Categories
Narrative

A Worrying Development

The corridors of the Roosa Barracks were almost painfully quiet. Normally they would’ve been crowded with people coming and going through Slayton Field, but all that traffic had been disrupted, first with the diablovirus, and now with the solar storm watch, which had pretty much shut down all space traffic.

Which meant a very lonely walk back to the BOQ for Drew Reinholt. It didn’t help that there wasn’t that much to do in here. Because of the risk of contagion, gatherings were being discouraged — and what was the point in watching a movie or listening to a lecture on your computer in your private quarters? Maybe it would’ve been different with the family, but Brenda and the kids were at Shepardsport.

And maybe it’s just as well that way. If someone does bring the virus to the Moon, it’s far more likely to hit here. With luck, we can catch it quickly enough that it stops here.

On the other hand, the closing of space traffic was also meaning that freight wasn’t coming up, including essential items. As Drew walked past the Caudells’ apartment, he recalled a conversation he’d had with Peter Caudell earlier in the day.

Most essential parts could be fabricated up here, thanks to two decades of determined development of in-situ resource utilization. Everything that could be produced locally was that much that didn’t have to be lifted out of Earth’s substantial gravity well — which meant that even astronaut meals for the lunar ferry and stations in Earth orbit were grown and prepared in lunar greenhouse-farms.

However, there were still a few things that still needed to be brought up from Earth — some because there just wasn’t enough demand to justify the duplication of specialized equipment, and some biologicals because the relevant organisms required very particular environments. Most of them were medicinals, and there had been ongoing efforts to synthesize their active ingredients.

Which means that we’re depending on how long those things remain in stock. At least most of them aren’t life-or-death, but there are a few specialized seals and filters that we still don’t have the ability to fabricate up here.

Something we need to work on changing, ASAP.

Categories
Narrative

A Tidbit of Good News

“Some of the dirtside solar astronomers are thinking this CME is just the first of several, based on some satellite data on the Sun’s magnetic field behavior. I spoke to Dr. Doorne this morning and she doesn’t think any subsequent ones are likely to hit the Earth-Moon system. However, she added the caveat that she is a radio astronomer specializing in deep-space objects.” Ken Redmond looked from Brenda to Autumn. “I wish I could offer you ladies something more solid, but right now that’s all we have to go on. Which means that we’re going to have to remain prepared for the possibility of additional solar storms, maybe for the next two to three weeks. I’ve already ordered conservation measures to stretch supplies of consumables that we can’t produce locally, against the possibility of a complete shutdown of spacelift capacity for the duration.”

“A wise precaution,” Autumn averred. “If you think I should make some kind of general announcement–“

Ken gestured for her to hold. “I’d want to run that by the skipper first. The radio station’s getting to be our public face to the whole solar system, and as messed-up as things are getting down on Earth, we need to be careful how we present things.”

Autumn might have a good professional voice, but her skills at controlling her expression weren’t nearly at the level she’d need if she were doing video as well as audio. No, she wasn’t happy about getting told that Captain Waite should approve of any public announcement.

However, Brenda could definitely see it as a sensible measure. Her dad was right about Shepardsport Pirate Radio being the settlement’s public face to three worlds. And he’d been an Air Force officer back during the Energy Wars, so he’d be thinking in terms of opsec, of not giving the other side any information about one’s weak points. Brenda had grown up with her dad’s war stories, while Autumn had grown up with a black-matted photo on the mantle and a name on the Wall of Honor. Not to diminish Lucien Belfontaine’s sacrifice during the NASA Massacre, but it just didn’t give her the same perspective.

No, Autumn didn’t like the feeling that she’d just had her wings clipped, but she had to be aware that a goodly segment of the population around here put great store in astronaut lineages. She couldn’t very well be seen to disrespect the most senior member of the her father’s lineage in the settlement. For starters, she needed to maintain Spruance Del Curtin’s respect, and she couldn’t help but be aware that Brenda had married into the Shepard lineage.

