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Chapter no 26

Project Hail Mary

โ€ŒIsat in my cell, staring at the wall.โ€Œ

It wasnโ€™t a dingy jail cell or anything. If anything, it looked kind of like a

college dorm room. Painted brick walls, desk, chair, bed, en-suite bathroom, et cetera. But the door was steel and the windows were barred. I wasnโ€™t going anywhere.

Why did the Baikonur launch facility have a jail cell handy? I donโ€™t know.

Ask the Russians.

That launch would be today. Soon, some muscular guards would come through that door along with a doctor. Heโ€™d inject me with something and thatโ€™d be the last time Iโ€™d see Earth.

Almost on cue, I heard the clink of the door being unlocked. A braver person might have seen that as an opportunity. Charge the door and maybe get past the guards. But Iโ€™d given up hope of escape long ago. What would I do? Run into the Kazakhstani desert and take my chances?

The door opened and Stratt walked in. The guards closed the door behind her.

โ€œHey,โ€ย she said.

I glared at her from my bunk.

โ€œThe launch is on schedule,โ€ย she said.ย โ€œYouโ€™ll be on your way soon.โ€ โ€œWhoopee.โ€

She sat in the chair.ย โ€œI know you wonโ€™t believe this, but it wasnโ€™t easy for me to do this to you.โ€

โ€œYeah, youโ€™re really sentimental.โ€

She ignored the barb.ย โ€œDo you know what I studied in college? What my undergraduate degree was in?โ€

I shrugged.

โ€œHistory. I was a history major.โ€ย She drummed herย ๏ฌngers on the desk.ย โ€œMost people assume I had a science major or business management. Communications, maybe. But no. It was history.โ€

โ€œDoesnโ€™t seem like you.โ€ย I sat up on my bunk.ย โ€œYou donโ€™t spend a lot of time looking backward.โ€

โ€œI was eighteen years old and had no idea what to do with my life. I majored in history because I didnโ€™t know what else to do.โ€ย She smirked.ย โ€œHard to imagine me like that, eh?โ€

โ€œYeah.โ€

She looked out the barred window toward the launchpad in the distance.ย โ€œBut I learned a lot. I actually liked it. People nowadaysโ€ฆthey have no idea how good they have it. The past was unrelenting misery for most people. And the further back in time you go, the worse it was.โ€

She stood and meandered around the room.ย โ€œForย ๏ฌfty thousand years, right up to the industrial revolution, human civilization was about one thing and one thing only: food. Every culture that existed put most of their time, energy, manpower, and resources into food. Hunting it, gathering it, farming it, ranching it, storing it, distributing itโ€ฆit was all about food.

โ€œEven the Roman Empire. Everyone knows about the emperors, the armies, and the conquests. But what the Romansย reallyย invented was a very e๏ฌƒcient system of acquiring farmland and transportation of food and water.โ€

She walked to the other side of the room.ย โ€œThe industrial revolution mechanized agriculture. Since then, weโ€™ve been able to focus our energies on other things. But thatโ€™s only been the last two hundred years. Before that, most people spent most of their lives directly dealing with food production.โ€

โ€œThanks for the history lesson,โ€ย I said.ย โ€œBut if itโ€™s all the same to you, Iโ€™d like my last few moments on Earth to be a little more pleasant. Soโ€ฆyou knowโ€ฆcould you leave?โ€

She ignored me.ย โ€œLeclercโ€™s Antarctica nukes bought us some time. But not much. And thereโ€™s only so many times we can dump chunks of Antarctica into the ocean before the direct problems of sea-level rise and ocean-biome death cause more problems than Astrophage. Remember what Leclerc told us: Half the global population will die.โ€

โ€œI know,โ€ย I muttered.

