On this particular day, however, the two nonmilitary groups were thor­oughly mixed. The famed Japanese interdisciplinary scientist Shigeru Takagishi, widely regarded as the foremost expert in the world on the first Raman expedition seventy years earlier (and also the author of the Atlas of Rama that was required reading for all of the crew), was sitting in the middle of the oval between Soviet pilot Irina Turgenyev and the brilliant but often zany British cosmonaut!electrical engineer Richard Wakefield. Opposite them were life science officer Nicole des Jardins, a statuesque copper brown woman with a fascinating French and African lineage, the quiet, almost mechanical Japanese pilot Yamanaka, and the stunning Signora Sabatini. The final three positions at the “south” end of the oval, facing the large maps and diagrams of Rama on the opposite wall, were occupied by Ameri­can journalist Wilson, the inimitable and garrulous Tabori (a Soviet cosmo­naut from Budapest), and Dr. David Brown. Brown looked very businesslike and serious; he had a set of papers spread out in front of him as the meeting began.

“It is inconceivable to me,” Borzov was saying while he strode purpose­fully around the room, “that any of you could ever forget, even for a mo­ment, that you have been selected to go on what could be the most impor­tant human mission of all time. But on the basis of this last set of simulations, I must admit that I am beginning to have my doubts about some of you.

“There are those who believe that this Rama craft will be a copy of its predecessor,” Borzov continued, “and that it will be equally disinterested and uninvolved with whatever trifling creatures come to survey it.



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