Read Mars Life Online

Authors: Ben Bova

Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fantasy

Mars Life (6 page)

BOOK: Mars Life
2.3Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads
TITHONIUM BASE: THE FOSSIL
Nearly everyone in the base crowded around the big stereo table. Ordinarily used to show three-dimensional views of Martian terrain, now it was a blank, unlit white—with the palm-sized fossil vertebra resting in front of Carter Carleton. It was light gray, the color of ashes; bits of dirt still clung to it here and there.
Carleton surveyed their eager faces as they pressed close, felt the heat of their bodies, the scent of their excitement. Directly across the table from him stood Chang Laodong, the mission director, bald and dour in his dumpy-looking blue coveralls with their mandarin collar, looking, as usual, as if he’d been sucking on a lemon.
Trying to suppress the supreme delight of this moment, Carleton spread his hands and, smiling, said, “Well, it’s a vertebra. No doubt of it.”
Chang forced a pale smile. “We must obtain verification of your identification from qualified paleontologists.”
Nodding, Carleton replied, “I’ve already sent stereo images of the fossil to half a dozen of the top universities.”
“And to program headquarters in New Mexico?”
“Of course,” Carleton replied. In his excitement he hadn’t initially thought about Waterman, back in Albuquerque, but then Doreen had reminded him of the mission protocol.
Chang stared hard at the fossil, as if he could force it to give information by sheer willpower.
“It certainly looks like a vertebra,” said Kalman Torok, running a hand through his thick mop of hair. “See the ridges?”
“And the central cavity where the spinal cord runs through,” added one of the other biologists.
“What kind of an animal is it from?” someone asked.
“Who the hell knows? This is all brand-new territory!”
“From what I know of physiology,” Carleton said slowly, deliberately working to keep his voice calm, “this looks like it came from a quadruped. Bipedal vertebrae don’t have such thick walls.”
“Then it’s not from a Martian. One of the intelligent species, I mean.”
“How do you know?”
“If it’s not bipedal — “
“Intelligent species don’t have to be bipedal.”
WASHINGTON, D.C.: REFLECTING POOL
Jamie, you can’t just barge into the Oval Office,” said Francisco Delgado, the president’s science advisor. “Hell, I haven’t seen her myself in three weeks.”
Delgado was a compactly built man with the physique of a former athlete who had gone soft. His brown-skinned face was starting to show jowls, although his hair was still dark and thick, as was his heavy brush of a moustache. He wore a dark gray business suit with a lighter gray sweater beneath its jacket. Jamie had known him since Delgado had been a biology professor from the University of California at Santa Cruz, and a consultant to the crew selection committee for the Second Mars Expedition.
Dressed in stiffly new jeans and a pullover under an old, thin blue windbreaker, Jamie was walking with the science advisor along the Reflecting Pool between the phallic spire of the Washington Monument and the Athenian harmony of the Lincoln Memorial. When Jamie had phoned from Boston to ask to see him, Delgado had suggested a breakfast meeting. Jamie was surprised that breakfast turned out to be a sweet bun and a plastic cup of coffee purchased from a street vendor.
It was a chilly morning, gray, with a hint of rain in the humid air. Only a few tourists were meandering by this early in the day, many of them pushing baby carriages, looking cold and unhappy with the weather.
Delgado walked briskly, paper-wrapped bun in one hand, coffee cup in the other. Jamie kept pace with him and within a few minutes he no longer felt chilled: in fact, Jamie wished he had a hand free to unzip his windbreaker.
“I need to talk to her,” he said. “This new discovery changes everything.”
The science advisor shook his head as he munched on his breakfast bun. “It doesn’t really change a damned thing, Jamie. They’re already talking about reducing the budget for the National Science Foundation.”
“But that’s where most of the university grants come from!”
“Don’t I know it.”
“Cut off the NSF funds and the universities won’t be able to support their work on Mars.”
“Well, that’s where the battle line is now. That’s what I’m fighting to protect.”
Jamie looked into Delgado’s troubled eyes and realized this man was on his side, but struggling against tremendous forces.
“What can I do to help?” he asked.
“Not a hell of a lot, Jamie. They’re not interested in Mars.”
“Let me talk to the president,” Jamie begged. “Maybe I can make her see the situation more clearly. Maybe I—”
“She won’t see you,” Delgado snapped, his tone hardening. “She can’t afford to be seen with you.”
“Can’t afford . . . ?”
“Look: she was elected by a paper-thin majority and now she’s facing the off-year elections with everybody blaming her for the greenhouse floods and anything else that’s happened during her first two years. Those Bible-thumping New Morality zealots already control the House of Representatives. By November they’ll have the majority in the Senate!”
“So she can’t afford to antagonize them, is that it?” Jamie asked.
Delgado turned on his heel and strode away. Crumpling the empty wrapper in one hand while he gulped the last of his coffee, he walked up to a trash receptacle and dumped both. Jamie followed him and did the same.