โ€œNo, you donโ€™t know,โ€ย she said.ย โ€œBecause it gets a lot worse.โ€ โ€œWorse than half of humanity dying?โ€

โ€œOf course,โ€ย she said.ย โ€œLeclercโ€™s estimate assumes all the nations of the world work together to share resources and ration food. But do you think that will happen? Do you think the United Statesโ€”the most powerful military force of all timeโ€”is going to sit idly by while half their population starves? How about China, a nation of 1.3 billion people thatโ€™s always on the verge of famines in the best of times? Do you think theyโ€™ll just leave their militarily weak neighbors alone?โ€

I shook my head.ย โ€œThereโ€™ll be wars.โ€

โ€œYes. Thereโ€™ll be wars. Fought for the same reason most wars in ancient times were fought for: food. Theyโ€™d use religion or glory or whatever as an excuse, but it was always about food. Farmlands and people to work that land.

โ€œBut the fun doesnโ€™t stop there,โ€ย she said.ย โ€œBecause once the desperate, starving countries start invading each other for food, the food production will goย down. Ever heard of the Tai Ping rebellion? It was a civil war in China during the nineteenth century. Four hundred thousand soldiers died in combat. Andย twenty millionย people died from the resulting famine. The war disrupted agriculture, see? Thatโ€™s how massive in scale these things are.โ€

She wrapped her arms around herself. Iโ€™d never seen her look so vulnerable.ย โ€œMalnourishment. Disruption. Famine. Every aspect of infrastructure going to food production and warfare. The entire fabric of society will fall apart. Thereโ€™ll be plagues too. Lots of them. All over the world. Because the medical-care systems will be overwhelmed. Once easily contained outbreaks will go unchecked.โ€

She turned to face me.ย โ€œWar, famine, pestilence, and death. Astrophage is literally the apocalypse. Theย Hail Maryย is all we have now. Iโ€™ll make any sacri๏ฌce to give it even the tiniest additional chance of success.โ€

I lay down on my bunk and faced away from her.ย โ€œWhatever lets you sleep at night.โ€

She walked back to the door and knocked on it. A guard opened it up.ย โ€œAnyway. I just wanted you to know why Iโ€™m doing this. I owed you that.โ€

โ€œGo to hell.โ€

โ€œOh, I will, believe me. You three are going to Tau Ceti. The rest of us are going to hell. More accurately, hell is coming to us.โ€

โ€”

Yeah? Well, hellโ€™s coming back to you, Stratt. In the form of me. Iโ€™m hell.

I meanโ€ฆI donโ€™t know what Iโ€™ll say to her. But I de๏ฌnitely plan to say stu๏ฌ€.

Meanย stu๏ฌ€.

Iโ€™m eighteen days into my nearly four-year journey. Iโ€™m just now reaching Tau Cetiโ€™s heliopauseโ€”the edge of the starโ€™s powerful magneticย ๏ฌeld. At least, the edge of where itโ€™s strong enough to de๏ฌ‚ect fast-moving interstellar radiation. From now on, the radiation load on the hull will be much higher.

Doesnโ€™t matter to me. Iโ€™m surrounded by Astrophage. But itโ€™s interesting to see the external radiation sensors go up and up and up. Itโ€™s progress, at least. But in the grand scheme of things, Iโ€™m on a long road trip and my current status isย โ€œjust walking out the front door of the house.โ€

Iโ€™m bored. Iโ€™m by myself in a spaceship without much to do.

I clean and catalog the lab again. I might come up with some research experiments for either Astrophage or Taumoeba. Heck, I could write some papers while Iโ€™m on my way home. Oh, and thereโ€™s the matter of the intelligent alien life-form I hung out with for a couple of months. I might want to jot a few things down about him too.

I do have a huge collection of video games. I have every piece of software that was available when we built the ship. Iโ€™m sure they can keep me busy for a while.

I check the Taumoeba farms. All ten of them are doing justย ๏ฌne. I feed them Astrophage from time to time, just to keep them healthy and breeding. The farms emulate Venusโ€™s atmosphere, so as the generations of Taumoeba go by, theyโ€™ll get even better at Venusian life. After four years of this, by the time I drop them o๏ฌ€ย at the planet, theyโ€™ll be well suited for it.

