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# 2023-12-17 - Shepherd Moons by Jerry Oltion | |
Illustrated by Eldar Zakirov | |
The mood in the control room was tense. When everything depends on | |
the next hour or so, people grow quiet and focused. In a little less | |
than an hour, the DART spacecraft would arrive at the asteroid | |
Didymos, and all their effort would go out in a final blaze of glory. | |
Priya Joshi and her partner in crime--and in practically everything | |
else--Mark Anderson, shared a monitor at the end of the back row. | |
They weren't directly part of the mission, but as astronauts with | |
extensive EVA training and experience navigating spacecraft, they | |
were there to observe and learn and help if they could. Plus Priya | |
was on NASA's asteroid exploration team, an as-yet theoretical | |
sub-group of astronauts who might someday actually venture out to one | |
of the Solar System's flying rocks, and this was her chance to see | |
one up close. Really close. | |
It wasn't every day that NASA whacked an asteroid with a half-ton | |
space probe. DART was designed to test how much influence an impact | |
would have on the asteroid's orbit, but it was also proof of concept | |
for much more ambitious missions to follow, some of which might be | |
crewed depending upon what they discovered tonight. Didymos was an | |
Earth-crossing asteroid with a two-year period, relatively easy to | |
reach and relatively easy to return from after an extended stay. If | |
NASA ever sent a mission out there, Priya planned to be on board. | |
The mission clock ticked over to 6:30. Forty-four minutes to impact. | |
Didymos was a bright speck in the center of the field, still too | |
small to show a disk. But the probe was approaching at over four | |
miles per second, and as they watched, a dimmer speck separated from | |
the bright one. Dimorphos, Didymus's tiny moon. That was the actual | |
target. DART would strike it head on as it swung around in its orbit, | |
slowing it down by a smidgen, enough for telescopes on Earth to | |
detect the difference in its period after a few more orbits. And that | |
sudden slowdown would change the orbit of the larger companion by an | |
even smaller smidgen. Not enough to matter, but it was a | |
proof-of-concept mission, a demonstration that we could alter the | |
orbit of an asteroid if we needed to. | |
A cheer filled the room as the two bright dots separated. "Right on | |
schedule," Mark said. So far the mission was going nominally. It was | |
entirely automated at this point, with the probe thirty-six | |
light-seconds away, so if anything went wrong, there would be little | |
the controllers could do to correct it. | |
"It'll be switching guidance from Didymos to Dimorphos," Priya said. | |
And as she spoke, the view gave a little jerk. "That was the thruster." | |
The mission communicator a few stations down the row said, "The probe | |
has achieved a navigation lock on Dimorphos. All systems are 'go.' | |
Forty-one minutes to impact." | |
Priya said, "That means the probe is... almost exactly ten thousand | |
miles out." | |
Mark laughed. "Stop showing off!" | |
Priya felt herself blush. "The numbers are easy. Four miles per | |
second, sixty seconds in a minute, forty-one minutes." | |
Mark said, "Four miles per second sounds fast, but it's less than | |
orbital speed. The ISS is going faster." | |
"But the ISS isn't going to smack into an asteroid." | |
"I hope not," Mark said. "I'm going up next year." | |
She fist-bumped him. "To a great mission." She'd been up once, three | |
years ago, but wasn't even on the schedule again. | |
"You'll get another shot at it," he said. | |
Priya just shrugged. To be honest, another tour on the ISS wasn't | |
high on her list of priorities. She wanted the Moon, or an asteroid | |
like Didymos, or even Mars. To actually go somewhere, see something | |
new, accomplish something nobody had done before. | |
The two specks drew apart on the monitor as the probe closed in. Mark | |
said, "I read somewhere that the number of Earth-grazing asteroids | |
that are binary is way higher than the number of binaries out in the | |
main asteroid belt. Weird statistic." | |
Priya said, "It's the YORP effect. Sunlight on a rotating body makes | |
it spin faster, and it eventually breaks apart. Sunlight is stronger | |
on near-Earth asteroids than on main belt asteroids." | |
Mark laughed. "I was just going to guess that." | |
"Sure you were." | |
Priya took a sip of coffee and kept the mug in her hand for warmth. | |
She had become shivering cold in the last few minutes. | |
They watched the asteroids draw apart, Didymos finally becoming a | |
disk rather than just a point of light. It was roughly spherical, | |
with boulders and depressions more or less at random. | |
Dimorphos was much smaller, only five hundred feet, a fifth the size | |
of Didymos, so they didn't see detail until just a couple minutes | |
before impact. When they did, all that stood out was just a bright | |
spot on a surprisingly smooth, round surface. | |
"That's weird," Priya said. "It's more spherical than Didymos. You'd | |
expect the smaller one to be more ragged. Less gravity to pull things | |
together." | |
It was growing fast now. Didymos slid off to the side of the screen, | |
leaving Dimorphos dead center. The bright spot began to take on | |
shape, but that shape was perfectly round. Round with a blister dead | |
center. Sunlight angling in from the side made it obvious that they | |
were looking at a dome. A dome with round ports, dish antennae, and | |
angled black solar panels. | |
Voices raised all around the control room. "What the hell! That's | |
artificial! Who put that there?" | |
Priya said, "Abort! Abort! Oh, shit." She set her coffee mug down | |
hard on the desk, sloshing it, but didn't look down. She couldn't | |
tear her eyes away. The probe sailed straight onward, the abort | |
signal crawling along after it at the speed of light, if one had been | |
sent at all. Nor could the thrusters move the probe far enough in the | |
few seconds left even if the signal had been instantaneous. | |
The guidance system did an impeccable job: The probe struck dead | |
square in the center of the dish antenna mounted atop the domed | |
outpost. | |
The video winked out upon impact, but DART had deployed a cubesat ten | |
days earlier that had drifted behind to watch the results. LICIA got | |
clear video of the expanding debris cloud. | |
Shrapnel erupted outward from the surface, blasting into space in a | |
tight cone--aimed directly at LICIA. There was just time to make out | |
some of the tumbling girders and twisted metal panels before LICIA | |
ran into the debris cloud and the signal stopped. | |
The control room erupted in pandemonium. Among the dozen other | |
voices, Priya said to Mark, "The facility must have been dug into the | |
asteroid a ways. If it was completely on the surface, the explosion | |
would have blown everything out sideways. But the ejecta mostly came | |
straight back along the incoming path, which means it was directed | |
like rocket exhaust. My guess is that there were at least a dozen | |
basement levels." | |
Greg, the tech at the station next to her nodded. "It reminds me of | |
the 9/11 attacks on the World Trade Center. The planes just | |
disappeared into the buildings for a second or two before the | |
explosions. The force was all outward, and it came from deep inside." | |
Priya had been in grade school when that happened, but she remembered | |
the video as if it had been yesterday. "Yeah," she said, "The | |
structure was mostly empty space. And that's what it looks like we | |
have here. The explosion didn't really take off until DART hit bottom." | |
Mark said, "That implies habitation. If it was a robotic | |
installation, there wouldn't be any need for empty space." | |
"I didn't see any bodies in the debris," Greg said. | |
"It's hard to tell," Mark said, "but it doesn't look like there was | |
atmosphere in there. The debris was all solid stuff. Hardware." | |
"And rock, there at the end," said Priya. She tapped the video slider | |
on her monitor and dragged it back a quarter inch, replaying the | |
impact and its aftermath. Amid the metal debris, several obvious | |
chunks of ragged asteroid material also flew out. Priya said, "That's | |
from the ground floor." | |
It's amazing what you can learn by watching something be destroyed, | |
she thought. They were like physicists examining particle tracks in | |
an atom smasher, deducing what had to have created the patterns they | |
saw. | |
"Who the hell could have put that there?" someone down the row asked. | |
"And why?" | |
"Elon?" Mark said. | |
Greg said, "Not likely. Something like this would have taken a major | |
launch effort. He'd never have been able to keep it secret." | |
"China, then?" Priya said. | |
"North Korea," someone else said, and everyone laughed. But it was a | |
hollow laugh. Someone had obviously put an outpost on Dimorphos, and | |
the only good reason for doing that was the same reason for the DART | |
mission: to nudge the binary pair into a different orbit. But if they | |
were doing it in secret, then presumably they intended to shift it | |
onto a course that would impact Earth. | |
* * * | |
Priya was in the Astronaut Office first thing in the morning. "I | |
volunteer for the mission," she said. | |
To his credit, the director didn't ask "What mission?" He just said, | |
"We're not even close to assigning a crew yet." | |
"I know that. But when you do, I'm your best candidate. It's a | |
two-year trip out and back, so supplies are going to be our biggest | |
concern. I weigh a hundred and ten pounds and can thrive on a twelve | |
hundred calorie diet. Probably less in freefall. And I'm already in | |
the asteroid rendezvous group. And my Ph.D. thesis was on the search | |
for extraterrestrial intelligence." | |
He raised his eyebrows. "You think that was an ET outpost?" | |
"When you've eliminated the impossible, whatever's left..." | |
"Yeah, right. I think we're far from proving that someone from Earth | |
couldn't have set that up. But yes, you're on the short list. Because | |
we're probably going out there no matter who turns out to be the | |
culprit." | |
Priya thanked him and let herself out, nearly bumping into Mark in | |
the hallway. "Beat you to it," she said. | |
Mark laughed. "We'll see how much that matters when the time comes. I | |
get the feeling there's going to be a lot of money thrown at this one." | |
"Yeah, maybe so. Good luck to both of us, then." Priya gave him a | |
quick hug. But she knew it was a one-person mission, and she knew who | |
was going. | |
* * * | |
In the following days, astronomers turned practically every telescope | |
on Earth--and off it--on Didymos and its mysterious moon, but saw | |
nothing remarkable. Radar picked up sparkles of reflection from the | |
debris still moving away from the explosion, but no motion on the | |
surface. | |
Nobody radioed for rescue, and nobody on Earth claimed responsibility | |
for the installation. Dimorphos's orbit had shortened by about a | |
hundred and thirty seconds, nearly twice the predicted amount, | |
presumably due to the focusing effect on the ejecta plume. | |
At least there wasn't an advancing fleet of vengeful aliens. But as | |
the days drew on without answers, speculation ran rampant on the | |
internet. It was the Russians. It was Martians. It was Satan. | |
It was a leftover spacecraft from the fleet that had seeded the Earth | |
with life billions of years ago. | |
And of course it was responsible for COVID-19, global warming (which | |
was nonetheless a myth), and inflation. | |
Then astronomers noticed that something had detached from another | |
Earth-grazing asteroid about forty million miles away and was heading | |
toward Didymos. Under power. There was no visible rocket exhaust, but | |
the thing was accelerating continuously at 2.5 gees. In fourteen | |
hours it had covered half the distance, then began decelerating at | |
the same 2.5 gees. | |
If there had been fuel involved, the acceleration would have | |
increased as the mass of the spacecraft decreased. Maybe the | |
aliens--for nobody seriously doubted anyone else was behind it | |
now--had an upper limit that they could withstand and had throttled | |
down as their mass decreased. Or maybe they were using entirely | |
different technology. | |
Maybe they were from Jupiter, which maybe not coincidentally had a | |
surface gravity of 2.5 gees. Or maybe they just wanted to make us | |
think they were from Jupiter. | |
Maybe, maybe, maybe. Nobody knew anything for sure. | |
Debate raged over whether to contact the aliens or not, but it was a | |
moot point. Practically every nation made a clandestine attempt, but | |
none were successful. Either the aliens weren't listening or weren't | |
interested in responding. | |
There had already been a follow-up mission in the works. Called Hera, | |
it was the second half of AIDA, the "Asteroid Impact and Deflection | |
Assessment" program that Priya had been involved in for years. Hera | |
was due to launch in 2024 and rendezvous with Didymos in late 2026 or | |
early 2027. | |
The only way to speed up an interplanetary transfer is with sheer | |
power. If you've got the thrust for it you can shoot straight for | |
your target and get there in weeks rather than months, but it takes a | |
phenomenal amount of fuel. Nobody on Earth had a space drive that | |
could keep up 2.5 gees of thrust for over a day, but SpaceX had a | |
rocket they once called the Big Falcon Rocket, later renamed | |
"Starship" when people realized what BFR really stood for, and it had | |
already made several successful flights. It was designed to carry | |
people to the Moon and to Mars; NASA suggested putting the Hera probe | |
on a stripped-down Starship and sending it out to Didymos at top | |
speed. It would still take several months, and the rendezvous would | |
be at the far point in Didymos's orbit, and the probe couldn't go | |
into orbit around the asteroid as originally planned, but it would | |
get there years earlier and could at least send photos of what the | |
aliens were up to. | |
And humanity collectively shivered in fear as they waited. There were | |
over a dozen binary Earth-grazing asteroids, and it was a safe bet | |
that every one of them had an alien outpost. None of them were on | |
orbits that would bring them truly close to Earth within the next | |
century or more, but with engines capable of keeping up 2.5 gees of | |
thrust indefinitely, it wouldn't take long to alter one's orbit until | |
it was on a collision course. | |
Priya lobbied for a crewed mission to follow, no matter what Hera | |
discovered. Surprisingly, NASA agreed, perhaps worrying that SpaceX | |
would do it on their own if they didn't. Or China. Or Russia. Or | |
North Korea. It was imperative that the U.S. be first. | |
But of course that meant asking Congress for the money. | |
* * * | |
The hearing was a joke. But after the midterm elections, Congress | |
itself was a joke. The hearing started out simple enough, with | |
questions like "Why can't we just aim the James Webb telescope at | |
it?" (Followed by the inevitable grumble: "We spent enough on the | |
damned thing, it ought to be useful for something.") | |
Priya, as the spearhead behind the mission--and because | |
Congresspeople liked being photographed with astronauts--was NASA's | |
representative. She answered with the truthful observation that at | |
Dimorphos's distance, even the Webb couldn't see the level of detail | |
they needed. | |
What could we possibly do with a manned mission that we couldn't do | |
with robots? Adapt to what we find there. | |
What do you expect to find? We don't know. That's why we need to go | |
look. | |
How do you propose to stop them once you get there? | |
And so on. It was clear from the start that the conservatives wanted | |
someone to blame and someone to bomb, while the liberals wanted to | |
convene a panel of experts who would study the situation for a decade | |
and make a recommendation. And of course there were the grandstanders | |
who asked brilliant questions like "Why didn't we know about this | |
beforehand?" | |
To which Priya merely replied, "Congressional budget cuts," and let | |
the silence linger. | |
Then the representative whom Priya had come to think of as the | |
Honorable Stupid Son of a Bitch from the State of Ignorance asked, | |
"How many men does NASA propose to send?" | |
Priya said, "One. And it'll be a woman. Me." | |
"You," he said flatly. "A little slip of a brown girl." | |
She bit her tongue. Took a deep breath. "An experienced astronaut who | |
has extensively studied both extraterrestrial contact and asteroids. | |
And who can live on twelve hundred calories a day. Which is a vital | |
consideration for a mission of this duration," she added for those | |
who hadn't been paying attention earlier. | |
Congressman Stupid cleared his throat and said, "No offense, Miss | |
Gupta, but if we approve this boondoggle, we'll be sending a man up | |
there. A white man." | |
A murmur swept through the chamber, but there was no bang of the | |
gavel, no outcry of protest. So Priya said, "No offense, Congressman, | |
but if you can say that and expect to be reelected, then we are all | |
well and truly screwed, alien invasion or no." | |
* * * | |
Mark cooked dinner for her that night. The TV was off. Neither of | |
them wanted to hear the outcry from the conservatives accusing her of | |
disrespect for the government that they showed no respect for, | |
either, nor from the religious nuts who were already accusing her of | |
making a pact with the devil, nor from the liberals who wanted to | |
spend the money on vaccines and food for starving nations. Priya | |
didn't even want to think about it at the moment, but she couldn't | |
put it out of her mind. | |
Halfway through the meal, a delightful shrimp scampi on linguini with | |
garlic toast on the side ("Good thing we're both eating this or | |
there'd be no smooching you for a week."), she said, "You know, I'm | |
beginning to wonder if I want to go out there after all. All the | |
evidence seems to point toward hostile aliens bent on wiping out | |
humanity before we can get a foothold outside the Solar System. What | |
could I possibly accomplish besides setting them off even more than | |
we have already?" | |
"You could make contact," Mark said. "We need to do that whether | |
they're hostile or benevolent. We need to find out what they're doing | |
and why." | |
"They're moving asteroids around. That much is obvious. And as for | |
why, I think that's pretty obvious, too. Why else are so many doubles | |
in Earth-crossing orbits?" | |
Mark considered that for a bite or two, then said, "Why do none of | |
them come closer than a couple of million miles? With no impacts in | |
the foreseeable future? If whoever's out there wanted to be able to | |
smack us down on a moment's notice, you'd think they'd keep one ready | |
to go." | |
"So you think they're just hanging out to watch us and using the | |
asteroids to sweep in for a closer look every now and then?" | |
"Maybe. Or maybe they're keeping the asteroids away. Maybe they're | |
watching over us, not just watching us." | |
"That would be nice if it were true. But why don't they answer our | |
hail now that we know they're there?" | |
He took a sip of wine. "Could be a test. We have to be able to reach | |
them before they'll respond." | |
She snorted. "Oh, we reached them all right. You'd think that would | |
have been enough." | |
"You know what I mean. Columbus didn't reach the new world by sending | |
a message in a bottle. He had to come here himself." | |
"And live to tell the tale." | |
"You'll make it." | |
"Or you will. Senator Shithead isn't the only misogynist racist in | |
Congress. I probably killed my chance of a mission anywhere, much | |
less to Dimorphos." | |
Mark shook his head. "Nonsense. You're the most qualified, most | |
logical choice. Of course you'll go." | |
* * * | |
But when the mission was approved and the crew announced, it was | |
Mark's name at the top of the list, with Priya as backup. | |
She spent a day sulking, and another day feeling guiltily relieved, | |
then she put aside her anger and her grief and her anxiety and helped | |
Mark train for the flight. He insisted that she train right alongside | |
him, because something could happen to him at the last moment and she | |
could wind up going after all. | |
Whoever went would be riding in a modified Starship crew module. The | |
thing was as big as a bus, with plenty of room for a couple dozen | |
people if they were just going to the Moon and back, but for the | |
extended trip to Dimorphos, every cubic foot of space would be taken | |
up with food and oxygen and supplies to keep even a single person | |
alive. The margin was tight with Mark's extra mass, but doable. With | |
Priya it would be a breeze. | |
The Hera mission swept outward. The faltering economy improved as | |
people, convinced humanity was doomed, spent their savings on sports | |
cars, boats, vacations, and lots and lots of survivalist supplies. | |
Priya wryly noted that there was enough high-velocity lead being | |
stockpiled in underground bunkers to deflect Didymos if it was all | |
fired at the asteroid. She got hate mail and death threats for that, | |
but she had been getting those for months now. | |
Hera reached the asteroid and sent back a flyby image of a dome under | |
construction that looked just like the one that DART had smashed. | |
Little creatures or robots or something dotted the surface of the | |
asteroid, but they were only a foot or so long, too small to show up | |
well in the images. Were they truly space aliens, lifeforms that | |
lived in vacuum? Nobody knew. But it was clear they were rebuilding | |
their outpost. | |
Not long afterward, astronomers noticed something odd: Dimorphos | |
acquired a wobble in its orbit. It was speeding up as it swung around | |
in the direction approaching Earth, and slowing down on the other | |
side, falling closer to Didymos when it was around behind it and | |
rising up higher when it was on the Earth-facing side. Then they | |
realized it wasn't Dimorphos's orbit that was changing, but Didymos | |
itself, the big asteroid. But it was moving onto a path that took it | |
even farther from Earth than before. The aliens were moving it away | |
from the Earth, not toward it. | |
The difference was only a few thousand miles; an almost insignificant | |
amount on the scale of the Solar System, but it clearly meant | |
