Anio
Flights to orbit had become old hat to Scott Jellison. He’d been an astronaut for over fifteen years as a member of the space agency. Scott had been to the Moon half a dozen times, to Apophis, a near-Earth asteroid once, and to orbit more times than he could count. He was flying up to Glenn Station in the Lunadyne Flyer to meet his crew for another mission up to another asteroid called Anio. The flyer would ride up to 10 km on the back of an airplane, then fire rockets to orbit.
He smiled, noticing the woman seated next to him wringing her hands and pulling tighter on the harness straps. Scott saw from her furrowed brows that the flight of the jet was not helping calm her.
“First time in space?” he asked.
“Well,” she started.
“Don’t worry, it’s lousy until day two or three, then your body will stop rebelling.”
“Oh okay. I heard it might be nauseating.”
“Got your meds?” Scott asked.
“Yeah, they gave me about a week of the anti-nausea.”
“Vacation?”
“Business,” she answered.
“Same here. I’m off to Anio over the next month.”
“Anio?”
“It’s an asteroid, 1999 AN10 or Anio for short,” he said. “I’m Scott Jellison.”
“Gen Miller.”
“Nice to meet you,” he saluted with a slight smile.
“Very funny.”
“Sorry, I couldn’t resist.”
“Yeah, you’re a real comedian,” she answered.
“So where?”
“Huh?”
“Where are you bound for?” Scott asked.
“Conrad Station.”
“Excellent—the Moon. That’s a great place for your first trip out. It was my first trip out of orbit.”
“When was that?” Gen asked.
“About fifteen years ago with the Space Agency.”
“Those were the early missions. Weren’t they?”
“Yes,” said Scott. He kept up the banter to distract her. “I was on crew four. We recovered the Ice core at the south pole after crew two botched it.”
“How was it botched?”
“The idiot dropped the sample canister, and it rolled to the bottom of the crater.”
“Oh, I seem to remember that he rescued his crewmate,” said Gen.
“That’s the official story, but Nils Carmike was a waste as an astronaut. I’m glad we forced him out of the Agency.”
“I didn’t hear about that.”
“No,” continued Scott. “You wouldn’t have. He left the Agency to pursue a commercial venture with another astronaut named Milt Johnson. They bankrupted themselves and left a lot of investors with massive losses. Last I heard, both are on the Moon now–so they could avoid the lawsuits.”
“Sounds like quite the pair of criminals.”
“Yeah, I guessed they might be even back at the Agency when we planned that first flight back to the Moon. Both of them seemed to pressure Annie MacInturner to choose Fra Mauro as the first landing site.”
“Why would they do that?” she asked.
“I think there was something up there that they wanted to get their hands on. Either they deliberately ignored the dangers of the mission, or they were so focused on their hidden agenda they missed them.”
“Dangers?”
“Yeah,” said Scott, feeling the aircraft climb and turn. It will be a few more minutes, he guessed. “An old experiment with unfired mortar shells.”
“Why would–”
“They used it with the seismometers.”
“Yeah,” Gen said. “You are working for the Agency still?”
“Technically, yes, but our own hardware isn’t being used to reach Anio.”
“So you’re going with Lunadyne?”
“Only as far as Glenn,” he said. “Then we’re flying with Selene. They had the smaller bid to get us to Anio. How about you?”
“Me? What?”
“Sorry. I meant, who are you working for?”
“I’m with Lunadyne,” she said.
“Engineer?”
“Deputy Sheriff.”
He felt the sudden acceleration hit his body, pushing him back into his seat. He heard her grunt.
“What the—”
“I know it’s your first time, but it’s just a rocket.”
*****
Scott floated toward the Space Agency’s end of the Glenn station. He moved past tourist accommodation and several companies who had habitats devoted to manufacturing. At one point, the Space Agency had the bulk of the station. Over time, however, they expanded it by adding more commercial habitats. Glenn station wasn’t the only station in orbit, but it had become one of the major hubs.
“Hi folks,” he said when entering the Agency hab.
“Hey Jellison,” said Kiku Fukamura, the station commander, while she tied back her unruly hair. “You’re late.”
“What do you mean, late?” He asked, trying to stay pleasant given their difficult history. Their professional relationship had strayed into personal territory, and it forced Scott to make some tough decisions that ended up driving a wedge between them.
“Your ship and crew are already here, taking up space and oxygen,” Kiku said.
“Of course,” he laughed, knowing that they couldn’t just leave when he arrived.
Scott was necessary for a launch, but not sufficient. The mission to Anio was precisely timed, having only a narrow launch window. And that window was in three days. As a result, both the prime crew and all the backups were present. They would swap out someone, but the goal was to have the prime crew board the transfer vehicle
“Any thoughts to Selene’s request?” she asked.
“What, the crew change they wanted?”
“Yeah.”
“I thought the Agency had ruled on that,” said Scott.
“The last the Administrator had said was that it was the astronaut’s office call.”
“And I thought Carla was going to say ‘no’.”
“She called me up an hour ago and said it was up to you,” said Kiku.
“Damn.”
“It’s bad enough that the civilians are taking over the Moon flights. Now they want to go into deep space. Anio was supposed to be our mission.”
“Well, it still is.”
“No,” said Scott. “It isn’t. The agency is now answering to the company that had been one of the worst cheaters in the industry.”
“Nobody has ever shown that.”
“Does it have to be?”
