Analog Science Fiction and Fact - July-Agust 2014
Page 28
Maggie confirmed the callout with the meteorological data displayed on the augmented reality projection on the inside of her helmet. "Thanks, Liu."
She raised the collective with practiced confidence and brought the helicopter to a hover over the pad. After a final check of the instruments and the flight controls, she applied more collective and pushed the cyclic forward, translating the BX–719 to forward motion.
This was already Maggie's sixth mission since being assigned to Syrtis less than eight Earth months ago. By necessity, they were all solo missions. A lone med-pilot plus the patient (or two, if the latter were light enough) was all the helicopter could lift in the thin Martian atmosphere. If there were more casualties, she could only take back the one or two most critically injured. For the remainder, she would do her best to stabilize them on site, to await either her return or the arrival of a MarsSAR ground team.
Every mission was different, but there were also similarities—most notably, the way she felt during the outbound flight. Like many young pilots, she was always geared up, her adrenaline constantly pumping. She knew exactly what she had to do; her training made that a certainty. Yet, at the back of her mind, there were always questions: How am I going to pull this off? What surprises await me?
Maggie didn't know much about this Carl Gablenz character, just brief clips of stuff she'd seen on media. He was probably one of those self-made rich people who had racked up a fortune in finance at Clavius. Somebody once tried to climb the four "Mons of Tharsis" in one year, but quit after getting stuck somewhere halfway up Pavonis. Maggie thought it might have been Carl. She was pretty sure he was the guy who had tried to do a solo balloon circumnavigation of Titan. That had been a failure as well. Maggie wondered if he'd ever succeeded in any of his crazy stunts.
If nothing else, she really hoped he was still alive when she found him. The paperwork for processing dead people was horrendous.
Maggie's thoughts were interrupted by a radio report from Liu.
"I have good news and bad news," he said. "Which would you like first?"
"Surprise me."
"Here is the data from Harmakhis–7, hot off the downlink." As he spoke, an image appeared on Maggie's augmented reality display showing a grey truncated ellipsoid with stubby fins against a crimson background. "We have pinpointed the crash site and the coordinates are being entered into your FMS now."
Maggie conf irmed that the helicopter's flight management system had accepted the navigational data. "I take it that's the good news. What's the bad?"
Another image appeared inside her helmet. At first, it appeared to show a featureless Martian plain. But as the contrast was enhanced, a pair of lines cutting across the surface became visible. They resembled shallow trenches, somewhat like those left by fingers scraping across fine sand, but on a much larger scale. According to the display, they were several hundred feet in length.
"Dust devil tracks," she said grimly.
"Yes. They are probably what brought down our intrepid adventurer Gablenz." If it had been at low altitude, the slow moving blimp and its possibly tired pilot would have been easy prey for the strong whirlwinds.
Maggie gritted her teeth. "So which department bureaucrat should we call to ask about our lidars?" The MarsSAR fleet was supposed to have been equipped with laser detection and ranging units months ago. Remote Syrtis Station was still waiting.
"Be careful, Maggie. Syrtis Station out."
She frowned, contemplating her situation. Martian dust devils were difficult to see, and without a lidar system there was no reliable way to detect one until she literally flew into it. But she remembered reading a journal paper about how the swirling dust often became charged through triboelectric effects, producing low frequency radio emissions. Maggie tuned one of the helicopter's receivers to pick up in the lower AM band. She wished she had more data, but with luck the radio might give her a few seconds of warning.
Maggie let the autopilot fly most of the course, guided by data from the Harmakhis–7 satellite. She took over manual control as she approached the crash site, flying a circular observation run around the downed aircraft.
"I have a visual of the target," Maggie reported. "Video and data telemetry on. Attempting to link-in with the aircraft's flight data recorder." The link status icon on her augmented reality display remained a red X. "No joy. Liu, where are we?"
"A-okay on your data and video, I'm seeing you fine. No link to the FDR. Please try again." Liu's voice crackled over the radio. "We... picking up interference..."
"Copy that," Maggie replied.
