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PREPARING

Eager for my next shift, I was ready early. I'd chosen one of my favorite sets of lace, which formed a delicate edge to the crisp neckline and sleeve edges of the practical coverall I generally wear. Fragile though it looks, lace is tough and durable, and I have no fear that my own collection, gifts from many thoughtful friends, will not last as long as I. This set in particular is snowy white, in sharp contrast to my dusky skin. I remember an early lover's self-satisfaction with finding a color match; we were sharing a blissful breakfast in Kashmir, and the smiling Hunza woman brought us a bowl of ripe apricots.

"That's it!" he said, holding one up to my cheek. "You're just that color!" Fanciful, but not inappropriate to that happy time. Trimly regulation in the rest of my appearance, I pulled myself smartly around the last handhold on the central shaft and swung into the big control room on the bottom deck. When he saw me, David got up silently from the computer control console, and I took his place.

Two other members of my shift, George and Sam, were already there, settling down at their console screens. George had the Prometheus in hover mode at the L1 point between Gargantua and Zuni, so with little to do, he had switched his pilot console from the normal lightsail navigation display to a science analysis setup. Carmen came in to replace Caroline at the communications console. Neither one looked at the other.

"Carmen. Zouave will be going behind Gargantua in about half an hour," said Caroline through James as she got up and left, talking as she went, with Carmen hearing her clearly through their imp-to-James-to-imp connection. "Tweedledum, the high-pressure exploration balloon, is getting some excellent views of a region of Zouave it and Tweedledee have not visited previously. Before Zouave disappears, you'll want to set up a bounce relay link through the commsat we placed at Zouave's L4 point." She had disappeared up the central shaft long before she finished talking.

"Right," replied Carmen through her imp, as she wrapped her legs around the console chair stand and readjusted the icons around the comm screen to the left-handed arrangement she preferred.

"George?" said Sam. "Nearly all the data on Zuni collected by the crawlers has been closely analyzed by James and the science analysis gang, correlated with the pictures taken from above by the orbiter, and collated into various files. If you'd like, I think I can run a condensed version of the highlights for you. It ought to give a pretty clear picture of what the two crawlers found before they were lost to accidents."

"Great, Sam. It's good to have all that information, like having an encyclopedia, but getting something out of it is like trying to read an encyclopedia!"

I quietly switched my own screen to Sam's so I could watch too.

The reports from the amphibious crawlers Burble and Bubble had indeed been voluminous. For years they had crawled in and out of the oceans and islands on Zuni below, their webbed tracks working as treads on the land, like paddles in the water.

"Plant, similar to that found in image 74698, color similar to shade 173, structure similar to number K91, located . . ."

The descriptions went on and on, and each find had been plotted on the increasingly detailed maps being developed in the archival memory of James. Of course, when most of these reports were actually coming in, we had been busy elsewhere in the Barnard planetary system.

We had learned of the loss of the robot scouts via brief communications from Bruce, the science orbiter which had brought the two crawlers and their aeroshells down close to Zuni so they could land, and who stayed in orbit to act as a communications relay between the crawlers and Prometheus, and to collect what data it could from orbit with its video cameras, microwave, infrared, ultraviolet, and gamma-ray scanners, and various science instruments including a gravity gradient field mapper. Soaring high above Zuni, Bruce's unemotional voice had reached us with the announcement of the loss of the first semi-intelligent robot.

"Burble is experiencing technical difficulties. Burble is submerging rapidly off the southern tip of island 105 east, 35 north. Burble has ceased communication." There was a pause. "All indications are that Burble is no longer operational."

We had all been too busy to respond with much more feeling than Bruce had displayed.

"Right, Bruce, you and Bubble carry on," was, I think, about the extent of it from George at the time. And there was not much more excitement at Bruce's equally laconic statement after the loss of Bubble. One of our many tasks on Zuni's surface will be to see if we can find any part of Burble and Bubble. If they are in any way salvageable, it will be well worth our work to return them to Prometheus where the Christmas Bush can make use of their parts.

If, now, Sam could begin to summarize all this information in a readable way, I would appreciate it as much as anyone. The scenes on the screen began to sharpen, images narrowing down to focus on some detail, then widening out to encompass a whole valley or bay. By now Carmen had switched her screen too, and some members of the previous shift had drifted back down from the dining area on the deck above to see what was going on, some of them going to spare consoles and bringing up replicas of Sam's screen. All of us watched with interest as Sam began to form vivid panoramas of the land below us, switching from overhead views taken by Bruce to the closeups of the same views taken by one of the crawlers.

