AUDIO LOG TRANSCRIPT: SOL 119
You know what!? Fuck this! Fuck this airlock, fuck that Hab, and fuck this whole planet!
Seriously, this is it! Iโve had it! Iโve got a few minutes before I run out of air and Iโll be damned if I spend them playing Marsโs little game. Iโm so god damned sick of it I could puke!
All I have to do is sit here. The air will leak out and Iโll die.
Iโll be done. No more getting my hopes up, no more self-delusion, and no more problem-solving. Iโve fuckingย had it!
AUDIO LOG TRANSCRIPT: SOL 119 (2)
Sighโฆokay. Iโve had my tantrum and now I have to figure out how to stay alive. Again. Okay, letโs see what I can do here.โฆ
Iโm in the airlock. I can see the Hab out the window; itโs a good 50 meters away. Normally, the airlock isย attachedย to the Hab. So thatโs a problem.
The airlockโs on its side, and I can hear a steady hiss. So either itโs leaking or there are snakes in here. Either way, Iโm in trouble.
Also, during theโฆwhatever the fuck happenedโฆI got bounced around like a pinball and smashed my faceplate. Air is notoriously uncooperative when it comes to giant, gaping holes in your EVA suit.
Looks like the Hab is completely deflated and collapsed. So even if I had a functional EVA suit to leave the airlock with, I wouldnโt have anywhere to go. So that sucks.
I gotta think for a minute. And I have to get out of this EVA suit. Itโs bulky, and the airlock is cramped. Besides, itโs not like itโs doing me any good.
AUDIO LOG TRANSCRIPT: SOL 119 (3)
Things arenโt as bad as they seem.
Iโm still fucked, mind you. Just not as deeply.
Not sure what happened to the Hab, but the roverโs probably fine. Itโs not ideal, but at least itโs not a leaky phone booth.
I have a patch kit on my EVA suit, of course. The same kind that saved my life back on Sol 6. But donโt get excited. It wonโt do the suit any good. The patch kit is a cone-shaped valve with super-sticky resin on the wide end. Itโs just too small to deal with a hole larger than eight centimeters. And really, if you have a nine-centimeter hole, youโre going to be dead way before you could whip out the kit.
Still, itโs an asset, and maybe I can use it to stop the airlock leak. And thatโs my top priority right now.
Itโs a small leak. With the faceplate gone, the EVA suit is effectively managing the whole airlock. Itโs been adding air to make up for the missing pressure. But itโll run out eventually.
I need to find the leak. I think itโs near my feet, judging by the sound. Now that Iโm out of the suit, I can turn around and get a look.โฆ
I donโt see anything.โฆ I can hear it, butโฆitโs down here somewhere, but I donโt know where.
I can only think of one way to find it: Start a fire!
Yeah, I know. A lot of my ideas involve setting something on fire. And yes, deliberately starting a fire in a tiny, enclosed space is usually a terrible idea. But I need the smoke. Just a little wisp of it.
As usual, Iโm working with stuff that was deliberately designed not to burn. But no amount of careful design by NASA can get around a determined arsonist with a tank of pure oxygen.
Unfortunately, the EVA suit is made entirely of nonflammable materials. So is the airlock. My clothes are fireproof as well, even the thread.
I was originally planning to check the solar array, doing repairs as needed after last nightโs storm. So I have my toolbox with me. But looking through it, I see itโs all metal or nonflammable plastic.
I just realized I do have something flammable: my own hair. Itโll have to do. Thereโs a sharp knife in the tool kit. Iโll shave some arm hairs off into a little pile.
Next step: oxygen. I donโt have anything so refined as pure oxygen flow. All I can do is muck with the EVA suit controls to increase oxygen percentage in the whole airlock. I figure bumping it to 40 percent will do.
All I need now is a spark.
The EVA suit has electronics, but it runs on very low voltage. I donโt think I could get an arc with it. Besides, I donโt want to mess with the suit. I need it working to get from the airlock to the rover.
The airlock itself has electronics, but it ran on Hab power. I guess NASA
never considered what would happen if it was launched fifty meters. Lazy bums.
Plastic might not burn, but anyone whoโs played with a balloon knows itโs great at building up static charge. Once I do that, I should be able to make a spark just by touching a metal tool.
Fun fact: This is exactly how the Apollo 1 crew died. Wish me luck!
AUDIO LOG TRANSCRIPT: SOL 119 (4)
Iโm in a box full of burning-hair smell. Itโs not a good smell.
