Saturn Run (25 page)

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Authors: John Sandford,Ctein

Tags: #Science Fiction, #Thriller

BOOK: Saturn Run
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32
.

With the asteroid belt coming up, Joe Martinez began running a plaster-and-paint school. The trainees included both Sandy and Becca, since both were adept with the eggs—Sandy from his journalistic and documentary excursions, and Becca from her occasional trips out to the radiators, which she insisted on inspecting in person.

Plaster-and-paint involved repair of collision damage, an ongoing issue for the
Nixon
. Most of the repair work was done by his own maintenance crews, but he trained extras in case there should be a substantial, but non-fatal, hit, which would require large crews both inside and outside.

The
Nixon
was traveling a hundred times faster than a high-speed bullet. A millimeter grain of interplanetary sand packed the same wallop as a rifle slug when it hit the ship at a hundred and forty kilometers per second.

The ship was covered with microseismometer sensors. They dutifully picked up the small but sharp impulses of sand strikes and relayed the information to the maintenance computers, which pinpointed the spot on the ship where the hit had taken place. The
Nixon
averaged about one hit a week, which wasn’t a lot, considering the distance they covered in that time. Each hit was shortly followed by a visit from a service egg. The divot got filled with structural composite putty and epoxy overcoat. The entire EVA took less than an hour.

“The thing about interplanetary space, as you all should know by now, is that it’s astonishingly empty,” Martinez told the crew. “The asteroid belt is only a little less astonishingly empty—I’m thinking we might get one hit a day out there, maybe two dozen total for the transit. None of them, I hope, will be larger than the ones we’ve already seen. The odds of a hit inconveniencing the power plant or heat radiating system are really, really small.”

Becca jumped in: “The odds are small, but just in case, we need to go through the protocols for dealing with the strike in those areas. I’ve got a lot of stuff to tell you, but mostly it boils down to this: if we take a critical hit on the engine or the radiators, you call Engineering and you wait for specific instructions. You don’t go off on your own or I honest-to-God will murder you. Is that clear to everybody?”

Everybody nodded.

“What happens, er, if the hit’s bigger than a grain of sand?” asked one of the trainees who hadn’t read the handout.

“That’s why we’re training you extras,” Martinez said, “because if that happens, it’s gonna be a major clusterfuck. How major, depends on where it hits. The real problem of the asteroid belt is not only are the sand-sized hits more common—we can handle those—but we’ve also got some bigger rocks out there. There are a hundred times fewer one-centimeter rocks out there than millimeter ones, so there’s a better than even chance we’ll never encounter one, on the whole trip. Even in the asteroid belt. That’s a good thing, because an impact with a centimeter-sized rock would have the explosive force of several kilos of high explosive. Containing something like that would be a struggle—that’s why we have the nose and tail cones.”

“What about ten-centimeter rocks?” asked the same trainee.

“That could be a total disaster, again, depending on where it hit.”

“We couldn’t dodge it?”

“No. We cover more than a hundred thousand kilometers every fifteen minutes—a third of the distance from the earth to the moon. We simply can’t track rocks that size, that far out. The good news is, the chances of hitting something that big are far less than one percent. Far less.”

“Be like losing the lottery,” Sandy said.

Martinez scratched his chin: “Interesting concept—losing a lottery. I’ve never heard of such a thing.”

After they finished the inside class, they went outside in the eggs, to practice the plaster-and-paint on simulated hits. They were being monitored by Crow, who monitored all EVAs. The entire interior of the ship
was covered by vid monitors, and the vid was cached for later viewing, if necessary. The exterior was of more immediate concern; Crow worried that if somebody were to sabotage the ship again, the attack well might come there and so real-time surveillance was in order.

He listened to the eggs going out, watched them by tapping into Martinez’s vid feed, then tapped into the private comm channel between Darlington and Johansson, and listened for a while.

One of his surveillance computers automatically monitored all shipboard communications, and a relational app alerted him to problematical talk and provided a written transcript—but those were just the words. They didn’t catch tone and the unvoiced emotions that directed it; there was no substitute for the occasional direct audio surveillance.

Crow was a bit surprised those two had fallen into bed. Not that he hadn’t expected Darlington to make a move at some point; really, the only question was how soon. Johansson, on the other hand . . . he’d have guessed she was too wrapped up with her work—obsessed might be more accurate—to consider any distracting personal involvements. The boredom of interplanetary flight was a bigger factor than he’d realized.

He would have to remember that if he ever found himself in this kind of insane situation again. Not that he was planning to.

Their conversation was work-related discussion interspersed with personal chat. It had taken nearly three weeks for the honeymoon period to wear off, and since then they’d slipped into mismatched couple behavior.

