Ghosts in the Wind, Part 3 – Wednesday Blog by Seán Thomas Kane
Act 5
The Peregrine spent the two hour flight out to the source abuzz with active anticipation. The crew of four knew how much was riding on the results of this journey. Olivia kept her eyes on the monitor that showed their distance from the source, worried that everything she’d staked her career on was about to go up in a great cloud of dust like the carbon traces she’d chased all the way from Earth. “Still, something’s out there,” she kept thinking, “Something’s out there.”
“We’re approaching the source,” Anneli announced to the crew, “Prepare for landing.”
Every urge in her body wanted to make Olivia jump from her seat and go stand behind Anneli as they landed but she knew that wasn’t safe for any of them. Instead, she stayed in her place and buckled up. This time they boarded the Peregrine in their E.V. suits and as they approached the landing coordinates they merely needed to lock and seal their helmets. All four dutifully did so after one last lecture from Lieutenant Commander Quillen about how this mission would be closely watched by every allied space agency back on Earth and so needed to be conducted in the best manner possible. Olivia looked across the way at her fellow scientists Dr. Rosalind O’Brien the chemist and sometimes geologist, and Dr. Viola Penelope, M.D., whose medical knowledge was backed up by enough biology expertise to keep all the Elysians occupying the base alive and well enough to complete their missions and return home to Earth when their time came. Both were as determined as Olivia to see this mission through, whatever the outcome, and if possible, to prove conclusively that there had once been life on Mars.
Anneli and Jo sat at the front of the shuttle, the Finn at the helm and the American in the co-pilot’s seat monitoring the shuttle’s engines and structural integrity. The Martian weather had begun to change again, ever fickle as it was, to which end neither they nor the meteorologists in Elysium or back on Earth could determine yet. Jo earned a scolding stare from Quillen when she quipped that the forecast of “it could either be the biggest dust storm we’ve ever experienced or nothing at all,” was “just like our daily forecast in Kansas City.” Durante laughed at that, as did Viola, Jim, Anneli, and Olivia. The engineer’s shrugging can-do attitude was what Olivia appreciated most about her. Jo McGonigle knew weird things could happen at any moment that would throw a mission right off track, but she was ready for whatever nature, humanity, or technology threw at her.
Olivia soon felt the landing gears descend and make contact with the ground below. “Elysium, this is Peregrine, we have landed at the source of the dust storm. Proceeding to disembark and collect further samples,” Anneli said into her radio.
“Peregrine, this is Elysium, you are cleared to egress,” came the call back from base.
“Jim’s voice” Olivia thought.
Olivia and the team unbuckled themselves and stood from their seats, making their clumsy way to the rear of the shuttle where a ramp lowered that led them out to the surface. Olivia led the way as usual, after all she was in command of this mission. Anneli was the most qualified security officer, but she also was needed to fly the Peregrine back to base if anything happened to them. So, Olivia was the one who led them outside.
The first thing she noticed was the haze that glowed over the sunshine, blocking some of the light that would’ve been helpful in closely analyzing anything on the surface that matched the carbon traces they were looking for. Rosalind and Viola shortly followed Olivia down the ramp, while Jo and Anneli stayed aboard, monitoring the on-board sensors and keeping things ready for launch should any of that ever-considered trouble arise. Olivia pulled out her tablet and began following the carbon sensor forward and to the left, turning to pass the shuttle until the three scientists were visible to Anneli and Jo from the forward windows. They continued walking for another 200 meters until the sensor stopped calling for forward motion.
Olivia took in a deep breath and looked down at the rocks below her. There wasn’t too much sand that she was slowed down by it, it wasn’t as though she were walking on a beach, the sand covering her feet. Instead, she found just enough that she began to try to move some away as she took steps about. The sensor in her tablet clearly showed the carbon was right below her. She turned to Rosalind, “Do you have the brush?”
“Yes,” came the reply over their comms. Rosalind was carrying a bag of tools. She set it on the ground half-a-meter away from Olivia and pulled out a paleontologist’s brush, “Here it is, Olivia.”
