Boundary Read online

Page 42


  He, along with many others, had been advancing that argument for years—and, now, he might well prove his point in the worst way possible. By dying.

  "Here goes."

  Inside Pirate, long-dormant pumps whirred to life. Despite the attenuation of the Martian atmosphere near Pirate there was still the sound of continuous thunder as the multiton test lander launched itself into the sky at a very slight angle. It rose up, seeming to float atop a cushion of near-invisible flame, and then cut off thrust. The passengers of Thoat watched, transfixed, as the ship that was their single hope of survival drifted upwards, then downwards, on a path that would bring it near enough to reach.

  Fire flared again from the rockets to cushion the fall and prevent the relatively delicate lander from cracking itself like an egg. One of the jets sputtered. Bruce nearly took control, but saw the jet catch again. A.J's program was already compensating.

  Fifty meters, forty, thirty . . . At an altitude of two meters, the rockets cut off, and the lander settled gently to the ground.

  Tension vanished into elation as A.J. once more nearly leaped from his seat. "Yes! Distance from Thoat is now . . . eighty-seven point two meters."

  Bruce was practically chortling. "That's great! We can hook the winch cable right to Pirate and draw ourselves alongside."

  "And," Madeline added, just as gleefully, "Joe and I have figured out a working coupler for our two hose systems. The fuel will be flowing in minutes, after we get these two together."

  "Then let's not waste any more time," Helen said, getting up. "I'm going out to get that winch cable strung."

  "Coming with you!" A.J. was up now, also.

  "Most of us are coming," Madeline said. "If you remember the pain it was stringing the cable the last time . . ."

  "Oh, yeah. I guess we leave Joe and Bruce."

  "Living in the lap of luxury as we are, mates. See you whenever you slaves are done."

  With four of them working to drag the cable and fasten it to Pirate, the job didn't take very long. The winch, despite some worries, did not fail on the way, and Madeline and Joe's coupling scheme worked.

  So, a few hours after Pirate had made its extremely short flight, Bruce leaned back and grinned at Joe sitting next to him. "Thoat's right happy now. Fuel's coming in and it ain't gonna stop until she's full up."

  The engineer didn't answer, as he was busy with further designs and computations.

  "What's up, Joe?"

  "Figuring out how we can separate one of the fuel tanks from Pirate and store it on or in Thoat somehow. It'd be silly to try to refuel by driving back out here, and I don't know whether Pirate will survive a longer hop. So if we can drag some extra fuel along somehow . . ."

  "Makes sense. Certainly worth looking into while we wait."

  By the time the Thoat was refueled, Joe was satisfied. "Okay, it's going to be uncomfortable on the ride over to Target 37, but if we clear most of the equipment out of the cargo bay we can put one of the fuel tanks in there. We'll have to live with a lot of clutter for the next couple of days, I'm afraid."

  "That's way better than leaving fuel a hundred kilometers behind us," Helen stated. "We'll do it. Good work, everyone."

  She leaned back in her seat, feeling the tension draining out of her. "Well, whaddaya know? It looks like we might actually survive long enough to—"

  "Don't say it, Helen! Don't say it!"

  Chapter 45

  Gupta shook his head. "Too risky, Jackie, too risky by far. We have no opportunity for second attempts in this." He continued to study the design, but he was clearly more worried now than he had been when they first confronted the challenge. A workable solution was proving more difficult to find than he'd expected.

  Jackie was just as discouraged. The problem wasn't getting something to deorbit. Gupta's original idea was sound enough, in that respect. They could unship one of the ion drives on the habitat ring and use its small but steady thrust to drop just about anything out of orbit in a few days.

  The problem was the actual reentry—more precisely, surviving the impact with the ground. Parachutes were just not all that useful. They'd provide some deceleration, of course, but not nearly enough. The thickness of the Martian atmosphere was less than two percent that of Earth's.

  True, most of what they intended to drop wasn't particularly sensitive to shock. But there was still a difference between an impact at twenty kilometers per hour and one at four hundred KPH. A critical difference, generally known as "crash and burn."

  "What about reentry itself? How's the design there?"

  Gupta's dark eyes brightened. "There we are in excellent shape. The simulations show that we have sufficient materials to make some quite large aeroshells, especially if we sacrifice some of the aerogel insulation to this important project."

