Moonwar – Book II Of The Moonbase Saga by Ben Bova. Part 1-2

‘I’m pregnant,’ she said.

He blinked. ‘You’re going to have a baby?’ His voice came out half an octave higher than usual.

‘Yes,’ she answered, almost shyly.

For a moment he didn’t know what to say, what to do. Then the reality of it burst on him and he broke into an ear-to-ear grin. ‘A baby! That’s great! That’s wonderful!’

But Claire shook her head. ‘Not if we can’t get off Moonbase, it isn’t.’

TOUCHDOWN MINUS 109 HOURS

Aboard the Clippership Max Faget, Captain Jagath Munasinghe stared suspiciously at the schematic displayed on his notebook screen.

‘And this is the control center? Here?’ he pointed with a blunt finger.

‘That’s it,’ said Jack Killifer. ‘Take that and you’ve got the whole base under your thumb.’

Munasinghe wore the uniform of the U.N.’s Peacekeeping Force: sky blue, with white trim at the cuffs and along the front of his tunic. Captain’s bars on his collar and a slim line of ribbons on his chest below his name tag. He was of slight build, almost delicate, but his large dark eyes radiated a distrust that always bordered on rage. Born in Sri Lanka, he had seen warfare from childhood and only accepted a commission in the Peacekeepers when Sri Lanka had agreed to disarmament after its third civil war in a century had killed two million men, women and children with a man-made plague virus.

Behind him, forty specially-picked Peacekeepers sat uneasily in weightlessness as the spacecraft coasted toward the Moon. None of them had ever been in space before, not even Captain Munasinghe. Despite the full week of autogenic-feedback adaptation training they had been rushed through, and the slow-release anti-nausea patches they were required to wear behind their ears, several of the troops had vomited miserably during the first few hours of zero-gee flight. Munasinghe himself had managed to fight down the bile that burned in his throat, but just barely.

Sitting beside the captain, Killifer wore standard civilian’s coveralls, slate gray and undecorated except for his name tag over his left breast pocket. He was more than twenty years older than the dark-skinned captain and almost a head taller: lean, lantern-jawed, his face hard and flinty. Once his light brown hair had been shaved down almost to his scalp, but now it was graying and he wore it long enough to tie into a ponytail that bobbed weightlessly at the back of his neck. The sight of it made Munasinghe queasy.

‘Forty men to take and hold the entire base,’ Munasinghe muttered unhappily.

‘It’s not that big a place,’ Killifer replied. ‘And like I told you, take the command center and you control their air, water, heat – everything.’

Munasinghe nodded but his eyes showed that he had his doubts.

‘Look,’ Killifer said, ‘you put a couple of men in the environmental control center, here-‘ he tapped a fingernail on the captain’s notebook screen, ‘-and a couple more in the water factory, keep a few in the control center and the rest of ’em can patrol the tunnels or do whatever else you want.’

“There are more than two thousand people there.’

‘So what? They got no weapons. They’re civilians, they don’t know how to fight even if they wanted to.’

‘You are absolutely sure they have no weapons of any kind?’

Killifer gave him a nasty grin. ‘Nothing. Shit, they don’t even have steak knives; the toughest food they have to deal with is friggin’ soybean burgers.’

‘Still . . .’

Feeling exasperated, Killifer growled. ‘I spent damn’ near twenty years there. I know what I’m talking about. It’ll be a piece of cake, I tell you. A walkover. You’ll be a friggin’ hero inside of ten minutes.’

Munasinghe’s dubious expression did not change, but he turned and looked across the aisle of the passenger compartment to the reporter who was sitting next to them.

TOUCHDOWN MINUS 108 HOURS 57 MINUTES

Edith Elgin had thought she’d chat with the women soldiers among the Peacekeepers all the way to the Moon. But ever since the rocket’s engines had cut off and the spacecraft had gone into zero gravity she had felt too nauseous to chat or even smile. Besides, most of the women barely spoke English; the little flags they wore as shoulder patches were from Pakistan and Zambia and places like that.

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