To understand Alexander, you must first understand his time.
It was an age when the universe had been opened for us. We knew
how to look at objects a thousand light years away, and map the
molecules that gave them form; we knew how things were put together
and how they could be taken apart; we knew how the universe began
and how it was likely to end. We knew how to reason, and how to
discover, and how to add new pages to our increasing store of
information.
It was also an age when ignorance was enshrined over knowledge.
Every local newspaper contained a horoscope. World leaders consulted
astrologers; psychic hotlines made millions; and a United States
Senator gained ten points in the polls by claiming to have been
in contact with Ancient Aztecs. We knew what comets were, where
they came from, and what they didnt foretell . . . but in a compound
in San Diego, thirty-seven intelligent, college-educated people
took poison because they believed that a comet called Hale-Bopp
would take them to heaven if they did.
In Alexanders age, we had knowledge . . . and we had delusion.
And we preferred the delusion.
You cannot understand Alexander Driers life without understanding
that.
You cannot understand his final gesture without understanding
that.
Of course, Alexanders time is still our time. Which is why some
of you are most interested in reading about a high-ranking government
coverup of alien experiments on pregnant human women.
I cant help what you want. I knew that going in.
But thats not what happened.
SPACE BABY SPEAKS FIRST WORDS AT BIRTH!
Warns of Threat From Space, Parents Say
The first tabloid reporter arrived in town one day after the birth,
the first delegation from the networks right behind him. Not long
after it hit the web, the pilgrims showed up. They came in motor
homes, in vans, on motorcycles, and on foot: the four-man Sweethaven
Sheriffs Office had to import a couple of dozen state police
just to keep the kooks and the loonies and the just plain curious
at bay. Most just wanted a glimpse of the child. A fewthankfully,
very fewhad darker things in mind; gene-splicing their mythologies,
they arrived with rifles and pamphlets and hate-filled eyes, muttering
black fantasies about an Antichrist seeded from the nonexistent
Dark Side of the Moon.
I didnt get to meet him until his tenth birthday, but I can only
imagine how frightening a time it must have been: Alexanders
parents and the rest of the immediate family barricading themselves
behind drawn curtains, looking out upon the steadily increasing
madness of a crowd that seemed to represent all the rest of the
world.
Alexanders mother, Faye, was so serene about the whole thing
that she seemed to be in denial. She just held the baby and sang
to him, making almost no reference to the mad scene just beyond
the driveway.
"Its funny," she said at one point. "We dont know him, really.
We dont know whether hell be good or bad, smart or dumb, brave
or afraid . . . the kind of things hell be interested in or the
kind of things thatll bore him silly. Hes a stranger to us.
An alien, for real."
Mark Drier winced as he glanced at the window. The blinds were
drawn, but he could still see the crowds, growing larger every
hour; some of them chanting, some of them singing, some of them
shouting in rage. "Better not let them hear you say that."
Many years later, telling me the story, Alexanders Uncle George
shook his head with awe as he remembered what Faye said at that
moment: "Them? Who cares about them? Theyll go away."
She was right, of course; the crowds began to diminish as soon
as even the dimmest pilgrims began to realize that they werent
about to get beamed aboard any orbital crockery. And the tabloids
went after fresher stories the first time a Sheen misbehaved in
Hollywood. But her prophecy couldnt have seemed likely to Mark
Drier that morning . . . not with the house being monitored by
ten TV networks, the phone unplugged to keep it from ringing off
the hook, and Grandma having a quiet mental breakdown in the bedroom
upstairs. At the moment, he knew only that nothing would ever
be all right again.
Alexander wasnt deformed, at least, not in the sense that Im
deformed. He had two of everything he needed two of and one of
everything he needed one of. And it was all functional. It all
worked. He was even beautiful, in the sense that all healthy babies
are beautiful. But his head was unusually large: it mushroomed
above the temples, bulging up and out like a sack stuffed with
more than it was designed to hold. (The doctors had feared water
on the brain, but it just happened to be the shape of the kids
head; the only problem it caused was in delivery, and that had
been handled by the caesarian.) His eyes were about three times
larger, proportionally, than the norm for a baby of that size;
and they were all black, with no whites showing at all. His nose,
as if to compensate, was unusually small, little more than a nostrilled
wrinkle in the center of his face. His mouth was a slit with thin,
pursed lips. His ears were little round buds with holes. His hands
were odd too: there were five fingers and a thumb on each, with
the fingers all disproportionately long.
Still, that, by itself, wasnt the problem. At least, not as Mark
Drier saw it. He was not a weak man. He could have dealt with
birth defects.
The problem was that everybody in America had already seen that
face. Theyd seen it staring at them from movie posters, from
bestselling books, from artists renditions on the covers of supermarket
tabloids. It was a face so frequently depicted in the mass media
that even people who refused to subscribe recognized it as a well-known
inhabitant of our shared popular culture: the face described by
the growing subculture of folks who claimed to have been abducted
and experimented uponusually in the form of anal probesby creatures
from outer space.
It was, in short, the face of a Roswell Alien.
Mark Drier peered out through the curtains again. The view out
there was just as disturbing. Even as he watched, a flyspecked
yellow schoolbus crammed with doughy, pasty-faced adults pulled
up at the curb. An inordinate number of the faces at the windows
had open mouths. He couldnt quite tell whether they were shouting,
or just chronic mouth-breathers. Their expressions were both ecstatic
and dull: like sheep having a party. He shuddered. "I dont know,
Faye. Thats a mob. We may have to start planning escape routes,
in case they rush us."
"They wont," Faye said placidly.
"Theyll do what they want," Mark said. "Dont you see? Some of
them came all the way across the country! Theyre not going to
let a front yard and a few closed doors stop them now!"
She considered that. "Then well just have to go outside and tell
them theyre disturbing the baby."
"And what makes you think theyll listen to that?"
"If they think hes a space baby, capable of shooting deathrays
from his fingers, they just might. But I dont think itll be
a problem. Theyll get tired. Theyll feel silly. Theyll go home.
And theyll leave us to the business of being a family." She smiled,
and touched noses with the baby. "Itll work out. Hes beautiful."
Nobody said anything to that.
Then Faye looked at them, and in a voice filled with soft sweet
steel, a voice that damned them for not responding, repeated,
"Hes beautiful."
The gathered Uncles and Aunts hastened to assure Faye that they
agreed. Mark joined in lastreluctantly, and unpersuasively, and
with what must have been shame for not being able to feel it the
way she did.
SPACE BABY FORETOLD IN BIBLE!
Will He Start World War Three?
Im going to have to take a break to ward off the expectations
of an unfortunately large percentage of the people reading this
account of Alexanders life.
Alexander was not an alien. He was not a half-human, half-alien.
He was not the result of genetic manipulation by aliens who wanted
an emissary on Earth. He was not the spawn of a UFO abduction
his mother repressed. He learned to speak at about the same rate
all children do. And he wasnt the harbinger of a message from
space, though come to think of it that eventually turned out to
be a little closer to the truth. He was a boy: one who may have
been a little different from the rest of us, but one whose genetic
birthright, however bent, was still entirely Homo sapiens. He came out the way he did because of an extremely rare, but
identifiable and very well-documented genetic condition that affected
his fetal development, subtly distorting his body in ways that
mirrored the by-then well-established folklore of the UFO conspiracy
buffs. A search of medical literature was able to find six other
cases within the past three centuries: even photos of one poor
boy from the early 1900s who spent most of his short life in a
freak show in South America. Of course, in todays media-conscious
age, there was no way that the malady in question would continue
to go unnamed, and so Alexander got the honor of being immortalized
in the medical textbooks before he was even old enough to recognize
his mothers face. Driers Syndrome, they called it: and if there
was any upside to the publics insistence on believing that the
child was somehow a visitor from outer space, it was the degree
to which that rescued him from a lifetime of being known as the
kid with the disfiguring disease.
But he was human, all right. Gloriously human. There will not,
at any point in this narrative, be a surprise revelation that
he was ever, wholly or in part, anything but.
So those of you who followed the various events of Alexanders
life in the kind of newspapers that run front-page headlines about
miraculous chocolate diets, can go indulge your little fantasies
elsewhere. Because thats not what happened.
SPACE BABY TURNS TOYS INTO GOLD!
Parents Now Wealthy, Friends Say
Alexander occupied such an important part of my life that I find
it hard to feel anything but contempt for anybody who had trouble
loving him. I suppose thats the main reason Ive always been
so hard on his father: why I still automatically think of him
as a cold and distant man, unable to forgive his son for being
less than normal. Im also aware that its the way some biographers
have portrayed himsome of them, God help me, even using interviews
with me as a primary source.
But it wasnt like that. In the lonely, hysterical days immediately
following Alexanders birth, Mark Drier was a frightened man,
desperately searching for the plan that would render everything
all rightand who cant be hated for coming up with the wrong
idea when nobody, with the possible exception of Alexanders mother,
knew what the right idea was.
He found her in the upstairs den, which was the brightest room
in the house: a perfect place for a young mother to breastfeed
her baby. The baby was, like all babies, trusting, hungry, squirming,
and needful. Id like to think that as Mark looked at his child
that day, he felt not instinctive revulsion, but also the awe
fit for all new life abroad in the world. He may even have felt
the joy of fatherhood. But he was a practical man, and love must
always make room for practicality . . . especially with buses
of UFO-Abduction Faithful still converging on town from every
direction.
Again: I wasnt there. I cant re-create the conversation precisely.
But I know the people. And it happened something like this:
Mark said, "Were going to need money."
Faye smiled. "Well, we knew that going in, hon."
His hands curled into fists. "Please. Babe. Im not talking about
Diapers and Dip-Tet money. Im talking about independent wealth.
Im talking about guard dogs and chain-link fencing: the kind
of money capable of keeping out the wackos for the rest of our
lives."
"We can handle the wackos," she said softly. "Theyll get bored.
Didnt you hear what Sheriff Dooley said? Some of them are going
home already."
Mark shook his head. "Some of them, maybe. Maybe even most of
themif they behave the way mobs usually dont. But all of them?
At home and in school and for the rest of his life? How do we
stop some especially dangerous nut, who may be just getting the
idea today, from coming after our boy with a gun maybe fifteen
years from now? Do you honestly think that everybody whos run
out of money or vacation time, and has to go back home to East
Calabash or whatever, is just going to forget this kid they were
so sure came from outer space? Be real! Theyll be back when you
least expect themand if not them, then somebody else. We cant
live an ordinary life that way. Hell, I wont be able to hold
onto my job as it iswe cant expect me to just go on selling
hardware when every yahoo in the countrys going to flock to my
store to see if I have antennae hidden under my hairline. We need
money, babe. If only to protect us from what hes going to bring."
Faye remained as perfectly serene as before, but there was an
edge to it now: a willful defiance of the places this conversation
was headed. "So what do you suggest?"
He was unable to meet her eyes. "The Enquirers willing to pay us five million for an exclusive interviewas
long as we tell them what they want to hear."
"That your sons a creature from outer space."
"Dont get me wrong," Mark pleaded. "I hate the bastards. But
I cant think of any other way. And if theyll be saying it anyway
. . . we might as well get paid for it, so we can get the boy
what he needs."
"Chain-link fence," she said, without raising her voice. "Guard
dogs. Isolation from other children."
"Safety," he countered.
She considered that for several seconds, glancing from the earnest
face of her husband to the oddly-shaped head of her child. Shed
been raised on a small family farm. Shed seen her parents struggling
through droughts; shed lived through foreclosures and years of
lean, grinding poverty. Shed even had to quit the university
after only two years, when her student loans were cut. She knew
what it meant to need money and not have it. Nobody can say how
much the idea tempted her; nobody would have blamed her for going
along with it.
But then she said, "No."
"Come on, Faye. Be realistic"
"I am being realistic. Im refusing to lie."
"Its a white lie."
"Its a cruel lie," she snapped. "Hes our child. Our human child.
And its our job as his parents to stand up for what he is, not
for what some trash newspapers want him to be. I want him to grow
up knowing we defended him!" She took the now-sleeping child from
her breast, handed him to her husband, and for the first time,
spat out her anger, "You want realistic? Call him by name. I havent
heard you do that yet. You want realistic, call him by name!"
FACE OF SPACE BABY FOUNDON MOON!
Is He Reincarnation of Ancient Lunar Pharoah?
Alexander was lucky, in some ways. Some places would have put
the kid in a museum and charged visitors admission to see himand
if you think thats overstating the situation, kindly look up
the case of the Dionne Quints. But thats not what happened.
Sweethaven came to see the hordes of morbidly curious as invadersuncouth,
unwanted barbarians who parked on lawns, peered in windows, and
dropped their garbage in the streets. Whats more, they came to
see the Driers as hometown heroes being victimized by outsiders.
There may have been a few voices raised against the child, at
first (most of them taking refuge in the fiction that he was brain-damaged,
and that hed have been better off in an institution anyway),
but as the months went on, and most of the nine hundred people
of Sweethaven got to see him up close, even that faded away to
silence, replaced by the determination to protect him at all costs.
Mark Drier did not lose his job at the hardware store; he had
to miss a lot of time at first, whenever the Nuts and the Media
got too obnoxious, but his boss covered for him, and paid him
full wages even when Mark couldnt make it in more than one or
two days at a time.
Nobody denounced Alexander from the pulpit. At least, not in Sweethaven:
there were some churches down south that preached about him as
if he had 666 stamped on his head, but Sweethavens Reverend Wallace
Vukcevich assured his flock that hed seen the boy and that he
seemed a perfectly fine baby, odd looks and all.
In the early months, there were two, and only two, acts of serious
violence directed against the Drier family. One time, a mentally
disturbed woman from Boca Raton, Florida, pulled out a gun and
started shooting at the housebut she got off exactly one very
wild shot before being wrestled to the ground. It didnt even
hit the house. Another time, when Faye was taking Alexander to
the doctor for a routine examination, a car filled with tabloid
reporters deliberately sideswiped the car so they could force
her to stop and get a close-up picture of the baby. The good people
of Sweethaven took both incidents very personally. The Boca Raton
woman was charged with Attempted Murder, Illegal Possession of
a Firearm, Reckless Endangerment, Trespassing, and everything
else the local courts could think of; she got the maximum penalty
on every count and was awarded a long string of consecutive sentences.
The reporters would have been lucky to get off with just that:
this was only a few years after the similar incident that caused
Princess Dianas death in France, and the small mob of local boys
on the scene had a pretty poor opinion of the kind of louts capable
of taking that kind of risk with the life of a baby. The tabloid
stringers spent almost as much time in the hospital as they later
did in jail.
As ugly and upsetting as both incidents were, they only served
to cement the towns resolve: Alexander may have been one strange-looking
kid, but he was one of theirs . . . a feeling that only grew as
he developed a personality, and turned out to be pretty normal
after all. He was a child. He learned to smile, to giggle, to
say his first words, to crawl, to walk, to manipulate his parents
with well-placed tantrums . . . and that most human of all skills,
to ask questions.
Which brings us to the moment hed later describe as his earliest
memory.
