“Small wonder I never done a mission,” Lottie said.
“I’m not qualified,” Hazel said. “Yet. But Aunt Phyllis sneaked me onto this job.”
“’Aunt Phyllis’?” Lottie said. So, that’s what this was about.
“It’s not just because she’s my aunt,” Hazel said. “I work hard. I told her I could keep up with anyone.”
“I’m old; I’m not slow,” Lottie said. “I’ve been cleaning around here since you was nothing but a dot in the Creator’s eye. What have you done?”
“I worked at a pastry shop near campus,” Hazel said. “I utilised my people skills to communicate with customers and meet sales goals, and I initiated clean-up in the seating area.”
“Great,” Lottie said. She wondered what other halfwit relatives Phyllis was going to foist on her.
At last, the security door opened. A big Indian with movie-star looks jumped out and gave Lottie a hug.
“Finally! You made it to the Big Time,” Clem said.
“I hear they like to promote from within.” Lottie handed over their information fobs. “More crew inside?”
“I think you’re it,” Clem said. He gave Hazel the once-over then flashed her a panty-dropper smile. “I know you?”
Hazel blushed. “No, I’ve been to Stanford.”
“Ah,” Clem said. “Applying for a Moon mission?”
“I have far-reaching goals,” Hazel said. “I’d like to see more of our people getting to the Moon. Bigger missions.”
“Good luck,” Clem said.
“She’s Phyllis’s niece,” Lottie said.
“Oh,” Clem said. “No luck needed.”
Hazel offered a bland smile.
“Two of us cleaning,” Lottie said. “Doesn’t the Hopper usually have four?”
“Usually,” Clem agreed. “You want me to call someone?”
What had Phyllis said about no fuss?
“Nope,” Lottie said. She could already see the long night stretched ahead of them. “Send us through.”
Clem led them through a long hallway to a second security station. He pointed at a heavy door with a small window.
“Your fob will get you through from here. Cleaning station is stocked. Sometimes, there’s weird stuff. Be sure to wear the full Hazmat suit.”
“We’re not helpless,” Lottie said, waving him away. “We’ll see you in the morning.”
The door shut behind them with a sucking snap. A green light came on, indicating they were sealed in.
Clem waved through the tiny window. Hazel waved back.
“He’s cute,” she said. “What do you think?”
“If I dated men half my age, I’d hop right on him,” Lottie said.
Lottie opened the cleaning station and they dug through the shabby Hazmat suit collection.
“They send a barrel full of Indians to the Moon every month. You’d think they could spare a few bucks for new Hazmat suits,” Lottie said. She picked the smallest one and struggled to pull the thing on.
“Is there another small one?” Hazel asked, digging through the rack.
“This ain’t small,” Lottie said. “You’d think they was expecting a six-foot Indian with a hundred-pound ass.”
Once they were zipped in, Lottie showed Hazel how to stock her cleaning pack with the anti-bacterial, anti-viral, anti-germ, anti-dust, and anti-dirt mops and swabs they would need.
“I don’t mind doing basic work like this,” Hazel said, sorting her supplies. “I feel like I’m learning, already.”
Lottie used her fist to cram the last items into her pack. “Don’t get lost,” she said as she headed for the hangar.
Hazel lurched to her feet and stumbled. She grabbed at Lottie’s pack and they teetered for a few seconds before catching their balance.
“Careful, you,” Lottie said.
“I can’t move right and I can’t see,” Hazel said. “These outfits aren’t made properly.”
“Tell it to Aunt Phyllis,” Lottie said. She grabbed a handful of Hazel’s suit in back and put a plastic cleaning tie on it. The fabric puffed out like a big white rose.
“I guess that’s better,” Hazel said.
One last security door stood between them and the main hangar. Lottie waved her fob at the ID pad.
“Nothing’s happening,” Lottie said.
“Did you hear the old crew quit?” Hazel said.
“I didn’t hear that,” Lottie said, wondering why Phyllis failed to mention that.
“We’re not supposed to know,” Hazel said, lowering her voice. “I overheard. They said the Hopper made them feel funny.”
“What else you hear?” Lottie asked.
“Something about the astronauts and the Space Center shrink.”
“What does that mean, feel funny? Like they ate something bad?” The last thing Lottie needed was space flu.
“I don’t know,” Hazel said. She took the fob from Lottie and tapped it against pad. “What’s taking so long?”
A low buzz sounded and the door slid open.
“Oh, see?” Hazel said. Before she should go on, Lottie pushed her through the door.
The Moon Hopper sat in a pool of dim light, looking like a shiny grasshopper built from blocks and tubes. A long ramp led up to the main hatch. A bluish glow came from inside.
Lottie had been looking forward to seeing it for years, but now that she stood in front of it, she was overcome with a sense of disappointment she couldn’t place.
“Wow,” Hazel said, walking toward it. “What an accomplishment for our people and—” She raised her hand to the face plate. “Gross. What’s that smell?”
“You can’t smell nothing. These suits have all kinds of layers and filters.” Then it hit Lottie, too, a wave of thick and terrible smell, like rotten green vegetables and burned rubber. Lottie thought she might put her hand up and stick her fist through it.
“What is it?” Hazel asked.
“Someone must have forgotten a cheese sandwich,” Lottie said.
They walked up the ramp and peered into the main work station.
“I thought it would be more impressive,” Hazel said.
Looking around at the yellowing panels, the torn storage pouches and the carefully placed strips of duct tape, Lottie found it tough not to wonder how the Hopper made the roundtrip each month.
“Looks lived-in, is all,” Lottie said. She stepped inside and her feet skidded on the floor.
“Is it supposed to be wet?” Hazel asked.
“Just leftover something,” Lottie said. She bent to one creaky knee, keeping a hand on the wall for support. She dragged a gloved hand through it and the smell bloomed up from the floor. For a moment, she thought she might gack and she had to rest her head against the wall.
“You okay?” Hazel asked.
“Get the floor clean,” Lottie said, pushing to her feet. She held up a wide scraper, which she fitted on an extending plastic pole. She swept it back and forth, pushing the muck into one corner. The pooled liquid had a grey tint to it.
“Too bad we can’t see any experiments,” Hazel said. She scraped half-heartedly at the floor, her cleaning initiative nowhere to be seen.
“Grab these,” Lottie said, pulling out a wad of absorbent pads and throwing them to the floor.
“I didn’t think it would be nasty,” Hazel said.
“Cleaning is like that,” Lottie said. She explained the Moon Hopper cleaning protocol. Every storage pocket, every compartment, every pouch had to be opened and emptied. Viable items were placed in clean, white bags to be re-sorted for possible future use or distribution. Everything else went into garbage bags.
“That gets sorted more later, too,” Lottie said. “Nothing from the Moon Hopper leaves without being accounted for.”
“How does the re-sorting work?” Hazel asked.
“Not your problem,” Lottie said. She would have liked to explain that certain families benefited from this, but no doubt, Aunt Phyllis would fill her in on that.
“This is the composting bin. We leave it and the HazWaste for another crew. You got all that?”
“It’s not rocket science,” Hazel said.