Mars

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Mars Page 51

by Ben Bova


  “No,” he said, more gently. “No, I can’t do that. It would raise suspicions.”

  “You could have a cold, for god’s sake.”

  “And then fly off to Houston?” He smiled without humor. “Half the subcommittee would be on the next plane. Or their aides, at least.”

  “Yeah, maybe,” Edith admitted.

  “Will you promise me not to call anyone, not to break the story?”

  “Can I go to Houston with you?”

  “Yes. Of course.”

  “Okay.”

  “You promise not to contact anyone about this while I am testifying this morning?”

  “We have a deal, don’t we?”

  But Edith was thinking, In Houston I can see how bad it really is, how tough a spot they’ve put Jamie into. An eyewitness account of Alberto Brumado watching as the team on Mars tries to rescue his daughter who’s stuck a thousand kilometers from their base. And sick. I could write my own ticket with that.

  Sick from what? What’s happened to them? To Jamie?

  Inwardly she made up her mind to keep her silence only until she was certain that they were doing everything they could for Jamie and the others. I’ve got to find out how they got into this mess. The minute I find out whose fault it is, then all deals are off.

  This could be even bigger than finding life on Mars: four explorers trapped and sick a thousand kilometers from safety. That’s a real story! You don’t have to be a scientist to get excited about that.

  SOL 38: EVENING

  Tony Reed smiled bitterly as the computer screen scrolled the list from the medical program’s analysis.

  “Just as I told you,” he said to Dr. Yang. “The idiot machine has nothing new to tell us.”

  Sitting beside him at the infirmary desk, Yang Meilin scanned the short list as a woman lost on the desert would search the horizon for an oasis.

  “The answer is here,” she said, barely loud enough for Reed to hear her. “I am certain of it.”

  The anger that Tony had felt earlier was gone now. Yang was not going to upstage him. She was just as bewildered and frustrated as he was. He felt almost sorry for her. Sorry for both of them. The two great medical experts, he said to himself, as stymied as a pair of chimpanzees. Says worlds for the selection board, doesn’t it?

  “I have a feeling,” Yang said, pressing one hand flat against her middle, “that we have seen the answer, but we do not yet recognize it.”

  Reed let a thin sigh escape. “Feelings are one thing,” he said almost gently. “What we need are facts.”

  “The one clear fact that we have,” she said, “is that everyone here on the ground is ill, except you.”

  Tony felt a pang of guilt. “Yes. That’s what’s so damned puzzling about all this, isn’t it?”

  “What are you doing that the others are not?”

  He shook his head. “Not a damned thing, as far as I can tell. I breathe the same air, I eat with them. …”

  “Something in the food?”

  Leaning back in his chair, Tony replied, “I can’t imagine that there is something in my meals that is protecting me from whatever the others have come down with. Or conversely, that their food is tainted in some way and mine just happens not to be.”

  “Vitamin deficiency is on the computer’s list.”

  “Yes, I know.” Some of the old exasperation was creeping back into Tony. “But we’ve checked that out time and again. They all take their vitamin supplements, just as I take mine. It can’t be that.”

  “You take the same pills they take?”

  “Yes, of course.”

  “Everyday?”

  “Yes.”

  Yang lapsed into silence and turned her eyes back to the screen, as if she thought that by staring at it hard enough the answer would come clear.

  Something nagged at Reed’s consciousness. Something peripheral, subliminal. As if they had touched on the answer without knowing it. As if …

  It can’t be the vitamins, he told himself. I take the same dietary supplements that the others do every day. I watch them all swallow them down with their breakfasts every morning. The four in the rover are out of my sight, of course, but I check with them every day.

  Could it be radiation poisoning? Something so subtle that the dosage meters aren’t equipped to detect it? After all, everyone else has been outside the dome much more than I have. I’ve stayed in here while they’ve been out doing their work.

  That couldn’t be it. There’s no strange radiation on Mars. Naguib and the others have been measuring the radiation environment since we landed. And the unmanned probes were measuring it for years before we arrived here.