Brenda was glad she wasn’t the one having to make a statement of agreement on the subject. Not that she was goingt to try to buck her father in his own domain, but it was still a very awkward position to be in.

After that, it was just a matter of winding down the conversation, a few parting pleasantries and taking their leave. The Chief of Engineering still had a lot of things he needed to take care of before that CME actually arrived and drenched the Moon in charged particles.

As Brenda walked back through the corridors of the Engineering department, she pulled out her phone and was surprised to find several texts from Drew. They must’ve all come while they were talking, and she hadn’t even noticed her text chime.

Unless one or another app had screwed up the audio again and she needed to reboot. However, from the worried tone of those last couple texts, it would probably be better to respond first and reboot only if Drew wanted to do an actual voice conversation.

Sorry, sweetheart, but I was talking with Dad about the CME that’s coming in. What’s going on?

Drew must’ve had his phone right beside him, because the text went from “delivered” to “read” in a few seconds. Moments later the “writing response” icon came up.

I wish you’d let me know you needed a neutral party to contact a friend dirtside. I know half a dozen people up here who wouldn’t even raise an eyebrow from the worst clone-phobes, and who’d be glad to do me a favor.

As soon as Brenda read that, she realized she should’ve thought of asking her husband. As a pilot-astronaut and an Air Force officer, he had a lot of connections.

Sorry, I guess I just didn’t want to bother you with my worries. You’ve got a lot on your plate already.

And you’ve got reason to be concerned that an old friend is in a dangerous situation. Just send me her e-mail address, her phone number, whatever contact information you have on her, and I’ll see if some of my friends can get things happening.

Categories
Narrative

Like a Watched Pot

Waiting was always difficult, but it was particularly hard when you had no idea of how long you might have to wait. Especially when there was no guarantee that you’d find any kind of results at the end of your wait.

Brenda Redmond remembered how much she’d hated that situation when she was a kid growing up. At least when the endpoint was known, she could make the wait go more quickly by marking off the days as they passed. The days until the school year ended. The days until a much-anticipated family vacation or a big launch. Even just the days until she reached some milestone that enabled her to enjoy one or another privilege. She needed only to look at the calendar and she could see the number of days remaining shrink.

But when you had to wait until you reached some achievement that Adult Authority refused to spell out, lest you put more effort into faking the outward markers than mastering the actual skills, it was super-hard. Or like she was stuck right now, waiting for someone else, over whom she had no control, to get something accomplished that would open a gate she needed to pass.

So far there’d been no word from Medlab, or from whoever they’d found to try to make contact with Robbie. And given that this person was doing her a favor, she didn’t want to be a pest about how they were coming on it.

Which meant there was nothing she could do about it right now. She’d learned from prior experience that the best thing to do in these circumstances was to keep busy with something that would take her mind off it.

And having the kids talk with Daddy was always a good way to raise everyone’s spirits. Drew had texted her earlier, letting her know that the solar storm watch meant he’d probably be staying down at Coopersville until the mass of charged particles had passed.

A storm that was likely to disrupt communications between settlements as well as with Earth. Perhaps not as badly with Coopersville, since they were connected by fiber-optic lines run alongside the tracks of the Ice Train, but even its repeaters could be knocked off-line if things got hairy enough.

The kids had loved talking to their father, even on the other end of a FaceTime connection. And they’d even headed to bed without any great resistance, for a change. Which meant now she and Drew could talk more privately.

“So how are you doing?” Drew leaned back a little, assuming a more relaxed pose.

“As well as I can. The kids are doing fine, Mom and Dad are OK, although they’re both working their butts off. I’ve got my work and my teaching to keep me busy.” Brenda tried to infuse her words with an enthusiasm she really didn’t feel right now.

Drew nodded, that slow bob of the head that was his way of saying, yeah, right, what are you really thinking behind the good-military-wife mask? “Yeah, ain’t that about the size of it. Keep on keeping on.” Then he leaned forward, lowered his voice in that conspiratorial tone he would use when he was saying it’s OK to tell me whatever’s bothering you. “I’m hearing rumint that you’re trying to track down someone dirtside.”

