«Roger Kodiak. Everything normal here; mission profile unchanged.»
«Okay, Niner. We have nothing new for you. Oh wait … Chet, Lew Regneson is here and he says he’s betting on you to uphold the Air Force’s honor. Keep ’em flying.»
Keeping his face as straight as possible, Kinsman answered, «Roger, Kodiak. Mission profile unchanged.»
«Good luck!»
Linda’s thoughtful expression had deepened. «What was that all about?»
He looked straight into those cool blue eyes and answered, «Damned if I know. Regneson’s one of the astronaut team; been assigned to Kodiak for the past six weeks. He must be going ice-happy. Thought it’d be best just to humor him.»
«Oh. I see.» But she looked unconvinced.
«Have you checked any of your pictures in the film processor?»
Shaking her head, Linda said, «No, I don’t want to risk them on your automatic equipment. I’ll process them myself when we get back.»
«Damned good equipment,» said Kinsman.
«I’m fussy.»
He shrugged and let it go.
«Chet?»
«What?»
«That power pod … what’s it for? Colonel Murdock got awfully coy when I asked him.»
«Nobody’s supposed to know until the announcement’s made in Washington … probably when we get back. I can’t tell you officially,» he grinned, «but generally reliable sources believe that it’s going to power a radar set that’ll be orbited next month. The radar will be part of our ABM warning system.»
«Antiballistic missile?»
With a nod, Kinsman explained, «From orbit you can spot missile launches farther away, give the States a longer warning time.»
«So your brave new world is involved in war, too.»
«Sort of.» Kinsman frowned. «Radars won’t kill anybody, of course. They might save lives.»
«But this is a military satellite.»
«Unarmed. Two things this brave new world doesn’t have yet: death and love.»
«Men have died …»
«Not in orbit. On reentry. In ground or air accidents. No one’s died up here. And no one’s made love, either.»
Despite herself, it seemed to Kinsman, she smiled. «Have there been any chances for it?»
«Well, the Russians have had women cosmonauts. Jill’s been the first American female in orbit. You’re the second.»
She thought it over for a moment. «This isn’t exactly the bridal suite of the Waldorf … in fact, I’ve seen better motel rooms along the Jersey Turnpike.»
«Pioneers have to rough it.»
«I’m a photographer, Chet, not a pioneer.»
Kinsman hunched his shoulders and spread his hands helplessly, a motion that made him bob slightly on the chair. «Strike three, I’m out.»
«Better luck next time.»
«Thanks.» He returned his attention to the mission flight plan. Next time will be in exactly sixteen hours, chickie.
When Jill came out of the sack it was Linda’s turn to sleep. Kinsman stayed at the control desk, sucking on a container of lukewarm coffee. All the panel lights were green. Jill was taking a blood specimen from one of the white mice.
«How’re they doing?»
Without looking up, she answered, «Fine. They’ve adapted to weightlessness beautifully. Calcium level’s evened off, muscle tone is good …»
«Then there’s hope for us two-legged types?»
Jill returned the mouse to the colony entrance and snapped the lid shut. It scampered through to rejoin its clan in the transparent plastic maze of tunnels.
«I can’t see any physical reason why humans can’t live in orbit indefinitely,» she answered.
Kinsman caught a slight but definite stress on the word physical. «You think there might be emotional problems over the long run?»
«Chet, I can see emotional problems on a three-day mission.» Jill forced the blood specimen into a stoppered test tube.
«What do you mean?»
«Come on,» she said, her face a mixture of disappointment and distaste. «It’s obvious what you’re trying to do. Your tail’s been wagging like a puppy’s whenever she’s in sight.»
«You haven’t been sleeping much, have you?»
«I haven’t been eavesdropping, if that’s what you mean. I’ve simply been watching you watching her. And some of the messages from the ground … is the whole Air Force in on this? How much money’s being bet?»
«I’m not involved in any betting. I’m just …»
«You’re just taking a risk on fouling up this mission and maybe killing the three of us, just to prove you’re Tarzan and she’s Jane.»
«Goddammit, Jill, now you sound like Murdock.»
The sour look on her face deepened. «Okay. You’re a big boy. If you want to play Tarzan while you’re on duty, that’s your business. I won’t get in your way. I’ll take a sleeping pill and stay in the sack.»
«You will?»
«That’s right. You can have your blonde Barbie doll, and good luck to you. But I’ll tell you this: she’s a phony. I’ve talked to her long enough to dig that. You’re trying to use her, but she’s using us, too. She was pumping me about the power pod while you were sleeping. She’s here for her own reasons, Chet, and if she plays along with you it won’t be for the romance and adventure of it all.»
My God Almighty, Jill’s jealous!
It was tense and quiet when Linda returned from the bunkroom. The three of them worked separately: Jill fussing over the algae colony on the shelf above the biology bench; Kinsman methodically taking film from the observation cameras for return to Earth and reloading them; Linda efficiently clicking away at both of them.
Ground control called up to ask how things were going. Both Jill and Linda threw sharp glances at Kinsman. He replied merely:
«Following mission profile. All systems green.»
They shared a meal of pastes and squeeze-tubes together, still mostly in silence, and then it was Kinsman’s turn in the sack. But not before he checked the mission flight plan. Jill goes in next, and we’ll have four hours alone, including a stretch over the Indian Ocean.
Once Jill retired, Kinsman immediately called Linda over to the control desk under the pretext of showing her the radar image of a Russian satellite.
«We’re coming close now.» They hunched side by side at the desk to peer at the orange-glowing radar screen, close enough for Kinsman to scent a hint of very feminine perfume. «Only a thousand kilometers away.»
«Why don’t you blink our lights at them?»
«It’s unmanned.»
«Oh.»
«It is a little like World War I up here,» Kinsman realized, straightening up. «Just being here is more important than which nation you’re from.»
«Do the Russians feel that way, too?»
Kinsman nodded. «I think so.»
She stood in front of him, so close that they were almost touching.
«You know,» Kinsman said, «when I first saw you on the base, I thought you were a photographer’s model, not the photographer.»
Gliding slightly away from him, she answered, «I started out as a model …» Her voice trailed off.
«Don’t stop. What were you going to say?»
Something about her had changed, Kinsman realized. She was still coolly friendly, but alert now, wary, and … sad?
Shrugging, she said, «Modeling is a dead end. I finally figured out that there’s more of a future on the other side of the camera.»
«You had too much brains for modeling.»
«Don’t flatter me.»
«Why on earth should I flatter you?»
«We’re not on Earth.»
«Touché.»
She drifted over toward the galley. Kinsman followed her.
«How long have you been on the other side of the camera?» he asked.
Turning back toward him, «I’m supposed to be getting your life story, not vice versa.»