โImade the new Taumoeba farm. Sheet aluminum and some basic milling on the CNC mill. It wasnโt a problem.โ
Rockyโs ship is the problem.
Iโve been watching his engineย ๏ฌare every day for the past month. Now itโs gone.
Iย ๏ฌoat in the control room. The spin drives are o๏ฌ, and the Petrovascope is set to maximum sensitivity. Thereโs some random Petrova-wavelength light coming from Tau Ceti itself, as always. And even thatโs dim. The star, almost as bright as Earthโs sun, now just looks like a fatter-than-usual dot in the night sky.
But aside from thatโฆnothing. Iโm way too far away to detect the Tau CetiโAdrian Petrova line and theย Blip-Aย is nowhere to be seen.
And I know right where it should be. Down to the milli-arc-second. And from here, its engines should be lighting up my scopeโฆ.
I ran the numbers again and again. Though Iโd already proven my formulae correct by daily observations of his progress. Now thereโs nothing. No blip from theย Blip-A.
Heโs derelict out there. His Taumoeba escaped their enclosure and wormed their way into his fuel bays. From there, they ate everything. Millions of kilograms of Astrophage gone in a matter of days.
Heโs smart, so he surely has the fuel compartmentalized. But those compartments are made of xenonite, right? Yeah.
Three days.
If the ship were damaged, heโdย ๏ฌx it. Thereโs nothing Rocky canโtย ๏ฌx. And he works fast. Five arms whipping around, often doing unrelated things. He
could be dealing with a massive Taumoeba infection, but how long would that take? He has plenty of nitrogen. He can harvest as much as he wants from his ammonia atmosphere. Letโs assume he did that as soon as he noticed the contagion.
How long would it take him to get things back online? Not this long.
Whatever may have happened, if theย Blip-Aย could beย ๏ฌxed, he would haveย ๏ฌxed it by now. The only explanation for it still being dead in space is that it has no fuel. He wasnโt able to stop the Taumoeba in time.
I put my head in my hands.
I can go home. I really can. I can return and spend the rest of my life a hero. Statues, parades, et cetera. And Iโll be in a new world order where all energy problems are solved. Cheap, easy, renewable energy everywhere thanks to Astrophage. I can track down Stratt and tell her to shove it.
But then Rocky dies. And more important, Rockyโs people die. Billions of them.
Iโmย this close. I just need to survive four years. Yeah, itโll be eating nasty coma slurry but Iโll beย alive.
My annoying logical mind points out the other option: Launch the beetles
โall four of them. Each with their own Taumoeba mini-farm and a USB stick full of data andย ๏ฌndings. Earth scientists will take it from there.
Then turn theย Hail Maryย around,ย ๏ฌnd Rocky, and take him home to Erid. One problem: It means I die.
I have enough food to survive the trip to Earth. Or I have enough to survive the trip to Erid. But even if the Eridians refuel theย Hail Maryย right away, there wonโt be enough food for me to survive the trip back to Earth from Erid. Iโll have only a few months of food left at that point.
I canโt grow anything. I donโt have any viable seeds or living plant matter. I canโt eat Eridian food. Too many heavy metals and other major toxins.
So thatโs what Iโm left with. Option 1: Go home a hero and save all of humanity. Option 2: Go to Erid, save an alien species, and starve to death shortly after.
I pull on my hair.
I sob into my hands. Itโs cathartic and exhausting.
All I see when I close my eyes is Rockyโs dumb carapace and his little arms alwaysย ๏ฌdgeting with something.
โ
Itโs been six weeks since I made my decision. It wasnโt easy, but Iโm sticking with it.
I have the spin drives o๏ฌย for my daily ritual. I bring up the Petrovascope and look out into space. I see nothing at all.
โSorry, Rocky,โย I say.
Then I spot a tiny speck of Petrova light. I zoom in and search that area. A total of four little dots, barely visible, are on the monitor.
โI know youโd love a beetle to take apart, but I couldnโt spare one.โ
The beetles, with much smaller spin drives, wonโt be visible for much longer. Especially with them zooming o๏ฌย toward Earth and me headed almost the opposite direction toward theย Blip-A.
The Astrophage coils in the mini-farms will protect the Taumoeba from radiation, and I did thorough tests to make sure both the farms and the life inside could handle the massive acceleration that beetles use. Theyโll be back at Earth in a couple of years from their point of view. About thirteen years, from Earthโs time frame.
