Down Under Crater Billy
by Stephen Burns
It began with the office routine of Binkovitch telling me, “C’mon, Dave, this baby’s absolutely
Then the schmuck laughed at this several hundredth-odd iteration of a joke that was stump stupid the first time he told it. As usual, that aggravating, annoying, sludgeforbrains
Once again I vowed to actually take one of my unused leaves, venture the hundreds of klicks north to Copernicus Down, visit the UN level, casually drop by UNNTSTOA’s section, pop into his office for our first face to face ever, and proceed to beat the living crap out of him. Since I had no plans to ever risk the ride back to Earth and then visit some tropical paradise like Tahiti, that was—and is—my dream vacation.
I took another look at the invoice inset at the bottom of the screen under Binkovitch’s ugly ferret face. Half a dozen different new items were listed, but one in particular was giving me the sort of sinking feeling the mammoths must have felt when they visited sunny La Brea.
“Well, at least it was manufactured by Mercedes-Motorola Microwerks,”
I said, trying to slow my mood’s descent into the tarpit. “Their stuff hardly ever goes screwlzy.”
“Hardly ever,” Binkovitch agreed with an evil grin.
As chief safety officer I had theoretical refusal of any item. But the priority tag the thing carried suggested that trying to navigate the bureaucratic maze it took to do so might be a Voyage of No Return. Aside from that, as CSO it was my job to
I sighed. “So when’s it coming?” I was still clinging hopefully to my one fallback position. Maybe I could stall it in the manufacturer’s own testing department for a while longer.
Binkovitch’s grin grew even more hatefully gleeful. “Your chief of testing took delivery on it about twenty minutes ago.”
There was no way for me to avoid dealing with the damned thing. Not if Gloria already had her hands on it.
If you look over any current map of Luna’s Earth-side you’ll see several areas marked with holographic red domes, the legend
The reason for the mapmakers getting worked up enough to use exclamation points is fairly obvious with most of them. Only a total moron would try to fly over or land on the Laser Power Columns, Meteor Defense Missile Emplacements, or Mass Catapults and risk being broiled like one of the Colonel’s chickens or shot down like a clay pigeon. The human race being what it is, of course a few people do it anyway.
Down in the Midlunar Lowlands at roughly 14°S 50°W is another area deemed dangerous enough for this same exclamation-pointed warning.
That’s where I live and work, along with around five hundred other lost souls trying to live something like normal lives: loving the ones we love, squabbling with the ones we don’t, petting our pets, watching our weight, dreaming of the greener grass on the other side of the fence, and spending the pay we get trying to make existence a little safer for the human race—and for ourselves in the bargain.
We don’t have any big lasers, missiles or catapults, and yet thanks to our reputation almost no one ever tries to fly over
The place is off the regular transport routes, out in the middle of dusty nowhere. It’s buried under ten meters of solid rock, and hard to get into or out of as a prison—not that it is one, we’re all here more or less voluntarily.
This hazard-marked place is Home Sweet (or at least Semisweet) Home to all of us living here down under Crater Billy.
Once Binkovitch was done getting his jollies for the day at my expense, 1 left my office and headed off to check out this new threat to our safety and my sanity. Some items we’ve been given to test bear closer watching than others. I had a feeling that this one would give me eyestrain.
When we were first brought here quite a few people had a hard time adjusting to the ant’s life of tunnels and caverns deep underground. Not me. I’m happy as a heavily medicated clam with the warm glow of lightpipes or sunpanels above me, a grass-covered stone floor under my feet, and nice reassuring rock walls all around me. I love the safety of traveling everywhere on foot in the dreamy lunar gravity, secure in the knowledge that there is no motorized transport to possibly break down or go out of control when it passes by, bringing my life to a sudden messy end.