The Martian
Especially with a human occupant fixing problems as they arise. But there’s no way around the food issue. He’ll start starving in a year. We
have
to send him supplies. Simple as that.”
    “What about an Ares 4 presupply?” said Teddy. “Land it at Ares 3 instead.”
    “That’s what we’re thinking, yeah,” Venkat confirmed. “Problem is, the original plan was to launch presupplies a year from now. They’re not ready yet.
    “It takes eight months to get a probe to Mars in the best of times. The positions of Earth and Mars right now…it’s not the best of times. We figure we can get there in nine months. Presuming he’s rationing his food, he’s got enough to last three hundred and fifty more days. That means we need to build a presupply in
three months
. JPL hasn’t even started yet.”
    “That’ll be tight,” Bruce said. “Making a presupply is a six-month process. We’re set up to pipeline a bunch of them at once, not to make one in a hurry.”
    “Sorry, Bruce,” Teddy said. “I know we’re asking a lot, but you have to find a way.”
    “We’ll find a way,” Bruce said. “But the OT alone will be a nightmare.”
    “Get started. I’ll find you the money.”
    “There’s also the booster,” Venkat said. “The only way to get a probe to Mars with the planets in their current positions is to spend a butt-load of fuel. We only have one booster capable of doing that. The Delta IX that’s on the pad right now for the EagleEye 3 Saturn probe. We’ll have to steal that. I talked to ULA, and they just can’t make another booster in time.”
    “The EagleEye 3 team will be pissed, but okay,” said Teddy. “We can delay their mission if JPL gets the payload done in time.”
    Bruce rubbed his eyes. “We’ll do our best.”
    “He’ll starve to death if you don’t,” Teddy said.
    •••
    VENKAT SIPPED his coffee and frowned at his computer. A month ago it would have been unthinkable to drink coffee at nine p.m. Now it was necessary fuel. Shift schedules, fund allocations, project juggling, out-and-out looting of other projects…he’d never pulled so many stunts in his life.
    “
NASA’s a large organization
,” he typed. “
It doesn’t deal with sudden change well. The only reason we’re getting away with it is the desperate circumstances. Everyone’s pulling together to save Mark Watney, with no interdepartmental squabbling. I can’t tell you how rare that is. Even then, this is going to cost tens of millions, maybe hundreds of millions of dollars. The MDV modifications alone are an entire project that’s being staffed up. Hopefully, the public interest will make your job easier. We appreciate your continued support, Congressman, and hope you can sway the committee toward granting us the emergency funding we need.

    He was interrupted by a knock at his door. Looking up, he saw Mindy. She wore sweats and a T-shirt, her hair in a sloppy ponytail. Fashion tended to suffer when work hours ran long.
    “Sorry to bother you,” Mindy said.
    “No bother,” Venkat said. “I could use a break. What’s up?”
    “He’s on the move,” she said.
    Venkat slouched in his chair. “Any chance it’s a test drive?”
    She shook her head. “He drove straightaway from the Hab for almost two hours, did a short EVA, then drove for another two. We think the EVA was to change batteries.”
    Venkat sighed heavily. “Maybe it’s just a longer test? An overnight trip kind of thing?”
    “He’s seventy-six kilometers from the Hab,” Mindy said. “For an overnight test, wouldn’t he stay within walking distance?”
    “Yes, he would,” Venkat said. “Damn it. We’ve had teams run every conceivable scenario. There’s just no way he can make it to Ares 4 with that setup. We never saw him load up the oxygenator or water reclaimer. He can’t possibly have enough basics to live long enough.”
    “I don’t think he’s going to Ares 4,” Mindy said. “If he is, he’s taking a weird

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