Authors: Brad Strickland,THOMAS E. FULLER
BRAD STRICKLAND
AND
THOMAS E. FULLER
Aladdin Paperbacks
New York London Toronto Sydney
MARS HAS A MILLION DIFFERENT WAYS TO KILL YOU….
Follow the adventures of teens living on Mars in the M
ARS
Y
EAR
O
NE
T
RILOGY
#1 Marooned!
#2 Missing!
#3 Marsquake!
Beginning Summer 04
If you purchased this book without a cover, you should be aware that this book is stolen property. It was reported as “unsold and destroyed” to the publisher, and neither the author nor the publisher has received any payment for this “stripped book.”
This book is a work of fiction. Any references to historical events, real people, or real locales are used fictitiously. Other names, characters, places, and incidents are the product of the author’s imagination, and any resemblance to actual events or locales or persons, living or dead, is entirely coincidental.
First Aladdin Paperbacks edition June 2004
Copyright © 2004 by Brad Strickland and the Estate of Thomas E. Fuller
ALADDIN PAPERBACKS An imprint of Simon & Schuster Children’s Publishing Division 1230 Avenue of the Americas New York, NY 10020
All rights reserved, including the right of reproduction in whole or in part in any form.
Designed by Felicity Erwin
The text of this book was set in Simoncini Garamond.
Manufactured in the United States of America
10 9 8 7 6 5
The Library of Congress Control Number 2003096184
ISBN-13: 978-0-689-86400-1
ISBN-10: 0-689-86400-0
eISBN 13: 978-1-439-11370-7
To Diane
Thanks to Ron Butler for his technical and scientific advice
MARS
YEAR ONE
Marooned!
“If you forget everything else,
remember the most important fact about this planet: Mars has a million ways to kill you.”
Lieutenant Mpondo swept his gaze over the twenty new arrivals. Sean Doe, in the fourth and last row, met his dark brown eyes without smiling, nodding, or blinking. Sean was over fifteen years old, and for most of that time people had been trying to kill him.
Sean and the nineteen others—all of them adults—sat strapped in, since the
Argosy
was still in space and they were weightless. Mpondo, a man of twenty-five with his hair cropped to a shadow on his skull, hovered with his feet just off the deck, a wall belt looped around his waist to keep him from drifting. He wore the orange uniform of the Interplanetary Service. It was the worse for wear, but after more
than a year of traveling, the same could be said for everyone’s clothes. Mpondo opened a panel and pressed a button, and the viewport, a ten-foot square 3-D screen, cleared to give them a view of space.
And of Mars, closer than ever before.
The ruddy reddish-orange disk nearly filled the viewport. The hemisphere of the planet that Sean could see lay in full sunlight. Mars looked like a ravaged world, all her blemishes showing: long shadowed cracks that were really canyons deeper than any on Earth, impact craters, a south pole ringed with an icy white cap, blurred haze. Someone in the front row murmured and pointed as a falling meteorite sketched a brilliant line across the planet near the polar ice cap.
“Just a delivery,” Mpondo said in a loud voice. “That’s ice, coming in from the robot mass driver on Jupiter’s moon Ganymede. Approximately twice a day the mass driver fires a projectile of compacted ice in an orbit that whips it around Jupiter and sends it to Mars. After a journey of years, the projectile comes into the Martian
atmosphere within twenty degrees of the south pole—yes?”
A man in the row ahead of Sean had his hand up. “How big are these things?” he asked.
“On Earth they would mass about twenty-five tons,” Mpondo replied, looking mildly irritated at the interruption. “And to answer your next question, they pose no threat to Marsport. They don’t come anywhere near the base. Their orbits bring them in at a shallow angle over the south polar regions, where they mostly evaporate—because of the heat of entering the atmosphere—before they even reach the surface. They’ve been crashing into the Martian atmosphere for more than thirty years now, adding water, carbon dioxide, and other gases to the planet. As a result, the Martian air is growing denser. One day it will be rich enough in oxygen to allow you to breathe on the surface, and thick enough to hold the sun’s heat. But that days a long time off.”
Sean could make out cloud patterns in the atmosphere of Mars, swirls and sweeps of pale
color, and he noticed now how the edges of the planet blurred to blue haze against the darkness of space, unlike the sharp lines of Luna, the Earth’s airless moon, where he had trained for the trip to Mars.
Mpondo was holding up a finger. “Right now, if you tried to breathe the atmosphere on Mars, it would kill you.” He held up another finger. “Right now, if you took an unprotected stroll outside of Marsport, you would freeze to death. Right now, if Marsport didn’t receive regular resupply from Earth, the colonists would starve. I could go on, but I think that makes the point. Mars is a deadly world.”
A new world, though,
Sean thought. He felt strange just contemplating his trip—no, his escape—from Earth. His chest tingled as he reflected on being among the first humans to live on a different planet from Earth, from the homeworld. So Mars was deadly? So what? Bring it on.
Sean could not remember his parents.
He could barely remember his rescue. He was one of a dozen survivors of the Aberlin tragedy, an act of biological terrorism that had erased a small Scottish town from existence. They told him he had been two when the attack happened. He vaguely remembered the American team that had found him and had flown him, isolated, across the Atlantic.
He remembered the endless stream of doctors who had jabbed and bled him, X-rayed and imaged him, tested and prodded and poked him, trying to learn why he had lived when hundreds of others had died. He was a specimen to them, nothing more.
