Chapter Two
Venus - 3725 C.E.
Although it had been quiet for several weeks now, Laurent still experienced some trepidation as he walked into the Emergency Rescue station. It had been quiet for too long. When would this spell of relative peace come to an end? The long history of unfortunate incidents in the South West section of Ishtar Terra suggested that this would be very soon. The extreme heat and oppressive air pressure on the surface of Venus along with the tempestuous atmospheric storms ensured that life as a firefighter was never likely to be boring for very long.
At several hundred metres beneath the planet's crust Laurent's station was situated at one of the best protected places on Venus. Most trouble happened on or near the planet surface. Each of the thousands of screens scattered around the control room displayed a view of the most vulnerable points in the planet's defences. These were most often on the massively thick shells that protected the thinly spread colonies that were still mainly connected by long subterranean tunnels. It was rare for anyone to venture far beyond the protection of these shells and that was usually for transplanetary air travel. Such an excursion was guaranteed to be a hazardous adventure given the weight of the heavily shielded vehicles and the planet's inclement atmosphere. It was normal for flights to be delayed for several days while passengers waited for climatic conditions to improve. It was far too risky for a space ship to be launched directly from the planet's surface. It would have to leave from the spaceports that hovered near the very top of the planet's atmosphere where air pressure was only a few times that of Earth and where in the early days of Venusian colonisation the great majority of the planet's relatively small population chose to live.
Unlike most Venusians, Laurent was denied the luxury of relaxing in a well-appointed air terminal when climatic conditions were most bad. It was almost always when the storms were at their worst and air travel at its most perilous that he had to squeeze into his cumbersome uniform and accompany his three regular companions on a rescue mission. The romanced of his profession inspired countless holomovies and attracted far more applicants to the Ishtar Emergency Services than there were ever vacancies. However, despite the heroic status of firefighters on Venus, few persevered with this career for very long. And that was precisely because of the high casualty rate associated with rescue missions. On average, a firefighter was killed in one of every twenty missions. Even Laurent, after nearly thirty years active service and innumerable commendations for bravery and medals for heroism, was seriously considering the option of working in a less active capacity.
His companions, Hua, Nathalie and Manfred, were sitting in the restaurant just behind the station office and dining on another scrumptious meal that Hua had prepared. Had his vocation not been for Emergency Services, he would have made an excellent chef. Laurent much preferred Hua's hand-prepared meals to anything assembled by machine.
"Any news?" Laurent asked as he sat down with his workmates and studiously ignored the pornographic holomovie shimmering above his head that Nathalie enjoyed having as a backdrop to her working day. He'd lost interest in pornography or indeed any sexual diversion since Magdalene, his wife of twenty four years, had died in active service the previous year.
"Bit of a storm across the mountain ranges," remarked Manfred. "There's a lava flow less than twenty kilometres from the Benedictine Monastery of Saint Andrew, but it doesn't look like it'll flow in that direction. Otherwise, it's very quiet."
"It's fucking boring!" moaned Nathalie who still had the enthusiasm of a raw recruit. "Something
must
happen soon. Much as I love Hua's ratatouille and zucchini, I'd rather be doing something more productive than watch porn and play cards."
"Speaking of which," said Manfred, with a broad grin, as he shuffled the pack in his hand. "What will it be? Bridge? Poker? Twenty One?"
"You always win, you fucker," moaned Hua good-humouredly. "But I fancy trying my luck. There are four of us. Let's play Bridge."
"Only if I can play opposite Mannie," said Nathalie who was also his occasional sexual partner. Not that there was much choice in Laurent's team. Hua much preferred men to women and Laurent still hadn't recovered from his grief. It was bad enough to be widowed. It was doubly bad to have been at his wife's side when it happened as they were trying to rescue people from an explosion in the Santa Gesualdo colony that claimed more than a dozen lives including Magdalene and the fresh recruit, Emilio, whose life she'd been attempting to save.