There were three Empresses of Mars.
The
first one was a bar at the Settlement. The second was the lady who ran
the bar; though her title was strictly informal, having been bestowed
on her by the regular customers, and her domain extended no further
than the pleasantly gloomy walls of the only place you could get beer
on the Tharsis Bulge.
The third one was the Queen of England.
One: The Big Red Balloon
What were the British doing on Mars?
For
one thing, they had no difficulty calculating with metric figures. For
another, their space exploration effort had not been fueled primarily
by a military industrial complex. This meant that it had never received
infusions of taxpayers’ money on the huge scale of certain other
nations, but also meant that its continued existence had been
unaffected by the inconvenient disappearance of enemies. Without the
necessity of offworld missile bases, the major powers’ interest in
colonizing space had quite melted away. This left plenty of room for
the private sector.
There was only one question, then: was there money on Mars?
There
had definitely been money on Luna. The British Lunar Company had done
quite well by its stockholders, with the proceeds from its mining and
tourism divisions. Luna had been a great place to channel societal
malcontents as well, guaranteeing a work force of rugged individualists
and others who couldn’t fit in Down Home without medication.
But
Luna was pretty thoroughly old news now and no longer anywhere near as
profitable as it had been, thanks to the miners’ strikes and the
litigation with the Ephesian Church over the Diana of Luna incident.
Nor was it romantic anymore: its sterile silver valleys were becoming
domesticated, domed over with tract housing for all the clerks the BLC
needed. Bureaucrats and missionaries had done for Luna as a frontier.
The
psychiatric hospitals were filling up with unemployed rugged
individualists again. Profit margins were down. The BLC turned its
thoughtful eyes to Mars.
Harder
to get to than Luna, but nominally easier to colonize. Bigger, but on
the other hand no easy gravity well with which to ship ore down to
Earth. This ruled out mining for export as a means of profit. And as
for low-gravity experiments, they were cheaper and easier to do on
Luna. What, really, had Mars to offer to the hopeful capitalist?
Only the prospect of terraforming. And terraforming would cost a lot of money and a lot of effort, with the successful result being a place slightly less hospitable than Outer Mongolia in the dead of winter.
But what are spin doctors for?
So
the British Arean Company had been formed, with suitably orchestrated
media fanfare. Historical clichés were dusted off and repackaged to
look shiny-new. Games and films were produced to create a public
appetite for adventure in rocky red landscapes. Clever advertising did
its best to convince people they’d missed a golden opportunity by not
buying lots on Luna when the land up there was dirt cheap, but
intimated that they needn’t kick themselves any longer: a second chance
was coming for an even better deal!
And so forth and so on.
It
all had the desired effect. A lot of people gave the British Arean
Company a great deal of money in return for shares of stock that,
technically speaking, weren’t worth the pixels with which they were
impressively depicted in old-engraving style. The big red balloon was
launched. Missions to Mars were launched, a domed base was built, and
actual scientists were sent out to the new colony along with the
better-socially adapted inhabitants of two or three hospitals. So were
the members of an incorporated clan, as a goodwill gesture in honor of
the most recent treaty with the Celtic Federation. They brought certain
institutions the BAC officially forbade, like polluting industries and
beast slavery, but conceded were necessary to survival on a frontier.
So
all began together the vast and difficult work of setting up the
infrastructure for terraforming, preparing the way for wholesale human
colonization.
Then
there was a change of government, which coincided with the BAC
discovering that the fusion generators they had shipped to Mars
wouldn’t work unless they were in a very strong electromagnetic field,
and Mars, it seemed, didn’t have much of one. This meant that powering
life support alone would cost very much more than anyone had thought it
would.
Not
only that, the lowland canyons where principal settlement had been
planned turned out to channel winds with devastating velocity. Only in
the Tharsis highlands, where the air was thinner and colder, was it
possible to erect a structure that wouldn’t be scoured away by
sandstorms within a week. The BAC discovered this after several
extremely costly mistakes.
The balloon burst.
Not
with a bang and shreds flying everywhere, exactly; more like a very
fast leak, so it sort of dwindled down to an ignominious little
lopsided thing without much air in it. Just like the dome of the
Settlement Base.
So
a lot of people were stuck up there without the money to come home, and
they had to make the best of things. Under the circumstances, it seemed
best to continue on with the job.
Mary
Griffith woke alone that morning, though she did not always do so. She
lay for a while in the dark, listening to the quiet, which was not the
same thing as silence: low hum of the jenny and a few snores drifting
from the other lofts tucked in under the curve of the dome like so many
swallows’ nests. No coughing. No quarreling. No fretful clunking to
tell her that Three Tank needed its valves unblocked yet again.
Smiling
to herself, she rolled out of her bedclothes and tossed the ladder over
the side, so descending nimbly to meet the day. She was a compactly
built and muscular little woman of a certain age. Her ancestors, most
of them coal miners, had passed along with other hardy genetic
characteristics a barrel chest, which gave her considerable bosom a
certain massive foundation, and Martian gravity contributed in its own
way to make Mother Griffith’s Knockers famous throughout the
Settlement.
Having
sent the ladder back up on its reel and tied off the line neat as any
sailor, she set the stove to heating and pumped a kettle of water. The
water came up reluctantly, as it always did, rust-colored, strangling
and spitting slush from the pipe, but it boiled clear; and as she sat
and sipped her tea Mary watched the steam rise like a ghost in the dry
cold air.
The
visible phantom ascended and dissipated, reaching the lofts and sending
its message to the other sleepers, who were pulled awake by its
moistness as irresistibly as though it was the smell of eggs and bacon,
were they back on Earth. Soon she heard them tossing in their blankets,
heard a racking cough or a whispered exchange. She sighed, bidding
goodbye to the last bit of early-morning calm. Another day begun.
She got up and rolled back the shade on the big window, and the sullen purple dawn flared in and lit her house.
"Oh,
my, that’s bright," said someone plaintively, high up in the shadows,
and a moment later Mr. Morton came down on his line, in his long black
thermals looking uncommonly like a hesitant spider.
"Good
morning, Mr. Morton," said Mary, in English because his panCelt was
still halting, and "Good morning, Ma’am," said he, and winced as his
bare feet hit the cold sanded floor. Half-hopping he picked his way to
the stove and poured his tea, inhaling the steam gratefully; brought it
back to the long stone table and seated himself, wincing again as his
knees knocked into the table supports. He stirred a good lump of butter
into the tea and regarded Mary through the steam, looking anxious.
"Er . . . what would you like me to do today?" he inquired.
Mary sighed and summoned patience.
He
was nominally her employee, and had been so since that fateful
afternoon when he, like so many others, had realized that his
redundancy pay did not amount to half the fare back to Earth.
"Well, you didn’t finish the scouring on Five Tank yesterday, did you?" she said.
"No," he agreed sadly.
"Then I think perhaps you had better do that, Mr. Morton."
"Okay," he said.
It
was not his fault that he had to be told what to do. He had spent most
of his adult life in hospital and a good bit of his childhood too, ever
since (having at the age of ten been caught reading a story by Edgar
Allan Poe) he had been diagnosed as Eccentric.
Mind
you, it wasn’t all jam and tea in hospital. Even the incurably twisted
had to be of some use to society, and Mr. Morton had been brilliant at
the chemistry, design, and fabrication of cast-stone structures for
industrial use. That was why he had been recruited by the BAC, arriving
on Mars with a single black duffel containing all he owned and a heart
full of dreams of romantic adventure.
Having
designed and fabricated all the structures the BAC needed, however, he
had been summarily fired. He had gone wandering away through the Tubes
and wound up at the Empress, his white thin face whiter still for
shock, and sat at a dark table drinking batch for eight hours before
Mary had asked him if he was ever going home, and then he had burst
into tears.
So she had given him a job. Mary had been fired, herself. Not for redundancy, though, really; for being too Ethnic.
"Five
Tank, yes, and in the afternoon we can brew another pale ale," she
decided, "Or maybe a good oatmeal stout, what do you think?" and Mr.
Morton brightened at that.
"Have we got any oats?" he inquired.
"If
She provides them," Mary said, and he nodded sagely. Mr. Morton wasn’t
an Ephesian himself, but he was willing to concede that there was
Somebody out there responsive to human prayer, and She certainly seemed
to hear Mary’s.
"Something will turn up," he said, and Mary nodded.
And
when the day had well and truly begun–when the lodgers had all
descended from their alcoves and gone trudging away down the Tubes to
their varied employments, when Mary’s daughters and their respective
gentlemen callers had been roused and set smiling or sullen about the
day’s tasks, when the long stone counter had been polished to a dull
shine and the heating unit under One Tank was filling the air with a
grateful warmth, and Mary herself stood behind the bar drawing the
first ale of the day, to be poured into the offering basin in the
little shrine with its lumpy image of the Good Mother herself, dim-lit
by her little flickering votive wire–even in that moment when the rich
hoppy stuff hit the parched stone and foamed extravagantly, for CO2
is never lacking on Mars–even just then the Lock doors swung open and
in came the answer to prayer, being Padraig Moylan with a hundredweight
sack of Clan Morrigan oats and two tubs of butter in trade.
Mr.
Moylan was thanked with grace and sincerity, the clan’s bar tab
recalculated accordingly. Soon he was settled in a cozy alcove with a
shot of red single malt and Mona, the best listener among Mary’s
children. Mary, having stashed the welcome barter in a locker, set
about her slow eternal task of sweeping the red sand from her tables.
She could hear Mr. Morton singing as he worked with his scouring pads,
his dreamy lyric baritone echoing inside Five Tank, reverberating "Some
Enchanted Evening."
Mary
ticked him off her mental list of Things to be Seen To, and surveyed
the rest of her house as she moved down the length of the table.
There
was Alice, her firstborn, graceful as a swan and as irritable too,
loading yesterday’s beer mugs into the scouring unit. Rowan, brown and
practical, was arranging today’s mugs in neat ranks behind the bar.
Worn by scouring, the mugs had a lovely silkiness on them now, shiny as
pink marble, dwindling to a thinness and translucency that meant that
soon they’d be too delicate for bar use and more would have to be cast.
(Though when that happened, the old ones could be boxed up and sent out
to the souvenir store in the landing port, to be sold as Finest Arean
Porcelain to such guests as came to inspect the BAC public facilities.)
Over
behind Four Tank, the shadows had retreated before a little mine-lamp,
and by its light Chiring and Manco had a disassembled filtering unit
spread out, cleaning away the gudge with careful paddles. The gudge too
was a commodity, to be traded as fertilizer, which was a blessing
because it accumulated with dreadful speed in the bottom of the
fermentation tanks. It was a combination of blown sand, yeast slurry
and the crawly stuff that grew on the ceiling, and it had a haunting
and deathless smell, but mixed with manure and liberally spread over
thin poor Martian soil, it defied superoxidants and made the barley
grow.
And everyone agreed that getting the barley to grow was of vital importance.
So
Chiring and Manco sang too, somewhat muffled behind recyclable cloth
kerchiefs tied over their mouths and noses, joining the last bit of
"Some Enchanted Evening" in their respective gruff bass and eerie
tenor. A tiny handcam whirred away at them from its place on the table,
adding footage to Chiring’s ongoing documentary series for the Kathmandu Post.
Mary nodded with satisfaction that all was well and glanced ceilingward
at the last member of her household, who was only now rappelling down
from the lowest of the lofts.
"Sorry,"
said the Heretic, ducking her head in awkward acknowledgment of
tardiness and hurrying off to the kitchen, where she set about denting
pans with more than usual effort to make up for being late. Mary
followed after, for the Heretic was another problem case requiring
patience.
The
Heretic had been an Ephesian sister until she had had some kind of
accident, about which few details were known, but which had left her
blind in one eye and somehow gotten her excommunicated. She had been
obliged to leave her convent under something of a cloud; and how she
had wound up here on Mars was anybody’s guess. She stammered, jittered,
and dropped things, but she was at least not the proselytizing kind of
heretic, keeping her blasphemous opinions to herself. She was also a
passable cook, so Mary had agreed to take her on at the Empress.
"Are
you all right?" asked Mary, peering into the darkness of the kitchen,
where the Heretic seemed to be chopping freeze-dried soy protein at
great speed.
"Yes."
"Don’t
you want the lights on? You’ll cut off a finger," said Mary, turning
the lights on, and the Heretic yelped and covered her good eye,
swiveling the ocular replacement on Mary in a reproachful kind of way.
"Ow," she said.
"Are you hung over?"
"No," said the Heretic, cautiously uncovering her eye, and Mary saw that it was red as fire.
"Oh, dear. Did you have the dreams again?"
The Heretic stared through her for a moment before saying, in a strange and breathless voice, "Out
of the ground came scarlet flares, each one bursting, a heart’s beacon,
and He stood above the night and the red swirling cold sand and in His
hand held up the Ace of Diamonds. It burned like the flares. He offered
it forth, laughing and said: Can you dig it?"
"Okay," said Mary, after a moment’s silence.
"Sorry," said the Heretic, turning back to her cutting board.
"That’s all right," said Mary. "Can you get luncheon on by eleven?"
"Yes."
"Oh, good," said Mary, and exited the kitchen.
Lady, grant me an ordinary day,
she begged silently, for the last time the Heretic had said something
bizarre like that, all manner of strange things had happened.
Yet
the day rolled on in its accustomed groove as ordinary as you please.
At noon, the luncheon crowd came in, the agricultural workers from the
clan and contract laborers from the Settlement, who were either Sherpas
like Chiring or Inkas like Manco; few English frequented the Empress of
Mars, for all their Queen might smile from its sign.
After
noon, when the laboring men and women went trooping back to their
shifts through the brown whirling day, and the wind had reached its
accustomed hissing howl, there was too much to do to worry. There were
plates and bowls to be scoured, there was beer to brew, and there was
the constant tinkering necessary to keep all the machines running, lest
the window’s forcefield fail against the eternal sandblast, among other
things.
So Mary
had forgotten all about any dire forebodings by the time the blessed
afternoon interval of peace came round, and she retired to the best of
her tables and put her feet up.
"Mum."
So
much for peace. She opened one eye and looked at Rowan, who was
standing there gesturing urgently at the communications console.
"Mr. Cochevelou sends his compliments, and would like to know if he might come up the Tube to talk about something," she said.
"Hell,"
said Mary, leaping to her feet. It was not that she did not like Mr.
Cochevelou, clan chieftain (indeed, he was more than a customer and
patron); but she had a pretty good idea what it was he wanted to
discuss.
"Tell
him, ‘of course,’ and then go down and bring up a bottle of the Black
Label," she said. She went to fetch a cushion for Mr. Cochevelou’s
favorite seat.
Cochevelou
must have been waiting with his fist on the receiver, for it seemed no
more than a minute later he came shouldering his way through the Tube,
emerging from the airlock beard first, and behind him three of his
household too, lifting their masks and blinking.
"Luck
on this house," said Cochevelou hoarsely, shaking the sand from his
suit, and his followers mumbled an echo, and Mary noted philosophically
the dunelets piling up around their boots.
"Welcome to the Empress, Mr. Cochevelou. Your usual?"
"Bless
you, Ma’am, yes," said Cochevelou, and she took his arm and led him
away, jerking a thumb at Mona to indicate she should take a broom to
the new sand. Mona sighed and obeyed without good grace, but her mother
was far too busy trying to read Cochevelou’s expression to notice.
Between
the beard and the forge-soot, there wasn’t much of Cochevelou’s face to
see; but his light eyes had a shifting look to them today, at once
hopeful and uneasy. He watched Mary pour him a shot of Black Label,
rubbing his thick fingers across the bridge of his nose and leaving
pale streaks there.
"It’s like this, Ma’am," he said abruptly. "We’re sending Finn home."
"Oh," said Mary, filling another glass. "Congratulations, Mr. Finn."
"It’s
on account of I’m dying without the sea," said Finn, a smudgy creature
in a suit that had been buckled tight and was still too big.
"And with the silicosis," added Cochevelou.
"That’s
beside the point," said Finn querulously. "I dream at night of the flat
wet beach and the salt mist hanging low, and the white terns wheeling
above the white wave. Picking dulse from the tidepools where the water
lies clear as glass–"
There were involuntary groans from the others, and one of them booted Finn pretty hard in the ankle to make him stop.
"And,
see, he goes on like that and drives the rest of us mad with his
glass-clear water and all," said Cochevelou, raising his voice slightly
as he lifted his cup and saluted Mary. "So what it comes down to is,
we’ve finally saved enough to send one of us home and it’s got to be
him, you see? Your health, Ma’am."
