โIcame to the meeting on time. At least, I thought I did. The email said 12:30. But when I got there, everyone was already seated. And silent. And they were all staring at me.โ
For the time being, we had a media blackout about the accident. The whole world was watching this projectโtheir only hope for salvation. The last thing we needed was for people to know the primary and backup science specialists were dead. Say what you will about the Russians, they know how to keep a secret. All of Baikonur was on lockdown.
The meeting room, a simple trailer the Russians had supplied, had a great view of the launch pad. I could see the Soyuz through the window. Old technology, to be sure, but easily the most reliable launch system ever made.
Stratt and I hadnโt spoken since the night of the explosion. She suddenly had to head up an ad-hoc disaster inquiry. It couldnโt wait until laterโif the accident was caused by some procedure or equipment that was going to be on the mission, we needed to know. I wanted to be involved but she wouldnโt let me. Someone had to keep dealing with various minorย Hail Maryย issues being reported by the ESA team.
Stratt stared right at me. Dimitriย ๏ฌddled with some papersโprobably a design for a spin-drive improvement. Dr. Lokken, theย ๏ฌery Norwegian who designed the centrifuge, drummed herย ๏ฌngers on the table. Dr. Lamai wore her lab coat as always. Her team had perfected a fully automated medical robot and sheโd probably be in line for a Nobel Prize someday. If Earth lived that long. Even Steve Hatch, the crazy Canadian who invented the beetle probes, was present. He, at least, didnโt look awkward. He just typed away on a calculator. He didnโt have papers in front of him. Just the calculator.
Also present were Commander Yรกo and Engineer Ilyukhina. Yรกo looked dour as ever, and Ilyukhina had no drink in her hand.
โAm I late?โย I asked.
โNo, youโre just in time,โย Stratt said.ย โHave a seat.โย I sat in the only empty chair.
โWe think we know what happened at the research center,โย Stratt began.ย โThe whole building is gone, but all their records were electronic and stored on a server that handles all of Baikonur. Fortunately, that server is in the Ground Control Building. Also, DuBoisโbeing DuBoisโkept meticulous notes.โ
She pulled out a paper.ย โAccording to his digital diary, his plan for yesterday was to test an extremely rare failure case that could happen in an Astrophage-powered generator.โ
Ilyukhina shook her head.ย โShould have been me testing this. I am responsible for ship maintenance. DuBois should have asked me.โ
โWhat was he testing, exactly?โย I asked.
Lokken cleared her throat.ย โOne month ago, JAXA discovered a possible failure state for the generator. It uses Astrophage to make heat, which in turn powers a small turbine with state-change material. Old, reliable technology. It runs on a tiny amount of Astrophageโjust twenty individual cells at a time.โ
โThat seems pretty safe,โย I said.
โIt is. But if the moderator system on the generatorโs pump fails,ย andย thereโs an unusually dense clump of Astrophage in the fuel line right at that moment, up to one nanogram of Astrophage could be put into the reaction chamber.โ
โWhat would that do?โ
โNothing. Because the generator also controls the amount of IR light shined on the Astrophage. If the chamber temperature gets too high, the IR lights turn o๏ฌย to let Astrophage calm down. Safe backup system. But there is a possible edge case, extremely unlikely, that a short in this system could make the IR lights turn on at full power and bypass the temperature safety interlock entirely. DuBois wanted to test this very, very unlikely scenario.โ
โSo what did he do?โ
Lokken paused and her lip wobbled a bit. She steeled herself and pressed on.ย โHe got a replica generatorโone of the ones we use for ground testing. He modi๏ฌed the feed pump and IR lights to force that crazy edge case to happen. He wanted to activate an entire nanogram of Astrophage at once and see how it damaged the generator.โ
โWait,โย I said.ย โOne nanogram isnโt enough to blow up a building. At worst it could melt a little bit of metal.โ
โYeah,โย said Lokken. She took a deep breath and let it out slowly.ย โSo you know how we store tiny quantities of Astrophage, right?โ
โSure,โย I said.ย โIn little plastic containers suspended in propylene glycol.โ
She nodded.ย โWhen DuBois requisitioned oneย nanogramย of Astrophage from the research centerโs quartermaster, they gave him oneย milligramย by mistake. And since the containers are the same and the quantities are so small, he and Shapiro had no way of knowing.โ
โOh God.โย I rubbed my eyes.ย โThatโs literally a million times the heat- energy release than they were expecting. It vaporized the building and everyone in it. God.โ
Stratt shu๏ฌed her papers.ย โThe simple truth is this: We just donโt have the procedures or experience to manage Astrophage safely. If you asked for aย ๏ฌrecracker and someone gave you a truck full of plastic explosive, youโd know something was wrong. But the di๏ฌerence between a nanogram and a milligram? Humans just canโt tell.โ
We were all silent for a moment. She was right. Weโd been playing around with Hiroshima-bomb levels of energy like it was nothing. In any other scenario it would have been madness. But we didnโt have a choice.