“Thanks,” she replied, taking the brush in her gloved left hand, and letting herself kneel down onto the ground, a challenging task in her E.V. suit, yet something she’d practiced enough times in Houston, on the Moon, and here on Mars that it wasn’t as much of a challenge as she still expected it to be. Olivia began brushing around where the carbon sensor was beeping and began to see more of the dust move.
“Are you seeing anything?” Viola asked, leaning to get a better look.
“Careful, you’re blocking my light,” Olivia replied. Viola stepped away and around, so she wasn’t eclipsing the Sun.
“There’s something there,” Rosalind peered from the side opposite Viola, on her knees as well next to Olivia.
Olivia kept brushing away as the rockface began to reveal itself further and further. At first, she thought she saw the impression of some ancient water or water ice reveal itself with a spindly impression, but that later gave way to something more defined, for there wasn’t just one spindle but several that kept growing in number. “They’re connected together!” she shouted through the comms, “Look at this! There’s some sort of a central core to it!” She seemed to have uncovered the entirety of the rock’s surface and saw what looked like something, though frankly she wasn’t sure what she was seeing yet at all. “What would you call it, Viola?” Olivia asked.
“Well, it looks like a complex structure, um, those could be the branches or spines of a plant, or they could be the limbs of an animal coming off of its main body, like some sort of arthropod.”
“What do you think, Rosalind?”
“I’ve never seen anything like it, I just don’t know what it could be.”
“Olivia, you better get your samples and pictures as quickly as you can, that haze is a dust storm after all. This whole place is going to be flooded soon,” Jo said over the comms from the Peregrine.
“How long do we have?” Olivia asked.
“An hour at best before it hits us, but that’s as long as the wind doesn’t pick up any further to the east.”
“Got it, we’ll get what we need and be out of here,” Olivia said. She turned to Rosalind and Viola, “Okay, can we get an etching of this?”
“Not in this wind,” Rosalind replied.
Olivia turned to the northeast and noticed the wind was picking the dust up more than it had just a minute before. If she couldn’t get an etching to study, then she’d have to get a few pictures. She pulled out her camera and began snapping, but no sooner had she extracted the device then the dust began to get into the camera and damage its gears. She knew she should’ve left this camera back in the lab, but it was a gift from her father, a hobbyist with old analog film cameras. She thought he’d be so proud to know the first photograph of an alien lifeform was taken with his camera. She put it back in its bag and turned to Rosalind, “Give me a shovel, we’re taking this fossil with us.”
“Understood, Doctor.” Rosalind turned back to the bag and grabbed the shovel out of it, unfolding it and letting some of the dust fall away from it as she did so. She handed the shovel to Olivia who set it on the ground next to her and began to brush away more dust to reveal any seams that might show her where this fossil finished, and the other rocks began. She just noticed a crack when Anneli’s voice sounded over the comm, “I need to start the engines if we’re going to keep them dust free enough to take off.”
“Understood, we’ll be back on board in just a minute,” Olivia said as she began to work at that crack with the shovel. The fossil began to slowly pry away from the other rocks and Olivia removed the shovel from one side turning it towards the far side of the fossil, trying her best to force it free. It began to move, but the cracks started to creep closer to the thing encased inside of it, too close for anyone’s liking. “Go back to the first side and see if you can get underneath it,” Rosalind hurriedly suggested. Olivia obliged, returning to the first side. She was able to get the lip of the shovel underneath the rock and slowly, gently, over what seemed to everyone involved on the ground and in the Peregrine to be well over an hour yet what was merely five minutes free the fossil from the rockface.
Olivia held the fossil up in the Martian air, gently placing her gloved hands beneath it. She turned to Viola, “place the bag around my hands.” Viola obliged with a carefully handled thick plastic bag, which was then placed into a rectangular box big enough for the fossil to fit into. “Okay, Peregrine, we’re coming back in,” Olivia said, as she held the fossil gently ahead of her, “like a pizza box” she thought, catching herself laughing.
