And reason, based upon our experiences of all other stellar motions, renders us certain that none will ever be seen, for if these stars had any motions similar to those of other stars, they would long since have been separated from or conjoined with the body of Saturn, even if that movement were a thousand times slower than that of any other star which goes wandering through the heavens.

Galileo Galilei, Letters on Sunspots, 4 May 1612

SELENE: ASTRO CORPORATION HEADQUARTERS

Pancho Lane frowned at her sister. “His name isn’t even Malcolm Eberly. He changed it.”

Susan smiled knowingly.

“Oh, what diff’s that make?”

“He was born Max Erlenmeyer, in Omaha, Nebraska,” Pancho said sternly. “He was arrested in Linz, Austria, for fraud in ’eighty-four, tried to flee the country and—”

“I don’t care about that! It’s ancient! He’s changed. He’s not the same man he was then.”

“You’re not going.”

“Yes I am,” Susan insisted, the beginnings of a frown of her own creasing her brow. “I’m going and you can’t stop me!”

“I’m your legal guardian, Susie.”

“Poosh! What’s that got to do with spit? I’m almost fifty years old, f’real.”

Susan Lane did not look much more than twenty. She had died when she’d been a teenager, killed by a lethal injection that Pancho herself had shot into her emaciated arm. Once clinically dead she had been frozen in liquid nitrogen to await the day when medical science could cure the carcinoma that was raging through her young body. Pancho had brought her cryonic sarcophagus to the Moon when she began working as an astronaut for Astro Manufacturing Corporation. Eventually Pancho became a member of Astro’s board of directors, and finally its chairman. Still Susan waited, entombed in her bath of liquid nitrogen, waiting until Pancho was certain that she could be reborn to a new life.



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