Sean supposed he had been about eight years old when a court had ordered his release. That’s when he had been given a name. Previously he had been AVS-3, Aberlin Village Survivor Three. The American media had decided to call him
John Doe. When he had learned what that meant, a generic term for an unknown, he had changed it just enough to make it his own: “Sean” was Scottish for “John,” and so he had become Sean Doe.
The government had placed him in a foster home, and within a month he had escaped from it. For three years he had survived in the urban jungle of Deep New York, where gangs of young thugs faced down everything law enforcers could throw at them. And he had survived.
At eleven, he was illiterate, underweight, and sick with half a dozen diseases of poverty. Then Dr. Simak had tracked him down at last.
Of all the doctors who had examined him, Dr. Amanda Simak was the only one that Sean had halfway trusted. And, as it turned out, she was the only one who seemed to care whether AVS-3 lived or died. She had found him in a burned-out storefront, wounded and ill, and had taken him, not to a hospital or to an
institution, but to her home. She had treated his wounds and his sicknesses, had taught him to read, had learned how intelligent he was. More importantly to Sean, she had legally adopted him.
All in one year.
Sean could remember that period of seventeen months, from the middle of his eleventh year to his thirteenth, as an interval of security in a life of danger. For the first time in his life, no one had been trying to hurt him. For the first time in his life, he had trusted an adult.
And then she had broken the news one morning while they sat on a jumble of boulders overlooking the stream that flowed near her home in the mountains. “Sean, I’m going away.”
He had not protested, and he had not cried. He had never cried in his life. “Where?”
She had pointed up into the blue sky of Earth and smiled. Amanda Simak was forty-two, a tall woman, with light brown hair and a plain,
thin face made lively by the bluest eyes Sean had ever seen. “Mars.”
“Take me.”
She had shaken her head. “Not yet. You’re too young. But when the time comes—”
“What will happen to me?”
She took one of his hands. “Not another foster home. I have friends who live in Florida. That’s very different from here, but I think you’ll like it. The Marsport Commission has agreed to consider sending young people to the colony, but that’s in the future. When you can come, I’ll send for you.”
And that was that. The couple in Florida, the Thomases, were much younger than Dr. Simak, and they tried their best. Sean learned to swim in the sea, and to fish and sail. They worried because he never laughed, never cried, never showed any sign of temper.
But they didn’t realize how little they knew about what he was feeling. Sean had a gift he could not explain or fully understand. It was a mental ability to
put together trends, facts, and forces and predict what would happen.
He watched the news and studied history. He learned of the forces in Old Europe, South America, Central Asia, Africa, all warring for their rights, their wishes, their desires.
In his head, lines of force intersected, changed direction, grew more intense.
And Sean knew something would happen in three to five years. Something terrible.
He never spoke of it. After Dr. Simak had arrived to take charge of Marsport, he never told even her. Their communication was odd, to be sure. Mars was so far from Earth that it took half an hour or more for transmissions to travel from one planet to the next. Instead of conversations, they had a series of monologues. Dr. Simak would appear on the monitor, smiling, saying, “Hello, Sean. Here’s the news from Mars,” and then would talk for ten or fifteen minutes. When she had finished, Sean would reply for about the same length of time, then transmit.
And in thirty or forty minutes, she would get his reply.
But he never told her what he saw coming.
They had been apart for well over a year when she sent word at last: “You can come.” He traveled to Luna, Earth’s moon. The colonists there called their underground warren “Lunacy,” and they called themselves “Lunatics,” but always with a grin. They had given Sean a crash course in Martian survival, and they had seen him aboard the
Argosy
for the long trip through space. Sean had never once complained.
By then he knew, although he could not quite express how he knew, that for Earth, time was running out.
The
Argosy
went into orbit
a hundred miles above the surface of Mars. The new colonists
flew down to Marsport in three landers sent up from the surface, each able to carry only six passengers. Sean’s chance did not come until the last day, when he and five others were cleared for landing. He never got a clear glimpse of the lander he was boarding, but from his training back on Luna he knew that it was shaped something like a flattened cone.
He had a window seat, and he stared out of a very small viewport as the craft dropped into the upper reaches of the Martian atmosphere. The lander turned, coming in tail-first at this altitude. Turbulence jolted and jarred him, and he heard the other colonists murmuring in tones of worry, but he held on and stared out the window. The distant landscape gradually grew closer and more distinct until they were sweeping over a chaotic world of craters, boulders, vast gullies, and wind-whipped sheets of sand.
Then the lander rotated, and Sean caught his breath. He could see the immense dome of a
mountain, one far larger than any on Earth: Olympus Mons, an enormous dead volcano that towered fifteen miles high.
Somewhere at its base was Marsport.
It took the lander another hour to pass over the gigantic mountain and touch down on a landing pad, a stretch of bare red rock that had been scraped smooth. The return of gravity, even the weak gravity of Mars, felt strange to Sean. Like everyone else on the
Argosy
, Sean had put in several hours a week in the centrifuge, a rotating cylinder that gave the effect of gravity. That was necessary because being too long in weightlessness tended to weaken a person’s bones and circulatory system. Still, that had been temporary and artificial. Now, as he stood up from his seat, Sean felt the tug of a planet again. On Earth he had weighed a little over one hundred pounds. Here it was more like forty-three, but after the weightlessness of space, he felt as if he were wading through molasses.
The passengers filed forward through a hatch into a sealed disembarkation tube, a long, slanting ramp without windows. At the far end was a corridor lighted by fluorescent panels, and at the end of the corridor Sean stepped into a dome that gave him a sense of spaciousness.
It was thirty meters—about a hundred feet—in diameter. And two-thirds of its walls were viewscreens.