Farmer
in the
Sky
Robert A. Heinlein
A BETTER WORLD, BY JOVE!
They shut off winter soon after that. The heat trap was turned on full force; the skies cleared and it was lovely.
The first view I got of the Ganymede sky was a little after dawn next Sun phase. The heat trap made the sky a pale green—but Jupiter shone right through it, ruddy, orange, and big. Big and beautiful—I've never gotten tired of looking at Jupiter.
It hangs there in the sky,
never rising, never setting . . . and you wonder what holds it up!
"Heinlein is more responsible for the development of modern science fiction than any other man!"
—The New Yorker
By Robert A. Heinlein Published by Ballantine Books:
BETWEEN PLANETS
CITIZEN OF THE GALAXY
THE DOOR INTO SUMMER
DOUBLE STAR
FARMER IN THE SKY
FRIDAY
GRUMBLES FROM THE GRAVE
HAVE SPACESUIT--WILL TRAVEL
JOB: A COMEDY OF JUSTICE
THE PUPPET MASTERS
RED PLANET
ROCKET SHIP GALILEO
THE ROLLING STONES
SPACE CADET
THE STAR BEAST
STARMEN JONES
TIME FOR THE STARS
TUNNEL IN THE SKY
WALDO & MAGIC. INC.
Farmer
in the
Sky
Robert A. Heinlein
DEL REY
A Del Rey Book BALLANTINE BOOKS • NEW YORK
FOR SANDY
Sale of this book without a front cover may be unauthorized. If this book is coverless, it may have been reported to the publisher as "unsold or destroyed" and neither the author nor the publisher may have received payment for it.
VL:6&up RLI: IL: 7 & up
A Del Rey Book
Published by Ballantine Books
Copyright © 1950 by Robert A. Heinlein
A condensed version was published in Boy's Life Magazine under the title Satellite Scout.
All rights reserved under International and Pan-American Copyright Conventions. Published in the United States by BaUantine Books, a division of Random House, Inc., New York, and simultaneously in Canada by Random House of Canada Limited, Toronto.
ISBN 0-345-32438-2
This edition published by arrangement with Charles Scribner's Sons
Printed in Canada
First Ballantine Books Edition: April 1975 Eighteenth Printing: October 1992
Our troop
had been up in the High Sierras that day and we were late getting back. We had
taken off from the camp field on time but Traffic Control swung us 'way east to
avoid some weather. I didn't like it; Dad usually won't eat if I'm not home.
Besides
that, I had had a new boy shoved off on me as co-pilot; my usual co-pilot and
assistant patrol leader was sick, so our Scoutmaster, Mr. Kinski, gave me this
twerp. Mr. Kinski rode in the other copter with the Cougar Patrol.
"Why
don't you put on some speed?" the twerp wanted to know.
"Ever
hear of traffic regulations?" I asked him.
The copter
was on slave-automatic, controlled from the ground, and was cruising slowly,
down a freight lane they had stuck us in.
The twerp
laughed. "You can always have an emergency. Here—I'll show you." He
switched on the mike. "Dog Fox Eight Three, calling traffic—"
I switched
it off, then switched on again when Traffic answered and told them that we had
called by mistake. The twerp looked disgusted. "Mother's good little
boy!" he said in sticky sweet tones.
That was
just the wrong thing to say to me. "Go
aft,"
I told him, "and tell Slats Keifer to come up here."
"Why?
He's not a pilot."
"Neither
are you, for my money. But he weighs what you do and I want to keep the crate
trimmed."
He settled
back in his seat. "Old Man Kinski assigned me as co-pilot; here I
stay."
I counted
to ten and let it ride. The pilot compartment of a ship in the air is no place
for a fight. We had nothing more to say to each other until I put her down on
North Diego Platform and cut the tip jets.
I was last
one out, of course. Mr, Kinski was waiting there for us but I didn't see him;
all I saw was the twerp. I grabbed him by the shoulder. "Want to repeat
that crack now?" I asked him.
Mr. Kinski
popped up out of nowhere, stepped between us and said, "Bill! Bill! What's
the meaning of this?"
"I—"
I started to say that I was going to slap the twerp loose from his teeth, but I
thought better of it
Mr. Kinski
turned to the twerp. "What happened, Jones?"
"I
didn't do anything! Ask anybody."
I was about
to say that he could tell that to the Pilots' Board. Insubordination in the air
is a serious matter. But that "Ask anybody" stopped me. Nobody else
had seen or heard anything.
Mr. Kinski
looked at each of us, then said, "Muster your patrol and dismiss them,
Bill." So I did and went on home.
All in all,
I was tired and jumpy by the time I got home. I had listened to the news on the
way home; it wasn't good. The ration had been cut another ten calories—which
made me still hungrier and reminded me that I hadn't been home to get Dad's
supper. The newscaster went on to say that the Spaceship Mayflower had
finally been commissioned and that the rolls were now opened for emigrants.
Pretty lucky for them, I thought. No short rations. No twerps like Jones.
And a brand
new planet.
George—my
father, that is—was sitting in the apartment, looking over some papers.
"Howdy, George," I said to him, "eaten yet?"
"Hello,
Bill. No."
"I'll have
supper ready right away." I went into the pantry and could see that he
hadn't eaten lunch, either. I decided to fix him a plus meal.
I grabbed two
Syntho-Steaks out of the freezer and slapped them in quickthaw, added a big
Idaho baked potato for Dad and a smaller one for me, then dug out a package of
salad and let it warm naturally.
By the time
I had poured boiling water over two soup cubes and over coffee powder the
steaks were ready for the broiler. I transferred them, letting it cycle at
medium rare, and stepped up the gain on the quickthaw so that the spuds would
be ready when the steaks were—then back to the freezer for a couple of icekreem
cake slices for dessert.
The spuds
were ready. I took a quick look at my ration accounts, decided we could afford
it, and set out a couple of pats of butterine for them. The broiler was
ringing; I removed the steaks, set everything out, and switched on the candles,
just as Anne would have done.
