
they could carry more of the blue solar-power cells. The cells took in sunlight and gave out electricity. I
knew about them; I was more fascinated with the slow-motion fall of the dust.
There wasn't much wind out there at the time, but I'd heard the Federation guards say that sometimes
there were dust hurricanes, with winds of more than three-hundred miles an hour. That, I thought, would
be something to see. A man out there would be blown away like toilet paper in front of a fan. For a
moment I wanted nothing to do with this planet.
I'd better learn, though, I told myself. This is home. Feel the low gravity. Talking about low gravs in
school didn't mean anything, but now I'm in it. I'd heard people can live to be two hundred on Mars
because of that low gravity, only they don't because Mars kills them first. There are a lot of ways to die
here. So learn or die.
"HEAR THIS ALL PILGRIMS. NEW ARRIVALS REPORT TO THE MAIN HALL. ON THE
DOUBLE." The speaker said that three times, then repeated it in Spanish.
The guards started moving through the crowd to hurry us along. They were all a little older than me, all
convicts who'd been recruited into Federation Service, with a few Federation troopers from the volunteer
army. They didn't like Pilgrims. They were slaves, too, but slaves with weapons and power - the worst
kind of slavemasters.
"On the double," one said. He laid his billy club against my butt. It splatted, and it hurt. I balled a fist
and turned toward him. He was grinning. "Want to try it?" he asked.
"No." I turned away and headed for the main hall. No point in getting my skull bashed in for nothing,
but it rankled that I had to take that.
"Always they push you around," someone said behind me. I turned to see a white-haired old man.
"Always they tell you what to do. It is the arrogance of power. They think of nothing but to hurt people,
to beat them, to show how important they are. Some day we will take that power away from them."
"Yeah, sure," I said. In about a million years. I could walk faster than him, and I did.
He tried to keep up. "I am Aristotle O'Brien," he said. "You may laugh at the name if you like."
I didn't want to laugh at his name, I wanted to get the hell away from him before he got me in trouble.
I didn't figure I owed him anything. As far as I was concerned the first rule was to keep my mouth shut
and stay out of trouble until I knew what the score was. That lonely old man could have been my
grandfather, but he hadn't learned that first rule, and probably he never would.
I put on the speed and left him. I wasn't too proud of that, leaving a lonely old man with no friends, no
one to talk to, no one to help him feel human. I wasn't very proud, but I left him.
The main assembly hall, like all of Hellastown except for the dome, was underground. The walls of the
tunnel leading down to it were concrete, but of a funny color - red, like the dust outside. The air stank
from too many people with too little wash water. The ramp down was steep and hard to walk on. Just
ahead of me was a giant, the biggest man of our group, one of the biggest men I'd ever seen. Kelso, his
name was, and he was a good bit taller than my six feet. On Earth he would have weighed over two
hundred and fifty pounds, no fat.
The assembly hall could have held ten times the hundred of us. It had seats and a stage. The stage was
crowded with junk, such as a portable field organ like military chaplains use, a big plaster relief map, a
blackboard, and a movie projection screen. Overhead were a bunch of faded streamers, old decorations
of some kind.
There wasn't any wood in the room. I thought about that for a second and realized I hadn't seen any
wood since I got to Mars. Even the guards' billy clubs were plastic.
The furniture was stone, concrete, iron, or plastic, none of it painted. A panel of colored glass was set
high up above the stage, some kind of Mars landscape with human figures in the foreground They were
all out on the surface without suits and there was a bright blue sky all around, overhead as well as at the
horizon. Idly, I wondered what it meant.
Most of the men crowded around the women. They kept pushing and shoving to get near them. Kelso
plowed his way through the press until he was next to a big-chested woman with flaring hips and tight
coveralls. She grinned at him. "You're a big one, aren't you, ducks?"
He started to answer, but someone shoved him. "Who the hell you pushing?" he yelled. The other guy