I bring the spin drives back online and continue on course.
Finding a spaceshipย โsomewhere just outside the Tau Ceti systemโย is no small task. Imagine being given a rowboat and told toย ๏ฌnd a toothpickย โsomewhere in the ocean.โย Itโs like that, but nowhere near as easy.
I know his course and I know he followed it. But I donโt know when his engines conked out. I only checked up on him once a day. Right now, Iโm smack-dab in the center of myย โbest guessโย for his position and Iโve matched my best guess on his velocity. But thatโs only the beginning. I have a heck of a search ahead of me.
I wish I had tracked him more often. Because I donโt know the exact time his engines died, the margin of error on my guess is about 20 million kilometers. Thatโs about one-eighth the distance between the Earth and the
sun. Itโs a distance so large it takes light a full minute to traverse it. Thatโs the best I can do with the information I have.
Frankly, Iโm lucky the error margin is soย small. If the Taumoeba had escaped a month later, it would have been exponentially worse. And all this is going on at the edge of the Tau Ceti system. Barely the beginning of the trip. The distance between Tau Ceti and Earth is overย four thousand timesย the width of the entire Tau Ceti system.
Space is big. Itโsโฆso, so big.
So yeah. Iโm extremely lucky to have only 20 million kilometers to search.ย โHmm,โย I mumble.
This far away from Tau Ceti, his ship wonโt be re๏ฌecting much Taulight.
Thereโs no chance Iโd spot theย Blip-Aย with my telescope.
Side note: Iโm going to die.
โStop,โย I say. Whenever I think about my impending death, I think about Rocky instead. He must have a sense of hopelessness right now.ย Iโm coming, buddy.
โWaitโฆโ
Iโm sure heโs sad, but heโs also not one to mope for long. Heโll be working on a solution. What would he do? His whole species is on the line and he doesnโt know Iโm coming. He wouldnโt just kill himself, right? Heโd do anything he could think of, even if it would have only a tiny percent chance of success.
Okay. Iโm Rocky. My ship is dead. Maybe I rescued some Astrophage. The Taumoeba canโt have gottenย allย of it, right? So I have some. Can I make my own beetle? Something to send back to Erid?
I shake my head. That would require a guidance system. Computer stu๏ฌ. Way beyond Eridian science. Thatโs why they had a crew of twenty-three on a massive ship in theย ๏ฌrst place. Besides, itโs been a month and a half. If he were going to build a little ship, heโd be done by now and I would have seen its engineย ๏ฌare. Rocky moves fast.
Okay. No beetle. But heโs got energy. Life support. Food enough to last him a long, long time (original crew of twenty-three, and it was always intended to be a round-trip voyage).
โRadio?โย I say.
Maybe heโll make a radio signal. Something powerful enough to be heard on Erid. Just a small chance of detection, but something. Eridians have a long life-span. Waiting a decade or so for rescue wouldnโt be that big a deal. Well, not on the life-or-death scale. If you asked me a few years ago Iโd say itโs not possible to send a radio signal ten light-years. But this is Rocky weโre talking about, and he might have some rescued Astrophage to power whatever he creates.
It doesnโt have to contain information. It just needs to be noticed.
Butโฆno. Thereโs just no way. Some back-of-the napkin math tells me that even with Earthโs radio technology (which is better than Eridโs), the strength of that signal at Erid would be way less than background noise.
Rocky will know that too. So thereโs no point.ย โHmm.โ
I wish I had better radar. Mine is good for a few thousand kilometers. Obviously thatโs nowhere near good enough. Rocky could probably whip something up if he were here. Itโs a little paradoxical, but I wish Rocky were here to help me save Rocky.
โBetter radarโฆโย I mumble.
Well, I have plenty of power. I have a radar system. Maybe I can work something out.
But you canโt just add power to the emitter and expect things to go well.
Iโll burn it out for sure. How can I turn Astrophage energy into radio waves?
I shoot up from my pilotโs seat.ย โDuh!โ
I have everything I need for the best radar ever! To heck with my built-in radar system, with its measly emitter and sensors. I have spin drives and a Petrovascope! I can throwย 900 terawattsย of IR light out the back of my ship and see if any of it bounces back with the Petrovascopeโan instrument carefully designed to detect even the smallest amounts of that exact frequency of light!