"Come
and get it!" I yelled and turned back to enter the calorie and point score
on each item from the wrappers, then shoved the wrappers in the incinerator.
That way you never get your accounts fouled up.
Dad sat
down as I finished. Elapsed time from scratch, two minutes and twenty
seconds—there's nothing hard about cooking; I don't see why women make such a
fuss about it. No system, probably.
Dad sniffed
the steaks and grinned. "Oh boy! Bill, you'll bankrupt us."
"You
let me worry," I said. I'n still plus for this quarter." Then I
frowned. "But I won't be, next quarter, unless they quit cutting the
ration."
Dad stopped
with a piece of steak on its way to his mouth. "Again?"
"Again.
Look, George, I don't get it. This was a good crop year and they started
operating the Montana yeast plant besides."
"You
follow all the commissary news, don't you, Bill?"
"Naturally."
"Did
you notice the results of the Chinese census as well? Try it on your slide
rule."
I knew what
he meant—and the steak suddenly tasted like old rubber. What's the use in being
careful if somebody on the other side of the globe is going to spoil your try?
"Those darned Chinese ought to quit raising babies and start raising
food!"
"Share
and share alike, Bill."
"But—"
I shut up. George was right, he usually is, but somehow it didn't seem fair.
"Did you hear about the Mayflower?" I asked to change
the subject.
"What
about the Mayflower?" Dad's voice was suddenly cautious, which
surprised me. Since Anne died —Anne was my mother—George and I have been about
as close as two people can be.
"Why,
she was commissioned, that's all. They've started picking emigrants."
"So?"
There was that cautious tone again. "What did you do today?"
"Nothing
much. We hiked about five miles north of camp and Mr. Kinski put some of the
kids through tests. I saw a mountain lion."
"Really?
I thought they were all gone."
"Well, I thought
I saw one."
"Then
you probably did. What else?"
I
hesitated, then told him about this twerp Jones. "He's not even a member
of our troop. How does he get that way, interfering with my piloting?"
"You did right,
Bill. Sounds as if this twerp Jones, as you call him, was too young to be
trusted with a pilot's license."
"Matter
of fact, he's a year older than I am."
"In my
day you had to be sixteen before you could even go up for your license."
"Times
change, George."
"So
they do. So they do."
Dad
suddenly looked sad and I knew he was thinking about Anne. I hastily said,
"Old enough or not, how does an insect like Jones get by the
temperament-stability test?"
"Psycho
tests aren't perfect, Bill. Neither are people." Dad sat back and lit his
pipe. "Want me to clean up tonight?"
"No,
thanks." He always asked; I always turned him down. Dad is absent-minded;
he lets ration points get into the incinerator. When I salvage, I really
salvage. "Feel like a game of cribbage?"
"I'll
beat the pants off you."
"You
and who else?" I salvaged the garbage, burned the dishes, followed him
into the living room. He was getting out the board and cards.
His mind
wasn't really on the game. I was around the corner and ready to peg out before
he was really under way. Finally he put down his cards and looked square at me.
"Son—"
"Huh?
I mean, 'Yes, George?'"
“I've
decided to emigrate in the Mayflower."
I knocked
over the cribbage board. I picked it up, eased my throttle, and tried to fly
right. "That's swell! When do we leave?"
Dad puffed
furiously on his pipe. "That's the point, Bill. You're not going."
I couldn't
say anything. Dad had never done anything like this to me before. I sat there,
working my mouth like a fish. Finally I managed, "Dad, you're
joking."
"No,
I'm not, Son."
"But
why? Answer me that one question: why?"
"Now
see here, Son—"
"Call
me 'Bill'."
"Okay,
Bill. It's one thing for me to decide to take my chances with colonial life but
I've got no right to get you off to a bad start. You've got to finish
your education. There are no decent schools on Ganymede. You get your
education, then when you're grown, if you want to emigrate, that's your
business."
"That's
the reason? That's the only reason? To go to school?"
"Yes.
You stay here and take your degree. I'd like to see you take your doctor's
degree as well. Then, if you want to, you can join me. You won't have missed
your chance; applicants with close relatives there have priority."
"No!"
Dad looked
stubborn.
So did I, I
guess. "George, I'm telling you, if you leave me behind, it won't do any
good. I won't go to school. I can pass the exams for third class citizenship
right now. Then I can get a work permit and—"
He cut me
short. "You won't need a work permit. I'm leaving you well provided for,
Bill. You'll—"
"
'Well provided for'! Do you think I'd touch a credit of yours if you go away
and leave me? I'll live on my student's allowance until I pass the exams and
get my work card."
"Bring
your voice down, Sonl" He went on, "You're proud of being a Scout,
aren't you?"
"Well--yes."
"I
seem to remember that Scouts are supposed to be obedient. And courteous,
too."
That one
was pretty hot over the plate. I had to think about it. "George——"
"Yes,
Bill?"
"If I
was rude, I'm sorry. But the Scout Law wasn't thought up to make it easy to
push a Scout around. As long as I'm living in your home I'll do what you say.
But if you walk out on me, you don't have any more claim on me. Isn't that
fair?"
"Be reasonable,
Son. I'm doing it for your own good."
"Don't
change the subject, George. Is that fair or isn't it? If you go hundreds of
millions of miles away, how can you expect to run my life after you're gone?
I'll be on my own."
"I'll
still be your father."
"Fathers
and sons should stick together. As I recall, the fathers that came over in the
original Mayflower brought their kids with them."
"This
is different."
"How?"
"It's
further, incredibly further—and dangerous."
"So
was that move dangerous—half the Plymouth Rock colony died the first winter;
everybody knows that. And distance doesn't mean anything; what matters is how
long it takes. If I had had to walk back this afternoon, I'd still be hiking
next month. It took the Pilgrims sixty-three days to cross the Atlantic or so
they taught me in school—but this afternoon the caster said that the Mayflower—will
reach Ganymede in sixty days. That makes Ganymede closer than London was to
Plymouth Rock."