“Just an old friend from high school.” Brenda considered how much she wanted to tell Drew about Robbie’s situation. Minimize too much, and Drew would tell she was trying to gloss over her worries. Tell too much, and he’d be worrying about her when he needed to concentrate on his work. “We’d grown apart, so it’s kind of complicated. Right now I’m waiting for a neutral third party to contact her and make sure she’s all right and I won’t make things difficult for her by trying to contact her.”

“That doesn’t sound like a good situation.”

“No, it’s not. Which is why I’m trying very hard not to worry about her while I’m waiting.” Brenda wondered whether Drew still kept in touch with any of his friends from school. He’d been sent up here when he was all of fifteen, when he’d gotten entangled in the Angry Astronaut Affair.

Probably not, since he didn’t seem to want to reminisce. “Probably a good idea. Especially considering you need to be alert tomorrow for your air shift.”

“True. Especially if that solar storm watch turns into a warning and we start having to give radiation reports every half-hour.”

After that there was nothing more to say but words of parting. And then looking at the grayed-out FaceTime window for a moment before pressing the Home button.

Yes, Drew was right. She needed her sleep. From the sound of things, they were looking at a long day tomorrow.

Categories
Narrative

A Ray of Hope

Autumn Belfontaine was sitting in the newsroom, sorting through one after another report of disaster on a level not seen since the 1918 Spanish Flu. If anything, the current situation was worse for the simple reason that the world of 1918 had not been nearly so connected, so that many places were spared for the simple reason that they were too far away for people to get to them during the incubation of the disease.

Today, only the Martian settlements were that far away. Even the Moon was a mere three days’ flight from Earth, if one were to take a direct flight. There’d been a close call with the Indian space program’s pre-flight quarantine procedures already, but it had been caught because the person had a layover on Harmony Station just long enough for them to become ill on the Sakura rather than after they’d gotten down. However, it had put a big chunk of Japan’s space infrastructure out of operation while everyone aboard both station and ferry had to quarantine.

And there’s some speculation that the next person to turn up sick on the way to the Moon will simply “fall out of an airlock.”

Autumn didn’t like the idea that someone could be so careless with everyone’s safety, but she could understand the motivations behind it. Schedules were tight enough in ordinary times, and with a big chunk of the cislunar spacelift capacity out of action, there’d be a feeling that they couldn’t afford to lose more on “just in case” precautions.

But now, with some kind of illness at Schirrasburg which might be the diablovirus, it became even more urgent. Lunans lived in far tighter quarters than Earthlings anywhere but Tokyo or Hong Kong. Even the various scientific outposts and mining bases, while isolated from each other, still had very little pressurized volume per person, which meant that everyone was in constant contact.

And then she noticed something on one of the Russian wire services. An anonymous source in the Imperial Household was reporting that Tsar Constantine had met via teleconference with Academician Nikolai Voronsky, head of the Russian genetic engineering program. Apparently Voronsky was reporting success in sequencing the genome of the diablovirus in its three major variants.

Which raised a serious conundrum for her. On one hand, people really needed some hope right now, with the news of disaster being moderated only by the fact that whole regions on Earth were no longer reporting at all. On the other, this was not exactly a reliable source. Heck, it was hardly above the level of “gossip sheet.” Was it a responsible thing to actually report it?

She retrieved her phone. Time to pass this to the people in Medlab, see if anyone down there had a good idea of its veracity.

Categories
Narrative

Echoes and Memories

Brenda Redmond didn’t like having to do homework in a crowded module lounge. However, she’d had enough trouble getting the kids to sleep after an all-too-brief FaceTime call with their dad that having a screen on in that apartment was not an option.

So here she was, trying not to listen to Lou Corlin tutoring a couple of teens. Differential equations, from the sound of it — stuff that dirtside kids didn’t even start studying until their third or fourth year in college. Up here, students moved forward as fast as they could master the subject material, rather than being forced to advance in lockstep with the rest of their agemates.

