“Our suits are not so customized. We could either shuttle the suits back and forth or go to body bags. I’d prefer not to go to body bags.”
“I understand.”
“We would also wish to bring aboard personal items. We understand that they would be thoroughly inspected by your security people.”
“Are you talking about weapons?”
“No, of course not. Just small sentimental items, and clothing and so on.”
“We can take a limited amount of that. But it will all be closely inspected.”
“Of course.”
Fang-Castro’s slate pinged. “Admiral? Summerhill, here. The bus with Darlington and Crow is back.”
“Send them to the conference room, along with Mr. Martinez,” she said. She turned to Zhang. “All right, sir, let’s see what my people have learned.”
57.
The transfer of the Celestial Odyssey’s crew took six hours in two shifts. Crew members collected personal belongings, packed them into standard Chinese military duffels, and carried them to the shuttle bay, where the bus from the Nixon was moored. Those chosen to go first got into space suits and shuffled onto the bus, for the short ride across. Cui would go with the first group, to command the Chinese on the Nixon. Zhang would go last.
On arrival at the Nixon, each Chinese crewman was put through a security scanner, and their duffel bags were both scanned and examined by hand. All personal items that might be considered volatile—a few bottles of perfume, soaps, and so on—were sequestered for chemical analysis, with the crewman’s name written on the outside of a clear plastic bag containing the questionable items.
At the end, only Zhang, Second Officer Sun, and four other Chinese crew members were left aboard the Odyssey. As they suited up and prepared to board the waiting bus, Zhang looked around the shuttle bay for the last time. They were abandoning ship. He’d never had to do that before. He’d never lost a vessel… or the majority of his crew.
The level of failure that he felt, the deep melancholy, that was something he could barely endure. Every morning he woke from fitful sleep into a worse nightmare. He’d done his best to be a good commander, to make the right decisions, but all he could say of himself was that his very best had only been enough to keep a near-total disaster from being total.
He barely felt the bus accelerate away from his ship. He shook himself. He wasn’t sure how much time had passed since he climbed onto the bus, probably less than a minute. All he had to do was wait. The fittings on their space suits weren’t compatible with the ports on the bus, but for such a short operation it didn’t matter. They could rely on their suits for life support during the transfer procedures.
Ahead of them was the Nixon; behind was his past. He watched as the shuttle bay grew smaller with distance. The lights were on, but there was no one left there to operate the doors.
The Celestial Odyssey would continue its voyage, the lights on but nobody home, as the Americans might say. For how long? Who knew? At their lowest power generation settings the reactors might run for many decades. Probably before then something would break and the lights would go out, leaving the ship a dark and powerless hulk.
For a while, though, the Odyssey would continue to function. Maybe, Zhang thought, long enough for Beijing to send out a recovery mission. More likely, given its condition, Beijing would abandon it. Perhaps centuries from this moment, space explorers would discover a mysterious, dimly lit ship, abandoned by its crew for reasons long forgotten, a Flying Dutchman of the Early Space Era.
A silly and romantic notion. Zhang’s mind was wandering. So much fatigue. With his responsibilities over, for all practical purposes, he could barely keep his eyes open.
The receding shuttle bay looked dimmer, blurrier. He wished he could rub his eyes to clear them. That was something he’d always hated about space suits; if you got an itch, you couldn’t scratch. Maybe he should just close his eyes for a minute, to see if that would clear his vision. He was just a package on the Americans’ transporter.
They didn’t need him.
Half an hour after leaving the crippled Chinese ship, the bus arrived at the Nixon. A white American egg hovered outside the bus bay, and Sun could see the young cameraman—Captain Darlington?—inside the egg, recording the transfer.
The bus edged into the Nixon’s air lock, settled onto the deck, where clamps engaged its legs. The bay doors closed and the hangar began to pressurize. Sun looked to Zhang. “Sir, we’ve arrived. Your orders?” She got no reply. She leaned over and poked at his arm. He didn’t move. She tried again. No response. Tried again…
She hit her open channel button. “Nixon, we have a problem. Admiral Zhang is unresponsive. We need medical attention!”
The Nixon’s chief medical officer, Derek Manfred, rushed forward, along with marines there to process the new arrivals. Manfred and Barnes unclipped the inert captain’s suit from the bus harness. There wasn’t time to wait for the hangar to finish pressurizing. They ran with him to the air lock. Barnes radioed over his shoulder. “You can come if you wish, Lieutenant Sun, but we’re not holding the air lock for you. Your call.”
Sun followed her commander.
Fang-Castro, Cui, Crow, and a few others were waiting on the other side of the air lock. Barnes held Zhang’s unmoving body while Cui pulled off his helmet and started in on the rest of the suit. Dr. Manfred moved in and shoved her to one side, gently but firmly.
He said, “Not breathing. No pulse. Shocking, now…. Nothing. Okay, last resort.” The doctor injected Zhang with something and shocked him again. “Nothing.”
Another shock, and another. Finally, to Cui: “I’m sorry, I can’t bring him back.”
Cui was stunned: “How could this happen?”
Manfred was doctor-cooclass="underline" “I’d have to perform an autopsy to be absolutely certain, but the blood chem telltales are consistent with asphyxiation. Way too little oxygen, way too much CO2. Something went badly wrong with the air mix in his suit.”
Fang-Castro reached out and touched Cui’s arm. “I am so very, very sorry, Lieutenant Cui. Admiral Zhang was unquestionably an intelligent and perceptive man and an officer of integrity. I was greatly looking forward to spending time with him in the coming months.”
She straightened up. “Lieutenant Cui, I believe that you are the ranking officer and now in command of your crew. I welcome you aboard the USSS Richard M. Nixon. With your permission, we can transport Admiral Zhang’s body to Medical. I’ll have our very best technician, Joe Martinez, go over his space suit. Dr. Manfred can perform an autopsy, if you wish. We should attend to the task of moving the rest of your crew into the Nixon.”
Sun said, “The suits were tested before we left. Tested. He should have been fine.” She hesitated, looked to Cui. “Sir, your orders?”
Cui was still trying to get her bearings. “Uh, yes.” She turned to Fang-Castro: “Thank you, Admiral, please go ahead with the personnel transfer. I want to be sure the rest of our… my… people are all right.”
Cui Zhuo stared for a moment at Zhang’s body, then turned to the shuttle bay air lock. The door opened—the bay was now fully pressurized—and the American marines were helping the final crew members peel off their suits. As the Chinese crewmen clambered out, the Americans helped them get their footing.