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Narrative

Connecting

Payton Shaw was just finishing his latest report to Colonel Hearne when a familiar voice called his name. Payton looked up to see Spruance Del Curtin leaning over the back of the sofa. “What brings you here?”

“I need a little help.” Sprue gave a quick look around, lowered his voice. “You’ve heard about the guy over at Schirrasburg who’s supposed to have caught the diablovirus?”

“Mostly because the whole settlement’s closed down and Colonel Hearne had to completely redo our flight roster to isolate the pilots who’d been there right before the guy turned up sick. Sure, we’re following strict quarantine procedures and pilots are no longer allowed to go inside the settlements they’re visiting, but there’s still a certain limited amount of contact.”

Sprue’s lips quirked up a little, not a full-out Smilin’ Al grin, but definitely mark him down as pleased with the situation. “So here’s the problem. There are a bunch of rumors going around now. Some of them say the guy’s recovered and may never have had the diablovirus in the first place. The rest are claiming he died but NASA’s covering it up to prevent panic, since nobody’s sure where he got it from.”

“That’s pretty heavy stuff, Sprue.” Payton considered just how deep he wanted to get into this mess. especially since he had no idea where Sprue had gotten his information. For all Payton knew, he’d gone and poked his nose into some place he shouldn’t again. “And you know the big boss really doesn’t want people passing rumors.”

“I know what Captain Waite’s said. We had a talk about it a while back.” Sprue sounded a little exasperated. “Anyway, I’m not passing rumors. I’m trying to find out whether there’s any substance to them. After all, isn’t the whole point of Shepardsport Pirate Radio trying to get the truth out so that people aren’t stuck having to sift through masses of contradictory rumors?”

“You really have a talent at putting me in a rough place, Sprue. I’m not going to promise anything, but I’ll see what I can find out.”

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Narrative

The Weight of Waiting

Payton Shaw had never intended to spend so much time texting with Tom Burdett. They both had work to do tomorrow, but Captain Burdett was the best leadership figure Payton had to turn to within their lineage. And Captain Burdett was aware of that situation, which was why he was so willing to give freely of his time, at least as much as he could while quarantined down in Flight Ops whenever he was in town.

But now the conversation was over and Payton knew he needed to get to bed. At least he didn’t have an air shift tomorrow at the station — he only did the Sunday morning all-Elvis show, the Church of the Blessed Elvis — but he had plenty of other work to keep him busy. And enough of it required close attention that it wouldn’t do to be so tired he was on the verge of nodding off the whole time.

His roommate had already gone to bed by the time he got back to the apartment. It made the process of rigging his bed a little more difficult, but once his eyes adjusted to the dim lighting of the panel of the room’s life-support monitor, it wasn’t that difficult.

He remembered when he first got up here, how the light from it had made sleeping difficult. He’d found out later that several of the other kids had gotten in trouble for covering theirs at night, because they simply could not sleep unless the room was much darker. However, in an artificial habitat on a world with no life-giving atmosphere, being able to see at a glance those vital figures on the conditions upon which life depended was simply non-negotiable. Adapting to the resultant light level in sleeping rooms was your problem.

Like so many things up here, Payton thought as he lay there looking at the ceiling. For Expulsees, there was no option of washing out of training, of being sent back in disgrace. Either they adapted, or they died.

Like Clarissa Munroe. Why should she come back to his mind now? He hadn’t thought of her since the day he went down to the Wall of Honor to pay tribute to his clone-brother, who’d died trying to save her from her own foolishness. But then the damnatio memoriae that had been placed upon her did not exactly encourage thinking about her overmuch.

But there’d been plenty of other people who’d died up here, in circumstances such that they weren’t condemned, and in some cases even got a place on the Wall of Honor, but left people wondering. A few accidents, but also more than a few seemingly heroic actions that had a certain odor of “get out of jail free card” to them.

And there too, it was considered an impropriety to speculate. Especially with the honored dead, one did not say anything that might appear to disparage.

Quite honestly, some of the stuff he was hearing about right now had that feel to it. Were people taking stupid chances because they no longer cared whether they lived or died, but were not going to destroy their reputation by an obvious act of self-destruction? Especially this business with the guy over at Schirrasburg suddenly coming down sick — the various protocols the pilot-astronauts operated under should have protected them from infection. But he was also aware how people took shortcuts — how many times had Betty Margrave put out reminders of the absolute importance of not propping safety doors when bringing large objects through?

