Martinez:
Dr. Shields says I need to write personal messages to each of the crew. She says itโll keep me tethered to humanity. I think itโs bullshit. But hey, itโs an order.
With you, I can be blunt:
If I die, I need you to check on my parents. Theyโll want to hear about our time on Mars firsthand. Iโll need you to do that.
It wonโt be easy talking to a couple about their dead son. Itโs a lot to ask; thatโs why Iโm asking you. Iโd tell you youโre my best friend and stuff, but it would be lame.
Iโm not giving up. Just planning for every outcome. Itโs what I do.
โขโขโข
GUO MING,ย director of the China National Space Administration, examined the daunting pile of paperwork at his desk. In the old days, when China wanted to launch a rocket, they just launched it. Now they were compelled by international agreements to warn other nations first.
It was a requirement, Guo Ming noted to himself, that did not apply to the
United States. To be fair, the Americans publicly announced their launch schedules well in advance, so it amounted to the same thing.
He walked a fine line filling out the form: making the launch date and flight path clear, while doing everything possible to โconceal state secrets.โ
He snorted at the last requirement. โRidiculous,โ he mumbled. Theย Taiyang Shenย had no strategic or military value. It was an unmanned probe that would be in Earth orbit less than two days. After that, it would travel to a solar orbit between Mercury and Venus. It would be Chinaโs first heliology probe to orbit the sun.
Yet the State Council insisted all launches be shrouded in secrecy. Even
launches with nothing to hide. This way, other nations could not infer from lack of openness which launches contained classified payloads.
A knock at the door interrupted his paperwork. โCome,โ Guo Ming said, happy for the interruption. โGood evening, sir,โ said Under Director Zhu Tao. โTao, welcome back.โ
โThank you, sir. Itโs good to be back in Beijing.โ
โHow were things at Jiuquan?โ asked Guo Ming. โNot too cold, I hope? Iโll never understand why our launch complex is in the middle of the Gobi Desert.โ
โIt was cold, yet manageable,โ Zhu Tao said.
โAnd how are launch preparations coming along?โ โI am happy to report they are all on schedule.โ โExcellent.โ Guo Ming smiled.
Zhu Tao sat quietly, staring at his boss.
Guo Ming looked expectantly back at him, but Zhu Tao neither stood to leave nor said anything further.
โSomething else, Tao?โ Guo Ming asked.
โMmm,โ Zhu Tao said. โOf course, youโve heard about the Iris probe?โ
โYes, I did,โ Guo frowned. โTerrible situation. That poor manโs going to starve.โ
โPossibly,โ Zhu Tao said. โPossibly not.โ
Guo Ming leaned back in his chair. โWhat are you saying?โ
โItโs theย Taiyang Shenโs booster, sir. Our engineers have run the numbers, and it has enough fuel for a Mars injection orbit. It could get there in four hundred and nineteen days.โ
โAre you kidding?โ
โHave you ever known me to โkid,โ sir?โ
Guo Ming stood and pinched his chin. Pacing, he said, โWe can really send theย Taiyang Shenย to Mars?โ
โNo, sir,โ said Zhu Tao. โItโs far too heavy. The massive heat shielding makes it the heaviest unmanned probe weโve ever built. Thatโs why the booster had to be so powerful. But a lighter payload could be sent all the way to Mars.โ
โHow much mass could we send?โ Guo Ming asked. โNine hundred and forty-one kilograms, sir.โ
โHmm,โ Guo Ming said, โI bet NASA could work with that limitation. Why havenโt they approached us?โ
โBecause they donโt know,โ Zhu Tao said. โAll our booster technology is classified information. The Ministry of State Security even spreads disinformation about our capabilities. This is for obvious reasons.โ
โSo they donโtย knowย we can help them,โ Guo Ming said. โIf we decide not to help, no one will know we could have.โ
โCorrect, sir.โ
โFor the sake of argument, letโs say we decided to help. What then?โ
โTime would be the enemy, sir,โ Zhu Tao answered. โBased on travel duration and the supplies their astronaut has remaining, any such probe would have to be launched within a month. Even then he would starve a little.โ
โThatโs right around when we planned to launchย Taiyang Shen.โ
โYes, sir. But it took them two months to build Iris, and it was so rushed it failed.โ
โThatโs their problem,โ Guo Ming said. โOur end would be providing the booster. Weโd launch from Jiuquan; we canโt ship an eight-hundred-ton rocket to Florida.โ
โAny agreement would hinge on the Americans reimbursing us for the booster,โ Zhu Tao said, โand the State Council would likely want political favors from the US government.โ
โReimbursement would be pointless,โ Guo Ming said. โThis was an expensive project, and the State Council grumbled about it all along. If they had a bulk payout for its value, theyโd just keep it. Weโd never get to build another one.โ
He clasped his hands behind his back. โAnd the American people may be sentimental, but their government is not. The US State Department wonโt trade anything major for one manโs life.โ
โSo itโs hopeless?โ asked Zhu Tao.
