The Sparrow - Mary Doria Russell [162]
"Still, there’s some room to maneuver, and things could be a lot worse," Jimmy said matter-of-factly. He pulled up the supply lists they’d assembled for George and D.W. to use on the last trip from the asteroid. "We figured on a year’s worth of stuff for the food depot and brought down all the equipment we thought would be of most use. Marc had seeds on his list. We can survive on the native foods, but if we can start a garden that doesn’t get washed away in this endless rain, we’ll have our own plants as well. I think we’ll do okay."
George suddenly sat up straight. "You know, there’s a chance we could manufacture more fuel for the lander. We’re pretty sure the Singers know chemistry, right?" he said, looking around. "Maybe after we make contact with them, we can work something out."
It was the first notion that offered any real hope. Jimmy and Anne stared at each other and then at George, who looked like a man who’d just gotten a reprieve. He was already back at work, looking for files on the fuel components.
"How long will the Wolverton tube operate without maintenance?" Anne asked George.
He looked up. "It’s set up to be self-sustaining, but we’ll lose maybe twenty percent of the plants a year, rough estimate. Marc will know better. There’s only seven of us now, so there’ll be a smaller oxygen demand. If we can make enough fuel to get back up there even once, then Marc or I could go up and optimize things before the rest of you come aboard. And we might be able to use Rakhati plants as replacements, now that I think of it." He felt better at that. They weren’t necessarily doomed.
"And in the meantime," Jimmy said, with modest cheer, "we can still use the Stella Maris as a resource. We’ve got the onboard computer systems and radio relays." He looked at Sandoz, who’d said virtually nothing during the discussion.
Emilio was preoccupied, but he’d followed most of the talk if not the calculations it was based on. He shivered suddenly but then seemed to come fully into focus. "It seems to me that the mission is intact. We came here to learn and we can still send back data." The equivocal face smiled but the eyes, for once, did not. "As you say, everything we need and everyone we care for is right here."
"The twigs aren’t that bad," Anne said resolutely. "I could get to like the twigs."
"And," George said, "I just might pull a rabbit out of this hat after all."
SOFIA MENDES AWOKE some twelve hours later, thoroughly disoriented. She had been dreaming, for some reason, of Puerto Rico, which she recognized more from the feel of the soft air than from any geographic clue. There was music in the dream and she asked, "Won’t someone get in trouble for singing?" But Alan Pace replied, "Not if you bring flowers," which made no sense to her, even inside the dream.
When she opened her eyes, it took several moments to figure out where she was, and then the misery from every joint and muscle reprised for her the story of the two days just past. She lay still, aching worse than she had the morning before in the forest, and began to work out why she’d dreamt of Puerto Rico. Someone was simmering a sofrito and she could detect the earthy smell of beans. The music was real, too, on remote from the Stella Maris library. The Runa were gone, she remembered, so they could play music again with impunity. She sat up with infinite care and was startled when Jimmy Quinn, sitting nearby, announced: "Sleeping Beauty has awakened!"
D.W. was the first to duck into the apartment and stare at her, open-mouthed. "I never thought I’d see the day but, Mendes, you look like fifteen miles of bad road. How do you feel?"
"Worse," she said. "How’s Marc?"
"Bloodied but unbowed," Marc called from the terrace. "And too stiff to come inside and say good morning to you, mademoiselle."
"God, child, I admire your bladder control." Anne came in. "Allow me to escort you