Return to Mars (8 page)

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Authors: Ben Bova

Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fantasy

BOOK: Return to Mars
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FIRST TRAVERSE: SOL 6
THE EXPEDITION INCLUDED TWO LARGE SEGMENTED ROVER VEHICLES FOR overland traverses. The rovers were exactly the same as those used in the first expedition: each was a trio of cylindrical aluminum modules, mounted on springy, loose-jointed wheels that could crawl over fair-sized rocks without upsetting the vehicle. They represented a considerable financial saving for the expedition: the cost of developing and testing them had already been absorbed by the first expedition. The second expedition merely had to order two more of them to be built.
One of the cylindrical modules was the fuel tank, big enough to keep the vehicle out in the field for two weeks or more. The middle segment usually held equipment and supplies, although it could be modified to serve as a small mobile laboratory if necessary. The front segment, largest of the three, was about the size of a city bus. It was pressurized like a spacecraft so people could live in it in their shirtsleeves. There was an airlock at its rear, where it linked with the second module. Its front end was u bulbous transparent canopy, which made the entire assembly look something like a giant metallic caterpillar.
Bach rover was designed to carry four in reasonable comfort, although the entire complement of eight explorers could be squeezed into one in an emergency.
Even bundled inside the cumbersome hard suit and sitting uncomfortably in the right-hand seat of the rover’s cockpit, Jamie felt free.
He watched the Martian landscape rolling past in a sort of double vision: his trained geologist’s eye cataloguing the landforms, the boulders and craters and wind-sculpted sand dunes; his deeper Navaho mind recognizing territory that might have once been home to the People.
How like the desert homeland of the People, he thought. Rusty sand and red rocks, steep-walled mesas off by the horizon. He almost expected to see footprints out there, the trail of his ancestors.
Nonsense! his Anglo mind scoffed. There’s not a blade of grass within a hundred million kilometers of here. The temperature out there is below zero and tonight it’ll drop to a hundred-and-more below. You can’t breathe the air.
Still, Jamie felt as if he had returned home.
And farther along out there, built into a cleft in the mighty cliff wall of the Grand Canyon, there waited the ruins of an ancient city. Jamie felt certain of that. No matter what the others said, no matter what the rational side of his own mind insisted, he knew in his heart that what he had seen on the first expedition had been built by intelligent creatures.
“Thirty klicks,” said Stacy Dezhurova. Sitting in the driver’s seat beside Jamie, she too was encased in a bulky hard suit, although she had not put on her helmet. With her dirty-blond pageboy she looked like a chunky Dutch woman being swallowed alive by a robot.
Jamie nodded and pushed himself awkwardly out of the seat. He had to bend slightly to get out of the bulbous glassed cockpit without scraping his helmet on the overhead.
He clomped past Trudy Hall, sitting in her tan coveralls in the midsection of the rover’s module. She smiled up at him.
The rover slowed to a smooth stop. Jamie hardly felt it; Dezhurova was an excellent pilot.
Trumball was standing by the airlock hatch with one of the beacon rods already in his hand. Jamie took it from him silently. Later on, Dex would suit up and do the outside work, but Jamie wanted to be the first to go outside.
“Checklist,” Trumball said as he handed the beacon to Jamie.
Jamie nodded and slid down the visor of his helmet. Trumball riffled through the safety checklist quickly but thoroughly, making certain Jamie’s suit was correctly sealed and all its equipment functioning properly.
“Okay, pal,” he said, tapping Jamie on the buck of his helmet. His voice was muffled by the helmet’s insulation.
“I’m going into the airlock.” Jamie spoke into the microphone built into the helmet between the bottom of the visor and the neck ring.
“Copy,” he heard Dezhurova’s voice acknowledge. “Wait one. I have an amber on the UV.”
The airlock ceiling held a battery of ultraviolet lamps which turned on automatically as the airlock was pumped down to vacuum. The UV light was supposed to sterilize the outside of the hard suits, killing any microbes clinging to their surfaces, so the explorers could not contaminate the world outside with microscopic life from Earth. The UV was also supposed to kill any possible back-contamination on the suits when the explorers came back into the rover.
“Backup is in the green,” Dezhurova’s voice said crisply in Jamie’s earphones. “I’ll check out the primary circuit while you are outside.”
