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She was right. It was a statue of us. Neither old nor young, but ageless. Two farmers, looking out forever across the endless Martian desert....
There was an inscription on the base, but I couldn't quite make it out. Martha could. She read it, slowly, while everyone in the crowd stood silent, listening.
"Lewis and Martha Farwell," she read. "The last of the pioneers--" Her voice broke. "Underneath," she whispered, "it says--the first Martians. And then it lists them--us...."
She read the list, all the names of our friends who had come out on that first s.h.i.+p. The names of men and women who had died, one by one, and left their farms to their children--to the same children who now crowded close about the platform and listened to her read, and smiled up at us.
She came to the end of the list and looked out at the crowd. "Thank you," she whispered.
They shouted then. They called out to us and pressed forward and held their babies up to see us.
I looked out past the people, across the flat red desert to the horizon, toward the spot in the east where the Earth would rise, much later. The dry smell of Mars had never been stronger.
The first Martians....
They were so real, those carved figures. Lewis and Martha Farwell....
"Look at them, Lewis," Martha said softly. "They're cheering us. Us!"
She was smiling. There were tears in her eyes, but her smile was bright and proud and s.h.i.+ning. Slowly she turned away from me and straightened, staring out over the heads of the crowd across the desert to the east. She stood with her head thrown back and her mouth smiling, and she was as proudly erect as the statue that was her likeness.
"Martha," I whispered. "How can we tell them goodbye?"
Then she turned to face me, and I could see the tears glistening in her eyes. "We can't leave, Lewis. Not after this."
She was right, of course. We couldn't leave. We were symbols. The last of the pioneers. The first Martians. And they had carved their symbol in our image and made us a part of Mars forever.
I glanced down, along the rows of upturned, laughing faces, searching for Duane. He was easy to find. He was the only one who wasn't shouting. His eyes met mine, and I didn't have to say anything. He knew. He climbed up beside me on the platform.
I tried to speak, but I couldn't.
"Tell him, Lewis," Martha whispered. "Tell him we can't go."
Then she was crying. Her smile was gone and her proud look was gone and her hand crept into mine and trembled there. I put my arm around her shoulders, but there was no way I could comfort her.
"Now we'll never go," she sobbed. "We'll never get home...."
I don't think I had ever realized, until that moment, just how much it meant to her--getting home. Much more, perhaps, than it had ever meant to me.
The statues were only statues. They were carved from the stone of Mars. And Martha wanted Earth. We both wanted Earth. Home....
I looked away from her then, back to Duane. "No," I said. "We're still going. Only--" I broke off, hearing the shouting and the cheers and the children's laughter. "Only, how can we tell _them_?"
Duane smiled. "Don't try to, Mr. Farwell," he said softly. "Just wait and see."
He turned, nodded to where John Emery still stood at the edge of the platform. "All right, John."
Emery nodded too, and then he raised his hand. As he did so, the shouting stopped and the people stood suddenly quiet, still looking up at us.
"You all know that this is an anniversary," John Emery said. "And you all know something else that Lewis and Martha thought they'd kept as a surprise--that this is more than an anniversary. It's goodbye."
I stared at him. He knew. All of them knew. And then I looked at Duane and saw that he was smiling more than ever.
"They've lived here on Mars for thirty-five years," John Emery said.
"And now they're going back to Earth."
Martha's hand tightened on mine. "Look, Lewis," she cried. "Look at them. They're not angry. They're--they're happy for us!"
John Emery turned to face us. "Surprised?" he said.
I nodded. Martha nodded too. Behind him, the people cheered again.
"I thought you would be," Emery said. Then, "I'm not very good at speeches, but I just wanted you to know how much we've enjoyed being your neighbors. Don't forget us when you get back to Earth."
It was a long, long trip from Mars to Earth. Three months on the s.h.i.+p, thirty-five million miles. A trip we had dreamed about for so long, without any real hope of ever making it. But now it was over. We were back on Earth. Back where we had started from.
"It's good to be alone, isn't it, Lewis?" Martha leaned back in her chair and smiled up at me.
I nodded. It did feel good to be here in the apartment, just the two of us, away from the crowds and the speeches and the official welcomes and the flashbulbs popping.
"I wish they wouldn't make such a fuss over us," she said. "I wish they'd leave us alone."
"You can't blame them," I said, although I couldn't help wis.h.i.+ng the same thing. "We're celebrities. What was it that reporter said about us? That we're part of history...."
She sighed. She turned away from me and looked out the window again, past the buildings and the lighted traffic ramps and the throngs of people bustling by outside, people who couldn't see in through the one-way gla.s.s, people whom we couldn't hear because the room was soundproofed.
"Mars should be up by now," she said.
"It probably is." I looked out again, although I knew that we would see nothing. No stars. No planets. Not even the moon, except as a pale half disc peering through the haze. The lights from the city were too bright. The air held the light and reflected it down again, and the sky was a deep, dark blue with the buildings about us towering into it, outlined blackly against it. And we couldn't see the stars....
"Lewis," Martha said slowly. "I never thought it would have changed this much, did you?"
"No." I couldn't tell from her voice whether she liked the changes or not. Lately I couldn't tell much of anything from her voice. And nothing was the same as we had remembered it.
Even the Earth farms were mechanized now. Factory production lines for food, as well as for everything else. It was necessary, of course. We had heard all the reasons, all the theories, all the latest statistics.
"I guess I'll go to bed soon," Martha said. "I'm tired."
"It's the higher gravity." We'd both been tired since we got back to Earth. We had forgotten, over the years, what Earth gravity was like.
She hesitated. She smiled at me, but her eyes were worried.
"Lewis--are you really glad we came back?"
It was the first time she had asked me that. And there was only one answer I could give her. The one she expected.