I canโt have the Petrovascope and engines on at the same time. But thatโs okay! Rocky is up to a light-minute away!
I work up a search grid. Itโs pretty simple. Iโm smack-dab in the middle of my guesstimate on Rockyโs location. So I have to search all directions.
Easy enough. Iย ๏ฌre up the spin drives. I take manual control, which, as usual, requires me to sayย โyes,โ โyes,โ โyes,โย andย โoverrideโย to a bunch of warning dialogs.
I throw the throttle to full and turn hard to port with the yaw controls. The force shoves me back into the seat and to the side. This is the astronavigational equivalent of doing donuts in the 7-Eleven parking lot.
I keep it tightโit takes me thirty seconds to do one full rotation. Iโm roughly back where I started. Probably a few dozen kilometers o๏ฌย but whatever. I cut the engines.
Now I watch the Petrovascope. Itโs not omnidirectional, but it can cover a good 90-degree arc of space at a time. I slowly pan across space in the same direction Iโd shined the engines and at the same rate. Itโs not perfect; I could get the timing wrong. If Rocky is very close or very far away this wonโt work. But this is just myย ๏ฌrst try.
Iย ๏ฌnish a full circle with the Petrovascope. Nothing. So I do another lap.
Maybe Rocky is farther than I thought.
The second lap turns up nothing.
Well, Iโm not done yet. Space is three-dimensional. Iโve only searched oneย ๏ฌat slice of the area. I pitch the ship forward 5 degrees.
I do the same search pattern again. But this time, the plane of my search pattern is 5 degrees di๏ฌerent from the last time. If I donโt get a hit on this pass, Iโll do another 5-degree tilt and try again. And so on until I get to 90 degrees, when I will have searched all directions.
And ifย thatย doesnโt work, Iโll start over, but with a faster pan rate on the Petrovascope.
I rub my hands together, take a sip of water, and get to work.
โ
Aย ๏ฌash!
Iย ๏ฌnally see aย ๏ฌash!
Halfway through my Petrova pan of the 55-degree plane. Aย ๏ฌash!
Iย ๏ฌail in surprise, which launches me out of the seat. I bounce around the zero-g control room and scramble back into position. Itโs been slow going up till now. I was as bored as a guy could be. But not anymore!
โCrud! Where was it! Okay! Relax! Calm down.ย Calm down!โ
I put myย ๏ฌnger on the screen where I saw the blip. I check the Petrovascope bearing, do some math on the screen, and work out the angle. Itโs 214 degreesโย yaw in my current plane, which is 55 degrees o๏ฌย the Tau CetiโAdrian orbital ecliptic.
โGotcha!โ
Time for a better reading. I strap on my now-worn and banged-up stopwatch. Zero g has not been kind to the little guy, but it still works.
I take the controls and angle the ship directly away from the contact. I start the stopwatch, thrust in a straight line for ten seconds, turn, and shut down the engines. Iโm moving something like 150 meters per second away from the contact, but that doesnโt matter. I donโt want to zero out the velocity I just added. I want the Petrovascope.
I stare at the screen with the stopwatch ticking away in my hand. Soon, I see the blip again. Twenty-eight seconds. The spot of light remains for ten seconds, then disappears.
I canโt guarantee itโs theย Blip-A. But whatever it is, itโs de๏ฌnitely a re๏ฌection of my spin drives. And itโs fourteen light-seconds away (fourteen seconds to get there, fourteen seconds to get back equals twenty-eight seconds). That works out to about 4 million kilometers.
No point in trying to work out the objectโs velocity by taking multiple readings. I donโt have that kind of precision with myย โ๏ฌnger on the screenโย approach. But I have a heading.
I can cover 4 million kilometers in nine and a half hours. Iย ๏ฌst-pump.ย โYes! Iโm de๏ฌnitely going to die!โ
I donโt know why I said that. I guessโฆwell, if I wasnโt able toย ๏ฌnd Rocky, Iโd set course for Earth. Iโm surprised I put this much e๏ฌort into it, actually.
Whatever. I set course for where I saw the blip andย ๏ฌre up the engines. I donโt even need to account for relativity on this one. Just high-school physics. Iโll accelerate half the way, then decelerate the other half.
โ
I spend the next nine hours cleaning up. Iโm going to have a guest again!
I hope.
Rocky will have to plug up all the holes he made in the xenonite walls. But that shouldnโt be a problem.