Zuni looks, with obvious discrepancies, rather like parts of the Earth's South Pacific. It appears to be mostly water, with islands of all shapes and sizes, over ninety-five large ones, and thousands of smaller ones, dotting the surface in such profusion one would think it would be difficult to miss hitting one, landing at random. However, such a move would certainly be disastrous, as the appearance is deceptive, and miles of water separate each morsel of land.

David stopped the display on his console in mid-scene.

"Here's a funny thing! I'm looking at two views of the same small area taken by the orbiter Bruce just a few days apart, but they look different! I'm sure it's the same spot, because of that strangely shaped granite knob in the middle of both images, but the pattern of vegetation has changed, and see the color difference?"

He displayed two pictures which we all pulled to our screens. There was a collection of trees in a complex pattern, and the pattern had changed significantly between the two pictures taken a few days apart, but, frankly, I could see no difference in the colors of the plants.

"Yes, the reports from Bruce do say shade 043 and shade 045, but I don't see any difference! Bruce is as persnickety about color as you are, David!" Jinjur straightened to her full diminutive height and ran exasperated fingers through her crisp black hair.

"The whole place seems to have nothing but those same bushes. Where's any significant difference?"

"What do you mean, no difference? Look there  . . .and there!" David's bony fingers prodded sharply at the two images, pointing to the sets of bush-like structures to one side of the granite knob. His touch-sensitive screen produced green circles on our screens.

"Can't you see how much bluer those plants are in the second image?"

"No," snorted Jinjur. There was a general murmur of agreement.

"Wait, I'll make it clearer," David said impatiently, and began to increase the color difference by stretching the spectrum. The onlookers, an opinionated cluster of individuals, began to come as close to argument as they ever did.

"I do believe I can see . . ."

"Obviously it's just a different time of day!"

"They were taken at the same time of the day," David reminded them.

"Much more likely a seasonal variation—that's why the pattern is different too."

"A major change in color and position in just a few days?" David retorted sarcastically.

"To coin a phrase," said Jinjur tartly, "I think you're barking up the wrong tree."

This, of course, set Richard off.

"Ash-ly, I don't want to go out on a limb, but are yew holly qualified to judge, Jinjur? I mean, until we syc'more information, I think we should go with the willo' the poplar majority! It's oak-kay with me to leaf the whole thing to David—he walnut be stumped! And as fir my o-pine-ion . . ." Here, fortunately, George ordered him to shut up.

I shifted my own console back to the original picture, and pulling other views of the same region taken by Bruce in its daily orbit of the planetoid, began to run it through a time-lapse sequence. Fortunately, the region was near the north pole, so that Bruce obtained a picture of the same region practically every day. As the images changed, and time passed, the pattern of plants in the picture slowly began to shift. Of course, that would normally be the case—plants do thrive and then wither. I increased the display rate  . . .Suddenly, I stared in shock. As the patterns of vegetation moved and shifted, definite lines of action began to form, almost as if the plants were advancing and retreating! I slowed the pace to a daily rate, and the action became invisible. But sped up, so that weeks were scanning by in a few seconds, it was easy to see—tendrils were moving out from established plants, new growths were beginning, and even more startling, the mass of growth changed with what had all the appearance of deliberate purpose, from the parent plant to the new growth! My gasp of amazement had caught David's attention, and he instantly brought up what I had on my console, roiling in its fast-moving action.

"There's a battle going on!" exclaimed Richard. "The bushes are moving around, and fighting each other!"

"Plants can't move around," said Jinjur. "Don't they always have fixed root systems?"

"Not these plants!" Nels was excited. "Look at that  . . .that  . . .spider plant there!" He was right, there was a resemblance of this alien plant to those common plants frequently seen barely surviving in some neglected corner of a student's room. "It's just sent out shoots towards that spot where there's more space, and now the little plant on the best spot has shot up to overshadow the neighboring ones! And what's really amazing is that the parent plant is dwindling, obviously sending the offshoot all of its nutrients!"

"You mean the parent plant is sacrificing itself?" It was difficult for me to accept the notion of altruism on the part of a plant.

"No, no, Reiki, it's not sacrificing anything, it's just moving! See, all the other little tendrils are shriveling up too, while that first offshoot is absolutely thriving and becoming the new parent body!"

It was David who spotted the even more aggressive actions of the foliage.

