Tuesday, 3 December 2019

ANOTHER EXCERPT FROM 'REACH FOR MARS.'

Prologue

We could hear the rumble of high-powered rocket engines warming up at idle from the other side of the airfield as we climbed aboard the transport. That rumble grew steadily louder as we were carried across the airfield toward the hangar, until I could feel the vibrations of it in my chest. As we climbed down from the Hummer and approached the external crew access door, the engines shut down one by one so that when we entered and walked down the corridor to the main hangar, our footsteps and their echoes off the walls were the only sounds that filled an eerie silence. As we entered the main hangar, we all stopped in our tracks and gazed up at the spaceship resting on her launch ramp above us.
With the brilliance of the overhead hangar arc lights reflecting off her white paint and her nose canted up thirty degrees, she looked as if she was flying to the stars without us. She was breathtakingly beautiful. She was to be our home for roughly two years—one hundred and eighty days of flight time to Mars, three hundred and seventy days of living and working there, and one hundred and eighty days for the return journey, or thereabouts. She was named Albatross after the fabled bird, a legendary symbol of hope and good luck to ancient (and not-so-ancient) mariners.
She would have had a classic flying saucer shape if it weren’t for the array of three huge thrusters poking out of her stern. There was one port thruster and one starboard thruster, and nestled between them but slightly higher on the stern was the main thruster. There were also twin Titan rocket boosters mounted to her underbelly, which gave the impression that she was carrying two very large torpedoes. They were there to save us fuel and to help blast us up to exit speed into the stratosphere, where they would be released to parachute back to Earth to be recovered, serviced, and refueled ready for the next launch. The spell was broken by the approach of Colonel Holman McCallum. He looked over his shoulder and upward, saying,
“She certainly is a beautiful ship to behold. I have no doubt that you two clowns are dying to launch her into space and send her blazing through the solar system toward Mars.”
“Yes, sir!” Nick and I replied immediately. He shook our hands and then the hands of the rest of the crew, wishing us all the best of luck. Then he escorted us to the elevator that would lift us to the entry hatch into the ship.
The other four crew members stepped onto the elevator, and it started to rise. Holly, as the colonel was known, grabbed our arms and led us into a room nearby. After closing the door, he turned and walked to his briefcase, opened it, and pulled out two astronaut canteens, which he held out to us. Although they looked like normal canteens, they were designed to be used in zero gravity, so they had a one way valve stem to draw out the liquid. More like a Sippy cup than a canteen, really.
“We’ve already got one each, sir,” I said.
“Not like these, you haven’t. They’re filled with rum.” We took them eagerly and thanked him.
“Think of it as a going away gift, and I stress going away,” he said with a smile. “I figure you won’t come across many corner liquor stores out there, although I suppose you could order it on the Internet, but you’d have Buckley’s chance of getting it delivered to you! Drink it slowly; it’s got to last you twenty-four months or more.”

We thanked him again as we stepped onto the elevator, and it started to rise. Holly once again shook our hands and wished us good luck on the gantry outside the entry hatch. He couldn’t follow us into the ship, because he wasn’t wearing magnetic boots, which were required to keep from sliding down the thirty-degree slope of the metal deck and crashing into the aft bulkhead. After we were fully suited up and strapped into our launch chairs, there wasn’t really anything for us to do while the techies did the final checks and preparations to launch, so I let my mind wander back to the time when I had first met Nicholas Watson.

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