Authors: Jack McDevitt
They had converted the restaurant into a makeshift hospital, and the antique shop into a morgue. She’d tried to treat the seriously injured where they fell, despite the threat presented by the cliff. But the ground had continued to shake, and eventually she’d bitten the bullet and ordered everyone away. Ten minutes later the mountain had collapsed.
Jerry had rounded up volunteers and they pitched in to help, cleaning wounds, setting bones, and applying tourni
quets. The doctor who’d come in aboard the chopper had been vacationing at a mountain cabin when Short Haul found him.
They had about forty people who needed hospital treatment. “Not going to happen,” said the doctor. His name was Hardacre and he was in his early thirties. He was a young, good-looking guy who complained that it was his first vacation in three years. He seemed to regard the disaster as a personal imposition. But he’d come, and he seemed competent, so Marisa wasn’t complaining.
“What do you mean, it’s not going to happen?” she demanded.
“You been watching the TV?” he asked.
“Not for the last hour or so.”
“When you get a minute, take a look. Whatever hospitals are left will be swamped. It’s likely to be a long time before anybody’s going to have beds available.”
She looked around at her patients. They had no cots, so the patients had all been placed on the floor and made as comfortable as conditions allowed. Hardacre had grabbed some painkillers and other supplies from the cache at the resort where he’d been staying, and they’d helped, had helped a lot. But these people needed serious treatment. What were they going to do?
As if to underscore the point, a distant murmur was becoming audible. Marisa’s first thought was that the rest of the mountain was coming down. They were well across the road, far enough away to be safe, but the sound was different from the one she’d heard earlier. And it was coming from the opposite direction, from the San Joaquin. Maybe the part of the mountain they were sitting on was going to go this time.
She put it out of her mind and went back to changing a dressing. The patient was a middle-aged woman with a shattered leg and a sliced arm. Hardacre had put twenty stitches in the arm and supported the leg as best he could. The woman’s
husband, who’d come through untouched, was beside her.
Marisa’s thoughts returned to Jerry. They’d set up a center for the lost kids wandering around. Jerry had seen that it was properly staffed. Now he was busy on the far side of the restaurant, changing bandages. It wasn’t something he liked to do and, in fact, Jerry had never liked blood very much, but he was shining this morning.
When she finished with the woman, she went on to other patients. The distant sound was getting louder. It was nothing like the fearful roar of the avalanche, but it was disquieting all the same, as if something were coming.
She was changing a dressing when one of the volunteers charged through a door. “The valley’s filling up!” she cried.
Marisa was almost immune to alarms by now. She finished what she was doing and strode to a back window that looked down into the San Joaquin.
It spread out before her, a vast basin rimmed by mountains lost in early-morning mist. Toward the west, a deluge was gushing out of a narrow defile and spreading out across the valley floor.
Later, when she took a break and went to see Erin and Jimmy, they hugged her and asked when they were going home. By then an inland sea, quiet and tranquil, stretched toward the morning sun as far as she could see.
“We
are
home,” she said quietly.
Micro Passenger Cabin. 8:03
A.M.
“Say again, Al.”
Charlie tried to keep his voice low so he couldn’t be overheard. But the conversation among the other passengers always stopped as soon as he got on the phone. He knew they weren’t trying to eavesdrop, except maybe Morley, whose job it was, but human nature was at work here. It was useless to try for privacy under these circumstances. Anyway, what did it matter?
“I said NASA tells us you’ll be okay. They’ve figured out how to rescue you.”
“I didn’t know I needed to be rescued.”
“My God, are you serious? You’re on your way to Pluto or something. They’re sending the
Lowell
after you.”
Charlie waved it away. In the face of everything else that had landed on him, the news seemed almost anticlimactic. “Okay,” he said.
