LOG ENTRY: SOL 505
I finally made it! Iโm at the MAV!
Well, right this second, Iโm back in the rover. I did go into the MAV to do a systems check and boot-up. I had to keep my EVA suit on the whole time because thereโs no life support in there just yet.
Itโs going through a self-check right now, and Iโm feeding it oxygen and nitrogen with hoses from the rover. This is all part of the MAVโs design. It doesnโt bring air along. Why would it? Thatโs a needless weight when youโll have a Hab full of air right next door.
Iโm guessing folks at NASA are popping champagne right now and sending me lots of messages. Iโll read them in a bit. First things first: Get the MAV some life support. Then Iโll be able to work inside comfortably.
And then Iโll have a boring conversation with NASA. Well, the content may be interesting, but the fourteen-minute transmission time between here and Earth will be a bit dull.
โขโขโข
[13:07] HOUSTON: Congratulations from all of us here at Mission Control! Well done! Whatโs your status?
[13:21] MAV: Thanks! No health or physical problems. The rover and trailer are getting pretty worn out, but still functional. Oxygenator and regulator both working fine. I didnโt bring the water reclaimer. Just brought the water. Plenty of potatoes left. Iโm good to last till 549.
[13:36] HOUSTON: Glad to hear it. Hermes is still on track for a Sol 549 flyby. As you know, the MAV will need to lose some weight to make the intercept. Weโre going to get you those procedures within the day. How much water do you have? What did you do with urine?
[13:50] MAV: I have 550 liters of remaining water. Iโve
been dumping urine outside along the way.
[14:05] HOUSTON: Preserve all water. Donโt do any more urine dumps. Store it somewhere. Turn the roverโs radio on and leave it on. We can contact it through the MAV.
โขโขโข
BRUCE TRUDGEDย into Venkatโs office and unceremoniously plopped down in a chair. He dropped his briefcase and let his arms hang limp.
โHave a good flight?โ Venkat asked.
โI only have a passing memory of what sleep is,โ Bruce said. โSo is it ready?โ Venkat asked.
โYes, itโs ready. But youโre not going to like it.โ โGo on.โ
Bruce steeled himself and stood, picking up his briefcase. He pulled a booklet from it. โBear in mind, this is the end result of thousands of hours of work, testing, and lateral thinking by all the best guys at JPL.โ
โIโm sure it was hard to trim down a ship thatโs already designed to be as light as possible,โ Venkat said.
Bruce slid the booklet across the desk to Venkat. โThe problem is the intercept velocity. The MAV is designed to get to low Mars orbit, which only requires 4.1 kps. But theย Hermesย flyby will be at 5.8 kps.โ
Venkat flipped through the pages. โCare to summarize?โ
โFirst, weโre going to add fuel. The MAV makes its own fuel from the Martian atmosphere, but itโs limited by how much hydrogen it has. It brought enough to make 19,397 kilograms of fuel, as it was designed to do. If we can give it more hydrogen, it can make more.โ
โHow much more?โ
โFor every kilogram of hydrogen, it can make thirteen kilograms of fuel. Watney has five hundred and fifty liters of water. Weโll have him electrolyze it to get sixty kilograms of hydrogen.โ Bruce reached over the desk and flipped a few pages, pointing to a diagram. โThe fuel plant can make seven hundred and eighty kilograms of fuel from that.โ
โIf he electrolyzes his water, whatโll he drink?โ
โHe only needs fifty liters for the time he has left. And a human body only borrows water. Weโll have him electrolyze his urine, too. We need all the
hydrogen we can get our hands on.โ
โI see. And what does seven hundred and eighty kilograms of fuel buy us?โ Venkat asked.
โIt buys us 300 kilograms of payload. Itโs all about fuel versus payload. The MAVโs launch weight is over 12,600 kilograms. Even with the bonus fuel, weโll need to get that down to 7,300 kilograms. So the rest of this booklet is how to remove over 5,000 kilograms from the ship.โ
Venkat leaned back. โWalk me through it.โ
Bruce pulled another copy of the booklet from his briefcase. โThere were some gimmes right off the bat. The design presumes five hundred kilograms of Martian soil and rock samples. Obviously we wonโt do that. Also, thereโs just one passenger instead of six. That saves five hundred kilograms when you consider their weight plus their suits and gear. And we can lose the other five acceleration chairs. And of course, weโll remove all nonessential gearโthe med kit, tool kit, internal harnessing, straps, and anything else that isnโt nailed down. And some stuff that is.