“Okay. Entering the airlock now.”
The airlock was no bigger than a telephone booth, barely large enough to fit a suited man. Clutching the stubby rod of the geology/meteorology beacon in one gloved hand, Jamie pressed the control stud beside the outer hatch with his other. He heard the pump chug to life as the telltale light on the panel went from green to amber.
The sound of the pump and the slight hissing of air dwindled to nothing, although Jamie could still feel the pump’s vibration through the thick soles of his boots. In a minute even that ceased, and the panel light went to red. The airlock was now in vacuum.
The ultraviolet light was invisible to his eyes, of course, although he thought it made the red stripes on his sleeves fluoresce slightly.
Jamie leaned on the control stud and the outer hatch slid open. He stepped carefully down the metal rung and out onto the red sand of Mars.
He knew it was nonsense, but Jamie felt free and happy outside by himself. The barren red sands of Mars stretched all around him, out to a rugged, undulating horizon that seemed almost too close for comfort. The edge of the world. The beginning of infinity. The sky was a yellowish tan along that horizon, shading slowly toward blue as he looked up toward the small, strangely weak sun.
“Good-sized crater off to the left,” he spoke into the helmet mike. “Looks recent, fresh rock along its rim.”
They were following the route he had taken during the improvised jaunt to the Grand Canyon six years earlier. The excursion that had nearly killed them all. The excursion that had discovered living Martian lichen at the bottom of Tithonium Chasma.
Jamie had half-expected to see traces of the wheel tracks from that trip, but the wind-driven sand had covered them over completely. They had not bothered to plant beacons along the way, six years ago; they
had been in too much of a hurry for that. Now Jamie corrected that oversight.
He pulled on the rod, extending it out to its full two meters, then planted it firmly in the red, dusty soil. Not soil, he reminded himself. Regolith. Soil is honeycombed with living things: worms, bugs, bacteria This rusty iron sand of Mars was devoid of any trace of life. The stuff was loaded with superoxides, like powdered bleach. When the earliest automated landing vehicles first sampled the surface and could not find even traces of organic molecules in it, hopes for discovering life on Mars plummeted.
Jamie smiled to himself inside his helmet as he worked the pointed end of the beacon deeper into the ground. Mars surprised them all, he thought. We found life. What new surprises will we find this time?
Below the superoxide level there might be colonies of bacteria that never saw sunlight, bacteria that digested rock with water from the permafrost. Geologists had been stunned to find such bacteria deep underground on Earth. Possum Craig was drilling for similar Martian organisms.
Jamie was sweating by the time he got the pole set firmly enough into the ground to satisfy himself. Reaching up, he unfolded the solar panels, then clicked on the beacon’s radio transmitter.
Sing your song, Jamie said silently to the beacon. A totem for the scientists, he realized. The instrumentation built into the slim pole would continuously measure ground tremors, heat flow from the planet’s interior, air temperature, wind velocity and humidity. Of the hundred-some beacons they had planted during the first expedition, more than thirty were still functioning after six years. Jamie wanted to find those that had failed and see what had happened to them.
But not now, he told himself. Not today. He went back to the rover and stepped up to the open airlock hatch.
He turned around and gazed out at the rock-strewn landscape once more before closing the hatch. That fresh-looking crater beckoned to him, but he knew they had no time for it. Not yet.
Jamie gazed out at Mars. Barren, almost airless, colder than Siberia or Greenland or even the South Pole. Yet it still looked like home to him.
DIARY ENTRY
None of the others seem to understand what danger we are in. This is an alien world, and all we have to protect us is a thin shell of plastic or metal. If that shell is ruptured, even a tiny pinprick, we will all die in agony. I was a fool to come here, but the rest of them are even bigger fools. They are a fingernail’s width away from death, and they act as if they don’t know it. Or don’t care. The fools!
OVERNIGHT: SOL 6/7
“ACTUALLY,” SAID TRUDY HALL, “MOST SCIENTIFIC WORK is crushingly boring.”
The four of them were sitting on the lower bunks in the module’s midsection, with the narrow foldout table between them and the remains of their dinners on the plastic trays before them. The two women sat on one side of the table, Trumball and Jamie on the other.