He drank, and Mary drank, and when they had both drawn breath, she said:
"What’s to happen to his Allotment?"
She had cut straight to the heart of the matter, and Cochevelou smiled in a grimacing kind of way.
Under
the terms of the Mutual Use Treaty, which had been hammered out during
that momentary thaw in relations between England and the Celtic
Federation, every settler on Mars had received an Allotment of acreage
for private terraforming. With the lease went the commitment to keep
the land under cultivation, at the risk of its reverting to the BAC.
The
BAC, long since having repented its rash decision to invite so many
undesirables to settle on Mars, had gotten into the habit of grabbing
back land it did not feel was being sufficiently utilized.
"Well, that’s the question," said Cochevelou. "It’s twenty long acres of fine land, Ma’am."
"Five in sugar beets and fifteen in the best barley," said Finn.
"With
the soundest roof ever built and its own well, and the sweetest
irrigation pipes ever laid," said Cochevelou. "You wouldn’t mind
drinking out of them, I can tell you."
Mary
became aware that dead silence had fallen in her house, that all her
family were poised motionless with brooms or trays of castware to hear
what would be said next. Barley was the life of the house. It was grown
on cold and bitter Mars because it would grow anywhere, but it didn’t
grow well on the wretched bit of high-oxidant rock clay Mary had been
allotted.
"What a pity if it was to revert to the BAC," she said noncommittally.
"We
thought so, too," said Cochevelou, turning the cup in his fingers.
"Because of course they’d plough that good stuff under and put it in
soy, and wouldn’t that be a shame? So of course we thought of offering
it to you, first, Ma’am."
"How much?" said Mary at once.
"Four thousand punts Celtic," Cochevelou replied.
Mary narrowed her eyes. "How much of that would you take in trade?"
There was a slight pause.
"The
BAC have offered us four grand in cash," said Cochevelou, in a somewhat
apologetic tone. "You see. But we’d much rather have you as a neighbor, wouldn’t we? So if there’s any way you could possibly come up with the money. . . ."
"I haven’t got it," said Mary bluntly, and she meant it too. Her small economy ran almost entirely on barter and goodwill.
"Aw,
now, surely you’re mistaken about that," said Cochevelou. "You could
take up a collection, maybe. All the good workers love your place, and
wouldn’t they reach into their hearts and their pockets for a timely
contribution? And some of your ex-BACs, haven’t they got a little
redundancy pay socked away in the bottom of the duffel? If you could
even scrape together two-thirds for a down, we’d work out the most
reasonable terms for you!"
Mary
hesitated. She knew pretty well how much her people had, and it didn’t
amount to a thousand punts even if they presold their bodies to the
xenoforensic studies lab. But the Lady might somehow provide, might She
not?
"Perhaps I ought to view the property," she said.
"It
would be our pleasure," said Cochevelou, grinning white in his sooty
beard, and his people exchanged smiles, and Mary thought to herself: Careful.
But
she rose and suited up, and fitted her mask on tight, and went for a
stroll through the airlock with Cochevelou and his people.
The
Settlement was quite a bit more now than the single modest dome that
had sheltered the first colonists, though that still rose higher than
any other structure, and it did have that lovely vizio top so its
inhabitants could see the stars, and which gave it a rather Space-Age
Moderne look. It wasted heat, though, and who the hell cared enough
about two tiny spitspeck moons to venture out in the freezing night and
peer upward at them?
The
Tubes had a nice modern look too, where the English maintained them,
with lots of transparencies that gave onto stunning views of the Red
Planet.
To be
strictly accurate, it was only a red planet in places. When Mary had
come to live there, her first impression had been of an endless
cinnamon-colored waste. Now she saw every color but blue, from
primrose-curry-tomcat-ochre to flaming persimmon-vermilion through
bloodred and so into ever more livery shades of garnet and rust. There
were even greens, both the subdued yellowy olive khaki in the rock and
the exuberant rich green of the covered acreage.
And
Finn’s twenty long acres were green indeed, rich as emerald with a
barley crop that had not yet come into its silver beard. Mary clanked
through the airlock after Cochevelou and stopped, staring.
"The Crystal Palace itself," said Finn proudly, with a wave of his hand.
She
pulled off her mask and inhaled. The air stank, of course, from the
methane; but it was rich and wet too, and with a certain sweetness. All
down the long tunnel roofed with industrial-grade vizio, the barley
grew tall, out to that distant point of shade change that must be sugar
beet.
"Oh, my," she said, giddy already with the oxygen.
"You see?" said Cochevelou. "Worth every penny of the asking price."
"If
I had it," she retorted, making an effort at shrewdness. It was a
beautiful holding, one that would give her all the malted barley she
could use and plenty to trade on the side or even to sell. . . .
"No
wonder the English want this," she said, and her own words echoed in
her ears as she regarded the landscape beyond the vizio, the low-domed
methane hell of the clan’s cattle pens, the towering pipe-maze of
Cochevelou’s ironworks.
"No
wonder the English want this," she repeated, turning to look Cochevelou
in the eye. "If they own this land, it divides Clan Morrigan’s holdings
smack in two, doesn’t it?"
"Too
right," agreed Finn. "And then they’ll file actions to have the cowshed
and the ironworks moved as nuisances, see and–ow," he concluded, as he
was kicked again.
"And
it’s all a part of their secret plot to drive us out," said Cochevelou
rather hastily. "You see? They’ve gone and made us an offer we can’t
refuse. Now we’ve broke the ground and manured it for them, they’ve
been just waiting and waiting for us to give up and go home, so they
can grab it all. The day after we filed the papers to send Finn back,
bastardly Inspector Baldwin shows up on our property."
"Didn’t his face fall when he saw what a nice healthy crop we had growing here!" said Finn, rubbing his ankle.
"So
he couldn’t condemn it and get the lease revoked, you see?" Cochevelou
continued, giving Finn a black look. "Because obviously it ain’t
abandoned, it’s gone into our collective’s common ownership. But it
wasn’t eight hours later he came around with that offer of four
thousand for the land. And if we take it, yes, it’s a safe bet they’ll
start bitching and moaning about our cattle and all."
"Don’t sell," said Mary. "Or sell to one of your own."
"Sweetheart,
you know we’ve always thought of you as one of our own," said
Cochevelou soupily. "Haven’t we? But who in our poor clan would ever be
able to come up with that kind of money? And as for not selling, why,
you and I can see that having the BAC in here would be doom and
destruction and (which is worse) lawsuits inevitable somewhere down the
road. But it isn’t up to me. Most of our folk will only be able to see
that big heap of shining BAC brass they’re being offered. And they’ll
vote to take it, see?"
"We
could do a lot with that kind of money," sighed Matelot, he who had
been most active kicking Finn. "Buy new generators, which we sorely
need. More vizio, which as you know is worth its weight in transparent
gold. Much as we’d hate to sell to strangers . . ."
"But if you were to buy the land, we’d have our cake and be able to eat it too, you see?" Cochevelou explained.
Mary
eyed him resentfully. She saw, well enough: whichever way the dice
fell, she was going to lose. If the Clan Morrigan acreage shrank, her
little economy would go out of balance. No barley, no beer.
"You’ve got me in a cleft stick, Cochevelou," she told him, and he looked sad.
"Aren’t
we both in a cleft stick, and you’re just in the tightest part?" he
replied. "But all you have to do is come up with the money, and we’re
both riding in high cotton, and the BAC can go off and fume. Come on
now, darling, you don’t have to make up your mind right away! We’ve got
thirty days. Go on home and talk it over with your people, why don’t
you?"
She clapped her mask on and stamped out through the airlock, muttering.
Mary
had been accustomed, all her life, to dealing with emergencies. When
her father had announced that he was leaving and she’d have to come
home from University to take care of her mother, she had coped. She’d
found a job, and a smaller apartment, where she and her mother had
lived in an uneasy state of truce until her mother had taken all those
sleeping pills. Mary had coped again: buried her mother, found a still
smaller apartment, and taken night University courses until she’d got
her doctorate in xenobotany.
When
Alice’s father had died, Mary had coped. She’d summoned all her
confidence, and found a prestigious research and development job that
paid well enough to keep Alice out of the Federation orphanage.
When
Rowan’s father had deserted, she’d still coped, though he’d waltzed
with most of her money; two years’ hard work taking extra projects had
gotten her on her feet again.
When
Mona’s father had decided he preferred boys, she had coped without a
moment’s trouble to her purse if not her heart, secure in her own
finances now with lessons hard-learned. And when the BAC headhunters
had approached her with a job offer, it had seemed as though it was the
Lady’s reward for all her years of coping.
A
glorious adventure on another world! The chance to explore, to
classify, and to enshrine her name forever in the nomenclature of
Martian algae! The little girls had listened with round eyes, and only
Alice had sulked and wept about leaving her friends, and only for a
little while. So they’d all set off together bravely and become
Martians, and the girls had adapted in no time, spoiled rotten as the
only children on Mars.
And
Mary had five years of happiness as a valued member of a scientific
team, respected for her expertise, finding more industrial applications
for Cryptogametes gryffyuddi than George Washington Carver had found for the peanut.
But
when she had discovered all there was to discover about useful lichens
on Mars (and in five years she had pretty much exhausted the subject),
the BAC had no more use for her.
The
nasty interview with General Director Rotherhithe had been both
unexpected and brief. Her morals were in question, it had seemed. She
had all those resource-consuming children, and while that sort of thing
might be acceptable in a Celtic Federation country, Mars belonged to
England. She was known to indulge in controlled substances, also no
crime in the Federation, but certainly morally wrong. And the BAC had
been prepared to tolerate her, ah, religion in the hopes that it
would keep her from perpetuating certain other kinds of immorality,
which had unfortunately not been the case–
"What,
because I have men to my bed?" Mary had demanded, unfortunately not
losing her grasp of English. "You dried-up dirty-minded old stick, I’ll
bet you’d wink at it if I had other women, wouldn’t you? Bloody
hypocrite! I’ve heard you keep a Lesbian Holopeep in your office
cabinet–"
Academic
communities are small and full of gossip, and even smaller and more
full of gossip under a biodome, and secrets cannot be kept at all. So Julie and Sylvia Take Deportment Lessons From Ms. Lash had been giggled at, but never mentioned out loud. Until now.
General
Director Rotherhithe had had a choking fit and gone a nice shade of
lilac, and Sub-Director Thorpe had taken over to say that It was
therefore with infinite regret, et cetera. . . .
And Mary had had to cope again.
She
hadn’t cared that she couldn’t afford the fare home; she loved Mars.
She had decided she was damned if she was going to be thrown off. So,
with her final paycheck, she’d gone into business for herself.
She’d
purchased a dome from the Federation colonists, a surplus shelter
originally used for livestock; and though the smell took some weeks to
go away even in the dry thin air, the walls were sound and warm, and
easily remodeled with berths for lodgers.
Chiring,
who had had his contract canceled with the BAC for writing highly
critical articles about them and sending the columns home to the
Kathmandu Post, came to her because he too had nowhere else to
go. He was a decent mechanic, and helped her repair the broken well
pump and set up the generators.
Manco
Inka, who had been asked to leave the BAC community because he was
discovered to be a (sort of) practicing Christian, brought her a
stone-casting unit in exchange for rent, and soon she’d been able to
cast her five fine brewing tanks and ever so many cups, bowls, and
dishes. Cochevelou himself had stood her the first load of barley for
malting.
And once it was known that she had both beer and pretty daughters, the Empress of Mars was in business.
For
five years now, it had stood defiantly on its rocky bit of upland
slope, the very picture of what a cozy country tavern on Mars ought to
be: squat low dome grown all over with lichen patches most picturesque,
except on the weather-wall where the prevailing winds blasted it bald
with an unceasing torrent of sand, so it had to be puttied constantly
with red stonecast leavings to keep it whole there. Mary swapped
resources with the clan, with the laborers, with even a few stealthy
BAC personnel for fuel and food, and an economy had been born.
And now it was threatened, and she was going to have to cope again.
"Holy Mother, why is it always something?"
she growled into her mask, kicking through drifts as she stormed back
along the Tube. "Could I count on You for even one year where nothing
went wrong for once? I could not, indeed.
"And
now I’m expected to pull Cochevelou’s smoky black chestnuts out of the
fire for him, the brute, and where am I to come up with the money?
Could You even grant me one little miracle? Oh, no, I’m strong enough
to cope on my own, aren’t I? I’ll solve everyone’s problems so they
needn’t develop the spine to do it themselves, won’t I? Bloody hell!"
She came to a transparency and glared out.
Before
her was Dead Snake Field, a stretch of rock distinguished by a cairn
marking the last resting place of Cochevelou’s pet ball python, which
had survived the trip to Mars only to escape from its terrarium and
freeze to death Outside. Initial hopes that it might be thawed and
revived had been dashed when Finn, in an attempt at wit, had set the
coiled icicle on his head like a hat and it had slipped off and fallen
to the floor, shattering.
There
in the pink distance, just under the melted slope of Mons Olympus, was
the sad-looking semicollapsed vizio wall of Mary’s own few long acres,
the nasty little Allotment she’d been granted almost as a nose-thumbing
with her redundancy pay. Its spidery old Aeromotors gave it a
deceptively rural look. With all the abundant freaky Martian geology to
choose from, the BAC had managed to find her a strip of the most
sterile clay imaginable; and though she was unable to farm it very
effectively, they had never shown any inclination to snatch it back.
"There’s another joke," she snarled. "Fine fertile fields, is it? Oh, damn the old purse-mouth pervert!"
She stalked on and shortly came to the Tube branch leading to her allotment, and went down to see how her own crops were doing.
Plumes of mist were leaking from the airlock seal; now that needed replacing too, something else
broken she couldn’t afford to fix. There were tears in her eyes as she
stepped through and lowered her mask, to survey that low yellow
wretched barley, fluttering feebly in the oxygen waves. The contrast
with Finn’s lush fields was too much. She sat down on an overturned
bucket and wept, and her tears amounted to one scant drop of water
spattering on the sere red clay, fizzing like peroxide.
When
her anger and despair were wept out, she remained staring numbly at the
fast-drying spot. The clay was the exact color of terracotta.
"I wonder," she said, "whether we could make pots out of the damned stuff."
She
didn’t need pots, of course; she could stonecast all the household
vessels she needed out of Martian dust. What else was clay good for?
Sculpting
things, she thought to herself. Works of art? Useful bric-a-brac?
Little tiles with SOUVENIR OF MARS stamped into them? Though she had no
artistic talent herself, maybe one of her people had, and then what if
they could get the Export Bazaar to take pieces on consignment? The
Arean Porcelain sold pretty well.
"What
the hell," she said, wiping her eyes, and standing up she righted the
bucket and fetched a spade from the tool rack. She dug down a meter or
so through the hardpan, gasping with effort even in the (comparatively)
rich air, and filled the bucket with stiff chunks of clay. Then she put
on her mask again and trudged home, lugging the latest hope for a few
punts.
In her
house, her family might have been frozen in their places from the
moment she’d left. On her entry they came to shamefaced hurried life
again, resuming their various household chores as though they’d been
hard at work ever since she’d left and not standing around discussing
the clan’s offer.
Mr. Morton came stalking up to her, knotting his fingers together.
"Er–Ma’am, we’ve been talking, and–"
"Here, Mama, that’s too heavy for you," said Manco, scuttling close and relieving her of the bucket. "You sit down, huh?"
"Very
kind, I’m sure," Mary said sourly, looking around. "I’ll bet not one of
you started the oatmeal stout brewing like I asked, have you? Take that
out to the ball mill," she added to Manco, pointing at the bucket. "As
long as we’ve got all this damned clay, let’s put it to good use and
make something out of it."
"Yes, Mama."
"Here, you sit down–" Mr. Morton gestured her toward a chair with flapping motions of his long arms.
"I
can’t sit down! I have too much to do. Holy Mother, Alice, that heating
unit should have been turned on an hour ago! Do I have to see to
everything around here?"
"Water’s heating now, Mum," Alice cried, running back from Tank Three.
"Well, but I wanted to tell you about our ideas–if it would be all right–" said Mr. Morton.
"I’m
sure it will be when I’m not so busy, Mr. Morton," said Mary, grabbing
a push broom and going after the sand again. "Rowan, did you and
Chiring reinstall the filter the new way we discussed?"
"Yes, Mum, and–"
"See,
I thought we might raise four thousand pounds easily if we put on a
sort of cabaret in here," Mr. Morton continued earnestly. "Like a
dinner show? I could sing and do dramatic recitals, and–"
"What
a very nice idea, Mr. Morton, and I’m sure I’ll think about it, but in
the meanwhile I need you to get that sack of oats out of the storage
locker."
