Lady of the Yellowstone

Fiction & Literature, Psychological, Science Fiction & Fantasy, Science Fiction
Cover of the book Lady of the Yellowstone by Mike Kennedy, Mike Kennedy
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: Mike Kennedy ISBN: 9781311601148
Publisher: Mike Kennedy Publication: August 29, 2014
Imprint: Smashwords Edition Language: English
Author: Mike Kennedy
ISBN: 9781311601148
Publisher: Mike Kennedy
Publication: August 29, 2014
Imprint: Smashwords Edition
Language: English

When one or both of the tunnels connect, the Yellowstone magma chamber will drain, releasing pressure, and giving mankind a century, or an age, or an epoch in which to prepare once more.

PBS will broadcast the two-hour special to an America that waits behind the Mississippi, or across the Canadian border, or beyond the high Sierras, facing the interior of a continent they have fled. The super volcano is awake.

A lazy summer of field work at Yellowstone is always the plum of Purdue’s PhD program. The Geology Department sends one lucky candidate out with Professor Bennington and his four Karelian Bear Dogs. Pretty Claire Cheviot is this summer’s lucky pick. West Lafayette, Indiana moves slower than erosion during the summer sessions. Even a romantic fling would seem a still life compared to drilling holes for dynamite charges.

It will be just the two of them. Separate tents seemed to end the argument about sharing a remote campsite with the professor. There are rumors in the department about Bennington, but they move slowly and have not worked their way around to Claire. The middle of May is still too early for tourists. The isolation at Craig’s Pass is complete. The wilderness of Lodgepole Pine and fantastic shapes must ever work its strange magic. Claire will return to the professor’s tent each night. Of all the many hidden things in Yellowstone, she will understand this least of all. The science at this place becomes her lover. Everything the Earth does, it does for her.

A vast construction project will set two tunnel boring machines in place four miles down inside an empty geologic feature discovered by Digger O’Dell: the Madison Valley Abyss. These will grind against the rock face of 40-foot diameter tunnels toward the magma chamber beneath Yellowstone National Park. The work will run round the clock. They will proceed a mile farther each month from subterranean stations that are much like man-made environments orbiting in the cold of space, and the workers will be suited-up much the same.

The Russian Federal Security Service sends over agent Victor Rostov to sabotage the American tunnel boring machines. A super eruption will level the playing field. With the Americans knocked out, the Russians will be free to turn their full attention to China, who has sent five million squatters into Siberia.

Bennington and Purdue gave Digger O’Dell his PhD five years ago on the strength of the discovery of the Abyss. Now Digger is off fracking wells in Pennsylvania. The army will bring him back for the big meeting that assembles after Claire finds the first of the lava starting a fire near Craig’s Pass.

Digger turns the two hand-wheels of the hatch and pushes it open. The air is full of ash. Still in his suit, still gripping his mouthpiece in his teeth, he climbs half of the steps and peers out the hatch through the rectangle of gold tinted glass in his hood. A brown cloud floats above the Industrial Village. The skeletons of I-beams stand like rows of scarecrows in a ruined field.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

When one or both of the tunnels connect, the Yellowstone magma chamber will drain, releasing pressure, and giving mankind a century, or an age, or an epoch in which to prepare once more.

PBS will broadcast the two-hour special to an America that waits behind the Mississippi, or across the Canadian border, or beyond the high Sierras, facing the interior of a continent they have fled. The super volcano is awake.

A lazy summer of field work at Yellowstone is always the plum of Purdue’s PhD program. The Geology Department sends one lucky candidate out with Professor Bennington and his four Karelian Bear Dogs. Pretty Claire Cheviot is this summer’s lucky pick. West Lafayette, Indiana moves slower than erosion during the summer sessions. Even a romantic fling would seem a still life compared to drilling holes for dynamite charges.

It will be just the two of them. Separate tents seemed to end the argument about sharing a remote campsite with the professor. There are rumors in the department about Bennington, but they move slowly and have not worked their way around to Claire. The middle of May is still too early for tourists. The isolation at Craig’s Pass is complete. The wilderness of Lodgepole Pine and fantastic shapes must ever work its strange magic. Claire will return to the professor’s tent each night. Of all the many hidden things in Yellowstone, she will understand this least of all. The science at this place becomes her lover. Everything the Earth does, it does for her.

A vast construction project will set two tunnel boring machines in place four miles down inside an empty geologic feature discovered by Digger O’Dell: the Madison Valley Abyss. These will grind against the rock face of 40-foot diameter tunnels toward the magma chamber beneath Yellowstone National Park. The work will run round the clock. They will proceed a mile farther each month from subterranean stations that are much like man-made environments orbiting in the cold of space, and the workers will be suited-up much the same.

The Russian Federal Security Service sends over agent Victor Rostov to sabotage the American tunnel boring machines. A super eruption will level the playing field. With the Americans knocked out, the Russians will be free to turn their full attention to China, who has sent five million squatters into Siberia.

Bennington and Purdue gave Digger O’Dell his PhD five years ago on the strength of the discovery of the Abyss. Now Digger is off fracking wells in Pennsylvania. The army will bring him back for the big meeting that assembles after Claire finds the first of the lava starting a fire near Craig’s Pass.

Digger turns the two hand-wheels of the hatch and pushes it open. The air is full of ash. Still in his suit, still gripping his mouthpiece in his teeth, he climbs half of the steps and peers out the hatch through the rectangle of gold tinted glass in his hood. A brown cloud floats above the Industrial Village. The skeletons of I-beams stand like rows of scarecrows in a ruined field.

More books from Science Fiction

Cover of the book The Silver Skull by Mike Kennedy
Cover of the book Prince of Shadows by Mike Kennedy
Cover of the book All the Bright Places: by Jennifer Niven | Conversation Starters by Mike Kennedy
Cover of the book The Friendly Cannibal: A Tale of Happiness and Human Consumption by Mike Kennedy
Cover of the book Das Haus Zamis 27 – Freaktown by Mike Kennedy
Cover of the book Gli orfani di Ana-j by Mike Kennedy
Cover of the book Caught in the Rush by Mike Kennedy
Cover of the book Midnight Whispers The Blake Danzig Chronicles by Mike Kennedy
Cover of the book Magic Mansion : Le Manoir de la Magie by Mike Kennedy
Cover of the book Shield Knight: Soulblades by Mike Kennedy
Cover of the book Wizards by Mike Kennedy
Cover of the book Vistaria by Mike Kennedy
Cover of the book Willie the Magical Rabbit by Mike Kennedy
Cover of the book The Colorado Chapters Trilogy by Mike Kennedy
Cover of the book Kiki. The beginning by Mike Kennedy
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy