Instead, her shoulders relaxed slightly and she said, just loud enough to be heard over the clanging, yelling, screeching cacophony, “Yeah, you’re right. I can.”
Before Greg realized what she had said, she added, “And I will.”
She turned abruptly and started off in a half trot, yelling over her shoulder, “C’m’on, we’ve got to get out to the rocket port and light some flares under some butts.”
As soon as she heard Doug’s voice over the satellite link, Bianca Rhee ducked out of the cramped comm compartment and raced down the shelter’s central aisle to the airlock, where the spacesuits were stored. Without bothering even to think about what size she was grabbing, she pulled on the first pair of leggings she came to and plopped down on the floor to tug on the boots.
“What d’you think you’re doing?”
Rhee looked up and saw Kilьfer standing over her, looking displeased.
“We’ve got to go up there and get them!” Rhee said, scrambling to her feet once the boots were sealed.
“You know how to run a hopper?”
“No,” she said, “but you do. Come on, hurry!”
Kilьfer grunted unhappily. “That’s my suit you’re putting on.”
“Oh!” She felt confused for a moment. “Look, there’s no time for me to get out of these and into my own. We’re about the same size. Use my suit.”
“Plumbing’s different,” Kilьfer said. But he reached for Rhee’s suit, hanging next to his.
“We won’t be out long enough for that to matter,” Rhee said. Then she added, “Will we?”
Kilьfer almost laughed.
Is he dead? Doug wondered. Brennart didn’t seem to be breathing and all Doug’s prodding and poking hadn’t awakened the astronaut.
Maybe it’s just a coma, Doug told himself. The radiation hasn’t killed me, why should it kill him?
But he had to admit that he felt very sick. His head was spinning and waves of nausea made him feel weak and feverish. The bleeding in his mouth seemed to have stopped, though. Maybe I just bit my lip or something, he tried to reassure himself.
Doug didn’t realize he had drifted into sleep until a sudden voice jerked him awake.
“Brennart! Stavenger! We’re here!”
Someone was rolling the canister of nanomachines out of the way.
“Under here,” Doug called weakly. “We’re underneath the hopper.”
Someone pulled him by the arms. “Careful,” he heard. “Don’t rip his suit.” Bianca’s voice? Doug couldn’t be sure.
“Brennart,” Doug mumbled. “Get him. He needs help.”
“Like you don’t”
Doug felt himself carried a short distance and then laid down on his side. He fought back the nausea that burned up into his throat. Don’t vomit, he commanded himself. Not inside the helmet. “Strap him down, I’ll go get Brennart.”
“Can you carry him by yourself?”
“If I need help I’ll holler.”
“Vidcam,” Doug said weakly. “Make certain the vidcam’s in my pocket.”
“Don’t worry about that now.” Definitely Bianca’s voice, he thought.
“No, it’s important Our legal claim. Got to have it. Otherwise Yamagata…’ He had to pause for breath.
“It’s okay,” Bianca said. “The vidcam’s there in your thigh pouch.”
“You take it,” Doug gasped. “Hang onto it Take care of it.”
She pulled the vidcam out of his thigh pouch and held it up so he could see it. “I’ve got it I’ll take care of it. Now relax, Doug.”
Relax. The word seemed to echo in Doug’s mind. Relax. Relax. There’s nothing more that you can do. You’ve done everything you could. It’s up to them now. Up to them.
The sudden pressure of takeoff startled him out of his drowsiness. Doug realized he was strapped down like a patient on a surgical table. And then the long, falling emptiness as the hopper descended back to their base camp. Got to tell them about the Yamagata team, Doug thought We’ve got to rescue them. They’re hurt. Got to tell them about it.
But the falling sensation overpowered every thought in his head and Doug held himself as rigidly as possible, forcing himself not to give in to the nausea burning up into his throat The only thing he could see was the flank of the mountain, twinkling like crystal in the sunlight gleaming so brightly that it hurt his eyes and he had to squeeze them shut.
Weight returned. We’ve landed, Doug knew. Darkness all around him. He was being lifted again, moved.
“We’re down,” Bianca’s voice said tenderly. “We’ll have you in the shelter and out of your suit in a few minutes.”
“Barf bag,” Doug mumbled.
“What is it?” He sensed Bianca bending low over him, as if that would improve their suit-to-suit radio link. “What do you need?”
“Barf bags,” he repeated, raising his voice as loud as he could. “Plenty of them.”
Joanna sat tensely in the rear seat of the company jetcopter. Greg’s face on the tiny pop-up display screen built into the seat’s armrest looked tired and strained.
“He’s taken a massive radiation dose,” Greg was saying. “The data they’re transmitting from his medical sensors aren’t good.”
Greg continued speaking, but Joanna ignored his words and said, “Get him back to Moonbase as quickly as possible. I’ll get a team of specialists up there right away.”
She saw Greg stop in midsentence to hear what she was saying. “I expected as much,” he said. “Jinny Anson’s already sent off a lobber to get him. It should be landing at their base camp in half an hour or so.”
“Good,” said Joanna. “I’m coming up there, too.”
Even in the minuscule screen she could see the displeasure on Greg’s face. “There’s nothing you can do to help him.”
Nothing you can do.The words echoed in Joanna’s mind. I let this happen to Doug. The Moon killed his father and now it’s going to kill him.
Misunderstanding her silence, Greg said, “We’re doing everything possible.”
“I’m already on my way to the rocket port,” Joanna said firmly.
When her words reached him, Greg nodded wearily. “I’m not really surprised, even though I think it’s a waste of your time.”
Joanna bit back an angry retort and said instead, “Greg, if this had happened to you, I’d be on my way to Moonbase just as fast.”
His face brightened a little. But only a little.
Joanna saw the yellow message light beside the screen start to flicker.
“Greg, I’ve got to end this call,” she said. “I’ve been trying to reach Kris Cardenas all morning and she’s finally returning my calls.”
It seemed to Doug that he spent a thousand hours or more weaving between consciousness and a restless feverish sleep that brought him neither rest nor relief from the waves of pain and nausea that were washing through him.
But it couldn’t have been all that long, because when he opened his eyes he saw Bianca Rhee still bending over lьm. And she was still in her spacesuit; only the helmet i was gone.
“How’s Brennart?” Dougfcroaked. His throat was raw from i the bout of vomiting that he had surrendered to as soon as they had removed his helmet.
“He’s dead,” said Rhee.
Killifer’s face appeared beside her, unshaven, dark circles beneath the eyes. “Poor bastard strangled on his own puke while the two of you were laying under the hopper.”
“Oh no.” Doug gagged on the bile burning up into his throat again. Rhee grabbed a vomit bag and pushed it into Doug’s hand. He retched miserably.
When he lay back on the bunk again, his eyes were watery and he felt as if every molecule of strength had been drained out of him.
“Brennart must have been unconscious when it happened,” Rhee said. “Totally out of it.”
“You’re lucky to be alive,” Killifer said dourly. “You took a helluva dose out there.”
“I would have died if Brennart hadn’t rigged up a shelter for us.”