โNot hopeless,โ Guo Ming corrected. โJust hard. If this becomes a negotiation by diplomats, it will never be resolved. We need to keep this among scientists. Space agency to space agency. Iโll get a translator and call NASAโs administrator. Weโll work out an agreement, then present it to our governments as a fait accompli.โ
โBut what can they do for us?โ Zhu Tao asked. โWeโd be giving up a booster and effectively cancelingย Taiyang Shen.โ
Guo Ming smiled. โTheyโll give us something we canโt get without them.โ โAnd that is?โ
โTheyโll put a Chinese astronaut on Mars.โ
Zhu Tao stood. โOf course.โ He smiled. โThe Ares 5 crew hasnโt even been selected yet. Weโll insist on a crewman. One we get to pick and train. NASA and the US State Department would surely accept that. But will our State Council?โ
Guo Ming smiled wryly. โPublicly rescue the Americans? Put a Chinese astronaut on Mars? Have the world see China as equal to the US in space? The State Council would sell their ownย mothersย for that.โ
โขโขโข
TEDDY LISTENEDย to the phone at his ear. The voice on the other end finished what it had to say, then fell silent as it awaited an answer.
He stared at nothing in particular as he processed what heโd just heard.
After a few seconds, he replied, โYes.โ
โขโขโข
Johanssen:
Your poster outsold the rest of ours combined. Youโre a hot chick who went to Mars. Youโre on dorm-room walls all over the world.
Looking like that, why are you such a nerd? And you are, you know. A serious nerd. I had to do some computer shit to get Pathfinder talking to the rover and oh my god. And I had NASA telling me what to do every step of the way.
You should try to be more cool. Wear dark glasses and a leather jacket. Carry a switchblade. Aspire to a level of coolness known only asโฆโBotanist Cool.โ
Did you know Commander Lewis had a chat with us men? If anyone hit on you, weโd be off the mission. I guess after a lifetime of commanding sailors, sheโs got an unfairly jaded view.
Anyway, the point is youโre a nerd. Remind me to give you a wedgie next time I see you.
โขโขโข
โOKAY, HEREย we are again,โ said Bruce to the assembled heads of JPL. โYouโve all heard about theย Taiyang Shen,ย so you know our friends in China have given us one more chance. But this time, itโs going to be harder.
โTaiyang Shenย will be ready to launch in twenty-eight days. If it launches on
time, our payload will get to Mars on Sol 624, six weeks after Watneyโs expected to run out of food. NASAโs already working on ways to stretch his supply.
โWe made history when we finished Iris in sixty-three days. Now we have to do it inย twenty-eight.โ
He looked across the table to the incredulous faces.
โFolks,โ he said, โthis is going to be the most โghettoโ spacecraft ever built.
Thereโs only one way to finish that fast: no landing system.โ โSorry, what?โ Jack Trevor stammered.
Bruce nodded. โYou heard me. No landing system. Weโll need guidance for in-flight course adjustments. But once it gets to Mars, itโs going to crash.โ
โThatโs crazy!โ Jack said. โItโll be going anย insaneย velocity when it hits!โ โYep,โ Bruce said. โWith ideal atmospheric drag, itโll impact at three
hundred meters per second.โ
โWhat good will a pulverized probe do Watney?โ Jack asked.
โAs long as the food doesnโt burn up on the way in, Watney can eat it,โ Bruce said.
Turning to the whiteboard, he began drawing a basic organizational chart.ย โI want two teams,โ he began.
โTeam One will make the outer shell, guidance system, and thrusters. All we need is for it to get to Mars. I want the safest possible system. Aerosol propellant would be best. High-gain radio so we can talk to it, and standard satellite navigational software.
โTeam Two will deal with the payload. They need to find a way to contain the food during impact. If protein bars hit sand at three hundred meters per second, theyโll make protein-scented sand. We need themย edibleย after impact.