"Watch those little vines! They're trying to strangle each other!" It was true. At this high rate of speed, the sinewy runners looked like furiously battling snakes, coiling viciously around each other, struggling to break their opponent's grip on the soil, trying with obvious intent to crush the life from each other. Amazed, we watched a larger offshoot slide quickly to the top of an apparently established plant and begin to grow strongly, only to be ruthlessly severed from its parent by a branch of the stronger plant.

With quickened interest we focussed our attention on the structure of these peculiar shrubs. The large central portion is very bushy, and almost always there are six tendrils out and about, searching and exploring, setting up new bushy offshoots in a tentative way, until a position is found that permits rapid growth. Then that growth is phenomenal! With the rest of the runners and the parent shrinking into nothing, the successful shoot attains full growth and vigor, and begins to send out little tendrils of its own! The change and warfare seem to be unending. This deliberate slow-motion battling makes us more curious than ever about the planet we hope to explore.

The information we have is tantalizing, to say the least. Although it is totally different from Earth, Zuni has many characteristics to which it is easy to relate. Because its gravity is twenty-eight percent of Earth's, walking will feel almost normal, but lifting heavy weights should be simple, as, for instance, fifty kilos will seem like only fourteen. The length of the "day" is a little over thirty hours, due to the fact that Zuni is tidally linked to Gargantua. The light, what there is of it, comes from Barnard, and is cut off from Zuni by the huge mass of Gargantua in an eclipse, every day, for nearly two hours. At nighttime, Gargantua itself is being illuminated by Barnard, providing more than enough light for us to move around safely. The only real darkness comes during the eclipse; I can easily find attractive the idea of an enforced siesta! Our years of relentlessly scheduled shifts have made me, just a little, resentful of their rigidity.

Eagerly we followed Bruce's updated descriptions of the land beneath him, tallying them with the lengthy explorations of our earlier scouts.

"Island 128 East 20 North: small saline lake at south end. Vegetation predominantly similar to more primitive bushes. Seaweed-type vegetation common. Island not visible above water for 1.5 hours around local noon and midnight. Not recommended for exploration."

"Oh brother!" sighed John. "As a tour guide for would-be explorers Bruce is a master of understatement. A place that is underwater for three hours every day would not, I agree, be a whole lot of fun."

"These tides," said George slowly, "are going to have to be reckoned with. Bring up the tide table Shirley compiled."

I pulled up the tide table and looked at it and the accompanying graph of tidal height versus time. The tides are indeed worthy of consideration. The tides on Zuni are not smooth and slowly varying, like Earth tides. Instead, superimposed on a small rising and falling pattern, there are short, sharp spikes of high water at seemingly irregular intervals.

"Gargantua is big and close," explained Shirley as she moved her finger across the touchscreen and a green circle imitated its motion on all our screens. "And its tidal pull is the strongest, of course, but as Zuni faces it all the time, the pull is constant, so all Gargantua does is make a large permanent bulge about twenty-six kilometers high in the ocean and the crust. Barnard, not being a very large star, only causes a modest rise in the ocean surface of one-and-a-half meters, about the same size tides as those on Earth. They come, naturally, twice a Zuni solar day, or about once every fifteen hours.

"Zulu, when it comes past between Zuni and Gargantua, causes a short, sharp tide that is three times stronger than the Barnard tide, or four and a half meters. This occurs during a three hour interval once every twenty-nine hours, a little oftener than once every Zuni day. Zouave's tide is even stronger, six and a half meters, and lasts six hours, but it only comes every seventy-eight hours, or once every two and a half Zuni days.

"But look what happens when the moons line up every eighteen Zuni days. Then we'll have tides of over eleven meters! And, when Barnard gets into the act, lining up with the rest of them, the tides will be nearly thirteen meters, that's forty feet high! The tidal surge then will be bigger than the biggest Earth tides at the Bay of Fundy. Those whoppers only come at the yearly spring tide there. Here on Zuni, it'll be every fifty-four Zuni days and it happens everywhere on the planet, not just in one peculiar bay! Not an effect we can afford to ignore, if we're going to do this mission safely."

"Well, we'll simply select a landing area on an easily accessible hill for the lander that is higher than the highest tide, but close enough to the water that the flouwen can easily get down to it," said Jinjur briskly.

"Right," seconded Shirley. "It might be best to come down over the surface of the water first, so we don't blast the vegetation too much, then slide over to the shore and up onto the top of the hill. With all these islands to choose from, we're bound to be able to find one that's close to perfect."

"It's vital that we do," said George, more seriously than we had heard him for some time. "This mission has me concerned. We have no more landers, and if anything happens to this one, there is no way those on Prometheus can rescue the landing party."

This flat statement had a brief chilling effect on us all, but it was brief indeed. I know I, as well as most of the rest of the crew, am secretly hoping to be part of this adventure!

At this point, the three flouwen came surging into the control room in their wetsuits, asking endless questions and crowding the working screens so closely that those who had things to do elsewhere went off to do them. The wetsuit with the vermillion-colored helmet pushed close to David's screen, accompanied by an astringent smell of ammonia.

"Big waves? Any waves? Look! There's a good one!" Little Red, like Loud Red, his distant larger portion left back on Rocheworld, was always interested in surfing.

"Big, yes, but look how it crashes onto those rocks. You'd have to drop out, just as it got exciting," said Little White. As Little White "spoke" to Little Red using sonic chirps generated by his body, the chirps were translated by James and the translation sent to us through our imps.

Little Red's desire to play with the actual controls of the computer, set up in fascinating array before him, was so strong that he moved in front of David, slowly pushing the man's arms to one side. Richard, behind David, gently but firmly intervened his own bulk in the opposite direction, but Little Red's attention was still on the flickering pictures before him.

"You're making the picture? You're seeing far away?" The question was wistful.

"I'm not actually seeing, these are old pictures, and we're just putting them together in a time sequence." David wondered how much of that was comprehensible to the flouwen. Little Purple, more content to observe from a comfortable distance, said, "Yes, you know, Little Red, like big wave comes, grows up up up, we slide down down down, then big splash! All in long, long picture!"

"Hunh!" was Little Red's dubious response—his own milder version of the emphatic "Dumb!" of Loud Red. It seemed a good time to change the subject.

"We're looking for the best time and place to go there," I said distinctly. "We need to find a spot where we'll all be able to see and find out more about this new place."

"Yes!" shouted Little Red. "Find good things to eat in the water!"

"That, too," I agreed. "We'll have to share all we learn with each other."

"Share?" A new word.

"Taste," said Little Purple firmly. "Same thing." He was right, for the flouwen can share each other's knowledge with the physical transfer of memory chemicals in a process much like tasting.

"It would probably be a good idea to find a relatively enclosed area of water, for these pests here," said Jinjur. "Nothing as confining as a lake, but we don't want them bounding off across miles of ocean in the few months we plan to be down."

We resumed scanning the terrain. "Here's a bay, but the vegetation seems sparse here."

"We'll keep looking," decided George. "If possible, we should choose a place near the Inner pole. That way the nighttime period will always be illuminated by the light from Gargantua, making it easier to explore. The only really dark period will then be the two hour eclipse around noon. James, divide up the Inner pole area between the leading and trailing poles into thirty degree sectors and the five of us will each take a sector, marking possibles as we search."

I was pleased at being included in this exercise. My own classification, as anthropologist, is somewhat ambiguous to the rest of the crew. It was so, simply because I had hastily selected the field as my first major, years ago, when an apologetic but insistent administrator had extracted me from the library. "You must choose something, from all these fields, to put down on the necessary papers!" I had been pleased at my own choice; so many interesting subjects can be reasonably included in this elastic discipline. With glee, the next term, I added "The Origin and History of American Quilts" and "Celtic Place-names" to my studies; my advisor only waved me wearily away as I happily explained how they fit into such a major. Since then, my studies and explorations had become almost too numerous to list, but George and especially Jinjur were very much aware of them all. They arranged quietly to have me around when I could be of help, either as technician or catalyst.

In the area assigned me I could find nothing promising. There were several islands with lagoons, but most of them were extremely small. We need to have a place large enough to contain a fair representation of all of the most common life forms. The largest island had no bodies of water on it at all apparently, except for the lake in the gigantic volcanic crater near the center. It looked like Mount Fuji after a few million years of heavy rain, which, I guess, is exactly what had happened to it. The rest of the island was a sloping volcanic shield ending in black sand beaches, on which the breakers crashed with steady regularity. Little Red, peering over my shoulder, obviously thought this was ideal.

"Good!" he shouted, and then launched into some jargon with his compatriots, apparently describing the curl of the wave which would allow then to travel parallel to the shore for long distances on a single wave. Firmly I moved the scanner inland, away from the attractive coast, and Little Red, disappointed, went off to lean on Richard's stalwart back. The flat fields I was surveying were not very interesting to me either. They reminded me of the "flow" country of northernmost Scotland, whose bleakness had impressed me even in the dreary charts of the agricultural handbook I had picked up one day in that much-loved library. Ostensibly a guide to making a living from those barren lands, it was really more of an encouragement to emigrate, but I had gleaned from it the possibilities of existence anywhere.