And yes, Iโ€™ve already decided Iโ€™ll drop them o๏ฌ€. Why not?

I have no idea what kind of world Iโ€™ll be returning to. Thirteen years have passed on Earth since I left, and theyโ€™ll experience another thirteen before I

get back. Twenty-six years. All my students will be adults. I hope they all survive. But I have to admitโ€ฆsome probably wonโ€™t. I try not to dwell.

Anyway, once I get back to my solar system, I may as well swing by Venus and drop o๏ฌ€ย the Taumoeba. Not sure how Iโ€™ll seed it, but I have a few ideas. The simplest is just to wad up a ball of Taumoeba-infested Astrophage and throw it at Venus. The Astrophage will absorb the heat of reentry and the Taumoeba will be released into the wild. Then theyโ€™ll have aย ๏ฌeld day. Venus must be Astrophage-central by now, and lord knows Taumoeba can get right to work once theyย ๏ฌnd their prey.

I check my food stores. Iโ€™m still on schedule. I have another three months of real, edible food packs left, and then itโ€™ll be coma slurry from then on.

Iโ€™m reluctant to go back into a coma. Iโ€™ve got the genes to survive it, but so did Yรกo and Ilyukhina. Why risk death if I donโ€™t have to?

Also, I canโ€™t be 100 percent sure I correctly reprogrammed the course navigation. I think itโ€™s right, and whenever I spot-check, Iโ€™m still on course toward home. But what if something goes wrong while Iโ€™m in a coma? What if I wake up and I missed the solar system by a light-year?

But between isolation, loneliness, and disgusting food, I may be willing to take those risks eventually. Weโ€™ll see.

Speaking of loneliness, my thoughts turn back to Rocky. My only friend now. Seriously. Heโ€™s my only friend. I didnโ€™t have much of a social life back when things were normal. Sometimes Iโ€™d grab dinner with other faculty and sta๏ฌ€ย at the school. Iโ€™d have the occasional Saturday-night beer with old college friends. But thanks to time dilation, when I get home all those folks will be a generation older than me.

I liked Dimitri. He was probably my favorite of the wholeย Hail Maryย gang. But who knows what heโ€™s up to now? Heck, Russia and the United States may be at war. Or they may be allies in a war. I have no idea.

I climb the ladder to the control room. I sit in the pilotโ€™s seat and bring up the Nav panel. I really shouldnโ€™t do this, but itโ€™s become a bit of a ritual. I shut o๏ฌ€ย the spin drives and coast. Gravity immediately disappears, but I hardly notice. Iโ€™m used to it.

With the spin drives o๏ฌ€, I can safely use the Petrovascope. I scan around in space for a bitโ€”I know where to look. I quicklyย ๏ฌnd it. The little dot of

Petrova-frequency light. Theย Blip-Aโ€™s engines. If I were within a hundred kilometers of that light, my entire ship would be vaporized.

Iโ€™m on one side of the system and heโ€™s on the other. Heck, even Tau Ceti itself just looks like a lightbulb in the distance. But I can still clearly make out theย Blip-Aโ€™s engineย ๏ฌ‚are. Using light as a propellant releases a simplyย absurdย amount of power.

Maybe thatโ€™s something we could use in the future. Maybe Earth and Erid could communicate with massive releases of Petrova light thanks to Astrophage. I wonder how much it would take to make aย ๏ฌ‚ash visible from 40 Eridani. We could talk in Morse code or something. They have a copy of Wikipedia now. Theyโ€™d work out what weโ€™re up to when they saw theย ๏ฌ‚ashes.

Still, ourย โ€œconversationโ€ย would be slow. 40 Eridani is sixteen light-years away from Earth. So if we sent a message likeย โ€œHey, how ya doinโ€™?โ€ย it would be thirty-two years before we got their reply.

