Read Mars Life Online

Authors: Ben Bova

Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fantasy

Mars Life (14 page)

BOOK: Mars Life
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TITHONIUM CHASMA: THE VILLAGE
This is what we’ve got so far,” Carleton said, bending slightly over the display that lit up the big, square stereo table.
It was late afternoon. Carleton’s digging crew was still out at the excavation site. The rest of the dome’s personnel were in their labs or workshops, except for a team of scientists and astronauts on their way back from an excursion to the Tharsis volcanoes, and the inevitable few people lounging in the cafeteria, on the other side of the big dome.
Jamie looked down at the three-dimensional image of a gridwork of lines. Most of them were straight and intersected in neat right angles, although along one side of the image the lines meandered crookedly.
“This is the radar imagery?” Jamie asked.
“Deep radar, yes,” said Carleton. Doreen McManus stood at his side, tall, lean, silent. The glow from the table’s display underlit her sculptured, serious face.
Carleton was much more animated. Pointing to a small red rectangle at one corner of the display, he explained, “This is where we’ve been digging. We’re already pulling up some blocks that might be bricks from the foundations of these buildings.”
“Those are buildings?”
Nodding vigorously, Carleton replied, “Certainly looks that way. Foundations, at least. The buildings themselves must have collapsed under the weight of the millions of years of dust accumulating over them.” Tracing the lines with a fingertip, “These were streets. They laid out their village in a grid, very orderly.”
“And here?” Jamie pointed to the lines that curved lazily.
“They must have been running along the edge of the river. That’s where the stream flowed.”
Jamie straightened up and focused on Carleton’s face. The anthropologist was beaming happily.
“We’ve got a lot of work to do,” Carleton said. “We’ve only just begun to peck at one corner of this village.”
“Dr. Chang wants to send out teams to follow the ancient riverbed and scout for other sites,” said Jamie. “The satellite imagery shows some interesting possibilities.”
“Chang.” Carleton almost spat the word. “He’s a geologist. What does he know about excavating sites?”
“He’s the mission director.”
“And you’re the science director for the whole program. You outrank him.”
Glancing at McManus, Jamie saw that she was looking across the dome toward Chang’s office cubicle. Its door was firmly closed.
“I don’t want to get into a power struggle with Dr. Chang,” he said quietly.
Carleton’s jaw settled. “The man’s belittled my work since day one. I honestly believe he doesn’t understand the magnitude of what we’ve found.”
Jamie took a slow breath. “I’ll speak with him. He does have the responsibility for the whole team here, you know. You’re not the only—”
“I know I’m not the only scientist working here,” Carleton acknowledged. Then, with an impish grin, he added, “But I’m the most important one.”
McManus spoke up. “Have you seen the bricks that we’ve uncovered? They’re from the foundation of this building here.” She pointed with a bright red lacquered fingernail.
“You’re sure?” Jamie asked Carleton.
“Absolutely. It’s from their village. They lived down here where the water was, where the river flowed.”
“And the buildings up in the cliffs?”
Carleton shrugged. “Who knows? A ceremonial center, most likely. I don’t think we’ll ever know for sure.”
“Maybe not,” Jamie murmured.
“So you’ll talk with Chang?” Carleton pressed. “We need to expand the dig. That means more people working on it. We need to uncover the entire village, the farms around it, everything.”
Nodding, Jamie said, “I’ll talk to him. But don’t expect miracles. I don’t want to go over his head.”
“Somebody’s got to,” Carleton said darkly.

* * * *

As if he knew what was transpiring, Chang remained closeted in his office the rest of the day. Jamie was reluctant to interrupt whatever the mission director was doing, even if it was nothing more than avoiding him. No confrontations, he told himself. This isn’t going to he settled by power politics, not here, not among these people. We’ve got to find a path that we can all travel, a method we can all agree on.
So Jamie spent the rest of the afternoon catching up on reports from Dex and the research groups scattered around more than a dozen universities on Earth—and Selene University, on the Moon. In his mind’s eye Jamie pictured a delicate web of thoughts and ideas as men and women in Asia, Europe, the Americas, Australia and even in the underground city of Selene, worked to puzzle out the history of Mars and its vanished people.
He couldn’t help thinking of the extinct Martians as people, even though he knew consciously that they probably did not look at all like human beings. But they
thought
the way we do, Jamie realized. They loved and feared and hoped and died the way we do. Maybe that’s what the Bible means when it says God created man in his image: it means intelligence, the moral knowledge of good and evil. It doesn’t matter what the body form looks like. It’s intelligence that makes us godlike.
Then he remembered the Navaho creation myth. The People had lived on a red world before coming to the blue world. A great flood had driven them out of the red world.
No, he told himself firmly. That is myth. The Martians didn’t migrate to Earth. They died here, every last one of them.

