Blood and Ice by Robert Masello

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ROBERT MASELLO

coffee than usual—“You really don’t want to have to pee once you get into a dry suit,” Lawson had advised him—Michael went back to collect his camera gear. He sealed up his Olympus D-220L in its watertight Ikelite housing, made sure it had a brand-new battery, and said a silent prayer to the god of technical fuckups. Hundreds of feet under the polar ice cap was no place for even a minor glitch to crop up. Like just about anything in the Antarctic, a dive was a complicated production. The day before, Murphy had sent a work crew out onto the ice with a huge auger, mounted on the back of a tracked vehicle, to bore two holes through the ice. The first hole, which would be covered by the rudimentary dive hut, was the hole the divers would use to get in and out of the water. The second hole, maybe fifty yards away, was the safety hole, just in case anything from shifting ice to aggressive Weddell seals made the first one temporarily inoperable. (Weddell seals could get very territorial about a nicely drilled breathing hole.) Murphy also insisted, den mother that he was, that anyone diving get a once-over from Dr. Barnes first. Michael had to prop himself up on the edge of her examining table, let her examine his throat and nasal passages, clear out his ears, take his blood pressure. It was odd, having to let someone whom he’d come to regard as simply a friend treat him suddenly in a professional capacity. He just hoped she wouldn’t have to give him the hernia test, by holding his testicles and having him cough. She didn’t. Nor did she seem the least bit uncomfortable in this different role. Charlotte, he discovered, could put on the dispassionate face of the physician and go about her duties in a purely clinical manner. Not that it stopped her, when the exam was done and she had declared him fit as a fiddle, from asking, “You sure you want to do this?” “Absolutely.” She was taking her stethoscope off and slipping it into a drawer. “Going under that ice, in a face mask and all that gear . . . you don’t have any claustrophobia?” From something in her voice, he suddenly had the thought that she was talking about herself, not him. “No. Do you?”


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