โWe can weigh nine hundred and forty-one kilograms. At least three hundred of that needs to be food. Get crackinโ.โ
โขโขโข
โUH, DR. KAPOOR?โย Rich said, peeking his head into Venkatโs office. โDo you
have a minute?โ
Venkat gestured him in. โYou areโฆ?โ
โRich, Rich Purnell,โ he said, shuffling into the office, his arms wrapped around a sheaf of disorganized papers. โFrom astrodynamics.โ
โNice to meet you,โ Venkat said. โWhat can I do for you, Rich?โ
โI came up with something a while ago. Spent a lot of time on it.โ He dumped the papers on Venkatโs desk. โLemme find the summary.โฆโ
Venkat stared forlornly at his once-clean desk, now strewn with scores of printouts.
โHere we go!โ Rich said triumphantly, grabbing a paper. Then his expression saddened. โNo, this isnโt it.โ
โRich,โ Venkat said. โMaybe you should just tell me what this is about?โ
Rich looked at the mess of papers and sighed. โBut I had such a cool summary.โฆโ
โA summary for what?โ โHow to save Watney.โ
โThatโs already in progress,โ Venkat said. โItโs a last-ditch effort, butโโ
โTheย Taiyang Shen?โ Rich snorted. โThat wonโt work. You canโt make a Mars probe in a month.โ
โWeโre sure as hell going to try,โ Venkat said, a note of annoyance in his voice.
โOh, sorry, am I being difficult?โ Rich asked. โIโm not good with people. Sometimes Iโm difficult. I wish people would just tell me. Anyway, theย Taiyang Shenย is critical. In fact, my idea wonโt work without it. But a Mars probe? Pfft. Cโmon.โ
โAll right,โ Venkat said. โWhatโs your idea?โ
Rich snatched a paper from the desk. โHere it is!โ He handed it to Venkat with a childlike smile.
Venkat took the summary and skimmed it. The more he read, the wider his eyes got. โAre you sure about this?โ
โAbsolutely!โ Rich beamed. โHave you told anyone else?โ โWho would I tell?โ
โI donโt know,โ Venkat said. โFriends?โ โI donโt have any of those.โ
โOkay, keep it under your hat.โ
โI donโt wear a hat.โ
โItโs just an expression.โ
โReally?โ Rich said. โItโs a stupid expression.โ โRich, youโre being difficult.โ
โAh. Thanks.โ
โขโขโข
Vogel:
Being your backup has backfired.
I guess NASA figured botany and chemistry are similar because they both end in โY,โ One way or another, I ended up being your backup chemist.
Remember when they made you spend a day explaining your experiments to me? It was in the middle of intense mission prep. You may have forgotten.
You started my training by buying me a beer. For breakfast. Germans are awesome.
Anyway, now that I have time to kill, NASA gave me a pile of work. And all your chemistry crap is on the list. So now I have to do boring-ass experiments with test tubes and soil and pH levels and Zzzzzzzzzz.โฆ
My life is now a desperate struggle for survivalโฆwith occasional titration.
Frankly, I suspect youโre a super-villain. Youโre a chemist, you have a German accent, you had a base on Marsโฆ what more can there be?
โขโขโข
โWHAT THEย fuck is โProject Elrondโ?โ Annie asked. โI had to make something up,โ Venkat said.
โSo you came up with โElrondโ?โ Annie pressed.
โBecause itโs a secret meeting?โ Mitch guessed. โThe e-mail said I couldnโt even tell my assistant.โ
โIโll explain everything once Teddy arrives.โ Venkat said.
โWhy does โElrondโ mean โsecret meetingโ?โ Annie asked.
โAre we going to make a momentous decision?โ Bruge Ng asked. โExactly,โ Venkat said.
โHow did you know that?โ Annie asked, getting annoyed.
โElrond,โ Bruce said. โThe Council of Elrond. Fromย Lord of the Rings. Itโs the meeting where they decide to destroy the One Ring.โ
โJesus,โ Annie said. โNoneย of you got laid in high school, did you?โ
โGood morning,โ Teddy said as he walked into the conference room. Seating himself, he rested his hands on the table. โAnyone know what this meetingโs about?โ he asked.
โWait,โ Mitch said, โTeddyย doesnโt even know?โ
Venkat took a deep breath. โOne of our astrodynamicists, Rich Purnell, has found a way to getย Hermesย back to Mars. The course he came up with would giveย Hermesย a Mars flyby on Sol 549.โ
Silence.
โYou shittinโ us?โ Annie demanded.