“What’s so funny?” Viola asked walking beside her.
“We put the first evidence of Martian life into a glorified carry-out box,” Olivia replied. The three scientists stopped at the foot of the Peregrine‘s ramp and laughed, looking at each other.
Viola put her hand on Olivia’s arm and leaned in with her belly laugh before Rosalind shouted, “No, stop! You could damage it!”
Viola stood upright, looking down at the box in Olivia’s hands, “Sorry,” she said, looking up into Rosalind’s eyes, a big smile on her face, “Let’s get this thing back to base.”
They ascended the ramp, which quickly closed behind them. Olivia took her seat first, “Viola, could you buckle me up? I’m not putting this box down until we get back to the lab.”
“You’ve got it,” came the reply as Viola gently moved the seat belts around Olivia’s outstretched arms and buckled her in. She returned to her seat across the shuttle and sat, buckling herself next to Rosalind who was already ready to go. “Alright, Anneli, get us out of here!”
“Elysium, this is the Peregrine, we’re ready for launch and on our way back,” Anneli called out over the comms.
“Get in the air now, Captain, you’re almost out of time, that wind is really picking up out there!” Jim shouted over the comms.
Anneli engaged the vertical thrusters, and the Peregrine took flight, turning in a gentle but assertive arc and heading back towards Elysium.
“Can we outrun the storm?” Olivia asked.
“At our usual speed, no,” Jo said, “but I’ve got our fuel efficiency up to 105%, which should get us into the shuttle bay just in time before the storm hits Elysium.”
The Peregrine raced ahead, far and fast, making the return trip 30 minutes quicker than usual and landing into Shuttle Bay 1 with a minute to spare before the dust hit the bay doors that closed as soon as the Peregrine was clear.
Olivia waited for the pressurization light to turn green and she nodded to Viola whose hands went to the locks on her helmet, “No, I need to get this to the lab, just unbuckle me.” Olivia commanded, a rare order from her that Viola followed without question. Now released, Olivia ran out of the Peregrine, her crew following after her and towards the shuttle bay doors where Durante, Quillen, and Jim were waiting. “Move, move!” Olivia shouted, running straight for the doors which glided open upon sensing her presence. The command crew stood aside as she passed, still in her E.V. suit. “Follow me to the science lab!” she shouted as she turned left and headed around the circle quicker than she’d ever moved before in that suit. Some residents were in the corridor as she passed, quickly moving out of the way to let the sudden appearance of the suited astrobiologist through. She turned left at her lab’s door and ran in, setting the box down on the center table and stepping back, unlocking, and removing her helmet, gloves, and then reaching back to press the button that would unzip the rest of her suit. It fell to her feet revealing her jumpsuit as Durante, Quillen, Jim, Anneli, Jo, Viola, and Rosalind entered the room together, the Peregrine crew out of breath for their own E.V. suit run. “Lock the door behind you, Rosalind,” Olivia gave one more command, she hoped it’d be her last of the day. The lock sounded.
“Okay, Doctor, what’ve you got?” Durante asked.
“Something.”
“Something?” Quillen asked, eyebrow raised.
“Yeah, something,” Olivia said, taking the lid from the box and pulling the bag out of it, placing it gently on the desk. “I’m just not sure what that something is yet.”
Durante looked down at the fossil that lay on the desk, the soft light glowing from underneath the opaque surface gave the fossil a sort of sanitized feel, like something brought in from out in the open for the first time. “Do you have pictures of it where you found it?” he asked.
“Yes, I need to get them developed, but I got a few,” Olivia replied.
“Developed?” Jim asked.
“Yeah, I decided to take my Dad’s old camera out there with me, take some film pictures of it.”
“Did you use flash?” Jo asked.
“Of course not, that would’ve damaged the fossil.”
“So, it’s a fossil, then?” Quillen puzzled over it, a look of genuine curiosity crossing her face.
