Moonseed (67 page)

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Authors: Stephen Baxter

BOOK: Moonseed
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“I had to sleep on it.”

“Why?”

He sat up. The sleeping bag fell slowly away from his chest, exposing his long johns. “There are a lot of costs. Suppose I told you it might be possible to save some of mankind.”

“Not all?”

“Not all. A handful. Maybe enough to start again.”

“Right now, I’d take it.”

“Okay. Now suppose I told you it would mean wrecking the Moon, as it exists now, before we have any kind of chance to study it, to learn from it. Gone forever.”

That made her pause.

“Go on.”

“Suppose I told you it might cost us our lives.” He grinned tightly. “In fact, probably. That’s the part I’ve been sleeping on.”

She closed her eyes. “I guess we’re all soldiers now,” she said. “And this is the front line.”

“Suppose I told you it will
certainly
cost Arkady his life.”

She kept her face still. “Why?”

“We talked about this. Because somehow Arkady is going to have to deliver that nuke of his to the surface, at the South Pole. It’s kind of hard to see how he can do that with
out at least stranding himself in orbit. Look, Geena, when I came out here I didn’t know what Arkady meant to you.”

“Would that make a difference now?”

“I don’t know,” he said. “Let’s face it. It’s complicated.”

“Then we must ask Arkady how he feels.”

“Yes,” he said. “Yes, we must.”

“Tell me what you got.”

He opened up his laptop, and started to explain.

 

And that was how it started.

They got into a complex four-way discussion, involving Houston, Korolyov, Arkady up in orbit, the two of them huddled in their shelter.

The mission planners in Moscow and Houston came up with a way for Arkady to deliver the bomb as Henry asked. It was actually Arkady’s idea. They chewed it over from every which way.

It lasted hours. It involved geologists, orbital mechanics specialists, NASA managers, even politicians.

The plan was wild, implausible, resting on a lot of unproven assumptions. And none of them—Arkady, Geena or Henry—had a hope of living through it, to see if it worked.

But, she slowly realized, they were going to do it anyhow.

Eventually they got the go-ahead. The consensus was, they had little, after all, to lose by trying Henry’s outrageous idea.

Arkady, of course, agreed immediately, as Geena knew he would.

When she thought about it, his proposal was entirely in line with his character. Because it would allow him to become a hero at last: a new Gagarin, transcending the old, the savior of the planet.

And as they talked on, the sun climbed imperceptibly
into the sky, and the slow lunar morning wore on toward its long noon.

48

The procedures for the final operation were rather intricate. Arkady copied them down by hand, on the backs of checklists for the trans-Earth injection burn and Earth-return aerobraking maneuver, neither of which would be required now. And when he had transcribed them he read them back to the ground controllers, in English and Russian.

He was forced to perform a brief space walk.

He opened the forward hatch, in the nose of the Soyuz’s orbital module, and thrust his head and shoulders into space. Then he clambered out, hauling the laser package after him.

The laser was an American Star Wars toy. Developed at Phillips Labs for the USAF, it was designed to be carried by a 747 aircraft, and used to shoot down short-range missiles. The technology was simple, light and robust, and no doubt inordinately expensive.

Still, the technology was remarkable. The laser was fueled by hydrogen peroxide which was mixed with chlorine to produce oxygen atoms. At hypersonic speeds, the oxygen was forced with iodine into the lasing cavity, which was a container no bigger than a breadbox, with mirrors at either end. When the oxygen reacted with the iodine it emitted light which was bounced between the mirrors, before being released…

The power generated by this miniature contraption was more than a megawatt.

It had seemed absurd when Henry Meacher had requested this system. What was he expecting, dogfights with the Moonseed in orbit around the Moon? But now, it seemed, its true destiny was becoming clear.

It was a simple matter to fix the laser in place on the outer hull, with silver wire and tape, so that its blunt nozzle
pointed ahead of the Soyuz. Arkady used his sextant to check its orientation; it must point directly along the axis of the craft.

When he closed the hatch and pressurized, he found the compartment filled with the sharp scent of space, the tang of scorched metal.