That assumes the contact I got was theย Blip-Aย and not just a random piece of debris in space.
I try not to think about it. Keep hope alive and all that. I move all my junk out of the xenonite areas.
Once Iโm done with that, Iย ๏ฌdget a lot. I want to stop and do another sweep to con๏ฌrm my heading, but I resist the urge. Just wait it out.
I stare at the aluminum Taumoeba farm in my lab. And the slide of Astrophage next to it in the Taumoeba alarm. Everything is going justย ๏ฌne. Maybe I couldโ
The timer beeps. Iโm at the location!
I scramble up the ladder to the control room and shut o๏ฌย the spin drives. I have the Radar screen up before I even get in the chair. I do a full active ping and full power.ย โCome onโฆcome onโฆ.โ
Nothing.
I settle into the seat and strap in. I thought something like this might happen. Iโm a lot closer to the contact now, but still not in radar range. I just traveled 4 million kilometers. Radar range is less than a thousandth of that. So my precision isnโt 99.9 percent. Big surprise.
Time for another Petrovascope sweep. But this time I donโt have the luxury of a full light-minute between me and the contact, wherever it is. If Iโm, say, 100,000 kilometers away, Iโll have less than a second before the light comes back to me. And I canโt use the Petrovascope with the spin drives on.
So now what?
I need to create a bunch of Astrophage lightย withoutย turning o๏ฌย the Petrovascope. I look through the menu options and donโtย ๏ฌnd anything. Thereโs no way to have the scope on when the spin drives are running. It must be a physical interlock somewhere. Somewhere aboard this ship is a wire
leading from the spin-drive controls to the Petrovascope. I could spend the rest of my life looking for that and have no success.
However, the main engines arenโt the only spin drives I have.
The attitude-adjustment engines are little spin drives sticking out the side of theย Hail Mary. Theyโre what let me yaw, pitch, and roll the ship. I wonder if the Petrovascope cares about them?
I keep the scope on and do a quick roll to the left. The ship rolls and the scope stays active!
Got to love those edge cases! Though Iโm sure someone on the design team thought of this case. They probably decided the comparatively small output from the attitude drives wouldnโt hurt the scope. And, looking at the overall concepts, it makes sense. The engines and attitude drives all point away from the ship and thus away from the Petrovascope. The reason it shuts down when the main drives are on is because of re๏ฌected light o๏ฌย small amounts of cosmic dust. The re๏ฌected light from the far less powerful adjustment drives was deemed acceptable.
But those adjustment drives are still putting out enough light to vaporize steel. Maybe theyโll be enough to light up theย Blip-A.
I aim the Petrovascope parallel to the port-side yaw thruster. In fact, I can see the thruster itself in the bottom of the visible-light mode image. Iย ๏ฌre it up.
Thereโs de๏ฌnitely a visible glow in the Petrova spectrum. A general haze near the thruster, like turning on aย ๏ฌashlight in the fog. But after a few seconds the haze dies down. Itโs still there, just not as prevalent.
Probably dust and trace gases from theย Hail Maryย herself. Tiny particles of stu๏ฌย drifting away from the ship. Once the thruster vaporized all the ones nearby, things calmed down.
I keep the thruster on, and let the ship rotate on its yaw axis as I watch the Petrovascope. Now I have aย ๏ฌashlight. The rotation rate of the ship increases faster and faster. I canโt have that. So I activate the starboard-side yaw thruster as well. The computer complains up a storm. Thereโs no sensible reason to tell the ship to rotate clockwise and counterclockwise at the same time. I ignore the warnings.
I do a full revolution and see nothing. Okay. Nothing new. I do a 5-degree pitch adjustment and try again.
On my sixth go-aroundโat 25 degrees from the Adrian ecliptic, I spot the contact. Still too far away to make out any detail. But itโs aย ๏ฌash of light in response to my yaw thruster. Iย ๏ฌick the thruster on and o๏ฌย a few times to gauge the response time. Itโs nearly instantโIโd say less than a quarter second. Iโm within 75,000 kilometers.
I point toward the contact andย ๏ฌre up the drives. This time I wonโt go barreling in willy-nilly. Iโll stop every 20,000 kilometers or so and take another reading.
I smile. Itโs working.
Now I just have to hope I havenโt been chasing an asteroid all day.
