Ben Bova – Mars. Part seven

“Tell it to Mikhail and Dmitri.”

“Come on, now, Jamie. You could use some relaxation yourself.”

“No thanks.”

“Think of it as research,” Ilona teased. “I think you don’t really get to know a man until you see him with his pants down.”

He stared at her for a wordless moment. Then, “Do Katrin and Joanna feel the same way?”

“You mean, are they doing what I’ve been doing?”

He started to reply, but heard voices drifting toward them from the passageway. Tony Reed and Joanna Brumado turned the corner and stepped into the observation area.

“I thought it was you, Ilona,” Reed said amiably. “I’d recognize that sexy voice anywhere.”

Jamie realized his eyes were fixed on Joanna. With an effort he pulled them away.

The four of them chatted about the landing they would make the next day, keeping their talk strictly on the business of the expedition. Reed seemed casual and relaxed, as ever. Joanna was serious, as usual, her dark eyes focused on Mars as if she realized for the first time that she was actually going to go down to the surface of that alien world.

Jamie felt almost like an automaton. He answered questions they addressed to him; he spoke the correct words and kept up his end of the four-way conversation. But his mind was racing, remembering the brief moments of wild animal heat he had shared with Ilona, remembering the sad, solemn expression on Joanna’s face when he had kissed her, wondering why he could not relax and play with Ilona and forget about everything else.

“I must get back to my quarters,” Joanna said quietly, almost timidly. “My father will be calling in another few minutes.”

Tony Reed held out his arm for her. “I’ll escort you there, if I may.”

She glanced toward Jamie, then back to Reed. “Of course. Thank you.”

Ilona watched them leave the observation blister, an enigmatic smile playing across her face. Once they were out of earshot she turned back to Jamie.

“The answer to your question is that Katrin has been much more discreet about her amours than I. And little Joanna, as far as I know, has been completely virtuous. Does that make you happy, Jamie?”

He nodded, trying to keep his face from betraying his emotions.

“But have you noticed,” Ilona added devilishly, “that Tony follows her wherever she goes?”

Jamie blinked, surprised. “He does?”

“Watch him,” she said. “He trails after her like a dog following a bitch in heat.”

That sly, smiling bastard, Jamie thought. Who lectures him? Who doctors his food?

“Tony’s not satisfied with me or Katrin,” Ilona went on. “He wants the unobtainable.”

And so do I, Jamie realized. So do I.

SOL 15: AFTERNOON

“This is kind of awkward, Edith,” Jamie said into the camera.

He was sitting on the bunk of his privacy cubicle, the vidcam perched on the flimsy little desk opposite him, focused on his face. First thing in the morning, before his scheduled work hours, he had suited up and gone outside to take a few minutes’ worth of panoramic shots of the rocks and dunes and distant mountains in the area around the dome. Now he sat on his bunk, wondering what he should say to Edith.

“Yesterday we had a bit of a scare. Things still aren’t quite back to normal yet. A stray meteorite punctured our dome. Just a little puncture. We never even found the meteorite; it must’ve been so small it evaporated from the energy of the impact. But it leaked out some of our air and for a couple of minutes everything was pretty tense.”

He looked upward. The dome was bathed in sunlight. The pumps and fans were throbbing their usual low notes. Jamie could hear voices and the cowboy twang of a country-and-western song from somebody’s tape player.

“We’re still breathing pure oxygen in here. We’ve got to tiptoe around and be extremely careful. In a pure oxygen atmosphere, the slightest spark could set the whole dome on fire. The separators are accumulating nitrogen from the air outside, but we won’t be back on normal air for another day or two.

“There wasn’t any damage, except for the puncture itself, which Vosnesensky and Paul Abell fixed inside of a couple of minutes. I was outside when it happened and another micrometeorite scratched my helmet. Oh yes, Tony Reed knocked over a whole bottle full of vitamin pills. He’s getting kidded about being so clumsy.”

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