Next, he considered the nuclear weapon, the B61–11 bunkerbuster, stowed here in the orbital compartment.

The laser could be controlled from a laptop computer, which he would have close to him during the landing. He ensured that the nuclear weapon could be triggered from the same device.

It was, thought Arkady, at heart a simple problem.

Henry insisted that his nuclear device, the bunker-buster, must be delivered to a precise point, at the very center of the South Pole-Aitken Basin. But the nuclear device was in lunar orbit, on board Soyuz, and simply dropping it, at orbital speeds, would not suffice.

But to leave orbit and land took energy to remove the velocity with which a spacecraft circled the Moon. The two landers used in the mission had expended that energy in the form of rocket fuel.

Now there were no more landers available. And, just like the Apollo Command Module, Arkady’s Soyuz was not designed to land on the Moon.

Nevertheless, it had been decided, it would have to, in order to complete this new mission.

In the 1980s NASA had actually studied this mode of landing, if briefly. It opened up a new area of knowledge, tentatively called “harenodynamics,” which was a fancy Latin-derived term for “sliding.” Arkady had once attended a conference on lunar bases, industrialization and settlement, which had touched on the subject; when he raised it now with NASA’s Mission Control at Houston, it had not taken long for the back room people there to dig the material out of their archives.

And even less time to express their disbelief.

The trouble was, a Moon landing required a disproportionate amount of fuel. Because it had no air, either for frictional braking, or for supporting gliding or parachuting, the Moon gave its visitors no help on the way down.

But harenodynamics was a way of forcing the Moon to help after all.
If
it could be made to work, it could provide a way of landing that would need just ten percent of the fuel of a conventional landing.

The trouble was, nobody had ever tested the idea, even on Earth, let alone the Moon. And Soyuz wasn’t built for it anyhow; there was a consensus that you’d need significant advances in a number of material technologies to make the technique reliable, if it was possible at all.

And besides, all pilots who looked at the papers hated the whole idea. If it was ever applied at all, surely it would be only for unmanned cargo drones.

But—as Arkady had immediately realized when he heard Henry’s request—in the current circumstance, there was really no choice at all.

He would go through with this because he had faith in Henry, and because he trusted Geena; her relationship with Henry had finished unhappily, but she would not select a fool.

And besides, as far as he could see, it was only Henry who had fully understood the implications of the Moonseed infestation from the beginning, and so Arkady must do what was necessary to implement his plans.

But on Earth, arguments raged on.

There were hardly any scientists who were prepared to validate Henry’s grand proposal. The Americans’ greatest concern seemed to be allowing a Russian access to their prized weaponry.

The Russian authorities were rather more focused on the humanity of it. TsUP at Korolyov at first flatly refused Arkady permission to proceed with this scheme. Breaking with custom, his personal physician was brought on the loop to try to persuade him to return to Earth. If he came
home, perhaps some alternative plan could be found—for instance, perhaps an unmanned missile could deliver a nuclear weapon as Henry desired.

But Arkady knew that could only cause delay. And it was self-evident that launches of any kind might soon become impossible from the surface of Earth; already many facilities at Canaveral had been destroyed in terrorist actions, and were in any event under threat from tsunamis. This might be the only chance.

In an attempt to persuade Arkady to desist, they even flew in his sister to TsUP, and had her talk to him on the ground-to-air loop.

It was never easy, Arkady had found, to talk to family and friends from space. Life in space—even on a routine Earth-orbit mission—was rather like a commercial airline pilot’s: hours of tedium, punctuated by moments of extreme terror. If you tried to describe the tedium, it was simply dull; if you talked about the terror, you sounded melodramatic—worse, you might finish up frightening the person who cared about you enough to call you.

It made for awkward conversation.

But his sister knew him, and was wise. Nor would she play the part demanded of her by TsUP.

She spoke to him of simple family matters.
Vitalik asked me to say hello,
she said. Vitalik was Lusia’s son, Arkady’s nephew.
He is at summer camp. He is getting happier. He swims in the sea, he rehearses plays, he is doing arts and crafts. It was different in our day.