Dad stood
up and knocked out his pipe. "I'm not going to argue, Son."
"And
I'm not, either." I took a deep breath. I shouldn't have said the next
thing I did say, but I was mad. I'd never been treated this way before and I
guess I wanted to hurt back. "But I can tell you this: you're not the only
one who is sick of short rations. If you think I'm going to stay here while
you're eating high on the hog out in the colonies, then you had better think
about it again. I thought we were partners."
That last
was the meanest part of it and I should have been ashamed. That was what he had
said to me the day after Anne died, and that was the way it had always been.
The minute
I said it I knew why George had to emigrate and I knew it didn't have anything
to do with ration points. But I didn't know how to unsay it.
Dad stared.
Then he said slowly, "You think that's how it is? That I want to go away
so I can quit skipping lunch to save ration points?"
"What
else?" I answered. I was stuck in a groove; I didn't know what to say.
"Hmm .
. . well, if you believe that, Bill, there is nothing I can say. I think I'll
turn in."
I went to
my room, feeling all mixed up inside. I wanted Mother around so bad I could
taste it and I knew that George felt the same way. She would never have let us
reach the point where we were actually shouting at each other—at least I had
shouted. Besides that, the partnership was busted up, it would never be the
same.
I felt
better after a shower and a long massage. I knew that the partnership couldn't
really be busted up. In the long run, when George saw that I had to go, he
wouldn't let college stand in the way. I was sure of that—well, pretty sure at
least.
I began to
think about Ganymede.
Ganymede!
Why, I had
never even been out to the Moon!
There was a
boy in my class who had been born on the Moon. His parents were still there; he
had been sent home for schooling. He gave himself airs as a deep-space man. But
Luna was less than a quarter of a million miles away; you could practically
throw rocks at it. It wasn't self-supporting; Moon Colony had the same rations
as Earth. It was really part of Earth. But Ganymede!
Let's see—Jupiter
was half a billion miles away, more or less, depending on the time of year.
What was the tiny distance to the Moon compared with a jump like that?
Suddenly I
couldn't remember whether Ganymede was Jupiter's third moon or fourth. And I
just had to know. There was a book out in the living room that would tell and
more besides—Ellsworth Smith's A Tour of Earth's Colonies. I went
out to get it.
Dad hadn't
gone to bed. He was sitting up, reading. I said, "Oh—hello," and went
to look for the book. He nodded and went on reading.
The book
wasn't where it should have been. I looked around and Dad said, "What are
you looking for, Bill?"
Then I saw
that he was reading it. I said, "Oh, nothing. I didn't know you were using
it."
"This?"
He held it up.
"It
doesn't matter. I'll find something else."
"Take
it. I'm through with it."
"Well
... All right-thanks." I took it and turned away.
"Just
a minute, Bill."
I waited.
"I've come to a decision, Bill. I'm not going."
"Huh?"
"You
were right about us being partners. My place is here."
"Yes,
but— Look, George, I'm sorry I said what I did about rations. I know that's not
the reason. The reason is—well, you've got to go." I wanted to tell
him I knew the reason was Anne, but if I said Anne's name out loud I was afraid
I'd bawl.
"You
mean that you are willing to stay behind—and go to school?"
"Uh—"
I wasn't quite ready to say that; I was dead set on going myself. "I
didn't quite mean that. I meant that I know why you want to go, why you've got
to go."
"Hmm .
. ." He lit his pipe, making a long business of it. "I see. Or maybe
I don't" Then he added, "Let's put it this way, Bill. The partnership
stands. Either we both go, or we both stay—unless you decide of your own
volition that you will stay to get your degree and join me out there later. Is
that fair?"
"Huh?
Oh, yes!"
"So
let's talk about it later."
I said
goodnight and ducked into my room quick. William, my boy, I told myself, it's
practically in the bag—if you can just keep from getting soft-hearted and
agreeing to a split up. I crawled into bed and opened the book.
Ganymede
was Jupiter-III; I should have remembered that. It was bigger than Mercury,
much bigger than the Moon, a respectable planet, even if it was a moon. The
surface gravity was one third of Earth-normal; I would weigh about forty-five
pounds there. First contacted in 1985—which I knew—and its atmosphere project
started in 1998 and had been running ever since.
There was a
stereo in the book of Jupiter as seen from Ganymede—round as an apple, ruddy
orange, and squashed on both poles. And big as all outdoors. Beautiful. I fell
asleep staring at it.
Dad and I didn't
get a chance to talk for the next three days as my geography class spent that
time in Antarctica. I came back with a frostbitten nose and some swell pix of
penguins—and some revised ideas. I had had time to think.
Dad had
fouled up the account book as usual but he had remembered to save the wrappers
and it didn't take me long to straighten things out. After dinner I let him
beat me two games, then said, "Look, George——"
"Yes?"
"You
know what we were talking about?"
"Well,
yes."
"It's
this way. I'm under age; I can't go if you won't let me. Seems to me you ought
to, but if you don't, I won't quit school. In any case, you ought to go—you need
to go—you know why. I'm asking you to think it over and take me along, but
I'm not going to be a baby about it."
Dad almost
looked embarrassed. "That's quite a speech, Son. You mean you're willing
to let me go, you stay here and go to school, and not make a fuss about
it?"
"Well,
not 'willing'-but I'd put up with it."
"Thanks."
Dad fumbled in his pouch and pulled out a flat photo. "Take a look at
this."
"What
is it?"
"Your
file copy of your application for emigration. I submitted it two days
ago."
I wasn't
much good in school for the next few days. Dad cautioned me not to get worked
up over it; they hadn't approved our applications as yet. "You know, Bill,
ten times as many people apply as can possibly go."
"But
most of them want to go to Venus or Mars. Ganymede is too far away; that scares
the sissies out."
"I
wasn't talking about applications for all the colonies; I meant applications
for Ganymede, specifically for this first trip of the Mayflower"
"Even
so, you can't scare me. Only about one in ten can qualify. That's the way it's
always been."