He’d been off and on the phone with Al Kerr for the better part of two hours, getting updates on a series of increasingly desperate situations. The United States had literally millions of people on the road for whom there was neither shelter nor food, swamping efforts by relief agencies. Both coasts and the Hawaiian Islands had been heavily damaged by waves and storms. In some places earthquakes had been triggered. Property damage would be in the trillions. And God knew how much loss of life. Medical Authorities were already warning about the possibility of infectious outbreaks; more tidal waves were reported in the Pacific.
Financial experts were pointing out that the functional loss of New York and Los Angeles would destroy the banking system, and were advising the government to move immediately.
“What do they suggest?” Charlie asked.
“I don’t think they have any idea at this point, Mr. President. But they want us to know that action is of the essence.”
What else?
There were major power outages in the Northeast and Northwest; tens of thousands of Mexican refugees for whom no provision could be made were streaming north; a freak electrical storm had virtually destroyed Tucson.
There were, however, some pieces of
genuine
good news: The heartland was still intact. The federal government was
functioning well; early indications were that its agencies and the military were performing miracles. Europe and Asia had not been hit as hard as the Americas, and their allies, and even a few old enemies, were helping where they could. Best of all, the missiles were locked and loaded, and by nine
A.M.
the Possum would be history.
Charlie outlined his priorities. Foremost, they needed to concentrate on the refugee problem. “Do whatever’s necessary to get food and services out. There’s a potential here for even worse losses. We need to figure out what we can do for the people on the road, and we need to get it right the first time. And don’t feel you have to wait for presidential authorization. Something needs to get done, do it. Just keep me informed. I’ll support you.”
“Or fire me,” said Al, obviously uncomfortable. Kerr had never been a supporter of Charlie Haskell, and now he expected to pay the price.
Charlie had more important things to think about. “I want action plans waiting for me as soon as I get back. Assemble a working group to get ahead of the curve. I don’t want to be just reacting to disasters. Put some people together to figure out what else might happen, what else we can do.”
“What specifically did you have in mind, Mr. President?”
“Cholera and typhus, for one thing.” He took a deep breath because he sensed the man’s timidity. Anger flowed through him. There just wasn’t time now for people who weren’t ready to get things done. “Goddammit, Al,” he said, “if I
knew
, I wouldn’t need the working group. Keep it small. I want ideas, not ass-covering. What do we need to do to keep the country alive? Not just people, but the institutions. You got that?
“Get somebody from the military. CDC. FEMA. Some academics. Figure it out. We got blindsided this week, Al. And I think we’ve had all we can stand. No more surprises.”
Was there anything else?
Yeah, there was. His voice softened: “I’m sorry about Henry and Emily. I know you and they were close.”
“Thank you, Mr. President.”
“I’ll expect you to stay on as chief of staff. At least until we get through this.”
“Yes, sir.”
He broke the connection, wandered back into the passenger cabin, where everyone pretended to be busy reading. “Everything okay, Mr. President?” Evelyn asked.
They’d all gone formal on him again. And maybe it was just as well. He wondered how much Lincoln would have accomplished if everyone in the neighborhood had called him Abe.
“Fine,” he said. “We’re doing fine.”
Which reminded him. He went up the ladder—he was getting good at zero-g moves now—and came in behind Saber. “Hello, pilot,” he said.
She raised a hand without looking around. “Hello, Mr. President.”
“I understand we’re not going to Pluto after all,” he said.
“Oh,” she said. “You know about that. No, we’ll be okay. We were never at risk.”
He slid into the copilot’s chair. “You’re sure?”
“Yes, sir,” she said.
“Anything I ought to know about?”
“No, Mr. President.”
“If there’s another problem, I’d like to be informed,” he said.
“Yes, sir. I didn’t think of it as a problem. I mean, I knew they had the
Lowell
in reserve.” She smiled up at him. Saber was, he decided, a beautiful woman. Somehow, there hadn’t been time to notice before. “I thought you had enough to worry about. Getting the Micro back was
my
job.”
“Do we have any fuel left at all?”
“We’ve got a couple hundred pounds. Not very much. I’m trying to save it.”
