by John Olson
* * *
Friday, July 4, Year Three, 12:30 P.M.
Nate
The instant vox went off, Mission Control fell silent. Nate stood up from his chair. Of all the tomfool, crack-headed stunts ... What had gotten into Kaggo?
A network exec rushed forward. “What’s going on?” he demanded. “Get the sound back on right away—”
“Quiet!” Josh pointed at the big screen.
Bob and Valkerie stood helmet to helmet in a ring of Martian stones.
“They’re talking,” Josh exclaimed. “And if I know Kaggo ...”
Nate stared up at the screen. Kaggo, you wouldn’t ...
Bob stepped back from Valkerie, took her hand in his, and knelt down on one knee.
From somewhere nearby, EECOM squealed.
Book 2: The Fifth Man
Technical Note
The Martian day—known as a sol—is 24 hours, 39 minutes, 35.244 seconds. Approximately. Clocks on on the Ares 10 mission are set to run slightly slower than on Earth, so that they tick off twenty‑four Martian hours in each sol.
This causes times on Earth and Mars to be continuously getting out of sync with each other in a very annoying way. Each sol, astronauts on Mars will lose about thirty‑nine Earth minutes relative to Mission Control, and so about once every thirty‑seven days, they will have to drop a sol from their calendar in order to stay roughly even with the Earth calendar.
In this book, dates and days of the week refer to the Earth calendar, whereas clock times are local—either Houston time or Martian local time as observed at base camp. We have sited the Ares mission base camp at 30° south latitude, 95° east longitude—within easy rover distance of at least six geologically distinct and interesting regions, but more than 1100 miles from the massive underground ice ocean near the Martian south pole.
We apologize for being compulsively nerdy about the subject of timekeeping. And much else. Undoubtedly, we are two sick gentlemen with too much time on our hands.
Who is the third who walks always beside you?
When I count, there are only you and I together
But when I look ahead up the white road
There is always another one walking beside you
Gliding wrapt in a brown mantle, hooded
I do not know whether a man or a woman
—But who is that on the other side of you?
T. S. Eliot, The Wasteland
Part 1: The Fifth Day
Sometimes I fancied it must be the devil, and reason joined in with me upon this supposition, for how should any other thing in human shape come into the place? Where was the vessel that brought them? What marks were there of any other footstep? And how was it possible a man should come there?
Daniel Defoe, Robinson Crusoe
Chapter One
Monday, March 16, 3:45 p.m., Mars Local Time
Valkerie
WATER. VALKERIE JANSEN FORCED ONE foot in front of the other, a weary survivor on a death march across a dry and barren planet. Water. Valkerie’s soul cried out for it. A patch of frost. A dark stain in the dust. Subterranean ice ...
Dry dust coated her visor—red streaks across a blur of powder‑white scuffs. The grit was everywhere. Valkerie could taste it, acrid and dry in the filtered air she breathed. She could feel it grinding in the joints of her EVA suit, eating deeper and deeper into the fragile seals that stood between her and death.
She plodded to the edge of a deep canyon and scanned the rocky walls below.
Heavily shadowed grooves started at a point a hundred meters below her and snaked their way down the rocky walls, dividing into smaller and smaller subbranches.
Weeping fissures. They looked so promising, so much like erosion gullies back on Earth. But where was the water? She and Lex had searched hundreds of fissures, but they were all dry. Dry as ... the rest of Mars.
“Okay, Lex. Here’s another one.” Valkerie bit into the butterfly valve of her water bag and took a reluctant swallow of sweat‑sock‑flavored water.
“How’s it look?” Geologist Alexis Ohta’s voice crackled over the comm speakers.
“Good enough. Pull the rover all the way up.” Valkerie pointed to a line two meters back from the four‑hundred‑meter drop‑off.
The six‑ton rover inched forward, climbing over rocks and small boulders like a monster truck at a redneck fair. Only in this case the rover was more of a monster minivan—with a laboratory, airlock, and bunks to sleep four.
“Okay, that’s good.” Valkerie waved at the rover’s gold‑tinted windshield.
