with us,â said Jiang. He resumed his leisurely digging. âItâs all we can do just to get supplies up here. We canât even take back the trash, much less anything of value from the surface. You should see the other side of the base! When a new resupply vehicle is ready to dock at the medical science unit, we use the leftover propellant in the old one to blast it a short distance away. Thatâs twelve vehicles in four years, scattered all over the place. If you could get them back to Earth, collectors would pay a fortune.â
âI mean, this whole baseâ¦â pouted Tae. âItâs falling apart, it smells, itâs in the middle of a garbage dump. Canât you do something about it?â
âThatâs a little unfair,â Sohya interrupted. âEveryone here is working hard to help humanity push into space. Itâs going to be a bit jerry-rigged in the beginning. Theyâre using their knowledge and ingenuity to deal with the problems in a positive way. Donât you think thatâs impressive?â
âBut Grandfather said that was the wrong way to do it!â
âMr. Toenji?â asked Sohya, baffled. âWhat did he say?â
Tae suddenly looked away. âI canât talk about it yet. I promised. Iâm sorry.â
Something that Sohya had not given much thought to before suddenly loomed as potentially significant. He had always assumed that Tae had been imposed on him so an old man could give his beloved granddaughter the trip of a lifetime. It was the kind of indulgence not uncommon among the wealthy. Still, it was out of proportion for an indulgent whim. It was hard to believe anyone would casually hand over three billion yen to fund a pleasure trip, even someone with personal assets several hundred times that. And it would not be surprising if Tae had been given some sort of goal. But even so, what sort of responsibility could she be expected to fulfill? As Sohya pondered this question, Jiang spoke up.
âYouâre certainly paying enough, Aomine. Iâm not sure weâre worth it though.â Jiang was shoveling faster now.
Sohya was briefly speechless. âIsnât there something more important for you to be doing here? Geological research? Gathering samples? Iâd like to know more about soil testingââ
âCrew IIâs data is in the computer, complete with visuals. Iâll give you a copy later.â
âWhat about Crew IVâs research?â
âWeâre not doing any.â
âYouâre not?â Sohya was dumbfounded.
âThatâs right,â Jiang said simply. âWith only three crew members, and with these facilities, thereâs nothing left to research. Weâve done everything. We tried making concrete out of regolith, but thereâs no water ice anywhere around here, so thereâs not a lot we can do. Maybe at the south poleâ¦Anyway, whatever it is we might be doing, we havenât got the people, the equipment, or the funding.â
âThen why are you here?â
âMaybe because they canât afford to send a bulldozer to bury the modules.â
Jiangâs cynicism was understandable. Beijing Control rode herd on the crew with a schedule controlled to the minute. Of course, even manual labor was important if it helped protect the base. Still, what was the point of such a minutely choreographed schedule?
A short distance away, Tae was playing at stepping on her own shadow. One set of shadows danced happily in the silence. Another shortened and lengthened in a monotonous rhythm. Sohya was lost in thought.
[6]
THEY WERE UP early the next morning. It was departure day.
The crew rose even earlier than usual and furiously began making launch preparations. There was nothing to retrieve from Xiwangmu 5, but research materials and several hundred commemorative boxes had to be loaded into the Changâe spacecraft. The small boxes contained
Unknown
Jianne Carlo
Christina Kirby
David Macinnis Gill
Juliet Marillier
Gracen Miller
Eric S Brown
Margaret Mallory
B. B. Roman
Tara Janzen