“It seems to be one. I need to do more work on it. Can we talk about this with command in the morning?” Olivia asked, “There will be silence from this lab to everyone from here until I’ve got your go-ahead.”
“You do your research, figure out what this is in two hours. I want an answer by 14:00. You got back fast enough we might be able to send something back to Earth about this once the storm passes,” Durante said, “Good luck!” he turned, taking one last look at the fossil, and heading out the door.
Quillen followed, but Jim held back for another moment staring down at the fossil before him. “You did it, Olivia, you found the proof!” he looked up at her, eyes watery, a glowing smile on his face.
“Thanks, Jim,” she was still shocked at the moment she found herself in and so couldn’t say more. He turned and left, letting the door close behind him.
Silence filled the room as Anneli, Jo, Rosalind, and Viola walked up to the table from each side and looked down at it. “Things were moving so fast down there on the surface it feels like we haven’t been introduced yet,” Viola said.
“Well, before it really introduces itself, we need to figure out what it is,” Rosalind replied.
“Any initial thoughts?” Olivia asked.
“Well, let’s get a digital photo of it and put that into a search engine, see what comes up,” Jo suggested.
Olivia turned to her fallen E.V. suit and pulled the tablet out of its pocket, aiming it above the fossil and snapping a photo of the rock below. “Running a search on the image now,” she announced. Several suggestions came up, but one seemed closest to this in the fossil record, “has anyone ever heard of Hallucigenia?” she asked.
“That’s a sort of worm from the Cambrian Period, right?”
“The what?” Jo asked.
“The Cambrian Period was the first period of the current eon in Earth’s geologic history. I think it started around 530 million years ago and ended 485 million years ago,” Olivia replied.
“Close, it started 538 million years ago,” Rosalind corrected.
“Thanks,” Olivia nodded to her colleague.
“So, you’re saying this fossil resembles that Hallucigenia that existed on Earth over 400 million years ago?” Viola asked.
“Yes, though I doubt it’s necessarily related, after all life on Earth had 4 billion years to evolve after planetary formation. Life on Mars would’ve already been well and truly extinct by then. The Martian Noachian Period corresponds to Earth’s Hadean and Archean Eons, which ended 1.9 billion years before the Cambrian Period began,” Rosalind explained.
“So, not only is this the first alien life ever discovered,” Olivia began, “it’s also the oldest lifeform ever discovered.”
“What have we done?” Viola asked.
“We’ve changed how we understand the very nature of life itself,” Anneli said, looking down at the fossil, “there are so many things we don’t know that could still be out there.”
“We need to go back out there, to search further, see what more we can find!” Olivia shot back, the excitement was all-consuming. She hurried over to her E.V. suit on the floor and took the camera case from its belt, pulling out her father’s old film camera from within and raising it to her eye, opening the shutter and snapping a photograph of the fossil.
Jo looked up at Olivia who stood there staring at the fossil, camera absent mindedly being fiddled with in her hands, “You got it, the photo. That could be the one on the front page of every newspaper, every television station, every news site on Earth.”
“I, I don’t know what to say, what to do,” Olivia stammered, she felt her confidence drain away, “could it really be possible? Is this really an alien?” She looked down at her feet, “what do we need to do to confirm that this fossil is real, Dr. O’Brien?”
“If we can date the carbon molecules then that’ll be a start, but radiocarbon dating has rarely been used on fossils that predate the end of the Cretaceous 66 million years ago, so I don’t know if it’d work.”
“What else?” Olivia asked sharply. When no answer came, she added, “We need options to prove that this is a genuine Martian fossil.”
Rosalind spoke up again, “Well, Martian geology is dated using impact crater density, so what we can say for sure is the area where we found this fossil, Terra Cimmeria, has more impact craters than other areas. There’ve been geological charts of Mars that show that area’s rocks are definitely Noachian in origin for almost eighty years now, so we have proof that the rocks in that area date to the Noachian.”
“I think we need to go back out there and find another fossil to confirm this theory.”
“That dust storm will have covered the entire source area in meters of debris by the time it’s safe to go back out there,” Viola sighed.
