"That was poetry," said the Badaulet.
"Yes, that was my favorite poem in the whole world. It was written in the T'ang dynasty, when China ruled the world."
"This system understands your sad poetry much better than it understands your funny jokes."
The flying bomb slammed into the fabric surface of the airlock, and it bounded off. It flopped and yawed and wobbled and caught itself in midair, and gained height for a second effort.
"I always wanted to die while making love or speaking poetry," Sonja explained.
"If this air smelled better, I would oblige you."
The bomb returned for its second pass. Sonja threw herself to the airlock floor, curled into a fetal position, and clamped her hands over her ears.
Another sullen thump followed and the bomb bounded off again, harmlessly.
"Oh, get up, woman," the Badaulet scolded. "Meet your death on your feet, for your girlish cowardice is so undignified."
"Get down here and hit the deck, stupid! This increases our odds of survival!"
"There are no 'odds for survival'! There is only what Heaven ordains!"
Having endured many bombs in her past, Sonja ignored him, and doubled up tightly on the spotless airlock floor. "For God's sake, why are they trying to hit me instead of that huge Mars dome over there? That is China's greatest prestige construction, it's got to be a much fatter target than I am!"
"Sonja, my dear wife Sonja: Let us swear to Heaven that if we survive this cowardly attack, we will track down these evildoers and personally kill them ourselves."
"I love you so much for saying that! That is the greatest thing you have ever said to me! I swear I'll do it, if you will do it with me."
The plane smashed into the airlock and shattered. Brittle pieces of airplane plummeted out of their sight.
"Built by amateurs," Sonja said, craning her neck to stare.
"I am glad that it broke to pieces," said the Badaulet, still on his feet but panting harder, "but now we will smother to death in this sealed, trapped room."
Sonja didn't much mind meeting her own death. Still, to lose
Sonja never heard the bomb explode.
SONJA'S SUPPORT TENT was scarlet and the moon shone through it.
Any narrow escape from death always made Sonja keenly sentimental. Escaping death had taught her that life had many tags and rags, loose ends, unmet potentials. Sonja rather prided herself on her serene fatalism, but there were always issues she felt unhappy to leave unsettled.
Escape from death put her in a generous, easygoing, affirmative mood. Because, now, all the days ahead of her were a free gift. Like icing on a pretty cake hit by a grenade.
"That drone bomb blew both my eardrums out," she told her brother, George. "The overpressure broke both of them. So the state built me brand-new ears. I have new and advanced Chinese cyborg astronaut ears. My ears are officially fantastic."
George blinked from distant Europe, on his video screen. "Sonja, how many attempts does this make on your life?"
Sonja blinked back. "Do you mean me personally?"
"Of course I mean you personally! Stop acting crazy."
"Why would I keep count of that? After I went to New York and I saw that New York City had been nuked...Why does anyone ever
"Are you talking to me openly about Radmila now?" George was amazed. "Are you on drugs, Sonja?"