Like most of the rest of us, he saw it on television.
Hed watched TV before, of course. His Mommy was not above occasionally
using it as a babysitter. He liked cartoons. He didnt understand
why grownups watched the things they watched, which mostly seemed
to be other grownups bantering in living rooms. He certainly didnt
understand the attention his Mommy and Daddy and Uncle and Aunt
gave the program on TV now, which was mostly a bunch of serious-looking
people speaking in grim, measured tones. Why was this fascinating
enough to keep the grownups from playing with him?
"The arrogance of it," Mark Drier said. "The infernal . . . gall."
"Its just symbolic," Uncle George said. "Theyre not actually
erasing the accomplishment."
"Oh, come on, George! Theyre doing worse! Theyre pissing on
it! Theyre telling the whole world that the whole thing was nothing
more than a big joke!"
Alexander, who was too young to understand any of this, who was
indeed frustrated by his familys helpless fascination for something
beyond his comprehension, merely wandered from one relative to
another, trying to interest them in more enjoyable activities
. . . until the network commentary switched over to the live feed,
and something truly interesting showed up on-screen.
It was a strange-looking man in a chubby suit, with a big box
on his back and a gleaming mirror instead of a face. There was
something irresistably puppetlike about the way the man bounced
up and down when he walked: something that struck the young Alexander
as both comical and graceful at the same time.
Alexander struggled free of his Mommys lap, toddled over to the
TV, and pointed a single questing finger at the funny man. "Who
dat?"
"Get away from the screen, son," Mark said. "Were trying to watch."
Alexander complied as much as his curiosity would allow him, backing
up all of two inches. "Who dat, Daddy? Who dat?"
"Alex, why wont you listen to me? Were trying to watch. Be nice."
"You could answer his question," Faye said. She was, by this point,
hypersensitive to slights of her son, especially where her husband
was concerned: especially in light of the little subliminal flinch
that sometimes passed across Marks face when Alexander fixed
those oversized black eyes on his. She didnt give Mark a chance
to redeem himself, but instead turned to Alexander and said, "Thats
an astronaut, honey."
Alexander blinked doubtfully, and repeated the unfamiliar word,
"Asnot?"
Faye repeated it with exaggerated care, "As-tro-naut. Thats what
we call somebody who goes to outer space. That man on the TV is
walking on the Moon."
Alexander knew what the Moon was. He saw it in the sky all the
time, both day and night, and his Mommy had taught him what it
was called. But up until this moment, it had never occured to
him that it was more than a pale round ball just out of reach
. . . that it was an actual place, so far away that there had
to be a special name for the people who went there. He stabbed
his finger at the astronauts helmet. "Dat?"
"Thats his space suit. He needs that to breathe."
Alexander later told me how his toddler mind processed this information.
He thought astronauts wore their space suits all the time, even
when they werent on the Moon, even when they were home in bed,
even when they were in the bathtub. It didnt make much sense
to him.
Mark Drier said something that couldnt have been any help endearing
him to his wife, "Hes too young, hon. He cant possibly understand
this."
Despite his confusion about the spacesuits, Alexander resented
that. He understood more than his Mommy and Daddy gave him credit
for. Like most toddlers, his comprehension vocabulary was already
far ahead of his deceptively primitive speech, and hed used it
to figure out a lot of things they couldnt even begin to guess
he knew: among them that his Daddy was a very sad man.
Then the astronaut on TV hopped over a small rock in his path,
both rising and falling with unnatural slowness, and Alexander
found himself smiling. He turned toward his mother. "I go dere?
I be ast-not?"
The assembled grownups met each others eyes.
And Mark Drier said, "No. You wont."
"Dat man ast-not."
"Yeah . . . well . . . its different for him."
Alexander asked the dreaded Next Question always asked by children,
"Why?"
Mark Drier silently appealed to one relative after another, imploring
them to rescue him. "Because . . . nobody has the wrong idea about
where he comes from."
"That does it," Faye said.
She rose from her easy chair, picked up her son, and carried him
from the room, leaving Mark enveloped by a silence echoing with
all the words that would have emerged from a perfect mans mouth.
SPACE BOY DRAWS CIRCLES IN SANDBOX!
UFO Scientists Note Uncanny Similarities To Crop Circles In Europe!
The young Alexander couldnt understand why something as wondrous
as an astronaut made the grownups around him so upset.
He was too young to know that hed been watching the live coverage
of the First Saudi Expedition to the Moon.
In the wake of the Third Gulf War, the Saudis, flush with their
apparent invincibility, had grown rich enough and fanatical enough
and crazy enough to sink an obscene amount of petrodollars into
their very own space programmostly staffed, in a particularly
cruel irony, by unemployed veterans of the moribund Japanese and
United States space programs. Like Projects Mercury through Apollo,
and the Golden Dawn expeditions sponsored by the late emperor,
this particular project took the better part of a decade to achieve
its stated goal: and though thered been some who said that the
Saudis would change their minds before they got that far, the
day had finally come, and the rest of the world could do little
but watch as the Saudis did just what theyd said they would do.
Many Islamic factions had never liked the idea of a Western Moon.
The Saudis had therefore taken the position that Armstrong, Aldrin,
and those who followed them had profaned it with their presence.
The entire purpose of their space program was to remove, and destroy,
everything that the Americans and the Japanese had left behind
during their various missionsstarting with Tranquility Base,
which they now dismantled before a television audience of two
billion people.
Reactions to this varied, depending upon where in the world you
were. In some parts of the world, anything that humiliated America
was reason to cheer. In others, it was considered a sad victory
of barbarians. Even Americans werent united in their reaction.
Some wept for triumphs long-gone. Some were so outraged by the
slap in the face they advocated military action against the Saudis.
Some thought the whole space program a waste of money better spent
elsewhere, and applauded the symbolic burial of Kennedys folly.
All too many people simply didnt careit was too far away, and
had nothing to do with their lives. Their vote was heard in the
form of over ten thousand phone calls to the TV networks, protesting
not the desecration of Tranquility Base but the preemption of
their favorite sitcoms. Most of those were of the opinion that
the landing on the Moon had been a hoax anyway. The Japanese,
and the Saudis, had simply leased parts of Arizona to film their
sequels.
I know how I reacted. I was eight years older than Alexander.
I cursed at the set with all the rage of a boy who considered
the desecration a personal assault, thinking the world a place
ruled only by madmen and fools.
I still believe that.
As for Alexander, he never did make it to the Moon. The universe
didnt have anything that obvious in mind for him. I didnt make
it there, either. It was a world that would never be part of our
futures, either shared or separate. But I do look at it sometimes:
still just as mysterious, still just as bright in the night sky.
And I wonder, in light of everything thats happened since, if
the Saudis succeeded only in keeping the dream alive for us.
NEW SPACE BOY SHOCKER: MIRRORS DONT REFLECT HIM!
Will Parents Still Deny His Origin?
The year Alexander turned four, the science scores of Americas
high school students hit an all-time low. The President of the
United States was caught making major policy decisions on Tarot
readings. The newest cult to claim one million converts preached
poverty, abstinence, and the worship of the planet Jupiter. And
two different prime-time newscasts began devoting five minutes
of each program to the astrological readings of singers and movie
stars.
I still have a copy of the reading one of those shows gave for
the Space Boy himself. "This is a time of growth and learning.
Expect major changes in the coming year. But dont forget to depend
on those close to you."
A brilliantly prescient horoscope for any four-year-old child.
It wasnt surprising they got around to him. He was, after all,
still a frequent topic of the tabloids, and even the comparatively
respectable media ran updates on the various milestones of his
life. The Driers had even allowed Life magazine to do a photospread of him attending the birthday party
of one of his little friendsthe theory being that pictures of
Alexander with pink cake smeared on his chin were the only possible
antidote for stories claiming that his real parents were the ancient
astronauts personally responsible for the Pyramid of Cheops. Alas,
they only helped to keep him in the public eyeand though the
good people of Sweethaven kept direct intrusion to a minimum,
coverage of Alexanders life was still so ubiquitous that the
Driers actually put their TV set in storage to save him from being
traumatized by accidental exposure to Space Boy shtick.
No, he had to suffer different traumas entirely.
Take the night he spent one full hour making faces in the mirror.
It wasnt one of his favorite gamesnot because he hated his face,
as he hadnt been raised to have such a poisonous feeling, but
because his smooth masklike features simply werent very good
at the comical art of grinning. Alexander smiling looked a lot
like Alexander frowning, and Alexander calm looked a lot like
Alexander angry: there were subtle differences which his family
could read, but anybody else had to rely on context or body language.
Genuinely funny faces were so hard to make that even Alexander,
who was at this point just beginning to get a grasp of how truly
odd he looked, knew he just wasnt very good at making them.
Today was different, though. Today he was practicing a trick hed
discovered not very long before: i.e. making the world appear
to jump side to side by opening and closing each eye in turn.
The phenomenon, which also has application in astronomy, is known
as parallax, and every child with two functional eyes takes a
turn being fascinated by it. He was most enthralled by the way
it looked in the mirrorthe way his whole head flickered back
and forth, just like a bouncing ball . . .
Somebody at the door said, "Alex."
Alexander jumped before he saw who it was. "Oh. Daddy."
Many years later, hed have to grope for the words to describe
his childhood feelings for Mark Drier. There was love involved,
of course; Mark had been a good and gentle man, who might have
been a fine father for a less unusual son. Hed certainly tried
to be a fine father to Alexander, saying the things he was supposed
to say, doing the things he was supposed to do, never being deliberately
cruel. But he was also a man whose affection seemed forced, a
man who couldnt quite conquer that little subliminal flinch he
demonstrated whenever his son entered a room . . . a man who had
very little to say to Alexander and by this point not much more
to say to Faye.
Without ever being struck, without ever being abused, Alexander
couldnt help being always just a little bit afraid of him.
And his father knew it, "Sorry. Did I scare you?"
"Maybe a little bit," Alexander said self-consciously. "I was
making faces."
Mark flashed a little wan smile at that. "Any good ones?"
"Not really. I think maybe I need a moustache."
Another wan smile. "I think maybe I could use one, too." He held
the expression for all of ten seconds before seeming to remember
something that pained himthen gathered up his strength, and with
a joviality that rang false, said, "Hey, Sport? I know its near
your bedtime, but howd you like to take a walk with your old
man? Just for a few minutes?"
Alexander glanced at the window beside the shower stall. The little
sliver of sky visible between the mostly drawn curtains was a
shade of purple-blue not very far removed from black; it would
not be long before the heavens got the news that the sun was gone
for another day. He spoke with caution: "Its dark."
"Thats okay. We wont be going far."
"Is Mom coming?"
"Not tonight," Mark Drier said. "But dont worry. She already
knows were going."
He took Alexander downstairs, zipped him up in his jacket, took
his hand, and walked him into the backyard. They had a big backyard.
They were at the edge of town, just south of the hills, on a slope
that was the first of a long bumpy ride to the horizon. Their
property was entirely surrounded by chain-link fence, not high
enough to keep away determined intruders, but enough to discourage
the merely curious. Alexander had seen folks with cameras scramble
over once or twice; hed also seen his Dad chase them away, shouting
words that Alexander himself was not permitted to speak. But there
hadnt been an incident like that since his last birthday.
Mark unlocked the back gate and walked Alexander to the top of
the first hill, home of a jutting slab of rock that the boy was
allowed to climb only when his parents were watching. It was a
big rock for a kid Alexanders age, almost as tall as his Dad.
Mark didnt give him a chance to climb itjust picked him up and
put him there, before climbing the rock himself and taking his
place by Alexanders side.
They sat without speaking for the several minutes it took the
last light of day to surrender to the blackness of night. Mark
said nothing because he was a smoker, and a sedentary man, who
did not climb hills easily; his ragged breaths burst from him
like little explosions. Alexander said nothing because his father
was holding his hand, which was in and of itself such an unusual
thing that he was scared to disturb it with the sound of his own
voice.
Time passed. Marks breathing slowed to normal.
The stars came out.
It was a clear night over a very small town, and the lights burning
down below were not enough to force many stars into hiding. Some
of them shone like pinprick flames. And as the night grew darker
above Sweethaven, and Alexander searched his fathers face for
the reason theyd hiked all the way up here, Mark seemed less
and less a recognizable presence and more and more a man-shaped
shadow eclipsing the lights in the sky above him.
Forever came and went before Mark spoke. "You cold?"
"No," Alexander said.
"Tired?"
How could Alexander be tired, when all this was going on? "No."
"Good," Mark said, still without looking at him.
More time passed. So much time that Alexander thought they were
supposed to sit here, holding hands, all the way to morning.
Then Marks profile shifted slightly, and he spoke in a strange,
faraway voice that didnt sound like he knew who he was talking
to. "You know . . . I used to love the stars. Not astronomy; I
was never any good at that. But once upon a time, when I was a
kid, I used to pitch a tent on a hilltop not far from here. I
didnt sleep in the tent unless it was raining, though. When it
was a nice, clear night, like tonight, I laid out my sleeping
bag and slept in the open . . . just looking up at the constellations.
Some of those nights, time just seemed to stop." He hesitated,
glanced at his son, and turned his gaze back to the sky. "Sometimes
I wish it did."
"You can wish on stars," Alexander said knowledgably.
"Ive heard that. But by the time somebody told me I was too old
to believe it." He sighed. "It took me a long time to learn that
even if you do wish on stars, you dont always get what you want
from them."
Alexander said, "You can still wish."
"Thats right. You can."
And because Mark seemed even sadder now than hed ever managed
to seem before, Alexander came right out and asked, "What do you
wish, Daddy?"
The shadow in the shape of Alexanders father shifted, no longer
a profile turned up but a black oval looking down at the boy.
Alexander didnt have enough light to see his expression; the
oval contained nothing but darkness. In the silence, Alexander
was terribly afraid that hed said something wrong.
Then Mark squeezed his hand extra tight. "We better get you back
to the house. Its getting late, and your mothers going to want
to tuck you back in."
Alexander could only be relieved that the strange interlude was
over. "Sure." He allowed his father to help him down from the
rock, even though he knew he could climb down by himself, and
followed him back to the house.
Something else happened late that night, long after he went to
bed. Though somewhere deep within the land of sleep, he realized
he was not alone. He opened his great black eyes a slit and looked
across the pitch-black room to a shape barely visible in the doorway.
It was his father, standing with slumped shoulders, one arm braced
against the doorframe. Alexander shouldnt have been able to see
him at all, since the hall was dark, too, but there was just enough
ambient light coming from elsewhere in the house to render Mark
Driers outline crisp and sharp. Too sleepy to get up, Alexander
fell back to sleep before it occurred to him to wonder just what
his father wanted now. When he opened his eyes again, still surrounded
by darkness, the doorway was empty.
The divorce was uncontested. Mark Drier moved to San Francisco,
where he got a one-room apartment and a job behind the counter
in a souvenir shop on Fishermans Wharf. He didnt aspire to anything
else, he didnt marry again, and he didnt get a phone. The few
times he received visits from journalists desiring inside gossip
about his son, he simply ejected them, always silently, and never
with unnecessary force.
