TITHONIUM BASE: EXCURSION
Jamie clutched Dex’s shoulders for several wordless moments. At last the two men stepped back from each other, both of them grinning broadly.
Dex recognized Vijay. “Well, how are you, gorgeous?”
“I’m fine, Dex. Glad to see you here.” She put her hands on his shoulders and bussed him on the cheek.
“And you know Dr. Chang, of course,” Jamie said, gesturing toward the mission director.
Chang stepped forward stiffly and offered his hand.
“A pleasure to see you again, Dr. Chang,” Dex said.
“Welcome to Trumball Exploration Center,” said Chang, using the base’s official name.
Dex nodded, then glanced around. “My father’d be very impressed with all this.”
“Please allow me to show you our humble base.” Dex glanced at Jamie.
“Go ahead,” Jamie said. “I’ll take care of your baggage.”
“Hey, this is it,” Dex said, bending to pick up his travel bag. “I leave when the torch ship goes.”
A sudden idea struck Jamie. “In that case, why don’t you come with us this afternoon?”
Chang’s eyes narrowed, but he said nothing.
“Come? Where?” Dex asked.
“We’re going out on an overnight excursion. To Crater Chang.”
“Safety regulations,” Chang murmured. “It is necessary—”
Dex interrupted, “Dr. Chang, I’m an experienced geologist. I’ve driven a camper more than a thousand kilometers overland.”
“More than twenty years ago,” Chang pointed out.
“The campers haven’t changed that much. And I’ve passed all my physicals.”
“So did Monsignor DiNardo.”
Dex’s expression tightened slightly. “I’m not going to die on you, Dr. Chang. And I’d like to get outside—after you show me around the base.”
Chang looked from Dex’s blue-green eyes to Jamie, then back again. “I know of your experience in overland excursion. No one has driven a camper farther.”
“Then it’s okay?”
“If the scientific director agrees.”
Jamie said, “I think it will be good for Dr. Trumball to accompany Hasdrubal and me on the excursion. It’s only overnight. We’ll be back tomorrow.”
“In time for the torch ship’s departure,” Dex added.
With a laugh, Jamie said, “We won’t leave you stranded here, Dex.”
“Good.” He hefted his travel bag. “I only brought a couple days worth of underwear.”
* * * *
While Chang escorted Dex on a tour of the base dome, Jamie took Dex’s bag and, with Vijay beside him, carried it to the compartment that would serve as Dex’s quarters.
“D’you think it’s all that good an idea, taking him out on your excursion?” she asked.
Jamie tossed the bag on the compartment’s bunk, noting almost unconsciously how lightly it floated in the gentle Martian gravity.
“A very good idea,” he replied as they started back toward the infirmary. “I want Dex to see what we’re doing here.”
“But what about the village?”
“We’ll take a look at it on our way out to the cable lifts.”
Vijay shook her head ever so slightly. “Carleton’s going to be disappointed.”
“We’ll look at the village,” Jamie repeated. “But I want Dex to see this new crater and the work that Hasdrubal’s doing.”
“I hope you know what you’re doing.”
“Me, too,” Jamie said.
* * * *
After a brief lunch with Chang in his office, Jamie bustled Dex to the main airlock, where they pulled on nanofabric suits.
“These things really work?” Dex asked, looking dubious.
Jamie nodded. “Everybody uses them now.”
“Pretty flimsy.”
The astronaut serving as safety officer almost scowled at him. “They’re the best damned protection you can have,” he said firmly. “A helluva lot better than those old clunkers. Even Dr. Carleton is using ‘em now.”
As if on cue, Carter Carleton came striding up toward them. Jamie introduced the anthropologist to Dex.
“Coming out to see the excavation,” Carleton said as he reached for one of the suits hanging limply in their locker. It wasn’t a question.
“We’ll stop by and take a look,” Jamie replied. “We’re on our way out to see Crater Chang.”
“Chang.” Carleton’s voice went flat.
“I’ve been following your work on the village,” Dex said, suddenly diplomatic. “Fantastic stuff, especially the graveyard.”
“Yes,” said Carleton.
“Complete skeletons,” Dex went on, shrugging his arms into the suit’s backpack. “We’re trying to get the news nets to carry a special on your work.”
Carleton said nothing. He stepped into the leggings of the suit he’d chosen, pulled them up over his hips and then worked his arms into the sleeves.
Once all three of them were in their suits with the bubble helmets inflated and the astronaut satisfied that they were properly sealed up, Carleton asked:
“Just how much time can you spare to examine the village?”
Jamie recognized the sarcasm in his voice. The anger.
“An hour,” he said, stepping to the airlock hatch. “Then we’ve got to go up the cable with Hasdrubal and spend the night in the dome up on the plain.”
“One hour,” Carleton muttered.
Jamie glanced at Dex. From the expression on his face Jamie could see that even Dex recognized the bitterness in Carleton’s tone.
* * * *
“That’s one pissed-off anthropologist,” Dex said as he walked between Jamie and Hasdrubal toward the cable lifts running along the cliff face.
“Did you want to stay longer?” Jamie asked.
With a small shrug, Dex said, “Might’ve been interesting, poking around those building foundations, looking into the graves.”
Hasdrubal said, “Carleton wouldn’t let you touch anything.”
“Yeah. I can understand why.”
And maybe, Jamie thought silently, you’ll be able to understand why we can’t have tourists poking around the village.
They reached the base of the cable and started to clip the harnesses over their suits. Jamie watched Dex closely. He had no problems with the harness and he seemed to be more at ease wearing the molecule-thin nanosuit.
“We gonna stop and look at the cliff structures on the way up?” Dex asked.
“Tomorrow,” said Jamie. “On the way down.”
Hasdrubal made a low, chuckling sound. “If we stopped now to look at the structures Carleton would shoot us in the back with one of the digging lasers.”
Jamie laughed, but when they started up on the cables he could see the team of people digging away industriously at the excavation. One person, though, was standing at the edge of the pit watching them, fists on his hips. Even at this distance Jamie could sense the anger radiating from the anthropologist.