TITHONIUM BASE: THE MILLION-YEAR EXPERIMENT
Jamie fingered the bear fetish in his coveralls pocket as he stood between Chang Laodong and Carter Carleton watching the access tube disconnect from the squat, squarish body of the L/AV and roll back toward the dome.
So long, Dex, Jamie said silently. Pick your tourists carefully. I’ll be here waiting for them.
“LIFTOFF IN FIFTEEN SECONDS,” the overhead speakers announced, “FOURTEEN . . . THIRTEEN ...”
Saleem Hasdrubal came up beside them. Looking out at the L/AV, he said, “I hear you’ve been talkin’ about my work.”
“... TEN . . . NINE . . . EIGHT ...”
Jamie said, “That’s right.”
“Mind tellin’
me
about it?”
“... FIVE . . . FOUR ...”
Jamie held up a finger, his eyes on the landing/ascent vehicle, his other hand squeezing the fetish. Rocket launches always had an element of danger, he knew.
“... TWO . . . ONE . . . LIFTOFF.”
The L/AV hurtled out of sight, the hot exhaust from its ascent engine spraying grit and pebbles across the landing area.
“Liftoff nominal,” they heard the astronaut pilot’s voice, almost as emotionless as the computer. “On track for orbital rendezvous.”
Jamie relaxed his grip on the stone bear. Turning to Hasdrubal, he began explaining his idea for repopulating the dying Mars. Together with Carleton and Chang they started walking slowly away from the airlock area.
The biologist’s eyes widened as he grasped what Jamie was saying. “It’d take a million years before you saw any development,” he said, his voice slightly hollow with awe.
Jamie replied, “It’ll be a long-term experiment, that’s for sure.”
Chang asked, “Can it be done?”
“Blasting out some new craters and doming ‘em over?” Hasdrubal asked. “Yeah, sure. Make ‘em deep enough to expose the SLiMEs. Why not?”
The mission director almost smiled. “Then watch bacteria adapt to new conditions.”
“Watch them evolve,” said Carleton. “The fundamentalists are going to go wild over that.”
“Let them,” Jamie said tightly. “Tourism will keep us funded.” And he realized, “Every tourist who comes here will be a walking advertisement for our work when he gets back home.”
Carleton grinned mischievously. “I’ll put them to work at the dig. That should give them something to talk about when they return to Earth.”
“Let them take souvenirs home?” Jamie asked.
The anthropologist shrugged. “Martian rocks. Or pebbles, more likely.”
Chang spoke up. “When a tourist digs up something of significance, artifact or fossil, attach his or her name to it. Give them pride.”
“Good idea,” said Carleton. “We’ll keep a running catalogue of all the bits and pieces, with the names of the people who found them.”
Hasdrubal still seemed somewhat dazed by Jamie’s idea. “A million-year experiment. There’s never been anything like it.”
“Yes there has,” Jamie replied. “You and me, all of us, all the life on Earth.”
“And Mars, too, I guess,” the biologist admitted.
“But now we can do a controlled experiment.”
“And take notes.” Hasdrubal laughed, a little shakily.
They had reached the cafeteria.
Chang gestured to the nearest table. “A proper ceremony is in order,” he said. “Please wait here.”
The mission director hurried back toward his office.
“What’s he up to?” Jamie wondered.
Carleton said, “I bet I know.”
Chang reemerged a moment later, carrying a slim green bottle in one chubby hand.
“Rice wine,” he explained once he reached their table. “From my home province.”
They drank a toast to the new project: Chang, Carleton, Hasdrubal and Jamie. To the future. To the million-year experiment.
Then Carleton got to his feet.
“Going to excavation?” Chang asked, an almost amiable smile on his chunky face.
“In a while,” the anthropologist said. “First I’m going to put in a call to Selene. We’re going to need a nanotechnology expert to oversee building the domes over the craters. I know just the right person.”
As he hurried off toward his quarters, they heard Carleton almost singing, “Let me not to the marriage of true minds admit impediments. . . .”