I stare at the little point of light on the screen and sigh. Iโ€™ll be able to track him for quite a while. I know where his ship will be at any given moment. Heโ€™ll use the exactย ๏ฌ‚ight plan I gave him. He trusts my science as much as I trust his engineering. But after a few months, the Petrovascope wonโ€™t be able to see the light anymore. Not because the light is too dimโ€”itโ€™s a very sensitive instrument. It wonโ€™t be able to see him because our relative velocities will cause a red-shift in the light coming o๏ฌ€ย his drives. It wonโ€™t be the Petrova wavelength anymore when it gets to me.

What? Would I do a ridiculous amount of relativistic math to calculate our relative velocity at any given moment as perceived by my inertial reference frame and then do Lorentz transformations toย ๏ฌgure out when the light from his engines will drop out of the Petrovascopeโ€™s perception range? Just so I know how much longer I can see my friend in the distance? Wouldnโ€™t that be kind of pathetic?

Yeah.

Okay, my sad little daily ritual is over. I turn o๏ฌ€ย the Petrovascope andย ๏ฌre up the spin drives again.

โ€”

I check my dwindling supply of real food. Iโ€™ve beenย โ€œon the roadโ€ย for thirty- two days now. According to my calculations,ย ๏ฌfty-one days from now Iโ€™ll be completely reliant on coma slurry.

I go to the dormitory.ย โ€œComputer. Provide coma food substance sample.โ€

The mechanical arms reach into their supply area and come back with a bag of white powder and drop it on the bunk.

I pick up the bag. Of course itโ€™s a powder. Why would they include the liquid in the long-term storage? The water system of theย Hail Maryย is a closed loop. Water goes into me, it comes out of me in various ways, and then itโ€™s puri๏ฌed and reused.

I take the package to the lab, open it up, and pour some powder in a beaker.

I add a little water, give it a stir, and it becomes a milky-white slurry. I give it a sni๏ฌ€. It doesnโ€™t really smell like anything. So I take a sip.

It takes e๏ฌ€ort, but I resist the urge to spit it out. It tastes like aspirin. That nasty pill-like taste. Iโ€™m going to have to eat this Bitter Pill Chowโ„ขย every meal for several years.

Maybe a coma isnโ€™t that bad.

I set the beaker aside. Iโ€™ll deal with that misery when the time comes. For now, Iโ€™m going to work on the beetles.

I have four little Taumoeba farms, courtesy of Rocky. Each one is a steel- ish capsule no larger than my hand. I sayย โ€œsteel-ishโ€ย because itโ€™s some Eridian alloy of steel that humans havenโ€™t invented yet. Itโ€™s much harder than any metal alloys we have, but not harder than diamond-cutting tools.

We went back and forth on the mini-farm casing. The obviousย ๏ฌrst choice was to make it out of xenonite. The problem is: How would Earth scientists get in? None of our tools would be able to cut it. The only option would be extremely high heat. And that risks harming the Taumoeba inside.

I suggested a xenonite container with a lid. Something that could be clamped down tight like a pressure door. Iโ€™d leave instructions on the USB stick on how to safely open it. Rocky rejected that idea right away. No matter how good the seal was, it wouldnโ€™t be perfect. Over the two years that the farm will experience during the trip, enough air could leak out to su๏ฌ€ocate

the Taumoeba inside. He insisted the whole farm be a single, completely sealed container. Probably a good idea.

So we settled on Eridian steel. Itโ€™s strong, it doesnโ€™t oxidize easily, and itโ€™s extremely durable. Earth can cut it open with a diamond saw. And hey, theyโ€™ll probably analyze it to learn how to make their own. Everyone wins!