“I guess not.”
“At least I can make the call.”
“That’s true,” said Kiku. “Have you decided yet?”
“I’m leaning against it. I really don’t want a Selene employee on the ship. They–”
“The replacement isn’t Selene. They are SRL.”
“What?”
“I would have thought they would have told you.”
“They didn’t,” said Scott. “When was that?”
“The person is to arrive tomorrow. Apparently, Selene is a subcontractor in this case. The prime SRL wanted to send someone on this journey.”
“This makes our training for shit. Stone and Maina have worked hard on this.”
“They are a team.”
“Yes. I don’t know which one of them I’d cut for this civilian.”
“Well,” said Kiku. “You have about twelve hours to figure that out.”
“I have the answer now.”
“What is it?”
“No.”
“I don’t think you can tell them no. The program depends too much upon Selene and SRL.”
“I expected that,” said Scott. “So, I have an alternative answer.”
“Okay, who is it?”
“You.”
“Me? What do you mean?”
“I’m cutting both Stone and Maina while adding you and the civilian.”
“Wait,” said Kiku. “You can’t be serious.”
“Do I look like I am joking?”
“I guess you don’t, but I still don’t understand why.”
“The main reason is that Stone and Maina are a team,” said Scott. “No one can really break up Stone and Maina. To be successful, I need them both. Since I can’t, my best bet is to find someone that I know will work with me.”
“So that’s me?”
“Yes. You and I have flown together more times than I can count. You and I flew mission seven to the Moon together.”
“I remember.” She paused. “Especially since it was our first one.”
“There also isn’t anyone that has as many flight hours with me, and Anio is ten times further away—”
“What about Sophia?”
“You’re kidding, right?” he asked.
“Well, you dumped me on three different missions to take her.”
“Two of those were the agency telling me to take her.”
“What about the third?”
“I didn’t think we should be confined in a small space together. Given what we were feeling about each other, I don’t think it would have ended well for us or the agency, regardless of which direction it took.”
“Well,” she said. “We went our separate ways.”
“Yes. Any regrets?”
“No.”
“So, are you going to Anio with me?” He asked.
“I should say no, but that would lead you back to Stone and Maina being inseparable, and we’ve been through that—I’ll go.”
“Great,” he said. “Besides, having the civilian with us should put a damper on any excessive feelings.”
“Oh, if I have any excessive feelings, I will let you know before launch.”
Her scowl betrayed her feelings. Scott imagined she was not happy with the situation. But he needed her astronaut skills. Even though Anio was a relatively simple mission because they had done Apophis some ten years prior. It was still a couple million miles further than the Moon or L5 station.
*****
The day passed without incident. Carla had agreed to make Kiku the third of the crew. Kiku was still resistant, but Scott felt confident she saw the reason he wanted her. Above all, Kiku could handle the situation if things got difficult. All astronauts could, but Kiku was one of the best.
“When is the third going to get here?” asked Scott.
“I expect her to be here later today,” said Kiku.
“Who is she?”
“Nichole Valintine.”
“Nichole!”
“Who did you think it was?”
“I was expecting Sam Melman,” said Scott. “He’d been with Selene for years. I thought he’d be their guy for going to Anio.”
“As we talked about yesterday, the prime is going to send the person—not Selene.”
“This corporate shit has got my head spinning.”
“Yeah,” she said. “It happens.”
“I met someone yesterday that was going to be a Deputy Sheriff for Lunadyne up at Conrad Station. Can you believe it? A Deputy Sheriff hired by a corporation to police the Moon.”
“You didn’t hear about the Sheriff and the strike from a few years back?”
“I heard about it,” he said. “But I really didn’t pay attention.”
“You never do.”
“What is that supposed to mean?”
“It means you get blinded by anything that isn’t Agency.”
“Well, it doesn’t matter to me.”
“You’d be a lead by now if you did,” Kiku said.
“I’ve got the missions. That matters.”
“It won’t after this one.”
“What? What do you mean?”
“It’s over.”
“What’s over?” Scott asked, then realized what Kiku said. “Not the Agency?”
“You know what I am talking about, then.”
“No, not exactly.”
“The Agency declared us unnecessary.”
“The astronauts?”
“Yes,” she said. “People like Nichole are going to be the vanguard.”
“Dammit, we are enabling it.”
“I really thought you knew.”
“Kiku, why are we involved, then? I mean, they should have released us before this flight.”
“There is supposed to be an announcement once we’ve rendezvous with Anio.”
“And we’d be out of a job.”
“Technically no,” she said. “But we wouldn’t be astronauts. We’d be managing missions by other vendors to meet our needs.”
“We wouldn’t be flying them?”
“No. Except for remote locations such as this station and the Moon. The agency decided it was far less expensive to put the missions up for bid instead of putting out a contract for the hardware and flying it ourselves.”
“Damn,” said Scott. “I would have never thought that they would replace me.”
“I suppose you could put those skills to use in commercial yourself.”
“Yeah, I guess.”
“You don’t sound convinced,” said Kiku.
“I’m convinced it’s a good way of getting killed.”
“If it is, we all must die sometime. For me, it will be better on a mission than watching on the sidelines.”
Scott considered for a moment.
Could she be right? Is this the way to go?
“If you look at it,” she continued. “An astronaut is more of a profession than a government title. I think it’s already proven.”
“Yeah. And we have this mission to prove that.”