"And I thought I could do a striptease," said Mona.
Three broom-pushes before the meaning sank in, and then:
"Striptease?"
Mary shouted. "Are you mad? When the BAC already sees us as a cesspit
of immorality and substance abuse? That’d really frost the cake!"
Mona pouted. "But you said when you were at University–"
"That was a long time ago and I needed the money, and–"
"And we need the money now! We never have any money!"
"Ladies, please–" said poor Mr. Morton, his face pink for once.
"The
oats, Mr. Morton. Mona, you will keep your clothes on until you come of
age and that’s all that will be said on the subject, do you understand?"
"What’s
this?" said Manco, emerging from the utility area and holding out
something in his hand. He had an odd look on his face. "This was in the
bottom of the bucket. The clay cracked apart and–"
"It’s a rock," said Mary, glancing at it. "Pitch it out."
"I don’t think it’s a rock, Mama."
"He’s right," said Chiring, squinting at it. "It looks more like a crystal."
"Then
put it on the back bar with the fossils and we’ll ask one of the
geologists about it. What was that?" Mary looked up suspiciously.
"Who’s that? Who just threw up?"
"It was me," said Alice miserably, emerging from behind the bar, and Rowan ran to her with a bar towel.
Mary
ground her teeth. "Food poisoning. Just what we all needed. That
devil-worshipping looney–" She started for the kitchen with blood in
her eye, but was stopped in her tracks as Rowan said quietly:
"It’s not food poisoning, Mum."
Mary
did an about-face, staring at her daughters. There was a profound
moment of silence in which she continued staring, and the three men
present wondered what was going on, until Alice wailed:
"Well, I didn’t think you could get pregnant on Mars!"
So
in all the excitement, the crystal was stuck on the back bar and
forgotten until that evening, when the Brick came in from his polar run.
The
Brick was so named because he resembled one. Not only was he vast and
tall and wide in his quilted Hauler’s jumpsuit, he was the color of a
brick as well, though what shade he might be under years of high-impact
red dust was anybody’s guess.
There
was red grit between his teeth when he grinned, as he did now on
emerging from the airlock, and his bloodshot red eyes widened in the
pleasant evening darkness of the Empress. He lifted his head and sucked
in air through a nose flattened as a gorilla’s from years of collisions
with fists, boots, steering wheels, and (it was rumored) hospital
orderlies’ foreheads. He had been on Mars a long, long time.
"Damn,
I love that smell," he howled in English, striding to the bar and
slapping down his gauntlets. "Beer, onions, and soygold nuggets frying,
eh? Give me a Party Platter with Bisto and a pitcher of Foster’s."
"I’m afraid we don’t have Foster’s, sir," dithered Mr. Morton. Mary elbowed him.
"It’s what we call the Ares Lager when he’s in here," she murmured, and Mr. Morton ran off at once to fill a pitcher.
"How’s it going, Beautiful?"
"Tolerably, Mr. Brick," said Mary, sighing.
He
looked at her keenly and his voice dropped a couple of decibels when he
said, "Trouble over something? Did the BAC finally get that warrant?"
"What warrant?"
"Oh,
nothing you need to know about right now," he said casually, accepting
his pitcher of beer and drinking from it. "Not to worry, doll. Uncle
Brick hears rumors all the time, and half of ’em never pan out. As long
as the Ice Haulers want you here, you’ll stay here."
"I
suppose they’re trying to get me closed down again," said Mary. "Bad
cess to them, and what else is new? But I have other problems today."
She
told him about the day’s occurrences and he listened, sipping and
nodding meanwhile, grunting occasionally in agreement or surprise.
"Congratulations, m’dear," he said. "This’ll be the first human child born on Mars, you know that? Any idea who the father is?"
"She knows who she hasn’t
been with, at least," said Mary. "And there’ll be tests, so it’s not as
though we’ll be in suspense for long. It’s only a baby, after all. But
where am I going to get four thousand punts, I’d like to know?"
Brick rumbled meditatively, shaking his head.
" ‘Only a baby’, she says. You know they’re not having ’em Down Home any more, don’t you?"
"Oh, that’s certainly not true. I had three myself," said Mary indignantly.
"The
birth rate’s dropping, all the same," said the Brick, having another
sip of his beer. "That’s what I hear. Funny thing for a species to do
when it’s colonizing other planets, isn’t it?"
Mary
shrugged. "I’m sure it isn’t as bad as all that," she said. "Life will
go on somehow. It always does. The Goddess provides."
"I
guess so," agreed Brick, and his voice rose to a genial roar as he
hailed the Heretic, shuffling out from the kitchen with his Party
Platter. "Hey, sweetheart! You’re looking gorgeous this evening."
The
Heretic blinked at him and shuffled closer. "Hi," she said, offering
him the food. He took it in one hand and swept her close for a kiss on
the forehead.
"How’ve you been?"
"I saw the living glory burning. A bright tower in the icy waste," she said.
"That’s nice. Can I get just a little more Bisto on these fries?"
"Okay."
The
Heretic went back to the kitchen and fetched out a little saucepan of
gravy-like substance, and as she larded Brick’s dinner, Mary went on:
"If
you could see that twenty acres! It was as rich as pudding, probably
from our very own sewage we sold them, and green as anything on Earth.
Where I’m going to get the cash for it I simply do not know. Chiring
makes forty punts a week from his column in the Kathmandu Post,
of which he has kindly offered me ten per week toward the land, but
I’ve only got a month. If one of my people was a brilliant artist we
might sell some folk art out of clay, but all of them protested they’re
quite talentless, so bang goes another good idea, and I’m running out
of good ideas. Just when I thought everything had settled down to some
kind of equilibrium–"
"What’s that new thing on the back bar?" inquired Brick, slightly muffled because his mouth was full.
"Oh.
That? Wait, you were a mineralogist, weren’t you?" Mary paused, looking
over her shoulder at him as she fetched the crystal down.
"I
have been many things, m’dear," he informed her, washing down his
mouthful with more beer. "And I did take a degree in Mineralogy at the
University of Queensland once."
"Then
you have a look at it. It was in some clay I dug up this afternoon.
Maybe quartz with some cinnabar stain? Or more of the ever-present
rust? It’s a funny old thing." She tossed it over and he caught it in
his massive hand, peered at it for a long moment.
Then
he unflapped his transport suit, reached into the breast and brought
out a tiny spectrometer mounted in a headset. He slipped it on with one
hand, holding the crystal out to the light with the other. He stared
through the eyepiece for a long moment.
"Or do you think it’s some kind of agate?" said Mary.
"No,"
Brick replied, turning and turning the crystal in his hand. "Unless
this gizmo is mistaken, sweetheart, you’ve got yourself a diamond
here."
Nobody believed it. How could something that looked like a lump of frozen tomato juice be worth anything? A diamond?
Whatever it turned out to be, however, everyone agreed that the BAC must not be told.
Cochevelou
offered to trade the glorious twenty acres for the rock outright, and
in fact proposed to Mary. Smiling, she declined. But terms of sale for
the land were worked out and a deposit of ten punts was accepted, and
the transfer of title was registered with the BAC by Mr. Morton, who as
a Briton seemed less likely to annoy the authorities.
And
on the appointed day, the rock was sewn into the lining of Finn’s
thermal suit, and he was seen off to the spaceport with much cheer,
after promising faithfully to take the diamond straight to the best
dealers in Amsterdam immediately on arriving Down Home.
The
next they heard of him, however, was that he was found drowned and
smiling on the rocks at Antrim not three weeks after his homecoming, a
bottle still clutched in his hand.
Mary
shrugged. She had title to the land, and Cochevelou had ten punts a
week from her. For once, she thought to herself, she had broken even.
Two: The Richest Woman on Mars
It was the Queen’s Birthday, and Mary was hosting the Cement Kayak Regatta.
Outdoor sports were possible on Mars. Just.
Not
to the extent that the famous original advertising holo implied
(grinning man in shirtsleeves with football and micromask, standing
just outside an airlock door, captioned: "This man is actually STANDING
on the SURFACE of MARS!" though without any mention of the fact that
the holo had been taken at noon on the hottest day in summer at the
equator and that the man remained outside for exactly five seconds
before the shot was taken, after which he leaped back inside and begged
for a bottle of Visine), but possible nonetheless, especially if you
were inventive.
The
cement kayaks had been cast of the ever-present and abundant Martian
grit, and fitted at one end with tiny antigravity units. These, like so
many other things on Mars, did not work especially well, but enabled
the kayaks to float about two feet above the ground. Indoors, they
bobbed aimlessly in place, having no motive power; once pushed out an
airlock, they were at the mercy of the driving winds.
But
it was possible to deflect or direct the wind with big double-bladed
paddles made of scrap pipe and sheet metal, salvaged from the BAC’s
refuse tip. It was then possible to sail along through the air, if you
wore full Outside kit, and actually sort of steer.
So
Cement Kayaking had become a favorite sport on Mars, indeed the only
outdoor sport. An obstacle course had been set up in Dead Snake Field,
and four kayaks lurched about in it now, fighting the wind and each
other.
"Competitive
sport and the pioneer spirit," Chiring was announcing into his handcam,
a solemn talking head against a background of improbable action.
"Anachronisms on Earth, do they fulfill a vital function here on the
final frontier? Have these colonists fallen back on degrading social
violence, or is cultural evolution an ongoing process on Mars?" Nobody
answered him.
The
Tube was blocked with spectators, crowding around the transparencies to
watch. They were also shouting, which dried their throats nicely, so
the beer was selling well.
"LEFT,
RAMSAY!" howled Cochevelou, pointing vainly at the hololoop of Queen
Anne waving that served as the mid-point marker. "Oh, you stupid little
git, LEFT!"
"A Phobos Porter for you, Cochevelou?" Mary inquired cheerily. "On the house?"
"Yes,
please," he growled. Mary beckoned and the Heretic trudged back along
the line. She turned to display the castware tank she bore in its
harness on her back, and Mary selected a mug from the dangling
assortment and drew a pint with practiced ease.Cochevelou took it,
lifted his mask and gulped it down, wiping the foam from his moustache
with the back of his hand.
"Very
kind of you, I’m sure," he said bitterly. "Given the amount I’m losing
today. YOU’RE A DISGRACE TO FLUFFY’S MEMORY!" he bellowed at Ramsay.
Fluffy had been the python’s name.
"We buried evil on Mars," said the Heretic in a dreamy little voice, and nobody paid any attention to her.
"It’s
not really his fault," said Mary. "How can the poor man hope to compete
with our Manco? It’s all those extra blood vessels in his fingertips,
you know, from being born in the Andes. Gives him better control of the
paddles. Selected by Nature, as it were."
"You
must have bet a packet on him," said Cochevelou, staring as Manco swung
round Fluffy’s Cairn and sent Ramsay spinning off to the boundary with
an expert paddle-check.
"Bet?
Now, dear Mr. Cochevelou, where would I get the money to do that?" said
Mary, smiling wide behind her mask. "You’re getting every penny I earn
for Finn’s Field, so you are."
Cochevelou grimaced.
"Speak no ill of the dead and all, but if I could ever get my hands on that little bastard’s neck–" he said.
"Beer please," said one of the BAC engineers, shouldering through the crowd.
"A
pint for the English!" Mary announced, and he looked around guiltily
and pulled up the hood of his suit. "How nice of you to come down here
to our primitive little fete. Perhaps later we can do some colorful
folk dancing for your amusement." She handed him a mug. "That’ll be one
punt Celtic."
"I heard you’ll take air filters," said the engineer in an undertone.
"What size, dear?"
"BX3s,"
replied the engineer, drawing one from the breast of his suit and
displaying it. Mary inspected it critically and took it from him.
"Your
gracious patronage is always appreciated," she said, and handed it to
the Heretic, who tucked it out of sight. "Enjoy your beer. You see,
Cochevelou? No money in my hands at all. What’s a poor little widow to
do?"
But Cochevelou missed the sarcasm, staring over her head down the tunnel.
"Who’s this coming?" he said. "Did they bring a passenger on the last transport up?"
Mary
turned and saw the newcomer, treading gingerly along in the cat-step
people walked with before they became accustomed to Martian gravity. He
was tall, and wore a shiny new thermal suit, and he carried a bukecase.
He was peering uncertainly through his goggles at the crowd around the
transparencies.
"That’s
a damned solicitor, that’s what that is," said Cochevelou, scowling
blackly. "Five’ll get you ten he’s come to see you or me."
Mary’s
lip curled. She watched as the newcomer studied the crowd. He swung his
mask in her direction at last, and stared; then walked toward her
decisively.
"It’s you, eh?" said Cochevelou, trying not to sound too relieved as he sidled away. "My sympathies, Mary darling."
"MS. GRIFFITH?" inquired the stranger. Mary folded her arms.
"I am," she replied.
"ELIPHAL DE WIT," he said. "I’VE HAD QUITE A TIME FINDING YOU!"
"TURN YOUR SPEAKER DOWN! I’M NOT DEAF!"
"OH!
I’M sorry," said Mr. De Wit, hurriedly twiddling the knob. "Is that
better? They didn’t seem to know who you were at the port office, and
then they admitted you were still resident but unemployed, but they
wouldn’t tell me where you lived. Very confusing."
"You’re not from the BAC, then?" Mary looked him up and down.
"What?"
Mr. De Wit started involuntarily at the crowd’s roar of excitement. The
English kayaker had just swung past the midway marker. "No. Didn’t you
get my communication? I’m from Polieos of Amsterdam."
"WHAT?" said Mary, without benefit of volume knob.
"I’m here about your diamond," Mr. De Wit explained.
"And
to think of all the dreadful things I said about poor dear Finn, when I
thought he’d failed in his sacred trust! And I thought you were a
solicitor at first!" Mary babbled, setting down a pitcher of batch and
two mugs.
"Actually,
Ms. Griffith, I am one," said Mr. De Wit, gazing around at the inside
of the Empress. "On permanent retainer for Polieos, to deal with
special circumstances."
"Really?" Mary halted in the act of reaching to fill his mug.
"And
I’m here as your counsel," he explained carefully. "There has really
been no precedent for this situation. Polieos feels it would be best to
proceed with a certain amount of caution at first."
"Don’t they want to buy my diamond, then?" Mary demanded.
"Absolutely,
yes, Ms. Griffith," Mr. De Wit assured her. "And we would prefer to buy
it from you. I’m here to determine whether or not we can legally do
that."
"What d’you mean?"
"Well–" Mr. De Wit lifted his mug and paused, staring down at the brown foam brimming. "Er–what are we drinking?"
"It’s
water we’ve put things in, because you wouldn’t want to drink Mars
water plain," said Mary impatiently. "No alcohol in it, dear, so it
won’t hurt you if you’re not a drinking man. Cut to the chase, please."
Mr. De Wit set his mug aside, folded his hands and said:
"In
a minute, I’m going to ask you how you got the diamond, but I’m going
to tell you a few things first, and it’s important that you listen
closely.
"What
you sent us is a red diamond, a true red, which is very rare. The color
doesn’t come from impurities, but from the arrangement of the crystal
lattice within the stone itself. It weighs 306 carats at the present
time, uncut, and preliminary analysis indicates it has remarkable
potential for a modified trillion cut. It would be a unique gem even if
it hadn’t come from Mars. The fact that it did makes its potential
value quite a bit greater."
He
took the buke from its case and connected the projector arm and dish.
Mary watched with suspicion as he completed setup and switched it on.
After a couple of commands, a holo-image shot forth, hanging in the
dark air between them, and Mary recognized the lump she’d entrusted to
Finn.
"That’s my diamond!"
"As
it is now," said Mr. De Wit. "Here’s what we propose to do with it." He
gave another command and the sullen rock vanished. In its place was an
artist’s conception of a three-cornered stone the color of an Earth
sunset. Mary caught her breath.
"Possibly 280 carats," said Mr. De Wit.
"What’s it worth?"
"That all depends," Mr. De Wit replied. "A diamond is only worth the highest price you can get for it. The trick is to make it desirable.
It’s red, it’s from Mars–those are big selling points. We’ll need to
give it a fancy name. At present," and he coughed apologetically, "it’s
being called the Big Mitsubishi, but the marketing department will
probably go with either the War-God’s Eye or the Heart of Mars."
"Yes, yes, whatever," said Mary.
"Very
well. And Polieos is prepared to cut, polish, and market the diamond.