* * * *

Jamie tried to use dinner as a social opportunity. Although he almost inevitably took his meal with Vijay, Jamie always attempted to invite one or two of the staff people to share their mealtime. It was easier to catch up on who was doing what over the dinner table. And the discussions weren’t always limited to the scientific work going on.
This evening they dined with Itzak Rosenberg and Saleem Hasdrubal at a table for four in a corner of the busy, noisy cafeteria. The area smelled of sizzling cooking oil and a vague aroma of vinegar. Whoever selected the evening’s music had picked Russian classics. Jamie thought he recognized the dark strains of Rachmaninoff over the clatter of dishware and hum of conversations.
Jamie wanted to ask the two of them about staying another year on Mars. But he wanted to approach the subject obliquely, carefully. Better to sound them out first, get to know them a little, before popping the big question.
Rosenberg seemed somewhat nervous at first, but Hasdrubal leaned back in his creaking plastic chair and, despite his stern, almost fierce appearance, joked about their disappointing stint at the crater Malzberg.
“It’s all Izzy’s fault,” Hasdrubal said, draping a long, lean arm around his colleague’s shoulders. “The crater wouldn’t pop a geyser as long as he was watching.”
Rosenberg looked uncomfortable, as if his partner’s arm weighed too heavily on him. “We’re accustomed to disappointments,” he murmured.
“We?” asked Vijay.
“The Children of Israel,” Hasdrubal answered immediately. “Their history has been full of disappointments and diasporas.”
“That’s not really funny, Sal,” said Rosenberg.
Hasdrubal looked at Rosenberg for a long, silent moment. “No, I guess it’s not, considering what happened to Israel.”
Thinking of the nuclear holocaust that had devastated much of the Middle East, Jamie glanced at his wife, then poked at the soymeat steak on his plate. Vijay’s a shade darker than Hasdrubal, he realized.
Trying to change the subject, Vijay asked, “What kind of a name is Hasdrubal?”
“Carthaginian,” said the biologist. Before anyone could ask more, he explained, “My great-grandfather was one of the original Black Muslims. When he changed his name from Jefferson he wanted something elegant, so he picked Hasdrubal.”
“He was a brother of Hannibal, wasn’t he?” Jamie asked.
Nodding, Hasdrubal added, “And my great-grandad was a reader of ancient history. Damned near took the name Caesar, but my great-grandmam talked him out of it.”
“Are you planning to go back to the crater?” Vijay asked.
Rosenberg answered, “No. We have it fully instrumented. If and when it blows we’ll get it all on record: imagery, heat flow, seismic data, the works.”
“I’ve analyzed the dirt for biological activity,” said Hasdrubal.
“And?” asked Vijay.
“Nada. Zip. Dirt’s loaded with superoxides. Not enough organic material in it to support a bacterium.”
“How deep does the superoxide layer go?” Jamie asked.
“It varies,” said Hasdrubal, waggling a long-fingered hand in the air.
“It’s more than twenty meters down at the Malzberg site,” said Rosenberg.
“That’s awfully deep, i’n’t it?” asked Vijay.
Hasdrubal nodded. “In some places it’s only a couple of meters down. Depends on where you are.”
“So what are you going to do now?” Jamie asked.
Hasdrubal took a swig of his fruit juice, then answered, “Carleton wants us to volunteer for his dig.” He broke into a toothy grin as he put his mug down. “But we have other plans.”
“We’re going to take a camper out and follow the path of the old river,” said Rosenberg.
“See if we can find other villages buried underground,” Hasdrubal put in.
“Dr. Chang has approved that?”
“Approved it?” Hasdrubal echoed, his grin going even wider. “He just about insisted on it. ‘Specially when we told him Carleton had approached us.”
Rosenberg leaned his elbows on either side of his dish and dropped his voice several decibels. “If Carleton’s for it, Chang’s against it. They don’t like each other. Not at all.”
Jamie studied the geologist’s round, bland face with its mop of tightly curled strawberry hair and the silly-looking little tuft of a goatee. The man was grinning, as if he found the conflict amusing.
“That troubles me,” Jamie said.
Rosenberg made an elaborate shrug. “Not much you can do about it, actually.”
Hasdrubal interjected, “Unless you wanna get in the middle of it.”
TITHONIUM CHASMA: THE CLIFF DWELLINGS
