
Celeste reached across the table, palms up. "I realize that. But in the
current political climate, even if the Icarus impact were an undisputed fact,
it still wouldn't do any good. Nobody wants to hear about a threat from space.
No matter how bad it is."
She beamed a smile at him. "Forget about Icarus, General. According to
mythology, Icarus was a fool who lost his wings and crashed into the sea.
Daedalus, though, was the interesting one who created dazzling new
technologies. Come with me -- let me show you exactly how interesting Daedalus
has become."
* * * *
Celeste took Pritchard past the two stone-faced guards into the
Agency's Mission Control. The two guards, a young Japanese man and woman,
scrutinized Celeste's badge, though they had seen her a thousand times before.
But recent terrorist threats by an EARTH FIRST! group had forced increased
security. Before either guard could object about the general's presence,
Celeste raised her hand. "It's all right. I'll vouch for him."
Pritchard started looking around before the reflectorized booth door
closed behind him. Celeste saw his eyes widen. The local Mission Control was
drastically reduced compared with the old Mission Control centers from the
days of the Shuttle missions. Because of advances in neural networks,
distributed processing, and sheer computing power, the United Space Agency did
not need a room the size of a giant auditorium staffed by a small army of
personnel to run the various missions -- a handful of people in a large
meeting room sufficed.
While Pritchard gawked, Albert Fukumitsu, the duty manager, waved her
over. "Director McConnell, we've been trying to track you down!" He wiped
sweat off his forehead. He had shaggy black hair tucked behind a headband.
"Jason Dvorak keeps calling from Moonbase Columbus."
"I had my pager shut off," Celeste said. She had enjoyed her few
moments of peace enough to make the headaches of being out of touch
worthwhile. "Jason needs to stop panicking and handle a little more himself."
Fukumitsu looked at her with a wry, skeptical expression. "This is a
somewhat unusual circumstance."
"Agreed. Did he launch the telepresence probe on schedule?"
"Yes, an hour ago." He waved his hand toward the screens on the wall.
One of the technicians, eavesdropping, called up a file that showed the
sequence of the hopper rising up in a puff of methane. "ETA at the Daedalus
site in about ten minutes."
"Long enough to get Jason on-line." Celeste pulled up one of the chairs
vacated by an off-duty tech and sat down beside Fukumitsu. "He's probably
fidgeting like a new father in the hospital waiting room."
She still smiled at how unlikely being in charge must seem to Dvorak,
and she certainly couldn't explain to him the reasons behind her unexpected
decision to place him in command.
Dvorak was an award-winning, innovative architect; he had grown bored
with the mundane work on Earth after having designed the impossible a dozen
times over. Then he had used his connections to get himself an audience with
the director of the United Space Agency. When he sat down across the desk from
her, Celeste had had no idea at all why he wanted to see her. But when he
began to spill his idea about revamping the entire moonbase, getting it ready
for the explosion of inhabitants that would arrive as soon as the Mars mission
was a success, Dvorak had won her over. "They are our pioneers," he had said.
"Right now they're living in flimsy tents. Let me give them log cabins at
least."
She had approved his training and his assignment, and after nearly a
year on the moonbase, scoping possibilities, reconfiguring some of the living
quarters, Jason Dvorak had already made his mark on daily life up there.
Without giving him any preparation time, she had rotated the former moonbase
commander, Bernard Chu, up to the Collins waystation at L-2, while sending
Collins's former commander, Eileen Dannon, back Earthside, where her frequent