We can do this as your agents, in which case our fee will be deducted
from the sale price, or we can buy it from you outright. Assuming," and Mr. De Wit held up a long forefinger warningly, "that we can establish that you are, in fact, the owner."
"Hm." Mary frowned at the tabletop. She had a pretty good idea of what was coming next.
"You
see, Ms. Griffith, under the terms of your Allotment lease with the
BAC, you are entitled to any produce grown on the land. The terms of
your lease do not include mineral rights to the aforesaid land.
Therefore–"
"If I dug it up on my Allotment, it belongs to the BAC," said Mary.
"Exactly.
If, however, someone sold you the diamond," and Mr. De Wit looked
around at the Empress again, his gaze dwelling on the more-than-rustic
details, "say perhaps some colorful local character who found it
somewhere else and traded it to you for a drink–well, then, not only is
it your diamond, but we have a very nice story for the marketing
department at Polieos."
"I see," said Mary.
"Good.
And now, Ms. Griffith, if you please: how did you come into possession
of the diamond?" Mr. De Wit sat back and folded his hands.
Mary
spoke without pause. "Why, sir, one of our regulars brought it in! An
Ice Hauler, as it happens, and he found it somewhere on his travels
between poles. Traded it to me for two pints of my best Ares Lager."
"Excellent."
Smiling, Mr. Dr. Wit shut off the buke and stood. "And now, Ms.
Griffith, may I see the Allotment where you didn’t find the diamond?"
As they were walking back from the field, and Mr. De Wit was wiping the clay from his hands, he said quietly:
"It’s
just as well the land isn’t producing anything much. When the diamond
becomes public knowledge, you can expect the BAC to make you an offer
for the Allotment."
"Even though I didn’t find the diamond there?" said Mary warily.
"Yes. And I would take whatever they offer, Ms. Griffith, and I would buy passage back to Earth."
"I’ll
take what they offer, but I’m not leaving Mars," said Mary. "I’ve hung
on through bad luck and I’m damned if good luck will pry me out. This
is my home!"
Mr. De Wit tugged at his beard, unhappy about something.
"You’ll
have more than enough money to live in comfort on Earth," he said. "And
things are about to change up here, you know. As soon as anyone
suspects there’s real money to be made on Mars, you won’t know the
place."
"I
think I’ll do smashing, whatever happens," said Mary. "Miners drink,
don’t they? Anywhere people go to get rich, they need places to spend
their money."
"That’s true," said Mr. De Wit, sighing.
"And
just think what I can do with all that money!" Mary crowed. "No more
making do with the BAC’s leftovers!" She paused by a transparency and
pointed out at the red desolation. "See that? It’s nobody’s land. I
could have laid claim to it any time this five years, but what would I
have done with it? It’s the bloody BAC has the water and the lights and
the heating and the vizio I’d need!"
"But with money. . . ."
By
the time they got back to the Empress, she was barreling along in her
enthusiasm with such speed that Mr. De Wit was panting as he tried to
keep up. She jumped in through the airlock, faced her household (just
in from the field of glorious combat and settling down to a celebratory
libation) flung off her mask, and cried: "Congratulate me, you lot! I’m
the richest woman on Mars!"
"You did bet on the match," said Rowan reproachfully.
"I
did not," said Mary, thrusting a hand at Mr. De Wit. "You know who this
kind gentleman is? This is my extremely good friend from Amsterdam."
She winked hugely. "He’s a gem of a man. A genuine diamond in the rough. And he’s brought your mother very good news, my dears."
Stunned silence while everyone took that in, and then Mona leaped up screaming.
"Thediamondthediamondthediamond! Omigoddess!"
"How much are we getting for it?" asked Rowan at once.
"Well–"
Mary looked at Mr. De Wit. "There’s papers and things to sign, first,
and we have to find a buyer. But there’ll be more than enough to fix us
all up nicely, I’m sure."
"Very probably," Mr. De Wit agreed.
"We finally won’t be POOR anymore!" caroled Mona, bounding up and down.
"Congratulations, Mama!" said Manco.
"Congratulations, Mother," said Chiring.
Mr. Morton giggled uneasily.
"So . . . this means you’re leaving Mars?" he said. "What will the rest of us do?"
"I’m not about to leave," Mary assured him. His face lit up.
"Oh,
that’s wonderful! Because I’ve got nothing to go back to, down there,
you know, and Mars has been the first place I ever really–"
"What do you MEAN we’re not leaving?" said Alice in a strangled kind of voice. "You’re ruining my life again, aren’t you?"
She
turned and fled. Her bedchamber being as it was in a loft accessible
only by rope ladder, Alice was unable to leap in and fling herself on
her bed, there to sob furiously; so she resorted to running away to the
darkness behind the brew tanks and sobbing there.
". . . felt as though I belonged in a family," Mr. Morton continued.
Alice might weep, but she was outvoted.
Rowan
opted to stay on Mars. Mona waffled on the question until the
boy-to-girl ratio on Earth was explained to her, after which she firmly
cast her lot with the Red Planet. Chiring had no intention of leaving;
his Dispatches from Mars had doubled the number of subscribers to the Kathmandu Post,
which was run by his sister’s husband, and as a result of the Mars
exposés he looked fair to win Nepal’s highest journalism award.
Manco
had no intention of leaving either, since it would be difficult to
transport his life’s work. This was a shrine in a grotto three
kilometers from the Empress, containing a cast-stone life-sized statue
of the Virgen de Guadalupe surrounded by roses sculpted from a mixture
of pink Martian dust and Manco’s own blood. It was an ongoing work of
art, and an awesome and terrible thing.
The
Heretic, when asked if she would like to return to Earth, became so
distraught that her ocular implant telescoped and retracted
uncontrollably for five minutes before she was able to stammer out a
refusal. She would not elaborate. Later she drank half a bottle of
Black Label and was found unconscious behind the malt locker.
"So, you see? We’re staying," said Mary to the Brick, in grim triumph.
"Way
to go, Beautiful," said the Brick, raising his breakfast pint of Ares
Lager. "I just hope you’re ready to deal with the BAC, because this’ll really get up their noses. And I hope you can trust this Dutchman."
"Here he is now," said Chiring sotto voce,
looking up from the taphead he was in the act of changing. They raised
their heads to watch Mr. De Wit’s progress down from the ceiling on his
line. He made it to the floor easily and tied off his line like a
native, without one wasted gesture; but as he turned to them again, he
seemed to draw the character of Hesitant Tourist about him like a
cloak, stooping slightly as he peered through the gloom.
"Good morning, sir, and did you sleep well?" Mary cried brightly.
"Yes, thank you," Mr. De Wit replied. "Er–I was wondering where I might get some laundry done?"
"Bless
you, sir, we don’t have Earth-style laundries up here," said Mary.
"Best you think of it as a sort of dry-cleaning. Leave it in a pile on
your bunk and I’ll send one of the girls up for it later." She cleared
her throat. "And this is my friend Mr. Brick. Brick is the, ahem, colorful local character who sold me the diamond. Aren’t you, dear?"
"That’s right," said the Brick, without batting an eye. "Howdy, stranger."
"Oh, great!" Mr. De Wit pulled his buke from his coat. "Would you be willing to record a statement to that effect?"
"Sure," said the Brick, kicking the bar stool next to him. "Have a seat. We’ll talk."
Mr.
De Wit sat down and set up his buke, and Mary drew him a pint of batch
and left them talking. She was busily sweeping sand when Manco entered
through the airlock and came straight up to her. His face was
impassive, but his black eyes glinted with anger.
"You’d better come see something, Mama," he said.
"I went to replace the old lock seal like you told me," he said, pointing. "Then I looked through. No point now, huh?"
Mary
stared at her Allotment. It had never been a sight to rejoice the eye,
but now it was the picture of all desolation. Halfway down the acreage
someone had slashed through the vizio wall, and the bitter Martian
winds had widened the tear and brought in a freight of red sand, which
duned in long ripples over what remained of her barley, now blasted and
shriveled with cold. Worse still, it was trampled: for someone had come
in through the hole and excavated here and there, long channels orderly
cut in the red clay or random potholes. There were Outside-issue
bootprints all over.
She said something heartfelt and unprintable.
"You think it was the BAC?" said Manco.
"Not likely," Mary said. "They don’t know about the diamond, do they? This has Clan Morrigan written all over it."
"We can’t report this, can we?"
Mary
shook her head. "That’d be just what the BAC would want to hear.
‘Vandalism, is it, Ms. Griffith? Well, what can you expect in a
criminal environment such as what you’ve fostered here, Ms. Griffith?
Perhaps you’d best crawl off into the sand and die, Ms. Griffith, and
stop peddling your nasty beer and Goddess-worshipping superstitions and
leave Mars to decent people, Ms. Griffith!’ That’s what they’d say."
"And they’d say, ‘What were people digging for?’ too," said Manco gloomily.
"So they would." Mary felt a chill. "I think I must speak with Mr. De Wit again."
"What should I do here?"
"Seal up the vizio with duct tape," Mary advised. "Then get the quaddy out and plough it all under."
"Quaddy needs a new air filter, Mama."
"Use a sock! Works just as well," said Mary, and stamped away back up the Tube.
Manco
surveyed the ruined Allotment and sighed. Resolving to offer Her
another rose of his heart’s blood if She would render assistance, he
wrestled the rusting quaddy out of its garage and squatted to inspect
the engine.
Mr.
De Wit and the Brick were still where Mary had left them, deep in
conversation; the Brick seemed to be regaling Mr. De Wit with exciting
tales of his bipolar journeys for carbon dioxide and water ice. Mr. De
Wit was listening with his mouth slightly open.
Mary started toward him, intent on a hasty conference, but Rowan stepped into her path.
"Mum, Mr. Cochevelou wants a word," she said in an undertone.
"Cochevelou!"
Mary said, turning with a basilisk glare, and spotted him in his
customary booth. He smiled at her, rubbing his fingertips together in a
nervous kind of way, and seemed to shrink back into the darkness as she
advanced on him.
"Eh, I imagine you’ve come from your old Allotment," he said. "That’s just what I wanted to talk to you about, Mary dearest."
"Don’t you Mary Dearest me!" she told him.
"Darling!
Darling. You’ve every right to be killing mad, so you do. I struck the
bastards to the floor with these two hands when I found out, so I did.
‘You worthless thieving pigs!’ I said to them. ‘Aren’t you ashamed of
yourselves?’ I said. ‘Here we are in this cold hard place and do we
stick together in adversity, as true Celts ought? Won’t the English
laugh and nod at us when they find out?’ That’s what I said."
"Words are all you have for me, are they?" said Mary icily.
"No
indeed, dear," said Cochevelou, looking wounded. "Aren’t I talking
compensation? But you have to understand that some of the lads come of
desperate stock, and there’s some will always envy another’s good
fortune bitterly keen."
"How’d they know about my good fortune?" Mary demanded.
"Well,
your Mona might have told our DeWayne," said Cochevelou. "Or it might
have gone about the Tube some other way, but good news travels fast,
eh? And there’s no secrets up here anyway, as we both know. The main
thing is, we’re dealing with it. The clan has voted to expel the dirty
beggars forthwith–"
"Much good that does me!"
"And to award you Finn’s Field free and clear, all further payments waived," Cochevelou added.
"That’s better." Mary relaxed slightly.
"And
perhaps we’ll find other little ways to make it up to you," said
Cochevelou, pouring her a cup of her own Black Label. "I can send work
parties over to mend the damage. New vizio panels for you, what about
it? And free harrowing and manuring that poor tract of worthless
ground."
"I’m sure you’d love to get your boys in there digging again," Mary grumbled, accepting the cup.
"No, no; they’re out, as I told you," said Cochevelou. "We’re shipping their raggedy asses back to Earth on the next flight."
"Are
you?" Mary halted in the act of raising the cup to her lips. She set it
down. "And where are you getting the money for that, pray?"
Cochevelou winced.
"An unexpected inheritance?" he suggested, and dodged the cup that came flying at him.
"You
hound!" Mary cried. "They’ll have an unexpected inheritance sewn into
their suits, won’t they? Won’t they, you black beast?"
"If
you’d only be mine, all this wouldn’t matter," said Cochevelou
wretchedly, crawling from the booth and making for the airlock with as
much dignity as he could muster. "We could rule Mars together, you know
that, don’t you?"
He
didn’t wait for an answer, but pulled his mask on and fled through the
airlock. Mary nearly pitched the bottle after him too and stopped
herself, aware that all her staff, as well as Mr. De Wit and the Brick,
were staring at her.
"Mr. De Wit," she said, as decorously as she could, "May I have a word with you in private?"
"That was sooner than I expected," said Mr. De Wit, when she’d told him all about it.
"You expected this?" Mary said.
"Of
course," he replied, tugging unhappily at his beard. "Have you ever
heard of the Gold Rush of 1849? I don’t know if you know much American
history, Ms. Griffith–"
"Gold was discovered at Sutter’s Mill," Mary snapped.
"Yes, and do you know what happened to Mr. Sutter? Prospectors destroyed his farm. He was ruined."
"I won’t be ruined," Mary declared. "If I have to put a guard on that field every hour of the day and night, I’ll do it."
"It’s
too late for that," Mr. De Wit explained. "The secret can’t be kept any
longer, you see? More Martian settlers will be putting more red
diamonds on the market. The value will go down, but that won’t stop the
flood of people coming up here hoping to get rich."
And he was right.
For
five years, there had been one shuttle from Earth every three months.
They might have come more often; technological advances over the last
couple of decades had greatly trimmed travel time to Mars. There just
hadn’t been any reason to waste the money.
The
change came slowly at first, and was barely noticed: an unaccustomed
distant thunder of landing jets at unexpected moments, a stranger
wandering wide-eyed into the Empress at odd hours. More lights glinting
under the vizio dome of BAC headquarters after dark.
Then the change sped up.
More
shuttles, arriving all hours, and not just the big green BAC ships but
vessels of all description, freelance transport services competing.
More strangers lining the bar at the Empress, shivering, gravity-sick,
unable to get used to the smell or the taste of the beer or the air but
unable to do without either.
Strangers
wandering around outside the Tubes, inadequately suited, losing their
sense of direction in the sandstorms and having to be rescued on a
daily basis by some opportunistic Celt who charged for his kindness:
"Just to pay for the oxygen expenditure, see?" Strangers losing or
abandoning all manner of useful odds and ends in the red desolation, to
be gleefully salvaged by the locals. Mary’s back bar became a kind of
shrine to the absurd items people brought from Earth, such as a digital
perpetual calendar geared to 365 days in a year, a pair of ice skates,
a ballroom dancing trophy, and a snow globe depicting the Historic
Astoria Column of Astoria, Oregon.
"I can’t think why you advised me to leave," Mary said to Mr. De Wit, as he sat at the bar. "We’ve never done so well!"
Mr.
De Wit shook his head gloomily, staring into the holoscreen above his
buke. "It’s all a matter of timing," he said, and drained his mug of
Ares Lager.
"Let
me pour you another, sweetheart," said Alice, fetching away the empty.
Mary watched her narrowly. To everyone’s astonishment but Alice’s, Mr.
De Wit had proposed marriage to her. As far as Mary had been able to
tell, it had happened somehow because Alice had been the one delegated
to collect his laundry, and had made it a point to personally deliver
his fresh socks and thermals at an inappropriate hour, and one thing
had led to another, as it generally did in the course of human history,
whether on Earth or elsewhere.
He
accepted another mug from her now with a smile. Mary shrugged to
herself and was about to retreat in a discreet manner when there was a
tremendous crash in the kitchen.
When
she got to the door, she beheld the Heretic crouched in a corner,
rocking herself to and fro, white and silent. On the floor lay Mary’s
largest kettle and a great quantity of wasted water, sizzling slightly
as it interacted with the dust that had been tracked in.
"What’s this?" said Mary.
The Heretic turned her face. "They’re coming," she whispered. "And the mountain’s on fire."
Mary
felt a qualm, but said quietly: "Your vision’s a bit late. The place is
already full of newcomers. What, did you think you saw something in the
water? There’s nothing in there but red mud. Pick yourself up and–"
There
was another crash, though less impressive, and a high-pitched yell of
excitement. Turning, Mary beheld Mr. De Wit leaping up and down, fists
clenched above his head.
"We did it," he cried. "We found a buyer!"
"How much?" Mary asked instantly.
"Two
million punts Celtic," he replied, gasping after his exertion.
"Mitsubishi, of course, because we aimed all the marketing at them. I
just wasn’t sure–I’ve instructed Polieos to take their offer. I hope
that meets with your approval, Ms. Griffith? Because, you know, no one
will ever get that kind of money for a Martian diamond again."