Father and Son didnt see each other again for almost two decades.
SPACE BOY GOES TO SCHOOL!
Teaches Classmates Orbital Mechanics
The year Alexander Drier entered first grade, the Jupiter Cult
boasted over three million members nationwide. A couple with a
million-dollar home in Texas was driven to personal bankruptcy
by the wifes seven-digit debt to the Home Astrology Network.
Three colleges offered their first courses in UFO abductions during
the twentieth century. Psychic surgeons opened successful clinics
in New York, Los Angeles, Denver and Chicagocuring nobody but
building a sizeable clientele among inoperable cancer patients
who had nothing left to lose. And a certain best-selling book,
written by the kind of writer who specializes in such things,
declared that photographs of the stone face on Mars taken over
the past ten years proved beyond a shadow of a doubt that its
lips were moving. He claimed that the government was trying to
prevent the rock formation from delivering its truly momentous
message to humanityhis chief proof an allegation that there were
no deaf lip-readers working at NASA.
I own a crayon drawing Alexander made at about this age. His mother
gave it to meno big sacrifice on her part, since she saved all
his drawings, and had hundreds of them. Its about as impressive
as youd expect from a drawing made by a six-year-old: stick figures,
lollipop trees, lopsided houses, garish color that refuses to
accept the authority of the lines meant to hold it in check. Faye
Drier stands at one side of the picture, with exaggerated curlycue
hair that seems to be made out of wildly askew Slinkies. She is
clearly smiling, clearly a figure meant to be seen with love.
The rest of Alexanders extended family is also in the picture,
though harder to identify. The bald man with the tie is probably
Uncle George. The woman standing next to him, a smaller version
of Faye, would then have to be Aunt Jude. Aunt Wendy, who lived
on the east coast now but visited at least twice a year, stands
next to her, identifiable by her big hoop earrings. Then theres
a blob of color that must have been intended to represent Alexanders
dog, Arnold . . . .
. . . and next to Arnold, Alexander himself, the whole reason
the drawing is so important. Because, once you take his limited
drafting skills into account, its an accurate drawing. It shows
a boy with a big round head that seems too large for his body,
and big long fingers disproportionately long for their hands,
and big black eyes shaped like almonds.
In the picture, hes smiling. Thats important. Alexander wasnt
very good at smiling; his facial muscles werent really built
for it. He couldnt maintain the expression for long. But in the
drawing hes smiling, and waving: like for all the world a still
from one of those old-time Spielberg movies.
The pictures important because it shows that Alexander, at that
age, already understood just how different he looked. He just
wasnt self-conscious about it, thats all.
Not even the day Faye brought him to his first day at the local
elementary schoola small brick building midway between Sweethaven
and Monarch, a somewhat larger town that sat fifteen miles up
the road.
Sweethaven and Monarch shared the school between them, in order
to make the classes large enough to support a teacher for every
grade. That was still an average of only ten or eleven children
per class. Six of the kids in Alexanders class were natives of
Monarch and three of those would now be meeting the Space Boy
for the very first time.
On the schools insistence, Alexander was ushered in half an hour
late, after his teacher, Mrs. Hirschman, had a chance to deliver
her little speech about what to expect. The speech included the
standard warning that he might look a little scary, but he shouldnt
be treated any differently than anybody else. As a result, the
five children who knew Alexander from Sweethaven, and the three
children from Monarch who had met him already, were now reminded
to consider him odd, and the three children whod never seen him
before watched his entrance with the awed fascination they would
have awarded a strange and colorful new species of bug.
As he took his seat, the girl in the desk next to him, Sally Watkins,
said the first thing that came to mind. "He looks like a spaceman."
Mrs. Hirschman was scandalized. "Sally! Thats rude!"
"Thats okay," Alexander said. "I do look like a spaceman."
"That may be true, but we dont like to make fun of the way people
look in this class."
"But everybody says it. . . ."
Mrs. Hirschman now definitely had the look of a woman who feared
losing control. "Its still not a subject were going to discuss
here. Is that clear?"
Alexander hesitated. "Okay. Sure."
"Thank you, Alexander."
She turned her back, to write something on the blackboard.
He simply followed her with his big black eyes, bemused by her
reaction, and wondering just what hed said to get her so upset.
He looked around at his classmates to see what they thoughtand
was startled to find several of them staring at him with expressions
ranging from loathing to morbid fascination. Those who were looked
away quickly as soon as he made eye contact, afraid to admit their
interest, scared that hed notice them as theyd noticed him.
Hed seen such reactions before (notably from his dad, and by
at most a couple of other people in Sweethaven), but he was treated
so normally by his mom and the rest of his family that hed just
written that off as something that strangers happened to do.
Now, looking at the faces of his classmates, it occurred to him
for the very first time that this was the way some people looked
at boys who looked like spacemen.
Its a tribute to the Drier family and the people of Sweethaven
that Alexander, a remarkably bright kid, didnt have enough experiential
data to reach this seemingly obvious conclusion until he was almost
six. But it still hurt. In this, the first moment where he really
had a taste of what it meant to be a freak, he felt so tremendously
self-conscious that he actually considered bolting from the room
in tears.
Then he noticed Sally Watkins, the little girl whod called him
a spaceman, sticking out her tongue at him.
He blinked, unsure how to react.
She looked away, then turned back, and stuck out her tongue again.
Experimentally, because it was the only response that seemed to
make sense, he stuck out his own tongue in kind.
She crossed her eyes.
And he felt better.
Popularity, it seemed, was not going to be a serious problem.
SPACE BOYS SECRET MISSION ON EARTH!
Veni, Vidi, Vici
In a particularly frightening nationwide poll, astrology became
the only "science" seventy percent of Americans could identify
by name. A certain national news magazine ran a cover story about
the prophecies of Nostradamus, and how theyd all come true, sorta.
There was another evolution debate in the Department of Education,
with Darwin evicted from over half the nations schools and creationism
installed as the officially recognized curriculum. Reports of
UFO abductions reached an all-time high, to the point where they
were reportedly taking place out in the open, on crowded city
streets, with nobody ever managing to get one on film.
Somehow, Alexander learned. He was so anxious to get back into
Mrs. Hirchmans good graces that he paid attention to her boring
lectures and did all his homework, and before long he realized
he was enjoying it.
There was a problem with a couple of local adults who objected
to having their kid go to the same school as Alexander. They actually
picketed the school, declaring it, "OFF LIMITS TO ALIENS." It
was ugly, and stupid . . . but it also died down once the idiots
in question realized that nobody was going to buy it. Alexander
was the local celebrity. He was the reason the world knew Sweethaven
and Monarch existed. They were proud of him. Plus the owners and
employees of the half dozen businesses in town owed their increased
sales to him, and they knew it.
Time passed.
When Alexander was eight he surprised his mother by announcing
that he wanted to become a spaceman. Faye deserves credit for
immediately understanding what he meant. "Maybe you better say
astronaut, dear."
That seemed reasonable enough to him. "Astronaut," he agreed.
Uncle George, who was listening, said, "You know, son, thats
a pretty hard thing to want to grow up to be."
"Why?" Alexander wanted to know.
"Because, right now, there arent any astronauts."
"There are the Israelis."
Uncle George shook his head. "Theyll quit soon. That always happens.
We got tired and quit. The Russians got tired and quit. The Japanese
got tired and quit. The Saudis got tired and quit. Pretty soon
the Israelis will get tired too. I dont know if anybody will
still be doing it by the time you grow up."
Alexander was at the stage of life where historical precedent
didnt mean a damn thing to him. "Thats okay. Im still going
to be an astronaut."
"How?" Uncle George wanted to know. "You gonna build a rocket
ship in your backyard?"
Alexander shrugged. "If I have to."
"And where are you going to go?"
"Venus. Saturn. Pluto. One of those places."
"Pluto," Uncle George repeated dubiously.
"Its cold there," Alexander said. "Its cold and Mercurys hot.
But Ill go anywhere they want to send me. It doesnt matter where
as long as I get to go."
Faye, who was digging up a clog in the sink, grunted, "And as
long as you also get to come back."
"Well, duh," Alexander said.
Much later, when the boy was watching Gilligan, Uncle George took
Faye aside to bring up a concern last expressed by Mark Drier
during the Saudi moon landing. "Listen, are you sure its a good
idea to encourage him to talk about that kind of thing? Let the
wrong person hear him talking about going off into space, and
theyll turn it into E.T. wanting to go home."
Faye said, "I dont care what they turn it into. I care what my
son turns it into."
"Oh, come on"
"No, you come on. Hes eight years old. Are you going to tell
him not to dream?"
"He can dream all he wants," Uncle George said. "But you have
to teach him to keep some things secret. He has too many people
listening to him . . . some of whom would love to hear him talk
about wanting to be an astronaut. Dont you see that they could
twist that into anything? Dont you understand that hes gotten
to the age where were going to have to keep a tight rein on the
kind of things that come out of his mouth?"
Faye sighed. "Im not going to keep him gagged, George."
"Its not as simple as that"
"Im sorry," Faye said. "But its as simple, or as complicated,
as my son and I choose to make it."
SPACE BOYS PLOT TO HYPNOTIZE THE WORLD ON TV!
Dont Watch His Eyes, Experts Warn
When Alexander was ten, he was interviewed on TV. Hed actually
appeared on television any number of times before thatstarting
with his birth, and continuing throughout his childhood, whenever
enterprising newspeople went back to Sweethaven for regular updates.
But that was just news footage. This was a fully authorized, in-depth
interview, promoted on prime time and aired on the highest-rated,
most influential TV news magazine of its time. It was considered
a coup by all involvednot only by the network and the newspeople,
but also by Faye and Alexander Drier.
This was because Fayes refusal to exploit her sons notoriety
had prevented the Driers from earning any of the millions that
might have been raised by Space Boy merchandise. In supporting
him, shed been helped not only by regular checks from Alexanders
absent father, but also by her family, which had helped her maintain
their home, and by her community, which had determinedly kept
her employed and protected from the worst of the UFO-abduction
crazies. But that hadnt provided for much more than necessities,
birthdays, and Christmases. And when Alexander, whose interest
in astronautics had not faded, and whose bedroom was now overflowing
with Saturn V models, Armstrong and Aldrin posters, and models
of the solar system, announced that the one birthday present he
wanted more than any other was a day at the Smithsonian Air and
Space Museum in Washington, Faye had felt her back forced against
a wall.
And so she finally let it be known that she was amenable to an
interview. As long as whoever performed the interview did it in
Washington, providing security and travel expenses for herself,
Alexander, one of Alexanders school friends (he chose Sally Watkins),
the parents of the child he chose, and two relatives to be named
later. So many news organizations leaped on this offer that shed
needed almost two weeks just to decide which one was least likely
to provide unpleasant surprises; she chose the one she did, despite
its decades-old confrontational stance toward corrupt businessmen
and politicians, because it was also a fairly honorable enterprise
that could be trusted to take it easier on a kid.
As a result, Alexander enjoyed several firsts: his first trip
outside Wyoming, his first airplane flight, his first journey
among strangers whose reactions to him could not be safely predicted,
his first time speaking for himself on television . . . and one
other thing, which he wouldnt find out until two days after the
interview aired.
From all accounts, he acquitted himself admirably.
There was the incident on the connecting flight to Philadelphia,
when a fifteen-year-old kid across the aisle elbowed his sister
and said: "Hey, look. Weve been abducted."
"Shut up!" the sister hissed. "Youre awful!"
Instead of ignoring them, Alexander leaned over and responded
in a spooky voice that carried throughout that entire section
of the plane: "Actually, hes right. And were not really landing
in Philadelphia . . . Bwah-ha-ha-ha-ha!"
That made a hit. So did his unannounced appearance at the Air
and Space Museum, where he found himself attracting more attention
than any of the exhibits. He might have ignored the people who
gathered around him to gawk. He might have gotten frightened and
asked them to leave him alone. He did neither. Instead, armed
with his own intense interest in the subject, he became a tour
guide: pointing out the Apollo capsule, the Space Shuttle, Skylab,
and everything else he recognized from his own reading, explaining
what they were and where they had gone in a loud, clear voice
that communicated more enthusiasm than factual accuracy. (He was,
after all, a ten-year-old.) Midway through his presentation, a
local news team arrived and filmed him describing how astronauts
went to the bathroom in spacescooping the interview show he was
slated to do in three days, but capturing for the very first time
on national television his declaration that he was going to be
an astronaut himself.
There was more. He went to Arlington, the Lincoln Memorial, the
Vietnam Memorial, the Clinton Museum, the Memorial for the Victims
of the Toxic Spill in Honolulu. He spent one sad morning in the
National Holocaust Museum, silently moving from one exhibit to
another, speaking only when he encountered the Nazis own footage
of a dwarf executed for his deformities. Alexanders response
upon realizing just how doomed his own life could have been (an
angry "Were all these people stupid, or what?") made the news
that night. The local anchorman joked about comments from an alien
visitor. I remember wanting to kill him.
Alexanders live interview turned out to be more than a way to
cadge a free trip to Washington; it was also a masterstroke of
public relations on the part of his mother. Because it was the
last thing the UFO fanatics had expected: nothing more than a
friendly conversation with a bright, articulate ten-year-old.
Alexander talked about his favorite teachers at school, what TV
shows he liked, the things hed seen in Washington, even his dinner
with the President (breaking up the host by taking that opportunity
to wave at the camera and say "Hi".)
At one point the conversation turned to how Alexander got along
with other kids.
Q: Do your friends make a big deal about you being famous?"
A: Sometimes.
Q: Does it change the way they treat you?
A: I dont know. Ive never been any different, so I dont have
any other experience to compare with.
Q: Well, lets put it this way. When you play Star Trek, do they always make you play the alien?
A: No. We take turns.
Q: Do you play Kirk?
A: Sometimes. But everybody says I look more like Picard.
By the first commercial break, most people whod tuned in to see
the Space Boy were already realizing that this was just a smart
and likeable kid. Unfortunately, most was not all, and polls revealed
that there were still twenty million Americans more convinced
of his extraterrestrial origins than ever before.
Part of that may have had something to do with the third segment,
which turned out to be Alexanders eulogy for the space program.
He talked about John Glenn and he talked about the walk on the
Moon and he talked about the space shuttle and he talked about
wanting to be an astronaut and he talked about how everybody told
him that wouldnt happen and he talked about how he wanted to
make sure it happened anyway. He talked about the planets and
what they were like and which ones hed like to visit if he only
got a chance. He was, as it happens, particularly enthused about
Mars, and he said hed rather go there than just about anywhere
else.
The final segment culminated in the moment of self-description
that defined Alexander for millions of Americans:
Q: Do you really think youll be an astronaut when you grow up?
A: One way or another.
Q: What does that mean?
A: It means that Ill do whatever I have to to make it happen.
Q: And then youll really be the boy from space.
A: No. Ill never be the boy from space. Ill be . . . (groping for a phrase) . . . the astronaut from Wyoming.
I was on the phone to the studio thirty seconds later.
