The door to the American shuttle rattled open and Vidya stepped from it to the surface of an alien world. She stood for a moment, looking out at the seemingly endless beaches and green. The beaches spread outwards in both directions from the chosen landing spot – a patch of nearly level ground that was right near the Pacific ocean – and the jungle or marsh or everglades or whatever they were spread forward. The distant sounds of birds and insects were beginning to creep back into audible ranges now that the shuttle had landed and the noise had become nothing more than the faint
tick
and
clink
of cooling metal.
The beach itself was strewn with pale sand – pure and clean, without a single plaspebble or cone crab to be seen. Tufts of grass peeked between the sandy beaches, and she did see a small family of crabs scuttling by, each bearing a natural shell. She stepped away from the shuttle and saw the four USMC soldiers standing off in a defensive position. Though the
Enterprise
was not a boarding focused ship, it still carried enough heavy rigs for their space born soldiers to be of use, even down here. Each soldier held a rifle in their hands and had their helmets on.
Vidya was also in a helmet – the only thing marring this perfect moment. She wanted to
breathe
this pure air. But the memory of the first Columbian exchange had dogged the Americans to this day and they had a sheepish concern that felt a bit like too little too late...until now. Now, they had the chance to do things
properly
. She also didn't particularly want to die of some unknown fever that her biology had never had a chance to adapt to.
Behind her, the rest of the naval technicians – including their pilot, one Ensign Trevor – were beginning to move off the supplies. They worked with a quick efficiency, taking advantage of the unloading equipment to set out the cache of supplies that they had moved down from the
Enterprise
. After the first drone had been shot down by locals, the decision had been made that the
Enterprise
needed to get more water for her reaction mass tanks...and she needed to do it as far from civilization as was possible to be.
So, they had landed on the Florida coast, which was significantly further away from the mainland on this Earth. And now, the techs were beginning to get out the system that would turn water into fuel. It was nothing more complex than a solar powered pump and a collection of filters – the nuclear thermal rocket that ran the
Enterprise
(and the smaller version that was used by her shuttles) didn't like things like salt or sea weed or fish clogging things up. Vidya tore her eyes from the crew inflating the nanocomposite tanks that would be filled with water, then loaded into the cargo hold in lieu of the purification station.
Captain DuBois had been argued into allowing her to come along with this mission to get some hands on samples. The science team had leveraged her Indian citizenship to force the issue. She could still remember Dr. Mann's oh so sheepish expression and the barely concealed amusement in his voice:
I'm sorry, sir, the Republic of India has insisted. I would wish to leave her back on the ship with us, but...well, they are putting their foot down.
Despite their being from different countries, they both shared a desire to begin to dig into the mysteries of this place.
Mann might have preferred to immediately land near the sites of civilization and begin observing them up close and personally. But Vidya wanted to get at the soil. At the earth. She wanted to study the geological differences and similarities. Was there anything to be found here that was different? An excited thrill shot through her as she knelt down and ran her gloved fingers through the sand. Imagine what could be done with an entire Earth's worth of petroleum, untapped and unused. If it could be extracted cleanly, safely, they'd have millennia of plastics and petrochemical byproducts to use. And they could save an entire planet the extinction worthy hassle of getting hooked on a fossil fuel energy schema. She chortled at the thought.
"Hey, Doc," Ensign Trevor said, walking over to where she was crouching. "You need any help?"
Vidya stood. The young ensign had been given the assignment to give her some experience with flying in a safe location. Captain DuBois, it seemed, was beginning to worry that they'd need more pilots in a hurry. For her part, the rainbow haired woman looked like she was walking on the clouds. Her smile was so broad and so bright that Vidya was shocked she hadn't polarized her own helmet. "No, no, thank you," Vidya said. "Uh, actually, I could use an escort – I need to take actual soil samples now that I've got some sand."
"Sure," Helen said, patting her hip, where a heavy slugthrower was looped. Then she touched her helmet, her lips moving silently – speaking on the soldier's com band, Vidya was sure. She flicked her finger and went back to their private com-link. "Lets go."
The two of them crested the ridge and startled a flock of birds into the air. The sudden motion caused Helen to start and clutch at her chest through her spacesuit.
"Fuckin' sky rodents!" Helen snapped.
"Ensign Trevor," Vidya whispered.
"Yeah?" Helen asked.
"Those were...those were passenger pigeons," Vidya tapped at her wrist, spooling the footage on her suit cams backwards, snatching a picture of one and running it through her database. "Yes, they were! Gods, those were
passenger pigeons
!"
"...so?" Helen asked.
"They're extinct on Earth. On...
our
Earth," Vidya said.
"Ooooh!" Helen nodded. "Cool."
"Cool?" Vidya shook her head. "Do you know what this means?"
"More bird shit on the NYArc's walls?" Helen asked.
Vidya rolled her eyes. "If
one
extinct species is intact here, we...we can begin transporting others back. Rhinos. Whales." Her voice was nearly giddy. "Imagine the reconstruction efforts that can speed up! No, not speed up, that can even
start
." She rubbed her gloved hands together. "Come on!"
And with that, she grabbed Helen's hand and surged forward towards the border where everglades met sand. There, Vidya began to hunt out the places she wanted to get sampling data from. She imagined, every time she knelt down and dug her collector into the dirt or loam, that she was on par with Buzz Alden or Neil Armstrong. For the first time, India would get a
first
over the Americans and the Russians and the Chinese. That was something. That was more than something. She paused after her third sample, her eyes closing.
"So, Doc, can I ask you a question?" Helen asked.
"Uh, sure," Vidya said.
"You, uh, seem pretty chipper," Helen said, her voice growing coy and playful. "And I noticed that Moe is pretty fucking hot."
Vidya slowly turned her head, craning her eyes to peer at Helen out of the corner of her helmet's visor. "Moe?"
"Yeah, you know? Tall? Dark? Handsome? Killer 'stache?"
"Did...you just call him
Moe
?" She asked.
"Yeah, short for Mohammad!" Helen said.
"You can't just call him Moe!" Vidya said, standing fully up. "It's incredibly rude!"
"My neighbor let me call him Moe," Helen said, sounding irritated. She put her hands on her hips. "And you can't deflect me that easily – I gotta know. Are you, you know, sharing
formulas
with him?" She wiggled her eyebrows. The dyejob she had gotten for her hair hadn't extended to her eyebrows, which were two thin black lines on her rapidly paling skin. It made the wiggle and waggle look extremely obvious, even through the faceplate.
Vidya bristled. "I'm a widow, Ensign Trevor."
Helen's face fell like she had been stabbed in the back. "Oh."
"My husband-" Vidya looked away. Her excitement tasted like ashes in her mouth. "He died at Janus."
"...oh..."
Conversation took a nose dive into silence from that point on as Helen paced a few steps behind Vidya. The one advantage of wearing a space suit on an Earthlike environment is that it added a few walls of remove between people. All Helen had to do was shut off her radio and she felt miles and miles away. Guilt gnawed at Vidya – guilt and a growing uncertainty. Because she felt as if she had only been
half
honest with Helen. Or maybe even a quarter honest. But to be fully honest felt too close to admitting that she was losing her godsdamned mind.
Every three, maybe four nights, of the voyage from Janus to this Earth, she had had a...
Dream.
Her cheeks heated.
The dreams were always intense. Always shockingly
real
feeling. And they involved her husband Sukhdeep
being