On my first try, the fire lit, but the smoke just drifted randomly around. My own breathing was screwing it up. So I held my breath and tried again.
My second try, the EVA suit threw everything off. Thereโs a gentle flow of air coming out of the faceplate as the suit constantly replaces the missing air. So I shut the suit down, held my breath, and tried again. I had to be quick; the pressure was dropping.
My third try, the quick arm movements I used to set the fire messed everything up. Just moving around makes enough turbulence to send the smoke everywhere.
The fourth time I kept the suit turned off, held my breath, and when the time came to light the fire, I did it very slowly. Then I watched as the little wisp of smoke drifted toward the floor of the airlock, disappearing through a hairline fracture.
I have you now, little leak!
I gasped for air and turned the EVA suit back on. The pressure had dropped to 0.9 atmospheres during my little experiment. But there was plenty of oxygen in the air for me and my hair-fire to breathe. The suit quickly got things back to normal.
Looking at the fracture, I see that itโs pretty tiny. It would be a cinch to seal it with the suitโs patch kit, but now that I think about it, thatโs a bad idea.
Iโll need to do some kind of repair to the faceplate. I donโt know how just yet, but the patch kit and its pressure-resistant resin are probably really important. And I canโt do it bit by bit, either. Once I break the seal on the patch kit, the binary components of the resin mix and I have sixty seconds before it hardens. I canโt just take a little to fix the airlock.
Given time, I might be able to come up with a plan for the faceplate. Then, I could take a few seconds during that plan to scrape resin over the airlock fracture. But I donโt have time.
Iโm down to 40 percent of my N2ย tank. I need to seal that fracture now, and I need to do it without using the patch kit.
First idea: Little Dutch Boy. Iโm licking my palm and placing it over the crack.
OkayโฆI canโt quite make a perfect seal, so thereโs airflowโฆgetting colder nowโฆgetting pretty uncomfortableโฆOkay, fuck this.
On to idea number two. Tape!
I have duct tape in my toolbox. Letโs slap some on and see if it slows the flow. I wonder how long it will last before the pressure rips it. Putting it on now.
There we goโฆstill holdingโฆ
Lemme check the suit.โฆ Readouts say the pressure is stable. Looks like the duct tape made a good seal.
Letโs see if it holds.โฆ
AUDIO LOG TRANSCRIPT: SOL 119 (5)
Itโs been fifteen minutes, and the tape is still holding. Looks like that problem is solved.
Sort of anticlimactic, really. I was already working out how to cover the breach with ice. I have two liters of water in the EVA suitโs โhamster-feeder.โ I could have shut off the suitโs heating systems and let the airlock cool to freezing. Then IโdโฆWell, whatever.
Coulda done it with ice. Iโm just sayinโ.
All right. On to my next problem: How do I fix the EVA suit? Duct tape might seal a hairline crack, but it canโt hold an atmosphere of pressure against the size of my broken faceplate.
The patch kit is too small, but still useful. I can spread the resin around the edge of where the faceplate was, then stick something on to cover the hole. Problem is, what do I use to cover the hole? Something that can stand up to a lot of pressure.
Looking around, the only thing I see that can hold an atmosphere is the EVA suit itself. Thereโs plenty of material to work with, and I can even cut it. Remember when I was cutting Hab canvas into strips? Those same shears are right here in my tool kit.
Cutting a chunk out of my EVA suit leaves it with another hole. But a hole I can control the shape and location of.
YeahโฆI think I see a solution here. Iโm going to cut off my arm!
Well, no. Notย myย arm. The EVA suitโs arm. Iโll cut right below the left elbow.
Then I can cut along its length, turning it into a rectangle. Itโll be big enough to seal the faceplate, and itโll be held in place by the resin.
Material designed to withstand atmospheric pressure? Check. Resin designed to seal a breach against that pressure? Check.
And what about the gaping hole on the stumpy arm? Unlike my faceplate, the suitโs material is flexible. Iโll press it together and seal it with resin. Iโll have to press my left arm against my side while Iโm in the suit, but thereโll be room.
Iโll be spreading the resin pretty thin, but itโs literally the strongest adhesive known to man. And it doesnโt have to be a perfect seal. It just has to last long enough for me to get to safety.
And where will that โsafetyโ be? Not a damn clue.
Anyway, one problem at a time. Right now Iโm fixing the EVA suit.
AUDIO LOG TRANSCRIPT: SOL 119 (6)
Cutting the arm off the suit was easy; so was cutting along its length to make a rectangle. Those shears are strong as hell.
