Friday 30 May 2014

SFFSat 31/5/2014 - Black Ice part 7

This is my snippet this week for SFFSat. SFFSat is a place where a number of authors post snippets from their written works, and give the opportunity for comments, support and encouragement. Please also explore the other blogs that are part of this set - you can find the information here. 


This is part seven of the Anton deGama story, Black Ice. Anton's crawler is sliding towards a deep trench on Titan. Anton's effort to evade inevitable doom involved detonating a methane explosion against a giant tumbling boulder of ice...



The impact almost flung Anton off the crawlway: his fingers were agony as he fought to hang on. The laser went spinning away into oblivion. The blast tore at the ammonia boulder, flinging even its great mass a few metres sideways, directly into the path of the crawler. Liquid ammonia poured out of the fire onto the slithering ice, refreezing again almost immediately.

Anton watched, his eyes fixed upon the gigantic rock in the crawler's path, waiting for it to grind its bulk through the momentarily liquid ice onto the solid ground below, and bring the slide to a halt.

As the oxygen was consumed, the ravening fires dropped. The crawler was only a metre or two from the boulder. The gigantic block of ice was moving more slowly, and the crawler crunched against it with an unnerving clang, audible even through the thin atmosphere.

But the boulder had not stopped. Anton shivered in dismay – his plan hadn't worked. The boulder and the crawler were still sliding – and the drop-off was only twenty metres away.


Oops. Looks like Anton's done for. 
As always, comments welcomed!

10 comments:

  1. It always sucks when your best choice for a plan fails to get the results you'd hoped for.

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  2. The giant iceberg sliding and on fire - what a great striking and original visual. No back up plan, no more time, just a great running scene!

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  3. Exactly what is the ice he's sliding on made of? Water ice wouldn't be particularly slippery at those temperatures, more like rock.

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    1. Absolutely - water ice is far too hard. This is ammonia ice, which (if I've remembered my chemistry correctly) has a far lower melting point - but still turns to a frozen form in normal circumstances.

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  4. This is one of those times when, unlike American football, twenty yards from the end is NOT a good thing.

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    1. Lol! Yes, 20 yards is defintely bad news for Anton!

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  5. Nooo! I am still on the edge of my seat!

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    1. Sorry - don't assume Anton's going to get out of this one easily...

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