Jamie’s heart was thumping as he rode the cable lift up the sheer face of the cliff. He was excited, not afraid. Sealed inside a nanofabric suit, he felt almost as if he were in his shirtsleeves riding past layer after layer of Mars’s geologic history. Bands of red rock, then gray, then an almost golden tan. Cracked, seamed, striated. The history of a world sliding past his eyes as he dangled in the climbing harness that hauled him up to the cleft where the buildings stood.
He remembered the First Expedition, their third morning on Mars, the jolt of sheer exhilaration he’d gotten when he’d spotted a rock that bore a streak of green. He’d been certain, rationally, that the green was an inclusion of copper. But still, green in the middle of the planetwide desert of rusty red! It turned out to be copper, as Jamie had suspected, but the excitement that it might have been life—that was a moment he’d never forget.
And then he’d discovered the cliff dwellings. At first no one believed him. He had seen the niche from a distance; even the camera imagery he had brought back to their base was hazy, indistinct. A Navaho imagining things that remind him of home, they all said. It wasn’t until the Second Expedition when he and Dex had driven purposefully out to the edge of the canyon and rappelled nearly a full kilometer down to the cleft in the worn old cliffs that they saw beyond a doubt that the buildings actually were there.
That was more than a thrill. Even inside the cumbersome old hard-shell suit he wore his knees had gone weak on him.
Chang had recited safety protocols at him when Jamie told the mission director he wanted to go to the cliff buildings. Jamie had quietly insisted on going alone.
“I don’t want to take anyone from their work,” he’d said.
Scowling, Chang said, “Take your fellow Navaho.”
“Graycloud? He’s got his own tasks to do, doesn’t he?”
It took some discussion, but Chang had finally agreed to allow Jamie to ride up to the buildings alone. Jamie got the impression that the mission director was just as glad that he didn’t have to take anyone away from their assigned jobs to escort him.
Now he pressed the control stud on the front of his climbing harness and the cable drive decelerated. Jamie rose slowly past the lip of the cleft and stopped the cable altogether, his feet dangling in midair, his body twisting slightly in the harness. His throat went dry. There they were, six buildings made of sun-dried brick, bleached white with age, silent, empty, waiting for him.
It’s better to do this alone, he told himself. Just these ancient buildings and me. No one else. No distractions.
He swung his legs and planted his booted feet on the edge of the cleft, unhooked the harness, then walked a dozen steps toward the buildings. The solid rock overhead formed a shield against the elements, not that it had rained or snowed on Mars for eons. There was frost from time to time, Jamie knew, pitifully thin coatings of rime that condensed on the rocks overnight and evaporated with the morning sun. The endolithic lichen living inside the rocks on the valley floor depended on that meager source of moisture.
Stepping to the face of the nearest building, Jamie wondered why the seasonal frosts hadn’t eroded the brickwork more. It’s had sixty-some million seasons to do its damage, he told himself. Yet, as he touched the bleached white wall with his nanogloved fingers, he saw that its surface was scarcely pitted. Archeologists had studied these buildings, he knew. He’d read their reports. No one could explain how the structures had remained relatively undamaged over all those millions of years. These bricks must be more than adobe, he reasoned. Maybe the Martians could teach us something about construction materials.
Another one of Mars’s mysteries, Jamie said to himself. And he smiled. Someday we’ll figure out the answers to all the mysteries. And Mars will be a lot less interesting.
Or will it? The answer to one mystery usually leads to still more unknowns.
Morning sunlight was slanting into the cleft as Jamie ducked through the low doorway of the building and stepped inside. Whoever built these structures wasn’t very tall. He remembered how he and Dex Trumball had to get down on all fours, inside their bulky hard-shell suits, and crawl through the entrance. In the flexible nanosuit he could walk through if he hunched over.