  Still the unconscious thought pecked at him. Something about the vitamins.

  Reed closed his eyes and envisioned his morning routine. He came to the infirmary and took his own vitamin pills, then went to the galley and made certain that there were enough there for all the others and that they took theirs with their breakfasts. He no longer mixed his morning cocktail; he wanted his head absolutely clear of drugs during this emergency. He personally watched everyone swallow their pills each morning, except for the occasional early bird who finished breakfast before he got to the galley. Since this malady had struck, there had been no one up and stirring earlier than Tony, not even Vosnesensky.

  His eyes suddenly shot to the cabinet where the vitamin bottles stood. Each bottle held five hundred of the ovoid orange pills.

  And locked in his medicine chest was a smaller bottle, the one he took his own pills from.

  “Oh no,” he groaned.

  Yang jerked from her self-absorbed study as if Reed had slapped her. “What? What did you say?”

  “I don’t take my vitamin pills from the same jar as the others.”

  She looked hard at him. “Does that make a difference?”

  “It shouldn’t … except—”

  Yang Meilin watched him expectantly. Tony could feel the anticipation radiating from her tense body.

  “That first jar there,” he pointed to the glass-fronted cabinet, “was open when the meteor strike punctured the dome. The other jars have never been opened; they’re still in their original seals.”

  Tony felt his face flush deeply with guilt. When the meteoroid had punctured the dome and all the alarms had gone off, that one big jar had been sitting open on his desk. He had knocked the bottle over in his rush to get out of the infirmary and into his hard suit. Afterward, when the emergency was over, he had picked up the pills scattered across his desktop and replaced them in the same bottle, discarding only those he had found on the floor.

  Nothing wrong with them, he had told himself. Then he had transferred the pills to the smaller bottles that fit into the galley shelves.

  His own supply of vitamin supplement was already in a smaller bottle, safely sealed in his medicine cabinet along with his amphetamines and other drugs. That medicine cabinet was not only locked; it was airtight.

  “Their pills were exposed to pure oxygen,” he muttered.

  Yang put a hand to her lips.

  “Yes,” Reed said, putting the scenario together as he spoke, “the dome was pressurized with pure oxygen for almost thirty-six hours. It took a couple of days before we pulled enough nitrogen from the air outside to make an Earth-normal mixture in here again.”

  “Pure oxygen …”

  “Pure oxygen will destroy ascorbic acid,” Reed said absently, as if recalling some obscure test question from a college examination.

  “The pills they are taking have no vitamin C in them.”

  “Right. They’ve all come down with scurvy.”

  “Scurvy!” Yang immediately grabbed the computer keyboard and typed furiously for a few moments. The machine hummed to itself, while Tony writhed inwardly in mental agony. My fault. Every bit of it is my own stupid fault.

  “It correlates,” Yang said, eyeing the new data displayed on the computer screen. “They all show the symptoms of scurvy.”

&nb
sp; Reed sat back in his chair feeling as weak and hollow as if he had come down with the affliction himself. Scurvy. And it’s all my fault. If only I had seen it earlier. Of course it had to be that. The oxygen, the pills …

  He looked up and saw that Yang was striding through the infirmary doorway.

  “Where are you going?” Tony called to her as he scrambled from behind his desk.

  “Wardroom,” she answered over her shoulder. Little though she was she marched like a trained soldier, arms swinging, boots clacking on the plastic floor. Tony hurried to catch up with her.

  “Looking for anyone in particular?” he asked.

  “The ground team leader. Vosnesensky.”

  “Ah. Yes, of course.”

  “You have bottles of vitamins that have not been unsealed?” Yang asked. “Not contaminated by oxygen?”

  “Yes,” he answered. “Fifteen hundred of them, in three sealed bottles.”

  Monique Bonnet was at the wardroom table with Paul Abell and Mironov, all three of them slumped wearily.

  “Where is the group leader?” Yang asked.

  Monique gave an exhausted sigh, then replied, “I believe he is at the communications console.”

