When all were assembled on the regolith, Petrov made the statement that, in the light of later events, has become immortal: “
I wasn’t especially impressed at the time. It sounded like the usual generalized nonsense. Which shows you what my judgment is worth.
I watched on my office monitor. And as the ceremony proceeded, I looked past the space travelers, across the barren wasteland of the Mare Maskelyne, wondering which was the shortest path to the Cassegrain crater.
I knew I should have just let it go, but I couldn’t. I could imagine no explanation for the Russians doctoring their satellite imagery. Vasili told me that everyone with whom he’d spoken was shocked. That the images had been dug out of the archives and distributed without inspection. And, as far as could be determined, without anyone distorting them. “
Mary told me not to worry about it. “We have more important things to do,” she said.
There was no one left at NASA from the 1960s. In fact, I knew of only one person living at Cape Kennedy who had been part of the Agency when Apollo 11 went to the Moon: Amos Kelly, who’d been one of my grandfather’s buddies. He was still in the area, where he served with the Friends of NASA, a group of volunteers who lent occasional support but mostly threw parties. I looked him up. He’d come to the Agency in 1965 as a technician. Eventually, he’d become one of the operational managers.
He was in his mid-eighties, but he sounded good. “
“This is going to sound silly, Amos.”
“
“Did you see the story in the tabloids about the dome?”
“
“You ever hear anything like that before?”
“
“I guess not.”
“
“Thanks.”
He told me how much he missed the old days, missed my grandfather, how they’d had a good crew. “
Finally he asked what the Russians had said about the images. I told him what Vasili told me. “
Twenty minutes later he called back. “
“Yes. That’s correct.”
“
“The Cassegrain Project.”
“
“But you have no idea what it was about?”
“
“Would you tell me if you knew?”
“
“Amos, you were pretty high in the Agency—”
“
“Do you remember anything else?”