“Most of any kind of work is a bore,” said Trumball, reaching for his glass of water. “I worked in my old man’s office when I was a kid. Talk about boring!”
“That’s what they say about flying for the air force,” Stacy Dezhurova added, straight-faced. “Long hours of boredom punctuated by moments of sheer terror.”
They all laughed.
“I know we could move a lot faster if we didn’t have to plant the beacons,” Jamie said, “but they’re important to—”
“Oh, don’t be so serious!” Hall said, looking surprised. “I wasn’t complaining. I was merely making a philosophical point.”
“The English are very deep,” Trumball said, grinning across the (able at her. “Really into philosophy and all that.”
“Rather,” agreed Hall.
Jamie made a smile for them.
“We have made good progress,” Dezhurova said. “We will get to within striking distance of the Canyon’s edge by sundown tomorrow.”
“We could make it to the edge itself if we spaced out the beacons u little more,” Trumball suggested. “Say, fifty klicks instead of thirty.”
Jamie felt his brows knit slightly. “Thirty klicks means we stop once every hour, more or less.”
Trumball turned on the cot to face Jamie, his grin knowing, certain. “Yeah, but if we spread ‘em out to every hour and a half we could save six-seven stops tomorrow. I checked it out on the computer. We’ll make a helluva lot better time.”
Hall’s expression turned thoughtful. “How would that affect the data stream?”
Trumball shrugged. “Not much. We picked thirty klicks pretty much arbitrarily, right? Stop once an hour, and the rover’s top speed isn’t much more than thirty kilometers per hour, right?”
“So if we space the beacons out every fifty klicks—will you still get the data you want?” Hall asked.
Jamie studied her face across the narrow table from him. Her gray-blue eyes were focused on Trumball. Her chin was slightly pointed; her facial bones sculpted almost like a fashion model’s. She had been a runner back on Earth; even on the long flight to Mars she had jogged around the spacecraft’s outer passageway for hours on end during her free time.
Trumball waved a hand in the air. “Sure. Thirty klicks, fifty klicks, what’s the difference?” He was facing Hall, but he glanced sideways toward Jamie.
Taking in a breath to give himself a moment to consider, Jamie said, “Maybe you’re right, Dex. Spacing out the beacons a bit more won’t hurt all that much.”
Trumball’s eyes widened momentarily. Quickly, he added, “And we could make better time getting to the Canyon.”
Jamie nodded. “Why not? Good suggestion.”
Trumball’s grin seemed more triumphant than grateful.
While the others took turns using the lavatory and getting into then-sleep coveralls, Jamie went forward to the cockpit and called the base dome.
Tomas Rodriguez’s chunky, dark-eyed face filled the dashboard screen. As Jamie went through his evening report, which Rodriguez would relay back to Tarawa, an inner part of his mind mused about the colors of the expedition’s members. There had been no deliberate attempt to achieve racial or national or even gender balance, yet the skin tones among their members ranged from Trudy Hall’s ivory to Rodriguez’s olive brown to Vijay Shektar’s near-ebony. I guess I’m somewhere between Tomas and Vijay, he realized.
Jamie had tried to plan out the assignments for field missions so that there would always be two women in each team. He knew he was being overly cautious, prudish even, but he thought the women would feel better with another female aboard, rather than alone with several men.
That left Vijay alone at the dome with Fuchida, Craig and Rodriguez, he knew, but he thought Vijay could take care of herself. Fuchida would be no problem and Craig would most likely behave like a benevolent uncle. Rodriguez had his store of testosterone, but he did not seem aggressive enough to worry Jamie.
Still, he wanted to see Vijay, talk with her.
Once he finished his report he asked, “Is Vijay still awake?”
“I think so,” Rodriguez said. “Hang two and I’ll get her.”
There was no intercom system in the base dome, only a public-address network of loudspeakers, reserved strictly for emergencies. Rodriguez simply got up from the comm console and walked to Shektar’s cubicle. Jamie waited, staring at an empty screen. Rodriguez came back in a few moments.
“She’s on her computer, talking to Dex, from the looks of it.” Jamie turned in the cockpit seat and, sure enough, Dex was squatting on his upper bunk hunched over his laptop, its screen glowing on his grinning, young, handsome face.

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