Dad agreed.
He said that this was the first time in history that some effort was being made
to select the best stock for colonization instead of using colonies as dumping
grounds for misfits and criminals and failures. Then he added, "But look,
Bill, what gives you the notion that you and I can necessarily qualify? Neither
one of us is a superman,"
That rocked
me back on my heels. The idea that we might not be good enough hadn't occurred
to me. "George, they couldn't turn us down!"
"They
could and they might."
"But
how? They need engineers out there and you're tops. Me—I'm not a
genius but I do all right in school. We're both healthy and we don't have any
bad mutations; we aren't color blind or bleeders or anything like that."
"No
bad mutations that we know of," Dad answered. "However, I
agree that we seem to have done a fair job in picking our grandparents. I
wasn't thinking of anything as obvious as that."
"Well,
what, then? What could they possibly get us on?"
He fiddled
with his pipe the way he always does when he doesn't want to answer right away.
"Bill, when I pick a steel alloy for a job, it's not enough to say, 'Well,
it's a nice shiny piece of metal; let's use it.' No, I take into account a list
of tests as long as your arm that tells me all about that alloy, what it's good
for and just what I can expect it to do in the particular circumstances I
intend to use it. Now if you had to pick people for a tough job of colonizing,
what would you look for?"
"Uh
... I don't know."
"Neither
do I. I'm not a social psychometrician. But to say that they want healthy
people with fair educations is like saying that I want steel rather than wood
for a job. It doesn't tell what sort of steel. Or it might not be steel that
was needed; it might be titanium alloy. So don't get your hopes too high."
"But—well,
look, what can we do about it?"
"Nothing.
If we don't get picked, then tell yourself that you are a darn good grade of
steel and that it's no fault of yours that they wanted magnesium."
It was all
very well to look at it that way, but it worried me. I didn't let it show at
school, though. I had already let everybody know that we had put in for
Ganymede; if we missed—well, it would be sort of embarrassing.
My best
friend, Duck Miller, was all excited about it and was determined to go, too.
"But
how can you?" I asked. "Do your folks want to go?"
"I
already looked into that," Duck answered. "All I have to have is a
grown person as a sponsor, a guardian. Now if you can tease your old man into
signing for me, it's in the bag."
"But
what will your father say?"
"He
won't care. He's always telling me that when he was my age he was earning his
own living. He says a boy should be self reliant. Now how about it? Will you
speak to your old man about it—tonight?"
I said I
would and I did. Dad didn't say anything for a moment, then he asked: "You
really want Duck with you?"
"Sure
I do. He's my best friend."
"What
does his father say?"
"He
hasn't asked him yet," and then I explained how Mr. Miller felt about it
"So?"
said Dad. "Then let's wait and see what Mr. Miller says."
"Well—look,
George, does that mean that you'll sign for Duck if his father says it's
okay?"
"I
meant what I said, Bill. Let's wait. The problem may solve itself."
I said,
"Oh well, maybe Mr. and Mrs. Miller will decide to put in for it, too,
after Duck gets them stirred up."
Dad just
cocked an eyebrow at me. "Mr. Miller has, shall we say, numerous business
interests here. I think it would be easier to jack up one corner of Boulder Dam
than to get him to give them up."
"You're
giving up your business."
"Not
my business, my professional practice. But I'm not giving up my profession; I'm
taking it with me."
I saw Duck
at school the next day and asked him what his father had said.
"Forget
it," he told me. "The deal is off."
"Huh?"
"My
old man says that nobody but an utter idiot would even think of going out to
Ganymede. He says that Earth is the only planet in the system fit to live on
and that if the government wasn't loaded up with a bunch of starry-eyed
dreamers we would quit pouring money down a rat hole trying to turn a bunch of
bare rocks in the sky into green pastures. He says the whole enterprise is
doomed."
"You
didn't think so yesterday."
"That
was before I got the straight dope. You know what? My old man is going to take
me into partnership. Just as soon as I'm through college he's going to start
breaking me into the management end. He says he didn't tell me before because
he wanted me to learn self reliance and initiative, but he thought it was time
I knew about it. What do you think of that?"
"Why,
that's pretty nice, I suppose. But what's this about the 'enterprise being
doomed'?"
"
'Nice', he calls it! Well, my old man says that it is an absolute impossibility
to keep a permanent colony on Ganymede. It's a perilous toehold, artificially
maintained—those were his exact words—and someday the gadgets will bust and the
whole colony will be wiped out, every man jack, and then we will quit trying to
go against nature."
We didn't
talk any more then as we had to go to class. I told Dad about it that night.
"What do you think, George?"
"Well,
there is something in what he says——"
"Huh?"
"Don't
jump the gun. If everything went sour on Ganymede at once and we didn't have
the means to fix it, it would revert to the state we found it in. But that's
not the whole answer. People have a funny habit of taking as 'natural' whatever
they are used to—but there hasn't been any 'natural' environment, the way they
mean it, since men climbed down out of trees. Bill, how many people are there
in California?"
"Fifty-five,
sixty million."
"Did
you know that the first four colonies here starved to death? 'S truthl How is
it that fifty-odd million can live here and not starve? Barring short rations,
of course."
He answered
it himself. "We've got four atomic power plants along the coast just to
turn sea water into fresh water. We use every drop of the Colorado River and
every foot of snow that falls on the Sierras. And we use a million other
gadgets. If those gadgets went bad—say a really big earthquake knocked out all
four atomic plants—the country would go back to desert. I doubt if we could
evacuate that many people before most of them died from thirst. Yet I don't
think Mr. Miller is lying awake nights worrying about it. He regards Southern
California as a good 'natural' environment.
"Depend
on it, Bill. Wherever Man has mass and energy to work with and enough savvy to
know how to manipulate them, he can create any environment he needs."
I didn't
see much of Duck after that. About then we got our preliminary notices to take
tests for eligibility for the Ganymede colony and that had us pretty busy.