Cleaning the glass off the faceplate took longer than Iโd expected. Itโs unlikely it would puncture EVA suit material, but Iโm not taking any chances. Besides, I donโt want glass in my face when Iโm wearing it.
Then came the tricky part. Once I broke the seal on the patch kit, I had sixty seconds before the resin set. I scooped it off the patch kit with my fingers and quickly spread it around the rim of the faceplate. Then I took what was left and sealed the arm hole.
I pressed the rectangle of suit material onto the helmet with both hands while using my knee to keep pressure on the armโs seam.
I held on until Iโd counted 120 seconds. Just to be sure.
It seemed to work well. The seal looked strong and the resin was rock-hard. I did, however, glue my hand to the helmet.
Stop laughing.
In retrospect, using my fingers to spread the resin wasnโt the best plan. Fortunately, my left hand was still free. After some grunting and a lot of profanities, I was able to reach the toolbox. Once I got a screwdriver, I chiseled myself free (feeling really stupid the whole time). It was a delicate process because I didnโt want to flay the skin off my fingers. I had to get the screwdriver between the helmet and the resin. I freed my hand and didnโt draw blood, so I call that a win. Though Iโll have hardened resin on my fingers for days, just like a kid who played with Krazy Glue.
Using the arm computer, I had the suit overpressurize to 1.2 atmospheres. The faceplate patch bowed outward but otherwise held firm. The arm filled in, threatening to tear the new seam, but stayed in one piece.
Then I watched the readouts to see how airtight things were. Answer: Not very.
It absolutelyย pissedย the air out. In sixty seconds it leaked so much it pressurized the whole airlock to 1.2 atmospheres.
The suit is designed for eight hours of use. That works out to 250 milliliters of liquid oxygen. Just to be safe, the suit has a full liter of O2ย capacity. But thatโs only half the story. The rest of the air is nitrogen. Itโs just there to add
pressure. When the suit leaks, thatโs what it backfills with. The suit has two
liters of liquid N2ย storage.
Letโs call the volume of the airlock two cubic meters. The inflated EVA suit probably takes up half of it. So it took five minutes to add 0.2 atmospheres to 1 cubic meter. Thatโs 285 grams of air (trust me on the math). The air in the tanks is around 1 gram per cubic centimeter, meaning I just lost 285 milliliters.
The three tanks combined had 3000 milliliters to start with. A lot of that was used to maintain pressure while the airlock was leaking. Also, my breathing turned some oxygen into carbon dioxide, which was captured by the suitโs CO2
filters.
Checking the readouts, I see that I have 410 milliliters of oxygen, 738 milliliters of nitrogen. Together, they make almost 1150 milliliters to work with. That, divided by 285 milliliters lost per minuteโฆ
Once Iโm out of the airlock, this EVA suit will only last four minutes. Fuck.
AUDIO LOG TRANSCRIPT: SOL 119 (7)
Okay, Iโve been thinking some more.
What good is going to the rover? Iโd just be trapped there instead. The extra room would be nice, but Iโd still die eventually. No water reclaimer, no oxygenator, no food. Take your pick; all of those problems are fatal.
I need to fix the Hab. I know what to do; we practiced it in training. But itโll take a long time. Iโll have to scrounge around in the now-collapsed canvas to get the spare material for patching. Then I have to find the breach and seal-strip a patch in place.
But itโll take hours to repair, and my EVA suit is useless.
Iโll need another suit. Martinezโs used to be in the rover. I hauled it all the
way to theย Pathfinderย site and back, just in case I needed a spare. But when I returned, I put it back in the Hab.
Damn it!
All right, so Iโll need to get another suit before going to the rover. Which one? Johanssenโs is too small for me (tiny little gal, our Johanssen). Lewisโs is full of water. Actually, by now itโs full of slowly sublimating ice. The mangled, glued-together suit I have with me is my original one. That leaves just Martinez, Vogel, and Beckโs.
I left Martinezโs near my bunk, in case I needed a suit in a hurry. Of course, after that sudden decompression, it could be anywhere. Still, itโs a place to start. Next problem: Iโm like 50 meters from the Hab. Running in 0.4 g while
wearing a bulky EVA suit isnโt easy. At best, I can trundle 2 meters per second.
Thatโs a precious 25 seconds; almost an eighth of my four minutes. Iโve got to bring that down.
But how?
AUDIO LOG TRANSCRIPT: SOL 119 (8)
Iโll roll the damn airlock.