It was Caroline who found it. We'd all been working in silence for more than an hour. Her quiet—"here"—contained so much satisfaction we all instantly switched in our consoles to her screen and delighted in the configuration she had outlined. It is a large island, located five degrees west and five degrees north of the Inner pole (which had already been picked as zero-zero) with a central volcano and a number of subsidiary calderas, probably coming from the same magma chamber. On the shore itself is a nearly circular lagoon, probably a drowned caldera, with only a narrow opening to the open sea. It is well suited to our purposes, I think.

"Looks like St. Vincent island in the Caribbean," said Thomas. "Except the Crater Lake on this island is connected to the sea. I guess we should call it Crater Lagoon instead."

"Yes!" said Jinjur, her finger on the touchscreen producing a green blob overlay on the image. "This looks like a good choice. The lander can come down above the center of Crater Lagoon there, slide over to the base of that low volcanic dome there and go up that gradual slope to the top, putting it well out of the reach of the tides. We can then set up camp and get going!"

It sounds almost too good to be true. George probed the reports for further details. The crawler, Bubble, had been through the lagoon and had made a traverse of the less forested portions of the island. "The water looks clear, there, and the bottom was too deep for the scout to record, so there is no danger of the tides uncovering anything below the surface. We'll continue to check it out, but temporarily, make it so!"

The continuing reports were favorable. Richard noted, approvingly: "The surrounding volcanoes are even taller—they'll provide protection from the prevailing storm winds. And from what we've seen of the local weather reports, that may be a very real advantage!"

The lagoon is big enough so the flouwen will have room to hunt, and the opening to the ocean is small enough to make it clear what is off limits to them. The microclimate seems to be as moderate as any here, located near the equator midway between the leading and trailing Poles, so that Gargantua is always in the sky, providing some light at night. Indeed, it seems evident that we will be able to see well enough to walk about and work at all times, except during the midday eclipse. That fact is both comforting and daunting! The pressure to get the maximum amount of data during our few months stay is unremitting. Fortunately, we will be able to concentrate fully, having no need to deal with any sort of domestic chores, the Christmas Branches on the rocket lander and the Dragonfly aerospaceplane will handle those.

The flouwen, of course, know they are destined for this mission, and are joyous over each step in the process being completed. Among the rest of us, however, a certain unavoidable tension is growing. Selecting the crew for each mission is strictly up to George and Jinjur, and their decisions have not yet been announced. It is entertaining, as well as enlightening, to observe the behavior of various individuals attempting to ensure they will at least not be overlooked! When I mention that Linda, our bouncy little astrophysicist, and tall Elizabeth are both to be found constantly in the exercise room, ostentatiously jogging on the treadmill wearing a spring-loaded hip harness (Linda's specialty) and furiously cycling (Elizabeth's long legs pedaling with amazing speed), the picture is clear. It would be funny, if one didn't sometimes catch a glimpse of the fire that can flash between those two pairs of green eyes as they each race to better their personal goals from yesterday!

David, Arielle, and I have no time to spare for any posturing, even if we were so inclined. All three of us are determined that whoever flies this last lander will find every command response from the lander's computers, Joe and Josephine, quick, clean, and absolutely perfect. Of all the variables on the mission, the computer system is one which we can control, and we intend it to be as reliable as we—and James!—can make it. Joe and Josephine are in constant communication with James, absorbing all the information the central computer has collected about the surface of Zuni. The satellites to be deployed to provide global communications for the landing party are also undergoing our painstaking examination, as well as the solar-sail levitated statites to be placed in a hovering position over the polar regions. Our work occupies our entire shift, and we are ready to relax when it is over, since James relieves us of any personal housekeeping tasks. I use my time to enter the exciting events of the day into my electronic journal. I am more than ever pleased with the adaptability and speed of my little recorder—I can enter as lengthy an account of the day's doing as I like, either with the lightest of finger pressures on the chordic keypad, or if I am really tired, simply by rambling along, out loud. As its designer, it is a source of much satisfaction to me that it can live in my pocket, as personal to me as my imp. If I have the good fortune to be selected for the mission, it will certainly go along with me . . .

