La Double Inconstance (2030–31) — Episode 4
9: Tuesday evening: ‘this is home’
From the psychologist’s office André takes the lift to the ground floor and exits to the plaza. He walks across to the engineering facility, strolls through its main corridor to emerge at the link road which he crosses to enter the dormitory building. Finally it’s up to the ninth floor where he has his apartment. He retrieves a cold beer from the fridge and reclines in his living room facing the picture window overlooking the campus… letting his thoughts run free.
We work ridiculous hours during the week, he thinks, but our weekends are sacrosanct. Without R&R and our families, our performance would fall off. We’d get stale, lose focus; we’d make mistakes.
In his imagination he relives his weekend routine: Friday lunchtime finishing here and taking the shuttle to the airport. It’s 400 km from Köln to Paris – two hours in the Gazelle allocated for his personal use (credited to his training plan).
He arrives at the Aérodrome de Lognes-Emerainville, east of Paris around half-past three. A cab gets him to nearby Marne-la-Vallée by four. And then it’s just the walk to the front door.
She opens the door and I step inside. Behind her I see our one-year-old holding on to the bars of her playpen. Toys are strewn on the floor. I look at Sylvia: she’s wearing a loose button-up blouse, no bra, short skirt, nothing on her feet. Brown hair cascades around her shoulders. She looks at me, a small smile on her lips, amused, teasing; slightly wary.
I step up close and put my hands about her waist. Push up her blouse and feel her body under my hands, warm and smooth. Her expression changes not a jot: she waits with timeless patience. I lean forward: our lips just brush. Our unrehearsed game, silently choreographed. In the background our child burbles to herself, oblivious.
I slide my hands up the outside of her legs, pushing her skirt up, feeling smooth flesh all the way. My hands meet behind her, join at the small of her back. I pull her to me.
Her hand in mine we ascend the stairs. Neither of us has yet said a word. She removes her blouse, sits on the bed – then slides back to wait for me.
I am home.
He drains the beer, thrusts these diverting thoughts aside and returns to the matter in hand. Coldly, rationally he considers de Kasparis’s plan. What will his wife’s reaction be? Can Anna talk her around? Not a cat in hell’s chance, he thinks. She will never agree. And they’ll expect him to talk her around – which would be the ruin of more than just one weekend.
He will, of course, refuse.
He wonders what Anna’s plan B might be.
10: Tartarus
Report retrieved from ESA archive.
Programme Tartarus: [ESA Top Secret; NATO Cosmic Secret].
Agence Spatiale Européenne: Très Secret
Programme Designation: Tartarus
Circulation: [redacted]
Date/Version: [redacted]
Summary
The anomaly was discovered thirteen months ago by the Mars Reconnaissance Orbiter (MRO-3) in low Martian orbit. The multispectral camera happened to loiter over the Mars-facing face of Phobos for 410 seconds and subsequent image-processing determined that a small crater, approximately 400 metres across, was in thermal disequilibrium.
A subsequent high-resolution sequence is consistent with a smooth fabric elevated over the crater floor, an effect similar to a radome used to protect radar installations. In the immediate aftermath MRO-3 disappeared. Its fate is currently unknown. It is presumed either to have burned up in the Martian atmosphere or to have been captured.
Mission Failures
Malfunctions have occurred in distant probes from many countries, including the precursor interstellar mission currently transiting the Oort Cloud. These events have been classified.
Responses to date
There are several spacecraft currently in the vicinity of Mars. One was recalibrated for a close flyby of Phobos. No data was returned due to proximate system malfunction. Engineering failure is considered unlikely. The NASA Deep Space Network (DSN) was observing Phobos at the time (by request) and observed brief, coherent and possibly modulated e/m radiation from the anomaly directed at the craft.
Conclusions and Recommendations
Putting coincidence to one side, it appears possible that some entity has established itself on Phobos. This may mark a covert objective to control Mars space by some adversarial power here on Earth. It is also possible that the phenomenon is of non-terrestrial origin. A covert NATO-ESA project has been established to investigate. Due to mission-uncertainty and signal propagation delays, an astronaut team plus drones will be deployed rather than an autonomous probe with command-override from Earth.
The ESA has been tasked to provide an insertion team leveraging its (secret) military astronaut programme. The launch window will be this summer with flight duration seven to eight months. This programme is designated Tartarus (cf. classical reference: appendix).
NASA/DoW is presumed to have its own plans which to date have not been shared.
Appendix: note on Phobos
Phobos is the innermost and largest of Mars’s two moons (the other is Deimos). It is shaped somewhat like a potato with a mean diameter of 22 km. It orbits 6,000 km from the Martian surface with an orbital period under eight hours. Its surface gravity is less than 600 micro-g and circum-Phobos orbital speed is 29 km/hour – which incidentally could be easily achieved by a sprinter. It is basically a very large pebble-shaped mountain resembling an asteroid.
The full story text can be found in my SF novel: here:
- "Donatien's Children" (2022) — as a PDF, and
- "Donatien's Children" (2022) — on Amazon for easier reading.