โSol 549? Howโs that even possible?โ asked Bruce. โEven Iris wouldnโt have landed till Sol 588.โ
โIris is a point-thrust craft,โ Venkat said. โHermesย has a constant-thrust ion engine. Itโs always accelerating. Also,ย Hermesย has aย lotย of velocity right now. On their current Earth-intercept course, they have to decelerate for the next month just to slow down to Earthโs speed.โ
Mitch rubbed the back of his head. โWowโฆ549. Thatโs thirty-five sols before Watney runs out of food. That would solve everything.โ
Teddy leaned forward. โRun us through it, Venkat. What would it entail?โ โWell,โ Venkat began, โif they did this โRich Purnell Maneuver,โ theyโd start
accelerating right away, to preserve their velocity and gain even more. They
wouldnโt intercept Earth at all, but would come close enough to use a gravity assist to adjust course. Around that time, theyโd pick up a resupply probe with provisions for the extended trip.
โAfter that, theyโd be on an accelerating orbit toward Mars, arriving on Sol
549. Like I said, itโs a Maryย flyby.ย This isnโt anything like a normal Ares mission. Theyโll be going too fast to fall into orbit. The rest of the maneuver takes them back to Earth. Theyโd be home two hundred and eleven days after the flyby.โ
โWhat good is a flyby?โ Bruce asked. โThey donโt have any way to get Watney off the surface.โ
โYeahโฆ,โ Venkat said. โNow for the unpleasant part: Watney would have to get to the Ares 4 MAV.โ
โSchiaparelli!?โ Mitch gaped. โThatโs thirty-two hundred kilometers away!โ โThree thousand, two hundred, and thirty-five kilometers to be exact,โ
Venkat said. โItโs not out of the question. He drove toย Pathfinderโs landing site
and back. Thatโs over fifteen hundred kilometers.โ
โThat was over flat, desert terrain,โ Bruce chimed in, โbut the trip to Schiaparelliโโ
โSuffice it to say,โ Venkat interrupted, โit would be very difficult and dangerous. But we have a lot of clever scientists to help him trick out the rover. Also there would be MAV modifications.โ
โWhatโs wrong with the MAV?โ Mitch asked.
โItโs designed to get to low Mars orbit,โ Venkat explained. โButย Hermesย would be on a flyby, so the MAV would have to escape Mars gravity entirely to intercept.โ
โHow?โ Mitch asked.
โItโd have to lose weightโฆaย lotย of weight. I can get rooms full of people working on these problems, if we decide to do this.โ
โEarlier,โ Teddy said, โyou mentioned a supply probe forย Hermes. We have that capability?โ
โYes, with theย Taiyang Shen,โ Venkat said. โWeโd shoot for a near-Earth rendezvous. Itโs a lot easier than getting a probe to Mars, thatโs for sure.โ
โI see,โ Teddy said. โSo we have two options on the table: Send Watney enough food to last until Ares 4, or sendย Hermesย back to get him right now. Both plans require theย Taiyang Shen, so we can only do one.โ
โYes,โ Venkat said. โWeโll have to pick one.โ They all took a moment to consider.
โWhat about theย Hermesย crew?โ Annie asked, breaking the silence. โWould they have a problem with addingโฆโ She did some quick math in her head. โFive hundred and thirty-three days to their mission?โ
โThey wouldnโt hesitate,โ Mitch said. โNot for a second. Thatโs why Venkat called this meeting.โ He glared at Venkat. โHe wants us to decide instead.โ
โThatโs right,โ Venkat said.
โIt should be Commander Lewisโs call,โ Mitch said.
โPointless to even ask her,โ Venkat said. โWeย need to make this decision; itโs a matter of life and death.โ
โSheโs the mission commander,โ Mitch said. โLife-and-death decisions are
her damn job.โ
โEasy, Mitch,โ Teddy said.
โBullshit,โ Mitch said. โYou guys have done end runs around the crew every time something goes wrong. You didnโt tell them Watney was still alive; now youโre not telling them thereโs a way to save him.โ
โWe already have a way to keep him alive,โ Teddy said. โWeโre just discussing another one.โ
โThe crash-lander?โ Mitch said. โDoes anyone think thatโll work? Anyone?โ โAll right, Mitch,โ Teddy said. โYouโve expressed your opinion, and weโve
heard it. Letโs move on.โ He turned to Venkat. โCanย Hermesย function for five
hundred and thirty-three days beyond the scheduled mission end?โ
โIt should,โ Venkat said. โThe crew may have to fix things here and there, but theyโre well trained. Remember,ย Hermesย was made to do all five Ares missions. Itโs only halfway through its designed life span.โ
โItโs the most expensive thing ever built,โ Teddy said. โWe canโt make another one. If something went wrong, the crew would die, and the Ares Program with them.โ
โLosing the crew would be a disaster,โ Venkat said. โBut we wouldnโt loseย Hermes. We can remotely operate it. So long as the reactor and ion engines continued to work, we could bring it back.โ
โSpace travel is dangerous,โ Mitch said. โWe canโt make this a discussion about whatโs safest.โ
โI disagree,โ Teddy said. โThis isย absolutelyย a discussion about whatโs safest. And about how many lives are at stake. Both plans are risky, but resupplying Watney only risks one life while the Rich Purnell Maneuver risks six.โ
โConsiderย degreeย of risk, Teddy,โ Venkat said. โMitch is right. The crash-lander is high-risk. It could miss Mars, it could reenter wrong and burn up, it could crash too hard and destroy the foodโฆWe estimate a thirty percent chance of success.โ
โA near-Earth rendezvous withย Hermesย is more doable?โ Teddy asked.