Except most of the likely mistakes are the stuff you’d expect of dirtsiders, not someone who lives with the constant awareness of the slender margins of our survival.

But right now there wasn’t a whole lot he could do about it. Do his best in his own area, but better to put those thoughts out of his mind so he could go to sleep.

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Narrative

Other Kinds of Traffic

Having finished studying, but not yet ready to hit the sack, Payton Shaw was taking a quick look through his social media. It split about 50/50 between the purely personal and that pertaining to his role as an on-air personality at Shepardsport Pirate Radio.

I really need to get some of this stuff updated. Of course the fact that his show was weekly rather than daily meant that he just didn’t have as much material for his professional pages as DJ’s like the Timeline Brothers or Spruance Del Curtin.

A voice calling his name pulled him out of his thoughts. Payton looked up to find Quinn Merton standing just behind him. “So you’re going through your social media too.

“Yeah, and I was trying to remember when traffic started slacking off. I mean, things have been kinda busy lately,” he decided not to mention the research he’d been doing after Colonel Hearne had left him with a puzzle, “so I wasn’t keeping as close of track. Things change slowly enough and you don’t really notice it until it gets big enough that you say hey, when did it happen?”

“How hard would it be to get actual traffic data on that stuff? I know Lou Corlin works down at IT, so he might be able to get some logs. And Spruance Del Curtin’s working on some kind of super-secret project for Dr. Doorne, and he got picked because he was in her statistics class.”

Payton considered that information. “Lou would be easy to approach, but if he doesn’t think he ought to be handing out that information, he’s going to be tough to convince. Sprue’s just the opposite. Aloof as a cat, but if you want to get him to do something for you, make it into a challenge and he’ll knock himself out to beat everyone else to it.”

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Narrative

A Watch, Not a Warning

Fixing plumbing was just the sort of tedious job that gave you plenty of time to think about other things. Right now, Payton Shaw was planning his playlist for Sunday’s show. He usually tried to achieve a mix of the songs everyone knew by heart and deep cuts only the real Elvis fans recognized. And a few covers for variety, like ZZ Top’s take on “Viva Las Vegas.”

A sharp buzz brought him out of his thoughts, and for a moment he wondered if he’d made a major mistake and set off a pressure alarm. No, that was coming from his phone, which he’d put in his tool bag while he was doing this.

He set his pipe wrench down just long enough to check. Solar storm watch declared for lunar Farside and cislunar space. Solar disruptions indicate that a flare or CME with significant radiation potential may occur at this time.

Not exactly the sort of thing you want to hear when you’re trying to finish an important project. Especially one in an area which had only the minimum level of protective regolith piled over it, so it would have to be one of the first areas evacuated if radiation levels started to rise, before the general alarm for everyone in the settlement to retreat to the storm shelters.

He’d just put his phone back and was about to start working again when it chimed incoming text. It’d better not be Ken down in Engineering telling him to wind it up early. The last thing he needed right now was Alice Murcheson on his case because he hadn’t finished and the irrigation lines were still out of commission in this section. Never mind direct orders from his actual boss, she’d be down his throat, not Ken’s. And given that she was married to Bill Hearne…

As it turned out, it was a not-quite-panicky text from his girlfriend. She was a relative newcomer up here, and she’d never been through an actual solar storm. Of course she’d gone through the standard drills — those happened on a monthly basis, with the occasional surprise drill tossed in just to keep everyone sharp.

Better reassure her, especially with everyone already keyed up from everything going on down on Earth. This is a watch, not a warning. Think of it as being like tornado watch and warning announcements. Right now someone’s picked up a pattern of solar activity that looks concerning, so they want all EVA’s finished and everyone back indoors. If there’s an actual CME approaching and it’s clear there’s no way it will miss us, they’ll up it to a warning and have everyone ready to go to the storm shelters on a moment’s notice.

Then I shouldn’t worry because the teacher told us to keep working on our experiments.

Jodi was taking a basic chemistry class right now. Payton tried to remember where the chem labs were in relation to the rest of Miskatonic Sector. You’re probably safer where you are than I am right now. Just keep focused on what you’re doing, and I’ll get back to Engineering as soon as I get this job finished up.

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Narrative

The Watcher at the Window

The guinea pig habitats were quiet this early in the morning. Payton Shaw moved slowly and carefully in the half-light which was supposed to simulate early morning. Guinea pigs seemed to do better when the diurnal cycle imitated the slow increase and decrease of light at dawn and dusk, rather than the lights simply coming on and turning off.