WHAT WAS SPACEBOYS REAL MISSION IN WASHINGTON?
Congressional Leaders Refuse to Comment
Two days later, the Driers were surprised in their hotel suite
by their network liason, Ms. Wallace. The womans manner was so
hesitant that Faye Drier, who answered the door, immediately assumed
that something terrible had happened back home.
"Oh, no," Ms. Wallace colored. "Im sorry. Its just . . . well,
it turns out that theres something else wed like to ask Alexander
to do for us. . . ."
Faye was on guard at once. "The deal was for one interview. Not
two."
"I know, and we appreciate that . . . but this isnt about an
interview. We dont even need him to appear on TV again. Its
. . . well, its somewhat special . . ." The woman peered over
Fayes shoulder, saw the pajama-clad Alexander emerge from his
bedroom, and spoke more quickly, "We would have told you before,
but we got almost five thousand phone calls during the broadcast
. . . and, well, it took a while before this one was reported
to somebody with authority to make a decision . . . "
Faye, still suspecting the worst, unchained the door and ushered
the poor woman in. Ms. Wallace sat on the couch, said hi to Alexander,
looked at her hands, and went on: "The call came from an . . .
unfortunate young man in Georgetown. Thats a residential neighborhood
here . . . "
"I know," Alexander said.
"Well, we checked this out very carefully, and hes real. His
names Colin Forsythe. Hes . . . well, an almost complete shut-in.
Severe muscular dystrophy, cant walk, cant do much with his
arms. He was five years old before his parents and his doctors
realized he wasnt hopelessly retarded. But hes far from thathe
got his high school equivalency at fifteen, and hes now working
on an on-line physics doctorate, through a special curriculum
devised at George Washington University. Hes also a big fan of
the space program, just like you. And when he saw the show, he
called and asked if it was possible for you to visit him."
Fayes frown had softened considerably. "And I suppose you want
to have a camera there so you can show their conversation on television?"
Wallace shook her head: "Id be lying if I said it hadnt occurred
to us. But were not asking for that. Under the circumstances,
were just passing on the message."
Faye looked at Alexander. "Its up to you, son. I wont push you
either way."
Alexanders response was immediate: "Can we go right after breakfast?"
Cue me.
SPACE BOY VISITS INVALID!
Promises Cure for All Human Illness
Alexander later said that walking into my room was like returning
to his own. The obsessions on display were the same: identical
posters of Buzz Aldrin vying for attention among mockups of the
Saturn V, the lunar module, skylab and the space shuttle. The
only real difference was that there was more of it: in part because
my family had a lot more money than Alexanders, in part because
I was eight years older and had been nursing my obsession for
that much longer, in part because I didnt have any of the other
distractions of childhood. I had about a thousand more books just
in this room alone, and a much faster computer than the secondhand
model Faye had been able to afford. And I also had one puzzling
decoration, hanging in what appeared to be a place of honor, that
Alexander would have to ask me about: a poster of my personal
hero, an emaciated, grimacing, but oddly buoyant man in a wheelchair.
(He hadnt heard of Stephen Hawking yet.)
Of course, he also had me to look at.
Like Alexander, I can be a pretty startling sight. Because my
condition manifested itself at a very young age, my arms and legs
never really had a chance to develop: theyre flabby, childish
things too small for the torso that connects them. Because of
these proportions, I cant use a normal wheelchair; instead, I
lie strapped in a recliner that holds me much like an egg held
in the palm of a hand. The brace on my neck keeps my head from
lolling to the side, and my face, framed by long greasy hair and
marked by what is usually two or three days of stubble, makes
me look like a degenerate infant. All in all, I look like a cartoon
drawn by somebody with no knowledge of anatomy. Most people seeing
me for the first time avert their eyes at once; I can judge their
characters by how quickly they manage to steel themselves for
a second try.
Alexander, who was used to that look himself, didnt avert his
eyes at all. "Hi," he said.
My speech synthesizer responded, "Hello. Come . . . in. Sit down
. . . on the bed."
He obliged. On his way over he didnt go out of his way to maintain
eye contact. But he wasnt fighting it either; I think he was
just fascinated by all my stuff. I can usually tell if Im going
to have anything in common with somebody by how frequently they
glance at my bookcase. Some folks only pretend to look because
they find it preferable to looking at me. But I can tell whos
faking and whos genuinely interested. Alexander clearly saw a
dozen books he wanted in the time he took just crossing the room.
Then he lowered the railing on the bed, sat down, and smiled at
me.
"Thanks . . . for coming," I said.
Thats the last sentence Ill write that way. Its there only
because its the way I sound. The synthesizers make my voice comprehensible,
but it still takes most of my lung capacity just to get out a
few short syllables, so my sentences are always filled with pauses.
These days, when my words are often reported for the printed page,
some reporters waste entire manuscripts putting ten sets of ellipses
in each sentence. Its a cute trick, but it tends to get on the
nerves awfully fast. And its unnecessary, too. My friends and
family mentally edit out the pauses. If you absolutely need my
cadences, add them yourself with a ballpoint.
Alexander said, "Well, I dont get to meet a lot of other people
interested in space. Most people think the space stuff is just
me being weird because of the way I look. Even my Mom, I think."
"And your Dad?"
Alexander answered a bit too quickly. "I have no Dad."
I said, "Too bad. I have a Mom and a Dad, and theyre pretty good
people, most of the time. But I didnt call you here to talk about
them. I wanted to ask. Have you ever read Heinlein?"
"Not yet," Alexander said. "Ive seen the books around, though.
The last thing I read was The Hobbit, and . . ."
I must have grimaced more than usual. "Elf Crap! God save me from
Elf Crap! Im talking about the real stuff! Science Fiction, not
Elf Crap!"
Alexander was a little startled by my vehemence. "Uh . . . you
mean like Asimov?"
"Or Niven or Barnes or Brunner. Any of those guys. But Im specifically
thinking of Heinlein. A story he wrote called Waldo. All about
somebody like me, with a body barely strong enough to pick up
a pencil on Earth, who coped by living on a satellite in free
fall. With no gravity holding him down, he could move around and
do what he wanted and be as independent as he wanted to be. Of
course, he also needed to be obscenely rich just to afford it.
My parents are rich, Space Boy. But I dont think theyll ever
be that rich. And Im not exactly astronaut material, so I dont
think anybodys ever going to send me on a mission. So thats
one dream that wont ever come true. Not for me." I hesitated,
just long enough for Alexander to know it was deliberate, and
not a pause created by the speech program. "But you. Were you
really serious about wanting to be an astronaut?"
Alexander blinked. It was the first time anybody had ever asked
him that without adult condescension, giving it the weight of
a real question. He actually had to think about it. But once he
did, the resolve just clicked right into place, like one crucial
piece of a puzzle hed been assembling all his life. I could hear
the surprise in his own voice as he said it: "Yeah. I was."
"You picked a hard career," I said. "There are no astronauts anymore.
Even the Israelis pulled back."
"So people keep telling me."
"And so they tell me, too. What they fail to realize is that weve
been going into space prematurely. We went before we had all the
tools. We went when we knew so little that we had to spend billions
just to get there and back. We went with a technology so primitive
that only a miracle prevented us from having more Challenger explosions. But we went. And the more time passes, the more inevitable
the second try. Because everything else were developing in the
meantime, without even tryingmore and more advanced computers,
more and more advanced insulation materials, stronger plastics,
more and more efficient fuel delivery systemsis going to make
it cheaper and easier to go again. Before long, space will belong
to corporations instead of governments." I lifted a finger for
emphasis, which is about as much as I can manage. "Ive been keeping
track of those developments, Space Boy. Very close track. And
my most conservative guess is that this country will be returning
to space in a big way within at most the next fifteen years .
. . which just happens to be my life expectancy."
Alexander blinked several times in rapid succession, as our shared
dream took shape in the air between us. "Wow."
"So I ask again. Do you really want to go? Are you really willing
to work hard and do whatevers necessary?"
He was ten years old, but he grew up in that moment. "Yeah. Whatever
it takes."
This time I smiled widely before I spoke.
"You just hired a manager. Do what I say and well get you there."
SPACE BOY SHOCKER:
"Im Gay," He Announces At Breakfast
We didnt see much of each other for the first few years after
that. Alexander still had grade school to finish, and I couldnt
travel without compelling reason. We racked up some big phone
bills, though, making plans, keeping our mutual enthusiasm high,
setting up supplemental courses of study, setting up an exercise
regimen designed to put him in the top ten percentile by the time
he reached adulthood, andtoo often, for meaverting the crises
that may seem like life or death at the time but are just, for
most people, part of the cost of growing up. There were times,
in those years, that I cursed Alexanders absent father, not out
of sympathy for my friend, but self-pity for the amount of time
I had to spend giving the heart-to-hearts that a Dad would have.
Once, when Alexander blew two math tests in a row, he called me
up all in a sweat to say that he was washed up. He couldnt be
an astronaut, let alone read all the tougher stuff I kept sending
him, if he couldnt even understand algebra!
I pointed out that Einstein had failed math in school, and added,
"How many of the other kids in your class blew these tests?"
"About half of them. But they dont study. I studied! I studied
hard!"
"Thats your problem," I told him. "You psyched yourself out.
You were so afraid of blowing it, you left yourself no other option."
"Huh?" he asked.
"Elementary psychology, Space Boy. The self-fulfilling prophecy.
You were so worried about learning it, you couldnt concentrate
on what you were studying. So relax already. Go fishing or hiking
or whatever you do out there in boonie-land. Take it a little
at a time, and youll eventually pick it up."
"Thats easy for you to say. You already know everything."
There is nothing more sobering than the discovery that youve
influenced an impressionable young mind into worshipping you.
I looked at the clutter of books and papers on my desk, which
I couldnt even read unless I could first get somebody to clamp
them to the book-holder attached to my chair, and at the unfinished
document on my word processor, which had been mired on page fifteen
since early the previous morning. "Yeah, right," I said, damning
the voice-synthesizer for its inability to convey sarcasm. "Im
just writing my doctoral thesis to prove how brilliant I am."
He laughed, but it was an uneasy laugh that trailed off fairly
quickly. "What if I flunk the next test, too?"
"Then itll be time to find yourself a girlfriend," I told him.
"A smart girlfriend who can teach you math while youre distracted."
"Yuck!" he said, and I smiled. Right on target. Now he had something
else to worry aboutsomething not related to becoming an astronaut.
The stick to go with his carrot. That particular stick would only
work for another year or two, of courseat which point I was sure
another one would come into playbut that was the nature of our
relationship. Being motivated was his job. Keeping him motivated
was mine.
The threat of having to study with a girl pushed him through basic
algebra, and his renewed self-confidence pushed him right back
into the straight-A track hed been on since he started school.
I sent him off a fresh batch of assigned reading and went back
to my thesis (a feasibility study of nuclear-powered ion rockets
for a manned mission to Mars).
My advice to go fishing had unexpected consequences. He asked
his Uncle George to take him, and caught half a dozen brook trout
on his first time out. In the process he discovered that he liked
the outdoors. He became quite the fly-fisherman, in the most remote
locations he could find, enjoying it in large part because it
was one place he was able to pretend, at least for a little while,
that there was no difference between him and the rest of humanity.
It didnt stop him joking on the phone that his big head scared
the trout the moment they saw him. I told him it proved fish had
more intelligence than we gave them credit for. He threatened
to use me as bait. When he sent me a picture of himself wearing
a floppy hat Faye had made for him, one of those vests with a
bizillion pockets on it, and hip waders, I told him he looked
like a redneck.
"Whats a redneck?" he asked.
Hed lived in Wyoming for a decade and didnt know the term. People
had apparently been too busy calling him names. "A redneck is the exact opposite of a space alien," I
told him.
It made his day.
Seventh grade wasnt much trouble for him. He had to ride a bus
twenty miles into Sheridan to attend junior high, but most of
the kids there already knew him, or at least knew about him, so
he didnt have to face more than the usual amount of idiocy. He
studied on the bus, went fishing on weekends, continued to work
on improving his time for the mile, and generally enjoyed himself.
Then he really did get a girlfriend. Actually, Sally Watkins,
the same girlfriend hed had since first grade . . . but it meant
something different now.
Youd have thought hed invented teenage angst. I got phone calls
at all hours of the night. He was on Mountain time and I was on
Eastern, so I had two time zones working against me, but he didnt
care. He called up to report every new development, from hand-holding
all the way through his first kiss to their first argument after
that.
"Look," I told him one Sunday at about five a.m. "Shes a girl.
Youre not supposed to understand her."
"Thats comforting."
He whined about how she was all smiles and friendly when they
were alone, but hardly spoke to him at school.
"Be glad its not the other way around," I told him. "Now go to
bed."
"Thats the problem. She wants to go to bed with me."
He sounded so forlorn I had to laugh. "This is a problem? Youre
what, fifteen? And bouncy little Sally wants to jump your bones?
No offense, but the way you look youre probably not going to
get a whole lot of other offers." (I was wildly wrong about that,
but then I had no real experience myself and had no idea how much
certain women would be attracted to noveltylet alone to the increasingly
remarkable person behind the strange looks.) "Id go for it,"
I told him.
"You know whatll happen if anybody finds out," he said.
"What? Her daddyll come after you with a shotgun?"
"I wish. No, half a dozen tabloids will come after me with reporters.
I can see it now: Alien Monster Wants Our Women! or Kill it
Before it Multiplies! Theyll mess up my life again, and probably
hers too."
It was the first time Id heard him complain about the press.
It was the first time hed even indicated they bothered him. I
took it as a sign he was growing up. "Hmm. So youll have to be
careful. Shouldnt be that difficult out there. Theres all those
woods, right?"
"Its October," he reminded me. "Hunting season."
He may not have been an alien, but he definitely lived in an alien
land. The image of Alexander stuffed and mounted on somebodys
wall flitted through my headnot entirely unpleasantly, given
what he was putting me through. I sighed and said, "Then borrow
your mothers car and use the back seat. Or sneak her into your
bedroom. I dont know; do I look like the sort of guy who knows
this kind of stuff?"
There must have been an edge to my voice. After all, the sort
of gymnastics he and his sweetie wanted to do would probably have
killed me. Not that I stood much of a chance of ever finding out
. . .
He must have suddenly remembered that he was not the only person
in this conversation with problems. "Sorry, Colin," he said. "I
shouldnt have bothered you. Not with this. Im just all confused
about it and dont know what to do." He paused, then asked, "You
really think its okay if I?"
"Yes, yes, go get your ashes hauled, Space Boy!" I said. "I dont
care what else you are; youre a teenager. Now that Sallys brought
it up, so to speak, your not going to be able to rest until youve
learned what its all about. So do it already, or we can both
kiss your ability to concentrate goodbye."
"All right, all right," he said. "Sorry I asked."
"Stop apologizing!"
"Uh . . . okay. Sor . . . I mean, thanks."
He was about to hang up when one last thought intruded. "Hey.
Remember to wear a condom."