A lot of Alan Shepard’s problem when he was that age was probably being bored to tears by regular classes in grade and high school. Even at Annapolis, he didn’t really hit his stride until his third year.

How many times had her own father grumbled about the difficulty of keeping Spruance Del Curtin motivated to put out his best work? Brenda knew a lot of those remarks hadn’t been meant for her ears, but when she was still living in her folks’ apartment, it had often been difficult to avoid overhearing her dad’s remarks to her mom about problems in Engineering.

Sometimes it seemed like just yesterday that she was still living with her natal family, and sometimes it felt like another lifetime. Heck, the craziness of the last few weeks sometimes seemed to stretch backward through her memory far further than it had any right to.

Speaking of which, she realized that she’d become so occupied with Kitty Margrave’s friend Amy that she’d completely forgotten about the message she’d gotten from Robbie Sandberg. Sure, she’d sent some kind of very basic response right away, of the I’ll be praying for you type, but she’d never followed up with anything substantial.

And now enough time had passed that she had no idea what Robbie’s situation might be now. Had she been able to find some kind of accommodations with a friend or trusted mentor? Or had she been left with no choice to return to her parents’ home, told it was her problem to deal with the breach between them? In which case, would it even be safe to send her a message?

If her parents were reading her e-mails, checking her phone, on the grounds of under our roof, under our rules, discovering a new message from a former friend thought to be banished from her life could cause trouble. Anything from a shouting match to beatings, confiscations of belongings, even things that would leave her wishing there weren’t a stay-at-home order keeping them from tossing her out on her ass.

Was there some way to contact Robbie, buck her up if necessary, without revealing her identity? All of a sudden she wished she knew a whole lot more about hacking.

Lou was winding up his tutoring session. On the other hand, he was a typical Chaffee straight-arrow. If she asked him, he’d probably aver that they shouldn’t be trying to go behind the backs of someone’s parents when those parents were putting a roof over that person’s head, not to mention that a lot of the necessary hacks were a bit sketchy if you weren’t doing them under the direction of appropriate authority. And while it made sense for Kitty Margrave to go to her aunt when it was clear that Amy was in danger, Brenda wasn’t sure she wanted to go to Betty about an old friend’s situation with so little to go on.

Categories
Narrative

Like Ripples Upon a Pond

In normal times, the Roosa Barracks was a lively place. Maybe not as lively as the main concourse of Grissom City, but for a pilot-astronaut, there was always the company of one’s colleagues. Spontaneous games of poker or Magic: the Gathering in the dining commons, all-night bull sessions in the lounge of the BOQ.

But all that had gone by the wayside due to the present emergency. By order of the commandant, everyone was to remain in quarters during their off-duty hours.

Drew Reinholt looked around his room, considering how it had never felt all that small before. Of course it wasn’t as if this were an isolation cell — he did have full Internet access. A few taps on his tablet and he could talk with anyone in the three worlds. Of course communication with anyone outside the Earth-Moon system would be subject to light-speed lag, which made a phone conversation impossible, but text messaging worked just as well.

However, he was really supposed to be using this time to go over the new revisions on the landers’ instrumentation. The software was supposed to have gone into service over the next several weeks, but with the current crisis, the implementation was going to be delayed For The Duration. However, Flight Ops wanted everyone getting up to speed so they’d be ready as soon as NASA green-lighted the change-over. Which meant you were expected to spend pretty much every spare hour either studying or practicing on the simulators.

He hadn’t really been listening to the music — everything was pretty much familiar, so it made perfect background music. But when it stopped right in the middle of a song, his attention went straight to it.

For a moment he thought the stream had been interrupted again — not surprising when the Administration really didn’t like Shepardsport Pirate Radio. But then the DJ came on. “We interrupt this program for breaking news.”