"Won’t they?" Mary was puzzled by his certainty. "Whyever not?’
"Well–"
Mr. De Wit coughed dust, took a gulp from his pint and composed
himself. "Because most of the appeal was in the novelty, and in the
story behind your particular stone, and–and timing, like I said. Now
the publicity will work against the market. Those stones that were
stolen out of your field will go on sale at inflated prices, you see?
Everyone will expect to make a fortune."
"But they won’t?"
"No, because–" Mr. De Wit waved vaguely. "Do you know why they say A diamond is forever?
Because it’s murder to unload the damned things, in the cold hard light
of day. No dealer ever buys back a stone they’ve sold. It took a
fantastic amount of work to sell the Big Mitsubishi. We were very, very
lucky. Nobody else will have our luck."
He
stooped forward and put his hands on her shoulders. "Now, please.
Follow my advice. Take out a little to treat yourself and put the rest
in high-yield savings, or very careful investments."
"Or I’ll tell you what you could do," said a bright voice from the bar.
They
turned to see the Brick in the act of downing a pint. He finished,
wiped his mouth with the back of his hand and said: "You could sink a
magma well up the hill on Mons Olympus, and start your own energy
plant. That’d really screw the BAC! And make you a shitload of money on
the side.
"Magma well?" Mary repeated.
"Old-style
geothermal energy. Nobody’s used it since Fusion, because Fusion’s
cheaper, but it’d work up here. The BAC’s been debating a plant, but
their committees are so brain-constipated they’ll never get around to
it!" The Brick rose to his feet in his enthusiasm. "Hell, all you’d
need would be a water-drilling rig, to start with. And you’d need to
build the plant and lay pipes, but you can afford that now, right? Then
you’d have all the power you’d want to grow all the barley you’d want and sell it to other settlers!"
"I
suppose I could do that, couldn’t I?" said Mary slowly. She looked up
at Mr. De Wit. "What do you think? Could I make a fortune with a magma
well?"
Mr. De Wit sighed.
"Yes," he said. "I have to tell you that you could."
The only difficult part was getting the drilling rig.
Cochevelou
looked uncertainly at Mona, who had perched herself on one of his
knees, and then at Rowan, who was firmly stationed on the other with
her fingers twined in his beard.
"Please, Mr. Cochevelou, my dear dearest?" Mona crooned.
Mary leaned forward and filled his glass, looking him straight in the eye.
"You
said we might rule Mars together," she said. "Well, this is the way to
do it. You and me together, eh, pooling our resources as we’ve always
done?"
"You staked claim to the whole volcano?" he said, incredulous. "Bloody honking huge Mons Olympus?"
"Nothing in the laws said I couldn’t, if I had the cash for the filing fee, which, being the richest woman on Mars now, I had, of course," Mary replied. "Nothing in the tiniest print said I was even obliged to tell the BAC. I had my fine lawyer and nearly
son-in-law Mr. De Wit file with the Tri-Worlds Settlement Bureau, and
they just said Yes, Ms. Griffith, here’s your virtual title and good
luck to you. Doubtless sniggering in their First World sleeves and
wondering what a silly widow woman will do with a big frozen cowpat of
a volcano. They’ll see!"
"But–"
Cochevelou paused and took a drink. His pause lost him ground, for Mary
shoved Mona out of the way and took her place on his knee, bringing her
gimlet stare, and her bosom, closer.
"Think
of it, darling man!" she said. "Think how we’ve been robbed, and kept
down, and made to make do with the dry leavings while the English got
the best of everything! Haven’t we always triumphed by turning
adversity to our own uses? And so it’ll be now. Your ironworks and your
strong lads with my money and Mars’s own hot heart itself beating for
us in a thunderous counterpoint to our passion!"
"Passion?" said Cochevelou, somewhat dazed but beginning to smile.
"She’s
got him," Chiring informed the others, who were lurking in the kitchen.
Mr. Morton gave a cheer, which was promptly shut off as Manco and the
Heretic clapped their hands over his mouth. Chiring put his eye to the
peephole again.
"They’re
shaking hands," he said. "He just kissed her. She hasn’t slapped him.
She’s saying . . . something about Celtic Energy Systems."
"It’s
the beginning of a new world!" whispered Mr. Morton. "There’s never
been money on Mars, but–but–now we can have Centres for the Performing
Arts!"
"We can have a lot more than that," said Manco.
"They could found a whole other city," said Chiring, stepping back. "You know? What a story this is going to be!"
"We could attract artistes," said Mr. Morton, stars in his eyes. "Culture!"
"We
could be completely independent, if we bought vizio and water pumps,
and got enough land under cultivation," Manco pointed out. A look of
shock crossed his face. "I could grow real roses."
"You could," Chiring agreed, whipping out his jotpad. "Interviews with the Locals: What Will Money Mean to the New Martians? By your News Martian. Okay, Morton, you’d want performing arts, and you’d
develop Martian horticulture." He nodded at Manco and then glanced over
at the Heretic. "How about you? What do you hope to get out of this?"
"A better place to hide," she said bleakly, raising her head as she listened to the rumble of the next shuttle arriving.
It was still possible to ride an automobile on Mars, though they had long since become illegal on Earth and Luna.
A
great deal of preparation was necessary, to be sure: one had first to
put on a suit of thermals, and then a suit of cotton fleece, and then a
suit of bubblefilm, and then a final layer of quilted Outside wear.
Boots with ankle locks were necessary too, and wrist-locked gauntlets.
One could put on an old-fashioned-looking aquarium helmet, if one had
the money; people at Mary’s economic level made do with a snugly
fitting hood, a face mask hooked up to a back tank, and kitchen grease
mixed with UV blocker daubed thickly on anything that the mask didn’t
cover.
Having
done this, one could then clamber through an airlock and motor across
Mars, in a rickety CeltCart 600 with knobbed rubber tires and a top
speed of eight kilometers an hour. It was transportation neither
dignified nor efficient, since one was swamped with methane fumes and
bounced about like a pea in a football. Nevertheless, it beat walking,
or being blown sidelong in an antigravity car. And it really beat
climbing.
Mary
clung to the rollbar and reflected that today was actually a fine day
for a jaunt Outside, considering. Bright summer sky overhead like
peaches and cream, though liver-dark storm clouds raged far down the
small horizon behind. Before, of course, was only the gentle but
near-eternal swell of Mons Olympus, and the road that had been made by
the expedient of rolling or pushing larger rocks out of the way.
"Mind
the pit, Cochevelou," she admonished. Cochevelou exhaled his annoyance
so forcefully that steam escaped from the edges of his mask, but he
steered clear of the pit and so on up the winding track to the drill
site.
The
lads were hard at work when they arrived at last, having had a full
hour’s warning that the Cart was on its way up, since from the high
slide of the slope one could see half the world spread out below, and
its planetary curve too. There was therefore a big mound of broken
gravel and frozen mudslurry, industriously scraped from the drillbits,
to show for their morning’s work. Better still, there was a thin
spindrift of steam coming off the rusty pipes, coalescing into
short-lived frost as it fell.
"Look, Mama!" said Manco proudly, gesturing at the white. "Heat and water!"
"So
I see," said Mary, crawling from the car. "Who’d have thought mud could
be so lovely, eh? And we’ve brought you a present. Unload it, please."
Matelot
and the others who had been industriously leaning on their shovels
sighed, and set about unclamping the bungees that had kept the great
crate in its place on the back of the CeltCart. The crate was much too
big to have traveled on a comparative vehicle on Earth without
squashing it, and even so the Cart’s wheels groaned and splayed, though
as the men lifted the crate like so many ants hoisting a dead cricket
the wheels bowed gratefully back. The cords had bit deep into the
crate’s foamcast during the journey, and the errant Martian breezes had
just about scoured the label off with flying grit, but the logo of
Third Word Alternatives, Inc. could still be made out.
"So this is our pump and all?" inquired Padraig, squinting at it through his goggles.
"This
is the thing itself, pump and jenny and all but the pipes to send wet
hot gold down the mountain to us," Cochevelou told him.
"And
the pipes’ve been ordered," Mary added proudly. "And paid for! And
here’s Mr. Morton to exercise his great talents building a shed to
house it all."
Mr.
Morton unfolded himself from the rear cockpit and tottered to his feet,
looking about with wide eyes. The speaker in his mask was broken, so he
merely waved at everyone and went off at once to look at the
foundations Manco had dug.
"And
lastly," said Mary, lifting a transport unit that had been rather
squashed under the seat, "Algemite sandwiches for everybody! And free
rounds on the house when you’re home tonight, if you get the dear
machine hooked up before dark."
"Does it come with instructions?" Matelot inquired, puffing as he stood back from the crate.
"It
promised an easy-to-follow holomanual in five languages, and if one
isn’t in there we’re to mail the manufacturers at once," Mary said.
"But they’re a reputable firm, I’m sure."
"Now,
isn’t that a sight, my darling?" said Cochevelou happily, turning to
look down the slope at the Tharsis Bulge. "Civilization, what there is
of it anyhow, spread out at our feet like a drunk to be rolled."
Mary
gazed down, and shivered. From this distance, the Settlement Dome
looked tiny and pathetic, even with its new housing annex. The network
of Tubes seemed like so many glassy worms, and her own house might have
been a mudball on the landscape. It was true that the landing port had
recently been enlarged, which made it more of a handkerchief than a
postage stamp of pink concrete. Still, little stone cairns dotted the
wasteland here and there, marking the spots where luckless prospectors
had been cached because nobody had any interest in shipping frozen
corpses back to Earth.
But she lifted her chin and looked back at it all in defiance.
"Think of our long acres of green," she said. "Think of our own rooms steam-heated. Lady bless us, think of having a hot bath!"
Which
was such an obscenely expensive pleasure on Mars that Cochevelou gasped
and slid his arm around her, moved beyond words, and they clung
together for quite a while on that cold prominence before either of
them noticed the tiny figure making its way up the track from the
Empress.
"Who’s that, then?" Mary peered down at it, disengaging herself abruptly from Cochevelou’s embrace. "Is that Mr. De Wit?"
It was Mr. De Wit.
By
the time they reached him in the CeltCart, he was walking more slowly,
and his eyes were standing out of his face so they looked fair to pop
through his goggles, but he seemed unstoppable.
"WHAT IS IT?" Mary demanded, turning her volume all the way up. "IS SOMETHING GONE WRONG WITH ALICE?"
Mr.
De Wit shook his head, slumping forward on the Cart’s fender. He
cranked up his volume as far as it went too and gasped, "LAWYER–"
"YES!" Mary said irritably, "YOU’RE A LAWYER!"
"OTHER LAWYER!" said Mr. De Wit, pointing back down the slope at the Empress.
Mary
bit her lip. "YOU MEAN–" she turned her volume down, reluctant to
broadcast words of ill omen. "There’s a lawyer from somebody else? The
BAC, maybe?"
Mr. De Wit nodded, crawling wearily into the back seat of the Cart.
"Oh, bugger all," growled Cochevelou. "Whyn’t you fight him off then, as one shark to another?"
"Did my best," wheezed Mr. De Wit. "Filed appeal. But you have to make mark."
Mary
said something unprintable. She reached past Cochevelou and threw the
Cart into neutral to save gas. It went bucketing down the slope,
reaching such a velocity near the bottom that Mr. De Wit found himself
praying for the first time since his childhood.
Somehow
they arrived with no more damage done than a chunk of lichen sheared
off the airlock wall, but they might have taken their time, for all the
good it did them.
The
lawyer was not Hodges from the Settlement, whose particular personal
interests Mary knew to a nicety and whom she might have quelled with a
good hard stare. No, this lawyer was a solicitor from London, no less,
immaculate in an airlock ensemble from Bond Street and his white
skullcap of office. He sat poised on the very edge of one of Mary’s
settles, listening diffidently as Mr. De Wit (who had gone quite native
by now, stooped, wheezing, powdered with red dust, his beard lank with
facegrease and sand) explained the situation, which was, to wit:
Whereas,
the British Ares Company had operated at an average annual loss to its
shareholders of 13 percent of the original estimated minimum annual
profit for a period of five (Earth) calendar years, and
Whereas,
it had come to the attention of the Board of Directors that there were
hitherto-unknown venues of profit in the area of mineral resources, and
Whereas,
having reviewed the original Terms of Settlement and Allotment as
stated in the Contract for the Settlement and Terraforming of Ares, and
having determined that the contractment of any and all allotted
agricultural zones was contingent upon said zones contributing to the
common wealth of Mars and the continued profit of its shareholders, and
Whereas,
the aforesaid Contract specified that in the event that revocation of
all Leases of Allotment was determined to be in the best interests of
the shareholders, the Board of Directors retained the right to the
exercise of Eminent Domain,
Therefore,
the British Ares Company respectfully informed Mary Griffith that her
lease was revoked and due notice of eviction from all areas of
Settlement would follow within thirty (Earth) calendar days. She was,
of course, at full liberty to file an appeal with the proper
authorities.
"Which
you are in the process of doing," said Mr. De Wit, and picked up a text
plaquette from the table. "Here it is. Sign at the bottom."
"Can she read?" the solicitor inquired, stifling a yawn. Mary’s lip curled.
"Ten
years at Mount Snowdon University says I can, little man," she informed
him, and having run her eye down the document, she thumbprinted it
firmly. "So take that and stick it where appeals are filed, if you
please." She handed the plaquette to the solicitor, who accepted it
without comment and put it in his briefcase.
"Hard luck, my dear," said Cochevelou, pouring himself a drink. "I’ll just quell my thirst and then edge off home, shall I?"
"Are you a resident of the Clan Morrigan?" the solicitor inquired, fixing him with a fishy eye.
"I am." Cochevelou stared back.
"Then, can you direct me to their current duly elected chieftain?"
"That would be him," said Mary.
"Ah."
The solicitor drew a second plaquette from his briefcase and held it
out. "Maurice Cochevelou? You are hereby advised that–"
"Is that the same as what you just served her with?" Cochevelou demanded, slowly raising fists like rusty cannon balls.
"In short, sir, yes, you are evicted," replied the solicitor, with remarkable sangfroid. "Do you wish to appeal as well?"
"Do you wish to take a walk Outside, you little–"
"He’ll
appeal as well," said Mary firmly, and, grabbing the second plaquette,
she took Cochevelou’s great sooty thumb and stamped the plaquette
firmly. "There now. Run along, please."
"You
can tell your masters they’ve got a fight on their hands, you
whey-faced soy-eating little timeserver!" roared Cochevelou at the
solicitor’s retreating back. The airlock shut after him and Cochevelou
picked up a mug and hurled it at the lock, where it shattered into pink
fragments.
"We’ll
burn their Settlement Dome over their heads!" he said, stamping like a
bull in a stall. "We’ll drive our kine through their spotless tunnels,
eh, and give ’em methane up close and personal, won’t we just!"
"We will not," said Mary. "We’ll ruin ’em with lawsuits, won’t we, Mr. De Wit?"
"I
don’t think you’re going to be able to do either," said Mr. De Wit,
sagging onto a bench. "They’ve already found new tenants to work the
land, you see. The Martian Agricultural Collective will be coming up
soon. Very much more the kind of people they would rather see living up
here. And the BAC itself is dissolving. The Board of Directors will be
running the whole operation from Earth now, under the corporate name
ARECO. I told you things would change."
"The cowards," growled Cochevelou. "So they’ll evaporate into mist when we swing at them, will they?"
"Then what’s the point of appealing?" Mary asked.
"It
will buy you time," Mr. De Wit replied, raising his gray exhausted
face. Alice brought him a cup of hot tea, setting it before him. She
began to massage his bowed shoulders.
"Of course," Alice said quietly, "We could all go home again."
"This is my home," said Mary, bridling.
"Well,
it isn’t mine," said Alice defiantly. "And it isn’t Eli’s, either. He’s
only staying up here to help you because he’s kind. But we will go back to Earth, Mum, and if you want to see your grandchild, you’ll have to go too."
"Alice, don’t say that to your mother," said Mr. De Wit, putting his face in his hands.
Mary looked at her daughter stone-faced.
"So you’re playing that game, are you?"
"I’m not playing any game! I just–"
"Go
back to Earth, then. Be happy there, if you’re capable of being happy.
Neither you nor anybody else alive will call my bluff," said Mary, not
loudly but in tones that formed ice around the edges of Mr. De Wit’s
tea. He groaned.
"And what’m I to
do?" said Cochevelou, looking horrified as the full impact hit him.