There was a trick to checking the automatic feeders and waterers without having to shine a light directly on the animals and disrupting the regulation of their circadian rhythms and activity cycles. This was the third time this week that Agriculture had reported problems with the automatics, and both Alice Murchison and Ken Redmond were getting fed up.

Especially with everything that’s going on, right now it’s going to be just about impossible to get spare parts. Which means that either we have to machine our own replacements, or we have to kludge together some other solution.

Payton recalled Colonel Hearne’s remarks about logistics. Just what had he meant that day, down by the Wall of Honor?

Over the last several days, Payton had done some discreet inquiries, always careful to mix them in with more innocuous searches in order to obscure any pattern that might attract attention. He did know that the port facility was having trouble getting certain items in, especially certain biologicals for Medlab that they were having difficulty producing up here.

Which could be a real problem if we ran into a major medical crisis. He recalled Colonel Hearne’s comments about Johnson Space Center having trouble staffing even their critical operations. Since then, Payton had also heard that Japan had been forced to shut down most of their Earthside space operations and quarantine both Edo Settlement and their lunar ferry because of a lapse of biosecurity on the part of one of the nations they provided transport for.

Who can I talk to, that might actually know something, but won’t think I’m nosing into places I don’t belong? Payton recalled that his ur-brother had had some film confiscated and classified top secret after his Mercury mission, apparently because he’d unwittingly photographed some super-secret military installations. And when he’d asked President Johnson, he’d been told in no uncertain terms that he should ask no further questions.

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Narrative

Remembrances

The formal entrance to Shepardsport was quiet today. Not surprising given the current situation, but Payton Shaw wasn’t used to having such complete privacy for his annual observance. Of course there wasn’t complete silence — no shirtsleeve environment on the Moon was ever completely silent, although the various fans and other devices to keep the air breathable could be made extremely quiet.

On the other hand, the place was now clean, with nothing to distract from the significance of this place. Payton remembered when he first arrived up here, when it was still stacked with boxes and bins unless there were a formal ceremony. Now the floor remained clear and polished at all times, the squid emblem of Shepardsport on display for all to see.

Payton approached the Wall of Honor, the three slabs of polished basalt flanked by the US and NASA flags, which was the real focal point of the room. In another place and time, the fallen might be honored by elaborate monuments with sculptures of marble and bronze. Here there was nothing but columns of names engraved in stone, a memorial that reinforced the gravity of what was remembered here in the spartan severity of its presentation.

Often people would touch the names of friends or family members who had given their lives in the pursuit of spaceflight. Although the lunar basalt was regularly shined, Payton could see a few fingerprints, especially on particularly famous names.

However, the name he was looking for was relatively recent. Payton knelt to look more closely at it — his clone-brother, Gavin Etlund.

Sometimes it seemed like yesterday — the growing tension, the horrible row in the dining commons and Gavin racing out after his girlfriend, pleading with her not to do anything rash. Other times it seemed like another lifetime, standing vigil outside Medlab as Dr. Thuc desperately tried to save Gavin’s life, to stabilize him enough that he could survive being transported up to Gagarinsk, where Colonel Grigorenko had arranged for him to receive regeneration.

Gavin was honored here, but only by name. One simply did not speak of the young woman whose life he’d tried to save. Never mind that it was pretty well agreed that Clarissa Munroe had had a bad case of undiagnosed Earth Separation Anxiety Disorder, and that her desperation led her to believe that if she just screwed up badly enough, she could be sent back home, never mind the Writ of Expulsion against her. Her actions had endangered not only herself and Gavin, but potentially the entire settlement, and as a result no sympathy toward her could be tolerated, lest it appear to excuse her actions.

It was a harsh damnato memoria, but uncomfortable as Payton was about it, he knew better than try to buck it. Up here, the margins of survival were too thin.

As he rose, Payton realized he was not alone. He turned to face the gray-haired man with the craggy good looks of Deke Slayton, the “forgotten” Mercury astronaut.

Payton’s mind raced with questions he dared not air in this sacred space. Colonel Hearne? What’re you doing here?

Bill Hearne just gave Payton a stern look, an unmistakable Wait. I want to talk to you.

Payton gave him a polite nod and retreated to the corridor while the older man paid his own respects. He’d come all too close to having his name on that wall himself: the rescue of the crew of the Falcon had been a close-run thing, still talked about in awed tones three decades later.

The longer Payton waited, the more he wondered just what Bill Hearne wanted with him. Was he in trouble? After all, getting down here meant going through the port facilities, and that meant being seen by the pilot-astronauts. And Bill Hearne had been the one to lay down the law that terrible night, using his authority as the last commander of the Falcon.