โSo are we going to delay the launch?โย I asked.
โNo, weโve talked it over and we all agree: We canโt delay theย Hail Maryโs departure. Itโs assembled, tested, fueled, and ready to go.โ
โIt is the orbit,โย Dimitri said.ย โIt is in tight orbit at 51.6 degreesโย inclination so Cape Canaveral and Baikonur can get at it easy. But is also in shallow orbit which is decaying. If it does not set out within next three weeks, we have to send entire mission up just to re-boost it to higher orbit.โ
โTheย Hail Maryย will leave on schedule,โย said Stratt.ย โFive days from now. The crew will have two days of pre๏ฌight checks, so that means the Soyuz has
to launch in three days.โ
โOkay,โย I said.ย โWhat about the science expert? Iโm sure we have hundreds of volunteers all over the world. We can give the selectee a crash course in the science theyโll need to knowโโ
โThe decisionโs been made,โย Stratt said.ย โReally, the decision made itself. Thereโs no time to train a specialist in everything they need to know. Thereโs just too much information and research to learn. Even the most brilliant scientists wouldnโt be able to glean all of it in just three days. And remember, only about one in seven thousand people have the gene combination to be coma-resistant.โ
Right around then I got a sinking feeling.ย โI think I see where this is going.โ
โAs Iโm sure you know by now, your tests came up positive. You are that one in seven thousand.โ
โWelcome to crew!โย Ilyukhina said.
โWait, wait. No.โย I shook my head.ย โThis is insane. Sure, Iโm up to speed on Astrophage, but I donโt knowย anythingย about being an astronaut.โ
โWe will train you as we go.โย Yรกo spoke quietly, but with con๏ฌdence.ย โAnd we will do the hard tasks. You will be utilized only for science.โ
โI just meanโฆcome on! There has to be someone else!โย I looked to Stratt.ย โWhat about Yรกoโs backup? Or Ilyukhinaโs?โ
โTheyโre not biologists,โย said Stratt.ย โTheyโre incredibly skilled people with a nose-to-tail expertise on theย Hail Mary,ย its operations, and how to repair damage. But we canโt train someone in all the cellular biology they need to know in the time we have. It would be like asking the worldโs best structural engineer to do brain surgery. Itโs just not theirย ๏ฌeld.โ
โWhat about other candidates on the list? The ones that didnโt make the original cut?โ
โThereโs no one as quali๏ฌed as you. Frankly, weโre luckyโlucky beyond our wildest dreamsโthat you happen to be coma-resistant. Do you think I kept you on the project for so long because I needed a junior high schoolteacher around?โ
โOhโฆโย I said.