“Then we need to try radiometric dating, though we don’t have that equipment here at Elysium,” Rosalind offered with some reluctance.
“So, in order to prove it we need to contact people on the outside, but in order to get clearance to contact people on the outside we need definitive proof first,” Olivia said, tapping her left index finger to her lips, her thumb and middle fingers resting on her chin as she paced about the lab. “Rosalind, what can you do in your own lab here at Elysium?”
“I can try radiocarbon dating a small piece of the rock around the fossil, though I don’t know what we’ll find. Most carbon is hard to date after the lifeform has been deceased for around 60,000 years.”
“Do it, go get your tools and collect your sample. We need something more to show to command at 14:00.”
“I’ll go get that drill now,” Rosalind replied, turning, and running out the lab door. Her own lab was two doors down still in the Science Section, but she nevertheless felt a strong sense of urgency, after all everyone’s careers hung on this discovery. Collecting a dental drill that she used on rocks she returned to the fossil and began working, taking a small sliver of the rock edge off, and letting it fall into a vial that Olivia had provided. The extraction done she turned back to the corridor and returned to her lab, extracting the sample with a pair of tweezers, and putting it onto a petri dish, into which she released several drops of a liquid scintillator which combined with the carbon to convert it to benzene, drawing out the carbon-14 from the sample which she could then attempt to date.
After an hour Rosalind returned to Olivia’s lab. Jo was looking at some of Olivia’s equipment, no doubt trying to increase its efficiency and range, while Anneli sat by the door, unsure of how she, their pilot, could help. Rosalind and Olivia were sitting at her desk analyzing pictures and negatives they’d taken of the fossil intently. Rosalind announced her presence by clearing her throat, then saying “I’m sorry, the carbon is too old to date using radiocarbon dating.”
Olivia turned from the monitor and looked at the fossil from across the room, the weariness of the whole experience showed on her face. “Okay, if that’s what we have to do then let’s go to Command and tell them.” She rose and walked over to the door. “Rosalind, Viola, could you come with me?” The scientists obliged, Viola joined Olivia and Rosalind at the door. Olivia turned to Anneli and Jo, “The rest of you, please stay here with the fossil. Let no one but us into this room, understood?”
“Understood,” Anneli said, finding a purpose for her at this stage in the mission. She would guard the fossil, the only known evidence of life from another planet from the rest of Elysium Base until Olivia returned with a decision about its next steps.
Olivia walked with Rosalind and Viola into the Command Console and approached Quillen, “We have results we need to share with Commander Durante.”
“You’re thirty minutes early,” Quillen replied, looking Olivia in the eye. The two women were the same height and shared a common determination to see their missions through.
“It’s urgent, Commander,” Olivia said with all the strength her tired voice could muster.
Quillen turned, waving them forward, “This way.” She led the trio into Durante’s office where he sat reading something on his monitor that made him frown.
Durante looked up, leaning forward in anticipation, “Dr. Stephens, what have you found?”
“Commander, the fossil is too old to be accurately dated with the equipment that Dr. O’Brien has here at Elysium, but based on the geological dating of the surrounding area where it was found in Terra Cimmeria, we argue that it is in fact a Noachian fossil and is at least 3.7 billion years old.”
“That’s something at least then,” Durante replied, leaning back in his seat. “Dr. O’Brien, your radiocarbon dating didn’t work?”
“No, sir. Radiocarbon dating is less accurate if a sample is more than 60,000 years old. The time scale is off the charts, this fossil is too old to be dated using that method. However, radiometric dating will be more accurate, and is far more likely to confirm the age of the fossil. If it is Noachian then it could be contemporaneous with the earliest known life yet found on Earth, which dates to the Archean Eon, but those are microorganisms that are dwarfed by the complexity of this fossil.”
“So, Martian life was more evolved than Earth life?” Quillen asked.
“Is that genuine curiosity I’m hearing, Quillen?” Durante asked, looking up at where she stood to his right.