 

I am going to Zuni! It was difficult to control my delight when Jinjur told me, but I managed, just barely, to restrain it until I returned here to privacy. It is the most marvelous news! It will be wonderful to be in a new place again, quite apart from all the discoveries which we will certainly make! And, like the rest, I too long for the freedom to move about a large and unfamiliar area—imagine having the possibility of tripping over something! Not that it would be pleasant, but for so long we have known every inch of our floors and walls, kept so immaculate by the Christmas Bush. And to think of looking up and not seeing a ceiling!

Jinjur summoned me through James, just now. I was not expecting this to be "the" summons, as of course James is virtually our PA system, and I had thought the announcement to the mission crew was to be a private matter. However, I reckoned without Jinjur's instinctive leadership technique—she takes no significant action covertly.

When I walked into her room, I knew instantly, and a thrill, almost electric, shot through me. There was no mistaking the message of that huge grin! I'm sure I mirrored it, nearly, as she said, "Yep, that's right! You're going to Zuni, and what's even more important to me, so am I!" This was surprising, and I reacted to it even in my excitement.

"Are you really? George . . ."

"Quite agrees, thank goodness. This mission looks to be the closest thing to a fine adventure as we'll be having in the foreseeable future, and I want to be part of it. We plan to leave in fifteen days."

"Thank you for including me—I'm absolutely thrilled!" I said, just to make sure she understood that. It's important to get those words actually said, and when I calm down a bit I shall write a note to her and to George, as a matter of record. She then told me why I'd been selected, and once again I was grateful for the sudden urge which had led me to speak up in my own behalf so many years ago when the committee was considering me for the Barnard mission. General Jones, as I'd thought of her then, had asked, "Ms. Leroux, why do you think this large array of disconnected skills  . . .pearl diving  . . .costume design  . . .would be of any use to us?"

"Such a variety of accomplishments," was my tactful way of rephrasing her query, "surely suggests an adaptability of mind. I've sustained myself, unaided, in countries and cities—not the least of which is here, in Washington! I control myself, and am content with myself. In addition, I have, to a pronounced degree, the ability to interact successfully with anyone, humans as well as computers. Such a skill should certainly be in demand on a mission such as this."

"Anyone?" The strong brown face remained cool.

"Years of absorbing the manners and customs of other people, along with an instinct to listen, have taught me to establish an easy working relationship almost instantly. Normally, I would not speak so frankly, but it will help you to know what I can do as quickly as I can tell you."

That had been all, at the time, but I had long suspected that my selection had been as much for those few words as the official reason. The announced decision, that while my excellent computer programming skills would no doubt be useful, an anthropologist was desired to assist in analyzing any alien life forms we might encounter, struck me as amusing. Jinjur's words to me today substantiated this.

"Right now, it doesn't appear that there will be any life on Zuni intelligent enough for you to analyze, Reiki. But there certainly may be a need for a peacemaker, as I try to keep a leash on this exploratory party!" It was not, strictly speaking, my business to ask who else was going, but happily, Jinjur was in the mood to rejoice with me.

"We've chosen Nels and Cinnamon, both," she said. "They outperform as a team better than both of them separately, if you can follow that! And there will certainly be plenty of interest to them in these weird plants. Nels will enjoy stretching those new legs of his," she added knowingly. I caught the tiny wince of remorse—she had, for so long, felt an antipathy for his flawed physique. "That will leave Deirdre in charge of the hydroponics lab—she'll enjoy that. But it sure will be quiet on that deck while we're away."

"Carmen is going too. I know she was unwell, but she's better now than I've ever seen her, and anxious to do outstanding work. I think she can." I agreed, silently.

"Then there's going to be David . . ." I was pleased with that. With both David and me on the mission, the vehicle computers would perform exceptionally.

"And Richard . . ." I liked that too. Although his person is certainly attractive, it's his sense of what is funny which I most enjoy. He has that trick, which I suspect is a gift, of punning with ease and speed on almost any subject. The others groan, but as an appreciator of words, I find this talent irresistible and am reduced to helpless giggles, though of course I conceal that carefully.

"Shirley's going too . . ." That was not a surprise. Jinjur and Shirley were a smooth-working team of long standing, and Jinjur knows she can rely absolutely on Shirley's integrity and capability as an engineer to keep the exploration spacecraft operating.

"And John as medic. That makes ten." I was a little less pleased with this last selection, particularly when I considered Jinjur's confrontations with him herself! But I shall try to be optimistic about their desire to cooperate. Quickly I tallied up the list.

"Ten? I counted nine . . ."

"Oh, and Arielle. She can pilot the last airplane. She'll like that," she said positively, and I was almost as thrilled as I'd been for myself. It will be so good to see her at the controls of another Dragonfly! I understood, now, the radiant smile Arielle had given me as she passed me in the corridor—I had thought it was due to the size of the piece of cake she was carrying.

