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Chapter no 17

Winter World

Iย FEELย weak when I wake up. Bruised. Head cloudy, worse than before, as if Iโ€™ve been kidnapped, beaten, and left on the roadside.

Through the grogginess, my gaze drifts to the terminal. Thereโ€™s row after row of messages from the ground. I try to read them, but I canโ€™t. I just want to go back to sleep.

I shake my head and move my arms, trying to wake myself up. Sleep equals death.

The last message reads:

Commander Matthews? Please respond.

My hands shaking, I reach out, grab the stylus, and peck at the keyboard.

Iโ€™m here.

While I wait for the response, I read through the messages above. Asking for my status. Informing me that the capsule was hit with debris (which became apparent when I was bouncing around in here like a pinball). Them telling me they were maneuvering away and to hang on (too late).

Good! Youโ€™ve given us a good scare down here.

Sorry. Pretty scary up here too ๐Ÿ™‚ I canโ€™t imagine.

Plan?

Working on it. Capsule status?

Thereโ€™s a long pause before the reply comes.

Compromised. But weโ€™re working on it. Donโ€™t worry.

Nothing makes me worry like someone telling me not to worry. Well, actually, there isย oneย thing that makes me worry more: hearing that the capsule Iโ€™m in, floating two hundred miles above Earth, is, quote, compromised. In my limited romantic experience, Iโ€™ve found that compromise is the key to successful relationships. But when youโ€™re talking about atmospheric reentry at roughly seventeen thousand miles an hour, compromise is not the key to success. Thatโ€™s how you die.

Heat is the problem. The Soyuz has a ceramic heat shield on the bottom. Itโ€™s ablative, which means it burns away as the capsule falls to Earth. The temperatures involved are extreme, thousands of degrees Celsius, enough to boil the ceramic layers. I donโ€™t know how this capsule was constructedโ€”I assume itโ€™s similarโ€”but I do know that if thereโ€™s a hole in it, Iโ€™ll burn alive in here.

And thatโ€™s not the only way I can die up here. I have a finite amount of oxygen, food, water, and fuel. Even if I can sustain myself, I need fuel to keep this capsule in orbitโ€”and not burning up in the atmosphere.

I type the only thing I can think to say:

What can I do?

Just rest, Emma. Youโ€™ve done your part. Let us do ours.

I have to do something. I inspect the hole that Sergei plugged. I canโ€™t discern any leakage of atmosphere at the periphery. Itโ€™s probably okay. To properly repair it, Iโ€™d need to do an EVA and patch it. But if the heat shield is compromised, it wouldnโ€™t matter anyway. I canโ€™t think about that. Canโ€™t let my mind run in circles.

To keep myself busy (and awake), I count the food and waterโ€”twice. Go through all three med kits. Stare out the window a moment, looking down at North America, then take the stylus and begin pecking out a letter to my sister. Itโ€™s a struggle to type this way, but the bigger struggle is coming up with the words. This is probably the last thing I will ever say to her. Thereโ€™s so much I want to tell her. And so much I canโ€™t.

To Mission Control:

When time allows, please pass along this letter to my sister.

Thanks.

Dear Madison,

There was an accident on the ISS. It was no oneโ€™s fault, just a random solar event. Bad luck. I survived. My crew didnโ€™t. I tried to save them.

A tear forms in my eye. When it breaks loose, I lose it. I release the stylus, which drifts to the end of its cord and snaps back, like a running dog that doesnโ€™t realize itโ€™s on a leash.

I float into the capsule and cry and cry some more, all the emotion of the last twenty-four hours hitting me at once.

All I have is time. I am cast away on an island in the sky, no chance of getting home. This is my message in a bottleโ€”my last letter to my only sibling and best friend. I have to get it right.

I erase the last line and continue.

My crew didnโ€™t. They were a good crew. The best crew (but Iโ€™m biased).

Donโ€™t be sad for me. I knew the risks when I came to the ISS. Space was my dream. I knew it could end this way, but Iโ€™m happy that I lived this dream for so long.

There are some things I want to say. The Tiffany necklace I inherited from Momโ€”Iโ€™d like for Adeline to have it. I canโ€™t really think of a use for the rest of my earthly possessions. Theyโ€™re likely not worth much in the Long Winter. Donโ€™t spend any time on them. You, David, and the kids need to get to one of the habitable zones. Or underground if theyโ€™re building colonies. I know that sounds extreme, but please trust me. Sell whatever you have to and go. Donโ€™t look back. Please. If Iโ€™m wrong, you can start over. If Iโ€™m not, you all wonโ€™t survive.

I love you so much.

โ€”Emma

A reply comes promptly after I send it.

Weโ€™ll deliver it, Commander.

I have a request. Proceed.

My sister is the only family I have. Is the government planning a shelter from the Long Winter? If so, I request a place for her. I assume there would have been a place for me. Please transfer it to her.

Youโ€™re talking like youโ€™re not coming home. You are. We just need some time.

Even if I were on the ground, I would give them my spot. Please.

Understood. Iโ€™ll take this upstairs as soon as I can.

I float away from the screen. That was worth surviving for. Saving them. All of a sudden, I feel a lot better, even though I know Iโ€™ll never leave this capsule alive.

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