โNext up,โ he continued, โWeโre ditching all life support. The tanks, pumps, heaters, air lines, CO2ย absorption system, even the insulation on the inner side of the hull. We donโt need it. Weโll have Watney wear his EVA suit for the
whole trip.โ
โWonโt that make it awkward for him to use the controls?โ Venkat asked.
โHe wonโt be using them,โ Bruce said. โMajor Martinez will pilot the MAV remotely fromย Hermes. Itโs already designed for remote piloting. It was remotely landed, after all.โ
โWhat if something goes wrong?โ Venkat asked.
โMartinez is the best trained pilot,โ Bruce said. โIf there is an emergency, heโs the guy you want controlling the ship.โ
โHmm,โ Venkat said cautiously. โWeโve never had a manned ship controlled remotely before. But okay, go on.โ
โSince Watney wonโt be flying the ship,โ Bruce continued, โhe wonโt need the controls. Weโll ditch the control panels and all the power and data lines that lead to them.โ
โWow,โ Venkat said. โWeโre really gutting this thing.โ
โIโm just getting started,โ Bruce said. โThe power needs will be dramatically reduced now that life support is gone, so weโll dump three of the five batteries and the auxiliary power system. The orbital maneuvering system has three redundant thrusters. Weโll get rid of those. Also, the secondary and tertiary comm systems can go.โ
โWait, what?โ Venkat said, shocked. โYouโre going to have a remote-controlled ascent with no backup comm systems?โ
โNo point,โ Bruce said. โIf the comm system goes out during ascent, the time it takes to reacquire will be too long to do any good. The backups donโt help us.โ
โThis is getting really risky, Bruce.โ
Bruce sighed. โI know. Thereโs just no other way. And Iโm not even to the nasty stuff yet.โ
Venkat rubbed his forehead. โBy all means, tell me the nasty stuff.โ โWeโll remove the nose airlock, the windows, and Hull Panel Nineteen.โ Venkat blinked. โYouโre taking the front of the ship off?โ
โSure,โ Bruce said. โThe nose airlock alone is four hundred kilograms. The windows are pretty damn heavy, too. And theyโre connected by Hull Panel Nineteen, so may as well take that, too.โ
โSo heโs going to launch with a big hole in the front of the ship?โ โWeโll have him cover it with Hab canvas.โ
โHab canvas? For a launch to orbit!?โ
Bruce shrugged. โThe hullโs mostly there to keep the air in. Marsโs atmosphere is so thin you donโt need a lot of streamlining. By the time the shipโs going fast enough for air resistance to matter, itโll be high enough that thereโs practically no air. Weโve run all the simulations. Should be good.โ
โYouโre sending him to space under a tarp.โ โPretty much, yeah.โ
โLike a hastily loaded pickup truck.โ โYeah. Can I go on?โ
โSure, canโt wait.โ
โWeโll also have him remove the back panel of the pressure vessel. Itโs the only other panel he can remove with the tools on hand. Also, weโre getting rid of the auxiliary fuel pump. Sad to see it go, but it weighs too much for its usefulness. And weโre nixing a Stage One engine.โ
โAn engine?โ
โYeah. The Stage One booster works fine if one engine goes out. Itโll save us a huge amount of weight. Only during the Stage One ascent, but still. Pretty good fuel savings.โ
Bruce fell silent.
โThat it?โ Venkat asked.
โYeah.โ
Venkat sighed. โYouโve removed most of the safety backups. Whatโs this do to the estimated odds of failure?โ
โItโs about four percent.โ
โJesus Christ,โ Venkat said. โNormally weโd never even consider something that risky.โ
โItโs all weโve got, Venk,โ Bruce said. โWeโve tested it all out and run simulations galore. We should be okay if everything works the way itโs supposed to.โ
โYeah. Great,โ Venkat said.
โขโขโข
[08:41] MAV: You fucking kidding me?
[09:55] HOUSTON: Admittedly, they are very invasive modifications, but they have to be done. The procedure doc we sent has instructions for carrying out each of these steps with tools you have on hand. Also, youโll need to start electrolyzing water to get the hydrogen for the fuel plant. Weโll send you procedures for that shortly.
[09:09] MAV: Youโre sending me into space in a convertible.