something. But what? A warning? A peace offering? A thumbed nose? | |
"They're probably testing their repairs," Priya said to an | |
interviewer who asked her opinion. | |
Of course the news story twisted her words, proclaiming "Aliens test | |
asteroid-moving ability in preparation for attack on Earth!" | |
The Starship project proceeded apace. Fuel flights rocketed into | |
orbit, stockpiling propellant for the long burn. The crew module was | |
loaded with supplies, including thousands of hours of movies, | |
thousands of digital books, and thousands of hours of music, in part | |
to trade with the aliens if cultural exchange was possible, but | |
mostly to keep the passenger sane on the long way out there. | |
And three days before launch, Mark developed vertigo. | |
"You're what?" Priya demanded when he told her. They were both in his | |
bed, where she'd given him a hero's send-off for most of the night. | |
"I'm dizzy." | |
She laughed. "You're shagged out," she said. | |
"No, I mean it. Everything is swirling around." He tried to sit up, | |
but twisted around and fell heavily back into the bed. Then he turned | |
his head sideways and threw up. | |
"Don't choke!" Priya pushed him hard over so he was on his side. | |
"Breathe out first!" | |
He coughed, gasped, coughed, then took a deep breath. "Gah. Get a | |
towel." | |
She grabbed two from the bathroom, threw one over his mess, and | |
handed him the other. | |
"Maybe it's food poisoning," she said. They had been eating well in | |
his last few days on Earth. | |
"Maybe." He wiped his face and tried again to sit up. She helped him | |
upright, but he had to close his eyes to keep from throwing up again. | |
"Everything's swirling around," he said. "Fast. Teacup-ride fast." | |
"That's not good." | |
And indeed it wasn't. When they finally got him to the flight | |
surgeon, a half-full barf bag and many dry heaves later, the flight | |
surgeon diagnosed a swollen inner ear. "I hate to break it to you, | |
bud, but you're not flying in that condition." | |
"How long before the swelling goes down?" Mark asked. | |
"A week, maybe two. But that's not the real issue. Once this sort of | |
thing develops, you never know when it's going to happen again. And | |
the natural rush of fluid to the head in microgravity will just make | |
it worse." | |
"So my career is shot." | |
"Maybe not. There are medications you can take. Surgery if that | |
doesn't work. Alan Shepard beat it and made it back into space, and | |
you can, too. But not in three days time." | |
Mark turned--carefully--to Priya. "See," he said, laughing softly. "I | |
told you it'd be you." | |
"Not like this!" she said. "I don't want to take your place!" | |
But there was little choice. Mark was grounded, and she was next in | |
line. | |
The death threats became more serious. Her entire apartment building | |
had to be evacuated after three separate drive-by shootings. She had | |
to bunk in the crew quarters at NASA. Even Mark had to stay there, as | |
the internet filled with conspiracy theories that he had "chickened | |
out and passed the torch to his n--" | |
"I sometimes wonder if we'd be better off with alien overlords," he | |
said sadly on the eve of her departure. | |
"Maybe I'll ask them to invade," Priya said. "If they aren't already | |
planning to." | |
* * * | |
Launch day. Priya rode the gantry elevator to the top, transferred | |
into the Starship--named simply and appropriately Envoy--and strapped | |
in. Practiced routine took over, and in what seemed like an eyeblink, | |
the thirty-three Raptor engines lit, and she felt the entire stack | |
shove her back into her couch. The low cloud deck flashed past, the | |
sky turned dark, and within minutes she was in orbit, catching up | |
with the fuel depot. | |
Refueling took the better part of a day, assisted by the crew of a | |
regular Falcon mission. And in one more twist of the whirlwind, Priya | |
lit the engines again and was off. | |
Didymos and Dimorphos were swinging back around toward Earth on their | |
two-year orbit. | |
Priya's velocity and their velocity combined to close the distance. | |
This wasn't a transfer path, where she would sneak up on her target | |
and slowly match course with it. This was going to be like a carrier | |
landing, full thrust again at the end and hope her navigation was | |
spot on. | |
When the outward burn stopped, she was moving at well over escape | |
velocity. Not as fast as Hera on its flyby trajectory, but plenty | |
fast. The Moon was visibly moving away, off to the side. | |
Earth was directly behind her, seen only in the aft camera view, but | |
receding like a marble dropped down a well. | |
She reported her condition as nominal and told mission control she | |
was going to get a couple of hours of sleep. She put the radio in | |
standby, turned off the internal cameras, unbuckled her safety | |
harness, stripped out of her flight suit, and set out to find the | |
nuclear bomb. | |
There had to be one. Probably just a suitcase nuke, only one or two | |
kilotons yield, but that would be plenty to spoil Priya's day if some | |
hothead in the Pentagon decided to set it off. And who knew what the | |
aliens would do in response? They didn't seem to have cared much | |
about a kinetic impact, but Priya guessed a nuclear weapon might just | |
piss them off enough to respond. | |
It took her four hours to find it. It was in the equipment bay, | |
disguised as an oxygen tank. | |
She only discovered it when she realized that this tank wasn't | |
actually plumbed into anything. It just had a wiring harness leading | |
to a connector spliced into the main bundle. | |
"Cut the blue wire, or the red wire?" she asked quietly as she | |
studied it. How would she have wired the thing if she had placed it | |
here? | |
She certainly wouldn't have set it to explode during a power failure. | |
So she reached out and pulled the connector apart. | |
There was no digital timer on the side of the tank. No androgynous | |
voice calmly counting down her last few seconds. Even so, her heart | |
pounded loud in her chest, and she could hear the blood whooshing in | |
her ears. But aside from that and the ever-present air circulation | |
fans that ran constantly on any crewed spacecraft, the ship was silent. | |
She had to rummage in the tool chest for a wrench to free the bomb | |
from its bay, then wrestle it though the cabin to the airlock. It was | |
about the size of a large beach ball, and she had a bad moment when | |
it looked like the airlock door was an inch too small for it, but the | |
nuke wasn't perfectly spherical. In the right orientation it fit in | |
the lock with room to spare. | |
Which was a good thing, because the lock didn't have automatic | |
controls. She had to suit up again and climb in with the bomb, then | |
cycle the lock and shove the bomb out into space. She gave it a good | |
kick with both feet, hanging onto the airlock grab rails as she did, | |
and was happy to see it tumble away at a pretty good clip. "Okay, so | |
I just violated the Outer Space Treaty on nuclear weapons," she said. | |
"There were mitigating circumstances." Then she closed the airlock | |
and went back inside. | |
* * * | |
Nobody mentioned it, of course. It was possible nobody even knew, | |
wouldn't know until they tried to power up their ace in the hole and | |
discovered it unresponsive. | |
Weeks passed. Mark's condition improved, as Priya knew it would. | |
Whatever he had done to give her the mission, he wouldn't have done | |
