Meredith had survived the rolling, Mariko Seidel might have. If
Or was JC right when he said Duddridge had found something on the planet that justified so much treachery?
Seth heard a faint roll of thunder, much muffled by the shuttle walls.
Meredith heard it also. “How long until the storm hits, Prospector?”
“Seth. Seth Broderick. It must be due soon. Can you walk?”
She nodded. “I can crawl. Go and report to your friends.”
“What I ought to do is go and find my baggage. It has three more water bottles and we’re going to need them. But it will take me a couple of hours, there and back.”
“Don’t tell me you walked that far over the boulder flats?”
“We didn’t know it would be such hard going.”
“We did. We had close-ups from the drones. That’s why we landed beside this distributary channel. It makes for easy walking all the way to the flower pots.”
“
“You mustn’t risk it again,” Meredith said firmly. “You’ll break a leg for sure, or get caught in the storm. And the water you collect won’t cover the sweat you’ll lose, there and back.”
The mere thought of water made Seth thirsty. “What choice do I have?”
“We can collect rainwater, but you’ll have to boil it with your blazer, and I honestly don’t believe that will sterilize it.”
He hadn’t brought a blazer.
“That’s a last resort. I can dehydrate a bit longer.” This shuttle would still contain everything they could possibly need, but they couldn’t get at it.
“Shine your light around for me. There’s a bra about somewhere.”
He laughed. “Modesty at a time like this?”
“Necessity in gravity like this.”
He apologized and found the bra for her.
* * *
As soon as he clambered through into the laboratory he heard almost continuous thunder. Gusts of rain sweeping across the plain had cut visibility down to a hundred meters or so. His external thermometer told him that the temperature had dropped twenty degrees. He had estimated that he could stand three hours on the surface, but now that seemed hopelessly optimistic and he had a lot more of this ordeal to look forward to. Even after the storm passed,
“Prospector to
“You know how time flies when you’re with a pretty girl.”
“They’re alive?”
“Meredith Tsukuba is. She’s suffering from dehydration, malnutrition, probably nitrogen narcosis. Perhaps emotional trauma, but she’s a very tough woman.”
“What about the comas and hallucinations?”
Seth hadn’t made up his mind yet. “Nothing obvious. She’ll need a long decompression after this and certainly quarantine.”
“Master, this is Jordan.”
“Yes, sir.”
“Bad news. Prepare for a major storm surge. That hurricane will make landfall right at high tide.”
“No problem,” Seth said. “Let me restate that: I mean, no decision needed. We’re in the shuttle and that’s as safe a place as we’ll find. Our problem is going to be drinking water. We have none left. We’ll try collecting rain; the air is wet enough to swim in right now.” If he opened his vizor to take as much as one sip of rainwater, he would be exposed to biohazard and faced with a long quarantine.
He uploaded his plog, bringing
The drawer he had noticed earlier was now explained. He dragged it behind him as he crawled out of the cave on hands and knees-the storm had barely started and already he did not dare try to stand up in it. He scooped a hollow in the sand to anchor the drawer; he packed sand in around it. The rain was almost horizontal, but enough was going in to fill it fairly soon.
A good prospector should never miss a chance to sample. Back in the shuttle, he wrapped up some fish bones, a couple of beetles, and some more fecal pellets, larger than those he had found earlier. Those took him past the total of twenty he had promised JC. Now he just had to deliver them.