1) This story is a psycho-drama which, although not violent, does shade a bit dark at times. It includes impregnation and non-consensual cuckolding. If these elements are not to your liking, then please move on to something that better suits your taste.
2) It is a work of sheer fantasy in all respects, and is intended for the purposes of erotic entertainment only. In real life it is incumbent on all of us to ensure consent in any situation, and to show respect and empathy to those around us--not just with regard to sex, but in every aspect of life.
3) All characters are over the age of 18.
4) I love to receive positive feedback and constructive suggestions. I hope you enjoy it.
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1. Stranded
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You know it's serious when they schedule you for a live videoconference with both Flight and Capcom.
Well, a "live" videoconference anyway. That close to Mars, the lag-time was nearly 10 minutes. Let's just say it wasn't an interactive experience. But that's exactly why I knew the affair was serious. For the heavy hitters to engage in such an inefficient form of communication? It signaled something major was up.
As soon as the link was active, Flight dove right in--her face displaying its usual gravity, only moreso. "MCT will follow up with details, but I wanted to sketch the big picture for you myself. The gist of it is this: a little over three months ago, we lost contact with Mars Ground Station. All efforts to reestablish communications have failed. Aerial photos show an explosion, with significant damage to the facility, including the entire comms array. The good news is we've detected activity at the site--leading us to believe there are survivors."
Next, Capcom took over. He made a show of concern, but mostly followed the standard mission-control playbook of keeping us task-focused. "I'm sure this development comes as a shock to you, as it did to us. But we'll be guiding you every step of the way. A new mission profile has already been developed. Your first priority will be to contact the Alpha-team crew, and render aid as necessary. Your second priority will be assessment. If the base is salvageable, we may be able to proceed with the mission. However, the likelier outcome is extraction. The Danae capsule is capable of transporting both you and Alpha team back to Earth, though it will be tight."
We tried asking questions, but the transmission delay was cumbersome, and few answers seemed forthcoming. Once we'd terminated the link, Glover made it clear (in his rod-up-ass Marine Corps pilot way) that he, for one, was pissed. "Three months they've been sitting on this information, and only now thought to share it with us? When we're days away from touchdown!?"
Sharon was more philosophical. "From their perspective, what was the point? We were halfway through the trip, with no way to turn around. And there wasn't much they could do to prep us either, since no one has any idea what's going on down there. I'm sure the psych consultants said it was better if we didn't spend all those weeks fretting about it helplessly."
Glover appeared to accept her logic--perhaps finding comfort in the notion that the higher-ups knew what they were doing. "Well," he growled at last, "I did wonder why MCT was scheduling refresher lessons on how to patch up the comms gear..."
We spent the last few days of the voyage running scenarios and updating our training. The catastrophe on the ground hadn't thrown us as badly as you might expect. We'd long since accepted that there were risks to what we were doing. And, we had reason to think the Alpha crew had survived, which was encouraging. Beyond that, we trusted our skills, and the organization behind us. We would meet whatever obstacles we encountered planet-side, and find a way to overcome them.
Still, I couldn't shake a downbeat mood as we started in on the landing protocols. I'd spent 4 years of my life preparing, and 7 months jammed in this capsule, just to get to Mars. But unless we found the damage to be less than expected, MCT was fully prepared to pack us back into the ship and make a sprint for home. The thought of all the disappointment that would entail, not to mention the sheer waste, made my stomach churn.
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There's really nothing like the raw, fucking power of being strapped to the top of a few million pounds of rocket as it blasts you into space. We'd experienced that at Cape Canaveral less than a year before.
But now I learned that the reverse process had an uncanny magic of its own. Knowing that you're about to splat into Mars at 25,000 miles an hour, and then feeling those same rockets smashing you into your seat, bleeding off all that speed, until you kiss up against the dusty red ground with the gentleness of a lover? Yeah, it was poignant.
After landing, we set right out for Mars Station, leaving Glover behind at the Danae capsule. As systems-engineer for Beta team, he'd be busy for the next few hours, conducting post-flight checks, and putting components into hibernation. While he labored, Sharon and I became human beings number four and five ever to set foot on the red planet (if you're counting). We made a pact that we'd never tell which of us touched down first, and I've honored it ever since.
Sharon was the bio-med specialist. She had a full slate of scientific tasks planned for the next three years: examining the effects of cosmic radiation on us, testing different hydroponics techniques, assessing strains of lichen for terraforming. But first and foremost, Sharon was a physician, and ensuring the health and well-being of the crew was both her duty and her passion. Given that we didn't know the status of Alpha team, there seemed every chance she'd be up to her chin in work when we arrived at the base.
As for me, I mostly tagged along as an extra pair of hands. We all had a fair bit of cross-training, but my primary specialty was exo-geology. As far as I was concerned, that meant I would be the one doing all the
real
work of the mission. However, it also meant that I was the least useful of the crew, from a purely functional perspective.
The rover maxed out at around 20 kph, but it beat schlepping in our pressure suits. As we bounced along, I took Sharon's hand and squeezed it through two thick layers of glove. Trying to reassure myself, maybe, as much as her. Now that we were close to our goal, I found it unnerving to be creeping so very slowly into the unknown.
We'd seen pictures of the site, but from space, it had seemed remote and serene. Down at ground-level, the wreckage made a much more visceral impression--overturned storage tanks, cracked modules, and debris scattered everywhere. In the stark and glacially-evolving environment of Mars, the disaster looked like it could have happened just yesterday.
Mission control thought Hab-2 was the most likely section to still be functional, and they were right on the money. The airlock cycled without a hitch, and our readings indicated the air was entirely breathable.
Popping off my helmet, what struck me immediately was that it was hot. I mean
hot
, like a sauna. And then I was shaking hands with a tall burly man in a blue flight suit.