Besides, Duck seemed different—or maybe it was me. I had the trip on my mind
and he didn't want to talk about it. Or if he did, he'd make some crack that
rubbed me the wrong way.
Dad
wouldn't let me quit school while it was still uncertain as to whether or not
we would qualify, but I was out a lot, taking tests. There was the usual
physical examination, of course, with some added wrinkles. A g test, for
example—I could take up to eight gravities before I blacked out, the test
showed. And a test for low-pressure tolerance and hemorrhaging—they didn't want
people who ran to red noses and varicose veins. There were lots more.
But we
passed them. Then came the psycho tests which were a lot worse because you
never knew what was expected of you and half the time you didn't even know you
were being tested. It started off with hypno-analysis, which really puts a
fellow at a disadvantage. How do you know what you've blabbed while they've got
you asleep?
Once I sat
around endlessly waiting for a psychiatrist to get around to seeing me. There
were a couple of clerks there; when I came in one of them dug my medical and
psycho record out of file and laid it on a desk. Then the other one, a
red-headed guy with a permanent sneer, said, "Okay, Shorty, sit down on
that bench and wait."
After quite
a while the redhead picked up my folder and started to read it. Presently he
snickered and turned to the other clerk and said, "Hey, Ned—get a load of
this!"
The other
one read what he was pointing to and seemed to think it was funny, too. I could
see they were watching me and I pretended not to pay any attention.
The second clerk
went back to his desk, but presently the redhead went over to him, carrying my
folder, and read aloud to him, but in such a low voice that I couldn't catch
many of the words. What I did catch made me squirm.
When he had
finished the redhead looked right at me and laughed. I stood up and said,
"What's so funny?"
He said,
"None of your business, Shorty. Sit down."
I walked
over and said, "Let me see that."
The second
clerk stuffed it into a drawer of his desk. The redhead said, "Mamma's boy
wants to see it, Ned. Why don't you give it to him?"
"He
doesn't really want to see it," the other one said.
"No, I
guess not." The redhead laughed again and added, "And to think he
wants to be a big bold colonist."
The other
one looked at me while chewing a thumbnail and said, "I don't think that's
so funny. They could take him along to cook."
This seemed
to convulse the redhead. "Ill bet he looks cute in an apron."
A year
earlier I would have poked him, even though he outweighed me and outreached me.
That "Mamma's boy" remark made me forget all about wanting to go to
Ganymede; I just wanted to wipe the silly smirk off his face.
But I
didn't do anything. I don't know why; maybe it was from riding herd on that
wild bunch of galoots, the Yucca Patrol—Mr. Kinski says that anybody who can't
keep order without using his fists can't be a patrol leader under him.
Anyhow I
just walked around the end of the desk and tried to open the drawer. It was
locked. I looked at them; they were both grinning, but I wasn't. "I had an
appointment for thirteen o'clock," I said. "Since the doctor isn't
here, you can tell him I'll phone for another appointment." And I turned
on my heel and left
I went home
and told George about it. He just said he hoped I hadn't hurt my chances.
I never did
get another appointment. You know what? They weren't clerks at all; they were
psycho-metricians and there was a camera and a mike on me the whole time.
Finally
George and I got notices saying that we were qualified and had been posted for
the Mayflower, "subject to compliance with all requirements."
That night
I didn't worry about ration points; I really set us out a feast.
There was a
booklet of the requirements mentioned. "Satisfy all debts"—that
didn't worry me; aside from a half credit I owed Slats Keifer I didn't have
any. "Post an appearance bond"—George would take care of that
"Conclude any action before any court of superior jurisdiction"—I had
never been in court except the Court of Honor. There were a flock of other
things, but George would handle them.
I found
some fine print that worried me. "George," I said, "It says here
that emigration is limited to families with children."
He looked
up. "Well, aren't we such a family? If you don't mind being classified as
a child."
"Oh. I
suppose so. I thought it meant a married couple and kids."
"Don't
give it a thought."
Privately I
wondered if Dad knew what he was talking about.
We were
busy with innoculations and blood typing and immunizations and I hardly got to
school at all. When I wasn't being stuck or being bled, I was sick with the
last thing they had done to me. Finally we had to have our whole medical
history tattooed on us—identity number, Rh factor, blood type, coag time,
diseases you had had, natural immunities and inoculations. The girls and the
women usually had it done in invisible ink that showed up only under infra-red
light, or else they put it on the soles of their feet.
They asked
me where I wanted it, the soles of my feet? I said no, I don't want to be
crippled up; I had too much to do. We compromised on putting it where I sit
down and then I ate standing up for a couple of days. It seemed a good place,
private anyhow. But I had to use a mirror to see it.
Time was
getting short; we were supposed to be at Mojave Space Port on 26 June, just two
weeks away. It was high time I was picking out what to take. The allowance was
fifty-seven and six-tenths pounds per person and had not been announced until
all our body weights had been taken.
The booklet
had said, "Close your terrestrial affairs as if you were dying."
That's easy to say. But when you die, you can't take it with you, while here we
could— fifty-seven-odd pounds of it.
The question
was: what fifty-seven pounds?
My
silkworms I turned over to the school biology lab and the same for the snakes.
Duck wanted my aquarium but I wouldn't let him; twice he's had fish and twice
he's let them die. I split them between two fellows in the troop who already
had fish. The birds I gave to Mrs. Fishbein on our deck. I didn't have a cat or
a dog; George says ninety floors up is no place to keep junior citizens—that's
what he calls them.
I was
cleaning up the mess when George came in. "Well," he says,
"first time I've been able to come into your room without a gas
mask."
I skipped
it; George talks like that. "I still don't know what to do," I said,
pointing at the heap on my bed.
"Microfilmed
everything you can?"
"Yes,
everything but this picture." It was a cabinet stereo of Anne, weighing
about a pound and nine ounces.
"Keep
that, of course. Face it, Bill, you've got to travel light. We're
pioneers."
"I
don't know what to throw out."