Over his shoulder, Delgado said, “Come with me, Jamie. There’s something I want to show you. Something you need to see.”
Ignoring the line of taxicabs parked along Constitution Avenue, Delgado hurried up toward the Ellipse. At first Jamie thought they were going to the White House after all, but Delgado veered off at Seventeenth Street and marched Jamie into a glass-walled office building. There was no plaque on the entrance, no sign announcing what the building was or which government agency might be housed in it.
Puffing slightly from the pace the science advisor set, Jamie followed Delgado through the inevitable security checkpoint in the quiet, nearly empty lobby. After they went through the metal detector a sullen-looking overweight guard in a blue National Security Agency uniform handed them identification badges. Jamie eyed the heavy black pistol holstered on the guard’s hip as he clipped his badge onto the front of his windbreaker. Delgado led Jamie into a waiting elevator.
“What is this place?” Jamie asked as the elevator doors closed. To his surprise, it went down, not up.
“It’s a new climatology facility,” the science advisor answered.
“Why-”
“There’s something you’ve got to see. Something that just might put things into the proper perspective for you.”
The elevator went down four levels, then stopped with a lurch. The doors slid open.
There were more people in the corridor down at this level than there had been in the lobby. Still, the men and women seemed to Jamie to be moving at a leisurely pace. Government employees, Jamie thought.
The smooth cream-colored paneling of the corridor was set with a series of doors, all of them blank except for five-digit numbers stenciled on them. Mounted beside each door was a small keypad. Delgado walked Jamie to the end of the corridor and tapped out a security code on the pad next to its double doors. They slid open noiselessly.
Jamie followed the science advisor into a darkened room, lit only by the giant display screens that filled three of the walls. People sat at what looked to Jamie like electronics consoles. The place reminded him of a NASA mission control center, except that the usual crackle of tense excitement was missing.
The wall displays were electronic maps, Jamie saw. He recognized satellite views of the continental United States, Europe, Latin America.
Delgado walked him through the consoles to the display of the United States.
“Take a good look,” said the science advisor. “This is a real-time display, with the cloud cover removed.”
Jamie recognized the image, although as he stared at it he realized it looked slightly wrong, subtly different from the maps he was accustomed to.
Pointing with an outstretched arm, Delgado said, “We’re holding our own along the East Coast, pretty much, although the dams and flood control systems have cost us so much the federal budget’ll be in the red for generations to come.”
That’s why Washington isn’t under water, Jamie realized.
Delgado went on, “But take a look at the Gulf of Mexico. Look at Florida. See how the sea level is moving in.”
Jamie could see that the coastline he was familiar with was no longer there. The Gulf of Mexico was encroaching from Texas to the tip of Florida. He couldn’t find Galveston. Miami was an island, surrounded by the Atlantic.
“That’s the way it is today,” Delgado said, his voice grim. “Now see what happens in five years.”
The image shifted. Most of Florida disappeared under water. The Mississippi River swelled into a connected series of lakes that swallowed entire cities. The Gulf of Mexico grew noticeably larger and covered most of Louisiana.
“That’s what we’re up against, Jamie. And it’s not going to stop. The Arctic is melting down! So’s the Antarctic. Fresh water runoff from Greenland will interrupt the Gulf Stream in another couple of decades. Maybe sooner. When the Stream shuts down, Europe goes into the deep freeze.”
In the greenish light from the wall displays Delgado’s face looked splotched, ghastly. Jamie heard the bitterness in his voice, the anger.
“We’re facing major flooding of the country’s heartland. People in the Pentagon are talking about marching into Canada to take their wheat belt, for god’s sakes! And maybe a new Ice Age to top it all off!”
Jamie stared at him in silence.
“And you want to spend money on frigging Mars? You expect the president to give you a Christmas present, all wrapped up in a bow? Forget it!”
With a silent shake of his head Jamie turned away and started for the door. I won’t forget it, he said to himself. I can’t.
TITHONIUM BASE: CONFLICT
Chang Laodong looked distinctly uncomfortable as he sat behind his desk facing Carter Carleton. The mission director’s office was small but three of its four walls were covered with smart screens that displayed treasures of Chinese art: silk paintings of misty mountain scenes, statues of powerful arch-necked horses, the inevitable portraits of Buddha and Mao. Otherwise the office was strictly utilitarian, with only Chang’s desk, the chair before it, and a sofa and low table along one wall, flanked by two more small chairs.
As always, Chang was wearing high-collared blue coveralls. He had summoned Carleton to his office to discuss the anthropologist’s demand for field workers to help excavate the village site. In his mind’s eye, the mission director saw all his carefully prepared work schedules being torn apart, his meticulous plans being thrown into chaos.