And then Autumn Belfontaine took over the mic, reporting a most disturbing discovery. Drew knew that stuff was pretty messed up down on Earth, even in the US. It wasn’t surprising that a fast-moving disease like the diablovirus, which could incapacitate people in hours, would leave a lot of kids at loose ends, enough to swamp a city’s child-protection services. But what the heck was with this business of taking kids out of unofficial foster homes and stuffing them into makeshift orphanages in the very schools that had been closed to slow the spread of the virus? Was this thing driving people subtly crazy, such that they seemed rational, but their judgement went to heck?

At least his kids were safe with Brenda over on Farside, and her family was right there in Shepardsport, just a few modules away from their apartment. And much as he’d like to be with them right now, he was getting a thorough appreciation for why it was necessary that pilots be kept away from a settlement’s general population.

All the same, he was definitely scheduling some time to talk with his kids tonight. Screen time might be a poor substitute for romping with them like he would when he was able to visit, but it was better than nothing.

Categories
Narrative

Things to Worry About

There were times when Brenda Redmond wished she didn’t have the morning drive-time air shift at Shepardsport Pirate Radio. It was a news-heavy shift, which meant getting to hear all about everything that was going on in the world — which these days meant everything going wrong in the world.

And the news report Autumn Belfontaine had been delivering right at the end of Brenda’s shift was particularly worrisome. If a worker in the Indian Space Agency’s pre-flight quarantine facility could pass the diablovirus to their astronauts and infect the entire Japanese LEO space station and lunar ferry, how safe were America’s facilities? Especially considering that it wasn’t just NASA any more, with McHenery Aerospace and several other private companies launching crewed spacecraft from commercial spaceports. They were supposed to follow the same pre-flight quarantine procedures as NASA astronauts — but there’d been issues of corner-cutting on other safety procedures, so who was to say they weren’t getting lax there too.

All it would take is one person.

It wouldn’t have been so bad if Drew had been down at Coopersville, but he was stationed at Slayton Field. Grissom City was not only the largest and oldest lunar settlement, but also the busiest spaceport city. Which meant Drew would be right on the front lines in terms of his risk of exposure.

But she couldn’t let her worries about him leak into her communications to him. She knew the risks — it came with being a military spouse. And it wasn’t fair to the other pilot-astronauts’ wives for her to worry too obviously when they had their own burdens.

Better to focus on the things she had some level of control over. Her work, her training and gym time, her teaching responsibility. And taking care of the kids, of course.

Her phone chimed: incoming text message. She pulled it out, halfway hoping it was Drew.

No, it was Kitty Margrave. Call me. We need to talk.

Categories
Narrative

Be Careful What You Carry

The Roosa Barracks had become uncomfortably quiet of late. Drew Reinholt kept catching himself wanting to look over his shoulder whenever he walked down an empty corridor.

Sure, there were stories about certain parts of the Roosa Barracks being haunted by the ghosts of the astronauts who’d died in the 1996 disaster and whose bodies had been left there when the contaminated area had to be sealed off. But they were the sort of things you told newbies to see that frisson of fear, not something you actually took seriously.

He tried to tell himself it was just the absence of activity making his own thoughts too loud in comparison. And truth be told, he would be resting a lot easier if he could get more than sporadic text messages through to Brenda over in Shepardsport. So far what little had come through had been upbeat, and she hadn’t used any of the codes they’d agreed upon if something serious had happened.

On the other hand, he had no idea how many text messages might still be stuck in the system, waiting for an open connection between Farside and Nearside. Any of them might contain one of those warning codes, telling him he needed to read between the lines of what she’d written.

And it didn’t help that the news coming from Earth was getting worse all the time. Small countries in Africa and Asia had simply stopped communicating with the outside world, as if they’d fallen off the map. He was hearing RUMINT through the Air Force grapevine about overflights of villages full of unburied bodies, of other villages reduced to burned-out wreckage.

Of course those were places still struggling to get a toehold in the Twentieth Century, where poverty and ignorance were so common outside the major cities that even an American small town of the Revolutionary War would’ve seemed sophisticated and futuristic.