I guess I
looked glum for he said, "Quit feeling sorry for yourself. Me, I've got to
give up this—and that's tough, believe me." He held out his pipe.
"Why?"
I asked. "A pipe doesn't weigh much."
"Because
they aren't raising tobacco on Ganymede and they aren't importing any."
"Oh.
Look, George, I could just about make it if it weren't for my accordion. But it
licks me."
"Hmm .
. . Have you considered listing it as a cultural item?"
"Huh?"
"Read
the fine print. Approved cultural items are not covered by the personal weight
schedule. They are charged to the colony."
It had never
occurred to me that I might have anything that would qualify. "They
wouldn't let me get away with it, George!"
"Can't
rule you out for trying. Don't be a defeatist."
So two days
later I was up before the cultural and scientific board, trying to prove that I
was an asset. I knocked out Turkey in the Straw, Nehru's Opus 81, and
the introduction to Morgenstern's Dawn of the 22nd Century, as arranged
for squeeze boxes. I gave them The Green Hills of Earth for an encore.
They asked
me if I liked to play for other people and told me politely that I would be
informed as to the decision of the board . . . and about a week later I got a
letter directing me to turn my accordion over to the Supply Office, Hayward
Field. I was in, I was a "cultural asset"!
Four days
before blast-off Dad came home early-he had been closing his office—and asked
me if we could have something special for dinner; we were having guests. I said
I supposed so; my accounts showed that we would have rations to turn back.
He seemed
embarrassed. "Son—“
"Huh?
Yes, George?"
"You
know that item in the rules about families?"
"Uh,
yes."
"Well,
you were right about it, but I was holding out on you and now I've got to
confess. I'm getting married tomorrow."
There was a
sort of roaring in my ears. Dad couldn't have surprised me more if he had
slapped me.
I couldn't
say anything. I just stood there, looking at him. Finally I managed to get out,
"But, George, you can't do that!"
"Why
not, Son?"
"How
about Anne?"
"Anne
is dead."
"But—
But—" I couldn't say anything more; I ducked into my room and locked
myself in. I lay on the bed, trying to think.
Presently I
heard Dad trying the latch. Then he tapped on the door and said,
"Bill?"
I didn't
answer. After a while he went away. I lay there a while longer. I guess I
bawled, but I wasn't bawling over the trouble with Dad. It seemed the way it
did the day Anne died, when I couldn't get it through my head that I wouldn't
ever see her again. Wouldn't ever see her smile at me again and hear her say,
"Stand tall, Billy."
And I would
stand tall and she would look proud and pat my arm.
How could
George do it? How could he bring some other woman into Anne's home?
I got up
and had a look at myself in the mirror and then went in and set my 'fresher for
a needle shower and a hard massage. I felt better afterwards, except that I
still had a sick feeling in my stomach. The 'fresher blew me off and dusted me
and sighed to a stop. Through the sound it seemed to me I could hear Anne speaking
to me, but that must have been in my head.
She was
saying, "Stand tall, Son." I got dressed again and went out.
Dad was
messing around with dinner and I do mean messing. He had burned his thumb on
the shortwave, don't ask me how. I had to throw out what he had been fiddling
with, all except the salad. I picked out more stuff and started them cycling.
Neither of us said anything.
I set the
table for three and Dad finally spoke. "Better set it for four, Bill.
Molly has a daughter, you know."
I dropped a
fork. "Molly? You mean Mrs. Kenyon?"
"Yes.
Didn't I tell you? No, you didn't give me a chance to."
I knew her
all right. She was Dad's draftsman. I knew her daughter, too—a twelve-year-old
brat. Somehow, it being Mrs. Kenyon made it worse, indecent. Why, she had even
come to Anne's Farewell and had had the nerve to cry.
I knew now
why she had always been so chummy with me whenever I was down at Dad's office.
She had had her eye on George.
I didn't
say anything. What was there to say?
I said
"How do you do?" politely when they came in, then went out and
pretended to fiddle with dinner. Dinner was sort of odd. Dad and Mrs. Kenyon
talked and I answered when spoken to. I didn't listen. I was still trying to
figure out how he could do it. The brat spoke to me a couple of times but I
soon put her in her place.
After
dinner Dad said how about all of us going to a show? I begged off, saying that
I still had sorting to do. They went.
I thought
and thought about it. Any way I looked at it, it seemed like a bad deal.
At first I
decided that I wouldn't go to Ganymede after all, not if they were going. Dad
would forfeit my bond, but I would work hard and pay it back—I wasn't going to
owe them anything!
Then I
finally figured out why Dad was doing it and I felt some better, but not much.
It was too high a price.
Dad got
home late, by himself, and tapped on my door. It wasn't locked and he came in.
"Well, Son?" he said.
"'Well'
what?"
"Bill,
I know that this business comes as a surprise to you, but you'll get over
it."
I laughed,
though I didn't feel funny. Get over it! Maybe he could forget Anne, but I
never would.
"In
the meantime," he went on, "I want you to behave yourself. I suppose
you know you were as rude as you could be without actually spitting in their
faces?"
"Me
rude?"I objected. "Didn't I fix dinner for them? Wasn't I
polite?"
"You
were as polite as a judge passing sentence. And as friendly. You needed a swift
kick to make you remember your manners."
I guess I
looked stubborn. George went on, "That's done; let's forget it. See here,
Bill—in time you are going to see that this was a good idea. All I ask you to
do is to behave yourself in the meantime. I don't ask you to fall on their
necks; I do insist that you be your own normal, reasonably polite and friendly
self. Will you try?"
"Uh, I
suppose so." Then I went on with, "See here, Dad, why did you have to
spring it on me as a surprise?"
He looked
embarrassed. "That was a mistake. I suppose I did it because I knew you
would raise Cain about it and I wanted to put it off."
"But I
would have understood if you had only told me. I know why you want to
marry her—"
"Eh?"
"I
should have known when you mentioned that business about rules. You have to get
married so that we can go to Ganymede——"
"What?"