himself permanent harm. In fact, she bet he hadn't done himself any | |
harm at all. The flight surgeon had to have been in on it; all Mark | |
had needed to do was swallow an emetic a few minutes before "waking | |
up" and declaring himself dizzy, and that was that. | |
He became the capsule communicator, her link with the ground. They | |
pushed the limit on personal conversation amid the instrument checks | |
and daily briefings. As the distance between Priya and Earth grew, | |
the light-speed lag grew with it until they were waiting half a | |
minute for replies, then a full minute, then two. Priya listened to | |
Mark's choice in music, watched his movies, read his books, ate his | |
food, marveling at how well he had anticipated her tastes. | |
He must have studied her apartment with a magnifying glass to know | |
her so well. If she ever doubted that he had thrown over his position | |
on the flight for her, the dozens of bags of Peppermint Patties | |
clinched it. He didn't even like them. | |
And Didymos finally rose out of the darkness. Another long burn of | |
the main engines, a minor course correction, another shorter burn, | |
and the familiar rock face drifted slowly up to meet her. At first | |
Dimorphos wasn't visible, but as she drew closer it swung around from | |
behind Didymos, a smooth ball one-fifth the size of its larger | |
companion. | |
She was suited up and strapped into her command couch. If she | |
crash-landed and split open the crew cabin, she would at least have | |
air and time enough to investigate the dome, which was once again | |
complete, or so it looked in the telescope view. | |
But the navigation computer performed flawlessly, matching her | |
velocity with the tiny moon and bringing the ship to rest less than | |
its own length away. | |
"I'm here," she said simply, knowing it would take almost a minute | |
for the news to reach Earth and another minute for Mark's response to | |
return. "Still no response from the inhabitants. | |
I'm blinking my navigation beacon in prime numbers, but I don't see | |
any lights on the dome. It looks like they've finished it. No sign of | |
our impact. If we left a crater, the dome has filled it completely. | |
Or maybe they--" | |
"We copy your arrival," Mark said. "Congratulations on being the | |
first human being to reach an asteroid. Hold station for a few | |
minutes and see if the dome builders respond. Try blinking your | |
navigation beacon in prime numbers." | |
Priya laughed. Her voice came out ragged between panting breaths, and | |
her heart felt like it was going to tear itself out of her chest. Now | |
was the time the aliens would blast her into atoms if they were going | |
to. | |
"No response," she said, not sure whether it was a report or a prayer. | |
The ship was drifting a bit. She could match velocity and hover a | |
while longer, but she hadn't come out here to hover. "I'm going to | |
land it," she said. | |
"Oh, you already thought of that," Mark said. "And no response. | |
Somehow I'm not surprised." | |
She didn't so much land on Dimorphos as dock with it. The asteroid's | |
gravity was almost negligible. She could probably have drifted up | |
alongside and simply let the ship come to rest against it, except the | |
spacecraft still had mass and she could shear off a thruster or an | |
antenna before it stopped. So she swung it around and aimed the | |
landing legs at the surface and brought it in slowly with gentle | |
nudges of the maneuvering thrusters. Her windows all faced sideways | |
and upward, so she watched the camera view. It felt like backing up a | |
Prius. | |
The asteroid surface looked like a freshly groomed construction site, | |
which was pretty much what it was. Small, shiny metal spider-like | |
vehicles about the size of house cats crawled across the ground, | |
scooping up loose regolith and carrying it to the hopper of what was | |
probably a furnace that smelted the stuff into its metallic | |
components. A pile of slag in back of the furnace confirmed her guess | |
and somehow disappointed her, too. Shouldn't advanced alien | |
technology be well beyond creating slag piles? Other spiders took | |
foot-long ingots of metal from the furnace and carried them to the | |
dome, where they disappeared into a tiny port that might have been an | |
airlock or might have been a simple hole in the side of it. The dome | |
that DART had destroyed hadn't been full of air; there was no reason | |
to suppose this one was, either. | |
The spiderbots didn't seem to notice her approach. As she brought the | |
ship in, one of them crept along directly beneath it. She slowed her | |
descent until it had cleared the landing site, then accelerated | |
again. She needed at least a couple of feet per second of impact | |
velocity to activate the tethers. | |
Of course at the last moment the spiderbot swerved back directly | |
beneath one of the legs, and the docking probe speared it like a ripe | |
tomato. Then the probe sensed the hard surface and fired its | |
explosive charge, driving the two-foot spike right on through the | |
spiderbot like a spear gun through a fish. | |
"Crap," Priya muttered. "Here we go again with the unintended | |
destruction of alien property." But three green lights winked on in | |
the navigation display. "At least we've got positive lock on the | |
tethers." She felt a bump as the reels pulled the landing pads tight | |
against the rock. | |
She tried again with the navigation beacon and called a general hail | |
on the radio, but there was still no answer. Mark said, "Looks good | |
for landing." | |
She tapped at the screen. "Shutting down navigation," she said. | |
"Inertial guidance off. | |
Thrusters disarmed. Fuel pumps off. Accelerometer--oh, wait, let me | |
get a reading. Ha! Five point one times ten to the minus sixth, just | |
as we calculated. Are we good or what?" She continued down her | |
checklist, and only after she'd finished the shutdown sequence did | |
she realize she'd forgotten the history quote. | |
"Copy you down," Mark said. | |
"Right. Um, yes, the Envoy has landed." Brilliant. | |
She looked out the window toward the dome, narrating what she saw | |
even though the cameras were seeing and recording even more than she | |
could from her single vantage point. "Still no sign of awareness that | |
I'm here. I see several multi-legged vehicles that I assume are | |
construction robots crawling slowly from place to place. They don't | |
seem concerned that I just speared one with a landing spike. Sunlight | |
is glinting off the side of the dome. It's fairly bright, but the | |
dome doesn't look polished. Just shiny, like aluminum or steel that's | |
been freshly milled. No lights. I do see several round outlines that | |
might be ports or windows or something, but they're the same shiny | |
surface as the rest of it. I see one rectangle about the shape of a | |
door that's solid black, like an opening to the inside. I assume | |
that's the entrance." | |
She took a deep breath. Her heart rate had slowed down a little with | |
the routine of landing, but it was edging upward again. "I don't | |
really see any point in waiting. I'm going to go check it out." | |
Before I lose my nerve, she didn't say, but she was certainly feeling | |
it. She thought she'd left her anxiety far behind, but now that she | |
was here, literally only feet away from an alien artifact--and quite | |
possibly aliens themselves--she could see swirling tracers in her | |
vision and hear her breath coming ragged in her earphones. | |