"Uhh . . . thats a problem." He turned all sheepish: "Im not
sure I could walk into the store and ask for a pack without causing
a riot. Forget the tabloids. The news would get out, and the parents
of every teenage girl within fifty miles of here would lock their
daughters in their rooms."
He had a point. "Sit tight, then," I said. "Dont do anything
stupid until you hear from me again."
And so the next morning I took one of my infrequent forays out
of my room, down the street in my electric scooter to the corner
market, to buy a box of condoms. I bought the giant economy sized
box, and grinned my silly spastic grin when the cashier gave me
a "what could you possibly want these for?" look. Let her wonder.
FACE ON MARS SPEAKS!
Its Crying for Help, Experts Say
Alex and Sally were apparently discreet. I didnt see anything
but the usual drivel in the tabloids, and I didnt get any more
frantic calls in the night for a while. Of course when they broke
up a few months later I heard all about that, but it wasnt as
big a crisis as it might have been; Alex was beginning to discover
that looking like an alien was a distinct advantage in the world
of curious women. By the time he entered high school and started
playing the "been there, done that" sophisticate, he was ten times
more insufferable than hed ever been as an anguished virgin.
I hated him, and let him know it frequently.
Of course, I would have hated him even more if he hadnt made
valedictorian, let alone gotten the full scholarship I helped
him apply for.
His speech was about Taking Back The Moon. Hed read it to me
a week earlier. It was stirring, emotional, eloquent, and absolutely
designed to get front-page attention from the tabloids. The local
papers said it was brilliant. The video chip he sent me confirmed
that it was. The tabloids ignored it entirelyI like to say because
it was intelligent, but more likely because that happened to be
the week a fifth-generation member of a certain well-known political
family got caught sharing a Memphis hotel room with half a dozen
bed-partners of assorted sexes and species. You know the one .
. . and Im happy to report that Alexander, being of the proper
age, made as many foul jokes about the incident as everybody else
did. It may not have been nice, but it was human.
My doctoral thesis was published, and I even made sure copies
of it got to the right people, but only one guy had ever returned
my letters. He was very enthusiastic, and I felt a brief thrill
at the thought that NASA might actually do something with it,
until he told me that he had rescued it out of the wastebasket
in the administrators office. He was a janitor. He had wanted
to be an astronaut, too, but that was the closest he had come.
The turnaround, when it happened, came from the last place I would
ever have expected: the tabloid-reading public. Regular newspapers
had long since become indistinguishable from tabloids, so that
included just about everybody. Even daily papers ran articles
on Elvis or Madonna sightings right beside the national news .
. . and occasionally they would do a piece on Space Aliens. Alexander
still got a lot of press, since he was a constant source of new
photographs for them, but the article that tipped the scales for
the space program was something else entirely.
Some poor drudge of a reporter, stumped for material and facing
a deadline, must have been digging through back issues looking
for something he could plagiarize when he ran across an article
on the Martian pyramid and the mysterious face that supposedly
looked out from the regolith beside it. Of course he didnt know
that the Mars Orbiter program in the nineties had pretty much
debunked the whole idea with detailed photos from a hundred miles
up, but if he did he wouldnt have cared. He had an article to
write, and suddenly he had a topic.
When the paper came out, demanding that the U.S. go back to Mars
and find out what the face was trying to communicate to us, nothing
much would have come of it if the reporter hadnt found an ingenious
way to eat up twelve more column-inches of space. He had printed
a clip-out form for people to sign and send to the President.
He had no doubt intended it as a simple gag, but he had underestimated
his audiences credulity. A flood of clip-outs poured into the
White House, many of them accompanied by long letters from people
who couldnt resist the chance to tell the President just why
this was so important. A sizeable number of people were of the
opinion that the face was Jesus. As other papers, not to be outdone,
joined in with clip-outs of their own, the issue, stupid as it
was, became the talk of the nation. When the President ignored
the letters, papers printed more articles crying "coverup!" and
exhorting their readers to send even more letters. Within a week
they were arriving by the ton.
The President was no fool. He knew the controversy was ridiculous.
But an election was coming up, and the economy was in the middle
of a long downward slide, brought on at least in part because
we werent fighting any wars to pump money into the big defense
contractors. He needed something to toss money at. Something that
would capture the publics imagination in terms people could understand.
If the public wanted to go to Mars, well then, he would lead them
to Mars.
He called an old college buddy of his who worked for NASA, a former
janitor who had gotten his Ph.D. and worked his way into the mission
planning office, and he suggested that a Mars proposal would receive
serious consideration in congress. But he would have to work fast.
The election was only a month away, and the President wanted to
drop a real proposal on the public at the last moment. His buddy
said, "I already know how to do it," and dusted off his copy of
my doctoral thesis.
Then the President called a dozen of the most influential senators
and representatives into his office and showed them the piles
of mail.
They were no fools either. Or maybe they were just fools enough.
They were certain that a mission to Mars was a big waste of time
and money, but they were willing to support it if it would get
them reelected. So in a resounding speech on the night before
the polls openedway too late for a rebuttal from the oppositionNASA
suddenly got its first new mandate in decades: Landing an American
on Mars.
SPACE BOY THREATENS MURDER!!
Heroic Photog Captures Full Scope of Rampage
Political correctness may not be the worst affliction of the twenty-first
century, but its certainly the silliest. Even when I was a kid
people grew uncomfortable if someone called me "crippled" rather
than "differently abled," but nobody could actually be fined for
it. Nowadays I could pull mandatory counselling time for calling
myself a crip, much less a gimp or a spaz. At the very worst I
am "moto-neurally challenged," and even that has a negative connotation
that makes people uncomfortable.
It also opens doors. Wide open. In their pathetic attempts to
ignore reality, the arbiters of morality and sentimentality in
our culture have decreed that people are not to be discriminated
against in any way, not for reasons of race, creed, color, age,
gender, sexual preference, marital status, economic conditionor
ability. Especially not ability. Goodness no; that would mean
someone was actually better at something than someone else, and
that flew directly in the face of conventional wisdom.
Combine that with (a) affirmative action, which came back with
a vengeance after its repeal at the turn of the century, and (b)
Alexs own marks, which now put him on the Deans List for the
fourth straight semester, in precisely the course of study that
Id mapped out for him, and (c) my own appointment to the Project
Development Committeeand Alex suddenly had a perfect shot at
his dream. Every minority of any sort had to be hired in proportion
to their prevalence in society, which meant that NASA had to hire
the handicapped, even for a wildly inappropriate job like "astronaut."
And Alex was one of very few people who qualified as handicapped
without actually being handicapped. Considering their other options,
NASA was glad to accept him the moment he mailed in his application.
It didnt matter that he was still a couple of years away from
graduation. In fact it helped them immensely. They had no training
program in place and wouldnt for at least two years. They had
nothing really for their new astronauts to do until they created
one. And in Alexanders case, since he was merely hired as a placeholder
anyway, they were happy to put him on the payroll and let him
stay in school. Besides, they figured, even if he was only an
astronaut in name, his very presence would keep the masses interested.
I called him up the day the news broke. It was, by the way, one
of the last times Id ever call him from the old house in Georgetown;
I already had handicap-design specialists fixing up my new place
in Cocoa Beach. It would require spending all my salary and much
of my trust fund on attendants, drivers, custodial workers, and
increased medical costs, but there was no way Id be able to handle
the job offsiteand there was no way Id ever want to. My clock
was still ticking. Still, when I called, it was Alexanders triumph
I was thinking about. My voice synthesizer chirped out a greeting
as ebullient as it could manage: "Congratulations, Space Boy."
"Dont call me that," he said. "Dont call me that ever again."
That set me back in my anti-bedsore harness. I had called him
Space Boy ever since we met. "Whats the matter? Tabloid reporters
getting you down?"
"Christ yes. Ijust a minute." I heard some scuffling, then he
shouted, "Get the fuck out of my room!" and there was a loud bang.
"Alex?" I asked. My voice synthesizer wouldnt shout. "Alex?"
He came back to the phone. "A couple of em got past the dorms
security system."
"What was that noise? You didnt shoot one of them, did you?"
He laughed. "I may be from Wyom-ing, but I dont solve everything
with a gun, no matter how good it would feel. No, I just kicked
one of them in the balls, grabbed the other one by her tits and
shoved her out of my room, and slammed the door in their faces."
"Ouch. Thats getting kind of personal, dont you think?"
"And theyre not? Im tired of being called Space Boy. Im tired
of being called a freak. Im the only guy in the world those bastards
can make fun of because of the way I look, and theyre driving
me crazy."
I heard more pounding as he said that, but I couldnt tell if
it was on the door or him banging on his desk. "Are you going
to be safe there?" I asked.
He sighed. "I saw two big security guards coming down the hallway.
Ill be all right."
I thought about it for a minute. He was used to me pausing to
catch my breath; he waited patiently until I said, "You may not
want toyou should excuse the expressionalienate the press. Theyre
in charge of public opinion these days."
"Theyre a bunch of sadistic leeches," Alexander replied.
"Powerful sadistic leeches," I countered. "Dont piss them off
if you can help it. NASA learned long ago that public opinion
is what launches rockets."
"What, now you want me to let em in?"
"No. Never let them close to you. No interviews, nothing like
that. Never even have a direct conversation with them. It would
be too easy for them to twist your words around. But you can still
communicate with them, and you can make them say what you want
them to say."
"How?"
I was thinking out loud, but I had plenty of time to do it while
I paused for breath. "Send out press releases. All the papers
will receive the same text, so we can say what we want without
worrying about it being misquoted." I laughed, and my stupid speech
synthesizer said, "Ha, ha, ha."
"Did I ever tell you that you sound like Boris Karloff when you
do that?" he asked.
"Fuck Boris Karloff," I said. "And fuck the press, too. We can
feed those bastards anything we want to, and as long as it makes
good copy theyll be happy to print it."
"So what do we want to say, besides Leave me alone?"
"How about, Making a bold move in support of handicapped people
everywhere, Alex Drier, the so-called "Space Boy," has accepted
an offer to become one of NASAs new generation of astronauts.
Despite the barrage of tasteless taunts he will surely endure
because of his unusual deformity, he has chosen to take this step
to demonstrate that public humiliation should not stop anyone
who is truly determined to blah blah blah."
"Brilliant," he said, his tone of voice making it clear that I
was anything but. "I especially like the blah, blah, blah part.
Truly inspired."
"Thank you. So what sucked about the rest of it?"
"You used Space Boy yourself. And you called me deformed."
"Better we say it than the press. The way I said it, youll get
sympathy. Itll make the press look like the bullies they are.
And the only way they can fight back is to quit printing articles
about you, which is all we really want anyway."
"Well, thats a point," he said after a moments thought. "Did
you save that?"
Everything I say is held in a temporary scroll-back buffer. I
recalled my impromptu press release and saved it permanently,
then said, "Let me work on this for a few minutes, then I can
transmit it to you and you can print it out and take it to the
reporters."
"I thought you said I shouldnt ever"
"Right. Have one of your security guards take it to the reporters.
Print out only ten copies, and make them fight over em like the
snarling dogs they are." I laughed again. "Ha, ha, ha. Its time
we took the high road, metaphorically as well as physically."
SPACE BOY STARTS TRAINING
"Hes a Natural," Says NASA
It didnt work as well as wed hoped it would, at least not right
away. The tabloids werent bothered by inconsistencies between
their stories and anyone elses; in their world that simply proved
that everyone else was lying. We did manage to direct the stories
a little bit, though, and over the next couple of years we got
better at it. Enough so that the media attention at least didnt
grow any worse as Alexander became more of a public figure.
Even so, Americas first four Mars astronauts were as whitebread
as the Mercury seven. And so were the second crew, and the third,
and the fourth. NASA may have had to hire minorities and the handicapped
and the gay-lesbian-old-Bahaithey even hired me, as a designer,
before they realized I actually knew more than the rest of them
put togetherbut they werent about to staff their missions that
way.
I fought it as best I could from within, but I didnt have that
much power. They were using my design for the Earth-Mars transfer
vehicle, but that didnt mean squat in the long run. If I made
too big a stink, they would have thrown me right off the project
without shedding a tear, and I wasnt willing to lose that for
anything.
We began testing the ion drive and the crew habitat. The lander
was still mired in design snafus, but it was beginning to look
like we could actually send four people to Mars and bring them
back alive even if we couldnt land them when they got there.
I was busier than Id ever been in my life, and happier, too,
even if the stress was taking its toll on my wasted stamina. By
the time Boeing actually delivered the lander, I could barely
talk at all, and was thinking of switching over to a neural implantone
of the new generation of voice-synths that could read the electrical
impulses in my brain so I didnt have to eyeball words off a computer
screen. Direct interface was becoming fairly common by that point,
but it seemed like a further retreat into infirmity, and I did
not look forward to taking that step.
The lander was basically an updated Lunar Module, with separate
descent and ascent rockets to cut down on the weight we had to
carry back into space on the return trip. That meant the crew
couldnt use it to jump from site to site on Mars, but they carried
ultralight aircraft for that. It was more efficient to use airplanes
anyway. We managed to squeeze two of them on board, along with
enough food and shelter for a years stay.
The clock was ticking. Rumors started flying as to who would crew
the mission, even though the selection wouldnt be made for over
a year. But Alex was out in the cold. NASA hadnt even given him
an orbital flight, and it was conventional wisdom that nobody
would be sent to Mars without at least one space flight under
their belt.
"What can we do?" he asked me one evening after another request
for a mission had been turned down on the grounds that he was
needed more in a support capacity than in space. "If I dont get
a flight soon, Ill never even get on the backup crew for Mars."
"True enough," I said, slowly and with great difficulty. "I know
how frustrating it must feel to come this far and then hit the
glass ceiling, but the crew selection is out of my control."
"Thats what I keep hearing from everybody I talk to," he growled.
"Except that bastard Ferris in the Assoff" (that was what we
called the Astronaut Office, where the crew selections were made)
"who just laughs."
"Ill think of something," I told him.
"What?"
"I dont know. Something. Theres got to be a way to show them
youre not a threat. Thats what Ferris is afraid of, after all.
He knows youre a good astronaut, but hes afraid of the kind
of publicity youll get if he actually sends you into space."
"Publicity!" Alex shouted. "Everywhere I turn, publicity is standing
between me and my life!" He began pacing the tiny space between
my desk and the door. "I hardly even left the house until I was
five because my Dad was afraid of what the crazies would do. Hell,
thats why he left. Well, if NASA hired me because of the way
I look, I am not going to let them use it to stop me from getting
a mission!"
I wish I could say his little rant sparked me into action, gave
me the brilliant idea that salvaged his career. Id love to take
credit for it, but thats not how it happened. What happened was
that he stomped out, mad, and I sat in my office until well after
dark, thinking with the lights out until I fell asleep.
Alex went home and trashed out his apartment, drinking beer and
getting angrier and angrier by the minute.
SPACE BOYS SECRET MISSION IN CALIFORNIA!
Is Killer Earthquake on the Way?
He should have died in a fiery crash somewhere over New Mexico.
