Two kilometers beneath the Atlantic Ocean, Subatlantic Oil's drilling complex is supposed to be the triumph of modern engineering. Thick armored bulkheads, remote cameras, and the best technical staff in the industry protect a project built to tap the largest untapped petroleum reserve on Earth. Then the leaks begin.
Water punches through steel that should never fail. Compartments rupture. Instruments report damage spreading through structures installed only weeks before. Something in the deep ocean environment has found a weakness in the supposedly impregnable system, and no one yet understands what it is.
Muhlenhoff, the district's commanding executive, insists the crisis will be solved. His task force will analyze the problem, the technicians will do the calculations, and the project will continue. Organization, leadership, and a confident attitude—those are the tools he trusts most.
Muhlenhoff was once an engineer himself. Long ago he worked with equations, data tables, and the hard mathematics of geology and drilling. Years of promotion carried him upward through committees, boardrooms, and political negotiations until the technical work disappeared from his daily life.
As pressure builds and damage spreads through the drilling complex, Muhlenhoff must face an uncomfortable truth. Orders and confidence may hold a project together for a while, but somewhere in the machinery of Subatlantic Oil a real engineer is desperately needed.
Frederik Pohl and C. M. Kornbluth were among the sharpest collaborators in science fiction. Together they produced a string of influential stories and novels including The Space Merchants, and Wolfbane. Their partnership combined Kornbluth's biting satire with Pohl's sharp understanding of technology and corporate systems, creating stories that expose the strange pressures hidden inside modern institutions.
"The Engineer" captures that partnership perfectly.