The rover shuddered to a halt and sank down on its hydraulic suspension. “I’ve got this one.” Lex’s voice sounded in Valkerie’s helmet, followed by bumpings and thumpings as she made her way to the back of the rover. “Out in a second.”
Valkerie flipped open an external storage hatch and pulled out a tool bag.
The puttering of the compressor motors faded to nothing as Lex evacuated the airlock.
Nine months on Mars and already the pump valves were wheezing. She’d have to mention that to Bob—
No. Valkerie took a deep breath. She could look at them herself. Bob had enough to worry about right now. The last thing he needed was more whining from her. She’d caused him enough pain already.
A gloved hand clasped Valkerie’s shoulder. “You okay?”
Valkerie rocked back and forth in a slow nod. “Want the MoleBot?”
Lex shrugged. “Let’s get it out, just in case.”
The two women hoisted the badgerlike digging robot from its bin and eased it to the ground. On Earth, it weighed almost sixty pounds. Here on Mars, barely twenty. Lex strapped the winch controller to her wrist while Valkerie attached the cable to Lex’s rappelling harness.
“Okay, go.” Lex backed toward the drop‑off, pulling the line from the rover’s winch taut.
Valkerie flipped a switch and watched Lex disappear backward over the edge. She stayed by the winch controls, not bothering to watch Lex’s progress. She would call if she needed anything.
Valkerie shifted her weight from one leg to the other and, using the mirror on her wrist, checked the gauge on her chest. One more hour and they’d call it a day. Then home for an obligatory evening of awkwardness. Then tomorrow the whole thing would start over again. Two hundred and ninety‑six days to go. How was she ever going to make it? Bob was so ...
She stomped her foot to shake out a cramp. Didn’t he know what he was doing to her? They were astronauts. They had a job to do. The whole world was watching. NASA hadn’t paid fifty billion dollars so she could ... so she could let her guard down. What a—
“Val!” Lex’s frantic voice blared in Valkerie’s helmet.
Startled, Valkerie peered over the edge. “What’s wrong? Hit another patch of—”
“Send down the mole! And a bigger pick!”
“What? Did you find something?” Valkerie squinted at her friend. “What is it? More sedimentary rock?”
“Salt deposits. I can’t believe it! In a depression. This is ... I mean, it’s a ledge, really. Not very big, but it’s ... Val, I need the brush set and—”
“A depression?” Valkerie’s heart slammed into overdrive. “At the top of the fissure?”
“It only goes back a couple of feet, but it’s crusted with salt deposits and—Val, we don’t have much time. Send down the tools.”
Valkerie scrambled to the side of the rover and pulled out the remote control for the mole. She strapped it to her arm with trembling fingers and worked the miniature joysticks to guide the small robot to the edge of the canyon. A torch, a brush set, more sample bags ... She buckled them to her tool belt and attached lines to her harness ring and the mole. Guiding the robot over the edge, she hit the remote winch controls and followed it down.
“Val, what are you doing? You’re supposed to stay with the rover. If Bob finds out—”
“Bob’s not here.” Valkerie maneuvered the mole alongside Lex and toggled off its winch
control. She let herself continue down a few feet farther and stopped her descent. Lex moved aside to let Valkerie see. A small basaltic overhang overshadowed a scree‑filled depression in the canyon wall. Thick, powdery deposits caked the rocks that filled the shallow groove. Layer upon layer of tan‑and‑rust‑smeared white.
“Did you touch it?” Valkerie searched the deposits for evidence that they had been disturbed.
“I don’t think so. Does it matter?”
“Probably not.” Valkerie pulled the torch off her belt and heated a platinum scoop in its flame until its edges glowed a dull red. She waved it in the thin Martian atmosphere, waiting impatiently for it to cool.
Valkerie extended her arm to Lex. “Get the mole ready. We’re running out of time.”
“What channel is it on?” Lex unfastened the robot controller from Valkerie’s arm and transferred it to her own.