Maggie continued to circle the crash site, transmitting video and data back to Syrtis. The blimp was tilted about thirty degrees to the surface, its cruciform fins pointed in the air and its crumpled nose planted into the ground. Except for the ruptured forward ballonets, which had lost their hydrogen harmlessly to the carbon dioxide Martian atmosphere, the solar cell covered envelope still largely retained its shape. The left side ducted-fan thruster pod was damaged, but otherwise the gondola housing the pilot also appeared relatively intact.
"... doesn't look good," Liu said.
"No, it doesn't."
"Still... no link." Liu's voice was still dropping out intermittently. "Their communications subsystem... damaged, proceed... caution..."
"Boys and their toys," Maggie muttered. "Why do we let idiots do these stunts?"
Maggie landed about a hundred feet from the crashed blimp. As the helicopter's huge fan-like rotors slowed, she released her seat harness and switched life support from the helicopter's to her biosuit's internal before disconnecting the umbilical and climbing out of the cockpit. Maggie went around to the helicopter's trauma bay and deployed the stretcher, picking up the medical kit and portable life support unit before making her way out to the crashed blimp. It was a physically demanding task, even in three-eighths gravity.
"Syrtis Station to MarsSAR–3." This time, the radio was clear.
"Go ahead, Liu."
"We have received Mr. Gablenz's medical records from Earth."
"Any allergies or relevant preconditions I should know about?"
"None."
When Maggie got to the unpressurized gondola, she found Carl Gablenz unconscious, still strapped in his seat. Carl's biosuit, like Maggie's, was a sleek form-fitting garment that applied counter-pressure to the body mechanically rather than barometrically with air like the bulky old spacesuits of the first human Mars landings. Maggie peered into the hard, transparent bulbous helmet. Carl looked younger than the twenty-five Martian years indicated in his medical records. With his eyes shut, his roundish face looked almost serene, and his black hair had only the slightest streaks of grey. She could not see any obvious signs of an airway obstruction like vomit, and a small patch of condensate on the inside of the helmet showed he was still breathing. Carl was indeed alive—to Maggie's great relief.
With efficient skill, Maggie unplugged Carl's biosuit umbilical from the blimp's dying life support and connected it to her portable unit. She initiated a wireless link with the biosuit computer and transmitted the MarsSAR key to access the embedded medical sensors. Next, she commanded the biosuit's smartskin to rigidize in order to immobilize its occupant as much as possible. On Earth, or in a pressurized Martian habitat, Maggie would have checked her patient's blood circulation by pressing their finger-or toe-nails and observing the capillary refill, but this was not possible through biosuit's gloves.
"Syrtis Station, this is MarsSAR–3. The patient is unconscious but breathing. Biosuit integrity has not been breached. His mean arterial pressure is sixty-seven."
"Copy that," said Liu.
Suddenly, Carl let out a low moan.
"My name is Maggie McConachie, from Mars Search and Rescue," she responded calmly. "You're going to be fine. We'll get you out of here very soon."
She would soon have to move Carl, but there was nothing more she could do to restrain his neck and cervical spine beyond rigidizing the biosuit's
smartskin. Attempting to insert a brace or splint would require taking off his helmet. EVA trauma protocols still left much to be desired. It was medical heresy to not better restrain the neck, but she had no choice but to be careful and keep any necessary motions as gentle as possible.
"Syrtis Station, the patient is semiconscious," Maggie reported. "Pulse steady, blood pressure systolic 80, respiratory rate 12, temperature 37.6. Level of consciousness is GCS 5. I'm going to oxygenate him now." She commanded the portable life support unit to vent the air in Carl's helmet and replace it with pure oxygen. She could see his eyes start to flutter. He looked like he was trying to say something. Maggie felt Carl's legs and arms, looking for signs of broken bones and finding none. "I'm going to administer Ringer's Lactate for fluid volume resuscitation."
"Data..."
Maggie blinked. The voice on the radio was not Liu's. "Mr. Gablenz?"
"Important, data..."
