers up before her face, trying to judge the spacing and pattern of the lines.

Through her fingers she could see the encampment, a little knot of frantic detail and activity jostling, terrified Air-pigs, scrambling people, the quivering Net all embedded in the shuddering bulk of the Air. Farr with his struggling Air-piglet was a pathetic scrap, wriggling through the invisible flux tubes.

Dura tried to ignore the small, messy knot of humanity, to focus on the lines.

Normally the motion of the lines was stately, predictable regular enough for the Human Beings to measure their lives by it, in fact. Overlaid on the eternal drift of the lines toward the Crust there were pulses of line-bunching: the tight, sharp crowdings that marked the days, and the slower, more complex second-order oscillations which humans used to count their months. In normal times it was easy for the Human Beings to avoid the slow creep of the lines; there was always plenty of time to dismantle the Net, repitch their little encampment in another corner of the empty sky.

Dura even knew what caused the lines stately pulsations, much good the knowledge did her: the Star had a companion, far beyond the Crust a planet, a ball like the Star but smaller, lighter which revolved, unseen, over their heads, pulling at the vortex lines as if with invisible fingers. And, of course, beyond the planet the childish ideas returned to her unbidden, like fragments of her lingering sleep beyond the planet were the stars of the Ur-humans, impossibly distant and forever invisible.

The drifting vortex lines were as stable and secure, in normal times, as the fingers of some friendly god; humans, Air-pigs and others moved freely between the lines, fearlessly and without any danger

Except during a Glitch.

Now, across the frame of her spread fingers, the vortex array was shifting visibly as the superfluid Air sought to realign with the Stars adjusted rotation. Instabilities great parallel sets of ripples already marched majestically along the length of the lines, bearing the news of the Stars new awakening from Pole to magnetic Pole.

The photons emitted by the lines smelled thin, sharp. The spin storm was coming.

* * *

Dura had chosen a sleep place about fifty mansheights from the center of the Human Beings current encampment, in a place where the Magfield had felt particularly thick, comfortingly secure. Now she began to Wave toward the Net. Wriggling, rippling her limbs, she felt electricity course through her epidermis; and she pushed with arms and legs at the invisible, elastic resistance of the Magfield as if it were a ladder. Fully awake now, she found herself filled with a belated anxiety an anxiety healthily laced with guilt at her tardiness and as she slid across the Magfield she spread the webbed fingers of her hands and beat at the Air, trying to work up still more speed. Neutron superfluid made up most of the bulk of the Air, so there was barely any resistance to her hands; but still she clawed at the Air, her impatience mounting, seeking comfort in activity.

Next page
Light

Font size:

Reset

Interval:

Bookmark:

Make

Similar books «Flux»

Look at similar books to Flux. We have selected literature similar in name and meaning in the hope of providing readers with more options to find new, interesting, not yet read works.


Stephen Baxter - Project Hades
Project Hades
Stephen Baxter
Stephen Baxter - Last and First Contacts
Last and First Contacts
Stephen Baxter
Stephen Baxter - Proxima
Proxima
Stephen Baxter
Stephen Baxter - Bronze Summer
Bronze Summer
Stephen Baxter
Stephen Baxter - Vacuum Diagrams
Vacuum Diagrams
Stephen Baxter
Stephen Baxter - Conqueror
Conqueror
Stephen Baxter
Stephen Baxter - Emperor
Emperor
Stephen Baxter
Stephen Baxter - Weaver
Weaver
Stephen Baxter
Stephen Baxter - Flux (Xeelee 3)
Flux (Xeelee 3)
Stephen Baxter
Stephen Baxter - Anti-ice
Anti-ice
Stephen Baxter
Stephen Baxter - Origin (Manifold 3)
Origin (Manifold 3)
Stephen Baxter
Reviews about «Flux»

Discussion, reviews of the book Flux and just readers' own opinions. Leave your comments, write what you think about the work, its meaning or the main characters. Specify what exactly you liked and what you didn't like, and why you think so.