โMuch more doable,โ Venkat confirmed. โWith sub-second transmission delays, we can control the probe directly from Earth rather than rely on automated systems. When the time comes to dock, Major Martinez can pilot it remotely fromย Hermesย with no transmission delay at all. Andย Hermesย has a human crew, able to overcome any hiccups that may happen. And we donโt have to do a reentry; the supplies donโt have to survive a three-hundred-meters-per-second impact.โ
โSo,โ Bruce offered, โwe can have a high chance of killing one person, or a
low chance of killing six people. Jeez. How do we even make this decision?โ โWe talk about it, then Teddy makes the decision,โ Venkat said. โNot sure
what else we can do.โ
โWe could let Lewisโโ Mitch began. โYeah, other than that,โ Venkat interrupted.
โQuestion,โ Annie said. โWhat am I even here for? This seems like something for you nerds to discuss.โ
โYou need to be in the loop,โ Venkat said. โWeโre not deciding right now. Weโll need to quietly research the details internally. Something might leak, and you need to be ready to dance around questions.โ
โHow long have we got to make a decision?โ Teddy asked.
โThe window for starting the maneuver ends in thirty-nine hours.โ
โAll right,โ Teddy said. โEveryone, we discuss this only in person or on the phone; never e-mail. And donโt talk toย anyoneย about this, other than the people here. The last thing we need is public opinion pressing for a risky cowboy rescue that may be impossible.โ
โขโขโข
Beck:
Hey, man. How ya been?
Now that Iโm in a โdire situation,โ I donโt have to follow social rules anymore. I can be honest with everyone.
Bearing that in mind, I have to sayโฆdudeโฆyou need to tell Johanssen how you feel. If you donโt, youโll regret it forever.
I wonโt lie: It could end badly. I have no idea what she thinks of you. Or of anything. Sheโs weird.
But wait till the missionโs over. Youโre on a ship with her for another two months. Also, if you guys got up to anything while the mission was in progress, Lewis would kill you.
โขโขโข
VENKAT, MITCH,ย Annie, Bruce, and Teddy met for the second time in as many days. โProject Elrondโ had taken on a dark connotation throughout the Space Center, veiled in secrecy. Many people knew the name, none knew its purpose.
Speculation ran rampant. Some thought it was a completely new program in
the works. Others worried it might be a move to cancel Ares 4 and 5. Most thought it was Ares 6 in the works.
โIt wasnโt an easy decision,โ Teddy said to the assembled elite. โBut Iโve decided to go with Iris 2. No Rich Purnell Maneuver.โ
Mitch slammed his fist on the table.
โWeโll do all we can to make it work,โ Bruce said.
โIf itโs not too much to ask,โ Venkat began, โwhat made up your mind?โ Teddy sighed. โItโs a matter of risk,โ he said. โIris 2 only risks one life. Rich
Purnell risks all six of them. I know Rich Purnell is more likely to work, but I
donโt think itโs six times more likely.โ โYou coward,โ Mitch said. โMitchโฆ,โ Venkat said.
โYou god damned coward,โ Mitch continued, ignoring Venkat. โYou just want to cut your losses. Youโre on damage control. You donโt give a shit about Watneyโs life.โ
โOf course I do,โ Teddy replied. โAnd Iโm sick of your infantile attitude. You can throw all the tantrums you want, but the rest of us have to be adults. This isnโt a TV show; the riskier solution isnโt always the best.โ
โSpace is dangerous,โ Mitch snapped. โItโs what we do here. If you want to play it safe all the time, go join an insurance company. And by the way, itโs not even your life youโre risking. The crew can make up their own minds about it.โ
โNo, they canโt,โ Teddy fired back. โTheyโre too emotionally involved. Clearly, so are you. Iโm not gambling five additional lives to save one. Especially when we might save him without risking them at all.โ
โBullshit!โ Mitch shot back as he stood from his chair. โYouโre justย convincingย yourself the crash-lander will work so you donโt have to take a risk. Youโre hanging him out to dry, you chickenshit son of a bitch!โ
He stormed out of the room, slamming the door behind him.