* * * *
It was a long and exhilarating day. Chang actually laughed as he cancelled the evacuation flight. Carleton and his crew went out to the dig with renewed spirit. Hasdrubal gathered most of the biologists and began planning the first steps of what they all called the million-year experiment.
As darkness fell and the dome’s transparent windows went opaque, Jamie stood by the entrance of his office cubicle and listened to the hum of activity. The cafeteria was filling up. People were laughing and joking. The overhead speakers blared up-tempo pop tunes.
He and Vijay had dinner with Hasdrubal and Zeke Larkin.
“I asked Carleton about blowing out new craters,” Larkin said over his plate of soymeat. “He’s the local expert on explosives.”
“And?” Jamie prodded.
“He said he’d help us all he could.”
Hasdrubal chuckled. “Maybe he’s hopin’ you’ll blow your head off.”
Larkin grinned back at him. “Yeah. Maybe so.”
“The important thing,” Jamie pointed out, “is that you can work together on this.”
“That we will do,” Hasdrubal said firmly.
All through dinner Vijay said very little, and as she and Jamie walked back to their quarters he asked, “Anything wrong? You’ve been a quiet little mouse all evening.”
“You had a lot to say,” she countered.
“Guess I did,” he admitted.
Vijay slid her arm into his. “You’ve done it, Jamie. You’ve found the right path.”
The memory of his grandfather flickered through Jamie’s awareness.
This village don’t exist yet,
Al had told him in his dream. But it will, Jamie said to himself. We’ll bring it to life.
“I don’t know if it’s the right path,” Jamie replied to Vijay, “but I think it’s a path that we can all follow. A path that will lead to where we want to go.”
“Even if it takes a million years?” she teased.
“Even if takes longer,” he said, totally serious.
“The important thing is, you’re going to keep the operation going,” she said. “You’re going to make it better than ever.”
Jamie nodded. “At least we’ll be able to stay on Mars.”
“People will be on Mars all the time.”
“Even tourists,” he said.
“You’ll handle them. You’ll put them to work, won’t you?”
“That’s the plan.”
Later, as they were undressing for bed, Jamie came to a realization. “You know, all through dinner you were looking at me in a kind of funny way.”
Vijay’s brows rose questioningly.
“It wasn’t just that you were quiet most of the time. You had this funny expression on your face.”
As she slipped her naked body under the sheet Vijay asked, “A funny expression?”
“Funny as in strange.” Jamie sat on the edge of the bed, then stretched out beside her and pulled up the sheet. He switched off the light. Vijay cuddled her body against his.
“What kind of expression?” she whispered into his ear.
He turned toward her, and in the darkness he answered, “I don’t know. Kind of like you knew something I didn’t. Kind of like you had a secret.”
“I don’t have any secrets from you, love.”
“I know. It’s weird, isn’t it?”
For a moment Vijay said nothing. They lay together, bodies pressed tight.
Then, “We’ll be staying on Mars permanently, won’t we, Jamie?”
“Looks that way.”
“I’ve been talking it over with Nari. There’s no reason why we shouldn’t have another baby.”
“Another . . . ? What? Here on Mars?”
Vijay laughed softly in the darkness. “Think of it as a biology experiment; a nine-month experiment.”
“That’s some experiment,” Jamie muttered. “It’s a big decision, Vijay. Are you sure—”
“I was sure when we left New Mexico, love. I just had to wait until you got everything sorted out in your head. And now you have, so . . . why not?”
“At our age?”
“That’s no problem.”
“But... on Mars?”
“Children have been born on the Moon. It’s perfectly natural.”
“But-”
“Nari will take good care of me. I’ll be fine and we’ll have a healthy child. It’ll be good publicity for Dex to use.”
Despite himself, Jamie laughed. “A publicity stunt.”
“A baby. Our baby. It’s time we did it.”
“A nine-month experiment.”
She nuzzled her cheek against his. “Mars forever,” Vijay whispered.
“Forever,” he whispered back.