โYou know how the ship works,โย Stratt continued.ย โYou know the science behind Astrophage. You know how to use an EVA suit and all the specialized gear. Youโve been present for every major scienti๏ฌc or strategic discussion weโve had about the ship and its missionโI made sure of it. You have the genes we need, so I madeย damnย sure you had the skills we need. God knows I didnโt want it to come to this, but here we are. Youโve been the tertiary science specialist all along.โ
โN-No, that canโt be right,โย I said.ย โThereโs got to be other people. Much more talented scientists. And, you know, people who actuallyย wantย to go. You must have made a list, right? Whoโs the next candidate after me?โ
Stratt picked up a piece of paper in front of her.ย โAndrea Cรกceres, a distillery worker from Paraguay. Sheโs coma-resistant, and holds a bachelorโs degree in chemistry with a minor in cellular biology. And she volunteered for the mission back during theย ๏ฌrst call for astronauts.โ
โSounds great,โย I said.ย โLetโs give her a call.โ
โBut youโve had years of direct training. You know the ship and the mission inside and out. And youโre a world-leading expert on Astrophage. Weโd only have a few days to get Cรกceres up to speed. You know how I operate, Dr. Grace. More than anyone else. I want to giveย Hail Maryย every possible advantage. And right now, thatโs you.โ
I looked down at the table.ย โBut IโฆI donโt want to dieโฆ.โ โNobody does,โย said Stratt.
โIt must be your decision,โย said Yรกo.ย โI will not have someone on my crew who is there against their will. You must come of your own volition. And if you refuse, we will bring in Ms. Cรกceres and do our best to train her up. But I urge you to say yes. Billions of lives are on the line. Our lives matter little when compared against such tragedy.โ
I put my head in my hands. The tears started to come. Why did this have to happen to me?ย โCan I think about it?โ
โYes,โย Stratt said.ย โBut not for very long. If you say no, we have to get Cรกceres here in a hurry. I want your answer byย ๏ฌveย tonight.โ
I stood and shu๏ฌed out of the room. I donโt think I even said goodbye. Itโs a dark and depressing feeling to have all your closest colleagues get together and decide you should die.
I checked my watchโ12:38ย I had four and a half hours to decide.
โ
The spin drives of theย Hail Maryย are incredibly overpowered for its current mass. When we left Earth, the ship weighed 2.1 million kilogramsโmost of it being fuel. Now the ship only weighs 120,000 kilograms. About one- twentieth its departure weight.
Thanks to theย Hail Maryโs relatively low mass, the scrappy little beetles are able to collectively give me 1.5 gโs of thrust. Except that the ship wasnโt designed to have a bunch of thrust coming in at 45-degree-angle force pushing arbitrary EVA handles on the hull. If weย ๏ฌre up the beetles at full power, theyโll just rip free of the handles and ride o๏ฌย into the Tauset.
Rocky was mindful of that when he zeroed out our rotation. Now we have that under control and I can do EVAs in zero g like God intended. I 3-D print a model of theย Hail Maryโs internal skeleton and give it to Rocky for his perusal. In under an hour, he not only has a solution but has fabricated the xenonite struts to implement it.
So I do another EVA. I add the xenonite supports to the beetles. For once, everything goes according to plan. Rocky assures me that the ship can now handle full thrust from the beetles and I donโt doubt him for a second. The guy knows engineering.
I type in a bunch of calculations into a complicated Excel spreadsheet thatโs probably got errors in it somewhere. It takes me six hours to put together. Iย ๏ฌnally come up with what I think is the right answer. At least, it should put us close enough that we can see theย Blip-A.ย Then we canย ๏ฌne-tune our vectors from there.
โReady?โย I say from the pilot seat.
โReady,โย Rocky says in his bulb. He holds the three control boxes in his hands.
โOkayโฆJohn and Paul to 4.5 percent.โ
โJohn and Paul, 4.5 percent, con๏ฌrmed,โย he says.
Sure, Rocky could have made controls for me to use, but this is better. I have to watch the screen closely and pay attention to our vectors. Best to have
someone give their full attention to the beetles. Besides, Rockyโs a shipโs engineer. Who better to run our makeshift engines?
โJohn and Paul to zero. Ringo to 1.1 percent,โย I say.ย โJohn and Paul zero. Ringo 1.1.โ
We make numerous tweaks to the thrust vectors bit by bit to angle the ship
roughly the direction I want. Weย ๏ฌnally achieve what I hope is the right direction.