  "That's no problem," Jackie said, nodding. "Take it from the right places and we'll hardly notice. When you say 'quite large,' are you sure . . ."

  "Very sure."

  "Okay, just checking. I mean, we're not dropping a little rover onto the surface. We need to send them stuff measured in tons."

  "I am aware that I am old and perhaps appear decrepit in your eyes, Ms. Secord, but I do not forget such simple points." Gupta's words were grave, but there was a spark of humor in his eyes.

  Jackie smiled. "You're not all that old, Satya. And don't forget that young little me with the still-perfect neurons is the one who forgot the difference between white pipes and yellow pipes."

  She turned back to the simulations. "Damn. It all comes down to . . . well, to coming down. We can get it out of orbit, and get it through the atmosphere, but we can't land it intact. Are you sure the rockets won't work?"

  "No, I am not sure. But that is precisely the problem. They may work well. However, they may fail at some point, and if they fail at the wrong point . . ." He sighed. "I can guarantee a firing of a simple rocket for a short time, but this will not be so simple. There will not be time for extensive testing; perhaps only one, very small, preliminary design to be test-landed before we must land the supplies for real. A vehicle to be landed by rocket needs fine control, especially if we have no time for long prototyping. But we lack the resources of people and materiel to, as one might say, throw money at the problem, and if that control fails . . ."

  "Yeah. Maybe we need to put in another call to Earth, bounce some ideas off of them, see what they . . ." She trailed off.

  A poke brought her back to awareness. "Jackie? What is it? You stopped talking. Have you an idea?"

  "Almost, I think. But I'm trying to figure out what it is."

  What was it? Something about what I just said. Talk to other people. Bounce ideas off them—

  Bounce?

  The idea was at once so obvious and absurd that she burst out laughing. "I've got it, Doctor! It'll take a lot of the lining fabric in some of the holds, a hell of a lot of sealant, some carbonan reinforcement— probably have to rip some suits up for it—but we can do it!"

  Gupta looked at her, one eyebrow raised in an expression of expectant amusement. "And, what, precisely, is it that we can do?"

  "The third Titan probe! And what was it, um, Mars Surveyor? Cosmic bubblewrap, Doctor! We'll surround the thing with airbags and bounce it to a safe landing!"

  The dignified engineer stared at her for a long moment. Then, startlingly, gave a high-pitched whoop and swung her around. "Yes! Yes indeed, yes! That is exactly the sort of thing we need! Design it well, design it strong, and it almost cannot fail. With a few rockets— of the simple sort—yes, Jackie! That will work!"

  "Defacing the environment of Mars, sure enough," Joe stated, with all the grim satisfaction of a Cassandra. "I now have proof that we are conscienceless exploiters of this helpless planet."

  Madeline smiled. "I demand to see your evidence, tree-hugger."

  "Behold, o closet robber-baron." Her HUD lit up with images from Thoat's rear-facing cameras.

  "Oh, wow," she said involuntarily. Thoat was cros
sing a flat area that looked dark gray from ground level, making its closest approach to the looming wall of the Valles Marineris. The cliffs here jutted out in a spur that Thoat had to skirt on its way to Target 37. The great towering ridge, scarcely a kilometer distant, threw back the sun's light diffusely, making the entire region brighter except for the dark sands.

  But where Thoat's wide-treaded wheels had dug in, bright salmon-red-orange ridges and scalloped lines marred the ground. "Wow," she repeated.

  "Interesting," Helen said. "That dark stuff is just a thin coating on the surface, it looks like. Maybe airborne dust from something else?"

  "Or there could be alternating layers—maybe seasonal."

  "True. Maybe the next expedition—you know, one that doesn't crash—will be able to look at it and figure it out."

  "I'm sure there will be a lot of expeditions," Madeline said. She looked out the forward port. As usual, Bruce was driving, focusing most of his attention on the nearby features so as not to run into any surprises.

  She raised her gaze, looking farther out. "What is that?"

  The others looked up.

  "Bugger me," Bruce said calmly.

  A towering yellowish column swirled in the distance, huge, misty, threatening. As they watched, they could see it was approaching. Dust roiled about its base.