  Yang headed off for the comm console without another word, Reed trailing right behind her. She must be hell on wheels in a hospital, the Englishman thought. God help the man or woman who gets in her way!

  Vosnesensky looked as if he were ready to drop off to sleep. He sagged in the chair; his face looked puffy, red eyed, bleary. Connors’s black features in the communications screen looked no better; worse, in fact.

  “I require your cooperation,” Yang said without preamble.

  Vosnesensky turned in his chair, started to push himself to his feet, then gave it up and simply sat there looking at the Chinese physician, almost eye to eye.

  “You must begin taking large doses of vitamins, now, immediately.”

  “Vitamins?” Vosnesensky was saying dully. “But we take vitamins. We take them every day, on the regular schedule.”

  “They are contaminated,” Yang said.

  Vosnesensky’s eyes shifted to Reed.

  “It’s true, Mikhail Andreivitch,” said Tony. “They were bathed in oxygen after the meteor hit. They’re practically useless.”

  “But what has that to do …?”

  “Scurvy,” said Yang.

  “Scurvy?”

  “That’s right,” Reed said. “You’ve all come down with scurvy from lack of vitamin C.”

  Silently he added, Because of me. Because I panicked. Because I didn’t want to see the truth. I’m a murderer. That’s what I am.

  SOL 39: MORNING

  “Vitamin deficiency?”

  The words woke Jamie. He had been sleeping dreamlessly when Connors’s voice, shrilly high-pitched, cut through to his conscious mind.

  Untangling himself from the thin blanket, Jamie slithered out of his bunk and padded in his stockinged feet forward to the cockpit. The rover felt shivering cold. Connors was talking to Vosnesensky. Both men looked utterly drained, but there was a strange grin on the Russian’s image on the screen.

  “We have scurvy,” Vosnesensky said, almost as if it were a joke.

  “Scurvy?”

  “It is definite. Yang’s tests were analyzed during the night. Our vitamin pills have been poisoned—no, that is not the correct word. The vitamin C in the pills has been deactivated because it was exposed to oxygen after the meteorite hit. Without sufficient vitamin C we have all come down with scurvy.”

  Jamie slumped into the right-hand seat. “You mean like old-time sailors who’ve been at sea too long?”

  “That’s why they called the Brits ‘limeys,’” Connors said, his voice still echoing disbelief. “Because they carried limes and other fresh fruits aboard their ships once they figured out what caused scurvy.”

  “Scurvy,” Jamie mumbled. “Scurvy.”

  “According to Dr. Yang it will take several days before the symptoms go away,” Vosnesensky said.

  “What about us?” Connors asked.

  The Russian’s grin disappeared like a light winking off. “So far, Kaliningrad has forbidden a rescue flight from orbit. Not until they make a decision.”

  “We’re stuck here until they make up their minds?” Connors said it as if it were equivalent to a death sentence.

  “And our illness will get worse, not better. We can barely stand on our feet, as it is,” Jamie said.

  “There is the backup rover,” Vosnesensky said.

  “But who’s going to drive it?” Connors asked. “You’re all just as sick as we are.”

  “I will.”

  “You can’t do that,” Jamie said. “You’re too sick to risk it.”

  Vosnesensky’s grin reappeared, faintly. “I will drive the rover. I will gobble vitamin capsules by the kilogram. I will arrive in your vicinity in no more than thirty-six hours.”

  Despite his exhaustion, Jamie understood the reason behind Mikhail’s smile. “Ivshenko and Zieman are at the dome now. You’ll take them with you. They’re both healthy.”

  The Russian bowed his head slightly in acknowledgment. “Yes, I will bring Ivshenko with me. We will ride to your rescue like the Seventh Cavalry in your western cinemas.”

  Connors muttered, “Wasn’t that Custer’s outfit?”

  Vosnesensky had not made up his mind until he had seen their faces. Connors looked gaunt, dying. Waterman’s broad cheekbones were jutting out, the flesh of his face was pulled taut, his eyes were red and watery.