I was startled. I said, "Huh? That's right, isn't
it? You told me so yourself. You said—"
"I
said nothing of the sort!" Dad stopped, took a deep breath, then went on
slowly, "Bill, I suppose you possibly could have gathered that
impression—though I am not flattered that you could have entertained it. Now
I'll spell out the true situation: Molly and I are not getting married in order
to emigrate. We are emigrating because we are getting married. You may be too
young to understand it, but I love Molly and Molly loves me. If I wanted to
stay here, she'd stay. Since I want to go, she wants to go. She's wise enough
to understand that I need to make a complete break with my old background. Do
you follow me?"
I said I
guessed so.
"I'll
say goodnight, then."
I answered,
"Goodnight." He turned away, but I added, "George—" He
stopped.
I blurted
out. "You don't love Anne any more, do you?"
Dad turned
white. He started back in and then stopped. "Bill," he said slowly,
"it has been some years since I've laid a hand on you—but this is the
first time I ever wanted to give you a thrashing."
I thought
he was going to do it. I waited and I had made up my mind that if he touched me
he was going to get die surprise of his life. But he didn't come any nearer; he
just closed the door between us.
After
awhile I took another shower that I didn't need and went to bed. I must have
lain there an hour or more, thinking that Dad had wanted to hit me and wishing
that Anne were around to tell me what to do. Finally I switched on the dancing
lights and stared at them until they knocked me out.
Neither one
of us said anything until breakfast was over and neither of us ate much,
either. Finally Dad said, "Bill, I want to beg your pardon for what I said
last night. You hadn't done or said anything to justify raising a hand to you
and I had no business thinking it or saying it."
I said,
"Oh, that's all right." I thought about it and added, "I guess
I shouldn't have said what I did."
"It
was all right to say it What makes me sad is that you could have thought it. Bill,
I've never stopped loving Anne and I'll never love her any less."
"But
you said—" I stopped and finished, "I just don't get it."
"I
guess there is no reason to expect you to." George stood up. "Bill,
the ceremony is at fifteen o'clock. Will you be dressed and ready about an hour
before that time?"
I hesitated
and said, "I won't be able to, George. I've got a pretty full day."
His face
didn't have any expression at all and neither did his voice. He said, "I
see," and left the room. A bit later he left the apartment. A while later
I. tried to call him at his office, but the autosecretary ground out the old
stall about "Would you like to record a message?" I didn't. I figured
that George would be home some time before fifteen hundred and I got dressed in
my best. I even used some of Dad's beard cream.
He didn't
show up. I tried the office again, and again, got the
"Would-you-like-to-record-a-message?" routine. Then I braced myself
and looked up the code on Mrs. Kenyon.
He wasn't
there. Nobody was there.
The time
crawled past and there was nothing I could do about it. After a while it was
fifteen o'clock and I knew that my father was off somewhere getting married but
I didn't know where. About fifteen-thirty I went out and went to a show.
When I got
back the red light was shining on the phone. I dialed playback and it was Dad:
"Bill I tried to reach you but you weren't in and I can't wait. Molly and
I are leaving on a short trip. If you need to reach me, call Follow Up Service,
Limited, in Chicago—we'll be somewhere in Canada. We'll be back Thursday night.
Goodbye." That was the end of the recording.
Thursday
night—blast-off was Friday morning.
Dad called
me from Mrs. Kenyon's—I mean from Molly's—apartment Thursday night. We were
both polite but uneasy. I said yes, I was all ready and I hoped they had had a
nice time. He said they had and would I come over and we would all leave from
there in the morning.
I said I
hadn't known what his plans were, so I had bought a ticket to Mojave port and
had reserved a room at Hotel Lancaster. What did he want me to do?
He thought
about it and said, "It looks like you can take care of yourself,
Bill."
"Of
course I can."
"All
right. We'll see you at the port. Want to speak to Molly?"
"Uh,
no, just tell her hello for me."
"Thanks,
I will." He switched off.
I went to
my room and got my kit—fifty-seven and fifty-nine hundredths pounds; I couldn't
have added a clipped frog's hair. My room was bare, except for my Scout uniform.
I couldn't afford to take it, but I hadn't thrown it away yet.
I picked it
up, intending to take it to the incinerator, then stopped. At the physical exam
I had been listed at one hundred thirty-one and two tenths pounds mass in the
clothes I would wear for blast off.
But I
hadn't eaten much the last few days.
I stepped
into the 'fresher and onto the scales—one hundred twenty-nine and eight tenths.
I picked up the uniform and stepped back on the scales—one hundred thirty-two
and five tenths.
William, I
said, you get no dinner, you get no breakfast, and you drink no water tomorrow
morning. I bundled up my uniform and took it along.
The
apartment was stripped. As a surprise for the next tenant I left in the freezer
the stuff I had meant to eat for supper, then switched all the gadgets to zero
except the freezer, and locked the door behind me. It felt funny; Anne and
George and I had lived there as far back as I could remember.
I went down
to subsurface, across town, and caught the In-Coast tube for Mojave. Twenty
minutes later I was at Hotel Lancaster in the Mojave Desert.
I soon
found out that the "room" I had reserved was a cot in the billiard
room. I trotted down to find out what had happened.
I showed
the room clerk the 'stat that said I had a room coming to me. He looked at it
and said, "Young man, have you ever tried to bed down six thousand people
at once?"
I said no,
I hadn't.
"Then
be glad you've got a cot. The room you reserved is occupied by a family with
nine children."
I went.
The hotel
was a madhouse. I couldn't have gotten anything to eat even if I hadn't
promised myself not to eat; you couldn't get within twenty yards of the dining
room. There were children underfoot everywhere and squalling brats galore.
There were emigrant families squatting in the ball room. I looked them over and
wondered how they had picked them; out of a grab bag?
Finally I
went to bed. I was hungry and got hungrier. I began to wonder why I was going
to all this trouble to hang on to a Scout uniform I obviously wasn't going to
use.