"Don't worry, Mr. Gablenz," Maggie said. "We'll have you on your way very shortly. Everything's fine." She pulled an EVA syringe from her med kit and jabbed it hard into Carl's left forearm. The Ringer's solution was delivered in seconds, and Maggie withdrew the syringe. A normally functioning biosuit's smart-skin could self-seal millimeter-sized punctures, but for the sake of time Maggie simply slapped a patch over the pinprick.
"We have a yellow caution on oxygen constraints," Liu warned. "You'd better start heading back to the chopper soon."
Maggie pulled the stretcher up beside Carl. She was about to release the harness that held him in the pilot's seat when she noticed a small still image stuck to the control panel. It was of a young girl, probably about one or two Mars years of age, sitting in the flight deck of some aircraft or spacecraft, pointing at the displays and controls.
Carefully supporting the upper body to minimize neck movements, Maggie slowly slid Carl off the seat and onto the stretcher. She briefly derigidized the biosuit's waist to lie him down, relocking the smartskin after he was fully reclined and strapped in. With the patient secure, Maggie began to push the stretcher back to the helicopter. She had just pulled up to the trauma bay when suddenly the stretcher began to thrash ever so slightly.
"Get... data..."
"Data?" Maggie repeated. She thought about the blimp's flight data recorder and her earlier inability to link-in. But there was nothing more she could do now. The recorders would have to be physically recovered whenever the crash investigation team from the Mars Transportation Safety Board showed up.
"Sir, I cannot recover the FDR data at this time," Maggie explained. "That will have to wait for the MTSB team. There is no time to go back to the wreckage now."
"Not flight data... science..."
"What?" "... data chit, my cuff..." Carl lapsed back into unconsciousness.
Maggie looked at Carl's arms and spotted a small velcro-sealed pocket on the biosuit near his left wrist. Her finger fished inside and produced a data chit. She stared at the small sliver for a moment before putting it into her own biosuit's pocket. Then she docked the stretcher to the helicopter's trauma bay, deflating the wheels before pushing it all the way inside and securing it. Finally, she unplugged Carl's biosuit umbilical from the portable life support unit and connected it to the helicopter's system.
"Syrtis Station, this is MarsSAR–3," Maggie said as she strapped herself back into the pilot's seat. "The patient is secure. I am commencing my return now."
Maggie raised the collective and the helicopter lifted off from Arabia Terra, kicking up a small amount of ruddy dust in its wake, and headed in a south-easterly direction back towards Syrtis. Maggie watched the altimeter display on her augmented reality visor count up past one thousand feet above ground level.
She activated the autopilot and settled back in the seat, occasionally glancing at the display in her helmet that was monitoring Carl's medical parameters such as heart rate, body temperature, respiration, blood pressure, and oxygen saturation. Her thoughts turned to Carl's data chit. She pulled it out of her pocket and plugged it in. Another display popped into her helmet, showing parameters of a different kind: wind speed and direction, temperature, barometric pressure, relative humidity, atmospheric opacity.
"Meteorology." At last, she understood. "Carl was collecting weather data."
"Maggie," Liu called in, "when you have a moment could you please transmit—"
"Hey, Liu? I didn't copy your last—"
The AM radio crackled to life.
"Tabarnak!" Maggie immediately disengaged the autopilot, pushing the cyclic forward and pulling hard on the collective. The helicopter began to accelerate, and the altimeter reading crept past two thousand feet.
A few seconds later, it hit.
Maggie was pressed into her seat as the helicopter abruptly lofted upward. A moment later, she felt the seat drop out from under her, and she was slammed hard against the harness. She struggled to compensate as the helicopter yawed violently to starboard, but the controls were very sluggish. On her augmented reality display, every icon that had anything to do with the helicopter's electrical system was lit up. She lost the flight management system and the avionics, and the fuel cells went offline.
With painful slowness, the controls began to respond. Maggie managed to stop the yaw and leveled out the helicopter. The buffeting subsided, and she felt the BX–719 climbing again. With the flight management system out, she could only guess at how much altitude she had lost, but one look down told her it had been very close. She could see individual rocks on the surface.
