“When did you decide this?”
“Today. This morning.”
“But why? I thought you hated Luna.”
“It’s…” He shook his head. “I don’t want to talk about it, OK? It just looks like the only thing left for me to do.”
“When are you going? Have you decided yet?”
“I’m going to apply tomorrow. Supposedly, they’re able to reply pretty quickly. I just came in tonight to say good-bye to all you guys. I think you’re all assholes and idiots, but I’m going to miss you. Funny, the way you get hooked on people, isn’t it?”
Touched by his bumbling, crude attempt to show his feelings, she reached out and covered his hand with hers. “It’s OK, I know what you’re saying.”
He looked at her, then his eyes fell to where her hand rested on his. “You wouldn’t want to… uh…” He gave up. “Never mind.”
She waited until his eyes came back up. She smiled slightly and shrugged. “Just might. You never know. Besides, someone’s going to have to drive you home. You’re obviously in no condition to do so yourself.”
Reg took a deep breath, slid to the end of the booth, then pivoted and sat heavily on her side. “Sheila, did you know that you’re an angel?”
An elaborate graphics terminal sat unused while Roberta Lith sketched by hand an intricate web of lines on a pad of paper next to her elbow. Small blocks, neatly labeled with part numbers, reached out geometric tendrils towards other blocks. Occasional clusters of discrete UV optical transistors appeared when no commercially available integrated circuits would do.
“Roberta?” came the voice from behind her.
“Hmmm?” She continued to trace in parts of the circuit.
Jennifer Holmes, inventor of the Holmes Door, bent to look over Roberta’s shoulder at the schematic. “I’ve never been able to decide whether you use a pad and pencil because you’re from Earth or because you have this innate need to be an anachronism.”
Roberta laughed. “Neither. I get a better intuitive feel for the circuit when I do it by hand. That thing,” she gestured at the terminal, “has no soul.”
“Is that the feedback loop for the secondary sampler?”
“I finished that hours ago.” She made a long reach and grasped the corner of a piece of paper, which she turned and handed to Jenny. “I changed my mind at the last minute. You know how we had talked about running the time base up another couple of meg? I thought of another way to do it. If you look over towards the clock for the logic circuits, you’ll see that I’ve pulled the pulse from there, instead. That way we can dispense with the phase check, they’ll already be in sync.”
Jenny studied the schematic for a moment. “Cute. Kills two birds with one stone.”
Roberta shrugged. “If it doesn’t work, we can always go back to doing it the way we discussed, but this looked like a more elegant solution.”
“I’m not sure it matters how we get the job done, just as long as we get there. Alan asked me again the other day about the Mars Door.”
“He really wants to go, doesn’t he?” Roberta asked.
Jenny nodded. “He first asked me about this the night of the vote for independence. I don’t think a week has passed since then that he hasn’t checked in, just to see how things are getting along. Mark my words—we’re going to Mars.”
“But… I mean, we work for Lunar Magnetics. How did he get them to spring for the project?”
Jenny laughed. “I’ve known Alan for years, and I’ve never known him to
Roberta frowned. “That doesn’t sound like the Alan
“Oh, don’t get me wrong—just between you and me, I’ve carried a bit of a crush on the man ever since I first met him, but I’ve seen him be tough as steel when the mood strikes him.” A distant look came into her eyes. “Sometimes he scares me.”
“Alan, scary? Oh, come on, now! He’s just a teddy bear.”
Jenny smiled, still distant. “Never forget, Roberta. Even cuddly bears have teeth and claws…”
Edgar Rice was beginning to take an interest in the graffiti that was popping up in random corridors around town. Part of it was the story value—after all, he was a newsman at heart, and