“Okay. What’s the drill on the rescue?”
She relaxed a little. “
Lowell
will catch up with us around four. We’ll transfer over and cut the Micro loose. They haven’t sent me an ETA yet, but I’d guess we’ll get back to the station by late evening. That’s only a guess. I don’t know what the capabilities of the
Lowell
are.”
Charlie looked at the myriad blinking lights and telltales on the Micro’s displays. “Can we see the Possum from here?”
She touched a key, and the rock appeared on a heads-up screen. “That’s the view from one of the satellites.”
The media descriptions said the Possum looked like something that had been cut in half. One side was flat, the other curved and rugged. It was more oblong than spherical, almost resembling a club. He was glad that idea hadn’t occurred to anyone in the media. He watched it tumbling slowly across the display.
Saber’s fingers moved over the keyboard. “Here’s something to compare it with.” An image of the Micro blinked on. It shrank until it was almost invisible against the object. “That’s us.” She pressed another key, and a series of micro-icons lined up along the length of the rock. “There are sixty-one of them,” she said. “End to end.”
“And how big are
we
?”
“Twenty-eight meters and change, blister to treads. We’re pretty compact.”
“We’ll be well rid of the thing,” he said.
The Possum exerted a near-hypnotic influence. He watched it turning, watched, on another screen, the blue globe of Earth.
The second image, Saber explained, was from the Micro’s telescopes.
The distance between the vice presidency and the office of the chief executive, Charlie was discovering, is measured in light-years. It might be that no one really understands that who hasn’t stood on both sides of the chasm. A few hours ago he was only worried about saving himself. That concern now seemed almost trivial.
The third decade of the twenty-first century had, until a few days earlier, been a good time for the planet. A hundred million Chinese were driving cars, almost everyone agreed that military incursions were in bad taste, the old economic cycle of boom and bust appeared to have been tamed, and the great powers had discovered that collaboration was more fruitful than competition. Technology was providing better lives for almost everybody. Science was forging ahead, and people now lived longer and stayed younger than ever before. Most cancers were curable; powersats supplied virtually unlimited energy; and the long struggle to reverse environmental damage had finally turned the corner. In the United States, racial tensions had been steadily easing, GNP was up every year, crime rates and population growth were down.
This is not to say there were no problems. There were far more people than the world’s natural resources could comfortably support, and ancient traditions and religious groups fought every effort to reduce the numbers. There was still too much crime, and too much of it violent, particularly in Russia, the United States, and China. A recent survey of American adults by
USA Today
suggested that three-eighths of the population were functionally illiterate. This was the highest ratio of any industrialized society, and it continued to climb steadily. The advantages of participating in the global communications network were still not available to a quarter of the U.S. population, and to more than a third of those living in other Western nations. Every major government carried a staggering burden of debt.
These were the problems a Haskell administration would have reasonably expected to confront. Anticipating the possibility of victory in the fall, Charlie had already staffed out work and formulated some ideas on his own. He’d talked to the people on the front lines, teachers and parents and cops and emergency room physicians and first-line supervisors in a wide range of occupations. He thought he was ready to assume the burdens of the presidency with a series of initiatives to attack these problems across a broad front.
As things had turned out, he could hardly have been less prepared.
Saber frowned and touched her earphone. “Wait one,” she said and looked at Charlie. “For you, Mr. President.” But his lamp hadn’t lit up, so the call wasn’t coming in on his private channel. “Do you want to talk to a Wesley Feinberg?”
“I’ve got it.” Charlie opened his cell phone. He’d never met Feinberg, but he knew him by reputation. And Al had briefed him on his part in the planning. Called him a trouble-maker. “Good morning, Professor Feinberg. This is Charles Haskell.”
“Mr. President.” The voice was strained. “I’ve been trying to get through to you for hours. Are you still planning to execute the nuclear strike against the Possum?”
“Yes,” said Charlie. “Of course.”
“Don’t.”
Charlie’s heart sank. “Why not?”