“Three.” Valkerie scooped up a sample of crust and slid it into a collection bottle, then snapped the pen cap off the back of the scoop handle and labeled the bottle. There wouldn’t be anything alive out in the open, exposed to all the peroxide dust and UV radiation, but maybe back behind the loose rubble ... She worked her way back under the overhanging rock, collecting and labeling samples as she went.
“Ready to start digging?” Lex’s voice sounded tense, eager.
“How much time?” Valkerie took the offered pick and started digging back into the loose gravel.
“Thirty‑five minutes ... to zero ...”
And thirty minutes of reserve beyond that. Valkerie completed Lex’s thought and swung the pick harder, pulling out the loose debris with her left hand. She scooped a sample into a vial and kept on digging. If there was anything interesting it would be deeper inside.
“We’ll have to wait until tomorrow. There’s not enough time.” Lex’s voice hung with an unspoken question.
Valkerie dug furiously through the rubble with her shovel. “We’ll use the mole. We’ve got to get behind this regolith.” She swung around on her tether and pulled the dangling robot toward the ledge. “More line.”
Lex lowered the robot and helped Valkerie detach the winch line and position it on the edge. “Okay, stand clear.” Lex flipped a switch on the remote control panel, and the robot churned forward, biting into the mound of loose gravel, pushing the debris backward between its heavy metal treads. Valkerie inched along after the robot, scooping out the rocks that mounded in its wake.
“It’s going to take forever to—”
The robot surged forward and disappeared. Lex whooped in triumph
“Turn it off! Turn it off!” Valkerie yelled into her mike. It was a cavity! The MoleBot had broken through to some kind of cave. She aimed her light into the gloom. The walls and floor of the small tunnel were crusted with glittering white. She couldn’t even see the back. “We’ve got to go in now while it’s fresh. Help me dig out the opening. I’ve got to sterilize.” Valkerie backed out and torched her pick and scoop.
Lex dug furiously to enlarge the opening.
Valkerie looked at her watch. Eighteen minutes to zero. Forty‑eight with their reserves. They didn’t have much time. “That’s enough. I’ve got to go in.”
Lex raked aside two more scoops of scree and moved aside. “Val ... ?”
“Okay, give me some line.” Valkerie stretched out and wormed her way into the constricting tunnel, holding her flashlight and collection kit out in front of her. She took two quick scrapings and wriggled on her belly, working her life support backpack through the narrow passage.
When she came to the mole, she pushed it aside and pointed her flashlight down the dark vent.
Something moved at the end of the tunnel. Something big.
Valkerie sucked in her breath.
“Val, what’s wrong?”
Valkerie probed the darkness, training the trembling beam of light on the point where the passage curved out of view.
Nothing.
She held her breath, afraid to blink. What had she seen? A rolling rock? She raised the flashlight.
A dark shadow leaped down from a protruding rock.
“Val, are you okay? What’s happening?”
“Sorry, I’m okay. Got spooked by a shadow, that’s all.” Valkerie forced a laugh.
“Well, you’d better hurry. We’re running out of time. Fifteen minutes to reserves.”
“Okay. Copy.” Valkerie pushed the mole ahead of her and wormed her way forward. The best samples would be deeper. She swept the walls with her light, but her eyes kept darting back to the end of the vent. Then she saw it—milky pink striations on an outcropping of white, just beyond the overhanging rock. She tried to duck beneath the jagged protrusion, but her helmet was too big.
“Thirteen minutes, Val!”
“I found something. Just a little bit farther.” Valkerie reached out, stretching out as far as she could reach with her pick. Too far. She tried to back up.
Stuck!
A surge of electric panic shot down her spine. She pushed harder. Harder. “Lex!”
“What’s wrong?”
The alarm in Lex’s voice shamed Valkerie to stillness. She squeezed her eyes tight and forced herself to take a deep breath. Then, undulating gently from side to side, she inched her way backward. Just enough to let her get a good shot at the stony spike that barred her way.
“Talk to me, Val. I want to hear you talking right now.”