“Yes.” At the Soviet pioneer camps when Arkady was a boy, the children had been subject to meetings and political training, so much so they were sometimes deprived of sleep. Not everything about the breakup of the Soviet Union, they agreed, was necessarily so bad. And so on. Lusia spoke further of Vitalik’s small projects and achievements.

She said nothing of his intentions, the fate of the world. She was simply saying good-bye, on behalf of the world, the family he had left behind.

She knew, as he did, that his proposed course of action would mean the final sacrifice. Even if, by some miracle, he survived the landing itself, he could not hope to live through what followed.

But then Henry and Geena were making as big a sacrifice.

There was really no choice.

It was a duty; it must be done.

After a time, they fell silent, and he listened to the soft hiss of the static on the air-to-ground loop.

And eventually, after much debate and protest, official permission was granted to proceed with the mission.

 

First, Arkady had to change the plane of the orbit of his Soyuz.

At present, the orbit was a ground-hugging circle, angled at some twenty-five degrees to the Moon’s equator, a shallow tilt. Now, Arkady needed a ground track that would take him over the Moon’s South Pole. So his orbit must be tipped up at a more jaunty angle, eighty degrees or more, so that he looped over both poles.

Steering a spacecraft to a new orbit was not a question of turning a wheel, like a car. The Soyuz’s main propulsion system would have to burn at an angle to its present velocity vector, gradually pushing it sideways, like a tug hauling at a supertanker.

The velocity changes required were well within the capabilities of Soyuz with its Block-D booster—which was, after all, capable of returning him all the way from lunar orbit and to the Earth—and it was a neat exercise in three-dimensional orbital mechanics, which Arkady conducted in conjunction with the ground, to calculate the rocket burns required.

But the maneuver would absorb most of the fuel reserve put aside for the return of Soyuz to the Earth, whether Arkady proceeded with the landing or not.

And so it was that when Arkady felt the gentle push of the propulsion system at his back, he knew he was, already, committed.

Arkady allowed himself a complete orbit, in his new polar orientation, before he began his descent.

As he passed over the Earth-facing hemisphere of the Moon, he spoke to Geena.


Are you lonely up there? Do you miss me?

“Yes,” said Arkady. Yes. But I cannot tell you how much. Not when the whole world, including your ex-husband, is listening in. “I even miss Baikonur.”

Baikonur? The steppe?

“The steppe has its beauty. At this time of year the grass and flowers have burned off, and the steppe has turned gray, save for the green of the camel thorn and the pale pink of the saxifrage flowers. Sometimes after the rain, puddles form, like little lakes, in the middle of the salty desert. Swans come to breed there!…”

It sounds beautiful.

“It can be.”

Now, unexpectedly, Geena sang a song for him. Her voice was hesitant, not very tuneful, her Russian accent poor. But he recognized it immediately. It was a favorite from his childhood,
On the Porch Together.
Her voice was nervous and thin, reduced to a scratch by the radio loop, and it all but reduced him to tears. She had learned this song from his family, and had now brought it to the Moon for him. And she was filling his heart. Most Americans could never understand the importance of such simple human moments.

And when she was done, Geena sang one of Yuri Gagarin’s favorites—so it was said, anyhow—called
I Love You, Life.
All the cosmonauts knew this one, and he joined in, but his voice was weak and he feared he would lose control.

At last, without warning, he sailed around the rocky limb of the Moon, and the radio signal turned to mush, cutting short her song.

He turned off the receiver, and drifted away into the empty, ticking cabin.

In solitude once more, Arkady watched the shadows lengthen, and, for the last time, he sailed into the shadow of the Moon.

 

It was necessary for his craft now to perform the final burn. As so often happened with the key events of this mission, it seemed, it must be done here, in the radio shadow of the Moon, when he was alone and out of touch with the Earth.

But if it must be, it must be.

He ensured that all the loose equipment in the craft was stowed away. Then he swam through to the descent module and sealed shut the hatch behind him.

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