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The Prometheus Project
Table of Contents
PROLOGUE
PART ONE:
1963
CHAPTER ONE
CHAPTER TWO
CHAPTER THREE
CHAPTER FOUR
INTERLUDE
PART TWO:
1968
CHAPTER FIVE
CHAPTER SIX
CHAPTER SEVEN
CHAPTER EIGHT
CHAPTER NINE
CHAPTER TEN
CHAPTER ELEVEN
INTERLUDE
PART THREE:
1969
CHAPTER TWELVE
CHAPTER THIRTEEN
CHAPTER FOURTEEN
CHAPTER FIFTEEN
CHAPTER SIXTEEN
CHAPTER SEVENTEEN
CHAPTER EIGHTEEN
CHAPTER NINETEEN
EPILOGUE
THE
PROMETHEUS
PROJECT
STEVE WHITE
This is a work of fiction. All the characters and events portrayed in this book are fictional, and any
resemblance to real people or incidents is purely coincidental.
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Copyright © 2005 by Steve White
All rights reserved, including the right to reproduce this book or portions thereof in any form.
A Baen Books Original
Baen Publishing Enterprises
P.O. Box 1403
Riverdale, NY 10471
www.baen.com
ISBN: 0-7434-9891-7
Cover art by Bob Eggleton
First printing, March 2005
Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
White, Steve, 1946-
The Prometheus project / Steve White.
p. cm.
"A Baen Books original"--T.p. verso.
ISBN 0-7434-9891-7 (hc)
1. Human-alien encounters--Fiction. I. Title.
PS3573.H474777P76 2005
813'.54--dc22
2004027035
Distributed by Simon & Schuster
1230 Avenue of the Americas
New York, NY 10020
Production by Windhaven Press, Auburn, NH (www.windhaven.com)
Printed in the United States of America
To Sandy, for more reasons than
I can possibly number.
Baen Books by Steve White
The Prometheus Project
Demon's Gate
Forge of the Titans
Eagle Against the Stars
Prince of Sunset
The Disinherited
Legacy
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Debt of Ages
with David Weber:
Crusade
In Death Ground
The Stars at War ( Megabook )
Insurrection
The Shiva Option
PROLOGUE
"Mr. President! Mr. President!" The White House press corps rose to its collective feet like an
attention-seeking wave.
The President of the United States smiled into the tumult and the TV cameras, and raised his hands for
silence. "That's enough questions for now, ladies and gentlemen. Let me just make a few concluding
remarks." He waited until something resembling silence had descended on the Press Room, and his
expression grew serious. "This has been a . . . vigorous campaign, and feelings have sometimes flared, as
they will among people of strongly held beliefs. But that's over now. The electorate has spoken, and the
Constitution admits of no doubt as to the outcome. Now it is a time for healing, and for unity. It is for that
reason that President-Elect Langston and I called this joint press conference. And now, let me turn the
podium over to the President-Elect."
Harvey Langston rose to his feet with a muttered "Thank you, Mr. President." He took his place behind
the Presidential seal and smiled at the reporters who, he knew, had never really expected to see him
there.
"Ladies and gentlemen, I want to add my voice to the President's. As we know, all sorts of things get
said in a campaign . . . by both sides. But now the President and I share a common goal: a smooth
transfer of power. My transition team has been in close communication with the President's staff to assure
that my administration can hit the ground running. I intend to act without delay to deliver what the people
have demanded by putting me in this house. The people want compassionate government. The people—"
"Forty-one percent of them, anyway," someone could be heard to remark, somewhere in the room.
"—want us to focus on our own domestic problems, and not on foreign adventurism," Langston
continued without a break, forcing himself to ignore the dig. Plenty of time later to stick it to that
wiseass reporter , he thought, knowing that Sal DiAngelo, his campaign manager, would have spotted
the man and noted his name. "The people want us to abandon our weapons of destruction and seek
peaceful solutions to the conflicts we ourselves have provoked! The people—"
From off to the side, DiAngelo caught his eye and frowned. Stop campaigning, damn you! Langston
told himself. You don't have to campaign any more. You've won! He still had to periodically remind
himself of that fact, as incredible to him as it was to most of the country.
"The people want continuity and the regular exercise of constitutional processes," he finished smoothly.
He prided himself on these seamless recoveries. It was an ability that could be counted on to save his
bacon as long as DiAngelo or one of his other handlers was around to shoot him warning looks when the
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shrillness started to creep back into his voice. "And now, I'll take a few questions."
He got through the questions from the floor, recognizing only those journalists he knew were friendly or,
at least, predictable. Then it was over, and the President and his successor were out the doorway of the
Press Room together, trailed by a gaggle of staffers and Secret Service men.
As they proceeded down the corridor into the West Wing, a tall, unfamiliar man on the outskirts of the
President's entourage caught Langston's eye. He felt certain he would have remembered the man if he'd
seen him before, despite his completely nondescript clothes. He looked old, with his thick mane of white
hair, and yet his movements were not those of an old man. His features were bleak and harsh, and
disfigured by a scar slanting across his left cheek. . . .