He was sure they’d deny the couple part. The mismatch, no one could deny. They squabbled. It was none of that “opposites attract” nonsense; they were just different. Johansson’s single-minded, utterly dedicated work focus didn’t stay at work; it carried over to her approach to her entire life. She behaved as if everything in her existence was a chore, and she liked the chores.

Right now the squabble was essentially territorial, although Darlington didn’t seem to realize that. Playing in Johansson’s quarters meant they were playing by her rules. She’d defined the scope of the relationship from the very beginning. Keeping physical matters on her turf
reinforced that authority. Served Darlington right. He so took it for granted that he called the shots in these sexual liaisons that he couldn’t wrap his head around why this one was discomforting him so. He’d made the first pass, but then she’d grabbed the ball and called the plays after that.

But . . . something else came through the squabbling, something the computers and transcripts wouldn’t flag. After listening for ten minutes, he thought,
Damnit. They’re falling in love.

That could be bad both ways.

He considered Darlington to be one of his troops. Troops were always better when unencumbered by attachments, especially attachments to critical personnel. There might even be more complicated sexual arrangements, he worried, that could turn into bitterness and strife. For example, what was going on between Darlington and Fiorella? Did Johansson know about it? Was there anything to know?

Darlington was his ace in the hole, but he wasn’t a very stable ace. So far the relationship seemed to be working for Johansson and Darlington, but if, or more likely when, it went south . . .

He figured Johansson was far less likely to fall apart. She had fuckin’ balls. Except . . . she counted for a lot more.

It was a classic risk vs. threat. More likely that Darlington would melt down, but all they’d lose would be a card he might never have to play and a cameraman. More likely Johansson would keep it together, but if she didn’t, there went the ship’s most important crew member.

“I got a fuckin’ soap opera,” he said aloud. “We got three hundred contingency plans, and not a single one for a fuckin’ soap opera.”

33
.

The
Nixon
was ninety-three days out, eight hundred and ten million kilometers from Earth, six hundred and twenty million from Saturn, and on the far side of the asteroid belt. Becca rode a transport cart down the axle to the service egg bay, sucking on the morning’s third bulb of coffee as she went. The day before, the
Nixon
had reached the point where it would stop accelerating outward from the sun, turn tail-forward, and begin the three-month process of decelerating into Saturn.

Becca had spent the day supervising the first controlled shutdown of the
Nixon
’s propulsion system since they’d left Earth’s orbit. Shutting down was less dangerous than start-up, but not a whole lot less tricky. Strictly speaking, it was unnecessary. The thrust of the four VASIMRs was low enough that firing broadside for a few hours would hardly affect their trajectory. But the techies running the simulations were antsy about those sail ribbons running at full velocity. The sims said they’d be fine in a rotating reference frame, but better to err on the side of caution and slow that molten metal down as much as they could.

Engineering had to ramp down the output of the reactor, turbines, and generators while shutting down the VASIMR engines and slowly winding down the radiator system. Not too fast or the system would overheat; not too slowly or the heat exchangers would freeze up.

The shutdown wasn’t complete. Becca didn’t want to restart the radiator system from scratch; cold starts were always rough. Happily, there was no need to. The reactors could churn out power indefinitely, and she’d had them wound down to the point where they’d be supporting the radiators at minimum output. She could bypass the main turbines and generators entirely, run the auxiliary power system—more than enough to maintain ship’s power and the heater and control systems for the heat exchangers and radiators—and toss in a bit extra to give the
molten metal ribbons something to do as they cycled from nozzle to collection boom and back down into the heat exchangers.

The process wasn’t all that difficult and they’d practiced it in Earth orbit. This wasn’t for practice, though, and there were no rescue ships if something went wrong.

It all went smoothly, though, and the
Nixon
went into free fall.

At that point, the attitude thrusters went to work, a complex and delicate orchestration of impulses that slowly rotated the entire structure—booms, struts, axles, and modules—a hundred and eighty degrees, so the engines were pointing away from the sun, and what had been the forward part of the ship was now facing back the way they came.

The crew wasn’t overly worried about impacts on the engines. Their cross-section was small, and they were now well clear of the asteroid belt; in fact they were approaching Jupiter’s orbit. Jupiter, fortunately, was far away. Becca didn’t have to be concerned with the Jovian gravity well or the massive radiation belts. Even Jupiter’s leading and trailing Trojan asteroids were far off: their orbit simply made for a mental benchmark.

The next one would be the rendezvous with Saturn.

On this day, she and her crew would bring the engines back online, essentially, shutdown in reverse. Again, as they’d practiced so many times in Earth orbit, it would be a slow and coordinated ramping up of reactors, turbines, generators, engines, while bringing the radiator system up to full speed.

