“Right.”
“Don’t you use radar to detect asteroids?” Brudnoy asked.
Doug could sense her nodding inside her helmet. “Sure. One of the radio telescopes converts to radar sweeps twice a day. When we pick up something new we track it long enough to determine its orbit and then turn one of the spectrographic’scopes on it.”
“What happens to all this equipment if Moonbase shuts down?” Doug asked.
“The university consortium will keep them running as long as they can, I guess,” Rhee answered. “The data gets piped back Earthside automatically, as it is. Maybe they’ll be able to send a maintenance crew up here every six months or so, keep it all going.”
“It would be a shame to lose all this,” Brudnoy muttered.
Doug nodded agreement even though they couldn’t see him do it.
It took three hours for Rhee to complete all her maintenance checks and make the necessary adjustments in the instruments. Then they climbed back into the open tractor and trundled toward Moonbase. Brudnoy and Doug got off at the rocket port and Rhee drove alone back to the main airlock and the garage inside it.
“So this is the one you want to buy,” Brudnoy said as they walked slowly to the lunar transfer vehicle sitting on one of the smoothed rock pads.
“It’s been in service for ten years,” Doug said, looking up at the ungainly spacecraft. “The corporation would sell it for about twice its scrap value, I think.”
The LTV looked rather like a pyramidal shaped skeleton. It squatted on four bent, flimsy-looking legs that supported a metal mesh platform. From the platform rose gold-foiled propellant tanks, darker odd-shaped cargo containers, pipes and plumbing with gray electronics boxes wedged in, it seemed, wherever they could-be fitted. Up at the top, some thirty feet above Doug’s head, was the empty plastiglass bubble of a passenger/crew compartment.
“Well,” Brudnoy said, sighing, “we won’t need the passenger bubble.”
“Replace it with more cargo holds,” said Doug.
“No, I think the mining equipment should go there.”
“Oh, right,” Doug agreed hastily. “I almost forgot we’ll need that.”
For nearly an hour they clambered over the aging LTV, awkward in their cumbersome surface suits. The spacecraft stood stoically on the pad, like a dignified old gutted building being inspected by skeptical prospective buyers.
“Metal fatigue,” Brudnoy muttered time and again. “This whole section must be replaced.”
Doug took notes on his hand-held computer.
Finally the Russian was satisfied. “Not as good as I wanted,” he said as he and Doug climbed back down onto the scoured ground again. “But not as bad as I feared.”
“Can we get into shape?” Doug asked.
“Of course,” Brudnoy answered. Then he added, “The question is, how much will it cost to get it into shape?”
“We’ve got some homework to do,” Doug said as they headed for the main airlock.
Once inside, and out of their suits, Doug said, “Come on down to my quarters and we’ll start figuring out the cost numbers.”
He started striding down the tunnel. Brudnoy lagged behind him.
“I could use a good night’s sleep,” the Russian said.
Doug saw that Brudnoy’s pouchy eyes had dark circles under them. He glanced at his wristwatch. It was nearly midnight.
“Oh. Okay,” Doug said as they approached the double-sized hatch of the farm. “Actually, I’ve got a few hours of studying to do; got an exam tomorrow.”
“On what subject?”
“European architecture. I’ll have to build either a classical Greco-Roman temple or a Gothic cathedral.”
“With your bare hands?” Brudnoy asked.
Grinning, Doug replied, “They’ll let me use a computer.”
“Very kind of them.”
“I’ve still got to put in a few hours at the screen, though,” said Doug.
Brudnoy stopped a moment at the farm’s entrance. The airtight hatch was closed, as usual.
“I should check on my rabbits,” he said, yawning. “The automatic feeder has been cranky lately.”
I’ll help you,” Doug offered.
“No, not now. I’m too tired. Tomorrow will be good enough.” And he started walking down the tunnel again.
Doug slowed his own pace to keep in step with the Russian.
“You never get tired, do you?” Brudnoy asked.
“I don’t feel tired, no.”
“Is it the natural buoyancy of youth, I wonder? Or do the nanomachines in you give you this preternatural endurance?”
“Preternatural?” Doug laughed.
Just as they reached the cross tunnel, two young women came around the corner. They stopped and stood uncertainly in the tunnel, both in crisp new white coveralls. Doug saw that they were wearing weighted boots. Newcomers.
“Oh!” said the taller of the two. “We’re looking for the farm.”
She was a good-looking brunette. Her companion was stockier, curly red hair clipped short, with a bosom that strained the front of her jumpsuit.
Brudnoy stroked his bearded chin. “The farm? Why should two such lovely ladies be looking for the farm at this time of night?”
“We just got off our shift,” said the brunette.
“And we heard that you keep bunny rabbits down here,” said the redhead.
Brudnoy’s weariness seemed to disappear. Before Doug’s eyes the tired old man turned into a smiling, boyish swain with large, liquid eyes that blinked at the two women longingly.
“Ah, yes, the bunny rabbits. One of them just gave birth, this very afternoon.” ,
“Really?” they squealed in unison. “Can we see them?”
“Of course,” said Brudnoy. “Right this way.”
“It’s not too late?”
“For such lovely newcomers to our humble farm, how could it be too late?” Brudnoy glanced at Doug and rolled his eyes.
“I’ve got to be going,” Doug said.
Smiling wolfishly, Brudnoy said, “Then I shall have to show the rabbits to these young ladies all by myself?”
“Well,” said Doug, “maybe I can hang around for a little bit.”
“If it’s not too much trouble,” the brunette said.
“No trouble at all,” Brudnoy answered grandly. “Just follow me.”
Doug laughed to himself as he followed Brudnoy and the two women back toward the farm and the rabbit pens. No wonder Lev likes to keep the rabbits, he said to himself. And here I thought he only had our nutritional needs in mind.
Well, Doug mused, maybe we can recruit these two for Operation Bootstrap. If nothing else.
MT. YEAGER
“Well, what do you think?” Doug asked.
He could hear his mother’s excited breathing through the suit radio. From their vantage atop Mt. Yeager they could see almost the entire floor of Alphonsus before the sharp lunar horizon cut off their view. In the other direction, Mare Nubium stretched out like an endless undulating frozen sea of rock, dotted with smaller craters and the glowing red beacon lights of the old temporary shelters.
“You were right, Doug,” Joanna said in a hushed, awed voice. “It’s breathtaking.”
She had never been out on the lunar surface before. Doug quietly insisted that she make an excursion with him; they both knew his motive was to get her alone, away from Greg, so they could talk without interruption, without eavesdropping.
Joanna had been upset and impatient during the hour they spent getting into the spacesuits and prebreathing their low-pressure mix of oxygen and nitrogen. Then Doug had requisitioned a hopper and taken his mother — who made it clear she was frightened half to death — up to the top of the tallest mountain in Alphonsus’ ringwall.
“There’s the mass driver,” Doug said, pointing at the dark line laid out across the crater floor. “And the rocket port. You can see the solar energy farms…”
But Joanna’s eyes were turned the other way. She stretched out a gloved hand toward the red beacons marching straight out toward the brutally close horizon.
“Those are the tempos, aren’t they?” she asked.