“Skeptical curiosity. Martian geological chronology isn’t as defined as Earth’s. We still just don’t know enough about how old the rocks on this planet are, thanks to this same problem that O’Brien is bringing up.”
“Then what do you want to do about this fossil, Dr. Stephens?”
“Sir, we need to take it back to Earth to have it radiometrically dated. It can stay in an allied government lab under tight security. We don’t have to announce why one of my team is going home early, whoever it is will have a sudden need to return––”
“They’re too ill to remain on Mars, perhaps?” Viola suggested.
“Yes, and they need to return for better medical care. The work on the fossil will take whoever goes back out of the public eye for long enough to recover before the news breaks back home.”
“Finally, you’re thinking less like a scientist and more like a strategist, Stephens,” Durante said, leaning further back in his chair and putting his hands behind his head. “Alright, it’s your fossil, so you’re the one going home. The Australians are going back in four months. I’ll alert Jack Collins, their mission commander, that you’re coming along for the ride.”
“Jo will be on that flight too,” Olivia said, smiling at the thought of getting a ride home with her friend from Opportunity III.
“Jo?” Durante asked, “Oh, yes McGonigle, the JPL Engineer. Yeah, that works out pretty nicely, doesn’t it.”
“It’s settled then,” Quillen said, “I’ll adjust your mission parameters and put you on the Endeavour heading home.”
“Thank you, Commander. This discovery means the world to me,” Olivia smiled meekly, her energy restored however slightly by the commander’s decision to let her return to Earth with the fossil.
“Go to your team, Doctor,” Durante said gently, “And give them a well-earned rest. In the meantime, we need to keep that fossil in your lab with limited access. I’ll have McGonigle install added security measures so only your team will have badge access to the lab. No one goes in or out without your approval, and that includes command staff.”
“Thank you, sir,” Olivia replied, nodding, and turning to walk out of the Command Console. Jim was standing at his station, waiting expectantly to hear what she had to say. She turned to him as she walked past and whispered, “I’m taking it home.”
~
That evening in their quarters Olivia lay back in her bunk while Viola, Rosalind, and Jo chatted away about everything they’d discovered. By this point word of the fossil had spread throughout the base, no secret was safe in a place so small as Elysium anyway, that Commander Durante had to make an announcement over the P.A. system to everyone there that Olivia’s lab would only be accessible to her team, and everyone else was to stay clear of it. He posted several security officers in four shifts outside her lab, day & night. She’d get used to the idea of having a guard standing outside. Still, she found herself drifting off to sleep, the stress and weariness of it all had worn her down more than usual. It really had been a long day. Yet one thing that Viola said from across the way in her bunk caught her attention just enough for her to open her eyes and listen, “Olivia’s going to be famous though, I mean we all are, but she’s the one who came all this way to look for it, who tracked it down, and who found it. The first alien life we’ve ever known! When she announces the results, she’ll be on TV, in books, the whole nine yards!”
“Maybe,” Olivia said, pulling back her bunk’s curtain just enough to see Viola’s face, “But at the end of the day I’m still just a scientist. I don’t care for the fame, hell, I don’t even think I want it. I came here to prove a theory, and so far, it’s still just a theory. Who knows whether we’ll be able to radiometrically date it. No one’s ever tried that on a Martian rock before.”
“It’s still a new frontier, Olivia. Something to be proud of.”
Olivia thought of her brother’s kids, going to school telling their friends that their aunt the astronaut had actually found an alien on Mars. Well, a dead alien, but an alien, nonetheless. She smiled, closed her eyes, and drifted off to a much earned sleep. The rocky ground of Terra Cimmeria filled her imagination, and she saw it begin to turn back in time, to fill with liquid water, until she herself was submerged beneath the waves. Then there before her the fossil broke free of the rock into which its remains had been encased billions of years before and began to swim about in the waters of this its prehistoric ocean home. She had found it, had traced a ghost on the wind and found its grave on this rocky planet six months from home.
