  There is nothing else to do, Vosnesensky told himself. I will pilot the rover to them and bring them back here to the dome. I will carry a supply of vitamins and food for them. Ivshenko will go with me, and Zieman will remain here. It is all within mission regulations; no safety measures will be broken.

  His mind made up, he called Dr. Li up in Mars 2 and informed him of the decision.

  Li looked startled. “You are in no condition to make such a traverse.”

  Vosnesensky said stubbornly, “Ivshenko is. And I am quite capable of sitting in a chair and steering the vehicle. We will detach the middle section and take only the command module and the logistics module. I will be in constant communication with Dr. Yang and Dr. Reed. I will take whatever medications they prescribe.”

  “Kaliningrad will refuse to permit it,” Li’s image on the screen said. “They have decided that the eight of you in the dome are more important than the four in the rover.”

  “The four in the rover have the specimens of Martian organisms with them,” Vosnesensky pointed out.

  Li shook his head. “The decision has been made to evacuate you from the dome first, and then to see if it is possible to rescue the traverse team.”

  “In that case,” Vosnesensky said, “I will go without Kaliningrad’s permission. Or yours.”

  Li’s eyes widened. “Do you realize what you are saying?”

  Feeling all the enduring strength of Mother Russia surging through his veins, Vosnesensky said, “Certainly I do, Dr. Li. But you must realize what you are saying. As expedition commander your responsibilities are huge, heavier than I would want to bear. But I would not willingly allow Kaliningrad or god almighty to write off four of my comrades.”

  “The safety of your remaining team members is the most important issue now.”

  “Perhaps so. I am merely the leader of this ground team. I do not have to worry about the mission controllers or the politicians above them. My responsibility is to the men and women here on the surface of Mars. All of them, including the four stranded out there in the canyon.”

  “You would be risking your life and the lives of whoever you take with you,” Li said.

  “Ivshenko will be happy to volunteer, doctor. I will see to that, never fear. We will observe all the safety regulations.”

  “I cannot grant you permission for this!”

  “Yes, I understand. That is your responsibility. Mine is to my comrades.”

&
nbsp; “Let me discuss it with Kaliningrad.”

  Vosnesensky almost laughed. “By the time the mission controllers finish arguing we will all be ready for our pensions—or our funerals. No, this must be done now, not two days from now.”

  Li licked his lips. In the comm screen he suddenly looked to Vosnesensky like a startled rabbit staring at him, ready to dart to safety. For long moments the two men stared at each other wordlessly.

  Finally Li said, “Good luck.”

  Vosnesensky gathered the eleven men and women together in the wardroom and announced his decision.

  “Ivshenko and I will drive the second rover to the canyon and pick up Waterman’s team. We will be gone for three days—four, maximum.”

  The others said nothing. Standing in a loose semicircle before the cosmonaut, they looked at one another uneasily, fleet shifting, eyes questioning.

  Finally Dr. Yang said, “You are not in physical condition to make such a journey.”

  “It is my responsibility,” Vosnesensky said. “Li and the mission controllers want to evacuate us back to orbit before trying to rescue the excursion team. I have decided otherwise. I must go. Me, myself.”

  “But you are still ill,” said Yang. “The effects of scurvy will linger for many days. You will be weak and debilitated. …”

  “Dmitri Iosifovitch will do all the work; I will merely take the glory.”

  They laughed, nervously.

  “I’ll go with you,” said Tony Reed.

  “You? No.”

  “I must,” Reed insisted.

  “There is no need for you to come,” Vosnesensky said. “It is an unnecessary risk.”

  Reed stepped up to confront the Russian. “It is my responsibility to go,” he said quietly, “just as it is yours.”

  Vosnesensky shook his head stubbornly. “We will not need a physician on board the rover. You will be in touch with us over the comm link.”

  “Don’t you understand?” Reed burst out. Turning to face the others, “Don’t any of you understand? It’s my fault! The reason you all got sick is my fault! My doing! I fouled up the vitamin pills. Then I failed to see what was happening to you.”

 

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