"Thanks. Dr. Drury, if you'll show us where we sleep-"
Eileen looked confused. "You don't have to keep watches. We've got people to do that."
"Sorry," I said. "Orders. We watch that bomb until it goes off."
"I'll take a watch," Erica said.
"No. No need. We've got nothing else to do, but you've got brain work. Get some sleep."
They'd set up two separate pressure tents for our group and put my gear in with Erica's. I didn't like the arrangements. She wouldn't let the bomb out of her sight, and we had to keep watches. I wasn't about to have anyone - including me - sit outside at night. I made them move the four of us, and the bomb, into one tent, where one of us could sit up on watch. We slept in our p-suits and helmets anyway. The university people laughed at us for that. They had double-walled tents and weren't afraid of blowouts."Yeah, but what if the Feddies find out where we are?" I asked.
"They won't," Eileen said. "And they'd never get here without someone knowing they were coming. I keep telling you, my father's on the faculty Council."
I didn't understand what the hell that had to do with anything. But I hadn't missed that she said "you people" when she referred to the Free Mars movement. Maybe it wasn't the Feddies we had to worry about.
I got Erica tucked in, and Doug climbed into his sleeping bag to catch some rest. Don Plemmons and I had a few words before he took first watch.
"I don't like these people, Garrett," he said. "They treat me like dirt. They give orders like Feddies, and they don't even wait to find out if you've got something else to do."
"They've been all right to me," I said.
"You're an officer."
"What the hell difference does that make?" I asked.
"It does. Watch and see. These people aren't Marsmen, Garrett. Not Marsmen at all."
"Crap. They've been here longer than we have. Third and fourth generation."
"Yeah. But they aren't Marsmen."
"Don't be stupid. I'll relieve you in three hours," I said. "No point in trying to sleep for that short a time. I'll stay up. Maybe I can find some company in the university tent."
"Okay, chief." He crawled into our tent. I'd rather have sat up with him, but Erica and Doug couldn't have got any sleep with us chattering.
Drury and Eileen were in the command tent. They acted glad to see me when I came in.
"Eileen has been telling me about your experiences at Deucalion," Drury said. "Maybe you can help us."
"How?"
"Well, we are going to have to storm that power plant," Drury said. "And we've never - well, maybe you could help. Command the assault force when the time comes. After all, you've got experience in that line."
"I do now. But only because we had a job to do and we did it. I'm sure your people - I mean, you've got to do it yourselves, you know. We can't take that power plant for you."
Drury looked serious. "I know that. People will be killed. I'm glad I don't have to decide who it will be. Perhaps we can persuade the Federation to give up without a fight."
"Could be." I didn't really believe it.
"Do you want a drink?" Drury asked.
"I've got guard duty coming up. I better pass."
"How about coffee?" Eileen asked.
"Coffee? Sure. We don't have any coffee on the Rim. Haven't had any since I left Earth."
"It's about time, then," Eileen said. "Joseph, some coffee for Lieutenant Pittson, please."
I hadn't seen the other man. He was sitting in the back of the tent, near the kitchen area. One of the cooks. He brought a ceramic mug and handed it to me. It smelled great. I held it to my nose and sniffed it, savoring it. "Thank you," I said. I meant it.
"You're welcome," Drury said.
I hadn't spoken to him. I'd said my thanks to Joseph, who'd brought it, but the cook had gone back to his seat in the back of the tent. I wondered about him. Labor client? Did the universities have labor clients? Why the hell would a man be a servant?
Drury had a nightcap, and excused himself. "We'll be there at noon tomorrow," he said. "Work to do. I'd better turn in. Eileen, will you be needing anything else from the kitchen?"
"I can manage," she said.
"All right. Joseph, you can go to bed now."
"Thank you, Doctor. Good night." They left together.
"More coffee?" Eileen asked.
"Sure. Thanks. How do you grow this, anyway?"
"Im afraid I don't know," she said. "We've always had coffee at the university. You can ask the agriculture people when you meet them."
"Yeah, I'll have to." If I could grow coffee, I could get a good price for it. Or could I? Would the Rimrats have got out of the habit? Nobody born on Mars had ever tasted the stuff: Hell, if there wasn't a market I'd make one - Mars and coffee were made for each other. It would be worth it, though, just to have some for myself.
"What's with Joseph?" I asked. "Is he a labor client?"
"Good heavens, no." She was shocked. "He's a university cook. Part of the staff. Labor client!"
She laughed then. "There are fifty people who'd like to have his job." She moved over closer, almost touching me. They'd brought inflatable plastic couches.
She was a very pretty girl. Short, with dark hair and brown eyes, her hair cut short also, with a red ribbon in it. Erica had been busy the last two weeks, and I found myself having disturbing thoughts. Eileen seemed to like me, too.
Don't be a damn fool, Garrett, I told myself. You've got nothing in common with this girl. So what? myself retorted.
"I think everyone else has gone to bed," Eileen said. She leaned against me. I could feel her warmth. There was no mistaking the invitation.
"Guess I'd better have a look around the perimeter," I said.
"Why? You're not on guard for two hours. What's wrong with you?" She reached out and pulled me toward her. "I know damned well I turn you on."
"Yeah, you do. But I told you, I'm engaged -"
"What on Mars does that have to do with anything?" she asked.
"Erica is probably the most mono-gamous woman who ever lived," I said. "Look, I'd love to hop in the sack with you, but nothing good can come of it -"
"You people are all crazy," she spat. "Possessive relationships. Bride prices - that's what it is, isn't it? Bride price and dowry. Sexual repressions. You're primitives. Probably that's why you like fighting and wars."
"What the hell's got you mad? And we don't like wars. It's just that we won't be pushed around. I told you how I got into this -"
"You sure did. It sounded to me like you liked it. And you fight duels. With knives."
"Yeah, sometimes. But it's no big thing. Look, I'd better go."
"Go on. But you can't say you don't want me. And you can't tell me how it would hurt your precious Ice Queen -"
"Now what the hell are you talking about?"
Eileen laughed. "I've seen the way she treats you. Cold. Expects you to do things for her. If you two are in love, I'm a purple sand cat. But she owns you -"
"Bullshit. She's got the responsibility for that damned bomb, and she's worried about whether it will work, and -"
"Sure," Eileen said. "Sure. Just go on, now. Go prowl around the desert looking for Federation police! There aren't any for two hundred kilometers, I told you that, but you just go play soldier. I'm out of the mood, anyway."
There are times when I think women are a separate species entirely.
SIXTEEN
The volcano rose above a series of rocky plateaus piled on each other like poker chips of decreasing sizes stacked into a cone. The mountain jutted more than a mile above the topmost plate. On Earth it would have been an enormous mountain, but it was small for Mars.