โHere goes nothing,โย I say.ย โAll ahead full!โย โJohn, Paul, Ringo 100 percent.โ
Iโm thrown back into my seat as the ship lurches forward, with 1.5 gโs of
gravity taking over as we accelerate in a straight line (maybe) toward theย Blip- Aย (hopefully).
โMaintain thrust for three hours,โย I say.ย โThree hours. I watch engines. You relax.โ
โThanks, but no time for rest. Want to use gravity while I can.โ
โI stay here. Tell me how experiments go.โย โWill do.โ
Iโm shooting for another eleven-day transfer. It takes 130 kilograms of fuel to make that happenโabout a quarter of what the beetles have aboard (if you include George, who is sitting on the lab table full of Astrophage). That should give us enough left over to correct whatever idiotic mistakes I made in my trajectory math.
Weโll get up to cruising speed in three hours, then weโll coast for most of eleven days. I donโt want to deal with spinning up or spinning down the centrifuge. Yes, it can be doneโRocky proved it when he zeroed us out before. But it was a delicate process with lots of guessing and opportunities for spinning out of control. Or worseโgetting the cables tangled up.
So, for the next three hours I have 1.5 gโs to work with. After that itโll be zero g for a while. Time to hit the lab.
I climb down the ladder. My arm hurts. But less than it has. Iโve been changing the bandages every dayโor rather, Dr. Lamaiโs medical marvel machine has been doing it. Thereโs de๏ฌnitely scarring all over the skin. Iโm going to have an ugly arm and shoulder for the rest of my life. But I think the
deeper layers of skin must have survived. If they hadnโt, I probably would have died of gangrene by now. Or Lamaiโs machine would have amputated my arm when I wasnโt looking.
Itโs been a while since I had to deal with1.5 gโs. My legs donโt approve. But Iโm used to this sort of complaint at this point.
I walk to the main lab table, where the Taumoeba experiments are still in progress. Every part of them isย ๏ฌrmly mounted to the table. Just in case we have more unexpected adventures in acceleration. Of course, itโs not like Iโm short on Taumoeba. I have a bunch of themย where my fuel used to be.
I check the Venus experimentย ๏ฌrst. The cooling mechanism whirs slightly, keeping the inside temperature correct for Venusโs extreme upper atmosphere. I originally intended to let the Taumoeba in there incubate for only an hour, but then the lights went o๏ฌย and we had other priorities. So now itโs been four days. If nothing else, theyโve had plenty of time to do their thing.
I gulp. This is an important moment. The small glass slide inside had a one-cell-thick layer of Astrophage. If the Taumoeba are alive and dining on Astrophage, light will be able to get through. The more light I see through that slide, the fewer Astrophage are still alive on it.
I steel myself, take a deep breath, and look inside. Jet-black.
My breathing becomes unsteady. Iย ๏ฌsh aย ๏ฌashlight out of my pocket and shine it from behind. No light gets through at all. My heart sinks.
I sidestep over to the Threeworld Taumoeba experiment. I take a look at the slide in there and see the same thing. Completely black.
Taumoeba canโt survive Venus or Threeworldโs environment. Or, at the very least, they arenโt eating. The pit of my stomach feels like itโs going to melt.
So close! We were so close! We have the answer right here! Taumoeba! A natural predator to the thing thatโs ruining our worlds! And itโs hearty too. It can survive and thrive in my fuel tanks, obviously. But not in Venus or Threeworldโs air. Why the heck not?!
โWhat you see, question?โย Rocky asks.
โFailure,โย I say.ย โBoth experiments. The Taumoeba are all dead.โ
I hear Rocky punch the wall.ย โAnger!โ
โAll this work! All of it for nothing. Nothing!โย I slam myย ๏ฌst to the table.ย โI gave up so much for this! I sacri๏ฌced so much!โ
I hear Rockyโs carapace clunk to the ground in his bulb. A sign of deep depression.
Weโre both quiet for a time; Rocky slumped in his bulb and me with my face buried in my hands.