[09:24] HOUSTON: There will be Hab canvas covering the holes. It will provide enough aerodynamics in Marsโs atmosphere.
[09:38] MAV: So itโs a ragtop. Much better.
LOG ENTRY: SOL 506
On the way here, in my copious free time, I designed a โworkshop.โ I figured Iโd need space to work on stuff without having to wear an EVA suit. I devised a brilliant plan whereby the current bedroom would become the new home of the regulator and the oxygenator, and the now-empty trailer would become my workshop.
Itโs a stupid idea, and Iโm not doing it.
All I need is a pressurized area that I can work in. I somehow convinced myself that the bedroom wasnโt an option because itโs a hassle to get stuff into it. But it wonโt be that bad.
It attaches to the rover airlock, so the getting stuff in is going to be annoying. Bring the stuff into the rover, attach the bedroom to the airlock from the inside, inflate it, bring the stuff into the bedroom. Iโll also have to empty the bedroom of all tools and equipment to fold it up any time I need to do an EVA.
So yeah, itโll be annoying, but all it costs me is time. And Iโm actually doing well on that front. I have forty-three more sols beforeย Hermesย flies by. And looking at the procedure NASA has in mind for the modifications, I can take advantage of the MAV itself as a workspace.
The lunatics at NASA have me doing all kinds of rape to the MAV, but I donโt have to open the hull till the end. So the first thing Iโll do is clear out a bunch of clutter, like chairs and control panels and the like. Once theyโre out, Iโll have a lot of room in there to work.
But I didnโt do anything to the soon-to-be-mutilated MAV today. Today was all about system checks. Now that Iโm back in contact with NASA, I have to go back to being all โsafety first.โ Strangely, NASA doesnโt have total faith in my kludged-together rover or my method of piling everything into the trailer. They had me do a full systems check on every single component.
Everythingโs still working fine, though itโs wearing down. The regulator and the oxygenator are at less-than-peak efficiency (to say the least), and the trailer leaks some air every day. Not enough to cause problems, but itโs not a perfect seal. NASAโs pretty uncomfortable with it, but we donโt have any other options.
Then, they had me run a full diagnostic on the MAV. Thatโs in much better shape. Everythingโs sleek and pristine and perfectly functional. Iโd almost forgotten what new hardware even looks like.
Pity Iโm going to tear it apart.
โขโขโข
โYOU KILLEDย Watney,โ Lewis said.
โYeah,โ Martinez said, scowling at his monitor. The words โCollision with Terrainโ blinked accusingly.
โI pulled a nasty trick on him,โ Johanssen said. โI gave him a malfunctioning altitude readout and made Engine Three cut out too early. Itโs a deadly combination.โ
โShouldnโt have been a mission failure,โ Martinez said. โI should have noticed the readout was wrong. It was way off.โ
โDonโt sweat it,โ Lewis said. โThatโs why we drill.โ
โAye, Commander,โ Martinez said. He furrowed his brow and frowned at the screen.
Lewis waited for him to snap out of it. When he didnโt, she put a hand on his shoulder.
โDonโt beat yourself up,โ she said. โThey only gave you two days of remote launch training. It was only supposed to happen if we aborted before landing; a cut-our-losses scenario where weโd launch the MAV to act as a satellite. It wasnโt mission-critical so they didnโt drill you too hard on it. Now that Markโs life depends on it, youโve got three weeks to get it right, and I have no doubt you can do it.โ
โAye, Commander,โ Martinez said, softening his scowl.
โResetting the sim,โ Johanssen said. โAnything specific you want to try?โ โSurprise me,โ Martinez said.
Lewis left the control room and made her way to the reactor. As she climbed โupโ the ladder to the center of the ship, the centripetal force on her diminished to zero. Vogel looked up from a computer console. โCommander?โ
โHow are the engines?โ she asked, grabbing a wall-mounted handle to stay attached to the slowly turning room.
โAll working within tolerance,โ Vogel said. โI am now doing a diagnostic on the reactor. I am thinking that Johanssen is busy with the launching training. So perhaps I do this diagnostic for her.โ
โGood idea,โ Lewis said. โAnd howโs our course?โ
โAll is well,โ Vogel said. โNo adjustments necessary. We are still on track to planned trajectory within four meters.โ
โKeep me posted if anything changes.โ โJa, Commander.โ
Floating to the other side of the core, Lewis took the other ladder out, again gaining gravity as she went โdown.โ She made her way to the Airlock 2 ready room.