This morning has been an exciting one. Those of us who have been selected are striving to conceal our elation, and those who are staying aboard Prometheus are vocal in their disappointment. Elizabeth, particularly, who's had no training in military obedience to orders, is openly unhappy.

"George, dammit, I really wanted to go on this one!"

George did his best. "I know, Red, I know. Think I don't want to go too? But we took the choices one by one, and I think we've got a crew which will make the most efficient use of that few months. Don't get too steamed up, old girl. We've still got lots of smaller moons to visit with almost no gravity to cope with, like Zoroaster, Zwingli, and Zeus. We can reach those easily with one of our left-over Ascent Modules, and your asteroid prospecting experience will be invaluable for exploring those bodies. Also, some day we will need to return the Littles back to the rest of themselves on Rocheworld. We'll certainly need your piloting experience then, to fly an Ascent Module down to the zero gravity point between the two lobes, and rendezvous with Dragonfly Two with its crew of flouwen and gummies. There's explorations ahead for all of us—enough to keep us busy for the rest of our lives!

This statement of the obvious made all of us, drifting near in the hall, feel better. The crew, intelligent, well-trained, and chosen for compatibility years ago, are in no danger of succumbing to envy. Those of us to go are soberly planning our work and preparing for our needs, and those remaining behind are able to put aside their disappointment enough to help prepare the Beagle for its voyage of exploration.

I had, already, privately decided what I would most assuredly take with me if I were selected. I suspect we have all done that! Certainly the task of packing our personal belongings aboard the Beagle has gone with amazing speed—and it is a curious coincidence that these personal bundles fit precisely and neatly into the compartments on the second of the three compact decks comprising the crew quarters of the Beagle. I have just time to make a brief inspection of my own living area before returning to my shift. The next few days are going to be very busy indeed.

Once on Zuni's surface, we plan to spend our working shifts outdoors, returning to the Beagle for meals and sleep. The information we gather throughout the day will all be entered and stored by Joe and James, so we will be able to pursue our tasks independent of each other. This is the way in which we are accustomed to working, but I have long felt it would be more pleasant and productive if we spent more time in serious discussions of our work. We have got in the habit of relating all of our findings and experiments only to James, so that, for instance, while I know of Nels' results in the creation of edible substances by eating them, I haven't any real grasp of how he got to that stage! And, while I could procure the data from James, on that or any other work in progress, it has always seemed to me to be uncomfortably close to reading another's mail, and I notice we all scrupulously avoid it. Living in such close proximity, we relate more intimately with the central computer than with each other, and while it does make for easier harmony, it sometimes seems to be unnatural. However, it may well be that on the surface of Zuni we find some exciting things to share, and being in a sense "away from home," our own enthusiasm will lead to interesting conversations. I hope so!

Our flouwen have no reticence at all about their eagerness to begin the trip. They will spend the orbital survey time in a portion of the tank which runs from the bottom of the docking lock down through the center of the next two decks. This space was originally designated for the storage of replacement air and water, and was designed with plenty of extra capacity. Now we must recalculate our requirements with great accuracy and only take as much as we need. Shirley and the Christmas Bush shortened the length of the high pressure air tank and the low pressure water tank by half, leaving the top half of the column free to hold the flouwen in the ammonia-water mixture they prefer. A glass window now replaces the metal inspection and cleaning port, and we can peer in at our colorful alien comrades as we step off the passway ladder rungs leading from the engineering deck onto the crew deck.

The flouwen have their own waterproof touchscreen connected to Joe, which allows them access to views seen by the Christmas Bush, any of our imps, or any of the lander's outside sensors, so they are not limited in their sensory input. It is cramped quarters for all three flouwen, however, so they take turns floating about the Beagle enclosed in their wetsuits, bothering the crew with their continual questions, and only going into their tank to rest and eat. They make the switch from their wetsuits to the tank via a flexible transfer tube Shirley rigged from their tank to the inside of the docking airlock in the center of the upper deck.

The flouwen go into the airlock in their suits, open their zipper, and stick the end of the transfer tube into their bodies. Joe opens an electronically controlled valve in the transfer line, and sucks the flouwen out of their suits and into their rest and relaxation center. The valve closes, and the airlock opens to the outside vacuum for a short time to vent the ammonia fumes away, then closes again. When the flouwen are ready to come out of the tank, the process is reversed, except that the spilled ammonia in the port is vented to the outside after the flouwen has filled up the suit and zipped it closed, but before he enters the portion of the Beagle occupied by humans.