Two hundred and forty-two men and women were based here at Tithonium, he knew. Biologists studying endolithic lichen and underground bacteria. Geologists studying satellite data of south polar cap melting. Atmospheric physicists investigating decline of moisture in atmosphere. Paleontologists searching for more rock dwellings along the walls of Grand Canyon. And the geysers: spurts of liquid water bursting out of ground. What is the heat source that liquefies permafrost? That is important!
All my responsibility, Chang told himself. All on my shoulders. Their work depends on my leadership, my ability to organize them properly, to bring their work into smooth, harmonious totality.
And this one stubborn anthropologist who’s made a lucky discovery. He sits there smiling, handsome as a video star. What does he care how he upsets my plans? He thinks he has the upper hand over me.
Chang forced a smile. “There is great excitement Earthside over your discovery,” he began.
“Yes,” said Carleton, his own smile broadening. “I’ve received several dozen messages from all over the world. Even China.”
Chang closed his eyes slowly, a tactic he used when he did not want to reveal his inner thoughts. He felt a surge of anger at this upstart who was wrecking his schedules, who was threatening to wrest control of this operation from his hands.
Carleton thought of a lizard basking on a sunny rock as he waited for Chang to open his eyes again. And his mouth.
“Waterman urges me to provide you with all the assistance you may require,” Chang said at last, his eyes still closed.
“I’m glad to hear it.”
Snapping his eyes open, Chang added, “He also tells me that the United States government is canceling all its funding for our operation. We may be forced to abandon our work here and return to Earth.”
Carleton’s head flicked back as if he’d been slapped. Good! Chang thought. Let him understand the consequences.
“We can’t stop the work here!” the anthropologist said. “Hell, we’ve just started.”
“I agree with your sentiment,” said Chang. “But if the Foundation cannot raise enough money to replace funds that the American government is withdrawing, we will be forced to go home.”
“Waterman won’t let that happen. He’ll figure out a way.”
“Let us hope so. In meantime, there is the question of how to adequately assist you in your work.”
“I’ve got plenty of volunteers.”
Chang shook his head slowly. “I cannot allow staff personnel to work for you on a volunteer basis. They are already working eight to twelve hours a day on their assigned duties. More, in many cases.”
“But if they want to — “
“Their eagerness to help you outweighs their common sense. They cannot help you with your digging for several hours each day and still work effectively at their regular tasks. Productivity will decline. People will fall asleep on their jobs. There will be accidents, dangerous accidents.”
Carleton started to reply, hesitated, then offered, “What about the team coming back from Hellas Base? They’re supposed to be shipped back to Earth. What if some of them volunteered to work with me full time?”
“Highly trained geologists and biologists, slaving like coolies in that pit of yours?”
His smile turning almost into a smirk, Carleton replied, “Dr. Chang, may I remind you that I’m a highly trained anthropologist and I’ve been slaving like a coolie for months. By myself. Now I need help, and your superiors Earthside agree that you should provide it to me.”
Chang’s self-discipline snapped. “May I remind you that you are a fugitive from very serious criminal charges on Earth!”
Carleton’s smile evaporated. “Those charges are baseless and you know it.”
“I know that the charges have never been settled. We took you into our program and allowed you to come to Mars despite them.”
Grimly, Carleton said, “That’s got nothing to do with the question at hand. Will you allow me to use some of the people returning from the Hellas base?”
Chang closed his eyes again, thinking, It is a good stratagem. People returning from Hellas are due to be shipped home. A few of them can stay here at Tithonium and work with him. Waterman is urging me to help him. This is how to do that without wrecking all our other work.
“Well?” Carleton demanded.
Opening his eyes, Chang said mildly, “You may ask personnel returning from Hellas. If any of them volunteer to remain here instead of returning to Earth, let it be so.”
Carleton took in a deep breath, as if he’d just accomplished an incredibly difficult feat. “Thank you, Dr. Chang,” he said, his voice low.
“How many hands will you need?” Chang asked.
“Six, for now. More than that and we’ll just get in each other’s way. But later on, as things progress. . .”
“Six,” Chang repeated. “We can accommodate six additional people here without straining our resources.”
“Five, actually,” said Carleton. “Ms. McManus has already volunteered to work with me.”
“The nanotechnologist? She has her regular duties.”
“She says she can spend at least half her days working on the excavation.”
Chang couldn’t help asking, “And where will she spend her nights?”
Carleton’s face froze. After several heartbeats he replied tightly, “That’s her business, not yours.”
BOOK: Mars Life
2.3Mb size Format: txt, pdf, ePub
ads

Other books

Shadowlight by Lynn Viehl
Drop Dead Demons by Kirk, A, E
Mute by Piers Anthony
BUY ME by Riley, Alexa
Spells & Sleeping Bags #3 by Sarah Mlynowski
Deadly by Sylvia McDaniel
Why Homer Matters by Adam Nicolson
Killer Career by Mandel, Morgan
A Lady's Secret Weapon by Tracey Devlyn