โ
With carefulย ๏ฌying and repeated measurements, Iย ๏ฌnally have the object on radar!
Itโs right there on the screen.ย โย โ
โOh, right,โย I say. I forgot thatโs how it got its name.
Iโm 4,000 kilometers awayโthe very edge of radar range. I bring up the telescope view, but I canโt see anything, even at the highest magni๏ฌcation. The telescope was made forย ๏ฌnding celestial bodies hundreds or thousands of kilometers across, not a spaceship a few hundred meters long.
I creep closer. The objectโs velocity with respect to Tau Ceti is about right for Rockyโs ship. Roughly the speed he would have gotten to around the time his engines died.
I could take a bunch of readings and do math to work out its course, but I have an easier plan.
I thrust for a few minutes here, a few minutes there, slowing down and speeding up until I match the objectโs velocity. Itโs still 4,000 kilometers away, but now the relative velocity to me is almost zero. Why do this? Because theย Hail Maryย is very good at telling me about its own course.
I bring up the Nav console and tell it to calculate my current orbit. After some stargazing and calculation, the computer tells me exactly what I wanted
to hear: Theย Hail Maryย is on a hyperbolic trajectory. That means Iโm not in orbit at all. Iโm on an escape vector, leaving Tau Cetiโs gravity in๏ฌuence entirely.
And that means the object Iโm tracking is also on an escape vector. You know what objects in a solar systemย donโtย do? They donโt escape the starโs gravity. Anything going fast enough to escape did so billions of years ago. Whatever this is, itโs no normal asteroid.
โYes yes yes yesโฆโย I say. I kick the spin drives on and head toward the contact.ย โIโm cominโ, buddy. Hold tight.โ
When Iโm within 500 kilometers, Iย ๏ฌnally get some resolution on the object. All I see is a highly pixelated triangle. Itโs four times as long as it is wide. Itโs not much information, but itโs enough. Itโs theย Blip-A.ย I know the pro๏ฌle well.
I have a bag of Ilyukhinaโs vodka handy for just such an occasion. I take a sip from the zip-straw. I cough and wheeze. Dang, she liked her liquor rough.
โ
Rockyโs ship sits 50 meters o๏ฌย my starboard side. I came up really carefully
โI donโt want to cross an entire solar system just to accidentally vaporize him with my engines. Iโve matched velocities to within a few centimeters per second.
Itโs been almost three months since we parted. From the outside, theย Blip- Aย looks the same as it always has. But something is de๏ฌnitely wrong.
Iโve tried everything to communicate. Radio. Flashes of spin-drive light.
Nothing gets a response.
I get a sinking feeling. What if Rockyโs dead? He was all alone in there. What if all heck broke loose while he was in a sleep cycle? Eridians donโt wake up until their bodies are ready. What if the life-support system went o๏ฌine while he was asleep and he justโฆnever woke up?
What if he died of radiation sickness? All that Astrophage that was protecting him from radiation turned into methane and Taumoeba. Eridians are very susceptible to radiation. It might have happened so fast he didnโt have a chance to react.
I shake my head.
No. Heโs Rocky. Heโs smart. Heโd have backup plans. A separate life- support system that he sleeps in, I bet. And heโd account for radiationโit killed his entire crew.
But why no response?
He canโt see. He doesnโt have windows. Heโd have to actively look outside with theย Blip-Aโs sensory equipment to know Iโm there at all. Why would he do that? He thinks heโs hopelessly derelict in space.
EVA time.
I climb into the Orlan for what seems like the millionth time and cycle through the airlock. I have a nice long tether anchored to the airlock interior itself.
I look out into the vast nothingness before me. I canโt see theย Blip-A. Tau Ceti is too far away to light things up. I only know where the ship is because it blocks the background stars. Iโm justโฆout in space and a big chunk of it has no pinpricks of light.
Thereโs no good way to do this. Iโm just going to have to take a guess. I kick o๏ฌย theย Hail Maryโs hull as hard as I can, aiming for theย Blip-A. Itโs a big ship. I just have to hit any part of it. And hey, if I miss, the tether will bounce me back in the galaxyโsย ๏ฌrst interstellar bungee jump.
Iย ๏ฌoat across space. The blackness ahead of me grows. More and more stars disappear until I see nothing. I donโt even have a sense of movement. I know logically I must have the same velocity as when I kicked o๏ฌย my ship. But thereโs nothing to prove it.
