After the accident, Harry dreamt of losing control of the plane, and making a nosedive for the ground. The day after he returned home, he abandoned the hope of a good night’s sleep and headed down to the TV room. There he spotted his father’s head of blond and silver hair resting on the sofa. He was watching the fuzzy replay of the accident that had been looping all day on the news.
‘It’s a good thing it happened now, and not later,’ his father said, without turning around.
‘Why?’ Harry asked, glancing at Jack’s photo in the corner of the screen. The greasy red hair he was always shaking out of his eyes.
‘Engine failure after take-off: what would you have done?’ His father finally turned to him.
‘If it was immediately after take-off, I’d close the throttle, attain a recommended gliding speed, pick a landing path and concentrate on a good landing…’
‘
‘A common one,’ Harry said quietly. ‘I think he tried to turn back and land in the aerodrome. He panicked. Maybe he wasn’t thinking about the airspeed and load factor…’
‘You see, Harrison, that is what your training is for. To make these mistakes now, to weed out the less competent. Imagine if something like this had happened up there.’
HARRY BEAT JESSE ON the simulator. They raced in neighbouring ships, but Harry was far more skilled than Jesse and he ascended to the end of the level, laughing as he did so.
‘How often do you fly on this simulator?’ Harry asked. Jesse shrugged, tugging at the elastic on the back of his goggles, which had tangled in his long hair.
‘Like, every week,’ he said.
‘How many times a week?’
‘Once or twice,’ Jesse said. Harry raised an eyebrow.
There was not one thing that Harry admired about Jesse. At Dalton, Jesse had been part of the sub-class of indie kids, who sulked at the edges of the canteen and shunned team sports, as if physical exertion was somehow beneath them, not realizing that half the work of being an astronaut was physical, and that teamwork was essential. Harry had been surprised when Jesse had been sorted into the piloting stream, but unsurprised when he’d dropped out and switched to botany and hydroponics after a matter of days.
Harry had watched the video of Jesse volunteering to take Ara’s place, the fervour in his eyes. If it wasn’t impossible, Harry might have thought that perhaps Jesse had killed her, pushed her into the river himself, just so that he could seize her place on the team.
‘Why did you switch to hydroponics?’ Harry asked.
Jesse shrugged. ‘Seemed a better fit, I guess.’
‘Seemed easier?’
Jesse said nothing.
Harry knew the answer. Jesse was the kind of person who believed in ‘destiny’ and not hard work. It had taken Harry’s father ten years of practising chess for six hours a day to become a grandmaster, and Harry had taken to flying with the same devotion.
Harry motioned to the sensor and the screen went blank. He stood up and clapped Jesse on the shoulder. ‘Look, Jesse Solloway, I don’t know whose arm you twisted to get on this ship. But I know that you don’t belong here.’
‘Oh, really?’
‘Really,’ Harry said. ‘You’re a lazy cheat, switching to hydro just because it’s easier. Trying to play the system. And then you convinced them to take you. Don’t think I haven’t seen you eyeballing me when I fly. It took years of practice to get where I am, so stick to planting seeds. Piloting is real work.’
Chapter 18
ELIOT
01.07.12
WHEN ELIOT IMAGINED LIFE on Mars he pictured scientists crouched in modest hab-labs, ticking off the days until their return. Billionaires pouring money into developing zero-g retirement homes or polar ice-hockey rinks. Immigrant workers from nameless corporations drilling down into the dust until their bones grew thin and brittle. There wasn’t much on Mars, and no one went there unless they had to.
There had been a time when his grandparents were enchanted by the red planet. They pictured faces of Martians etched into the dust. People still spoke about the first manned Mars landing with a little shiver. Eliot forgot how many times he had seen the iconic black-and-white footage of the day the Soviets pushed their flag down into the rust-coloured soil, nine months before the British.
According to the history books, Igor Bovarin had been at the front end of that race. He had been one of the chief engineers whose work contributed to the VASIMR engine, the patented device that shortened the journey to Mars from around seven months to seven weeks. The joke that the USSR could make it to Mars and back before the US or the British left the launch pad was not entirely unfounded.