STYX
Jiøí Netrval

In the middle of an oval hall with low ceiling there was a pink triangular table standing on a thin little leg.Four men wearing unbuttoned overalls were sitting around the table nd haggling excitedly about something.
       Signalman Sikorski was sitting part from them on perverted aluminium case,his back leaning against the armoured wall.Behind ancient black-rimmed glasses his eyes were shut tight.There was nothing worth seeing in this room ny more —at ny rate it seemed so to him t that moment.The excited voices of the men sitting around the table fused into n indistinct murmur.He thought casually that none of them had ever realized.that the triangle monster they were sitting around might have been a rarity,even historical relic possibly from the 20th Century,which had got there mysteriously by some oversight.An objective exposition entitled “The Beginning Of The Colonization Of Planets”could be compiled from other furniture in the base.This was probably the way of life on Mars at some time in the 21st Century…
       But now we are further on from that and there are prospects of higher order,he thought with gloomy irony.What kind of perspective did they have at the time?Vertiginous:they believed their issue would reach the stars.And what kind of perspective do we have?We believe that our offspring will reach the Star.We think only of the one Star that overshadows all the others as if they didn’t even exist.For long time nobody has used the sharp astronomical name,everybody talks simply about the Star and isn’t fraid of being misunderstood.We’ve already been believing in it for one hundred and fifty years.Four generations…For four generations people have been fighting through boundless darkness, disappearing in emptiness forever...For long,endlessly long time they’ve been vegetating in deserted worlds,where cold nd infinite boredom lurk and where everything becomes old and withers away…everything except hope…at least,they say so…Hope with big H,”he thought again with the same bad irony that he couldn’t stamp out.Have I still got hope?I don’t know,I don’t think of it the way others do…We believe that in fifty years our sons will get to the Star…One hundred and fifty years ago Rajevsky proved that the cyclic blazes of the Star were guided...A special library is dedicated to the Star,a huge white building in the middle of park…hundreds of thousands of volumes and microfilms…The ruler of stars is the ruler of everything…the highest level of Intellect…a promise of golden age…I have also believed in that,why not...it is so beautiful… For one hundred nd fifty years we’ve been transmitting unceasingly… and They don’t answer…”
       He came round and raised his head.Mathematician Wettstein sitting on a case next to him was watching Sikorski’s face with his near-sighted blue eyes,which were tired like Sikorski’s own.He waited for continuation of the dialogue.It was necessary to say something.
       “Why don’t They answer,in your opinion?”he asked,uttering under his breath the last idea that had got stuck in his head.
       “I can see only two possible ways to explain it,”Wettstein began in his quiet gentle voice.He was talking on this topic for the thousandth time but he didn’t seem to mind it.“Either they are so different from us that they simply don’t perceive us,or…or they stand so high bove us that we are for them the same thing that animals are for us —they don’t take due note of us at all,although they know bout us.Like people,for example, operating transmitter somewhere in the middle of forest who don’t notice all the birds singing in the treetops —do you understand?By the way,it reminds me…the latest news I’ve heard is that Liedermann wants to revive that old signalling theory.It is a strange idea that everything,the great beating giant,the whole fantastic set of fireworks serves only for transmitting signals…Millions of light years away,of course,otherwise it wouldn’t have any purpose.Intergalactic civilization…”
       Sikorski didn’t listen to him.Formerly he’d found the mathematician’s theories interesting,but that was a long time ago…But there must be something to talk about…
       “What are they actually quarrelling about?”he asked without ny interest,watching the little group around the table.
       Wettstein paused in the middle of his speech and knitted his brows.“I don’t know.I don’t know actually,”he answered after a while.“I heard that Henry had been saying strange things in the morning.Very strange things.I don’t know bout nything since.I’ve been working at M-3.But Henry has seemed to me strange already for a week.He looks as if he hasn’t slept t all and…”
       “What did he actually say?”Sikorski asked with vestige of interest.
       “I don’t remember exactly,”Wettstein replied evasively.
       A clear melodious tone came from the other end of the hall from massive black control desk.It was Gatty,the main computer of the base. Then a green light came on bove one of the screens on the desk.Base commander physicist
       Donovan rose and without hurrying stepped towards the desk.The remaining three men at the table stayed seated nd watched intensely his every move quietly with intense attention. Donovan bent over and pushed a button.The main monitor lit up and signals and formulas whirled on to it like a snowstorm.Several moments..........

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