Chapter 249 - Sol Three Hundred and Forty-Two, Don’t Die on Mars (1/2)
3:15 p.m.
Tang Yue and Tomcat had lost count of the number of times they fell. Tomcat was too short, and holding up Tang Yue meant a high center of mass. A slip by Tang Yue was enough to pull Tomcat down. As they stumbled their way forward, Tang Yue had already lost his bearings.
“Five meters! Four meters!”
“Three meters!”
“Two meters! Two meters!”
“One meter… We’re there!”
Tang Yue and Tomcat collapsed to the ground.
Tang Yue breathed heavily as he opened his eyes. It was still pitch-black in front of him. He still wasn’t able to see anything.
“We’ve walked a total of 6,475 steps. That’s the effective step count. We aren’t counting the times we rolled and fell to the ground.” Tomcat lay beside Tang Yue. Its body was snow-white in color. “Based on the distance, it should be here.”
Tang Yue struggled to turn his body to face up. After resting for half a minute, he found the strength to speak.
“But there’s nothing at all…”
They had arrived at their destination, but there was nothing. There wasn’t any huge Roman court or little green men. There wasn’t even a simple roving court. Apart from the howling wind, sand, and snow, there was no sign of light for as far as they could see.
“That’s right… there’s nothing at all here,” Tomcat said.
Tang Yue remained silent for a very long time before he suddenly laughed. As he laughed, he coughed.
“Tomcat, tell me. If those darn alien b*stards are that advanced and powerful, why must they make us go through all this hassle? They could have directly sent us a spacecraft, couldn’t they? Getting on a spacecraft to court and hire a lawyer should be a one-stop service. It would be easy… Why did they have to make us travel all this distance?”
“Maybe because they are an insurance company,” Tomcat said.
“So what?”
“All the insurance companies in the Universe are probably the same. They try to pay the least they can pay. It’s best if they pay nothing,” Tomcat said. “They will find some leeway in interpretation to reduce their damages based on the permissible limits. They would then push the blame. Think about it. If you were to die midway, there wouldn’t be any lawsuits. Then, they wouldn’t need to make any compensation. They don’t even need to shoulder any responsibilities. You are the last Earthling. If you were to die, no one will remember the Earth.”
“That’s despicable.”
“They are capitalists after all.”
Tang Yue sighed. “You are framing the question with an Earthling’s point of view. In fact, who knows what’s on their minds?”
“That’s right…” Tomcat nodded. “Who knows what’s on their minds.”
Tang Yue and Tomcat fell silent before they broke out into laughter simultaneously.
Indeed, there was nothing.
That letter was a joke, a farce. It had given them coordinates that had nothing.
To Tang Yue, this was something expected. When he left Kunlun Station, he had already foreseen such a scene. Tang Yue no longer cared if the coordinates on that letter were genuine. He only wished to find somewhere to rest in the vastness of the world. And the coordinates gave him a possible direction.
It was silent all around. It was unknown if the wind was just too weak or if something had gone wrong with his ears. While lying on the ground, Tang Yue faced up. He once thought that he might die under the starry sky. That way, he could embrace the Universe and allow his soul to swim with the stars. Unfortunately, the heavens were unkind to him. There was a blizzard and a sandstorm. The darkness and oppression felt like a coffin’s cover.
Tang Yue took out the photo frame from his pocket and adjusted the Radiant Armor’s headlamp.
He stroked the photo, flicking away the snow and sand on it and sweeping his gaze across the faces. This was Tang Yue’s only group photo. They were the only evidence that Old Wang, Thomp, Old Zheng, Mai Dong, as well as Earth once existed. Before Tang Yue managed to take a careful look, the headlamp extinguished.
Tang Yue patted his helmet gently, but the light didn’t come back on. He felt a little regret that his glance had been his final goodbye to the world of light.
The charge on the Radiant Armor’s battery had dropped to the red warning threshold. To ensure Tang Yue’s safety, it had prioritized the power to the life support system. All other power-consuming devices were cut. But no matter how hard the Radiant Armor tried to raise the temperature, it was futile. Tang Yue was constantly losing heat and he was beginning to show signs of hypothermia.
“Did you bring the shovel?” Tang Yue pressed the photo frame to his chest, his eyelids growing heavy.
“No,” Tomcat replied. “It’s too heavy. I threw it midway.”