After a few seconds, Venkat followed behind, saying, โIโll make sure he cools off.โ
Bruce slumped in his chair. โSheesh,โ he said nervously. โWeโre scientists, for Christโs sake. What the hell!?โ
Annie quietly gathered her things and placed them in her briefcase.
Teddy looked to her. โSorry about that, Annie,โ he said. โWhat can I say?
Sometimes men let testosterone take overโโ
โI was hoping heโd kick your ass,โ she interrupted. โWhat?โ
โI know you care about the astronauts, but heโs right. Youย areย a fucking coward. If you had balls, we might be able to save Watney.โ
โขโขโข
Lewis:
Hi, Commander.
Between training and our trip to Mars, I spent two years working with you. I think I know you pretty well. So Iโm guessing you still blame yourself for my situation, despite my earlier e-mail asking you not to.
You were faced with an impossible scenario and made a tough decision. Thatโs what commanders do. And your decision was right. If youโd waited any longer, the MAV would have tipped.
Iโm sure youโve run through all the possible outcomes in your head, so you know thereโs nothing you could have done differently (other than โbe psychicโ).
You probably think losing a crewman is the worst thing that can happen. Not true. Losing the whole crew is worse. You kept that from happening.
But thereโs something more important we need to discuss: What is it with you and disco? I can understand the โ70s TV because everyone loves hairy people with huge collars. But disco?
Disco!?
โขโขโข
VOGEL CHECKEDย the position and orientation ofย Hermesย against the projected path. It matched, as usual. In addition to being the missionโs chemist, he was also an accomplished astrophysicist. Though his duties as navigator were laughably easy.
The computer knew the course. It knew when to angle the ship so the ion engines would be aimed correctly. And it knew the location of the ship at all times (easily calculated from the position of the sun and Earth, and knowing the exact time from an on-board atomic clock).
Barring a complete computer failure or other critical event, Vogelโs vast knowledge of astrodynamics would never come into play.
After completing the check, he ran a diagnostic on the engines. They were functioning at peak. He did all this from his quarters. All onboard computers could control all shipsโ functions. Gone were the days of physically visiting the engines to check up on them.
Having completed his work for the day, he finally had time to read e-mail.
Sorting through the messages NASA deemed worthy to upload, he read the most interesting first and responded when necessary. His responses were cached and would be sent to Earth with Johanssenโs next uplink.
A message from his wife caught his attention. Titled โunsere kinderโย (โour childrenโ), it contained nothing but an image attachment. He raised an eyebrow. Several things stood out at once. First, โkinderโ should have been capitalized. Helena, a grammar school teacher in Bremen, was very unlikely to make that mistake. Also, to each other, they affectionately called their kidsย die Affen.
When he tried to open the image, his viewer reported that the file was unreadable.
He walked down the narrow hallway. The crew quarters stood against the outer hull of the constantly spinning ship to maximize simulated gravity. Johanssenโs door was open, as usual.
โJohanssen. Good evening,โ Vogel said. The crew kept the same sleep schedule, and it was nearing bedtime.
โOh, hello,โ Johanssen said, looking up from her computer.
โI have the computer problem,โ Vogel explained. โI wonder if you will help.โ โSure,โ she said.
โYou are in the personal time,โ Vogel said. โPerhaps tomorrow when you are on the duty is better?โ
โNowโs fine,โ she said. โWhatโs wrong?โ
โIt is a file. It is an image, but my computer cannot view.โ โWhereโs the file?โ she asked, typing on her keyboard.
โIt is on my shared space. The name is โkinder.jpg.โโ โLetโs take a look,โ she said.
Her fingers flew over her keyboard as windows opened and closed on her
screen. โDefinitely a bad jpg header,โ she said. โProbably mangled in the download. Lemme look with a hex editor, see if we got anything at all.โฆโ
After a few moments she said, โThis isnโt a jpeg. Itโs a plain ASCII text file. Looks likeโฆwell, I donโt know what it is. Looks like a bunch of math formulae.โ She gestured to the screen. โDoes any of this make sense to you?โ
Vogel leaned in, looking at the text. โJa,โ he said. โIt is a course maneuver forย Hermes. It says the name is โRich Purnell Maneuver.โโ
โWhatโs that?โ Johanssen asked.
โI have not heard of this maneuver.โ He looked at the tables. โIt is complicatedโฆvery complicated.โฆโ
He froze. โSol 549!?โ he exclaimed.ย โMein Gott!โ
โขโขโข
THE HERMESย crew enjoyed their scant personal time in an area called โthe Rec.โ Consisting of a table and barely room to seat six, it ranked low in gravity priority. Its position amidships granted it a mere 0.2 g.
