The Lunadyne Incident and Other Stories
Descent into Darkness is a featured short story in the collection The Lunadyne Incident and Other Stories by Torn MacAlester, a near future science fiction short story that is part of a collection, is now available at amazon.com.
Excerpt from Descent into Darkness by Torn MacAlester
A New Mission
It took some time for Nils Carmike to process the shock of the events of the past month. Monday had been on the first. Not an unusual occurrence since one seventh of all months begins on Monday. Though Monday the first draws special attention as having both the start of the week and the start of the month activities happening, as well as new projects tend to either start on the first day of the week or the first day of the month. Monday the first draws special attention because of it. But this Monday the first didn’t mark a beginning for Nils. This Monday marked an end for Nils, as Cy MacInturner dropped him from the Moon mission. Cy’s decision sent ripples into the schedule since Nil’s backup ended up with the position, and Cy wanted another six months added to the already significant schedule to retrain his crew and backup. It meant only one thing: Nils was being pushed out of the agency.
By the end of the month, which was on a Tuesday, Moses Crane, Chief Astronaut and one of the most experienced astronauts remaining in the space agency after the reorganization created by the Yellowstone disaster, grabbed Nils to become part of his crew. The destination was the Moon. As a result, Nils and Mose were the talk of the space center. The Chief Astronaut selected them for the third mission to the Moon. Someone had already dumped Nils from one mission. To suddenly have a reprieve gave Nils hope. The Moon was his.
“What’s the mission, Mose?” Ask Nils.
“Simple,” said the older Astronaut. “Land at Shackleton Rim. Extract an ice core from a PSR.”
“PSR?” Nils asked, then suddenly remembered it was the shorthand for ‘permanent shadowed region’, a location on the Moon that never saw sunlight. It was a term that he’d not quite gotten used to since he originally learned the term ‘dark crater’ to describe the same thing.
“You know what the PSR is, don’t you?” The older astronaut asked.
“Oh, I do. I was thinking about something else when you first used the term.” Taking an extravehicular activity or EVA to the bottom of one had been on the list of activities on the previous mission that Nils had lost. It was a reprieve, in a sense. Losing the seat — but gaining the activity seemed like a win for him. “How many EVAs? Or are we focused on the one task in the dark crater?”
“No, we’ve got three planned by the back room,” said Mose. “The surface experiment setup, the PSR, and a geology traverse.”
“Is the PSR second, or can we go after it first?”
“We can do as we wish,” said Mose. “I got the guarantee from the Astronaut Office before I agreed to take this mission. What I say goes.”
“So that applies––”
“All across the board, including crew selection.”
Nils knew Mose had the experience and reputation to pull it off too. He’d been an astronaut for nearly forty years. Nils admired the old-school approach dated from the earliest of the Shuttle missions and he’d flown in every class of vehicle the agency had been using since. When Cy MacInturner wanted to reorganize Moon flight three, Mose stepped forward at 71 and took command of the mission.
“Are you sure you want me, Mose?” asked Nils, anxious because of the reprimand during his support of a failed Moon mission and the recent dismissal from another.
“Yeah, Nils. You aren’t a rookie. You’ve flown to the space station a few times, and you’ve done your rotation as a backup crew for a Moon mission. Since you’ve studied the PSR ice retrieval, you’ve got the skills that make you the only one qualified for this mission. So, what part of ‘what I say goes’ didn’t you get?”
“Sorry boss, I got it.” Nils felt vindicated, though he was nervous. Mose was the best. Nils only hoped he could meet that level.
“Good. As of now, I want you to forget that reprimand associated with your backup stint—your mind needs to be on this mission and nothing else. Now let’s get busy and plan a mission.”
“Yup. I’m all set, Mose.” The past would be a burden, but Nils did his best to push it aside.