Then, I spot a faint blotchy tan glow ahead. Iโmย ๏ฌnally close enough to theย Blip-Aย that my helmet lights are illuminating part of it. It gets brighter and brighter. I can see the hull more clearly now.
Itโs go time. I have just seconds toย ๏ฌnd something to grab on to. I know his hull has rails all over the place for that robot to get around. Iโm hoping Iโll be close enough to one to grab.
I spot a rail dead ahead. I reach out. Slam!
I hit theย Blip-Aย much harder than an EVA suit should. I shouldnโt have kicked o๏ฌย theย Hail Maryย with so much gusto. I scrabble at the hull, grabbing for anything. My plan to grab a rail failed miserably, I got a hand on one but just couldnโt keep a grip. I bounce and start drifting away. The tether gets tangled up behind and around me. Itโll be a long climb back to my ship for another try.
Then I spot a weird, jagged protuberance on the hull a few meters away. An antenna, maybe? Itโs too far to reach with my hands, but maybe I can get it with the tether.
Iโm drifting away from the hull at a slow but steady rate and I donโt have a jetpack. Itโs now or never.
I tie a quick slipknot in the tether and throw it at the antenna.
And, Iโll be gosh darned, I nailed it! I just wrangled an alien spaceship. I pull the loop tight. For a second, I worry it might break the antenna o๏ฌ, but then I see the blotchy tan texture. The antenna (if thatโs what it is) is made of xenonite. Itโs not going anywhere.
I pull myself along the tether to the hull. This time, with the antenna and tether to aid me, I manage to grab hold of a nearby robot rail.
โWhew,โย I say.
I take a moment to catch my breath. Now to put Rockyโs hearing to the test.
I pull the biggest wrench I have from my tool belt. I rear back and smack the hull. Hard.
I smack it over and over.ย Clank! Clank! Clank!ย I hear the sound through my own EVA suit. If heโs alive in there, thatโll get his attention.
I push one end of the wrench against the hull and crouch down to bring my helmet in contact with the other end. I stretch my neck out in the helmet and push my chin against the faceplate.
โRocky!โย I yell as loud as I can.ย โI donโt know if you can hear me! But Iโm here, buddy! Iโm on your hull!โ
I wait a few seconds.ย โI have my EVA suit radio on! Same frequency as always! Say something! Let me know youโre okay!โ
I turn up my radio volume. All I hear is static.
โRocky!โ
A crackle. My ears perk up.ย โRocky?!โ
โGrace, question?โ
โYes!โย Iโve never been so happy to hear a few musical notes!ย โYeah, buddy! Itโs me!โ
โYou are here, question?!โย his voice is so high-pitched I can barely understand him. But I understand Eridian pretty well now.
โYes! Iโm here!โ
โYou areโฆโย he squeaks.ย โYouโฆโย he squeaks again.ย โYou are here!โย โYes! Set up the airlock tunnel!โ
โWarning! Taumoeba-82.5 isโโ
โI know! I know. It can get through xenonite. Thatโs why Iโm here. I knew youโd be in trouble.โ
โYou save me!โ
โYes. I caught the Taumoeba in time. I still have fuel. Set up the tunnel.
Iโm taking you to Erid.โ
โYou save me and you save Erid!โย he squeaks.ย โSet up the darn tunnel!โ
โGet back in you ship! Unless you want to look at tunnel from outside!โย โOh, right!โ
โ
I wait eagerly by the airlock door, trying to watch the action play out through the little window. Itโs all happened beforeโRocky attaching the airlock-to- airlock tunnel with the hull robot. But this time it was a little more challenging. I had to maneuver theย Hail Maryย into position because theย Blip-Aย canโt move at all. Still, we got it done.
Aย ๏ฌnal clank, then a hiss. I know that sound!
Iย ๏ฌoat into the airlock and check through the outer window. The tunnel is in place. He kept it all this time. Why not? Itโs an artifact from his speciesโ ๏ฌrst contact with alien life. Iโd keep it too!
I turn the emergency relief valve. Air from my shipย ๏ฌlls my half of the tunnel. Once it equalizes, I throw open the door andย ๏ฌy in.
Rocky waits for me on the other side. His clothes are a mess. Covered in the all-too-familiar gunky Taumoeba residue. And there are burns all along one side of his jumpsuit and two of his arms are in pretty bad shape. Looks like he had a pretty rough time. But his body language is sheer joy.