Beck held a coil of metal wire in one hand and a pair of work gloves in the other. โHeya, Commander. Whatโs up?โ
โIโd like to know your plan for recovering Mark.โ
โEasy enough if the intercept is good,โ Beck said. โI just finished attaching all the tethers we have into one long line. Itโs two hundred and fourteen meters long. Iโll have the MMU pack on, so moving around will be easy. I can get going up to around ten meters per second safely. Any more, and I risk breaking the tether if I canโt stop in time.โ
โOnce you get to Mark, how fast a relative velocity can you handle?โ
โI can grab the MAV easily at five meters per second. Ten meters per second is kind of like jumping onto a moving train. Anything more than that and I might miss.โ
โSo, including the MMU safe speed, we need to get the ship within twenty meters per second of his velocity.โ
โAnd the intercept has to be within two hundred and fourteen meters,โ Beck said. โPretty narrow margin of error.โ
โWeโve got a lot of leeway,โ Lewis said. โThe launch will be fifty-two minutes before the intercept, and it takes twelve minutes. As soon as Markโs S2 engine cuts out, weโll know our intercept point and velocity. If we donโt like it, weโll have forty minutes to correct. Our engineโs two millimeters per second may not seem like much, but in forty minutes it can move us up to 5.7 kilometers.โ
โGood,โ Beck said. โAnd two hundred and fourteen meters isnโt a hard limit, per se.โ
โYes it is,โ Lewis said.
โNah,โ Beck said. โI know Iโm not supposed to go untethered, but without my leash I could get way out thereโโ
โNot an option.โ Lewis said.
โBut we could double or even triple our safe intercept rangeโโ โWeโre done talking about this,โ Lewis said sharply.
โAye, Commander.โ
LOG ENTRY: SOL 526
There arenโt many people who can say theyโve vandalized a three-billion-dollar spacecraft, but Iโm one of them.
Iโve been pulling critical hardware out of the MAV left and right. Itโs nice to know that my launch to orbit wonโt have any pesky backup systems weighing me down.
First thing I did was remove the small stuff. Then came the things I could disassemble, like the crew seats, several of the backup systems, and the control panels.
Iโm not improvising anything. Iโm following a script sent by NASA, which was set up to make things as easy as possible. Sometimes I miss the days when I made all the decisions myself. Then I shake it off and remember Iโm infinitely better off with a bunch of geniuses deciding what I do than I am making shit up
as I go along.
Periodically, I suit up, crawl into the airlock with as much junk as I can fit, and dump it outside. The area around the MAV looks like the set ofย Sanford and Son.
I learned aboutย Sanford and Sonย from Lewisโs collection. Seriously, that woman needs to see someone about her seventies problem.
LOG ENTRY: SOL 529
Iโm turning water into rocket fuel.
Itโs easier than youโd think.
Separating hydrogen and oxygen only requires a couple of electrodes and some current. The problem is collecting the hydrogen. I donโt have any equipment for pulling hydrogen out of the air. The atmospheric regulator doesnโt even know how. The last time I had to get hydrogen out of the air (back when I turned the Hab into a bomb) I burned it to turn it into water. Obviously that would be counterproductive.
But NASA thought everything through and gave me a process. First, I disconnected the rover and trailer from each other. Then, while wearing my EVA suit, I depressurized the trailer and back-filled it with pure oxygen at one-fourth of an atmosphere. Then I opened a plastic box full of water and put a couple of electrodes in. Thatโs why I needed the atmosphere. Without it, the water would just boil immediately and Iโd be hanging around in a steamy atmosphere.
The electrolysis separated the hydrogen and oxygen from each other. Now the trailer was full of even more oxygen and also hydrogen. Pretty dangerous, actually.
Then I fired up the atmospheric regulator. I know I just said it doesnโt recognize hydrogen, but itย doesย know how to yank oxygen out of the air. I broke all the safeties and set it to pull 100 percent of the oxygen out. After it was done, all that was left in the trailer was hydrogen. Thatโs why I started out with an atmosphere of pure oxygen, so the regulator could separate it later.
Then I cycled the roverโs airlock with the inner door open. The airlock thought it was evacuating itself, but it was actually evacuating the whole trailer. The air was stored in the airlockโs holding tank. And there you have it, a tank of pure hydrogen.