"We're getting infrared from the black rectangle," Mark said. "But | |
whether that's heat from the interior or just absorbed sunlight, we | |
can't tell. It's black-body radiation, no spectral signature." | |
"We'll find out soon enough what it is," Priya said. | |
She unbuckled and twisted around to the cargo lockers. Her suit had | |
two video cameras built in, but she also picked up her phone, which | |
she kept charged for recording her personal journal. And from down in | |
the bottom of locker twenty-six she pulled out the cardboard | |
disposable camera. Thirty-six exposures on good old Kodachrome film. | |
Even if the aliens pulled a Jodi Foster on her and wiped out her | |
digital data, there was at least a chance that they wouldn't know | |
about photographic film, nor how to fog it. | |
Of course winding the little bugger with spacesuit gloves could be an | |
exercise in frustration, but she'd practiced it a dozen times back on | |
Earth and managed to make it work. | |
She tucked the phone and camera into leg pockets. "Okay," she said, | |
disconnecting her suit from the ship's air supply and pulling herself | |
up to the docking hatch atop the capsule. "I've got eight hours of | |
oxygen if I don't hyperventilate. I've got cameras. Radio is working. | |
I'm as ready as I'll ever be." She twisted the handle and pulled the | |
hatch inward. Pulled herself upward into the airlock. | |
Mark said, "The olive branch! Don't forget the olive branch!" | |
"Oh, holy... right. The olive branch." Priya pushed herself back down | |
into the cargo bay and opened locker twenty-six again, rummaged | |
around until she found the freeze-dried peace offering in its | |
vacuum-sealed bag. It looked surprisingly good after its months in | |
storage, but Priya wondered how much of that was the fact that this | |
was the only sign of life on board other than herself. She swallowed | |
a lump in her throat and said, "Olive branch, check." It was too big | |
for a pocket, so she tucked it under one of the suit's waist straps. | |
She pulled herself back up into the airlock and tugged the hatch | |
closed after her. "Up" being a more or less visual referent than | |
anything else. She opened the valve that let the air out, feeling her | |
pressure suit stiffen as it did. Her breathing seemed to become even | |
louder than before, but she hoped that was only because she'd lost | |
the ambient sound from the ship now that there was no air to transmit | |
it. | |
She clipped the end of her tether to her waist, then popped the outer | |
hatch and swung it outward, following it until she was half out of | |
the circular ring. This was more of a spacewalk than a surface | |
expedition. There would be no walking over to the dome. The first | |
step would launch her into orbit, or possibly escape velocity. | |
"Heart rate's one-twenty," Mark said. "Take some deep breaths." | |
He was reacting to her telemetry while she was still in the airlock. | |
She was up to one-fifty now. Deep breaths were probably a good idea. | |
She closed her eyes. Imagined sitting on a couch with a fuzzy kitten | |
in her lap. Purring. | |
Back down to one-thirty. Okay, that was probably as good as it was | |
going to get. On down the side of the ship, handhold over handhold. | |
It was a long ways down. She reached the ground and planted her feet | |
on it, holding herself down with both hands on the rung at waist | |
height, and this time she remembered to say, "We come in peace, for | |
all mankind." A stolen phrase, but there was nothing more appropriate | |
to say at the moment. She just hoped any aliens listening understood | |
what she meant, and cared. | |
She looked across the thirty feet or so that separated her from the | |
edge of the dome. The far side of the dome was actually beyond the | |
horizon. "I feel like Le Petit Prince here," she said. "The horizon | |
is about fifty feet away. And the Envoy is even bigger than a baobab." | |
She hooked a carabiner to a loop on the landing leg and slid her | |
tether into it, then pulled out several dozen feet of slack. She was | |
going to have to float across to the dome, and she wanted to make | |
sure she could pull herself back to the ship if she missed. From a | |
pocket she retrieved a magnet with a big T-handle. It wanted to pull | |
her around toward the bolts in the landing leg, but she turned away. | |
"Okay, here goes," she said, just as Mark said, "Amen to that." | |
She ignored him and positioned herself so her feet were up against | |
the landing leg and her body was horizontal to the ground, then very | |
gently extended her legs. | |
The robot-scraped regolith slid past just a few feet from her face, | |
coming closer. She had angled a little too steeply toward the ground. | |
She reached out and touched the surface with her fingertips, just | |
barely, and her angle changed by a few degrees. Too high now, but the | |
dome was tall enough that she would still hit it. Question was | |
whether there would be anything to grab when she did. | |
She watched her own distorted reflection grow larger. She reached | |
forward with the magnet and waited for it to pull her in, but instead | |
the magnet just hit the surface and bounced away. "Okay, not | |
magnetic," she said. She looked frantically for a handhold, a ridge, | |
a tunnel, anything she could grasp, and found a set of cris-crossing | |
flanges about half an inch high. Too small to get a good grip on with | |
her gloved hands, but enough to pinch between thumb and forefinger | |
and bring herself to a halt. | |
"I think these must be the tracks the spiderbots use to crawl around | |
on the surface," she said. | |
Very carefully, she pushed herself down the curve of the dome until | |
she was at the base of it, then she pulled herself around to the | |
black rectangle. It was so black she couldn't tell if it was a solid | |
thing or a hole into a pitch dark interior. It was about twice her | |
height, and just about half that in width. She reached out | |
tentatively and encountered resistance. Solid, then. | |
There was a yellowish loop sticking out about halfway along its long | |
axis, near the left edge. | |
She twisted around to get a good look at it. | |
"It's a door handle. With a thumb latch. Looks like brass." She | |
reached toward it with the magnet, and it didn't stick. "Not | |
magnetic. I bet it's brass." She laughed out loud. "It's a friggin' | |
brass door pull." | |
She grasped the handle and steadied herself, then banged on the door | |
with the magnet. It left no mark, and she heard no noise. | |
"All right, I'm going to try it." She pushed down on the thumb latch | |
and pulled on the handle, bracing herself against the side of the | |
dome as she did. | |
The door swung open. It was way thicker than a normal door, about a | |
quarter of its width. | |
Something about the dimensions triggered a memory, and she laughed | |
again. "It's a monolith. | |
From 2001: A Space Odyssey. The dimensions are one-four-nine, the | |
first three squares." | |
Mark said, "Copy your successful transfer. You're go for ingress if | |
you can find an entry point." | |
"I've found it, you numbskull," she muttered, but she was smiling. | |
Smiling and hyperventilating at the same time. Her suit flashed a | |
warning. Amber, not red. She held her breath until it went away. | |
Lights blinked on inside the dome, long glowing strips overhead | |
illuminating a corridor that led straight inward. "Okay, now we're | |
cooking," Priya said. "That's the first indication we've gotten that | |
they even know we're here." | |
