Chapter 229 - Sol Three Hundred and Thirty-Four, Humanity’s Joy and Sadness Aren’t Interlinked (2/2)

“We are aliens,” Tang Yue said. “We are stranded on Mars, strange creatures from an unknown alien planet. No one can discover us, hear us, or understand us.”

“Humanity’s joy and sadness aren’t interlinked.”

“That’s right,” Tang Yue said. “Back when I was letting my imagination run wild, I thought how nice it would be if one’s emotions could be shared. That way, no matter how sad something is, as long as it’s equally distributed across ten thousand people, a hundred thousand people, or a million people… each person will on average experience a millionth of the sadness. If that happened, the world wouldn’t see tears again.”

“But there wouldn’t be smiles either.”

Tang Yue looked blankly at the starry sky. Occasionally, he still imagined that the United Space Station was above him, hurtling across his head.

“It’s late. It’s time to rest.” Tomcat nudged Tang Yue. “You can sleep for seven hours. The Radiant Armor can operate normally for eight hours, so you need to wake up an hour in advance to charge it… The time now is ten. You will have to wake up before five tomorrow to recharge it.”

Tang Yue yawned and stole a glance at it,

“What about you? Do you need to recharge tomorrow morning?”

“I’ll continue stargazing.” Tomcat sat on the rock.

Tang Yue got up and headed back to sleep. The geolab on the Mars Wanderer had a sleeping bag, but it was only used to line the floor. Tang Yue had no way of crawling into it while donning the Radiant Armor.

They couldn’t sleep outside as the temperature at night would keep dropping until it reached –80°C. Such low temperatures drastically wore on the temperature control, causing the power needed to increase. They had brought the RTG along, and it was able to maintain the geolab’s temperature at around 0°C. In contrast with the outside world, this was undoubtedly a paradise in spring.

Tang Yue crawled into the geolab and closed the hatch.

Tomcat sat on the rock, the star chart flat across its knees.

This cat sat there like a statue for a very long time. Cats were strange creatures. At times, they would sit by the window motionless, a glint in their eyes suddenly appearing without anyone understanding why. Perhaps it was a baffling sense of melancholy or a strange level of silence. At times, one would suspect that they possessed similar amounts of intelligence as humans. They often traversed the walls and rooftops, looking down from above at human society.

Tomcat naturally lacked the ability to jump onto a roof or its short and fat body would probably smash through the roof. Cats would believe that a meatball chariot had fallen from the sky before being sent into a tizzy.

However, it felt that it was just like the other cats; they were all pixies.

A short and fat pixie was still a pixie.

It didn’t accept any claims against that!

A meteor suddenly streaked across the sky, brightening for a short instant. Tomcat blinked. It was about time for it to rest. The temperature was dropping and it too found low temperatures a hazardous environment that would drastically shorten its lifespan.

Tomcat got up and returned to the geolab’s outer hatch. The airtight lab had two hatches just like the airlock. Tomcat crawled in and closed the outer hatch before opening the inner hatch.

The cramped geolab was dark due to a lack of light. It was nearly pitch-black apart from the faint green light emitted from the Radiant Armor indicators. Tang Yue was sitting against the wall sleeping, his head bent. He didn’t spread the sleeping bag against the floor but instead hugged it tightly.

When Tomcat entered, it turned around to seal the hatch before snuggling close to Tang Yue. Slowly, it curled into a huge furball and closed its eyes.