"Mine will call for a vote. Three votes of no-confidence for a
chieftain and there’s a new chieftain."
"Overwhelm them with persuasion, man," Mary told him. "Spin them a tale about our glorious new future up the slope in–in–"
"Mars Two," said Mr. De Wit, staring into his teacup.
Three: The Shining City on the Hill
Cochevelou
survived the vote. That was one good thing. Another was that Celtic
Energy Systems got its pumping station built and online. Though the
easy-to-follow assembly holo was indeed in five languages, they turned
out to be Telugu, Swahili, Pashto, Malayalam, and Hakka. Fortunately,
most of the orderlies in the hospital where Mr. Morton had grown up had
spoken Swahili, and he had picked up enough to follow assembly
directions.
Of
course, the pipes hadn’t arrived from Earth yet, so there was no way to
send water, heat or steam anywhere; but Mr. Morton had fabricated an
elegant little neoGothic structure to house the pumping station, a sort
of architectural prototype, as he explained, for the Edgar Allan Poe
Memorial Cabaret, and he was already happily designing the Downtown
Arts Plaza and Promenade.
"It’s
the backlash," said the Brick gloomily, nursing his beer. "Too many
freaks up here for the BAC to cope with, so they’ll just scrap the
whole Settlement and ship up their own hand-picked squares. Have you
seen any of these guys from the Martian Agricultural Collective?"
"I
have not," said Mary, looking over his head to count the house. Three
booths occupied, and only two seats at the bar; not good, for a Friday
night. "They’re not drinkers, seemingly."
"They’re
not drinkers,’ the Brick affirmed. "Their idea of fun is singing
anthems to Agrarian Socialism, okay? Bunch of shaven-headed humorless
bastards."
"Oh, dear," said Mary. "No beer, is it? And are they monkish as well?"
"No," said the Brick, shuddering. "They got their own ladies. They shave their heads too. Seriously political."
"So
they won’t be inclined to stop by for a chat," said Mary thoughtfully.
"How’s your job security, then, under the new regime?"
The
Brick grinned. "They can round up all the other loonies and ship ’em
home, but they’ll still need Ice Haulers, right? And we’ve got the
Bipolar Boys and Girls Union. They mess with us, we’ll drive a dozen
six-ton flatbeds through Settlement Dome and Mars ’em."
Marsing was a local custom. It resembled mooning, but was uglier.
"I’m sure they won’t dare mess with you, Mr. Brick," said Mary.
"Hey, let ’em," said the Brick, waving a massive hand. "I like a good fight."
Wreathed
in an air of pleasant anticipation and carbon dioxide, he downed the
last of his beer and headed out, pausing by the airlock to mask up. As
he exited, two other people came in from the Tube.
They
removed their masks and stared around at the Empress. Their gazes dwelt
with approval a moment on the votive shrine to the Mother, in its
alcove; traveled on and grew somewhat cold looking on the great
brewtanks that loomed at the back of Mary’s domain. They were both
pear-shaped women, one elderly and one youngish, and Mary wondered what
the hell they were doing on Mars.
"Are you perhaps lost, ladies?" she inquired in English.
"Oh,
I don’t think so," said the elder of the two. She advanced on the bar,
closely followed by her associate. Somewhere in the gloom behind Mary,
there was a gasp and the clang of a dropped skillet.
"You must be Mary Griffith," said the elder. "I am Mother Glenda and this is Mother Willow. We’re with the Ephesian Mission."
"Indeed? How nice," said Mary. "Visiting from Luna, then?"
"Oh, no," said Mother Glenda. "We’ve come to stay. Blessed be."
"Blessed
be," Mary echoed, feeling slightly uneasy as she looked into Mother
Glenda’s face, which was pink-cheeked and jolly-smiling, though there
was a certain hard glint in her eyes.
"The
Church felt it was time to bring the Goddess to this desolate place,"
said Mother Willow, who had a high breathless voice. "Especially with
all these desperate people seeking their fortunes here. Because, there
are really hardly any red diamonds up here after all, are there? So
they’ll need spiritual comfort when the vain quest for worldly riches
fails them. And besides, it’s Mars."
"Mythologically the planet of war and masculine brutality," explained Mother Glenda.
"Ah," said Mary.
"And
the Martian Agricultural Collective are all atheists, you see, so it’s
an even greater challenge," said Mother Willow earnestly. "You can
imagine how pleased we were to learn that there was already a Daughter
resident up here. And how outraged we were to hear that you have been
the victim of paternalist oppression!"
"I wouldn’t say I’ve been a victim," Mary replied, grinning. "I’d say I’ve given as good as I’ve got, and I’m still here."
"Good answer," said Mother Glenda. "Holy Mother Church has followed your struggle with some interest, daughter."
"Really," said Mary, not much liking the sound of that.
"And,
of course, one of the first things we want to do is offer our support,"
Mother Willow assured her. "Holy Mother Church will help you fight your
eviction. Our legal and financial resources are practically unlimited,
you know, and we have publicists who would love to tell your story. The
Goddess cares for Her own, but most especially for those who have
suffered persecution in Her name!"
Mary
caught her breath. She thought of the Diana of Luna affair, that had
cost the British Luna Company millions of pounds and kilometers of real
estate. And now the Church must be looking to duplicate that success
here. . . .
"Oh,
my, what a lovely thought," she said dreamily. "This might be ever so
much fun. Please, allow me to offer you a nice mug of–er–tea."
Everyone
in three worlds knew the story: how, in the early days of Luna’s
settlement, a devout Ephesian named Lavender Dragonsbane had found a
solid silver statue of the Goddess buried on the moon. The British
Lunar Company claimed that what she had found was, in fact, a vaguely
woman-shaped lump of nickel ore. It was given to archaeologists to
study, and then other parties (including MI5) had stepped in to demand
a look at it, and somehow it had mysteriously vanished in transit from
one set of experts to another.
The
Ephesian Church had sued the BLC, and the BLC had sued back. Lavender
Dragonsbane had a vision wherein the Goddess told her to build a shrine
on the spot where she had found the statue. The BLC claimed that the
statue had been deliberately planted by the Ephesians on that spot
because it happened to be valuable real estate they wanted.
However, in calling what had been found a statue,
the BAC had contradicted their earlier statement that it had been
nothing but a curiously shaped bit of rock. The Tri-Worlds Council for
Integrity found for the Ephesian Church on points. Now the Church owned
half the Moon.
". . . and you could be our next Lavender Dragonsbane, daughter," said Mother Willow, setting aside her tea.
"Well,
that would spoke the BAC’s wheels and no mistake," said Mary giddily.
"Or Areco or whatever they’re calling themselves now."
"The perennial oppressors," said Mother Willow, smiling, "brought to their knees by the simple faith of one woman. Blessed be!"
"Blessed be!" Mary echoed, visions of sweet revenge dancing through her head.
"Of course, you understand there will have to be some changes," said Mother Glenda.
"Yes, of course," said Mary, and then: "Excuse me?"
Mother
Willow coughed delicately. "We have been given to understand that your
staff is nearly all male. We can scarcely present you as Her defender
on Mars when you perpetuate hiring bias, can we, daughter? And Holy
Mother Church is very concerned at rumors that one of your employees is a . . . Christian."
"Oh,
Manco!" said Mary. "No, you don’t understand. He really worships Her,
you see, only it’s just in the image of Our Lady of Guadalupe. And
everybody knows that’s some kind of Red Indian flower goddess really,
and nothing to do with paternalist oppressors or anything like that and
after all he’s a, er, Native American, isn’t he? Member of a viciously
oppressed ethnic minority? And he’s built Her a big shrine and
everything in a sacred grotto hereabouts."
Mother
Willow brightened. "Yes, I see! That makes it an entirely different
matter. I expect our publicists could do very well with that." She
pulled out a jotpad and made a few brief notes. "One of Her faithful
sons escaping to Mars from the brutal lash of Earth prejudice, yes. . .
."
"And as for
the rest of ’em being male," said Mary, "Well, I have to take what I
can get up here, don’t I? And they’re not bad fellows at all. And
anyway, out of the whole Settlement, there’s only–" She had been about
to say, There’s only the Heretic wanted a job, but caught herself and went on– "Er, only so many women on Mars, after all."
"That’s true," said Mother Willow graciously.
"And we quite understand
you have been placed in a position where it was necessary to fight the
enemy with his own weapons," said Mother Glenda. "However, all of
that–" and she pointed at the brewtanks, "must stop, immediately."
"I beg your pardon?" said Mary.
"There is to be no more traffic in controlled substances," said Mother Glenda.
"But
it’s only beer!" Mary cried. "And it’s not illegal in the Celtic
Federation, anyway, of which I am a citizen, see? So I’m not doing
anything wrong."
"Not under the statutes of men,"
said Mother Glenda. "But how can you feel you are doing Her will by
serving a deadly toxin like alcohol to the impoverished working classes
of Mars? No, daughter. Holy Mother Church wants to see those tanks
dismantled before she grants her aid."
"But what would I serve my regulars?" Mary demanded.
"Herbal teas and nourishing broths," suggested Mother Willow. "Healthful drinks."
Mary narrowed her eyes. Perhaps sensing an explosion imminent, Mother Willow changed the subject and said delicately:
"And there is one other matter. . . ."
"What’s that?" said Mary stonily.
"There
was an unfortunate incident on Luna," said Mother Willow. "Tragic,
really. One of our faithful daughters was injured in an accident. The
poor creature was confused–we’re certain now there was brain damage–but
it would appear that, in her dementia, she said certain things that
were interpreted in entirely the wrong way. Misunderstandings will
happen . . . but Holy Mother Church seeks now to bring her child home."
"We understand she works for you here," said Mother Glenda.
"Er,"
said Mary. "Well. She has done, but . . . you must know she’s a bit
unreliable. I never know when she’ll turn up. I thought she was a
heretic, anyway."
"She
doesn’t know what she’s talking about," said Mother Glenda quickly.
"She ought to be in–that is, on medication for her condition."
"You mean you want to put her in hospital," said Mary.
"Oh,
no, no, no!" Mother Willow assured her. "Not one of those dreadful
state-run homes at all. The Church has a special place for its
afflicted daughters."
I’ll just bet you do, Mary thought. She sat mulling over the price tag on her future for a long moment. At last she stood up.
"Ladies, I think you’d best go now."
When
they had left at last, when the flint-edged smiles and veiled threats
and sniffs of mutual disapproval had been exchanged, Mary drew a deep
breath. "Missionaries," she muttered. Then she made her way back into
the stygian blackness of her kitchen.
She
found the Heretic at last, wedged behind the pantry cupboard like a
human cockroach, by the sound her ocular implant was making as it
telescoped in and out.
"They’re gone now," Mary informed her.
"Can’t come out," the Heretic replied hoarsely.
"You don’t want to go back to Earth with them?"
The Heretic didn’t answer.
"You’d get lots of nice drugs," Mary pointed out. The Heretic shifted, but was still mute.
"Look,
they’re not going to hurt you. This is modern times, see? They even
hinted your excommunication might be revoked. Wouldn’t you like that?"
"No," said the Heretic. "They think He’ll talk for them. But He won’t."
"Who won’t talk for them?" Mary asked, settling back on her heels. "Your, er, sort of god thing?"
"Yes."
"Why would they want him to talk to them?"
There
was a silence, filled gradually with the sound of the cupboard rattling
and the whirring noise of the Heretic’s eye. Finally she controlled her
trembling and gasped:
"Because
of what He said when I was in the House of Gentle Persuasion. He told
them–something was going to happen. And it happened just like He said."
"You mean, like a prophecy?"
"Prophecies
predictions can’t let this get out! Bad press Goddess knows false field
day for the unbelievers paternalist voodoo conspiracies wait! We can
use her!" The Heretic’s voice rose in a shriek like a rusty hinge coming unhinged. "Stop that now or you’ll put your other eye out! But He was there. Held down His hand from the red planet and said Come to me! Showed
me the open window and I left. Showed me a cargo freighter and I signed
on. And I am here with Him and I will never go back now."
Mary stared into the shadows, just able to make out one sunken red-rimmed eye in a pale face.
"So they think you can do predictions, is that it?"
There was silence again.
"And that’s why the Church wants you back," said Mary grimly.
The blur in the darkness might have nodded.
There were rumors.
Mary
heard that Areco had no interest in the terraforming project, that its
intention was to strip-mine for red diamonds, which were much more
valuable than anyone had thought, and it had signed no real lease with
the MAC.
At the
same time, she heard that the red diamond rush had played out
completely and that Areco was committed to backing the Martian
Agricultural Collective, because terraforming was the only way anyone
would ever make money on Mars.
She
heard that General Director Rotherhithe had been called home in
disgrace and seemed to be dying of emphysema. He was also rumored to be
in perfect health and Areco’s principal stockholder, calling the shots
from some sinister high desk on Earth.
She
heard that the Church was encountering unheard-of resistance from the
MAC. She heard that the Church had signed a mutually profitable
agreement with the MAC and that the new mission complex–temple,
administrative offices and all–was being built even now on the other
side of the settlement.
And her appeal was certain to be rejected, and her appeal was certain to succeed. Any day now.
Nothing happened. Life went on.
Then everything happened at once.
It
was difficult to organize a baby shower on Mars, but Rowan had managed,
on the very day before Mr. De Wit and Alice were scheduled to return to
Earth.
Alice’s
baby had been determined to be a girl, which was fortunate for the
purposes of party décor, as most of the household ware was already
pink. The Heretic had been coaxed out from under the refrigeration unit
long enough to bake a cake, which rose like a pink cloud and stayed
that way, thanks to Martian gravity, and while there was nothing but a
tin of Golden Syrup to pour over it, the effect was impressive.
The
problem of presents had been overcome as well. Rowan had commandeered
Mr. De Wit’s buke to catalog-shop, and simply printed out pictures of
what she had ordered. The images were blurry, gray, and took most of a
day to print out, but once she had them she painted them with red ochre
and pink clay.
"See?
Virtual presents," she said, holding up a depiction of a woolly jumper.
"You don’t even have to worry about luggage weight on the shuttle. This
set’s from me. It comes with matching bootees and a cap."
Alice
blotted tears and accepted it gratefully. Beside her, Mona gazed at the
heap of pictures–receiving blankets, bassinet, more woolly jumpers–and
squeaked, "Oh, I can’t wait to have a baby of my own!"
"Yes, you can, my girl," Mary told her, standing to one side with Mr. De Wit, who seemed rather stunned.
"I
can’t imagine what my neighbors will think when all this stuff starts
arriving," he said, giggling weakly. "I’ve been a bachelor so many
years. . . ."
"They’ll get over it," said Alice, and blew her nose. "Oh, Eli, darling, look! An Itsy Witsy Play Set with a slide and a sandbox!"
"That’s
from me," said Mary, somewhat stiffly. "If the little thing has to grow
up on Earth, at least she’ll be able to play outdoors."
There was a sizzling moment wherein Alice glared at her mother, and Mr. Morton broke the silence by clearing his throat.
"I,
er, I hope you won’t mind–I prepared something." He stepped forward and
offered Alice a text plaquette. "In honor of your name being Alice, I
thought it would be nice–there’s this marvelous old book, proscribed of
course, but I recorded as much as I could remember of the poems–perhaps
she’ll like them. . . ."
Alice
thumbed the switch and the screen lit up, and there was Mr. Morton in
miniature, wringing his hands as he said: "Ahem! Jabberwocky. By Lewis
Carroll. ’Twas brillig, and the slithy toves did gyre and gimbal in the
wabe. . . ."
"My, is it in Old English?" Alice inquired politely. "How nice, Mr. Morton!"
"Well, it–"
"This
is from me." Manco stepped forward, and drew from his coat a little
figurine, cast from the most delicately rose-colored grit he could
find. The Virgen de Guadalupe smiled demurely down at the businesslike
little seraph who held her aloft on a crescent moon. "The Good Mother
will look after her. You’ll see."
"It’s lovely! Oh, but I hope it doesn’t get confiscated going through Earth customs," Alice cried.
"Just point to the crescent horns and tell ’em it’s Isis," Mary advised.
Chiring stepped forward and laid a black cube on the table.
"This
is a holoalbum," he said. "Candid shots of the whole family and a
visual essay on the Martian landscape, you see? So she’ll know where
she’s from. She’ll also get a lifetime subscription to the Kathmandu Post."
"That’s very thoughtful," said Alice, not knowing what else to say. "Thank you, Chiring."
"Ma’am? There’s somebody in the airlock," said Mr. Morton.
"That’ll be Lulu and Jeannemarie from the clan, I expect," said Rowan.