“It’s okay now. I’m fine.” Valkerie swung at the protrusion. Her pick only struck a glancing blow, but the rock seemed to move. Maybe it was loose. She swung again, this time higher up, where it disappeared into the ceiling. The pick embedded itself into soft dirt. She pried her fingers into the scar and pulled on the rock with all her might. It swung down reluctantly with a drizzle of dirt and sand.
Then, with a shudder, a shower of gravel pelted her body, pinning her to the ground.
She was trapped.
* * *
Monday, March 16, 4:15 p.m., Mars Local Time
Bob
Heavy breathing—at first faint and irregular, then swelling to fill his helmet—sounded in Bob Kaganovski’s earphones, washing away the sound of his own breathing with its insistent roar.
Bob ran his fingers along a row of long, irregular scratches in one of the struts at the base of the Mars Ascent Vehicle. Where had those marks come from?
He caught movement out of the corner of his eye—a white flash against the rust‑colored backdrop of low hills.
“Kennedy?” Bob spun around and searched the Martian terrain, squinting through his dust‑streaked visor.
Nothing.
Great, I’m going nuts. Seeing things.
“Commander?” Bob shook his head. Where could Kennedy Hampton have gone? He had been standing next to Bob just a second ago—or had it been more like half an hour? Repairs to the ISRU fuel factory had taken longer than expected. He tried to think back, but couldn’t say for sure when he’d seen Kennedy last. Could he have gone back to the Hab? Icy fingers crawled up Bob’s spine.
Something was watching him.
Bob whirled to look behind him.
Nothing.
His pulse began notching upward. Relax, Kaggo. You can’t afford another panic attack. He began pacing around the Mars Ascent Vehicle, desperate to ward off the nameless fear that was settling around him like thick fog.
It didn’t work. The tension ratcheted up second by second. Raw fear raced through Bob’s veins—like he was a hobbit facing all nine Nazgul. His heart hammered at his ribs, and the sound of his breathing roared in his helmet.
Bob started to run, tripped, and fell in the dust. He lay there, clutching the cold regolith, gasping.
The fear peaked in one awful Psycho‑shower‑scene burst and then receded.
Slowly, the adrenaline rush ebbed. Bob lay on the ground until his heart had slowed to a decent clackety‑clack. It was his third panic attack this month. There was no reason for it. None at all. If he told anyone
...
But what if he didn’t tell anyone? What if it got worse? What if he did something crazy? What if he went stark‑barking mad and walked off a cliff?
The chill of the Martian surface penetrated to his marrow.
Bob pushed himself to all fours, then staggered to his feet.
He had to tell someone.
He didn’t dare tell anyone.
“Hey, Kennedy, where are you?” Bob’s voice sounded weak inside his helmet. Get a grip, Kaggo.
“I’m up in the MAV doing a systems check. I told you that.”
You did not. Bob bit his tongue. The last thing he wanted to do was to get in an argument with the Hampster.
“So what seems to be the problem down there?” Kennedy’s Southern‑gentleman voice. If that was supposed to be reassuring, it wasn’t working.
“I, uh ... I need you to look at something down here.” Bob forced the tension from his voice. “It’s kind of important.”
“All right. All right. You’d think I could leave you alone for five minutes without the world coming to an end.”
Bob clenched his teeth to keep from screaming at Kennedy and checked his watch. 4:30. Only two more hours of oxygen left in his backpack. Pacing back and forth, he tried to stamp some warmth into his toes. The heat in his EVA suit was turned up to max, but his feet were freezing. He glanced up at the sky. A too small, too yellow sun pierced the peach‑colored haze. It was almost minus twenty degrees Celsius outside—balmy by Mars standards. Why was he still so cold?
“See? That wasn’t so bad.” Kennedy’s voice blared in Bob’s ears.
Bob turned to look up at the MAV. Kennedy was standing at the top of the stairs, just outside the small capsule, spinning the wheel that locked down the hatch. Come January, they’d all climb in there and blast off into Mars orbit, where they’d link up with the Earth Return Vehicle for their long trip home. It couldn’t happen soon enough.