On the other hand, the name Hearne was looking at was clearly much higher on the wall. Maybe one of his friends who’d died in the NASA Massacre, back in the Energy Wars? He’d been commanding American Eagle that day, doing repairs on a spy satellite, and it had always bothered him that he was above it all while terrorists were rampaging through Johnson Space Center, shooting up offices and murdering astronauts and support staff.

Finally Hearne completed whatever personal memorial he needed to perform and walked back out to join Payton in the corridor. “I’m rather surprised to see you down here tonight, Mr. Shaw. I thought you had quite a bit of work to do these days.”

Payton’s gut twisted in ill-ease. What was with the formal address? And why the indirection?

On the other hand, if he were in trouble, the last thing he wanted to do right now was say or do anything that could look defensive. Keep on his guard, but maintain the appearance that he was taking the greeting and question at face value, as politeness, not accusation.

He chose his words with care, hoping that it wouldn’t make him look deceitful. “I do, sir, but today I needed to honor someone’s memory.”

Hearne nodded, a curt movement of the chin up, then down. “We may soon have a lot more memories to honor.”

Something’s seriously wrong here. Payton studied Col. Hearne’s expression, seeking any hint of what was going on. He decided to take a risk, based on some things Autumn Belfontaine had said at the recent all-hands staff meeting at the station. “It’s pretty bad down there, isn’t it?”

“NASA’s trying to keep it quiet, but that damn bug’s gotten into Johnson, and I’m hearing scuttlebutt that they’re having trouble keeping critical operations staffed.”

Payton considered that information. Why would someone so senior be sharing it with someone as lowly as himself? Might it be a test, to see whether Payton could exercise discretion with a choice bit of RUMINT? “That’s not good.” He spoke those three words with deliberate care, hoping it would convey that he understood both the gravity of the situation being described and the significance of being given the information.

“No, it’s not. You work logistics, so I’ll leave the full implications as an exercise for your edification.”

There was a finality in those words that made it clear the conversation was at a close. Make it definite, this was some kind of test — and Payton had absolutely no idea what.

“Uh, thanks, sir.” Payton hoped he sounded reasonably enthusiastic about being handed this puzzle. He certainly didn’t feel like it.

Conversation completed, Col. Hearne made a sharp turn back to the pilot-astronauts’ offices, leaving Payton to make his own way back to Dunwich Sector and his apartment.

Something’s going on, and I need to find out what, without letting it get noised about that I know just how bad things are getting dirtside.

Damn. He almost wished that Col. Hearne had given his ears a blistering about Clarissa Munroe.

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Narrative

A Little Less Conversation

Listening to Shepardsport Pirate Radio in your office could be tricky here in the Roosa Barracks, since Grissom City was still trying to stay cozy with the Administration. But Peter Caudell had enough family over there on Farside that he liked to keep it on, even if he had to keep the volume low or listen on headphones. Which was a lot easier these days than it had been back in the days before Bluetooth.

And right now he was just as glad he’d picked the completely private option, because something seriously strange was going on over there. For starters, they were playing way too much Elvis. It would’ve been one thing if this were a Sunday morning, because that was Payton Shaw’s program, the Church of the Blessed Elvis. Two hours of nothing but the Man from Memphis.

But today was a rather ordinary Tuesday. Everything he could see was showing ordinary levels of traffic in cislunar space, and the Sun was behaving itself quite nicely. None of the messy coronal mass ejections that seemed to be characteristic of a solar minimum and could wreck havoc with space activities.

So why did so many songs by Elvis Presley keep showing up on their playlist? Even in the Classic Rock program in the afternoon, Spruance Del Curtin tended to favor acts from the 70s and 80s, but today he’d played half a dozen Elvis songs.

And now that the disco program was on, Spencer Dawes was playing that cover of “A Little Less Conversation.” What was that band’s name? Something-or-other XL, Peter had never paid much attention because disco wasn’t his kind of music. Was it worth the risk to go online to the Shepardsport Pirate Radio website and check their official playlist?

Still, it bothered him just enough to be a persistent itch at the back of his mind. Maybe he ought to make a few discreet inquiries to his clone-brothers over there, see if any of them had heard anything. Too bad none of them had landed a position on the station staff, which was a shame when one considered Scott Carpenter’s fondness for music.

Worst case, there was always Payton Shaw. Sure, he was a Cooper, but the clones of the Mercury Seven did stick together.