Finally, I hear a scrape. Itโs Rocky pulling his carapace o๏ฌย theย ๏ฌoor.ย โWe work more,โย he says.ย โWe no give up. We work hard. We are brave.โ
โYeah, I guess so.โ
Iโm not the right guy for this job. Iโm a last-second replacement because the actually quali๏ฌed people blew up. But Iโm here. I may not have all the answers, but Iโm here. I must have volunteered, believing at the time that it was a suicide mission. Doesnโt help Earth, but itโs something.
โ
Strattโs trailer was twice the size of mine. Privileges of rank, I suppose. Though to be fair, she needed the space. She sat at a large table covered in papers. I could see at least six di๏ฌerent languages in four di๏ฌerent alphabets on the paperwork before her, but she didnโt seem to have a problem with any of them.
A Russian soldier stood in one corner of the room. Not exactly at attention, but not relaxed either. There was a chair next to him, but heโd apparently elected to stand.
โHello, Dr. Grace,โย Stratt said without looking up. She pointed to the soldier.ย โThatโs Private Meknikov. Even though we know the explosion was an accident, the Russians arenโt taking any chances.โ
I looked to the soldier.ย โSo heโs here to make sure imaginary terrorists donโt kill you?โ
โSomething like that.โย She looked up.ย โSo. Itโsย ๏ฌve oโclock. Have you made your decision? Are you going to be theย Hail Maryโs science specialist?โ
I sat opposite her. I couldnโt meet her gaze.ย โNo.โย She scowled at me.ย โI see.โ
โItโsโฆyou knowโฆthe kids. I should stay here for the kids.โย I squirmed in my seat.ย โEven if theย Hail Maryย ๏ฌnds the answer, weโre going to have almost thirty years of misery.โ
โUh-huh,โย she said.
โAnd, um, well, Iโm a teacher. I should teach. We need to raise a strong, solid generation of survivors. Right now weโre soft. You, me, the whole Western world. Weโre the result of growing up in unprecedented comfort and stability. Itโs the kids of today thatโll have to make the world of tomorrow work. And theyโre going to inherit a mess. I can really do a lot more by preparing kids for the world thatโs to come. I should stay here on Earth where Iโm needed.โ
โOn Earth,โย she repeated.ย โWhere youโre needed.โ โY-Yeah.โ
โAs opposed to on theย Hail Mary,ย where you could be instrumental in solving the entire problem because youโre completely trained for the task.โ
โItโs not like that,โย I said.ย โI mean. Itโs a little like that. But look, Iโm no good on a crew. Iโm not some intrepid explorer.โ
โOh, I know,โย she said. She clenched herย ๏ฌst and looked to the side for a moment. Then back to me with a burning gaze Iโd never seen before.ย โDr. Grace. Youโre a coward and youโre full of shit.โ
I winced.
โIf you really cared so much about the children, youโd get on that ship without hesitation. You could save billions of them from the apocalypse instead of preparing hundreds of them for it.โ
I shook my head.ย โItโs not about thatโโ
โDo you think I donโt know you, Dr. Grace?!โย she yelled.ย โYouโre a coward and you always have been. You abandoned a promising scienti๏ฌc career because people didnโt like a paper you wrote. You retreated to the safety of children who worship you for being the cool teacher. You donโt have a romantic partner in your life because that would mean you might su๏ฌer heartbreak. You avoid risk like the plague.โ
I stood up.ย โOkay, itโs true! Iโm afraid! I donโt want to die! I worked my ass o๏ฌย on this project and I deserve to live! Iโmย notย going, and thatโsย ๏ฌnal! Get the next person on the listโthat Paraguayan chemist. Sheย wantsย to go!โ
She slammed herย ๏ฌst on the table.ย โI donโt care whoย wantsย to go. I care whoโs most quali๏ฌed! Dr. Grace, Iโm sorry, but you areย goingย on that mission. I know youโre afraid. I know you donโt want to die. But youโre going.โ
โYouโre out of your darn mind. Iโm leaving now.โย I turned to the door.ย โMeknikov!โย she shouted.