In addition to air and water, the mass of food needed for three extra-large and extra-hungry companions is a concern. John's computations of our individual calorie rations have been ruthlessly meticulous. Arielle's needs are much higher than my own, a fact of which I am well aware.

"You're an easy keeper!" was the remark of a horse-breeder I had once loved in Argentina. He'd accompanied the words with a beautiful smile and an affectionate pat, but I'd left the next day.

During our shift, David and I began, with James, our strictest examination and checkout of the computer controlled systems aboard the Beagle. While the Christmas Bush surveyed, inch by inch, the exterior and interior of the plane, David and I started with the launch sequence. We were proceeding steadily, when, in almost apologetic tones, James interrupted.

"The Christmas Bush informs me that latch 0079 will not open."

We looked at each other, then at the screens, in dismay. Quickly we drifted upward to examine the faulty latch, which had jammed shut a storage compartment.

"Damn!" said David. "It's not serious, but it didn't show up on my routine scan!"

"Nor on mine," I agreed regretfully. Together we pried open the latch with tools from the in-flight maintenance kit. This compartment is important to have accessible, as it contains the spacesuits needed for outside repair work and the launching of the commsats.

"Now, we've got to get the thing relatched and workable. I'll get Shirley," David decided. This was a good choice; no one is better than she at repairing this sort of thing so that it stays repaired. Then James summoned us to another possible problem, this time in one of the landing jets.

"Arielle's the one we want for this," we decided, and once again, we were successful in correcting the problem.

Arielle looked at the outputs of the engineering sensors for the recalcitrant jet, and fired it three times in quick succession, which cleared it beautifully.

"Vapor bubble," she said succinctly, and drifted back to the galley.

Thus our tests and inspection continued, and will do so right up until launch. Every seal, every filter for air and water, every measuring device and evaluating recorder need to be in the perfect condition they were originally, although the lander has hung here unused for nearly fifty years. We must be sure nothing has deteriorated or altered, even so slightly that, as with the latch, no indication of malfunction had registered with James.

At the conclusion of my shift today I was satisfied that every part of the computer system aboard the Beagle is in excellent working order. David and I have gone through the sequences, from our launch, through the deployment of the satellites, to our landing on Zuni, and our return to Prometheus. Shirley and Arielle have gone through the same procedures, independently, and James has monitored every step.

When I came off duty I was ready for a quiet meal. I elected to have the comfort of a bowl of porridge; perversely, I had become fond of this innocent food when I discovered how it freed me from the nuisance of hunger in a busy day, and a supply of the humble grain was part of my personal stores, periodically renewed by means of a special planting by the hydroponics crew. Along with an equal supply of barley, and the fiery chili with which the Christmas Bush could supply me on demand, my needs were met most fully. I took the bowl along the corridor, and hearing no sound, went into the big lounge area on Prometheus. I was surprised to see George there, alone on the big sofa, staring out the three-by-four meter window. The panoramic view was spectacular—Zuni below, Gargantua to one side, and nearly all the moons visible and fully illuminated by Barnard behind us. He glanced quickly at me and smiled as I settled slowly down beside him.

"Well, Reiki! I hope that's one of your special meals you have there—if all continues well, your next may be one of the camping creations aboard the Beagle."

"I'll enjoy that," I said sincerely. "Are we as nearly ready as that?"

"Everyone says so except Jinjur," he grinned. "And I expect she'd say so too, if I could get her attention. I really think she has launched herself, and is too many miles away to hear me. I miss her already!"

He returned his gaze to the swirling cloud patterns of Zuni visible through the viewport. I have been so absorbed in getting ready to make this trip, and I know we will be so busy on the trip itself—it felt strange just to sit and stare, with quiet detachment, at our destination. So must early explorers have felt, as their small ships headed close inshore to foreign lands. Gradually most of the rest of the crew joined us, content to share in the silence.

It was late when George slowly rose, stretched, and said in his most ponderous tones, "Explorers of Zuni, I sincerely trust you will follow the magnificent precedent, set so long ago by the dauntless explorer Joshua Slocum, after he waded ashore on the small uncharted island he discovered off the coast of South America . . ."

We sat, stunned, searching our memories. Richard said, slowly, "Wait. Didn't he put up a sign  . . .?"

"Yes," said George firmly. "Keep Off The Grass!"

It was time to go to bed.

 

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Framed