  "That looks like a tornado!" The tension in Helen's voice was that of someone who had more than once found themselves in Tornado Alley during peak season.

  "Sort of," A.J. said, his eyes viewing the scene through satellite and sensors. "It's a dust devil. Peak wind speed of this one appears to be about one hundred and eighty kilometers per hour, and she's about five kilometers high."

  "A hundred and eighty kilometers per hour?" Bruce said. "Bloody hell."

  Madeline felt the same way. Winds that fast could—

  Both Joe and A.J. started laughing.

  "What the hell's so funny?" Bruce demanded. Madeline glared questioningly at the two former Ares members—then at Rich, as he joined in the laughs. All of a sudden, Bruce started laughing also.

  Madeline looked at Helen. "Maybe it's a male thing. You know, driving toward certain death? Like their idiot ancestors used to charge into battle naked, to show they weren't afraid."

  That caused A.J., who had been about to say something, to laugh again. "Sorry, sorry, but—look, we're on Mars. The air pressure out there is less than a fiftieth of Earth's. That's how dense—or thin, rather—it is compared to our atmosphere. And it's how dense a fluid material is that really determines how hard it's going to hit you. Look at water: if you immerse yourself in water and even weigh yourself down with lead, just try standing against a current of a few kilometers an hour."

  "Oh." Madeline felt foolish. She had a vague memory of reading something about this in one of the dozens of books and papers she'd studied during their training for the mission.

  Helen stared out the port. "So what you're saying is that you could walk right out there into that thing and it'd feel like being in . . . "

  Joe did the calculations for her. "About a sixteen kilometer per hour wind back home. A nice breeze, and that's about it. With a bunch of dust."

  "So it's no threat?"

  "None at all, not to Thoat. In fact, we should have all our sensors going as we drive through it. Might learn something. Though I'd slow down a bit in the fog."

  "Don't need to teach me my business, mate. I don't drive faster when I can see less, rest assured."

  Madeline still felt an involuntary tension as the swirling vortex approached. Towering as high as the canyon walls and spinning at over a hundred miles per hour, it did not seem harmless at all but a looming, elemental threat.

  Then Thoat was plunging into the maelstrom. She thought she felt a faint vibration, and there was a slight hissing noise. But aside from the sight of the dirty yellowish haze streaming by and obscuring their normal vision, the huge rover simply ignored the formidable-looking dust devil.

  A faint, almost subliminal flicker made her jump. "What's that?"

  Bruce and A.J. leaned forward. "Hey! That's cool." Deep purplish light shimmered, barely at the level of visibility, on the few sharper edges on Thoat's nose. The violet light brightened and seemed to leap from one of the short sensor antennas toward the ground several times.

  "Cool, fine, but what is it, and is it dangerous?" Madeline was a bit nettled by the uninformative reaction. Her instinct was that anything you didn't understand could be dangerous, so you needed to understand it fast.

  "Corona discharge," Joe answered. "Mars' atmosphere is almost as thin as the pressure inside a neon light tube. Close enough that if you build up electrical charges, they'll jump long distances. It's not dangerous to us, though. The rover's insulated, and when you go through the lock those handgrips you're required to hold make sure that if you did build up a charge outside, it gets equalized. But it could be a pain in other ways. Also might give us some other phenomena to see later."

  Momentarily they broke back into sunlight, looking up at a slice of bright pinkish sky surrounded by the spinning sand clouds. Madeline was not the only one to exhale in relief.

  Somewhere in the middle of that, without her remembering having done so, she discovered that her hand was holding Joe's. It was the first time there'd ever been any physical contact between them in public. Even in private, there hadn't been much, since their reconciliation. For reasons that were still obscure to her, Madeline had not been willing to move quickly, in that regard.

  Fortunately, Joe hadn't pushed the issue. Madeline wasn't sure why, since it certainly wasn't a lack of sexual attraction. As the days had passed and she'd gotten to know him better, she'd decided that the explanation was very simple. Joe was smart enough to know that he wasn't smart about things like that, so he was willing to let her take the lead and set the pace.

  She felt very warm, for a moment, and gave Joe's hand a squeeze.

  Then they reentered the storm.