But even in wealthy countries, things were going from bad to worse. The most worrisome was the reports of flight control centers having trouble maintaining staffing. Just a few days ago, an old friend who’d gone back to Earth to work at Johnson had e-mailed him, saying that all the NASA space centers were going on full lockdown. Non-essential employees were to stay home, and essential employees were to stay in place, sleeping in makeshift accommodations on military cots.

And the Moon was only three days away from Earth, well within the incubation time of this new bug. All it would take would be one person breaking pre-flight quarantine on a lark — his own ur-brother had made an unauthorized jaunt just days before his Apollo flight — and they’d have it up here too. Somehow knowing that Mars was far enough away to be spared had proven cold comfort.

Especially since Shepardsport is still a lot more crowded. Even here in the Roosa Barracks, we have more room per person, and we’ve got the tightest quarters of anything here at Grissom City.

Even as he was considering that, a familiar voice called his name. He turned to face Peter Caudell. “What’s up?”

“Bad news.” Caudell looked worried. “We’ve just heard from the Indian Space Agency that they’ve had an accidental exposure. Apparently some of the support staff for their quarantine facility are daily commuters, and one of them has turned up sick — two days after their astronauts docked with Space Station Harmony and boarded the Sakura for the Moon.”

Although India had its own spacelift capability into Low Earth Orbit and its own lunar settlement, it paid Japan and the US for transport up here. Which meant their carelessness had now endangered not only Chandra Settlement, but also a good segment of Japan’s space infrastructure. And considering there was only a single station serving all nations on the lunar end–

“Have they gotten to Luna Station yet?” Drew tried not to think too much about the implications until he was certain. Still, cultures that focused too much on saving face had a tendency to cover up these sorts of problems, which had proved dangerous, even deadly, in the demanding environment of space. No one would ever forget what happened to Phoenix.

“At the moment they’re still a day out, and JAXA is still negotiating on how they’re going to handle it. So far, none of the Indian astronauts are showing any symptoms, but we can’t afford to risk any contact with anybody aboard the Sakura until everyone is past the longest possible incubation period. I’m also hearing some discussion of a strict quarantine for all pilots.”

“Damn, that’s going to suck. Shepardsport’s already confining visiting pilots to their port facilities. If we can’t visit at all–” Drew realized he was coming dangerously close to self-pity.

“It’s not just ports of call. They’re talking about closing off the Roosa Barracks and Slayton Field from the rest of Grissom City. Nobody in or out without a three-week quarantine.”

And Drew realized why Peter looked so worried. His daughter works up in the rodent labs. Either she has to change jobs or she has to find some place to stay in Grissom City for the duration.

Categories
Narrative

Seeking Connection

It’s really sad when you’re listening to a disreputable Internet radio station just to hear your wife’s voice in one of the canned announcements. Drew Reinholt fiddled with his vTuner settings yet again, hoping yet again that it would connect with the Shepardsport Pirate Radio livestream. And it’s even sadder when you can’t.

Strictly speaking, there was no prohibition on the Slayton Field pilots listening to Shepardsport Pirate Radio, even in their offices when they were at work on their secondary astronaut specialties. But then Colonel Dyer knew better than give an order he knew would not be obeyed.

He pulled up the computer’s terminal and began doing some basic network tests. Although Drew wasn’t an IT specialist, or even an electrical engineer, he’d learned some basic network troubleshooting techniques over the years, especially back in the days when he was roaming the lunar surface with Dr. Schwartz.

He was able to ping the server, but only intermittently, which suggested that something was interfering with the transmission of packets. If there had been physical damage to the cables that ran alongside the ice train’s tracks, down to Coopersville and back north on Farside, it should’ve resulted in every IP address associated with Shepardsport simply disappearing from the Internet.