If everything went as planned, they’d be at Saturn in a little over three months. Things had been going smoothly since the shutdown of Reactor 2. Both the flyby of the sun and the transit of the asteroid belt had been as uneventful as statistics had predicted, given good engineering.

The shutdown of Reactor 2 still nagged at her. If she’d been able to keep both reactors up and running, they’d be looking at a Saturn arrival in a little over a month and a half, instead of three months away. They weren’t in any danger of losing the race to the Chinese—they’d already made up for the nine-month launch lead the
Celestial Odyssey
had,
which was now only a little farther from the sun than the
Nixon
. The Chinese ship was coasting along at less than twenty kilometers per second, even after its unexpected midcourse boost. The
Nixon
was speeding away from the sun at more than a hundred and seventy kilometers per second. They’d get to Saturn with months to spare.

But still . . . Reactor 2 nagged.

As the cart approached the service egg bay, her mind turned back to the day’s itinerary. This was perhaps the most critical point in the ship’s journey; now they had to start decelerating or they were all on a one-way trip to some not-very-nearby star. Ironically, the loss of Reactor 2 actually made her job easier. They only had half as much power to manage and they still had close to full capacity on the radiators, so nothing there was being pushed to its limits.

Doing it right required paying attention to detail, but it was the kind of power plant operations work that made her the most comfortable—the boring kind. Take it up five percent. Check all the settings. Double-check the settings. Take it up another five percent. Check the settings. Double-check the settings. Rinse and repeat until done.

She didn’t even need to be in the engine room for this one, so she was going to be keeping an eye on the performance of the radiators from outside. Sometimes you picked up on stuff just watching the equipment run that you didn’t get from the instrument readings. Sandy would accompany her so she could get a hard copy record of whatever she saw and take advantage of his multispectral cameras and extensive range of optics. Whatever she found worth recording he’d capture six ways to Sunday, and she’d review it at her leisure.


When she arrived at the service bay, Sandy had finished loading his camera gear into his egg and was chatting with Joe Martinez. Martinez had his slate plugged into Sandy’s egg, checking out all the relevant preflight specs.

“Morning, Joe,” she said, as the transport stopped and she pushed herself off, got her feet stuck to the floor.

“Becca . . . already checked you out, you’re good.” He touched his slate and said to Sandy, “And you’re good, too.”

“I already knew that, having done exactly what you just did,” Sandy said.

Martinez shut down his slate and said, “Two heads are better than one, especially . . . I say, especially . . . when one of them is yours. That problem doesn’t come up with Becca, of course.”

Becca yawned: “I gotta pee before I go out.”

Sandy: “You haven’t already?”

“Yeah, but I had two more bulbs of coffee since then and I could really use another.” She handed Sandy a sack: “Peanut butter sandwiches and a bag of cookies. We might be out for a while.”

“Hmm. Junk food. My body is my temple. Do I want to stick sugar and fat into it?”

“You might, if we have a problem, and wind up being outside for five or six hours.”

“Good point.” He stuck the sack in a plastic box next to the egg’s pilot seat.

Becca yawned again and said, “You guys are playing tonight, right?”

“Seven o’clock. We’ve got three new covers of Eye-Shine songs, so you’ll probably want to be there.”

“I can hardly wait.” She wandered off to the restroom and was back three minutes later. “Let’s get out there and get it done. Wendy’s ready to push the button. Sandy, you got the macro on?”

“I do.”

“Let’s go, then.”

“Have fun, you kids,” Martinez said. “Don’t stay out too late.”


The next two hours were carefully choreographed, a virtual textbook exercise, and thoroughly documented. It wasn’t as bad as the cold starts had been in Earth orbit. The radiator ribbons were still moving, the reactors were simmering along at ten percent output, and the heat
exchangers and sodium boilers were primed and simmering, like a stove set on very low.

Becca was in frequent contact with Greenberg as they worked through it, and she and Sandy cruised the radiator mechanicals as they worked toward full speed. Becca pointed Sandy at a couple of items she’d wanted documented: the exact way the edge of the molten ribbon flowed from the outer end of the slot nozzle, some details of how the ribbons got collected and shunted down the masts.

It was dim out there: the sun was still the sun, but drastically shrunken: pea-sized.

There was no planetary light to fill in the shadows. Jupiter was nowhere close, and Saturn was still a long way out—although they’d been past the orbit of Mars and through the asteroid belt, and were approaching the orbit of Jupiter, the planets were nothing like evenly spaced: Saturn was twice as far from Earth as Jupiter.

Sandy finished another scan of the slot nozzle and asked, “Now what?”