Still, it was enough to keep everyone in a seat as they pondered what Vogel
told them.
โโฆand then mission would conclude with Earth intercept two hundred and eleven days later,โ he finished up.
โThank you, Vogel,โ Lewis said. Sheโd heard the explanation earlier when Vogel came to her, but Johanssen, Martinez, and Beck were hearing it for the first time. She gave them a moment to digest.
โWould this really work?โ Martinez asked.
โJa.โย Vogel nodded. โI ran the numbers. They all check out. It is brilliant course. Amazing.โ
โHow would he get off Mars?โ Martinez asked.
Lewis leaned forward. โThere was more in the message,โ she began. โWeโd have to pick up a supply near Earth, and heโd have to get to Ares 4โs MAV.โ
โWhy all the cloak and dagger?โ Beck asked.
โAccording to the message,โ Lewis explained, โNASA rejected the idea. Theyโd rather take a big risk on Watney than a small risk on all of us. Whoever snuck it into Vogelโs e-mail obviously disagreed.โ
โSo,โ Martinez said, โweโre talking about going directly against NASAโs decision?โ
โYes,โ Lewis confirmed, โthatโs exactly what weโre talking about. If we go through with the maneuver, theyโll have to send the supply ship or weโll die. We have the opportunity to force their hand.โ
โAre we going to do it?โ Johanssen asked. They all looked to Lewis.
โI wonโt lie,โ she said. โIโd sure as hell like to. But this isnโt a normal decision. This is something NASA expressly rejected. Weโre talking about mutiny. And thatโs not a word I throw around lightly.โ
She stood and paced slowly around the table. โWeโll only do it if we all agree. And before you answer, consider the consequences. If we mess up the supply rendezvous, we die. If we mess up the Earth gravity assist, we die.
โIf we do everything perfectly, we add five hundred and thirty-three days to our mission. Five hundred and thirty-three days of unplanned space travel where anything could go wrong. Maintenance will be a hassle. Something might break that we canโt fix. If itโs life-critical, we die.โ
โSign me up!โ Martinez smiled.
โEasy, cowboy,โ Lewis said. โYou and I are military. Thereโs a good chance weโd be court-martialed when we got home. As for the rest of you, I guarantee theyโll never send you up again.โ
Martinez leaned against the wall, arms folded with a half grin on his face.
The rest silently considered what their commander had said.
โIf we do this,โ Vogel said, โit would be over one thousand days of space.
This is enough space for a life. I do not need to return.โ
โSounds like Vogelโs in,โ Martinez grinned. โMe, too, obviously.โ โLetโs do it,โ Beck said.
โIf you think itโll work,โ Johanssen said to Lewis, โI trust you.โ โOkay,โ Lewis said. โIf we go for it, whatโs involved?โ
Vogel shrugged. โI plot the course and execute it,โ he said. โWhat else?โ โRemote override,โ Johanssen said. โItโs designed to get the ship back if we
all die or something. They can take overย Hermesย from Mission Control.โ
โBut weโre right here,โ Lewis said. โWe can undo whatever they try, right?โ โNot really,โ Johanssen said. โRemote override takes priority over any
onboard controls. It assumes thereโs been a disaster and the shipโs control panels
canโt be trusted.โ
โCan you disable it?โ Lewis asked.
โHmmโฆโ Johanssen pondered. โHermesย has four redundant flight computers, each connected to three redundant comm systems. If any computer
gets a signal from any comm system, Mission Control can take over. We canโt shut down the comms; weโd lose telemetry and guidance. We canโt shut down the computers; we need them to control the ship. Iโll have to disable the remote override on each system.โฆ Itโs part of the OS; Iโll have to jump over the code.
โฆ Yes. I can do it.โ
โYouโre sure?โ Lewis asked. โYou can turn it off?โ
โShouldnโt be hard,โ Johanssen said. โItโs an emergency feature, not a security program. It isnโt protected against malicious code.โ
โMalicious code?โ Beck smiled. โSoโฆyouโll be a hacker?โ โYeah.โ Johanssen smiled back. โI guess I will.โ
โAll right,โ Lewis said. โLooks like we can do it. But I donโt want peer pressure forcing anyone into it. Weโll wait for twenty-four hours. During that time, anyone can change their mind. Just talk to me in private or send me an email. Iโll call it off and never tell anyone who it was.โ
Lewis stayed behind as the rest filed out. Watching them leave, she saw they were smiling. All four of them. For the first time since leaving Mars, they were back to their old selves. She knew right then no oneโs mind would change.