I carried the airlockโs holding tank to the MAV and transferred the contents to the MAVโs hydrogen tanks. Iโve said this many times before, but: Hurray for standardized valve systems!
Finally, I fired up the fuel plant, and it got to work making the additional fuel Iโd need.
Iโll need to go through this process several more times as the launch date approaches. Iโm even going to electrolyze my urine. Thatโll make for a pleasant smell in the trailer.
If I survive this, Iโll tell people I was pissing rocket fuel.
โขโขโข
[19:22] JOHANSSEN: Hello, Mark.
[19:23] MAV: Johanssen!? Holy crap! They finally letting you talk to me directly?
[19:24] JOHANSSEN: Yes, NASA gave the OK for direct communication an hour ago. Weโre only 35 light-seconds apart, so we can talk in near-real time. I just set up the system and Iโm testing it out.
[19:24] MAV: What took them so long to let us talk? [19:25] JOHANSSEN: The psych team was worried about
personality conflicts.
[19:25] MAV: What? Just โcause you guys abandoned me on a godforsaken planet with no chance of survival?
[19:26] JOHANSSEN: Funny. Donโt make that kind of joke with Lewis.
[19:27] MAV: Roger. So uhโฆthanks for coming back to get me.
[19:27] JOHANSSEN: Itโs the least we could do. How is the MAV retrofit going?
[19:28] MAV: So far, so good. NASA put a lot of thought into the procedures. They work. Thatโs not to say theyโre easy. I spent the last 3 days removing Hull Panel 19 and the front window. Even in Mars-g theyโre heavy motherfuckers.
[19:29] JOHANSSEN: When we pick you up, I will make wild, passionate love to you. Prepare your body.
[19:29] JOHANSSEN: I didnโt type that! That was Martinez! I stepped away from the console for like 10 seconds!
[19:29] MAV: Iโve really missed you guys.
LOG ENTRY: SOL 543
Iโmโฆdone?
I think Iโm done.
I did everything on the list. The MAV is ready to fly. And in six sols, thatโs just what itโll do. I hope.
It might not launch at all. I did remove an engine, after all. I could have fucked up all sorts of things during that process. And thereโs no way to test the ascent stage. Once you light it, itโs lit.
Everything else, however, will go through tests from now until launch. Some done by me, some done remotely by NASA. Theyโre not telling me the failure odds, but Iโm guessing theyโre the highest in history. Yuri Gagarin had a much more reliable and safe ship than I do.
And Soviet ships were death traps.
โขโขโข
โALL RIGHT,โย Lewis said, โtomorrowโs the big day.โ
The crew floated in the Rec. They had halted the rotation of the ship in preparation for the upcoming operation.
โIโm ready,โ Martinez said. โJohanssen threw everything she could at me. I got all scenarios to orbit.โ
โEverything other than catastrophic failures,โ Johanssen corrected.
โWell yeah,โ Martinez said. โKind of pointless to simulate an ascent explosion. Nothing we can do.โ
โVogel,โ Lewis said. โHowโs our course?โ
โIt is perfect,โ Vogel said. โWe are within one meter of projected path and two centimeters per second of projected velocity.โ
โGood,โ she said. โBeck, how about you?โ
โEverythingโs all set up, Commander,โ Beck said. โThe tethers are linked and spooled in Airlock 2. My suit and MMU are prepped and ready.โ
โOkay, the battle plan is pretty obvious,โ Lewis said. She grabbed a handhold on the wall to halt a slow drift she had acquired. โMartinez will fly the MAV, Johanssen will sysop the ascent. Beck and Vogel, I want you in Airlock 2 with the outer door open before the MAV even launches. Youโll have to wait fifty-two minutes, but I donโt want to risk any technical glitches with the airlock or your suits. Once we reach intercept, itโll be Beckโs job to get Watney.โ
โHe might be in bad shape when I get him,โ Beck said. โThe stripped-down MAV will get up to twelve gโs during the launch. He could be unconscious and may even have internal bleeding.โ
โJust as well youโre our doctor,โ Lewis said. โVogel, if all goes according to plan, youโre pulling Beck and Watney back aboard with the tether. If things go wrong, youโre Beckโs backup.โ
โJa,โ Vogel said.
