12 April 2096: Morning
“We’re going to miss the big debate,” Tavalera said, as he watched Gaeta climb into the hulking excursion suit.
“Not to worry,” Timoshenko called from behind the suit, where he was helping Gaeta worm through the hatch in the back. “They’ll replay it on the news broadcasts six hundred times, at least.”
They had trundled Gaeta’s excursion suit on its dolly, like the sarcophagus of a giant, down to the outer chamber of the airlock at the habitat’s endcap, the only airlock big enough to accommodate the ponderous armored suit. Then, with Gaeta himself helping, they’d used the overhead winch to stand the suit up on its thick-soled boots. Gaeta opened the hatch in the suit’s back and clambered inside. The transfer craft that would carry him to the rings was docked outside the airlock. Pancho and Wanamaker were going through the prelaunch countdown. Tavalera had brought a quartet of roll-up computers to monitor the suit’s sensors and run communications, and he stuck them on the scuffed metal bulkhead because there were no smart walls in the airlock area. Once Gaeta’s head appeared in the helmet visor, Tavalera turned on the intercom.
“Can you hear me, Manny?”
“Loud and clear. You can turn down the volume a smidge.”
Timoshenko checked the suit’s hatch to make certain it was sealed, then walked back to the row of roll-ups with Tavalera.
It took several minutes for the two men to run through the checklist. Finally Tavalera said, “You’re okay to enter the airlock.”
Gaeta turned slowly, like a monster out some old horror flick, while Timoshenko trotted to the airlock’s inner hatch and pecked out the combination on the wall plate that opened it. The hatch swung smoothly inward and Gaeta clumped carefully over its sill. Once the hatch closed again, with Gaeta inside the airlock, Timoshenko hurried back to the pasted-up computers where Tavalera waited.
“Pumping down the airlock,” Tavalera called out.
They heard Gaeta’s voice from the fabric computer that was handling communications, “Copy pumping down.”
Glancing up from the screens to Timoshenko, Tavalera said, “I really appreciate your helping us out here.”
Timoshenko shrugged. “I’m a big boss now, I’ve got lots of time. Not much for me to do except sit at a desk and listen to excuses.”
And hope for the future, he added silently.
Timoshenko had known, when Eberly summoned him to his office, that the chief administrator was going to twist his arm again. The habitat had suffered an hour-long power outage earlier in the day, the third in the past six weeks. Now it was night, well past the dinner hour, and the desks in the outer office were empty. The overhead lights were off; only a small desktop lamp here and there broke the darkness.
He knocked once on Eberly’s door and then opened it. Eberly was at his desk. As usual it was immaculately clear, its surface glistening in the full light of the overheads.
“Precisely on time,” Eberly said, smiling brightly, as he gestured Timoshenko to one of the chairs before his desk.
Timoshenko sat without speaking a word.
“I fired Aaronson this afternoon,” Eberly said without preamble. “We can’t keep having these blackouts. I’m appointing you director of the entire maintenance department.”
“I decline the honor.”
Still smiling, Eberly opened his desk drawer and pulled out a single sheet of plastic. “Your wife is quite beautiful,” he said, sliding the sheet across his desk.
Timoshenko did not dare to pick it up. Merely a glance at Katrina’s lovely face was enough to make his heart thunder.
“My ex-wife has nothing to do with this,” he said through gritted teeth.
“I’ve asked the authorities in Moscow about her. She hasn’t remarried. She’s apparently willing to come out here,” said Eberly. “It seems she’s even anxious to be reunited with you.”
Timoshenko’s first reaction was to leap across the desk and throttle the smug bastard. But he fought it down, barely.
“You two can be reunited,” Eberly went on, “once you’ve accepted the post of head of the maintenance department. You’ll be an important member of this habitat’s community, and she—”
“I don’t want her here! I don’t want her exiled from Earth!”
Eberly shook his head like a schoolteacher disappointed with his student’s response. “You’re a victim of disorganized thinking, Ilya. You see this habitat as a place of exile, a prison, a gulag.”
“Isn’t it?”
“Not in the slightest. This is the most comfortable, even luxurious, habitation you’ve ever known in your entire life. Admit it. Aren’t the living conditions better here than they were in Russia? Aren’t you more free than you ever were there? Don’t you have a better position; aren’t you a respected man?”
Timoshenko couldn’t reply. He wanted to stuff Eberly’s words down his throat, but he knew that what the man was saying was quite true. With the exception that Timoshenko could never leave this man-made world. Never return to Russia. Never see his home. Never see Katrina or hear her voice again. Luxurious or not, this is still a prison, he told himself.
Leaning across his desk and pointing a finger at the engineer, Eberly said, “You’re living much better than your wife is, you know. I’ve looked into her situation, on your behalf. She’s nowhere near the level of comfort and respect that you’re living at.”
“Is … is she all right?”
“She’s living in a one-room apartment and working as an assistant in the central public library in Kaliningrad. That’s a suburb of Moscow, I believe.”
“An assistant? But she has a doctorate in communications.”
“She can be here in six months or less,” Eberly tempted. “If you take the job as head of maintenance.”
Timoshenko started to shake his head, but he heard his own voice saying, “You promise you can bring her here?”
“On the next ship that’s coming from Earth.”
“And … and she can leave … if she doesn’t like it?” If she doesn’t want to stay with me, he added silently.
“She’ll be coming here voluntarily,” Eberly said smoothly. “Of course she can leave whenever she wishes.”
Timoshenko felt paralyzed, unable to decide, unable even to think. His guts were churning, but his mind was a blank.
“She wants to come here,” Eberly purred. “She wants to be with you. I know she does.”
No matter what he knew he should say, Timoshenko blurted, “All right! All right! I’ll take your damned job. I’ll be a big boss, just like you want.” And inside his head he told himself, Katrina is coming here! She’s coming here to join me! She wants to be with me!
He lumbered up from the chair without saying another word and lurched to the door while Eberly watched, smiling. Only after he was safely out of Eberly’s office, in the shadowy darkness of the unoccupied desks, did Timoshenko let tears of joy flow down his cheeks.
Standing beside Tavalera in the airlock area, Timoshenko tried to keep his mind on the business at hand. He forced the image of Katrina out of his head and concentrated on the data displayed on the flimsy computer screens.
“Should I open the link with Dr. Wunderly?” he asked.
Tavalera nodded absently as he pressed a pressure pad on the communications computer’s fabric keyboard. “Pancho, you ready to take Manny aboard?”
Pancho was standing in the transfer craft’s compact little cockpit. Barely big enough for two people, it had no chairs, nothing but display panels with their winking gauges and readouts and a single circular port of glassteel directly in front of her.
“Ready for boarding,” she said into the pin mike clipped onto the collar of her coveralls. Turning to Wanamaker, she said, “You’re the welcoming committee, Jake.”