That he didnt stands as testament to his skill as a pilot, but
not to his calm reasoning ability while intoxicated, because what
he did when he got mad enough was check out a T-38the training
jet the astronauts use to fly back and forth from Houston to the
Capeand roar off in a sentimental blaze of glory for San Francisco.
I dont know who was the more surprised when they met. Alex unannounced
at your door in the middle of the night could scare the piss out
of practically anybody, even his dad. On the other hand, Mark
Drier had aged quite a bit since Alex had last seen him. Eighteen
years of straight time, the salt air of Fishermans Wharf, and
a lifetime of regrets had all left their mark on him. Alex was
taller, too, so it looked to him like his father had shrunk to
hobbit size and wrinkled like an apple left in the sun.
To hear him tell it, neither one of them blinked an eye.
"Hi," Alex said.
"Hi," said Mark.
They looked at each other for a moment, then, "Can I come in?"
"Sure." His dad stood aside and Alex entered his one-bedroom apartment.
It was lit by a single light in the kitchen, which revealed a
reasonably tidy bachelors home. Dirty dishes on the counter,
but not more than a couple days worth. Newspapers and magazines
on the metal table and all but one of the creaky wooden chairs
around it. Full bookshelves in the living room, and a big ship
in a bottle on top of a console TV.
"You make that?" Alex asked.
"Yep."
"Looks nice. Ive always wondered how people get the masts and
sails and stuff to fit through that little hole. And how they
manipulate it once its inside."
"Patience," Mark said. "And long sticks with tape on the end."
"You never struck me as a patient sort of guy," Alex said.
It might have been an accusation. His father chose not to interpret
it that way. He just shrugged and said, "Ive had a lot of free
time on my hands. You learn."
"I guess you could." Alex sat down in the gray naugahyde recliner
facing the TV. His dad sat on the couch off to the side. "Of course,
Ive never had much patience either. I guess I got that from you."
Mark Driers hands were shaking. "Listen, Alex, I"
"No," Alexander said. "Thats not why I came here." He removed
a tabloid from his jacket pocket. The headline read: CITY OF IMMORTALS
DISCOVERED ON THE MOON. "You never did go to the press, not even
after you left home. Why not?"
Mark studied the blank TV screen. "Your mother didnt want me
to."
"I doubt if she wanted you to leave, either."
"She wouldnt have wanted me to stay, with what I was becoming."
Mark looked back at his son. "I was never built to live inside
a goldfish bowl. I could feel myself becoming something I didnt
want to be. I think I was actually going crazy. That would have
been a disaster for you, and for her."
"You too," Alex said.
His dad snorted. "Yeah, for me too. So I did the only thing I
had guts enough to do. I took myself out of the picture. Completely
out, and that meant no stories in the paper, not even when I couldnt
find a job at first." He shook his head incredulously. "Did you
know that your Uncle George sent me money for three months until
I got my feet under me again?"
Alex felt as if hed fallen into ice water. Uncle George had never
had a good word for Mark. "He did?"
"Yep. Wouldnt let me pay him back, either. He wrote me letters
for the first couple of years to let me know how you were doing,
but II finally asked him to stop."
"Why?" asked Alex.
"Id already cut myself off from you," Mark said. "Id already
failed you. Every letter reopened the wound."
There was an uncomfortable silence while each man thought whatever
fathers and sons think at times like these. Then Alex cleared
his throat and said, "I have no problem with that, Dad. I really
dont. The only thing I have a problem with is how the media attention
screwed up your life. So this may sound kind of crazy, but I want
you and Mom to sell your story to the press. Auction an exclusive
to the highest bidder. Run the price up into the millions and
retire on the proceeds."
Mark laughed. "Nobodyd pay for our story now."
Alex leaned forward in his chair. "They would if you told them
they were right about me all along."
SPACE BOY CONFIRMED ALIEN!
Parents Reveal All
Next stop, Wyoming.
Insert a picture of Faye screaming at the top of her lungs. Alex
said his ears actually rang afterward. She nearly threw him out
of the house, and it was two hours before she allowed Mark to
cross the threshold. Only because the idea had come from Alex
did she even listen, and only because Mark said he didnt want
to do it either did she finally decide to go ahead with it.
"I certainly hope you know what youre doing," she told Alex.
"This could kill your career faster than a spacesuit failure."
"Mom, my career is already dead. This is a last-ditch effort to
pump some life into it."
"Last ditch effort to make fools of us all," Mark said softly,
but he was beyond arguing at this point. He had cast his fate
to the winds long ago, and was happy to drift wherever they took
him. He was looking around at the house he had left nearly two
decades earlier, noting that it needed paint and wondering how
the roof was holding up. He had carefully avoided looking too
long at Faye, because every time he did that he felt something
go wonky in his chest.
"Im trying to make fools of NASA," Alex protested. "If youve
got a better idea, Im all ears. Metaphorically speaking, of course."
He tweaked the tiny little flaps on the sides of his head. Mark
looked away; Faye laughed.
"I still dont see how its going to help," she said.
"Leave that up to me. You just make up the most outrageous story
you can think of. Abduction, genetic experiments, off-planet meetings
with the Imperial Space Commandeven Elviswhatever you want."
"I dont want to have anything to do with it," Faye protested, but she was
already weakening. Twenty years of stubborn rationality in the
face of rampant crackpottery had left her creative side screaming
for release. She actually yearned for a chance to play the loon,
at least once. And if it helped her son, she would make sure it
was a doozy. The promise of a couple of million dollars didnt
hurt her creativity, either.
Alex was back in Houston by the time the story came out. Hed
spent his final day of relative obscurity briefing the other astronauts,
so when Ferris called him into his office to express his false
condolences for the unfair treatment he was getting in the press,
Alex was ready for him.
"No, theyre absolutely right," Alex said. "Im a space alien."
Ferris nearly split a seam. "What?"
"Well, I must be." Alex walked over to the window and looked out
at the lush grounds three floors below. "I mean, why else would
NASA be holding back a perfectly good astronaut? Theyve got to
be afraid of whatll happen if they send him into space. And the
only possible reason for that"
"Youre insane!"
"is because theyre afraid hell steal the spaceship and go home."
He turned back from the window. "Or could it be that NASAs simply
afraid the press will make fun of them? Well, welcome to the world
of Alex Drier. Now my problem is your problem."
"You cant seriously think this . . . this circus is going to
get you a mission," Ferris said, snapping his index finger against
the headline.
"I have no idea what will get me a mission," Alex said. "Hard
work and determination certainly wasnt good enough. Busting my
butt to help train every other astronaut in the corps wasnt good
enough. Keeping a low profile to allay your paranoid fear wasnt
enough. So I decided to let my parents make some money while they
still could. If that means taking some media heat again for a
while, well, whats the harm in it? Ive survived it before. And
Im grounded anyway, arent I?"
Ferris loosened his collar. "Look, Ive told you a million times"
"Are you or are you not afraid of the publicity?" Alex demanded.
"If you can sit there behind your desk and tell me with a straight
face that the media attention doesnt scare youwhile youve got
a copy of the Times right there on top of the heapthen Ill go pack my bags and
join a freak show. But if thats why youve been holding me back,
I and every other astronaut in the project will tell the press
not only that Im a space alien, but that this whole project is
the result of rays beamed into our heads from the mothership orbiting
the north pole of the Moon."
"You cant orbit a pole," Ferris said contemptously.
"Damn right you cant. And Im not a space alien, either, but
thats what everyone has agreed to say until you stop treating
me like one."
"This is blackmail!" Ferris shouted.
"This is a fucking wake-up call," Alex shouted back. "Im the
best damned astronaut this project has got and everybody knows
it. Im the most dedicated, the most coordinated, the most physically
fit, and with the exception of Mary Paiz, Im the smartest. If
you dont believe me, look at the reports from your own doctors
and shrinks. Theres only one reason I havent been in orbit yet,
and one reason why Im being shoved off the Mars mission, and
thats because youre afraid the press will make fun of you for
sending a guy with a big head into space." He snatched up the
newspaper and flung it into the wastebasket. "Well, thats where
your fear belongs, and that" he pointed straight upward "is
where I belong. Its your call. But this most assuredly is not
blackmail, because your worst nightmare has already happened."
SPACE BOY STONEWALLS PARENTS SHOCKING TESTIMONY!
Is NASA In On the Coverup?
Ferris suspended him, of course.
He was still free to do what he wanted on-site; he just didnt
have any official responsibilities any more. So he spent the next
couple of days in the simulators, practicing launch and landing
and docking maneuvers. He even spent long hours in the ultralight
scout simulator, learning how to fly the ungainly fabric-covered
jets in Marss thin atmosphere. He told me later he figured it
was the closest he would ever get, so he wanted to spend as much
time there as he could before he was fired.
Ferris noted what he was doing, and took it as another example
of arrogant pride. Drier was so damned sure of himself he kept
training even when he was suspended! But the techs kept feeding
Ferris the performance ratings, and the numbers spoke for themselves.
Alex successfully landed on Mars with three thrusters out and
a fourth one stuck at full throttle. He correctly diagnosed and
shut down a leaking fuel pump in mid-ascent before it could explode,
and finished the launch and docking with only two out of three
engines. He rode out a duststorm in an ultralight, conserving
power and fuel by gliding in the updraft on the windward side
of Mons Olympus until the weather cleared enough for him to land.
And he survived the death mission, the one that was supposed to
end with a headlong crash into Mars no matter what the astronauts
did to compensate for all the malfunctions on the way down.
"How did he do that?" Ferris demanded of me when he saw the results.
I was the engineering genius; I was supposed to have designed
the simulation to be foolproof.
"I didnt think about deploying the scout planes after the parachutes
failed," I said. My delight was so great that I spoke at almost
normal speed. "Sure, doing that adds drag, but it also means jettisoning
both thruster quads on the lower stage and burning up the fuel
you need for the return mission in the upper stage quads just
to stay upright. He landed it all right, but he would never have
gotten it back into orbit."
"Dont bet on it," Ferris said. "That bugeyed bastard did this
while his oxygen supply was down to practically zip and the cabin
was shaking like a box falling downstairs. The T-handle broke
off in his handwhich was NOT part of the simulationand he fixed
it with duct tape without letting the lander pitch over in the
process. If theres a way to fix the damage after he got down,
Ill bet hed find it."
"Changing our tune, are we?" I asked him.
He glowered at me. "My tune is none of your damned business. But
yes, its conceivable that I might have made a mistake regarding
him. I just hope its not too late to correct it."
"We dont launch for eleven months," I reminded him.
"Im aware of the launch window," he replied. He left my office
without saying goodbye.
SPACE BOY GOES TO SPACE
"Its my destiny," He says
His first mission was nothing special. I say that with such aplomb,
knowing that anyone who goes into space for even the most routine
mission thinks its the most fantastic thing that ever happened
to them. Alex was no exception, even though he got spectacularly
sick the first day.
His was the first landing mission. The mission before his had
tested the Mars Descent and Ascent Module, known affectionately
as MADAM, in low Earth orbit. Docking and flight maneuvers had
gone well, so the next logical step was to try landing it somewhere.
Earth was out of the question, since the engines only developed
three-quarters of a g of thrust, but that didnt mean they had to take it all the way
to Mars untested, either. Theres a perfect testing ground only
240,000 miles away.
Its so perfect a person might even be tempted to say God put
it there to help us on our way to greater things. That was one
theory proposed when the Middle Eastern fundamentalists raised
a stink about us returning to profane the Moon they had so recently
cleaned up, but it did little to pacify them. The US government
didnt really care. By then we were so tired of the constant squabbling
that came from that part of the world that we just ignored them
and went on about our business.
Alex didnt get to actually land on the Moon. That would have
been too much publicity even for a repentant Ferris to handle.
But he did get to ride along in the Earth-Mars transfer module
and test out its recreation facilities while the lander crew did
their thing below.
He had fun playing with the entertainment and exercise equipment,
the scientific instruments, and so forth. That stuff had all been
tested a million times on the ground, but he dutifully put it
all through its paces so we could detect any on-site problems
before we sent a crew out with it for a two-year mission. About
the only thing he found out of spec was a warble in the CD player,
which sent Pioneer into a tizzy for a couple of days until the
problem was traced to a power supply drain from the gyroscopic
stabilizers.
When he tested the surround-sound theatre system, he of course
played Communion Part Six. Of the alien hysteria movies that came out when he was young,
that was the one that most closely paralleled his actual life.
It was also the cheesiest and most embarrassingly bad one, with
the aliens stomping around flatfooted like Frankenstein monsters
and sucking the blood from the poor residents in the fictitious
town of Rattlesnake, Montana. Alex had always loved that one,
and he hooted and laughed through all two hours and seven minutes
of it while Mission Control listened in on the hab modules live
audio feed. When word got out that thats what he was watching,
it started a minor stampede to the video stores to rent copies
of it, and the movie even enjoyed a brief comeback in theatres.
It also reminded people how stupid their fears over his appearance
had been. An embarrassed America quietly returned a lot of DVDs
to the video stores, and the nostalgia theatres switched over
to Batman Seventeen in mid-week.
The guys on the Moon landed without a hitch, got out and did a
walk-around inspection, practiced a few of the things they would
need to do on Mars, then gathered up some rocks for the geologists
back home, climbed back inside, and blasted off for rendezvous
again. They didnt leave any beer cans behind to intentionally
irritate the Saudis, but the lower half of the lander and an inflatable
dome are still sitting there doing a fine job of that. And they
did deploy and assemble one of the ultralight aircraft for practice
at doing it in low gravity with spacesuits on, so now theres
a fully assembled airplane sitting on the airless Moon, fueled
and ready to puzzle the hell out of anybody who comes along after
humanity has vanished into history.
The ascent stage took them back into orbit without mishap, and
they flew the hab module back to Earth on a long spiral that took
them another two weeks, just to test out the recyclers and fuel
cells and so forth. When they finally splashed down, three weeks
after they left, Alex was beaming from tiny little ear to tiny
little ear. Hed made it to space.
And he was on the backup crew for Mars. When the announcement
came out, he didnt know whether to laugh or cry. Backup crew.
This was a one-shot mission; unless the first crew discovered
underground cities or something like it, he wouldnt get another
chance.
"Cheer up," I told him. "Maybe somebody on the prime crew will
get hit by a bus."
Some days I look back on that moment and wonder if there really
is something behind all the superstitions people have developed
since we learned how to rub sticks together to make fire. Dont
say your dreams out loud or theyll never come true, dont break
a mirror or youll get seven years of bad luck, and most assuredly
dont say anything that will tempt fate, at least without knocking
on wood when you say it.
Im practically paralyzed, okay? I couldnt knock on wood if my
life depended on it. I dont believe in that crap anyway. But
that didnt stop Randy Parker from stepping out into traffic on
a busy London streetinstinctively looking to the left instead
of the right for approaching trafficand winding up under a tour
bus filled with tennis fans on their way to Wimbledon.
It was the first time I ever allowed myself to thinkeven for
a moment, even as grim whimsythat maybe this Space Boy stuff
had some substance after all. Maybe there was a mothership, manipulating
things Alexanders way. Maybe that was the only way to account
for the way things had always seemed to work out for him.