  "It sure looks impressive," A.J. said. "But it's just a bunch of hot air."

  Helen slapped him playfully.

  "Sorry, I didn't mean to shock you. I was just trying to make a comment about current events."

  "Okay, that's enough," Joe said sternly. "Give him his discharge."

  Madeline snatched her hand away. "God help us! Helen, we're doomed. Months of this, we're facing! Their jokes were bad enough, but now—puns, too?" She almost wailed the last two words.

  Helen shook her head gloomily. "I know. We'll just have to breeze through it."

  Ignoring the aghast look on Madeline's face, the paleontologist leaned forward and asked Bruce: "How far have we got to go?"

  "We're in the home stretch, luv. Judging from the maps and all, we've got about fifty klicks left and we're knocking on the front door."

  "So we'll be there sometime tomorrow?"

  "Right around six, local time."

  "Then day after tomorrow we'll be looking for the base."

  "As long as we don't get in any more trouble. Keep your fingers crossed."

 

    The Grantville Gazette Volumn VI Read onlineThe Grantville Gazette Volumn VIGrantville Gazette, Volume IX Read onlineGrantville Gazette, Volume IXRing of Fire III Read onlineRing of Fire IIIGrantville Gazette-Volume XIII Read onlineGrantville Gazette-Volume XIIIGrantville Gazette V Read onlineGrantville Gazette V1635: The Eastern Front Read online1635: The Eastern FrontRing of Fire Read onlineRing of FireMother of Demons Read onlineMother of Demons1824: The Arkansas War Read online1824: The Arkansas WarGrantville Gazette 43 Read onlineGrantville Gazette 43Forward the Mage Read onlineForward the MageThe World Turned Upside Down Read onlineThe World Turned Upside DownRing of Fire II Read onlineRing of Fire IIBoundary Read onlineBoundaryGrantville Gazette VI Read onlineGrantville Gazette VI1812: The Rivers of War Read online1812: The Rivers of War1633 Read online1633All the Plagues of Hell Read onlineAll the Plagues of HellGrantville Gazette, Volume 7 Read onlineGrantville Gazette, Volume 7Worlds Read onlineWorlds1632 Read online1632The Alexander Inheritance Read onlineThe Alexander InheritanceDiamonds Are Forever Read onlineDiamonds Are ForeverThe Philosophical Strangler Read onlineThe Philosophical StranglerGrantville Gazette, Volume VIII Read onlineGrantville Gazette, Volume VIIIGrantville Gazette-Volume XIV Read onlineGrantville Gazette-Volume XIVGenie Out of the Bottle Read onlineGenie Out of the BottlePyramid Scheme Read onlinePyramid Scheme1636- the China Venture Read online1636- the China VentureGrantville Gazette, Volume XII Read onlineGrantville Gazette, Volume XIIGrantville Gazette, Volume I Read onlineGrantville Gazette, Volume IThe Demons of Constantinople Read onlineThe Demons of ConstantinopleThe Macedonian Hazard Read onlineThe Macedonian Hazard1634- the Galileo Affair Read online1634- the Galileo AffairThe Shaman of Karres Read onlineThe Shaman of Karres1636: The Ottoman Onslaught Read online1636: The Ottoman OnslaughtThe Genie Out of the Vat Read onlineThe Genie Out of the VatThe Grantville Gazette Volumn II Read onlineThe Grantville Gazette Volumn II1636: The Saxon Uprising Read online1636: The Saxon Uprising1634 The Baltic War Read online1634 The Baltic War1636: Mission to the Mughals Read online1636: Mission to the Mughals!632: Joseph Hanauer Read online!632: Joseph HanauerGrantville Gazette-Volume XI Read onlineGrantville Gazette-Volume XI1637: The Peacock Throne Read online1637: The Peacock Throne1636: The China Venture Read online1636: The China VentureThe Rats, the Bats & the Ugly Read onlineThe Rats, the Bats & the UglyGrantville Gazette, Volume