โI wish there was more we could do right now,โ Lewis said. โBut all we have left is the wait. Your work schedules are cleared. All scientific experiments are suspended. Sleep if you can, run diagnostics on your equipment if you canโt.โ
โWeโll get him, Commander,โ Martinez said as the others floated out. โTwenty-four hours from now, Mark Watney will be right here in this room.โ
โLetโs hope so, Major,โ Lewis said.
โขโขโข
โFINAL CHECKSย for this shift are complete,โ Mitch said into his headset. โTimekeeper.โ
โGo, Flight,โ said the timekeeper.
โTime until MAV launch?โ
โSixteen hours, nine minutes, forty secondsโฆmark.โ
โCopy that. All stations: Flight director shift change.โ He took his headset off and rubbed his eyes.
Brendan Hutch took the headset from him and put it on. โAll stations, Flight director is now Brendan Hutch.โ
โCall me if anything happens,โ Mitch said. โIf not, Iโll see you tomorrow.โ โGet some sleep, Boss,โ Brendan said.
Venkat watched from the observation booth. โWhy ask the timekeeper?โ he mumbled. โItโs on the huge mission clock in the center screen.โ
โHeโs nervous,โ Annie said. โYou donโt often see it, but thatโs what Mitch Henderson looks like when heโs nervous. He double- and triple-checks everything.โ
โFair enough,โ Venkat said.
โTheyโre camping out on the lawn, by the way,โ Annie said. โReporters from all over the world. Our press rooms just donโt have enough space.โ
โThe media loves a drama.โ He sighed. โItโll be over tomorrow, one way or
another.โ
โWhatโs our role in all this?โ Annie said. โIf something goes wrong, what can Mission Control do?โ
โNothing,โ Venkat said. โNot a damned thing.โ โNothing?โ
โItโs all happening twelve light-minutes away. That means it takes twenty-four minutes for them to get the answer to any question they ask. The whole launch is twelve minutes long. Theyโre on their own.โ
โSo weโre completely helpless?โ
โYes,โ Venkat said. โSucks, doesnโt it?โ
LOG ENTRY: SOL 549
Iโd be lying if I said I wasnโt shitting myself. In four hours, Iโm going to ride a giant explosion into orbit. This is something Iโve done a few times before, but never with a jury-rigged mess like this.
Right now, Iโm sitting in the MAV. Iโm suited up because thereโs a big hole in the front of the ship where the window and part of the hull used to be. Iโm โawaiting launch instructions.โ Really, Iโm just awaiting launch. I donโt have any part in this. Iโm just going to sit in the acceleration couch and hope for the best.
Last night, I ate my final meal pack. Itโs the first good meal Iโve had in weeks. Iโm leaving forty-one potatoes behind. Thatโs how close I came to starvation.
I carefully collected samples during my journey. But I canโt bring any of them with me. So I put them in a container a few hundred meters from here. Maybe someday theyโll send a probe to collect them. May as well make them easy to pick up.
This is it. Thereโs nothing after this. There isnโt even an abort procedure. Why make one? We canโt delay the launch.ย Hermesย canโt stop and wait. No matter what, weโre launching on schedule.
I face the very real possibility that Iโll die today. Canโt say I like it.
It wouldnโt be so bad if the MAV blew up. I wouldnโt know what hit me, but if I miss the intercept, Iโll just float around in space until I run out of air. I have a contingency plan for that. Iโll drop the oxygen mixture to zero and breathe pure nitrogen until I suffocate. It wouldnโt feel bad. The lungs donโt have the ability to sense lack of oxygen. Iโd just get tired, fall asleep, then die.
I still canโt quite believe that this is really it. Iโm really leaving. This frigid desert has been my home for a year and a half. I figured out how to survive, at
least for a while, and I got used to how things worked. My terrifying struggle to stay alive became somehow routine. Get up in the morning, eat breakfast, tend my crops, fix broken stuff, eat lunch, answer e-mail, watch TV, eat dinner, go to bed. The life of a modern farmer.
Then I was a trucker, doing a long haul across the world. And finally, a construction worker, rebuilding a ship in ways no one ever considered before this. Iโve done a little of everything here, because Iโm the only one around to do it.
Thatโs all over now. I have no more jobs to do, and no more nature to defeat. Iโve had my last Martian potato. Iโve slept in the rover for the last time. Iโve left my last footprints in the dusty red sand. Iโm leaving Mars today, one way or another.
About fucking time.