The difference between me and the UFO nuts is that Im capable
of looking at that hypothesis and saying "Naaaah."
And besides, I dont consider Alex preternaturally lucky anymore.
Not at all.
MARS CREW STOPS INVASION FLEET
Epic Laser Battle Ends in Victory!
Randy Parkers death put Alex on the mission, along with Dave
Anderson, Mary Paiz, and Shawnee Sanders, three straight arrows
with test scores and simulator records almost as high as his.
The press had fun with the idea of sending two couples to Mars.
They werent couples, but nobody denied the probability that they
would become couples on the way. It was even worked into the mission
profiles, albeit secretly. And if you want me to talk about who
did what to whom, youre reading the wrong account. I bring it
up because some people have suggested that sexual dynamics led
to what eventually happened on Mars; it makes good tabloid fodder,
I suppose, but thats not what happened.
As for me, I had plenty of engineering snafus to take care of.
The hardware worked amazingly well, which for a project this complex
meant we still had one or two major complications a day. Most
of them were simple malfunctions that we could fix and forget
about, but a few turned out to be design flaws and those had to
be reengineered. Those were the scary ones, because you never
knew if your changed design would work any better than the first
one, or if the different configuration would have a ripple effect
that would knock out something else. Toward the end I felt like
we were sending four people out into space in a vehicle made more
of hope and prayers than of hard metal.
They say a painting is never finished, only abandoned. It shouldnt
be that way with spaceships, but the sad truth is that you can
always improve the design. Launch windows wont wait for a perfect
ship, though, and funding is a finite resource, so all you can
do is make the best ship you can with the time and materials youve
got, and then trust the astronauts to keep it working throughout
the mission.
We didnt do a bad job. I can say with great pride that the spaceship
didnt kill anyone. Technically neither did the scout planes,
though when a mans body lies a few hundred feet from a crash
site its hard to say that the plane didnt kill him. But even
if wed known about the takeoff instability, wed still have sent
the planes along and hoped for the best. It was too late to redesign
them, too late to change the mission profile, too late to do anything
but light the rockets and go.
On launch day, the Cape was packed for a dozen miles in every
direction, and every television in the country was tuned to the
NASA channel. I think it was finally soaking in to a whole generation
of people that we were once again doing something great, that
there was more to life than just the day-to-day grind. We were
about to explore another planet!
There wasnt a dry eye in the house when the clock ticked down
to zero and the Saturn VI bellowed its liftoff roar across the
palmettos. Even the people who thought it was a waste of money
were whispering, "Go, baby, go!" while the rocket struggled to
lift the spaceship into orbit. I was in the control center, and
people later told me that my speech synthesizer was saying, "Don
blah huh," over and over again, but what I was really saying was,
"Dont blow up, dont blow up!"
Miraculously, it didnt. The Saturn put them into orbit, the final
stage launched them out past the Moon for a gravity assist, and
the ion rocket kicked in and propelled them gently on toward Mars.
The tabloids went especially nuts during the eight months it took
our guys to get there; the grinning vacuousness that seems to
affect all astronaut transmissions meant for public consumptioneven
Alexanders, Im sorry to saypalled after only a couple of weeks,
and was replaced in the headlines by rampant speculation over
the "real" reason for the mission. Surely it was a humanitarian
gesture to take Alexander home! Or a rendezvous with the Aztecs
known to inhabit Olympus Mons! And just what kind of torrid romantic
doings were really going on when the cameras werent rolling?
The most amusing of the stories were faxed to the crew until Mary
Paiz, speaking for them all, sent back a transmission asking us
to stop. If Alexander had a reaction, he didnt show it.
After that they lived in their own private little world. Their
recycling equipment kept them alive and healthy, and the entertainment
system and scientific instruments (indistinguishable from their
point of view) kept them sane, and before they knew it they were
braking into orbit around Mars.
They spent a few days sending out communications satellites so
they would be in constant contact with each other no matter how
far apart they got on the ground, mapping their landing site,
and making sure the automatic instruments would continue to take
pictures and other readings while they were gone. Then when they
were sure their transfer vehicle would be warm and waiting for
them when they got back, they climbed into the lander and headed
down.
No waiting in orbit for one poor astronaut like the Apollo guys
had done. All four went to the surface, and all four would contribute
equally to the exploration. We had enough missions planned for
everybody to have their fill.
They landed in the Valles Marineris, down at the lower end where
there would be lots of flood debris and erosion would have exposed
plenty of geological strata for them to study without digging.
The valley was so wide at that point that the sides were over
the horizon, and all of it was flood plain. The ultralight airplanes
would allow them to range farther afield, but thats where everyone
expected the action to be.
Except the tabloid-reading public, of course. They wanted to know
about the face and the pyramid. Never mind that photos from orbit
showed two unassuming hills and a few eroded craters; people were
sure that an on-site investigation would turn up alien artifacts
by the truckload. When they learned that NASA had scheduled an
ultralight flyby only after all the other mission objectives had
been met, the ruckus could be heard all the way to Mars.
NASA didnt budge. We released new photos from orbit showing the
same thing we already knew from the last orbital survey, and the
crew went on about the business of setting up their dome and making
their first cautious forays into the Martian wilderness.
Cautious was the word. Mars is barely more habitable than the
Moon. The air is thin and mostly carbon dioxide, so the astronauts
had to wear pressure suits at all times, but theres just enough
of it for a cold wind to suck the heat out of a suit in practically
no time. A single mistake could be fatal, and everyone made their
share of mistakes. Not long after they got there, Mary slipped
with a rock hammer and punctured her pressure suit, but Alex dragged
her back to the dome and tossed her inside before she ran out
of air. Dave didnt reinstall one of the domes two air recycling
canisters properly after he recharged it and nearly asphyxiated
them all in their sleep. Shawnee stayed out too long after dusk
and nearly froze to death before she could make it back to the
dome.
And the ultralight airplanes turned out to be much trickier to
fly than we had hoped. The problem was mostly on takeoff and landing,
when they made the transition from hovering on their jet exhaust
to actually flying. Marss atmosphere is too thin to make a rolling
takeoff practical, especially on rocky ground, so the ultralights
were designed like Harrier jets, with vectored thrust engines
that could be rotated downward for takeoff and landing. Problem
was, at inbetween angles they really affected the wings lift,
and there was a configuration in the middle where the engines
didnt have enough thrust for the plane to hover anymore and the
wings didnt have enough lift for it to fly, so if you werent
moving fast enough when you went through that phase you fell like
a rock.
Alex found out about it the first time he took one of the planes
up for a test flight. He was going through the checklist, calling
out his actions as he rose to about fifty feet, brought the nose
up, and increased the thrust for flight, when he crossed through
the dead zone. "Throttle up to eighty percent, engines running
smooth, tilting forward toshit!" The stall warning buzzer overrode his voice for a moment, then
his words became intelligible again as he said, "nose down, throttles
to full, gaining speed. Starting to feel some response to the
controls. Okay, I think Im flying now, but that didnt feel right
at all. Im going to bring it around for a visual."
"Roger," Dave said. "Ive got the binks on you. Dont see anything
wrong from here, but maybe when you come around. You sure you
dont want to land?"
"Not until I find out what happened," Alex said. He had the pilots
almost instinctive urge to put air rather than rock beneath him
when he had a problem. He banked the plane around and did a slow
pass over the domeslow being about a hundred miles an hour in
the thin Martian air.
Dave gave him a close inspection with binoculars, but didnt see
anything wrong. "Looks copacetic, ol boy," he said.
The ultralights were mostly wing, since Marss atmosphere is so
thin. Alex waggled them a little, then jounced the plane up and
down a bit with the elevator. "Flies like a pregnant cow," he
reported. "Just like it did in the simulator. But I never felt
anything like that dropout before. Im going to take it up a ways
and see if I can repeat it."
"You sure you want to do that?" Dave asked him.
"I dont want to try landing until I know what happened," Alex
replied.
Back home at mission control we were all pulling our hair out.
We had a man in the air with a problema hundred and fifty million
miles away. What we were hearing had happened thirteen minutes
ago. Alex could have been dead already and we wouldnt know it
until the radio signal carrying his last words caught up to us.
We had people in the simulator trying to figure out what had happened
up there the moment we heard there was a problem, but even if
they figured it out instantly, it would be thirteen more minutes
before their solution helped Alex any.
So we hung onto our butts and gritted our teeth while we listened
to Alex calmly describe everything he did. "Climbing through eight
thousand. I can see quite a ways from up here. Man oh man, a hell
of a lot of water must have come through this canyon. It looks
like it was cut with a fire hose. Okay, Im at ten oh and slowing.
Bringing the engines backward to hover. Angle at ten, twenty,
thirtythere it goes! Get back here, you bastard! Throttling up
and tilting on back to forty, fifty, sixty. Airspeed down to forty,
thirty, twenty. Its looking stable now. Hovering like a balloon.
Plenty of control. Its just in that transitional phase where
it all goes to hell for a second."
He tried switching back over to forward flight, and sure enough
the same thing happened, so he brought it to a stop again and
tried it over and over until he learned how to compensate for
it. "All right, heres what were going to have to do," he said
as he dropped back down toward the base for a landing. "Itll
suck fuel like a tank rupture, but weve got to go up and down
like an elevator for at least a thousand feet before we switch
flight modes, cause were going to lose a couple hundred feet
in transition."
Mary said, "Why the hell didnt they figure that out back home?"
"Who knows?" Alex said. "Planes always act squirrelly at low speed.
They couldnt test these things in partial vacuum for more than
a few seconds at a time, cause they dont have a vacuum pump
thatll keep up with a wind tunnel. And they sure as hell couldnt
test it at a third of a gee." He laughed. "Ill bet theyre scurrying
to figure it out now."
He was right about that. Everybody involved in the ultralight
design ran for days without sleep trying to understand what had
happened and how to correct for it with materials the Mars crew
had on hand. They figured it out, too, and cobbled together a
fix out of an empty fuel tank and duct tape that reduced the instability
to about half what it was originally, but that was the best they
could do. The problem was inherent in the wing design, and there
wasnt anything they could do on site to correct for that.
So the crew went on with their jobs, flying planes that were ready
to smash them into the ground at a moments notice. It was either
that or forget about ninety percent of the mission objectives,
but this was our only shot at Mars. There was no money for another
mission, and even if the money miraculously showed up in the budget,
these four wouldnt be going back. There wasnt any question what
they would do. Id have done the same thing in their place.
I keep telling myself that.
MARS MISSION A COVERUP!
Why NASA Wont Ask the Questions YOU Want Answered!
For months nobody had any more problems with the planes. All four
astronauts flew them dozens of times each, and they got so used
to the instability that we nearly forgot it was there. With all
the new discoveries the crew were making about Mars we had so
much else to think about that the airplane problem faded into
the background.
When we lost the first plane it had nothing to do with the flight
problem anyway. A dust storm got it during the night, plucked
it away like it had never been there. Alex said the crew never
even heard a noise. They just looked out in the morning after
a hard blow and saw that it was gone, and the other plane was
missing a couple feet of fabric at the end of its left wing.
They were able to fix that easily enough and go on flying. Fortunately
there werent that many flights left in the mission plan. They
had accomplished all the major objectives, and now they were working
their way down the "wish list," the extra projects that they could
do if there was time before their launch window opened for the
return trip to Earth.
One of those was a long-range flight to check another site on
the planet for signs of life. They had found dozens of tantalizing
clues, including rocks like the one found in Antarctica that contained
what might have been fossilized microbes, and colored layers of
sediment that had unusually high concentrations of carbon, but
they hadnt found proof that life had ever existed on the planet,
much less that it existed now. That was the one big question everyone
wanted an answer to, and it was looking like the crew was going
to come home empty-handed.
They had already flown the two-thousand-mile length of the canyon,
so when Alex proposed taking a flight of similar length northward
to check out another site, nobody argued that the distance was
too great. Nobody argued much at all until he revealed his intended
landing site: the pyramid and face in Cydonia.
Maybe it was his idea of a practical joke. Or maybe it was revenge.
He knew that actual video footage of the area taken from a low-flying
plane would ruin the site forever as an object of new-age pseudoscience.
Maybe he wanted to get back at the tabloids that had made his
life miserable. Well never know. All we know for sure is that
he justified his choice by pointing out that the geology at Cydonia
was different from what they had been studying, so since they
had come up empty-handed on the search for life where they were,
it made a good candidate for further exploration.
And going there incidentally fulfilled the wishes of a large portion
of the population who had paid for the mission.
Nobody missed the irony of sending the "space alien" to check
out the site. I think Alex probably enjoyed that. And he certainly
enjoyed the idea of getting out by himself for a few days. With
the prospect of another eight months in a can with his three crewmates
coming up, he wanted as much solitude as he could soak in before
they left.
So he packed his toothbrush and enough food and water for a week,
and took off for Cydonia. He would have to spend a couple of cramped
nights sleeping in the cockpit of the plane, but he didnt care
about that. He had camped out plenty of times in pup tents on
fishing trips in Wyoming; he was used to sleeping in tight quarters.
This had to be the happiest time in his life. Here was a kid from
a small western town, a strange-looking kid that practically the
whole world had made fun ofmaking a solo flight a sixth of the
way around Mars. He was exactly where he wanted to be, and hed
gotten there despite all the superstitious, credulous, and downright
malicious people who stood in his way. And not only that, but
he had made his mother proud. Hell, he had made his father proud, and thats saying something.
A straight route would have taken him to the east of the Chryse
site where Viking 1 had landed, but he took the extra time to
fly over it, swooping low and circling around to take pictures
of the fragile little lander sitting there on the boulder-strewn
plain.
Everyone back home had grown familiar with images of the habitat
site from the air. Its bubble and lander and power generator provided
a comforting picture of home away from home, a place we could
all imagine ourselves living in our dreams. The Viking probe had
the exact opposite effect. It looked lost down there among the
rocks, a tiny speck of technology amid a vast, forbidding landscape,
its dish antenna still pointing into the sky like a hand reaching
for the planet it could never touch again.
"Thats, um, the Viking probe," Alex said quietly after his third
circle around it. "I guess Ill be going on to Cydonia now."
By the time he got there, hours later, his sense of humor had
returned. As he approached the pyramid and the face, his onboard
video camera showed the now-familiar rounded hills and craters
that we know them to be, but he talked as if an entire Martian
city were unfolding beneath him.
"Oh my God!" he said, "there it is. Look at the buildings, and
the elevated walkways, and the flags waving from the tops of the
towers. They look likeyes, yes, theyre Buffalo on a field of
blue! Theyre Wyoming flags! Proof positive that this is the site
of a massive government coverup. And theres the face. Is it a
space alien? Sorry to say it doesnt look a thing like me. In
fact it looks more like my dad. Hi, Dad." He banked the plane
around so the bumpy hill was right in front of him. "Look, its
speaking! Whats it saying? Looks like, Nyah, nyah, fooled you!
And now its fading away. Yes, its turning into just an ordinary
hill with craters in it. Oh, what cruel fate!"
