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“No problem,” said Killifer.

“I’m going outside to set a little fire under the digging. Roger, you did well out there. I’m pleased.”

Deems’s normally half-frightened expression slowly evolved into a shy, delighted smile.

“Doug,” Brennart snapped, “shouldn’t you be registering our time of arrival and summary of activities?”

“I’ve already done that,” Doug replied, biting back the instinct to add, sir.

“And our schedule-for tomorrow?”

I’m set to transmit that as soon as we send out the nanotech team tomorrow morning.”

Brennart looked down on Doug with something approaching displeasure. “Do it now. Right now.”

“But legally—”

“Get it into the record!” Brennart insisted. “Tell them you’ll send confirmation when the team actually starts out tomorrow. Exact time and all that.”

“Very well,” said Doug.

They squeezed out of the analysis cubicle like four men getting out of a phone booth. This is no place for a claustrophobe, Doug thought as they marched single file up the narrow central aisle of the shelter.

The cylindrical shelter was divided by thin plastic internal walls that could be load-bearing only in the gentle gravity of the Moon. Brennart and Deems headed for the airlock; Brennart to suit up for the surface, Deems to put his helmet back on and go to a well-deserved rest break in the shelter that housed his bunk. The digging team had not yet linked the four shelters with connecting tunnels.

Doug followed Killifer to the comm center, another cubicle that was hot and overcrowded with two people in it. The communications technician was at his post, headphone clamped to his ear.

I’ll take over,” Killifer said. “Go take a leak.”

The guy grinned appreciatively and surrendered his flimsy plastic chair to Killifer, who took the headset and slipped it around his neck.

“Anything expected in?” Killifer asked his departing back.

“Nope,” said the technician as he squeezed past Doug. “Everything’s quiet until the next satellite comes over.”

The expedition included six miniature communications satellites in polar orbit, following one another endlessly like soldiers on perpetual parade. Moonbase’s regular commsat, hovering at the L-l libration point above the lunar equator, could not’see’ the deep valleys of the mountainous south polar region, so the polar orbiting minisats were necessary.

Doug had suggested twelve satellites, so there would be continuous coverage, but Savannah had decided that the expedition could do with fifteen-minute breaks between satellites, and doubling their communications costs was not worth the additional coverage.

While Killifer began punching up the inventory of supplies and equipment carried aboard the crashed lander, Doug sat at the other display and tapped out his legal report for Moonbase and the World Court at The Hague. He could feel the heat that their bodies and the computers and communications sets were generating. Sweat trickled down his ribs.

They were sitting close enough to be touching shoulders, but for nearly half an hour neither of them said a word. Doug finished his task and set up tomorrow’s work, then — for lack of anything else to do — called up the inventory Killifer was working on.

“You checking up on me?” Killifer snapped.

Startled, Doug said, “No. Of course not.”

“Then why’re you looking over my shoulder?”

With a shrug, Doug answered, “I don’t have much of anything else to do at the moment.”

“Then get outta here and give me some space.”

Doug stared at the older man. “You don’t like me much, do you?”

“Why should I?”

“What do you mean?”

“You were stuck into this mission on orders from Savannah. Your so-called job could be done by a trained baboon. You’re nothing but a snoop from corporate headquarters.”

“A snoop?” Doug wanted to laugh. “What’s there to snoop about? I’m here because I thought this expedition would be exciting.”

Killifer glared at him. “Exciting? You must be crazy.”

Doug waved a hand. “Don’t you find all this exciting? The first people here at the south pole and all that?”

“Christ, you’re worse than a snoop. You’re a frigging dilettante.”

“Well,” said Doug ’I’m sorry you think so. I hope to be as helpful as I can.”

“Oh great. Just stay out of the way and we’ll get along fine.”

With a laugh, Doug replied, “It’s not going to be easy to stay out of each other’s way, cooped up in these tin cans.”

“Then why don’t you go outside and take a nice long walk?”

Getting to his feet, Doug said, “That’s not a bad idea.” And he left Killifer alone in the comm cubicle.

Killifer watched him leave, then turned back to his tedious inventory task. He heard a piercing note from the earphone on the headset draped around his neck and quickly clapped the set over his close-cropped hair.

“Moonbase to Brennart. Emergency notification. A major solar flare is expected in the next twenty-four hours. We don’t know if it will impact your area or not, but you should take all safety precautions.”

It was a recorded message, transmitted by the minisat that had just come up over their horizon. Killifer duly noted it into the computer log and then started to call Brennart, out on the surface.

His fingertip hovered over the keypad. I’ll tell Brennart when he gets back in. No sense shaking him up right now. Plenty of time before there’s any danger.

Too bad it won’t hit while the Stavenger kid is outside, he thought.

LUNAR TRANSFER VEHICLE

Before this flight to the Moon, Greg had never been farther than the space stations in Earth orbit. He had been nervous about spending a couple of days in weightlessness, but so far the medication patch behind his right ear seemed to be working: he felt a little queasy, but under control.

The lunar transfer vehicle was basically a freight carrier; the maintenance gang at the space station had added a crew module especially for him. It was a small bubble of alloy and plastiglass, barely big enough for the mandatory human pilot and co-pilot and a pair of passengers.

The bubble was pressurized, but safety regulations required the humans to stay in spacesuits for the duration of the two-day flight. If a stray meteoroid punctured the module’s skin they could slide their visors down and ride the rest of the way buttoned up in their suits.

The other “passenger,” tightly strapped in to the seat next to Greg, was a drum of lubricating oil. Not romantic, but very necessary for the machinery at Moonbase. With the bulky steel-gray drum beside him and the two pilots sitting in front of him, Greg’s main view was overhead. He cranked his seat back as far as it would go, and realized that in zero-gee ’overhead’ was a matter of opinion. He felt almost as if he were standing and looking straight ahead.

What he saw was the Earth, glowing blue and white against the empty blackness of space, dwindling imperceptibly as the lunar transfer vehicle coasted toward the Moon. Two days inside this spacesuit, Greg thought. We’re going to smell ripe when we finally put down at Alphonsus. Staring at the Earth, he realized with the force of a physical sensation that he was leaving the world and heading for a place that had no air or water or life of its own. He shuddered inwardly at the thought.

“Mr. Masterson, sir?”

Greg could not tell whether it was the pilot or co-pilot speaking to him. Their voices sounded virtually identical in his helmet earphones.

“We have a problem, sir. Ground control reports an imminent SFE. We’re ordered to reverse course and return to the station.”

Astronauts and their jargon, Greg thought. “What’s an SFE?”

“Solar flare event. Extremely high levels of ionizing radiation. Very dangerous.”

“Lethal,” said the other astronaut.

Alarmed, Greg asked, “How much time do we have?”