Authors: Jeremy Robinson
"Only from the air,"
Peterson looked at the tall tree. Its bark was smooth and grey; its leaves a brilliant green. A powerful tree. The fact that this might actually be the last of its kind on Earth made it awe inspiring. Peterson looked at
"Three reasons,"
Looking up, Peterson could see the moon hovering in the sky above. "It's been fifty-two years since man first walked on the moon and we still look at it as a crowning achievement of mankind. With manned missions to Mars thrown in the trash for various reasons and the more recent moon trips being...redundant, space exploration has been in a slump. We need this to work, Michael."
"Not to worry," Peterson said with confidence. "Everything is on schedule."
"You're sure about that? About everything? I'm meeting with the board tomorrow. They'll give me the final go ahead even with a slim chance of success, but the final say is mine and I don't like slim chances. They haven't worked for any space program thus far and we don't need another failure on our hands. So I'll ask you one last time. Are you absolutely, one hundred percent, without question, sure that you'll find what you're looking for?
"Not a doubt in the world. I've worked my entire life for an opportunity like this. I promise you, we will succeed." Peterson smiled. "I wouldn't be doing this otherwise. I don't like to fail."
"Good,"
A loud ring filled the air.
"Dr. Connelly and her crew are here to see you, Ma'am," came the voice of a receptionist on the other end.
"Direct them to my office,"
"Will do," Peterson said.
*
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Connelly stretched and touched her toes, which felt awkward in the formal business suit she was wearing, but the three flights it had taken to get them from Antarctica to northern
The GEC had been funding her project for the past five years and in the last year alone, her funding had quadrupled. She wasn't sure why the money was increased, and she never asked. It allowed her to finish work on TES three years ahead of schedule. Upon arriving at the front door of the GEC headquarters, they were ushered in like celebrities, offered drinks and muffins, and had been waiting quite comfortably for twenty minutes when a pretty, young receptionist strode into the lobby and flashed a smile.
"Director Heintz is ready to see you now," the receptionist said. "Please, follow me."
Connelly stood with Robert and Willard at her side and followed the receptionist to the elevator. The doors opened and the receptionist motioned for them to enter. Once all three were in, the receptionist joined them, hit the button for the tenth floor and then stepped back out. "Take a right out of the elevator. Director Heintz's office is the last door on the left." With that, the doors closed and the three were left alone.
"Do they pay them to act cheery?" Willard said with a grin. "I think that girl ate Happy Flakes for breakfast."
"Corporate complexes like this tend to be imposing," Robert said, "even to the employees. It helps to a see a happy face, even if it's fake."
"'Imposing' is an understatement," Connelly said. "And I have a long list of questions that need answers."
Robert played with his beard. "Like why they pulled us out two days before our first full test."
Kathy nodded. "Or the urgency behind the trip. Next day air from
"Or," Willard started, "why we're being treated like royalty. They were practically shoving those muffins down our throats."
"Fattening the goose," Robert said.
"And I take it you've never been picked up at the airport by a limo before?" Willard said.
Connelly shook her head, no. "Just another in a long line of questions we need answered. This better not be a waste of time."
Ding
. The doors opened and all three put on phony smiles before exiting the elevator. They turned right and headed down the hallway. The impending sense of doom grew like a tangling vine. Connelly paused at the polished oak door before knocking. "You ready?"
Both men nodded. Connelly knocked.
"Come on in," came Nancy's voice from the other side of the door.
Connelly turned the handle and entered the gleaming office. Connelly squinted as she entered the massive corner office, two walls of which were windows.
The three silently took their seats and waited for the bomb to drop.
Willard turned red and looked at his clothes. He glanced at Connelly, with her business suit, which accentuated her long, firm legs. Then he looked at Robert, who'd at least made an attempt to look professional with his sweater and tweed jacket. Compared to them he looked like a college student. He opened his mouth to speak, but was cut short by
Willard smiled, clearly pleased. "Thank you."
Connelly shifted in her seat.
Connelly nodded, "I slept through most of them."
"Well, you must be wondering why we've made such a to-do about you being here?"
"The question has crossed our minds," Connelly said.
"Yes," Connelly said. "We were planning to do our first full run through in two days, but we're positive she's fully functional and ready to go. We'll prep for the test as soon as we get back."
"That won't be necessary,"
"Of—of course," Kathy said.
"Kathy, how would you feel about continuing your work with TES at another location?
Connelly raised a skeptical eyebrow. "What do you mean?"
"For the sake of time, I'll put this bluntly,"
"You can't do that," Connelly said defiantly.
"Look,"
"This is
my
project!" Connelly gripped her armrests.
Willard interjected before Connelly could stand and start screaming. "Hey," he said, "I just got a natural history lesson from these two so even I know that there is no other place on Earth where there's a frozen lake buried under that much ice. So please enlighten us. Where on Earth, aside from
"I don't understand," Connelly said. "Where do you plan on using TES?"
Robert leaned forward with his eyebrows perched high on his wrinkled forehead. "Come again?"
Nancy's smile grew wider. "Not on this planet... As you probably know, NASA had been planning a trip to the sixth moon of Jupiter, Europa, for years. But they ran out of support from the
"This is unbelievable," Robert said. "Europa...but I thought they sent a probe there in 2010?"
"You mean it crashed," Willard said.
Robert's forehead became even more wrinkled. "As in blown up?"
"Yes,"
"I sincerely doubt that the existence of water alone is enough evidence to spur a manned mission to the center of our solar system," Robert said.