“Let’s just back off for a while—probably ought to go back in, but let’s give it another hour.”

“All right.”

“How come Fiorella’s not out here?”

“After the turnover operation, we had about as much as we needed for her show. She talked to Wendy about what she’d see today—Wendy said there wouldn’t be much—so she’s trying to scrape some kind of feature story out of the garden guys.”

“That ought to be exciting. I hear they thought they had an aphid last week.”

“Turned out not to be true. It was a flake of the dry fertilizer they use.”

Becca laughed and said, “And you ran right over to cover the nonexistent aphid?”

“Hey, it coulda been a big story.”

Becca made sure they were on a private channel. “Can I get serious for a moment?”

“Yeah?”

She could hear a little resignation in that drawn-out word. “I’m feeling like we need to talk about what’s going on between the two of us. And I’m going to need you to talk back for a change. Please?”

“Oh, Jesus . . .”

“We’ve been keeping company, as my folks would put it, for two months now, and I’m still not sure how deep I’m in. For me, that’s a long relationship.”

“I guess it is for me, too,” Sandy acknowledged.

“You think I don’t know that? I knew that about you the day after we first met. The other women on the team made sure I knew about you. You think you don’t have a reputation that precedes you?”

“Ummm, I don’t think about it.”

Becca sighed.
Guys!
“I’m sorry. That’s not really what I wanted to talk about and I’m not trying to put you on the defensive. It’s just . . .”

Becca took a deep breath.
I’m finally getting to the point,
she thought.

“It’s not that I don’t like it, it’s just I don’t exactly know what that is. I’m not sure there’s a future.”

“If this is about us breaking up . . .”

“What? No! No, no, no! I mean, I’m really enjoying this. Whatever it is.”

Deep breaths, just breathe,
she thought.
Damn, I hate Talks.

Engineering pinged.

“Hold on,” Becca said, “Wendy’s calling. Back to you in a minute.”

Becca opened the two-way comm to Engineering. “How’s it going, guys? I’m seeing temperature fluctuations in Exchanger 1. Anything I need to worry about?”

Greenberg came back: “Becca, it doesn’t look like much from here. We’re getting a few hiccups in a couple of the heater coils. Minor current spikes. We’ll stamp ’em out.”

“Okay, Wendy, but sooner rather than later, okay? Turnaround’s enough work without distractions. Let’s kill this one, pronto.”

“Sure thing, boss. I’ll ramp up the damping algorithms another notch. That oughta do it.”

“Good. Stay on top of it.”

Becca switched two-way back to Sandy. “Hey, you listen in on that?”

“Yeah, what’s up?”

“Not much, some rattles in the gears. Do me a favor, though, feed me an external shot of Slot Nozzle 1, the outboard half? IR, false color mapping, like you did back when we were doing the Earth-orbit tests? Can you do that?”

Sandy was a few hundred meters away: “No problem, I’ve had an IR camera running. Just let me switch to wide-angle”—there was a pause—“Okay, should be getting the IR feed on screen four”—another pause—“Okay, I just kicked in the color thermal map post-process on the vid. You seeing that?”

“Yeah, it’s good. I’m copying Engineering in on this.” Becca opened a conference channel back to Engineering. “Wendy, I’m feeding you Darlington’s IR view of Nozzle 1. See that hot spot between Plates 87 and 91, about seventy percent out from the mast? I think that’s where the fluctuations originate. Try dialing back the heaters around there.”

“I agree. We’ve already been focusing on that section,” Greenberg said. “We’ll sweat the small stuff, doncha worry.” Wendy clicked off.

Becca switched back to the private link with Sandy.

“What was I saying? Oh yeah. I’m liking this. A whole lot. I think you are, too. You’re sticking around, anyway. It’s just that . . . when we get back, I expect I’m gonna go home to Minnesota and you’ll be going back to Pasadena. That whole shipboard romance thing, and that’ll be it.

“I’m really not sure I want that to be it. I’m still working on it. But I’d really like to know how you feel about this . . . ‘thing’ . . . between the two of us. You ever thought about moving to Minnesota? Okay, not much to surfing there, but at least we’re not topping fifty degrees in the summer.” Becca took a deep breath. “Okay. That’s your cue. I’m done. You’ve got the floor.”

Sandy was silent.

“Sandy? What’s on your mind?”

“Well, I hadn’t thought that far ahead.”

“Well, maybe it’s time!” Becca blurted exasperatedly. Damn, this mattered. She was surprised by that.

Another ping: “Wait one, Wendy’s pinging me again.” Becca went back to the engineering channel.

“What’s up?”

“We sent a power-back command, but Heater 1-89’s still pumping out full heat. What do you rec—”

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