Itโs basically a phone booth on its side. I did some experiments.
I figured if I want it to roll, Iโll need to hit the wall as hard as possible. And I have to be in the air at the time. I canโt press against some other part of the airlock. The forces would cancel each other out and it wouldnโt move at all.
First I tried launching myself off one wall and slamming into the other. The airlock slid a little, but thatโs it.
Next, I tried doing a super-push-up to get airborne (0.4 g yay!) then kicking the wall with both feet. Again, it just slid.
The third time, I got it right. The trick was to plant both my feet on the ground, near the wall, then launch myself to the top of the opposite wall and hit with my back. When I tried that just now, it gave me enough force and leverage to tip the airlock and roll it one face toward the Hab.
The airlock is a meter wide, soโฆsighโฆI have to do it like fifty more times. Iโm gonna have a hell of a backache after this.
AUDIO LOG TRANSCRIPT: SOL 120
I have a hell of a backache.
The subtle and refined โhurl my body at the wallโ technique had some flaws. It worked only one out of every ten tries, and it hurt a lot. I had to take breaks,
stretch out, and generally convince myself to body-slam the wall again and again.
It took all damn night, but I made it.
Iโm ten meters from the Hab now. I canโt get any closer, โcause the debris from the decompression is all over the place. This isnโt an โall-terrainโ airlock. I canโt roll over that shit.
It was morning when the Hab popped. Now itโs morning again. Iโve been in this damn box for an entire day. But Iโm leaving soon.
Iโm in the EVA suit now, and ready to roll.
All rightโฆOkayโฆOnce more through the plan: Use the manual valves to equalize the airlock. Get out and hurry to the Hab. Wander around under the collapsed canvas. Find Martinezโs suit (or Vogelโs if I run into it first). Get to the rover. Then Iโm safe.
If I run out of time before finding a suit, Iโll just run to the rover. Iโll be in trouble, but Iโll have time to think and materials to work with.
Deep breathโฆhere we go!
LOG ENTRY: SOL 120
Iโm alive! And Iโm in the rover!
Things didnโt go exactly as planned, but Iโm not dead, so itโs a win.
Equalizing the airlock went fine. I was out on the surface within thirty seconds. Skipping toward the Hab (the fastest way to move in this gravity), I passed through the field of debris. The rupture had really sent things flying, myself included.
It was hard to see; my faceplate was covered by the makeshift patch. Fortunately, my arm had a camera. NASA discovered that turning your whole EVA-suited body to look at something was a strenuous waste of time. So they mounted a small camera on the right arm. The feed is projected on the inner faceplate. This allows us to look at things just by pointing at them.
The faceplate patch wasnโt exactly smooth or reflective, so I had to look at a rippled, messed-up version of the camera feed. Still, it was enough to see what was going on.
I beelined for where the airlock used to be. I knew there had to be a pretty big hole there, so Iโd be able to get in. I found it easily. And boy is it a nasty rip! Itโs going to be a pain in the ass to fix it.
Thatโs when the flaws in my plan started to reveal themselves. I only had one arm to work with. My left arm was pinned against my body, while the stumpy
arm of the suit bounced freely. So as I moved around under the canvas, I had to use my one good arm to hold the canvas up. It slowed me down.
From what I could see, the interior of the Hab is chaos. Everythingโs moved. Entire tables and bunks are meters away from where they started. Lighter objects are wildly jumbled, many of them out on the surface. Everythingโs covered in soil and mangled potato plants.
Trudging onward, I got to where Iโd left Martinezโs suit. To my shock, it was still there!
โYay!โ I naively thought. โProblem solved.โ
Unfortunately, the suit was pinned under a table, which was held down by the collapsed canvas. If Iโd had both arms, I could have pulled it free, but with only one, I just couldnโt do it.
Running low on time, I detached the helmet. Setting it aside, I reached past the table to get Martinezโs patch kit. I found it with the help of the arm-camera. I dropped it in the helmet and hauled ass out of there.
I barely made it to the rover in time. My ears were popping from pressure loss just as the roverโs airlock filled with wonderful 1-atmosphere air.
Crawling in, I collapsed and panted for a moment.
So Iโm back in the rover. Just like I was back on the Greatย Pathfinder
Recovery Expedition. Ugh. At least this time it smells a little better.
NASAโs probably pretty worried about me by now. They probably saw the airlock move back to the Hab, so they know Iโm alive, but theyโll want status. And as it happens, itโs the rover that communicates withย Pathfinder.