It wasn’t.
"Ma’am."
Matelot stood stiffly, twisting his air mask in his hands. Padraig
Moylan and Gwil Evans flanked him, staring at the floor.
"What’s this, gentlemen?" said Mary.
Matelot
cleared his throat and looked from one to the other of his companions,
clearly hoping one of them would speak. When neither showed any
evidence of opening their mouths for the rest of eternity, he cleared
his throat again and said:
"Himself
sends word to say that, er, he’s been made an offer he can’t refuse to
drop our appeal against eviction. And that even if he could refuse it,
the clan has voted to accept."
"But there’s still Celtic Energy Systems, my dears," said Mary, into the thunderous silence that had fallen.
"Well,
that’s not piped up to anything yet, you know . . . but it’s not that,
Ma’am," said Matelot, looking up into Mary’s eyes and looking away
quickly. He gulped for air and went on: "Areco wants the fruit of our
labors. The ironworks and the cattle sheds and fields and all. Areco’s
buying ’em for a princely sum and giving us a golden rocket back to
Earth, plus company shares. Every one of us rich enough to retire and
live like gentry the rest of our lives. And so Himself sends you four
thousand punts Celtic as compensation for Finn’s fields, and hopes you
will consider emigration as well."
Padraig Moylan extended a banking plaquette in a trembling hand.
The
silence went on and on. Was anyone breathing? After a moment Mary
reached out and took the plaquette. She glanced at it before looking
back at the clansmen.
"I see," she said.
"And we’ll just be going, then," said Matelot. Mary’s voice hit him like an iron bar as she said:
"Is he selling all the fixtures?"
"What?" said Matelot weakly.
"I
want to buy all your antigrav units," said Mary, handing the plaquette
back. "I want them in my house by tomorrow morning. And I’ll make a
preemptive bid, look you, for your last harvest. Go now and tell him
so."
"Yes’m," said Matelot, and collided with his fellow clansmen as they all three attempted to get out the airlock at once.
When
they had gone, Mary sank down on a settle. The rest of her household
stared at her. Nobody said anything until Rowan came and crouched
beside her.
"Mum, it doesn’t matter. Maybe Areco will make us an offer too–"
"We’re not waiting to see," said Mary.
"You’re
going back to Earth?" asked Alice, too shocked for triumph. Mr. De Wit
shook his head in silence, a sick expression in his eyes.
"I am not," said Mary. "I said I won’t be driven out and I meant it."
"Good
for you!" cried Mr. Morton, and blanched as everyone turned to stare at
him. Then he drew a breath and said: "She’s right! We–we don’t need the
clan. We’ve got our pumping station and all that land up there. We can
make a new place! Our own settlement, for people like us. We’ve
already got plans for the theaters. We can expand into a hotel and
restaurant and–who knows what else?" He spread out his hands in general
appeal.
"Where are we going to get the people?" asked Manco.
"Well, er–you can advertise in the Kathmandu Post,
can’t you?" Mr. Morton turned to Chiring. "Tell the Sherpas all about
the great job opportunities now being offered at, ah, Griffith Energy
Systems! Tell them we’re making a wonderful place up here where people
will be free and there’ll be Art and exciting adventure and, and no
corporate bad guys running their lives!"
Chiring had already pulled out his jotpad before Mr. Morton had stammered to his conclusion, and was busily making notes.
"I think we can get Earth’s attention," he said.
Alice sighed, gazing at her mother. She looked down at the bright pictures scattered at her feet.
"We’ll stay and give you all the help we can," she said. "Won’t we, Eli?"
"No."
Mary got to her feet. "You’re going back to Earth. No sense wasting
perfectly good tickets. You can be my agents there. I’ll be buying a
lot of things for the new place; I want them shipped properly. And Mr.
De Wit can handle all of the thousand lawsuits I plan to file much more effectively if he’s on Earth, can’t you, Mr. De Wit?"
Mr.
De Wit bowed slightly. "Your servant, Madam." He coughed. "I think it
might be worth your while to inquire whether Polieos is interested in
buying shares in Griffith Energy Systems."
"I
will, by Goddess!" Mary began to pace. She swung one arm at her
available complement of men. "You lot go over to the clan now and start
collecting those antigrav units. If the old bastard won’t sell, tell
him we’re just borrowing them, but collected they must be."
"Yes,
Mama." Manco picked up a crowbar and looked significantly at Chiring,
Morton, and De Wit. They headed all together for the airlock.
"Girls,
start packing. Everything’s to be closed down and strapped in.
Disconnect everything except Three Tank. Mona, you go out to the Ice
Depot and let the Haulers know I’m giving away beer tonight."
"Right away, Mum!" Mona grabbed her air mask.
As Alice and Rowan hurried away to pack, Mary strode into her kitchen.
"Did you hear all that?" she called. There was a rustle from the shadows in the pantry. Finally the Heretic sidled into sight.
"Yes," she said, blinking.
"Will it work, do you think? Can we tell them all to go to hell and start our own place?" Mary demanded.
The
Heretic just shrugged, drooping forward like an empty garment; then it
was as though someone had seized her by the back of the neck and jerked
her upright. She fixed a blazing red eye on Mary, and in a brassy voice
cried:
"For
the finest in Martian hospitality, the tourist has only one real
choice: Ares’ premiere hotel–The Empress of Mars in Mars Two, founded
by turn-of-the-century pioneer Mary Griffith and still managed by her
family today. Enjoy five-star cuisine in the Empress’s unique
Mitsubishi Room, or discover the delights of a low-gravity hot spring
sauna!"
Mary
blinked. "Mars Two, is it to be? As good a name as any, I suppose.
That’s a grand picture of the future, but a little practical advice
would be appreciated."
The strange voice took on a new intonation, sounding sly:
"All-seeing Zeus is lustful, can never be trusted; His son has a golden skull. But Ares loves a fighter."
"I don’t hold with gods," said Mary stiffly. "Especially not a god of war."
Someone else smiled, using the Heretic’s face. It was profoundly unsettling.
"All life has to fight to live. There’s more to it than spears and empty rhetoric; she who struggles bravely has His attention."
Mary backed out of the kitchen, averting her eyes from the red grin.
"Then
watch me, whoever you are, because I’m going to give Areco one hell of
a fight," she muttered. "And if my cook’s still in there, tell her to
get to work. I’m throwing a party tonight."
By the time the sullen day dawned, the Haulers were still drunk enough to be enthusiastic.
"Jack the whole thing up on ag units, yeah!" roared the Brick. "Brilliant!"
His fellow Haulers howled their agreement.
"And just sort of walk it up the slope a ways, we thought," said Mary. "So it’ll be on my claim, see."
"No,
no, no, babe–" a Hauler named Tiny Reg swayed over her like a cliff
about to fall. "See, that’ll never work. See? Too much tail wind. Get
yer arse blowed down to Valles Marinerisisis. You nona let–wanna let
us–"
"Tow my house all the way up there?" asked Mary artlessly. "Oh, I couldn’t ask!"
"Hell yeah!" said the Brick. "Just hook it up an’ go!"
"Fink
I got my glacier chains inna cabover," said a Hauler named Alf, rising
from a settle abruptly and falling with a crash that sent a bow wave of
spilled beer over Mary’s boots. When his friends had picked him up, he
wiped Phobos Porter from his face and grinned obligingly. "Jus’ nip out
an’ see, shall I?"
"Oh,
sir, how very kind," said Mary. She put out an arm and arrested Mr.
Morton’s flight, for he had been in the process of running to refill
mugs from a pitcher. "Can we do it?" she demanded of him sotto voce. "You understand these things. Will the house take the stresses, without cracking like half an eggshell?"
"Er–"
Mr. Morton blinked, stared around him for the first time with
professional eyes. "Well–it will if we brace the interior cantilevers.
We’d need, ah, telescoping struts–which we haven’t got, but–"
"Where can we get them?"
"They’re
all in the construction storage shed on the Base. . . ." Mr. Morton’s
voice trailed off. He looked down at the pitcher he was carrying.
Lifting it to his mouth, he drank the last pint it contained and wiped
his mouth with the back of his hand. "I know the code to get the shed
door open," he said.
"Do you?" Mary watched him closely. His spine was stiffening. He put down the pitcher, flexed his long arms.
"Yes, I do," he said. "I’ll just go off and see an oppressive corporate monolithic evil entity about a dog, shall I?"
"I
think that would be a good idea," said Mary. Mr. Morton strode to the
airlock, put on his mask, and paused as though to utter a dramatic exit
line; then realized he should have delivered it before putting his mask
on. He saluted instead, with a stiff perfect British salute, and
marched away down the Tube.
"Mum?"
Mary
turned and beheld Alice, swathed extravagantly for the trip Outside.
Mr. De Wit stood beside her, a carryon in each hand and under either
arm.
"The tickets say to get there three hours before flight time for processing," said Alice hesitantly.
"So you’d best go now," said Mary. Alice burst into tears and flung her arms around her mother’s neck.
"I’m sorry I haven’t been a good daughter," cried Alice. "And now I’m going to feel like a deserter too!"
"No,
dearest, of course you’re not a deserter," said Mary automatically,
patting her on the arm. She looked over Alice’s shoulder at Mr. De Wit.
"You’re going to go away with this nice man and bear me a lovely
granddaughter, see, and perhaps someday I’ll come visit you in my
diamond-encrusted planet shuttle, yes?"
"I
hope so," said Alice, straightening up, for her back ached. Mother and
daughter looked at one another across all the resentments, the dislike,
the grudges, the eternal intractable issues of their lives. What else was there to say?
"I love you, Mum," said Alice at last.
"I love you, too," said Mary. She went to Mr. De Wit and stood on tiptoe to kiss him, for which he bent down.
"If you desert her, I’ll hunt you down and kill you with my own two hands," she murmured in his ear. He grinned.
They
went away through the airlock, just as Alf the Hauler came in. Beer had
frozen on his clothing and he was bleeding from his nostrils, but he
seemed not to have noticed.
"Got a couple fousand meters of chain!" he announced. " ’Nough to move bloody shrackin’ Antartarctica!"
"You
silly boy, did you go out without your air?" Mary scolded gently.
"Rowan, bring a wet face flannel for our Alf. Where are your keys,
dear?"
Smiling
like a broken pumpkin, Alf held them up. Mary confiscated them and
passed them to Manco, who masked up before ducking outside to back
Alf’s hauler into position.
"You
can hold yer breff out dere, you know," said Alf proudly if muffledly,
as Mary cleaned him up. "S’really easy once you get used to it."
"I’m sure it is, love. Have another beer and sit still for a bit," Mary told him, and turned to Rowan. "What’s happening now?"
"Uncle Brick and the others are putting the ag-units in place," said Rowan. "Is it time to disconnect Three Tank yet?"
"Not yet. They’ll want a drink before they go up the slope," Mary replied.
"But, Mum, they’re drunk!" Rowan protested.
"Can
you think of a better way to get them to do it?" Mary snapped. "What
chance have we got, unless they think it’s a mad lark they came up with
themselves? I’ll get this house on my claim any damned way I can. Pour
another round!"
Alice
was reclining in her compartment, adjusting to the artificial gravity
and staring up at the monitor above the couch. It was showing only
old-fashioned flat images from the live camera mounted above the
shuttleport; but the views were something to occupy her attention in
the gray cubespace, and the litany of Last time I’ll ever have to look at this was soothing her terrors.
Suddenly,
something on the screen moved, and the image became surreal,
impossible: there out beyond the Settlement a dome was rising, as
though a hill had decided to walk. Alice cried out. Eliphal was beside
her immediately, though she had had the impression he had been off
seeing about their menu selections for the flight.
"What’s the matter?" he asked, taking her hand in both his own.
"Where did you come from?" she asked him, bewildered. "Look out there! She’s actually talked them into it!"
Clearly
free now, the Empress of Mars was crawling up the slope from the
Settlement Base like a gigantic snail, ponderous, of immense dignity,
tugged along inexorably by no less than three freighters on separate
leads of chain, each one sending up its own pink cloud of dust from
roaring jets.
"Of
course she’s done it, Alice." How assured his voice was, and yet a
little sad. "Your mother will found a city up there, on beer and
rebellion. It’ll be a remarkable success. You’ll see, my dear."
"You
really think so?" She stared into his eyes, unsettled by the expression
there. He was the kindest man she had ever met, but sometimes she felt
as though she were a small lost animal he’d picked up and taken home.
She turned her eyes back to the monitor. "I guess we should have stayed
to help her, shouldn’t we?"
"No!"
He put his arms around her. "You’ll come home to Earth. I’ll keep you
safe, you and the little girl. I promised your mother."
"Oh,
Earth . . ." Alice thought of green hills, and blue skies, and a blue
sea breaking on a white beach . . . and her mother, and her mother’s
problems, finally subtracted from her life. She closed her eyes,
burying her face in Eliphal’s shoulder. His beard smelled of cinnamon
and myrrh.
"Looks like a huge mobile tit!" whooped the Brick, peering into his rear monitor as he yanked back on the throttle.
"But
it’s leaking, Mum," fretted Mona, watching the vapor plumes emerge and
dissipate instantly wherever they appeared, over every unplastered
crack and vent. "Are we going to have any air at all once we get it up
there?"
"We can
wear our masks indoors the first few days," Mary told her, not taking
her eyes off the monitor. "Wear extra thermals. Whatever we have to do. Hush, girl!"
In Alf’s cab, Chiring was muttering into a mike, aiming his cam at the monitor for lack of a window.
"Chiring
Skousen, your News Martian, here! What you’re seeing is an epic
journey, ladies and gentlemen, a heroic gesture in defiance of
oppression!" He paused, reflected on the number of seats the NeoMaoists
had won in the last Nepali parliamentary election, and went on: "The
valiant working classes have risen in aid of one woman’s brave stand
against injustice, while the technocrats cower in their opulent
shelters! Yes, the underpaid laborers of Mars still believe in such
seemingly outmoded concepts as gallantry, chivalry, and courage!"
"And beer," said Alf. "Whoo-hoo!"
"The new battle cry of Mars, ladies and gentlemen!" Chiring ranted. "The ancient demand of Beer for the Workers! Now,
if you’re still getting the picture from the monitor clearly, you can
see the slope of Mons Olympus rising before us. Our road is that paler
area between the two rows of boulders. We, er, we’re fighting quite a
headwind, but our progress has been quite good so far, due to the
several ice freighters kindly donated by the Haulers Union, which are
really doing a tremendous job of moving Ms. Griffith’s structure."
"Yeh, fanks," said Alf.
"And
the, er, the chains used for this amazing feat are the same gauge used
for tackling and hauling polar ice, so as you can imagine, they’re
quite strong–" Chiring babbled, keeping his camera on the forward
monitor because he had spotted something he did not understand in the
rear monitor. He paused again and squinted at it.
"What the hell’s that?" he whispered to Alf. Alf looked up at the monitor.
"Uh-oh," he said. "That’s a Strawberry."
"And,
and, er, ladies and gentlemen, if you’ll follow now as I turn my cam on
the rear monitor, you can see one of the unique phenomena of the
Martian landscape. That sort of lumpy pink thing that appears to be
advancing on the Settlement Base at high speed is what the locals call
a Strawberry. Let’s ask local weather expert, Mr. Alfred Chipping, to
explain just exactly what a Strawberry is. Mr. Chipping?"
Alf
stared into the cam, blinking. "Well, it’s–it’s like a storm kind of a
fing. See, you got yer sandstorms, wot is bad news, eh? And you got yer
funny jogeraphy up here and jolligy and, er, now and again you get yer
Strawberry, wot is like all free of ’em coming together to make this
really fick sandstorm wot pingpongs off the hills and rocks and changes
direction wifout warning."
"And–why’s it that funny spotty color, Mr. Chipping?"
"Cos it’s got rocks in," grunted Alf, slapping all three accelerator levers up with one blow of his ham hand.
Chiring began to pray to Vishnu, but he did it silently, and turned his camera back to the forward monitor.
"Well,
isn’t that interesting!" he cried brightly. "More details on the
fascinating Martian weather coming up soon, ladies and gentlemen!"
"I’ll be damned," said the Brick, in a voice that meant he had abruptly sobered. "There’s a Strawberry down there!"
"Where?" Mary craned her head, instinctively looking for a window, but he pointed at the rear monitor. "What’s a Strawberry?"
"Trouble for somebody," the Brick replied, accelerating. "Settlement Base, looks like."
"What?"
"Oh!" said Mona. "You mean one of those cyclone things like Tiny Reg was in?"
"What?"