He recalled a long-ago leadership lecture about “rewarding intermittently” as a means of motivation. If someone were deliberately sabotaging Shepardsport’s connectivity, say with some kind of malware, might they allow just enough packets to go through to keep people trying to get through? Drew could think of several possible ways to create such an effect, although he knew he couldn’t describe them in sufficient detail to get IT to pay attention to him.

A tap on the door of his office brought him out of his ruminations. Drew looked up from his computer to find Peter Caudell standing there. “Hey, Drew, I know you’ve got family over at Shepardsport. Have you been having trouble making connections with them?”

“Damn skippy I have.” Drew knew he was being sharper than was politic with someone so senior, who’d done a hitch up here back in the days when the Roosa Barracks was just the moonbase. “Just this morning Brenda and I were going to FaceTime before she went on her air shift. Then it broke up and I wasn’t able to connect with her. I was hoping I could at least try to text her when we got back down, but by that time I couldn’t even get through on SMS.”

Peter nodded, concern drawing a furrow between his eyebrows. Even at his age he still had Scott Carpenter’s good looks — that was a geneset that aged well. “One of my clone-brothers over there has been having some problems. I’ve been checking in with him pretty regularly, trying to buck him up when things get particularly bad. Our last check-in should’ve been about four hours ago, and I haven’t been able to raise him at all.”

Drew nodded toward his computer with vTuner up. “Right now all I know is I can’t connect with Shepardsport Pirate Radio’s streaming service. I’ve been hesitant to contact IT about it because I don’t want to advertise that I listen to them. But I’m thinking it’s a lot more than just the digital radio stream getting cut off.” He looked straight into Peter’s eyes. “Maybe your word would have more weight than anything I could say.”

Categories
Narrative

Network Trouble

With pilots from other settlements no longer permitted to come up from the spaceport to the residential sector of Shepardsport, Drew had decided there was no real point in trying to get a permanent transfer to the regular run over there. Better to just stay on the orbital missions than to have Brenda and the kids so close but out of reach.

So here he was at Luna Station, waiting for the cargo handling robots to finish loading the lander so he could take it down. Live fish, according to the manifest. Probably one of the big agricorps that ran the South and West Farms was broadening their genetic stock.

Still, it gave him some downtime, and with the current situation he and his pilot weren’t allowed to go aboard Luna Station. Which meant no opportunity to hang out and visit with the pilot-astronauts from the other settlements.

On the other hand, it did give him other opportunities. Even if he couldn’t go visit Brenda and the kids in person, he could spend some FaceTime with them.

Or so he’d thought. He’d texted Brenda to make sure she and the kids were where they could talk, and she’d answered right back that they had a few minutes before she needed to get Randy to class and Leonie to nursery.

But when he tapped the FaceTime icon, it took forever to connect. When it did, the lag time was so bad it was impossible to carry on a conversation. The kids were getting frustrated, so Brenda had suggested they drop the call and try again.

Now it was just ringing and ringing, like it couldn’t connect. He’d tried three or four times, and the window of opportunity was rapidly closing. Not to mention that he’d just gotten a notification that loadout was winding up, so he’d better start prepping for undock and descent back to Slayton Field.

But first he wanted to see if he could find out what was going on. He didn’t usually listen to Shepardsport Pirate Radio while he was on a mission, but right now he wanted to see if they were reporting any kind of network issues.

However, when he entered their web address, he got a 503 error. A second try got a 502, and after a few other assorted errors, he had to conclude that there was something seriously wrong with their network connection.

On the other hand, given that they were now one of the best sources of honest news reportage, if something serious had happened and the Administration was trying to cover it up, it was completely possible that their servers were getting swamped. When he got back to the Roosa Barracks, he’d have to connect with some people in Grissom City’s IT department and see if they had any ideas.

In the meantime, he needed to put those concerns out of his mind and concentrate on getting ready to fly this bird back home. Brenda was a smart cookie and knew how to take care of herself in a pinch.

And she had a top-notch commandant in Reggie Waite. If Drew couldn’t trust his clone-brother to protect his own, who could he?