"Harvey . . . I mean, Mr. President-Elect," muttered DiAngelo, derailing his train of thought, "I still see
no reason for this meeting. If there's anything that needs to be settled, the staffs—"
"Oh, it's all right, Sal. The President has asked for a private one-on-one conversation, and I see no
reason to object. I'm curious to see what he wants. And besides, we can afford to be obliging."
"Yes, but—"
Before DiAngelo could finish, they passed by the Cabinet Room and the office of the President's private
secretary, and reached the door that was their destination. Langston glanced around, but the mysterious
old man was no longer in sight. The President led the way through the door. Langston followed, with
Secret Service men politely but firmly shooing everyone else away. Then the door closed behind him, and
he was in the Oval Office.
The President sat down behind the massive oak desk in front of the tall French windows of foot-thick
armored glass that admitted the pale light of late fall afternoon. He motioned to a chair across the desk.
Langston was impressed despite himself as he crossed the carpet with the Presidential seal in gold and
red against the deep blue. The momentary mood vanished as his eyes fell on the flags of the five armed
services in their traditional position to the right of the desk, along the south wall. Must get rid of those ,
he made a mental note to himself.
Langston sat down and gazed across the desk at the man he would succeed in January. Silence and
mutual loathing settled over the room.
"Mr. President," Langston finally began, "I trust that in the spirit we both articulated at the press
conference just now—"
"Oh, cut the crap," the President interrupted in a voice as cold as his eyes. "I'm well aware that you have
no higher opinion of me than I have of you. So spare me your trademark smarmy hypocrisy. We're alone
now— really alone—and we can dispense with the pap we were feeding those hyenas in the Press
Room."
"Do you seriously expect me to believe that? You're just trying to trick me into—"
"You can also spare me your paranoia. You know it's true, because otherwise I wouldn't be talking this
way. Besides, what would be the point of trying to trap you into anything? It's too late for it to do any
good. You've won." The President shook his head slowly, as though to clear it of a stunned disbelief that
still hadn't worn off. "There's no getting around that fact . . . and I'd even go so far as to call it fifty
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percent just. You didn't deserve to win, but Ortega did deserve to lose."
Vice President Andrew Ortega had been the President's handpicked choice to succeed him, in line with
their party's strategy of reaching out to Hispanics. He'd won the nomination with little opposition save that
of isolationist commentator Frank Ferguson, a Holocaust-denial crank who had subsequently bolted the
party and launched an independent candidacy with the announced aim of acting as a spoiler for "that
spic." Still, Ortega's election had seemed a foregone conclusion. The opposition party, knowing it
couldn't win anyway, had thrown a sop to the Old Left hardcases who were its shock troops by
nominating one of their own: the patently unelectable Harvey Langston, congressman from a California
district for which the term "La-La Land" might well have been coined.
Then the unthinkable had begun to unfold. Ortega's campaign had been a parade of blunders, bloopers,
pratfalls and general ineptitude without modern precedent. The unfunny comedy show had climaxed the
night of the final debate, when the Vice President—whose handlers had believed his drinking problem to
be safely in the past—had managed to not quite fall on his face on prime-time TV. His apology to the
nation the next day had made matters even worse than they would have been had he tried to brazen it
out.
Voter turnout had been the lowest in the history of presidential elections, with most of Ortega's centrist
base of support—not to mention the agonizingly embarrassed Hispanics—staying home in disgust. In
spite of everything, he had somehow managed a forty-three percent plurality of the dismally small popular
vote. Ferguson had gotten a once-unimaginable fifteen percent. Another one percent had gone to the
usual assortment of minor-party joke candidates. But Langston's forty-one percent had been distributed
with mathematical precision to give him exactly two hundred and seventy-one electoral votes.
Now he sat in the office he would soon occupy, filled with his triumph and his hatred of the man across
the desk.
"Thank you for clearing the air, Mr. President. Yes, I know—or can imagine—what you think of me.
And I make no secret of what I think of you." Oddly enough, Langston found himself believing the
President's assurance that no one was listening . . . and it felt so good to be able to finally let it all out,
without DiAngelo to rein him in. "You're a reactionary, warmongering dinosaur—a tool of the
military-industrial complex and the multinational corporations! You've ignored the problems capitalism
has inflicted on us—poverty, racism, sexism, suburban sprawl, cigarette smoking, meat eating, SUVs,
and all the rest of our real problems. Instead, you've promoted economic growth to please the fat cats of
Wall Street, and invented imaginary foreign threats to justify military spending."
The President raised one eyebrow. "As 'imaginary' as the terrorism we've faced ever since the
'imaginary' destruction of the World Trade Center back in 2001?"
"What you call 'terrorists' are heroic freedom fighters whom our own greed and imperialism have forced
to defend themselves against us! We brought the 9/11 attacks on ourselves, by our support for Israeli
oppression of the Palestinian people! Besides, the Israelis knew about it in advance and didn't warn us.
They let it happen, to inflame public opinion against the peace-loving people of the Arab world. That's
been clear all along, at least to those of us who aren't blinded by the propaganda of the international
Zionist conspiracy!"
This time both presidential eyebrows rose in arcs of irony. "The Vice President-Elect might not see it
quite that way."
Langston flushed. "Senator Goldman and I have had to agree to disagree about some things. But on
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