He bounces from handhold to handhold.
โI am very very very happy,โย he says with a high pitch. I point to his bad arms.ย โAre you hurt?!โ
โI will heal. Attempted many things to stop Taumoeba infestation. All failed.โ
โI succeeded,โย I say.ย โMy ship isnโt made of xenonite.โย โWhat happen, question?โ
I sigh.ย โThe Taumoeba evolved to resist nitrogen. But it also evolved to get
into xenonite to hide from nitrogen. The side e๏ฌect is Taumoeba-82.5 can work its way through xenonite over time.โ
โAmaze. Now what, question?โ
โI still have two million kilograms of Astrophage. Bring your stu๏ฌย aboard.
Weโre going to Erid.โ
โHappy! Happy happy happy!โย He pauses.ย โNeed to make nitrogen wash.
Make sure no Taumoeba-82.5 get into Hail Mary.โ
โYes. I have full faith in your abilities. Make a sterilizer.โ
He shifts from one set of bars to another. Those burned arms are hurting him, I can tell.ย โWhat about Earth, question?โ
โI sent the beetles with the mini-farms. Taumoeba-82.5 canโt get through Eridian steel.โ
โGood good,โย he says.ย โI make sure my people take good care of you. They will make Astrophage maybe for you to go home!โ
โYeahโฆโย I say.ย โAbout thatโฆIโm not going home. The beetles will save Earth. But I wonโt ever see it again.โ
His joyous bouncing stops.ย โWhy, question?โ
โI donโt have enough food. After I take you to Erid, I will die.โ
โYouโฆyou no can die.โย His voice gets low.ย โI no let you die. We send you home. Erid will be grateful. You save everyone. We do everything to save you.โย โThereโs nothing you can do,โย I say.ย โThereโs no food. I have enough to last until we get to Erid and then a few months more. Even if your government
gave me the Astrophage to go home, I wouldnโt survive the trip.โ
โEat Erid food. We evolve from same life. We use same proteins. Same chemicals. Same sugars. Must work!โ
โNo, I canโt eat your food, remember?โย โYou say is bad for you. Weย ๏ฌnd out.โ
I hold up my hands.ย โItโs not just bad for me. It will kill me. Your whole
ecology uses heavy metals all over the place. Most of them are toxic to me. Iโd die immediately.โ
He trembles.ย โNo. You no can die. You are friend.โ
Iย ๏ฌoat closer to the divider wall and talk softly.ย โItโs okay. I made my decision. This is the only way to save both of our worlds.โ
He backs away.ย โThen you go home. Go home now. I wait here. Erid maybe send another ship someday.โ
โThatโs ridiculous. Do you really want to risk the survival of your entire species on that guess?โ
Heโs silent for a few moments andย ๏ฌnally answers.ย โNo.โ
โOkay. Get that ball thing you use as a spacesuit and come on over. Talk me through how to patch up the xenonite walls. Then you can move your stu๏ฌย inโโ
โWait,โย he says.ย โYou no can eat Erid life. You no have Earth life to eat.
What about Adrian life, question?โ
I snort.ย โAstrophage? I canโt eat that! Itโs ninety-six degrees all the time! It would burn me alive. Plus, I doubt my digestive enzymes would even work on its weird cell membrane.โ
โNot Astrophage. Taumoeba. Eat Taumoeba.โย โI canโt eatโโย I pause.ย โIโฆwhat?โ
Can I eat Taumoeba?
Itโs alive. It has DNA. Is has mitochondriaโthe powerhouse of the cell. It stores energy as glucose. It does the Krebs cycle. Itโs not Astrophage. Itโs not
96 degrees. Itโs just an amoeba from another planet. It wonโt have heavy metals like Eridian life evolved to haveโthey arenโt even present in Adrianโs atmosphere.
โIโฆI donโt know. Maybe I can.โ
He points to his ship.ย โI have twenty-two million kilograms of Taumoeba in fuel bays. How much you want, question?โ
I widen my eyes. Itโs theย ๏ฌrst time Iโve felt genuine hope in a long time.ย โSettled.โย He puts his claw against the divider.ย โFist my bump.โ
I laugh and put my knuckles against the xenonite.ย โFist-bump. Itโs justย โ๏ฌst-
bump.โ โ
โUnderstand.