X Read onlineGrantville Gazette, Volume XThe Course of Empire Read onlineThe Course of EmpirePyramid Power Read onlinePyramid Power1636: The Devil's Opera Read online1636: The Devil's OperaRing of Fire IV Read onlineRing of Fire IVGrantville Gazette. Volume XX (ring of fire) Read onlineGrantville Gazette. Volume XX (ring of fire)1634: The Baltic War (assiti chards) Read online1634: The Baltic War (assiti chards)The tide of victory b-5 Read onlineThe tide of victory b-51634: The Ram Rebellion Read online1634: The Ram RebellionThe Rats, the Bats and the Ugly trtbav-2 Read onlineThe Rats, the Bats and the Ugly trtbav-2Castaway Resolution Read onlineCastaway ResolutionCouncil of Fire Read onlineCouncil of FireSlow Train to Arcturus Read onlineSlow Train to Arcturus1637_The Volga Rules Read online1637_The Volga RulesBoundary b-1 Read onlineBoundary b-11637: No Peace Beyond the Line Read online1637: No Peace Beyond the LineThe Sorceress of Karres Read onlineThe Sorceress of KarresDestiny's shield b-3 Read onlineDestiny's shield b-3In the Heart of Darkness b-2 Read onlineIn the Heart of Darkness b-2Grantville Gazette.Volume 22 Read onlineGrantville Gazette.Volume 22Carthago Delenda Est э-2 Read onlineCarthago Delenda Est э-21635: The Eastern Front (assiti shards) Read online1635: The Eastern Front (assiti shards)1812-The Rivers of War Read online1812-The Rivers of WarThe Dance of Time b-6 Read onlineThe Dance of Time b-6Belisarius II-Storm at Noontide Read onlineBelisarius II-Storm at NoontideIron Angels Read onlineIron Angels1636:The Saxon Uprising as-11 Read online1636:The Saxon Uprising as-111812: The Rivers of War tog-1 Read online1812: The Rivers of War tog-1Jim Baens Universe-Vol 1 Num 6 Read onlineJim Baens Universe-Vol 1 Num 6Fortune's stroke b-4 Read onlineFortune's stroke b-41637 The Polish Maelstrom Read online1637 The Polish MaelstromThe Shadow of the Lion hoa-1 Read onlineThe Shadow of the Lion hoa-1Grantville Gazette.Volume XVI Read onlineGrantville Gazette.Volume XVI1636:The Kremlin games rof-14 Read online1636:The Kremlin games rof-141824: The Arkansas War tog-2 Read online1824: The Arkansas War tog-2Time spike Read onlineTime spikeJim Baen's Universe-Vol 2 Num 1 Read onlineJim Baen's Universe-Vol 2 Num 1Grantville Gazette.Volume VII Read onlineGrantville Gazette.Volume VII1634: The Ram Rebellion (assiti shards) Read online1634: The Ram Rebellion (assiti shards)Grantville Gazette.Volume XVII (ring of fire) Read onlineGrantville Gazette.Volume XVII (ring of fire)Jim Baens Universe-Vol 2 Num 5 Read onlineJim Baens Universe-Vol 2 Num 51635: The Cannon Law (assiti shards) Read online1635: The Cannon Law (assiti shards)Grantville Gazette. Volume 21 Read onlineGrantville Gazette. Volume 21Rats, Bats and Vats rbav-1 Read onlineRats, Bats and Vats rbav-11636_The Vatican Sanction Read online1636_The Vatican SanctionThe Aethers of Mars Read onlineThe Aethers of MarsJim Baen's Universe Volume 1 Number 5 Read onlineJim Baen's Universe Volume 1 Number 51634: The Bavarian Crisis (assiti chards) Read online1634: The Bavarian Crisis (assiti chards)Grantville Gazette Volume 24 Read onlineGrantville Gazette Volume 24TITLE: Grantville Gazette.Volume XVIII (ring of fire) Read onlineTITLE: Grantville Gazette.Volume XVIII (ring of fire)Ring of fire II (assiti shards) Read onlineRing of fire II (assiti shards)1635:The Dreeson Incident (assiti shards) Read online1635:The Dreeson Incident (assiti shards)Jim Baen's Universe-Vol 2 Num 4 Read onlineJim Baen's Universe-Vol 2 Num 4In the Heart of Darkness Read onlineIn the Heart of DarknessMuch Fall Of Blood hoa-3 Read onlineMuch Fall Of Blood hoa-3