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At The End Of The Orbit by Arthur C. Clarke Episode #305

Arthur C. Clarke | December 29, 2024
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    At The End Of The Orbit by Arthur C. Clarke Episode #305
    Arthur C. Clarke

AT THE END OF THE ORBIT

Episode #305 · Written by Arthur C. Clarke · Narrated by Scott Miller

A meteor’s silent fall sparks a discovery that pulls a hardened pearl diver into a deadly confrontation with his own past. As a stranded space capsule reveals an unexpected survivor, vengeance becomes a trap he can no longer outrun.

Arthur C. Clarke’s At The End Of The Orbit begins with an unearthly meteor silently streaking across a tropical pre-dawn sky—an omen of the moment that will bring an entire life’s worth of guilt, rage, and suppressed memory to the surface. On a small pearling ship off the Great Barrier Reef, Tibor, a seasoned diver haunted by the scars of Hungary’s uprising, heads below the water expecting another routine day among shells and silt. Instead, he finds something utterly foreign resting on the seabed: a scorched Soviet space capsule from deep space, its occupant trapped inside and alive. That single discovery becomes the catalyst for Tibor’s reckoning, turning a quiet morning into a life-altering confrontation between a man and the past he’s never truly escaped.

Clarke builds the tension with extraordinary control, keeping the story grounded in the ordinary world of divers, tenders, and reef currents—then puncturing that normalcy with the intrusion of something monumental and unexpected. The drama unfolds not with explosions or cosmic threats, but through the slow, inexorable tightening of a psychological vise. As Tibor’s private demons rise and twist his intentions, the story transforms into a haunting examination of guilt, revenge, and the irreversible moment when a man sees the truth about himself. Clarke delivers a punch that is as emotional as it is atmospheric, leaving readers with an ending that lingers long after the final line.

ABOUT THE AUTHOR

Arthur C. Clarke needs little introduction: one of the “Big Three” of science fiction (alongside Asimov and Heinlein), his work helped define the modern genre. Clarke was not only a visionary storyteller but a scientific thinker whose predictions about space travel, telecommunications, and technological advancement proved startlingly accurate. His collaboration on 2001: A Space Odyssey remains one of the most iconic achievements in speculative fiction and cinema. His writing is admired worldwide for its clarity, imagination, and intellectual rigor.

Across his vast body of short fiction, Clarke excelled at threading scientific plausibility through deeply human stories. He understood that science fiction gains its emotional power from the people caught in the machinery of discovery, ambition, or circumstance. His characters—astronauts, dreamers, engineers, and the haunted—often find themselves standing at the boundary between the known and the unknown. The resulting stories are timeless, resonant, and endlessly re-readable.

In At The End Of The Orbit, Clarke pairs the stark beauty of the sea with the cold isolation of space, showing that both environments expose the hidden corners of the human psyche. This is Clarke at his most intimate, delivering a story that is tense, atmospheric, and morally powerful. It is a masterpiece of compact storytelling, revealing in just a few pages the vast terrain of a broken man’s conscience.

LISTEN TO THE STORY

Listen to At The End Of The Orbit by Arthur C. Clarke — a gripping vintage sci-fi tale of a diver who discovers a fallen space capsule and faces a reckoning he never expected.

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