The soldier deftly stepped between me and the door. I turned back to her.ย โYou have got to be kidding.โ โIt would have been easier if youโd just said yes.โ
โWhatโs your plan?โย I jerked a thumb at the soldier.ย โHold me at gunpoint for four years during the trip?โ
โYouโll be in a coma during the trip.โ
I tried to dart past Meknikov, but he stopped me with arms of iron. He wasnโt rough about it. He was just monumentally stronger than I was. He held me by the shoulders and faced me toward Stratt.
โThis is crazy!โย I yelled.ย โYรกo will never go for this! He speci๏ฌcally said he doesnโt want anyone on his ship against their will!โ
โYeah, that was a curveball. He is annoyingly honorable,โย Stratt said.
She picked up a checklist that sheโd written in Dutch.ย โFirst, youโre to be held in a cell for the next few days until the launch. Youโll have no communication with anyone. Right before launch, youโll be given a very strong sedative to knock you out and weโll load you into the Soyuz.โ
โDonโt you think Yรกo will be a little suspicious about that?โ
โIโll explain to Commander Yรกo and Specialist Ilyukhina that, due to limited astronaut training, you were worried that youโd panic during the launch so you elected to be unconscious for it. Once aboard theย Hail Mary, Yรกo and Ilyukhina will secure you into your medical bed and start your coma procedure. Theyโll take care of all the pre-launch prep from there. Youโll wake up at Tau Ceti.โ
Theย ๏ฌrst seeds of panic started to grow. This lunacy might actually work.ย โNo! You canโt do that! I wonโt do it! This is insane!โ
She rubbed her eyes.ย โBelieve it or not, Dr. Grace, I kind of like you. I donโt respect you very much, but I do think youโre a fundamentally good man.โ
โEasy for you to say when youโre not the one being murdered! Youโreย murderingย me!โย Tears rolled down my face.ย โI donโt want to die! Donโt send me o๏ฌย to die! Please!โ
She looked pained.ย โI donโt like this any more than you do, Dr. Grace. If itโs any consolation, youโll be hailed as a hero. If Earth survives this, thereโll be statues of you all over the place.โ
โI wonโt do it!โย I choked on bile.ย โIโll sabotage the mission! You kill me?!
Fine! Iโll kill your mission! Iโll scuttle the ship!โ
She shook her head.ย โNo, you wonโt. Thatโs a blu๏ฌ. Like I said, youโre fundamentally a good man. When you wake up, youโll be good and angry. Iโm sure Yรกo and Ilyukhina will be pretty mad about what I did to you too. But in the end, you three will be out there and youโll do your job. Because humanity depends on it. Iโm ninety-nine percent sure youโll do the right thing.โ
โTry me!โย I screamed.ย โGo on! Try me! See what happens!โ
โBut I canโt rely on ninety-nine percent, can I?โย She glanced at her paper again.ย โI always assumed the American CIA would have the best interrogation drugs. But did you know itโs actually the French? Itโs true. Their DGSE has perfected a drug that causes retrograde amnesia that lasts for long periods of time. Not just hours or days, but weeks. They used it during various anti- terror operations. It can be handy for a suspect to forget he was ever interrogated.โ
I stared at her in horror. My throat hurt from yelling.
โYour med bed will give you a nice dose of it before you wake up. You and your crewmates will just assume itโs a side e๏ฌect of the coma. Yรกo and Ilyukhina will explain the mission to you and youโll roll right into getting to work. The French assure me the drug doesnโt erase trained skills, language, or anything like that. By the time your amnesia wears o๏ฌ, you guys might have already sent the beetles back. And if not, my guess is youโll be too far invested in the project to give up.โ
She nodded to Meknikov. He dragged me out the door and frog-walked me down the path.
I craned my neck back toward the door and screamed,ย โYou canโt do this!โ โJust think of the kids, Grace,โย she said from the doorway.ย โAll those kids
youโll be saving. Think of them.โ