water to him, along with some music. It was Friday night, after all, and even in the Soviet Union there were parties going on at restaurants. People were dancing. In fact his plan depended on the presence of nightlife here-Estonia is livelier than most of the country-but the pier was derelict, as his briefers said it would be. He moved in, tying the boat off to a piling with considerable care-if it drifted away, he'd have real problems. Next to the pile was a ladder. Clark slipped out of his coverall and climbed up, pistol in hand. For the first time he noted the harbor smell. It was little different from its American equivalent, heavy with bilge oil and decorated with rotting wood from the piers. To the north, a dozen or so fishing boats were tied to another pier. To the south was yet another, that one piled up with lumber. So the harbor was being rebuilt. That explained the condition of this one, Clark thought. He checked his watch-it was a battered Russian "Pilot"-and looked around for a place to wait. Forty minutes until he had to move. He'd allowed for choppier seas for his trip in, and all the calm had really done for him was to give him the additional time to meditate on how much a lunatic he was for taking on another of these extraction jobs.
Boris Filipovich Morozov walked outside the barracks where he still lived, staring upward. The lights at Bright Star made the sky into a feathery dome of descending flakes. He loved moments like this.
"Who's there?" a voice asked. It had authority in it.
"Morozov," the young engineer answered as the figure came into the light. He saw the wide-brimmed hat of a senior Army officer.
"Good evening, Comrade Engineer. You're on the mirror-control team, aren't you?" Bondarenko asked.
"Have we met?"
"No." The Colonel shook his head. "Do you know who I am?"
"Yes, Comrade Colonel."
Bondarenko gestured at the sky. "Beautiful, isn't it? I suppose that's one consolation for being at the far end of nothing."
"No, Comrade Colonel, we are at the leading edge of something very important," Morozov pointed out.
"That is good for me to hear! Do all of your team feel that way?"
"Yes, Comrade Colonel. I asked to come here."
"Oh? And how did you know of this place?" the Colonel wondered.
"I was here last fall with the Komsomol. We assisted the civil engineers in the blasting, and siting the mirror-pillars. I was a graduate student in lasers, and I guessed what Bright Star was. I did not tell anyone, of course," Morozov added, "But I knew this was the place for me."
Bondarenko regarded the youngster with visible approval. "How goes the work?"
"I had hoped to join the laser team, but my section chief press-ganged me into joining his group." Morozov laughed.
"You are unhappy with this?"
"No-no, please excuse me. You misunderstand. I didn't know how important the mirror group was. I've learned. Now we're trying to adapt the mirror systems to more precise computer control-I may soon be an assistant section leader," Morozov said proudly. "I am also familiar with computer systems, you see."
"Who's your section chief-Govorov, isn't it?" "Correct. A brilliant field engineer, if I may say so. May I ask a question?"
"Certainly."
"It is said that you-you're the new Army colonel they've been talking about, correct? They say that you may be the new deputy project officer."
"There may be some substance to those rumors," Bondarenko allowed.
"Then may I make a suggestion, Comrade?" Morozov asked.
"Certainly."
"There are many single men here "
"And not enough single women?"
"There is a need for laboratory assistants."
"Your observation is noted, Comrade Engineer," Bondarenko replied with a chuckle. "We also plan a new apartment block to relieve the crowding. How are the barracks?"
"The atmosphere is comradely. The astronomy and chess clubs are very active."
"Ah. It has been time since I played chess seriously. How tough is the competition?" the Colonel asked.
The younger man laughed. "Murderous-even savage,"
Five thousand meters away, the Archer blessed his God's name. Snow was falling, and the flakes gave the air the magical quality so beloved by poets and soldiers. You could hear-you could feel the hushed silence as the snow absorbed all sound. All around them, as far up and down as they could see, was the curtain of white that cut visibility to under two hundred meters. He assembled his subunit commanders and began organizing the assault. They moved out in a few minutes. They were in tactical formation. The Archer was with the lead section