"Yeah," grunted the Brick, accelerating more.
"Tiny
Reg said he was hit by one down by Terra Sirenum and it just took his
freighter and picked it up with him in it and he went round and round
so fast it broke all his gyros and his compass as well," Mona
explained.
"Bloody Hell!" Mary began to undo her seat harness, but the Brick put out an arm to restrain her.
"You don’t want to do that, babe," he said quietly.
"What do we care if it hits Settlement Base, anyroad?" Mona asked.
"Girl, your sister’s down there!"
"Oh!"
Mona looked up at the monitor in horror, just as the Strawberry
collided with the new Temple of Diana, which imploded in a puff of
crimson sand.
"Alice!"
Mary screamed, searching across the monitors for a glimpse of the
transport station. There was the shuttle, safe on its pad, lights still
blinking in loading patterns. There it stayed safe, too, for the
Strawberry turned now and shot away from the Base, tearing through
Tubes as it went, and the lockout klaxons sounded as oxygen blew away
white like seafoam in the burning-cold day.
"Never saw one come up on Tharsis before," was all the Brick said, steering carefully.
"But the transport station’s safe!" Mona said.
"Goddess thank You, Goddess thank You, Goddess. . . . Is it getting bigger?" Mary stared fixedly at the monitor bank.
"No," said the Brick. "It’s just getting closer."
Within
the Empress, Mr. Morton scrambled spiderlike along the network of
crossing stabilizer struts, which had telescoped out to prop the
Empress’ walls like glass threads in a witchball. He peered down
worriedly at the floor. It was heaving and flexing rather more than he
had thought it would. He looked over at the telltale he had mounted on
the wall to monitor stress changes, but it was too far away to read
easily.
"Are we
going to be okay?" inquired Manco, remarkably stoic for a man dangling
in a harness ten meters above uncertain eternity. The Heretic swung
counterclockwise beside him, her red eye shut, listening to the clatter
of her saucepans within their wired-up cupboards.
"Masks on, I think," said Mr. Morton.
"Gotcha,"
said Manco, and he slipped his on as Mr. Morton did the same, and
gulped oxygen, and after a moment he nudged the Heretic as she orbited
past. "Come on, honey, mask up. Leaks, you know?"
"Yeah," said the Heretic, not opening her eye, but she slipped on her mask and adjusted the fit.
"So what do we do?" Manco asked.
"Hang in there," said Mr. Morton, with a pitch in his giggle suggesting the long sharp teeth of impending catastrophe.
"Ha bloody Ha," said Manco, watching the walls. "We’re shaking more. Are they speeding up out there?"
"Oh,
no, certainly not!" Mr. Morton said. "They know better than to do that.
No more than two kilometers an hour, I told them, or the stresses will
exceed acceptable limits."
"Really?"
Manco squinted through his goggles at a bit of rushing-by ground
glimpsed through a crack on the floor that opened and shut like a
mouth.
"All
right, here’s something we can do–" Mr. Morton edged his way along a
strut to the bundle of extras. "Let’s reinforce! Never hurts to be
sure, does it?" He pulled out a telescoping unit and passed it hand
over hand to Manco. "Just pop that open and wedge it into any of the
cantilevers I haven’t already braced."
Manco
grabbed the strut and twisted it. It unlocked and shot out in two
directions, and he swung himself up to the nearest joist to ram it into
place.
"Splendid," said Mr. Morton, unlocking another strut and wedging it athwart two others.
"Should I be doing that too?" asked the Heretic, opening her good eye.
"Well,
er–" Mr. Morton thought of her inability to hold on to a pan, let alone
a structural element requiring strength and exactitude in placement,
and, kindly as possible, he said: "Here’s a thought: why don’t you
rappel down to that big box there on the wall, you see? And just, er,
watch the little numbers on the screen and let us know if they exceed
5008. Can you do that?"
"Okay,"
said the Heretic, and went down to the telltale in a sort of controlled
plummet. Below her, the floor winked open and gave another glimpse of
Mars, which seemed to be going by faster than it had a moment earlier.
"This box says 5024," the Heretic announced.
Mr.
Morton said a word he had never used before. Manco, hanging by one
hand, turned to stare, and the Heretic’s ocular implant began to whirr
in and out, gravely disturbing the fit of her mask.
"So, Mr. Brick," said Mary in a voice calm as iron, "Am I to understand that the storm is bearing down upon us now?"
"Bearing up, babe, but that’s it, essentially," said the Brick, not taking his eyes off the monitor.
"Can we outrun it, Mr. Brick?"
"We might," he said, "If we weren’t towing a house behind us."
"I see," said Mary.
There
followed what would have been a silence, were it not for the roar of
the motors and the rotors and the rising percussive howl of the wind.
"How does one release the tow lines, Mr. Brick?" Mary inquired.
"That lever right there, babe," said the Brick.
"Mum, that’s our house!" said Mona.
"A house is only a thing, girl," said Mary.
"And there’s still people in it! Mr. Morton stayed inside, didn’t he? And Manco stayed with him! They’re holding it together!"
Mary
did not answer, staring at the monitor. The Strawberry loomed now like
a mountain behind them, and under it the Empress seemed tiny as a
horseshoe crab scuttling for cover.
"And
there’s always the chance the Strawberry’ll hit something and go
poinging off in another direction," said the Brick, in a carefully
neutral voice.
"Mr.
Brick," said Mary, "Basing your judgment on your years of experience
hauling carbon dioxide from the icy and intolerant polar regions, could
you please think carefully now and tell me exactly what chance there is
that the Strawberry will, in fact, change direction and leave us alone?
In your opinion, see?"
"I absolutely do not know," the Brick replied.
"Right," said Mary. She reached out and pulled down the lever to release the tow line.
A
nasty twanging mess was avoided by the fact that Alf, in his freighter,
had made the same decision to cast loose at nearly the same second, as
had Tiny Reg (who had actually lived through a Strawberry after all and
who would have cast loose even earlier, had his reflexes not been
somewhat impaired by seventeen imperial pints of Red Crater Ale).
They
all three sheared away in different directions, as though released from
slings, speeding madly over the red stony desolation and slaloming
through piles of rock the color of traffic cones. Behind them the
Empress of Mars drifted to a halt, its tow lines fluttering like
streamers. The Strawberry kept coming.
"5020," the Heretic announced in a trembling voice. "5010. 5000. 4050."
"Much
better," said Mr. Morton, gasping in relief. "Good sensible fellows.
Perhaps they were only giving in to the temptation to race, or
something manly like that. Now, I’ll just get out my flexospanner and
we’ll–"
"4051," said the Heretic.
"What the hell’s that noi–" said Manco, just before the ordered world ended.
On
thirty-seven monitors, which was exactly how many there were on the
planet, horrified spectators saw the Strawberry bend over as though it
were having a good look at the Empress of Mars; then they saw it leap
away, only giving the Empress a swat with its tail end as it bounced
off to play with the quailing sand dunes of Amazonia Planitia. The
Empress, for its part, shot away up the swell of Mons Olympus, rotating
end over end as it went.
Mr.
Morton found himself swung about on his tether in ever-decreasing
circles, ever closer to a lethal-looking tangle of snapping struts to
which he was unfortunately still moored. The Heretic caromed past him,
clinging with both arms to the stress telltale, which had torn free of
the wall. Something hit him from behind like a sack of sand, and then
was in front of him, and he clutched at it and looked into Manco’s
eyes. Manco seized hold of the nearest strut with bleeding hands, but
his grasp was slick, and it took both of them scrabbling with hands and
feet to fend off the broken struts and find a comparatively still bit
of chaos where they clung, as the floor and ceiling revolved, revolved,
slower now, revolving–
Floor upwards–
Righting itself–
Going over again, oh no, was the floor going to crack right open?–
Still tumbling–oh, don’t let it settle on its side, it’ll split open for sure–
Righting itself again–
And
then a colossal lurch as the wind hit the Empress, only the ordinary
gale force wind of Mars now but enough to sail anything mounted on
ag-units, and Mr. Morton thought: We’re going to be blown to the South Pole!
Something
dropped toward them from above, and both men saw the Heretic hurtling
past, still clutching the stress telltale as well as a long confusion
of line that had become wrapped about her legs. She regarded them
blankly in the second before she went through the floor, which opened
now like split fruit rind. The line fell after her and then snapped
taut, in the inrush of freezing no-air. There was a shuddering shock
and the Empress strained at what anchored it, but in vain.
The
men yelled and sucked air, clutching at their masks. Staring down
through the vortex of blasting sand, Manco saw Mr. Morton’s neoGothic
pumping station with the stress telltale imbedded firmly in its roof,
and several snarls of line wound around its decorative gables.
And
he saw, and Mr. Morton saw too, the Heretic rising on the air like a
blown leaf, mask gone, her clothing being scoured away but replaced
like a second skin by a coating of sand and blood that froze, her hair
streaming sidelong. Were her arms flung out in a pointless clutching
reflex, or was she opening them in an embrace? Was her mouth wide in a
cry of pain or of delight, as the red sand filled it?
And
Manco watched, stunned, and saw what he saw, and Mr. Morton saw it too,
and they both swore ever afterward to what they saw then, which was:
that the Heretic turned her head, smiled at them, and flew away into the tempest.
"Take us back!" Mary shrieked. "Look, look, it’s been blown halfway up the damn volcano, but it’s still in one piece!"
The
Brick dutifully came about and sent them hurtling back, through a cloud
of sand and gravel that whined against the freighter’s hull. "Looks
like it’s stuck on something," he said.
"So
maybe everybody’s okay!" cried Mona. "Don’t you think, Mum? Maybe they
just rode inside like it was a ship, and nobody even got hurt?"
Mary and the Brick exchanged glances. "Certainly," said Mary. "Not to worry, dear."
But
as they neared the drilling platform, it was painfully obvious that the
Empress was still in trouble. Air plumed from a dozen cracks in the
dome, and lay like a white mist along the underside, eddying where the
occasional gust hit it. Several of the ag-units had broken or gone
offline, causing it to sag groundward here and there, and even above
the roar of the wind and through the walls of the cab, Mary could hear
the Empress groaning in all its beams.
"Mum, there’s a hole in the floor!" Mona screamed.
"I can see that. Hush, girl."
"But they’ll all be dead inside!"
"Maybe not. They’d masks, hadn’t they? Mr. Brick, I think we’d best see for ourselves."
The
Brick just nodded, and made careful landing on the high plateau. They
left Mona weeping in the cab and walked out, bent over against the
wind, deflecting sand from their goggles with gloved hands.
"YOU
GOT UNITS 4, 6, AND 10 DEAD, LOOKS LIKE," announced the Brick. "IF WE
SHUT OFF 2, 8, AND 12, THAT OUGHT TO EVEN OUT THE STRESS AND LET HER
DOWN SOME."
"WILL YOU GIVE ME A LEG UP, THEN, PLEASE?"
The
Brick obliged, hoisting Mary to his shoulders, and there she balanced
to just reach the shutoff switches, and, little by little, the Empress
evened out, and settled, and looked not quite so much like a drunken
dowager with her skirts over her head. Mary was just climbing down when
Alf and Tiny Reg pulled up in their freighters. Chiring scrambled from
Alf’s cab and came running toward her with his cam held high.
"UNBELIEVABLE!"
he said. "IT’S AN ACT OF THE GODS, LADIES AND GENTLEMEN! NARROW ESCAPE
FROM CERTAIN DEATH! FREAK STORM DEPOSITING BUILDING INTACT ON VERY SITE
INTENDED! MARS’S FIRST RECORDED MIRACLE!"
"SHUT THE DAMN THING OFF," Mary told the audience of Posterity. "WE’VE GOT PEOPLE INSIDE."
Chiring
gulped, seeing the wreckage clearly for the first time. He ran for the
Empress, where the Brick was already taking a crowbar to the airlock.
"MUM!" Rowan jumped from Tiny Reg’s cab. She reached her mother just as Mona did the same, and they clung to Mary, weeping.
"HUSH YOUR NOISE!" Mary yelled. "WE’RE ALIVE, AREN’T WE? THE HOUSE IS HERE, ISN’T IT?"
"DAMN YOU, MUM, WHAT’LL WE BREATHE UP HERE?" Rowan yelled back. "HOW’LL WE LIVE? WE’LL FREEZE!"
"THE GODDESS WILL PROVIDE!"
Rowan
said something atheistical and uncomplimentary then, and Mary would
have slapped her if she hadn’t been wearing a mask, and as they stood
glaring at each other Mary noticed, far down the slope below Rowan, a
traveling plume of grit coming up the road. It was the CeltCart.
By
the time the cart reached the plateau, Mary had armed herself with the
Brick’s crowbar, and marched out swinging it threateningly.
"COCHEVELOU,
YOU’RE ON MY LAND," she said. She aimed a round blow at his head but it
only glanced off, and he kept coming and wrapped his arms around her.
"DARLING
GIRL, I’M BEGGING YOUR PARDON ON MY KNEES," said Cochevelou. Mary tried
to take another swipe at him but dropped the crowbar.
"HOUND!"
she gasped, "GO BACK TO EARTH, TO YOUR SOFT LIFE, AND I, ON MARS, WILL
DRY MY TEARS, AND LIVE TO MAKE MY ENEMIES KNEEL!"
"AW,
HONEY, YOU DON’T MEAN THAT," Cochevelou said. "HAVEN’T I GONE AND GIVEN
IT ALL UP FOR YOUR SAKE? THE SPOILED DARLINGS CAN ELECT THEMSELVES
ANOTHER CHIEFTAIN. I’M STAYING ON."
Mary
peered over his shoulder at the CeltCart, and noted the preponderance
of tools he had brought with him: anvil, portable forge, pig iron . . .
and she thought of the thousand repairs the Empress’s tanks and
cantilevers would now require. Drawing a deep breath, she cried:
"OH, MY DEAR, I’M THE GLADDEST WOMAN THAT EVER WAS!"
"MUM! MUM!" Mona fought her way through the blowing sand. "THEY’VE COME ROUND!"
Mary
broke from Cochevelou’s embrace, and he followed her back to the cab of
the Brick’s freighter, where Manco and Mr. Morton were sitting up, or
more correctly propping themselves up, weak as newborns, letting Alf
swab BioGoo on their cuts and scrapes.
"ARE YOU ALL RIGHT, BOYS? WHERE’S THE HERETIC GONE?" Mary demanded.
Mr. Morton began to cry, but Manco stared at her with eyes like eggs and said, "There was a miracle, Mama."
Miracles
are good for business, and so is the attraction of a hot bath in a
frozen place of eternal dirt, and so are fine ales and beers in an
otherwise joyless proletarian agricultural paradise. And free
arethermal energy is very good indeed, if it’s only free to you
and costs others a packet, especially if they have to crawl and
apologize to you and treat you like a lady in addition to paying your
price for it.
Five
years down the line, there was a new public house sign, what with the
Queen of England being scoured away at last by relentless grit, and a
fine new sign it was. Two grinning giants, one red and one black,
supported between them a regal little lady in fine clothes. At her
throat was the painted glory of a red diamond; in her right hand was a
brimful mug, and her left hand beckoned the weary traveler to warmth
and good cheer. Inside, in the steamy warmth, Sherpas drank their beer
with butter.
Five
years down the line, there were holocards on the back bar, all
featuring little Mary De Wit of Amsterdam, whether screaming and
red-faced for the camera in her first bath, or holding tight to Mr. De
Wit’s long hand while paddling her toes in the blue sea, or smiling
like a sticky cherub before a massed extravagance of Solstice presents
and Chanukah sweets, or solemn on her first day of school.
Five
years down the line, there was a little shrine in the corner of the
kitchen with a new image, a saint for the new faith. It resembled
nothing so much as the hood ornament of an ancient Rolls-Royce, a sylph
leaning forward into the wind, discreetly shrouded by slipstream short
of actual nakedness. Its smile was distinctly unsettling. Its one eye
was a red diamond.
Five
years down the line, there was actually a Centre for the Performing
Arts on Mars, and its thin black-clad manager put on very strange plays
indeed, drawing the young intellectuals from what used to be Settlement
Base, and there were pasty-faced disciples of Martian Drama (they
called themselves the UltraViolets) creating a new art form in the
rapidly expanding city on Mons Olympus.
Five
years down the line at Mars One, there were long green fields spidering
out along the Martian equator and even down to the lowlands, because
that’s what a good socialist work-ethic will get you, but up in Mars
Two, there were domed rose gardens to the greater glory of Her who
smiled serene in Her cloak of stars, Mother of miracles like roses that
bloom in despite of bitter frost.