His approach for the farms themselves was simple. Inside, thereโ€™s an active colony of Taumoeba and a Venus-like atmosphere. Also, thereโ€™s a coil of very thin steel-ish tubing full of Astrophage. The Taumoeba can only get at the outermost layer, so they have to work their way down the tube, which has a total length of about 20 meters. Some basic experimentation tells us that will last the small Taumoeba population several years. As for waste productsโ€”ย theyโ€™ll just stew in their own poop. The capsule will gain methane and lose carbon dioxide over time, but it doesnโ€™t matter. Though itโ€™s a small volume by human standards, itโ€™s a vast, gigantic cavern to the tiny microbes inside.

The beetles have been a priority for me. I want them ready for launch at a momentโ€™s notice. Just in case thereโ€™s a catastrophic problem with theย Hail Mary. But I donโ€™t want to send them o๏ฌ€ย if there isnโ€™t a mission-critical problem. The closer we are to Earth when they launch, the better their odds of making it there safely.

In addition to installing the mini-farms, I also have to refuel the little buggers. Iโ€™d used almost half their fuel supply when they served as ad-hoc engines for theย Hail Mary. But they only need 60 kilograms of Astrophage each to be full. Barely a drop in the bucket compared to my supply of imported, Eridian-made Astrophage.

The hardest part is opening the beetleโ€™s little fuel bay. Like everything else around here, it wasnโ€™t intended for reuse. Itโ€™s like adding fresh butane to a Bic lighter. Itโ€™s just not meant for that. Itโ€™s completely sealed. I have to clamp it into the mill and use a 6-millimeter bit to get inโ€ฆitโ€™s a whole big thing. But Iโ€™m getting good at it.

Iย ๏ฌnished John and Paul yesterday. Today Iโ€™m working on Ringo and, time permitting, George. George will be the easiest. I donโ€™t need to refuel himโ€”I never used him as an engine. I just have to attach the mini-farm.

Figuring out where to put the mini-farm was another matter. Even with its small size, itโ€™s too big toย ๏ฌt inside the little probe. So I epoxy it to the

undercarriage. Then I spot-weld a small counterweight to the top of the beetle. The computer inside has very strong opinions about where the center of mass of the probe is. Itโ€™s easier to add a counterweight than completely reprogram a guidance system.

Which brings us to the matter of weight.

The additional weight of the farm makes the beetles weigh a kilogram more than they should. Thatโ€™s okay. I remember countless meetings with Steve Hatch discussing the design. Heโ€™s a weird little guy, but heโ€™s a heck of a rocket scientist. The beetles know their location in space by looking at the stars, and if they have less fuel than they expected to have, they taper their acceleration down as needed.

In short: Theyโ€™ll get home. Itโ€™ll just take a little longer. I ran the numbers and itโ€™s a trivial di๏ฌ€erence in Earth time. Though the beetles will experience several additional months during the trip than the original plan.

I go to the supply cabinet and pull out the BOCOA (big olโ€™ย container of Astrophage). Itโ€™s a lightproof metal bin with wheels. There are several hundred kilograms of Astrophage in there and Iโ€™m in 1.5 gโ€™s of gravity. Thatโ€™s why I added the wheels. Youโ€™d be amazed what you can do with a machine shop and aย ๏ฌrm desire not to drag heavy stu๏ฌ€ย around.

I hold the handle with a towel because itโ€™s so hot. I wheel it over to the lab table, settle into the chair, and get ready for the methodical refueling process. I get the plastic syringe at the ready. With it, I can squirt 100 milliliters of Astrophage into that 6-millimeter hole per shot. Thatโ€™s about 600 grams. All told, I have to do it about two hundred times per beetle.

I open the BOCOA andโ€”

โ€œUgh!โ€ย I wince and draw away from the container. It smells horrible.ย โ€œUhโ€ฆโ€ย I say.ย โ€œWhy does it smell like that?โ€

Then it hits me. I know that smell. Itโ€™s the smell of dead, rotting Astrophage.

The Taumoeba are loose again.

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