They were going back to Mars.
โขโขโข
EVERYONE KNEWย Brendan Hutch would be running missions soon.
Heโd risen through NASAโs ranks as fast as one could in the large, inertia-bound organization. He was known as a diligent worker, and his skill and leadership qualities were plain to all his subordinates.
Brendan was in charge of Mission Control from one a.m. to nine a.m. every night. Continued excellent performance in this role would certainly net him a promotion. It had already been announced heโd be backup flight controller for Ares 4, and he had a good shot at the top job for Ares 5.
โFlight, CAPCOM,โ a voice said through his headset.
โGo, CAPCOM,โ Brendan responded. Though they were in the same room, radio protocol was observed at all times.
โUnscheduled status update fromย Hermes.โ
Withย Hermesย ninety light-seconds away, back-and-forth voice communication was impractical. Other than media relations,ย Hermesย would communicate via text until they were much closer.
โRoger,โ Brendan said. โRead it out.โ
โIโฆI donโt get it, Flight,โ came the confused reply. โNo real status, just a single sentence.โ
โWhatโs it say?โ
โMessage reads: โHouston, be advised: Rich Purnell is a steely-eyed missile man.โโ
โWhat?โ Brendan asked. โWho the hell is Rich Purnell?โ โFlight, Telemetry,โ another voice said.
โGo, Telemetry,โ Brendan said. โHermesย is off course.โ
โCAPCOM, adviseย Hermesย theyโre drifting. Telemetry, get a correction vector readyโโ
โNegative, Flight,โ Telemetry interrupted. โItโs not drift. They adjusted course. Instrumentation uplink shows a deliberate 27.812- degree rotation.โ
โWhat the hell?โ Brendan stammered. โCAPCOM, ask them what the hell.โ โRoger, Flightโฆmessage sent. Minimum reply time three minutes, four
seconds.โ
โTelemetry, any chance this is instrumentation failure?โ
โNegative, Flight. Weโre tracking them with SatCon. Observed position is consistent with the course change.โ
โCAPCOM, read your logs and see what the previous shift did. See if a massive course change was ordered and somehow nobody told us.โ
โRoger, Flight.โ
โGuidance, Flight,โ Brendan said.
โGo, Flight,โ was the reply from the guidance controller.
โWork out how long they can stay on this course before itโs irreversible. At what point will they no longer be able to intercept Earth?โ
โWorking on that now, Flight.โ
โAnd somebody find out who the hell Rich Purnell is!โ
โขโขโข
MITCH PLOPPEDย down on the couch in Teddyโs office. He put his feet up on the coffee table and smiled at Teddy. โYou wanted to see me?โ
โWhyโd you do it, Mitch?โ Teddy demanded.
โDo what?โ
โYou know damn well what Iโm talking about.โ
โOh, you mean theย Hermesย mutiny?โ Mitch said innocently. โYou know, thatโd make a good movie title.ย The Hermes Mutiny. Got a nice ring to it.โ
โWe know you did it,โ Teddy said sternly. โWe donโt know how, but we know you sent them the maneuver.โ
โSo you donโt have any proof.โ
Teddy glared. โNo. Not yet, but weโre working on it.โ
โReally?โ Mitch said. โIs thatย reallyย the best use of our time? I mean, we have a near-Earth resupply to plan, not to mention figuring out how to get Watney to Schiaparelli. Weโve got a lot on our plates.โ
โYouโre damn right we have a lot on our plates!โ Teddy fumed. โAfter your little stunt, weโre committed to this thing.โ
โAllegedย stunt,โ Mitch said, raising a finger. โI suppose Annie will tell the media we decided to try this risky maneuver? And sheโll leave out the mutiny part?โ
โOf course,โ Teddy said. โOtherwise weโd look like idiots.โ
โI guess everyoneโs off the hook then!โ Mitch smiled. โCanโt fire people for enacting NASA policy. Even Lewis is fine. What mutiny? And maybe Watney gets to live. Happy endings all around!โ
โYou may have killed the whole crew,โ Teddy countered. โEver think of that?โ
โWhoeverย gave them the maneuver,โ Mitch said, โonly passed along information. Lewis made the decision to act on it. If she let emotion cloud her judgment, sheโd be a shitty commander. And sheโs not a shitty commander.โ
โIf I can ever prove it was you, Iโll find a way to fire you for it,โ Teddy warned.
โSure.โ Mitch shrugged. โBut if I wasnโt willing to take risks to save lives, Iโdโฆโ He thought for a moment. โWell, I guess Iโd be you.โ