Millennium

Millennium Read Free Page A

Book: Millennium Read Free
Author: John Varley
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turned out the offending part or written the fatal directive, and they’d all want to be on hand to hear the bad news as it happened. By the time the sun came up in California a billion people would be clamoring for answers. How did this happen? Whose fault is it? What should be done about it?
    And I was the guy who had to provide those answers. Every nerve in my body was crying out to get in the air, get there, and start looking.
    I was about to order the takeoff when a call came in from George, sparing me a decision that he’d surely have resented. He was having car trouble. He’d called a taxi, but suggested we’d better take off without him and he’d catch up later. I heaved a sigh of relief and told the pilot to get us out of here.
    *    *    *
    What’s it like on your way to a major airline disaster? Fairly quiet, for the most part. During the first hour I made a few calls to Los Angeles, spoke briefly to Kevin Briley. I learned that Roger Keane had boarded a helicopter and was surely at the DC-10 site by now. Briley was about to leave to catch his own flight to Oakland, where he would meet me at the airport. I told him to set up security.
    Then some of the others made calls to Seattle, Oakland, Schenectady, Denver, Los Angeles. Each of the go-team memberswould be forming his own team to look into one aspect of the crash, and each wanted to get the best possible people. Usually that was no problem. The grapevine operates quickly in a crash this size. Almost everyone we called had already heard; many were already on their way. These were people we knew and trusted.
    But none of that took very long. After that first hour we were alone in the sky on the five-hour flight to Oakland. So what did we do?
    Do you have any idea how much paperwork is involved in an accident investigation? Each of us had half a dozen reports in progress. There were reports to read and reports to write, and endless items to review. My own briefcase bulged with pending work. I did some of it for an hour or so.
    Finally I wasn’t understanding what I was reading. I yawned, stretched, and looked around me. Half the team was asleep. That struck me as a fine idea. It was 4:30 in the morning, Eastern time, three hours earlier on the West Coast, and none of us were likely to get any sleep until well past midnight.
    Across the aisle was Jerry Bannister, in charge of structures. He’s the oldest of us: a big man with a huge head and thick gray hair, an aeronautical engineer who got his start on the Douglas assembly line building Gooney Birds because the Army recruiter rejected him. He’s deaf in one ear and wears a hearing aid in the other. Looking at him, you’d think he was the biggest mistake the Army ever made. I’d put him up against a platoon of German soldiers any day, even at age sixty. He’s got one of those craggy faces and a pair of those giant hands that would make him look right at home in a machine shop. It’s hard to picture him at a drawing board or putting a model through wind-tunnel tests, but that’s what he’s good at. After the war he put himself through college. He worked on the DC-6 and the DC-8, among many others. He was sound asleep, head back, mouth open. The guy is almost nerveless; nothing rattles him. He collects stamps, of all things. He’s nutty about philately; once he starts talking about it it’s impossible to shut him off.
    Behind him, his bald head gleaming in the cone of light from overhead, was Craig Haubner, my systems specialist. He would spend the rest of the flight filling page after page of his yellow legal tablet, bounce off the plane and out to the crash site and spend all day and into the night poking and peering into the wreckage, and return to the temporary headquarters still neat, alert, and full of energy. It was impossible to like Haubner—he wasn’t very good with people, and sometimes didn’t even seem to be human—but we all respected him. His ability to examine a bit of

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