I tried to send a message, butย Pathfinderย isnโt responding. Thatโs not a big surprise. Itโs powered directly from the Hab, and the Hab is offline. During my brief, panicked scramble outside, I saw thatย Pathfinderย was right where I left it, and the debris didnโt reach that far out. It should be fine, once I get it some power.
As for my current situation, the big gain is the helmet. Theyโre interchangeable, so I can replace my broken-ass one with Martinezโs. The stumpy arm is still an issue, but the faceplate was the main source of leaks. And with the fresh patch kit, I can seal the arm with more resin.
But that can wait. Iโve been awake for over twenty-four hours. Iโm not in any immediate danger, so Iโm going to sleep.
LOG ENTRY: SOL 121
Got a good nightโs sleep and made real progress today.
First thing I did was reseal the arm. Last time, I had to spread the resin pretty thin; Iโd used most of it for the faceplate patch. But this time I had a whole patch kit just for the arm. I got a perfect seal.
I still only had a one-armed suit, but at least it didnโt leak.
Iโd lost most of my air yesterday, but I had a half hour of oxygen left. Like I said earlier, a human body doesnโt need much oxygen. Maintaining pressure was the problem.
With that much time, I was able to take advantage of the roverโs EVA tank-refill. Something I couldnโt do with the leaky suit.
The tank-refill is an emergency measure. The expected use of the rover is to start with full EVA suits and come back with air to spare. It wasnโt designed for long trips, or even overnighters. But, just in case of emergency, it has refill hoses mounted on the exterior. Inside space was limited already, and NASA concluded that most air-related emergencies would be outdoors.
But refilling is slow, slower than my suit was leaking. So it wasnโt any use to me until I swapped helmets. Now, with a solid suit capable of holding pressure, refilling the tanks was a breeze.
After refilling, and making sure the suit was still not leaking, I had a few immediate tasks to take care of. Much as I trust my handiwork, I wanted a two-armed suit.
I ventured back into the Hab. This time, not being rushed, I was able to use a pole to leverage the table off Martinezโs suit. Pulling it loose, I dragged it back to the rover.
After a thorough diagnostic to be sure, I finally had a fully functional EVA suit! It took me two trips to get it, but I got it.
Tomorrow, Iโll fix the Hab.
LOG ENTRY: SOL 122
The first thing I did today was line up rocks near the rover to spell โA-okay.โ That should make NASA happy.
I went into the Hab again to assess damage. My priority will be to get the structure intact and holding pressure. From there, I can work on fixing stuff that broke.
The Hab is normally a dome, with flexible support poles maintaining the arch and rigid, folding floor material to keep its base flat. The internal pressure was a vital part of its support. Without it, the whole thing collapsed. I inspected the poles, and none of them had broken. Theyโre just lying flat is all. Iโll have to re-couple a few of them, but thatโll be easy.
The hole where Airlock 1 used to be is huge, but surmountable. I have seal-strips and spare canvas. Itโll be a lot of work, but I can get the Hab together again. Once I do, Iโll reestablish power and getย Pathfinderย back online. From there, NASA can tell me how to fix anything I canโt figure out on my own.
Iโm not worried about any of that. I have a much bigger problem. The farm is dead.
With a complete loss of pressure, most of the water boiled off. Also, the temperature is well below freezing. Not even the bacteria in the soil can survive a catastrophe like that. Some of the crops were in pop-tents off the Hab. But theyโre dead, too. I had them connected directly to the Hab via hoses to maintain air supply and temperature. When the Hab blew, the pop-tents depressurized as well. Even if they hadnโt, the freezing cold would have killed the crops.
Potatoes are now extinct on Mars.
So is the soil bacteria. Iโll never grow another plant so long as Iโm here.
We had it all planned out. My farm would give me food till Sol 900. A supply probe would get here on Sol 856; way before I ran out. With the farm dead, that plan is history.
The ration packs wonโt have been affected by the explosion. And the potatoes Iโve already grown may be dead, but theyโre still food. I was just about to harvest, so it was a good time for this to happen, I guess.
The rations will last me till Sol 400. I canโt say for sure how long the potatoes will last, until I see how many I got. But I can estimate. I had 400 plants, probably averaging 5 potatoes each: 2000 taters. At 150 calories each, Iโll need to eat 10 per sol to survive. That means theyโll last me 200 sols. Grand total: I have enough food to last till Sol 600.
By Sol 856 Iโll be long dead.