And maybe—once he had some leverage over her—he might be able to salvage Brand. Somehow. No one had a greater stake in this mission than she did. So that it might succeed, she might be made to see the realities.
Before he could appeal to her sense of reason, however, her sense of mission, he had to have the upper hand. Had to hold all of the cards.
He hurried toward the Ranger.
“Brand, I’m sorry,” Cooper wheezed, as soon as the respirator was off of his face. “Mann lied—”
As he spoke, a look of comprehension swept across her face.
“Oh, no,” she gasped.
As Murph roared up to the house, Tom’s truck was nowhere to be seen.
That was as planned—he would be fighting the fire she had set, trying to salvage the crop.
“Keep watch,” she told Getty as she jerked the door open. Then she took off running toward the front door.
“Lois!” she called out as she hit the porch.
“There’s been an explosion,” CASE informed them, as the lander rose and pivoted amid clouds of steam and frost.
“Where?” Brand asked.
“Dr. Mann’s compound,” he replied, as they leapt skyward.
Romilly, Cooper thought. TARS. TARS was with him.
What had Mann done to them?
Mann strapped into the Ranger, gave the systems a quick once-over, and then started the engines. As the ship shot into the air, he felt a sudden, unexpected exhilaration.
This planet had been his prison, and for most of the time he had believed it would be his tomb. It had made him do things he never thought himself capable of doing, and only now did he allow himself to understand how very much he despised it, the hold it had on him. It had been like a mirror held up to him, a mirror which showed him not his face, but his soul, and he hadn’t liked what it showed him.
Yet accepting the darkness in his character was better than dying there. He could live with everything he had done, and everything he was going to do, so long as he didn’t have to go back there. To that planet.
Which he didn’t. It was all over now. Despite the odds, he had escaped. Wherever death finally caught up with him, it would not be on that icy tomb.
It felt good. Like a new start.
But he had to reach the Endurance before the others.
There was nothing to be seen of Mann’s pod but billowing, oily black smoke, and Cooper knew Romilly was dead. Mann’s story about KIPP had been pure bullshit—KIPP had collected data proving the planet was uninhabitable, and Mann had shut him down. He must have also booby-trapped him, in case anyone started prying.
Mann was Professor Brand’s protégé, all right—a liar to the core. But the professor had justified his lies as necessary to save the human race—at least that was how he saw it. Mann had lied only to save himself. Cooper remembered Mann’s comments about how the professor had made himself a monster, made the “ultimate sacrifice,” to tell the world what it needed to be told.
Had Mann really been talking about himself? Was that how he justified all of this, in that diseased mind of his?
Romilly probably never felt a thing, Cooper thought. Thank God.
He and Brand watched the flames, both too sunken in despair to speak.
Suddenly something burst from the smoke. For a horrible moment he thought it was Romilly, burning to death, but then the figure resolved itself into the blocky machine that it was.
TARS.
CASE turned the lander and opened the airlock. TARS leapt in with a dull whump. Then CASE aimed the lander skyward. Only one thing mattered now, Cooper knew.
Who got to the Endurance first.
“Do you have a fix on the Ranger?” he asked CASE.
“He’s pushing into orbit,” the robot replied.
“If he takes control of the ship, we’re dead,” Cooper said.
“He’d maroon us?” Brand asked. She seemed to be having trouble coming to terms with the recent behavior of NASA’s best and brightest.
He remembered the conversation they’d had, before going into hypersleep. It seemed like a very long time ago.
“Scientists, explorers,” she had said. “That’s what I love. Out there we face great odds. Death. But not evil.”
As if for some reason scientists and explorers were incapable of evil. Cortez? Haber, the guy who invented chemical warfare?
“Just what we bring with us then,” he had told her. Well, they had brought it.
The signs had been everywhere. Too bad he hadn’t taken his own comment to heart. If he had exercised even a commonsense amount of suspicion, Romilly would still be alive. And they wouldn’t be racing against hope.
“He is marooning us,” Cooper said.
Lois loved Tom, but she had already lost one child, and she knew her son Coop was sick, and would only get sicker. So Murph didn’t have a hard time convincing her what was best. Now she waited nervously as Lois gathered a few things for her and the boy.
Murph glanced up the stairs.
Would she ever come here again? It didn’t seem likely, however this turned out. She wasn’t sure she even wanted to come back. She remembered happy times here with her dad and brother, with Grandpa and—in her warmest, earliest memories—her mom.
The outside of the house had always looked worn, eroded away, its paint and wood stripped by relentless years of wind and dust. She remembered Grandpa—every day, twice a day, sweeping the porch, trying to keep the dust back. And it had worked—inside the house it had been safe. It had been home.
But now it seemed hollowed out. Maybe it had begun that night when she left her window open, inviting the dust into the house. Within a matter of days, her father had been gone, and nothing was ever right again.
Without Dad and Grandpa there, the house felt like someone she had once known well, but who was now in the last stages of Alzheimer’s. A box that looked familiar, but wasn’t, and never would be again.
And yet there was something she needed to do here. One last thing.
Without really thinking about it, she let her feet carry her up the stairs and through the doorway into her old room. She heard Lois and Coop, already outside with Getty, waiting, knowing that if Tom returned now, the whole plan was doomed.
But something, something told her she needed to be here, now—and not just for Lois and Coop.
“Come on, Murph!” she heard Getty shout. But the pull was like gravity.
She had to go.
As the lander roared toward the eternal night of space, Cooper moved up beside CASE. His throat and nose still stung—for all he knew, the damage might be fatal. His lungs might be about to hemorrhage or whatever, and that would be that. For the moment, however, he was alive, and he was able, so it didn’t make sense dwelling on the worst.
All that mattered was stopping Mann.
He hit the transmitter.
“Dr. Mann?” he said. “Dr. Mann, please respond.”
There was no response. In a way, he was surprised. Mann seemed awfully fond of hearing himself talk, and almost psychotically desperate to justify himself. He must, Cooper guessed, have moved beyond the need for pretty speeches. He was concentrating on reaching the Endurance.
That was probably bad news—it meant that Mann had written them off. And he had too great a lead for them to catch up.
“He doesn’t know the docking procedure,” CASE pointed out.