Her vision was shot with tracers again. She had to take a few more | |
deep breaths, close her eyes, and envision an entire basket of | |
kittens. Then she pulled herself inside. Her tether trailed in after | |
her. Hmm. If the door closed behind her, it would snip the tether. | |
Not good. She wasn't eager to unclip it, but there was a convenient | |
loop just outside the door that seemed obviously made for the | |
purpose. So she unclipped, latched the tether to the loop, and pushed | |
her way on inward. | |
"You still receiving?" she asked. It was a long two minutes, but she | |
waited until Mark said, "Still copy you. Leave the door open, though." | |
"Ya think?" She pulled herself forward. The corridor was narrow | |
enough that she could put a hand on either side and pull herself along. | |
She was about thirty feet in when the light changed. She looked back | |
to see the door swing shut. She didn't hear the boom, nor feel it, | |
but she was pretty sure it had closed solidly. | |
"Mark, do you copy?" | |
Air rushed in. Her suit lost its rigidity. "If it's all the same to | |
you," she said, looking around at the bare metal walls, "I'm going to | |
leave my suit on." | |
She pushed onward. Mark didn't reply. Mission control was probably | |
going nuts about now, but Priya wasn't about to retreat to the ship | |
just to ease their anxiety. She was going to have to explore the dome | |
sometime, and she was already here, so they could just wait for her | |
report. | |
Or for the aliens to throw her body out the door. | |
The corridor ended in a large hemispherical room. It looked as empty | |
as a balloon, but as she pulled herself in and oriented herself to | |
stand upright against the flat metal floor, a column of light | |
flickered into being in the center and filled out to create a | |
hologram of--Santa Claus? | |
"You've got to be kidding," Priya said. | |
A soft, yet resonant voice said in her headphones, "Yes, actually, I | |
am. I'm hoping to calm you down. Your vital signs are borderline | |
dangerous." | |
"Tell me something I don't know." | |
Paintings and tapestries appeared on the walls. Furniture | |
materialized: A comfy couch, a low coffee table with magazines on it, | |
a kitchen table and chairs. A window opened up onto a forest with | |
birds and butterflies flitting about. | |
And the floor slowly became a floor. The asteroid was either under | |
thrust to somewhere or the alien had turned on artificial gravity. It | |
stopped at about a quarter normal, just enough to let her stand | |
upright, but not so much that she would be uncomfortable after her | |
long flight in zero gee. | |
"Does that help?" the red-suited hologram asked. | |
"A little," she admitted. "But I'm not exactly comfortable talking to | |
a childhood myth. Can you show me your true form?" | |
"My true form now is a tangle of circuitry and quantum gates. But in | |
the very distant past..." | |
Santa began to blur and shift, losing the beard and the garish red | |
coat to become a green-and-purple upright cylinder with a tuft of | |
yellow fronds waving like palm leaves from the top. Half a dozen | |
tentacles stuck out at seeming random from the central body, and | |
dozens of smaller tentacles held the base of it off the floor. It | |
might have been a tree, or a sea anemone, seen through a waterfall. | |
Priya gulped. She'd asked for it. | |
"Mind if I record this?" She held up her phone. | |
"Go ahead," said the alien. It held its tentacles out to the sides in | |
what might have been a welcome. | |
She activated the phone's video camera with the stylus nub on her | |
little finger, held it out aimed at the alien, and got out the | |
disposable camera with her other hand. There was no way to be sneaky | |
about it, so she just snapped three shots and tucked the camera back | |
in her pocket. | |
Then she said, "First off, just so we're clear, the impact that | |
destroyed your previous outpost was a mistake. We didn't know you | |
were here. We're sorry for the damage." She took the olive branch | |
from under her suit's waist strap and held it out. "This is a symbol | |
of peace among the people of Earth. We offer it in the hope that we | |
can coexist." | |
The alien's skin rippled slowly from bottom to top. Its voice | |
remained that of a patient old man. "Thank you. That's very kind, and | |
appreciated. We can definitely coexist." It glided forward on its | |
writhing foot tendrils and reached out with two of its upper | |
tentacles for the plastic packet, and Priya was surprised when the | |
packet left her hands and moved across the room with the hologram, | |
who placed it on a shelf that flickered into being as it approached. | |
The alien turned back to Priya and said, "You'll be wanting to know | |
if we're hostile or benevolent or what. We're mostly benevolent. | |
You've got a very dirty Solar System, with way too many asteroids in | |
way too many eccentric orbits. We've been redirecting them from | |
impact trajectories for about forty million years. Too late to save | |
your dinosaurs, and I have to apologize for Tunguska and Chelyabinsk, | |
but we've been pretty successful overall." | |
Priya felt a shiver run down her spine, but it was a shiver of | |
delight. "I knew it," she said. | |
"The number of binary asteroids in Earth-grazing orbits is way out of | |
line with the rest of the population. And they all miss Earth by | |
millions of miles. The odds of that happening by accident were almost | |
zero." | |
The alien rippled from the base upward again. "I was wondering when | |
someone would see that. You're right on the cusp of figuring out a | |
lot of things. When you do, there's a whole Universe waiting for you." | |
Priya's arm was growing tired even in the low gravity. She switched | |
the phone to her other hand. "What kind of universe are we looking | |
at? Are we talking Star Wars here, or Star Trek, or In the Ocean of | |
Night, or 2001, or Contact, or what?" | |
"Definitely 'or what.'" The alien waved its tendrils around. "The | |
distances involved are far too great for the creation of empires. If | |
faster-than-light travel is possible, we haven't figured it out yet. | |
Even trade is mostly done by information exchange. You're going to | |
get visitors every now and then, but not often, because the galaxy is | |
a big place and spacefaring species are few and far between. But | |
curiosity is probably intelligent life's strongest trait, so you'll | |
find young civilizations exploring their neighborhoods." The alien | |
paused and gave a little shiver. | |
"They're not always benign. The last ones through were about two | |
thousand years ago and were kind of jokesters. I reported them, and | |
they're probably still busting rocks on Ceti Alpha Five, but that | |
doesn't really help you a whole lot." | |
Two thousand years ago. Priya didn't know whether to laugh or cry. | |
What would happen when people heard about this on Earth? They | |
wouldn't believe her, not even if her recordings remained intact. | |
They couldn't afford to. | |
She said, "Mission control is probably going crazy by now. I've been | |
out of contact for what, ten minutes? Can you relay my video and | |
audio to my ship so they can listen in?" | |
The alien twisted its upper body left and right. "Sorry, no. I can | |
tell you anything you want to know, within reason, and you can record | |
anything I say, but I'm forbidden to broadcast directly to your | |
planet. Or to visit it. That seldom works out to anyone's advantage." | |
"So it's all on my shoulders and nobody is likely to believe me." | |