Twenty years worth of curious, two-legged explorers from Earth had swept away all the dust that had accumulated in the buildings. The rooms inside were bare, their stone-covered floors cleared and somehow sterile looking. Archeologists had come and gone, cleaning, searching, sifting the dust, seeking artifacts, fossils, some hint of who built these cliff structures, some clue about their purpose in the lives of their vanished builders.
Over the span of more than twenty years they had found precious little. Practically nothing, Jamie knew. The rooms had been empty. No furniture, no altars, not a scrap or a shard to indicate why the structures had been built up here in this inaccessible site, or what they had been used for. The Martians had taken their secrets with them.
Except for the drawings.
Jamie clambered up the aluminum ladder that had been placed for access to the next floor. The drawings were on a wall on the uppermost floor. One wall out of the entire complex of buildings. Was this your shrine? Jamie asked the vanished Martians. Your school?
A battery of full-spectrum lamps faced the wall, connected to a thermionic nuclear power pack, pointing at the drawings like an execution squad. The lamps were off, but there was enough sunlight coming in through the light well in the ceiling that Jamie could make out the etched figures clearly.
Archeologists had sprayed the wall with a monomolecular coating of clear hard plastic, so that no one could damage the lines of finely etched figures. Jamie shook his head at their precaution. Sixty million years of time hadn’t erased the drawings. But maybe a handful of thoughtless assholes could mess them up, he admitted to himself.
At first the scientists thought the figures had been writing: line after line of delicate curves and swirls etched into the rock facing of the wall. Gradually the teams of archeologists and philologists who had come to Mars to study the figures came to the conclusion that they were pictographs: a form of writing, to be sure, but one that used pictorial symbols rather than arbitrary shapes to form words.
Jamie reached out with a gloved hand, barely able to suppress the very human urge to touch the symbols. He saw a circle with rays coming out of its perimeter, so much like the sun symbols of the southwest Native Americans that his breath still caught in his throat whenever he looked at it. Other symbols vaguely reminded him of snakes, triangles, even a few that sort of looked like trees.
Line after line of carefully wrought pictographs. They had eyes like ours, Jamie told himself. And hands, fingers. They had minds like ours.
The lines of precise, regularly spaced figures ended about a meter above the cleanly swept floor. Then came ragged, lopsided symbols, obviously scrawled in desperate haste compared to the orderly pictographs above them. The methodical lines of symbols had been inscribed deeply into the stone by chisels or similar instruments. The childlike scribbles had been scratched out quickly, roughly, as if the person who scraped them onto the rock had been looking over his shoulder, staring death in the face.
It’s their history, Jamie was certain. They were telling the story of their people, their way of life, their beliefs, their dreams. And then it happened. That giant meteor hit like the fist of devastation. The skies went dark. Their crops died. It became winter forever.
Jamie stared at the symbols as if he could make them speak to him by sheer willpower. But they remained mute, lifeless.
Are they prayers? Jamie asked himself. Was this collection of buildings placed up here in this inaccessible cleft in the rocks as some sort of temple? Will we ever know?
Jamie stood there, as silent and unmoving as the stones themselves, until the sunlight began to fade.
“Dr. Waterman.” The excursion monitor’s voice in his earplug sounded foreign, alien. “You’re at the limit. Temperature’s starting to go down.”
It took him two tries to make his voice work. “Right. I’m starting hack.”
With enormous reluctance he turned away from the carvings and made his way back down to the lowest level of the building. It was late afternoon. He’d been in the building almost the whole day.
Time to get back to the base, he told himself. Before it starts to get really cold.
As he slipped his arms into the climbing harness and clicked its lock on his chest, Jamie took one more look at the bleached white buildings. And he realized what he had to do.
BOOK: Mars Life
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