Lieutenant Adkins lay on his side on the bunk, idly looking out the porthole and resting his aching muscles. The Martian landscape stretched away on all sides, a cold barren desert of red sand, red rocks, red mountain, red sky. The sheets of his bunk were still damp with the sweat and residue of Lieutenant Brandon. Or maybe Sergeant Minnelli before her. Or perhaps Ensign Geneva before her. In the past several days in his little bunk, their sweat and residue had mingled and mixed like the red rocks and sand and sky outside the porthole.
Out there, the small setting sun gleamed briefly on the round silver dome over the dig site in the distance, a glittery speck on the horizon, where so many of the crew members had broken down and cried at what they'd found. Three of them -- including the last two males besides Adkins himself -- had lurched out into the wispy Martian air and yanked open their pressure suits and died squirming and gasping in the red dust rather than live with this new, piercing knowledge.
Adkins, never an especially religious man, hadn't cried, had assumed he would survive the knowledge, and he was right.
Surviving the pleasure was another question.
He lay back and closed his eyes and let his naked muscles go limp. He'd quit bothering with clothes several days earlier, the process of dressing and undressing having become just one more exertion. During one recent bout, he'd actually become so exhausted that his legs had given out and his weight had settled entirely onto Helmsman Decker, who wasn't a big woman and might gotten hurt had he not managed to push himself off with his arms.
He'd told Captain Janeway, after that episode, that he'd need to sleep, preferably for a few days.
"Request denied," she'd answered, through the intercom on the wall next to his bed. "I'm sorry, Bill, but this particular order is the most important one I've ever given. I wish I could distribute the work more evenly, but as you know, I can't. The best I can do is to tell you that all your crewmates are fully committed to the mission. In fact, I'll be joining the rotation myself soon . . . "
* * *
He'd just tipped toward the edge of sleep when he heard the gentle rap on his door and the rustle of another body in the room. He opened his eyes. Commander McNamara, right on schedule.