Hans did not believe that for a moment. Something had touched the lower part of the ship, and seconds later they had lost the drive. Every other part of the ship might be equally vulnerable. He glanced across at Darya to make sure that her suit was fully closed.
“Come on.”
“Where?” But she was already standing up.
“Outside. We lost power, and I don’t know why. Until we know what happened I think we’ll be safer on the surface.”
How safe was that? Hans did not know, but already he was cycling the inner door of the airlock. It did not matter that all the air would be lost from the interior of the ship. When they came back in—if they came back in—air could be replaced.
The inner door was open. Hans had never closed the outer one, and he pushed Darya toward it.
“Go ahead.”
“Ben—”
“I’ll help him.”
Hans was exposing Darya to an unknown risk, and she surely knew it. The surface could be even more dangerous than the
Hans moved to where Ben’s suited figure lay sprawled by the wall of the airlock. After the first impact as the
The suit tell-tales showed that its integrity had been maintained. That was good, but had Ben survived the multiple shocks? Hans leaned over and shone the head beam of his own suit into the faceplate. Ben’s eyes were open, and the pupils contracted as the light struck them.
Alive.
Hans had no time to ask for anything more. He scooped up the suited body and headed for the outer door of the airlock. It was a three-meter drop from there to the surface, but—thank Heaven for low-gravity planets—he jumped and landed without difficulty.
Darya was waiting. She at once pulled him away from the ship. He did not resist. The flat plain of the grid patch, which had before been dark as the grave, was illuminated now by a faint blue.
Twenty paces from the
Ignoring Darya’s cry of warning, Hans took a couple of paces back toward the ship. Once you were close enough you could see what was really happening. Just above the pale blue line of flame, the hull of the
Logic said that they ought to turn and run, but to where? Hans could see that the whole grid area had become edged with blue light. He and Darya could move no more than a hundred meters or so in any direction without passing across that blue barrier. He turned to stare again at the
Hans stared upward. Somewhere in the sky, hundreds of millions of kilometers away, the
That existence would be for only a few more minutes. The chance of anything from the
Hans brought his attention back to their surroundings. Another meter of the
Hans took a deep breath. “Darya?”
He knew what they had to do. He just wanted to hear her voice.
“I’m here, Hans.”
“We can’t stay where we are. I screwed up, and I’m sorry. I thought the surface would be safe. I was as wrong as I could be.”
“We all were.”
“The ship is done for. We can’t go up. There’s only one thing left.”
“Hans, I know that. I know very well what we have to do.” She produced a sound somewhere between a laugh and a sob. “This is my fault, not yours. I’m the one who wanted to come here, and I’m the one who said I wanted to see the interior of Iceworld. If I’m lucky, I’ll get my wish.”