"Correct. Understand that we've done this many times before | |
throughout the Galaxy, and we've learned that as frustrating as this | |
may seem to you, it's the best way to avoid inadvertently damaging | |
your society. Merely discovering our existence is often fraught with | |
danger, but that much is unavoidable when you reach this stage in | |
your development." | |
"Could I at least go outside and tell them I'm all right?" | |
The alien rippled upward again. "If you wish. It will take a few | |
minutes to pump the air away." | |
Priya heard the thrum of the pump starting up. | |
"A pump?" she asked. "No force fields holding the air back?" | |
"Air is slippery. Pumps are more reliable." | |
"Why not an airlock, then?" | |
"Because the pump works well enough." | |
She nodded. Okay, aliens would have different ideas about what was | |
important and what wasn't. If this was the extent of the weirdness, | |
it was pretty insignificant. | |
"Sorry to put you out," she said. "I just don't want them to worry." | |
"I understand. It's actually very thoughtful of you." | |
She wanted to sit down, but the couch wasn't shaped right for her | |
spacesuit with its life-support backpack. So she settled for leaning | |
against the wall with her legs at an angle. Friction held her in | |
place, and she could loosen up her tight muscles for a minute or two, | |
at least. | |
"Do you have a name?" she asked. "I'm Priya." | |
"You're going to laugh. I'm--" a hissing sound with a pop and a click | |
at the end. "Ssspok." | |
She did laugh. "You're kidding me. Spock?" | |
"Unfortunately, yes. Mr. Rodenberry must have hit upon it | |
independently. There was nothing I could do about it." The alien made | |
a sort of sideways twist, the way a person might wring out a | |
washcloth. A shrug? "I can at least spell it without the 'c.'" | |
Priya could feel her pressure suit expanding, and the sound of the | |
vacuum pump was growing weaker. But she still had a couple of minutes. | |
"So, Spok without a 'c,' are you an artificial intelligence or an | |
uploaded personality or what?" | |
"I'm not an artificial intelligence. That would be very bad. A word | |
of advice: don't go there. There aren't many rules for emerging | |
civilizations, but that's one of them. If you create artificial | |
intelligence, we make you stop. Understood?" | |
Priya swallowed hard, then nodded. "Yeah, but again, I'm just me. If | |
you won't communicate directly, I can't promise anything about the | |
rest of the human race." | |
"Just make sure the word gets out. If the rest of your people refuse | |
to heed the warning, we'll shift to plan B." | |
Priya remembered the congressional hearing. "The world's being run by | |
idiots and billionaires," she said. "If you're counting on wisdom or | |
caution to win out, I think you're expecting too much of us at the | |
moment." | |
"It's surprising how motivating plan B can be once it's begun." | |
"I suppose you're not going to tell me what it is." | |
"Correct." | |
She could barely hear the pump now, and her suit felt about as tight | |
as it had on the way over. "Ready to blow the hatch?" she asked. | |
"Almost," said Spok. "Another minute." | |
She shifted her position against the wall. "So if you're not an | |
artificial intelligence, then what are you?" | |
"I'm a biological personality, recorded and held in storage to await | |
your arrival here." | |
"And you've been here forty million years?" | |
"Yes." | |
"Without going crazy." | |
"The subjective time has been much less than that. I've been inactive | |
for most of it. And there are copies of me on several other shepherd | |
asteroids, so we act as corrective feedback for one another." | |
"Is this something you can do with a human mind, too?" | |
Spok made the twisty shrug again. "In theory, yes. It would take some | |
calibration of the equipment. Your brains don't work the way mine | |
does. Or did. But that's undoubtedly one thing that will come with | |
further contact with other civilizations." | |
The gravity slowly diminished. Priya straightened up, holding onto | |
the doorframe to keep from drifting up to the top of the dome. "Hold | |
that thought. I'm going to go check in." | |
She pulled herself down the corridor to the black monolith door. | |
"Hold onto the handle," Spok said, his voice as strong in her | |
headphones as when she was in the room with him. "There will be | |
residual air that will blow outward." | |
"Right. Thanks." She grasped the handle--the same brass loop with | |
thumb latch as on the outside, and pushed the plunger. Sure enough, | |
the door swung open, drawing her out with it, and swung her around in | |
a tight arc. The door banged up against the side of the dome, and she | |
banged into it a moment later, clutching the handle for dear life. | |
Different ways of doing things, for sure. A cloud of dust blew | |
outward toward the horizon. She waited for it to dissipate, then | |
righted herself and clipped her tether to her suit. | |
"Houston, this is Priya. I'm outside again. Everything is fine. I've | |
met the... the intelligence that runs the place, and I've established | |
that it's not a threat. Quite the contrary; it's been protecting us | |
from asteroids for forty million years, deflecting them away from us, | |
not toward us. | |
I'm going back inside to learn more about it, but first I want to--" | |
"Calling Envoy. Come in Envoy. Priya, can you hear me?" Mark sounded | |
frantic. | |
"--to upload the video I've taken so far. Hold on." She set her phone | |
and suit cameras to upload to the capsule, where the video would be | |
automatically relayed to Earth. | |
"I'm likely to be inside for a while longer this next time around. | |
The alien says it'll answer my questions, so I'm going to ask it | |
everything I can think of. So don't worry if you don't hear from me | |
for a few hours. I've got plenty of air in my suit, and Spok--that's | |
what it calls itself--can pressurize the dome for me. I--" | |
"Priya! Thank God you're okay. When your signal cut out like that we | |
feared the worst." | |
"It's far from the worst." Priya looked up at the stars, and over at | |
Didymos just half a mile away. It was a rocky wall covering almost a | |
third of the sky. If Spok and its robots could turn Dimorphos | |
regolith into building materials, she was pretty sure humanity could | |
do the same with Didymos. And there was a lot of Didymos there to | |
turn into habitat, and spacecraft, and power satellites, and who knew | |
what all. | |
She looked back to the dome. Inside was a being whose sole purpose | |
was to look after humanity's best interests, and it wasn't some | |
mystical fantasy that she had to take on faith. Rather it was a real | |
being, with real capabilities and real knowledge that it was willing | |
to share. Maybe its original manifestation, as Santa Claus, had been | |
more appropriate than she'd realized. | |
"Oh yeah," she said, smiling, "It's about as good as we could ask for." | |
* * * | |
Jerry Oltion would like to thank Trevor and Emily and the rest of the | |
Analog crew for expediting this story so it would see print before | |
the DART mission whacked the asteroid in real life. The target date | |
is September 26th, 2022, which will probably make this the | |
fastest-obsoleted story in the history of science fiction. Or perhaps | |
the most prophetic? | |
From: http://www.analogsf.com/wp-content/uploads/2023/02/ShepherdMoons_Oltion_A… | |
detail: gopher://gopherpedia.com/0/Jerry_Oltion | |
tags: sci-fi | |
# Tags | |
sci-fi |