He banked away. "Well, what a disappointment that was, eh? I guess
Ill just land over there by what used to be its chin and see
about doing some real science."
Mary, who had been monitoring his signal over the satellite link,
was laughing out loud. Most of us at Mission Control were, too,
but a few people werent. Space flight was a popularity game,
and Alex had just cost us some supporters.
He didnt care. I never got the chance to ask him, but I know
what he thought of that kind of support anyway.
He brought the plane in high, making his customary "Yee-ha!" yell
as he went through the roller coaster moment, then set it down
light as a feather on the rocky ground at the base of the hill.
He jumped out and tied down the wings so a stray gust of wind
wouldnt blow away his ride home, then turned around and trudged
through the rocks to see what he could see.
He did not send another transmission for seventeen minutes.
When he did, there was a peculiar strained quality to his voice.
"Mary," he said. "Houston. Ive found something."
The tone of Mary Paiz answering transmission clearly showed that
she expected another joke announcement. "Copy, Buck."
"No kidding, Wilma. Hold on. Going to visual." He switched on
his video camera and broadcast an image of a jagged stone in a
field of other stones. "See this?"
"Wonderful rock, Alexander."
"Not the rock. This patch here." His finger prodded a shadowy
area. "See this? Well, close up it looks like velvet."
"Velvet?" asked Mary.
"Yeah. Its fuzzy, and I cant get light to reflect from it, not
even from my helmet lamp. It looks like" He paused.
"Like what?" Mary said.
"I was going to say lichen, but its soft," he said. "Springy.
Like some kind of . . . " His reluctance to say the word was palpable.
After about five seconds of dead silencewhich seemed like the
longest hesitation in the history of the solar systemMary prompted
him again. "Alex? Come in, Alex."
The broadcast image grew as Alexander zoomed in. He described
the image out loud in case the transmission wasnt getting through.
"Okay. Reality check. At ten power I see little stalks with cup-shaped
ends, all packed together so theres hardly any space between
them. Theyre stuck to the rock by more little cups that look
quite a bit like the ones on top. Im trying not to be too credulous
here, but thats definitely an organized structure. A biological
structure."
"Are you shittin me?" Mary asked.
"Live transmission," Alex reminded her. "But no, Im not. This
is for real. They look like plants of some sort."
"Holy . . . . Wow. And us with less than a week left on the planet."
"Well, you know how it is. You dont find the souvenirs you want
until the end of your vacation."
"Do you see any more?"
"Let me look." Alex stood up and panned around at the other rocks.
"Yeah," he said. "Five or six patches of it. No, more than that.
Oh, theres a big one. Must be three inches across."
"Get samples," Mary told him.
"Duh," he said. His voice barely betrayed the excitement he had
to be feeling, but the biomonitors in his suit told a different
story. His heart was racing, and his skin temperature had risen
a couple of degrees. He knew hed just made the history books
again, and this entry would dwarf the one about Driers syndrome
or even the first mission to Mars. He was now the man who had
discovered the first indisputable evidence of extraterrestrial
life.
He spent the next two days scraping stuff off rocks, digging in
the ground for other organisms, and climbing up and down the hill
looking for anything else he could find. He even bagged up one
entire rock a couple of feet across because it had four different
kinds of growth on it and he thought maybe it would provide some
idea of how the Martian ecosystem worked.
And then it was time to head back. He packed his samples in the
plane, strapped everything down, and lifted off for home. He took
the plane up a few hundred feet, tilted the engines forwardand
dropped like a rock.
And kept dropping. Long after the wings should have caught enough
air to start flying, the plane still generated no lift. "Shit,"
Alex said, "there must be a downdraft. Increasing thrust to max."
The plane kept dropping. In one-third gee, he had plenty of time
to watch the ground come up at him, but his biomonitors showed
his pulse rate barely rising. "Its not going to work in flight
mode," he said. "Transitioning back to hover mode." He angled
the engines back. "Come on, you dirty bitch. Come on, come on!"
We heard the impact. It sounded like someone had dropped a dictionary
on a beer can.
"Alex?" Mary called out. "Alex, are you okay?"
"Well, Im down," he said, "but I wouldnt say Im okay. Both
engines broke loose in the crash. Theyre doing cartwheels across
the rocks now. There, one of em stopped. The other ones still
rolling around like a pinwheel." He coughed. "Damn. Bit my tongue."
"Are you . . . can you . . . ?"
"Fix the plane? I dont see how. Even if the engines still work,
the wings are crumpled like tin foil. But it looks like Im going
to have to figure something out, doesnt it?" He didnt state
the obvious: there was no backup plane to come get him.
He got out of the wreckage and hiked through the rocks to the
closest engine. It had been battered so badly that it was barely
recognizable. The other one had tried to suck in a rock as it
was winding down, and what was left of the turbine lay scattered
all around it.
"Looks like time for plan B," Alex said.
SPACE BOY MUTINY!!
Did He Intend to Stay on Mars All Along?
There was no plan B. Everyone wracked their brains for a way to
get an astronaut two thousand miles back to base without a plane,
but there just wasnt any. He wouldnt make a tenth that distance
on foot. Dave suggested going for him in the landing vehicle,
but Alex vetoed that idea right away.
"Its not designed for suborbital flight," he said. "Besides,
even if you could restart the lower stage and fly it, youd have
to rob fuel from the upper stage, and then all four of us would
be stuck on the ground until our food and air ran out. If we dont
get back into orbit within the week well miss our launch window."
"We cant just leave you there," Dave said.
"Im all for rescue if youve got a realistic plan, but using
the lander isnt going to work."
At Mission Control, we had to concur. That was the hardest decision
I ever made in my life, even though I was just part of the engineering
group and even though I knew there wasnt a real decision. We
might have risked the other three for a chance to save Alex, but
we wouldnt doom all four of them just to make a vain attempt.
I wasnt the capcom on this mission, but I was Alexs best friend,
so I got to deliver the bad news. There was no way to hold a conversation
with the speed of light lag what it was, so I just made a short
speech and had my voice synthesizer remove all the pauses before
transmitting it. I wont transcribe it here; all the radio messages
from the mission are on file for the curious. Theres only one
thing to say in a situation like that anyway. You say youre sorry
that things worked out the way they did, and youre going to miss
your best friend very much, but you want your other friends to
come back home safe, dammit, so dont try anything stupid.
There were a lot of tearful goodbyes. Alexs mom and dad talked
with him a couple of times, and he told them not to worry, that
hed had a pretty full life and no regrets. "Id have come here
even if I knew in advance that this was how it would end," he
said. The newspapers made quite a deal out of that, and for the
first time since Alex was born some of them ran an entire article
without once mentioning his physical appearance.
Mary wasnt ready to give up. She cursed us all, including Alex,
and tried to convince Dave and Shawnee to defy orders and try
the lander anyway, but Dave had backed off from that idea after
hed seen how impossible it was, and Shawnee merely said, "Over
my dead body. No offense, Alex."
Alex said, "None taken."
Launch time came, and with a great deal of argument but no real
hope left, Mary and Dave and Shawnee climbed aboard the lander
and rode it back into orbit. The transfer vehicle was still waiting,
snug and warm, to take them back to Earth.
And Alex? He did the only thing left for him to do. He studied
the lifeforms he had found and transmitted his findings back to
us. He told us how the organisms cupped tops followed the sun,
how they closed up at night, and how the whole colony moved, ever
so slowly, around the face of the rocks over the course of the
day. They werent quite plants, and they werent quite animals.
They were something else entirely. Alexs description of them
was incredible, exciting like nothing else humanity had ever experienced,
but we couldnt forget that we were learning it from a man whose
time was rapidly running out.
He couldnt either. Occasionally his voice would crack, and he
would stay quiet for a few minutes while he got his emotions under
control again. Those of us listening were sniffling and wiping
our eyes as well. By then we numbered at least half the people
on Earth, since the TV networks as well as the NASA channel had
started live coverage. I was pissed that they hadnt bothered
until someone was about to die, but thats the way the media do
things. Science by itself isnt interesting; human drama is what
gets the ratings.
Alex knew that. He hadnt spent a lifetime under the media bug-lens
without learning what played well and what didnt. He must have
been planning his final speech since the moment he knew he was
stranded. It wasnt a long onehe knew the average viewers attention
span, toobut he said what he wanted to say at the one moment
in his life when he knew people would hear it. And maybe even
listen.
It came in the middle of day five. He had had a hard time the
previous night, nearly freezing in the crumpled ultralights tiny
cabin when the outside temperature had dropped to minus-sixty.
The planes batteries were dead and his suit batteries were nearly
gone as well; he kept from freezing by exercising constantly,
which burned up air faster than his recycler could keep up with
it. He was down to practically nothing by morning; it was clear
he wouldnt survive another night.
He spent half the day finishing up what observations he could
make, describing what microscopic details of the "planimals" he
could see with the portable sampling kit, but just a little after
noon, Cydonia time, he stopped and said, "I think its time we
all had a little talk."
The video camera was dead by then, so all we have to go on are
the radio signals and the orbital cameras pictures of his footprints,
but it seems apparent that he climbed up the flank of the hill
above the ultralight, stopping at the "chin" and looking south
as he spoke.
"I am standing here on an alien world," he said. "Ive been called
an alien myself over the years, so maybe its appropriate that
this is where I wound up. I certainly cant ignore the irony of
my final resting place, a hill with some craters on it that made
so many people think there was life on Mars. And so there is,
but it has nothing to do with mysterious monuments to anthropocentric
thinking."
He laughed softly. "Anthropocentric. Look it up. Its a dirty
word, but its in the dictionary." He must have sat down on a
rock; we could hear his pressure suit creak. "I wish each and
every one of you could see what I see here. Mars is nothing like
Earth. Its got a volcano the size of the United States and a
canyon so wide that you can stand in the bottom and not see either
side. When I woke up this morning there was dry ice on the ground.
Frozen carbon dioxide. The air froze here last night. Its like that everywhere I turn. There
are more wonders here than we could even begin to imagine . .
. and Im here to see them because we were crazy enough to come
look."
He sighed. "Why cant that be the thing that excites our imaginations?
Why must we waste our minds and our energy on delusions that we
should have put aside long ago? Faces on Mars. Alien abductions.
Imaginary beings dictating our lives at every turn. Whats wrong
with us? We have brains, we have senses; why cant we use them
to understand the universe around us rather than make up elaborate
fantasies and pretend theyre the truth?
"Well, heres a truth for you. I am Alexander Drier. Like the
rest of you, Im a human being. And from this moment on, like
the rest of you, Im a Martian. We all became Martians the second
humanity set foot on this world, and because of what weve learned
here well all carry a little bit of Mars around with us for the
rest of our lives.
"Does that somehow diminish our humanity? Of course not. It means
were more human. Because only human beings could have gotten
here. We dreamt it, we wanted it, we built it, and we did it.
And Mars will always be here, a beckoning light in the sky for
anyone else with a dream and the determination to see it through.
"I want you to remember that, when you look at the new face on
Mars." He stood up and walked back down the hill, out into the
sandy plain beyond.
"New face?" asked Mary, in equatorial orbit a third of the way around
the planet.
"Youll see," Alex replied.
They didnt see for several hours, until the polar mapping satellite
made its pass over him. By then hed made most of one circuit
and he was well into a second one, scuffing up the soil with his
boots like a kid making designs in fresh snow.
It was a bit lopsided, as patterns drawn on the ground without
surveying instruments often are, but it was perfectly recognizable.
A long oval, ballooning out on one end and narrowing down to a
pointy chin on the other. Big, almond-shaped eyes filling nearly
half the enclosed space. Two little dots for a nose and a single
line for a mouth, bent upward at the ends in a goofy grin. Alexander
Driers own caricature.
"Alex, what the hell is that for?" Mary asked when she saw it.
"A . . . reminder," he said. His voice was ragged and he was panting
hard. "Besides, people wanted . . . a face. Who am I to deny them?"
She laughed, but it turned into a sob. "Im sorry, Alex. Im sorry
it has to end like this."
"Me too," he said, "but believe me, its better than it might
have been. At least I got here. Oof!" There was a thump over the
radio.
"Alex?"
"Sall right. Tripped on a rock. Its getting hard to see. Look,
I dont have much daylight left, or air either, and I dont really
want to make people listen to me die, so Im going to shut off
my radio."
"No! Alex, you dont have to die alone."
"Im not alone. Ive got you, and Mom and Dad, and Colin, and
Uncle George, and everybody. Ive got all these little whatever-they-ares
growing on the rocks all around me. Ive got the whole universe
right over my head. Im not alone."
"Thats not what I meant. I meant"
"I know what you meant, but thats not the way I want to go. Look,
its time. Everyone out there, I love you. Try to love each other,
too, okay? This is Alexander Drier, signing off."
There was a click as he switched off his radio.
MARS MISSION A HOAX!
Space Boy Spotted Pumping Gas In Wyoming
The next pass showed where he had fallen. He had made it back
around to the chin, and had lain down with his arms and legs outstretched,
a tiny body to go with the face he had drawn. The orbital cameras
resolution wasnt good enough to tell if he had opened his suit
or not, but he wouldnt have lasted long either way. With night
falling and the temperature plummeting, he would have frozen to
death in minutes.
The face didnt last a month, of course. The next windstorm obliterated
his tracks, leaving only his body and the crumpled remains of
the ultralight airplane as evidence that anyone had ever been
there.
But we knew. Alexs last days wouldnt fade from our memory, not
for as long as anyone looked up in the night sky and wondered
what was out there.
Mary and Dave and Shawnee made it back to Earth with only the
usual harrowing adventures. Congress cut NASAs budget the next
year, but not as bad as we had been afraid they would, so we cautiously
began work on our next phase in exploring our solar system: an
orbital habitat that people can actually live in long enough to
travel to the outer planets. The first prototype will be tested
for a couple of years in Earth orbit, then leased out to the highest
bidder for living space. I figure I might just survive long enough
to rent some cubic there myself. It wont be Heinleins Waldo,
but itll be something for an old man who can barely move here
on Earth.
In the meantime, life lurches along the way it usually does. The
newspapers still carry horoscopes, but theyre not on the front
page anymore. Government scandals and student unrest have taken
up that space again.
And of course the latest Alien Shocker.
Three months ago a boy was born in Mississipi with Driers Syndrome.
His parents are good but simple people who hadnt expected a media
feeding frenzy at their front door, but they knew opportunity
when they saw it. Theyve been portrayed as country hicks who
ran afoul of an alien mad scientist, but theyve already bought
a house on fifty acres, fenced and guarded by a dozen rent-a-cops
until they can find enough rottweilers and dobermans to do the
job for free.
That solved their external problem, but internally theyre still
going through the same thing Mark and Faye went through nearly
thirty years ago.
The Driers arent answering their mail, so the mother wrote me
a plaintive letter, begging me to help her understand her child.
Among the things she asked was a simple, straightforward question:
Is my son a spaceman?
I intend to answer with the only truth I know, taught to me by
my friend, the astronaut from Wyoming.
Thats up to him.
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