"—respond please, Maggie. Are you all right?"
"Liu! Yeah I, uh—I think I'm still alive. Gimme a second here." She switched to the backup flight management system and power cycled the avionics. Live data began to reappear on her augmented reality display.
Another voice came on the radio. "Maggie, this is Charles. I am happy to learn that you do speak a sort of French after all, but I would advise you not to say such things in polite company. What happened?"
"I just made the acquaintance of the devil, and she's a bitch." Maggie blinked, trying to clear the sweat that had run into her eyes. "Nearly ran me into the ground, and the electrostatic discharge fried a bunch of stuff. I'm running on the backup FMS and the batteries. Wait a minute—"
A status icon changed.
"Okay, the fuel cells have reset and are back online." She checked the medical telemetry. "And our guest is okay. Slept through the whole thing, so to speak."
"Do you need assistance?"
"Yes, I need assistance... make sure the coffee's hot when I get back!"
"Copy that, Maggie," said Charles ."You have certainly earned it."
She leveled out the helicopter at an altitude of five thousand feet above datum for the flight back to Syrtis. The late morning Sun cast a diffuse light over the endless bloody plains below her, a landscape wounded by craters and smothered by a crimson sky.
Maggie's thoughts turned to Carl Gablenz.
On the Earth of the past, it was the pilots who had blazed the trails into the frontiers of the day. Over continents and oceans and across the globe, there was always someone who had to do it first so that others could follow. Flying started as adventure for the few, and through their daring eventually became a safe and indispensable means of travel for all. As it was on the blue planet, so it is again on the red one.
Carl Gablenz was not a stuntman. He was a pioneer, and somewhere another small future explorer was waiting for his safe return. Perhaps the two of them really weren't so different after all. They might even do the same things before flying.
"Coffee." Maggie McConachie smiled. An atmospheric physics journal and some heliocentric jazz, she decided, would go very nicely with that.
Press Release
Date: Ls 118.74, 59 A.L.
Source: The Bessie Coleman Foundation
Carl Gablenz has been rescued by the Mars Search and Rescue Service and is currently recovering at the Syrtis Station medical facilities. Mr. Gablenz expressed his
deep gratitude to the courageous personnel of MarsSAR, and thanked all those who have sent well-wishes from across the Solar System. Although his record-setting flight attempt was cut short, valuable data was collected that will help researchers at Thomas Mutch University improve their models of the Martian atmosphere, which promises to make future air travel safer. Mr. Gablenz also vowed to make another attempt at the Martian flight duration record as soon as possible.
"It's all part of the process of exploration and discovery," said Mr. Gablenz."It's all part of taking a chance and expanding our horizons. The future doesn't belong to the fainthearted; it belongs to the brave."
* * *
The Half-Toe Bar
Andrew Reid | 4172 words
Both contact officers bowed from the waist, as the Local man came out of the smithy. Behind them, Bogdana resisted the impulse—a servant bowed only to her own master, and that was the drill for everyone in tech support. Or so the xenthropology section had decreed, as if any of them really knew.
The blacksmith could have walked out of a book, a perfect documentary illustration in canvas kilt, leather apron, and wooden clogs—muscled like a cartoon from his neck to his calves. Behind him, the smithy was a shelter without walls, built with timbers and roofed with split grey wood shingles.
"We've heard your story," the blacksmith said, as the professors straightened themselves up. Although they weren't paying her for it—the contact officers gave you a look every time a field tech so much as nodded to a Local—Bogdana's ear for the language was getting better.
"Tell me if my old head remembers what I'm told," the smith went on, and scratched his chin through a beard that looked like rusted steel wool. "You're from a world so far we can't see it, but which is close to this star here, or that star there."
He reached an arm up at the blazing blue sky, not breaking eye contact with Professor Scott. His hand made a quick motion in the air, as if he was feeling for something on a high shelf, something he didn't really care if he found.