If I had
had my ration book I would have gotten up and stood in line at the dining
room—but Dad and I had turned ours in. I still had some money and thought about
trying to find a free-dealers; they say you can find them around a hotel. But
Dad says that "free-dealer" is a fake word; they are black marketeers
and no gentleman will buy from them.
Besides
that I didn't have the slightest idea of how to go about finding one.
I got up
and got a drink and went back to bed and went through the relaxing routine.
Finally I got to sleep and dreamed about strawberry shortcake with real cream,
the kind that comes from cows.
I woke up
hungry but I suddenly remembered that this was it!—my last day on Earth. Then I
was too excited to be hungry. I got up, put on my Scout uniform and my ship
suit over it.
I thought
we would go right on board. I was wrong.
First we
had to assemble under awnings spread out in front of the hotel near the
embarking tubes. It wasn't air conditioned outside, of course, but it was early
and the desert wasn't really hot yet. I found the letter "L" and sat
down under it, sitting on my baggage. Dad and his new family weren't around
yet; I began to wonder if I was going to Ganymede by myself. I didn't much
care.
Out past
the gates about five miles away, you could see the ships standing on the field,
the Daedalus and the Icarus, pulled off the Earth-Moon run for
this one trip, and the old Bifrost that had been the shuttle rocket to
Supra-New-York space station as far back as I could remember.
The Daedalus
and the Icarus were bigger but I hoped I would get the Bifrost; she
was the first ship I ever saw blast off.
A family
put their baggage down by mine. The mother looked out across the field and
said, "Joseph, which one is the Mayflower?"
Her husband
tried to explain to her, but she still was puzzled. I nearly burst, trying to
keep from laughing. Here she was, all set to go to Ganymede and yet she was so
dumb she didn't even know that the ship she was going in had been built out in
space and couldn't land anywhere.
The place
was getting crowded with emigrants and relatives coming to see them off, but I
still didn't see anything of Dad. I heard my name called and turned around and
there was Duck Miller. "Gee, Bill," he said, "I thought I'd
missed you."
"Hi,
Duck. No, I'm still here."
"I
tried to call you last night but your phone answered 'service discontinued,' so
I hooked school and came up."
"Aw,
you shouldn't have done that."
"But I
wanted to bring you this." He handed me a package, a whole pound of
chocolates. I didn't know what to say.
I thanked
him and then said, "Duck, I appreciate it, I really do. But I'll have to
give them back to you."
"Huh?
Why?"
"Weight
Mass, I mean. I can't get by with another ounce."
"You
can carry it."
"That
won't help. It counts just the same."
He thought
about it and said, "Then let's open it."
I said,
"Fine," and did so and offered him a piece. I looked at them myself
and my stomach was practically sitting up and begging. I don't know when I've
been so hungry.
I gave in
and ate one. I figured I would sweat it off anyhow; it was getting hot and I
had my Scout uniform on under my ship suit—and that's no way to dress for the
Mojave Desert in June! Then I was thirstier than ever, of course; one thing leads
to another.
I went over
to a drinking fountain and took a very small drink. When I came back I closed
the candy box and handed it back to Duck and told him to pass it around at next
Scout meeting and tell the fellows I wished they were going along. He said he
would and added, "You know, Bill, I wish I was going. I really do."
I said I
wished he was, too, but when did he change his mind? He looked embarrassed but
about then Mr. Kinski showed up and then Dad showed up, with Molly and the
brat—Peggy—and Molly's sister, Mrs. van Metre. Everybody shook hands all around
and Mrs. van Metre started to cry and the brat wanted to know what made my
clothes so bunchy and what was I sweating about?
George was
eyeing me, but about then our names were called and we started moving through
the gate.
George and
Molly and Peggy were weighed through and then it was my turn. My baggage was
right on the nose, of course, and then I stepped on the scales. They read one
hundred and thirty-one and one tenth pounds—I could have eaten another
chocolate.
"Check!"
said the weightmaster, then he looked up and said, "What in the world have
you got on, son?"
The left
sleeve of my uniform had started to unroll and was sticking out below the half
sleeve of my ship suit. The merit badges were shining out like signal lights.
I didn't
say anything. He started feeling the lumps the uniform sleeves made.
"Boy," he said, "you're dressed like an arctic explorer; no
wonder you're sweating. Didn't you know you weren't supposed to wear anything but
the gear you were listed in?"
Dad came
back and asked what the trouble was? I just stood there with my ears burning.
The assistant weightmaster got into the huddle and they argued what should be
done. The weightmaster phoned somebody and finally he said, "He's inside
his weight limit; if he wants to call
that monkey suit part of his skin, we'll allow it. Next customer, please!"
I trailed
along, feeling foolish. We went down inside and climbed on the slide strip, it
was cool down there, thank goodness. A few minutes later we got off at the
loading room down under the rocket ship. Sure enough, it was the Bifrost, as
I found out when the loading elevator poked above ground and stopped at
the passenger port. We filed in.
They had it
all organized. Our baggage had been taken from us in the loading room; each
passenger had a place assigned by his weight. That split us up again; I was on
the deck immediately under the control room. I found my place, couch 14-D, then
went to a view port where I could see the Daedalus and the Icarus.
A brisk
little stewardess, about knee high to a grasshopper, checked my name off a list
and offered me an injection against dropsickness. I said no, thanks.
She said,
"You've been out before?"
I admitted
I hadn't; she said, "Better take it."
I said I
was a licensed air pilot; I wouldn't get sick I didn't tell her that my license
was just for copters. She shrugged and turned away. A loudspeaker said,
"The Daedalus is cleared for blasting." I moved up to get a
good view.
The Daedalus
was about a quarter of a mile away and stood up higher than we did. She had
fine lines and was a mighty pretty sight, gleaming in the morning sunshine.
Beyond her and to the right, clear out at the edge of the field, a light shone
green at the traffic control blockhouse.
She canted
slowly over to the south, just a few degrees.
Fire burst
out of her base, orange, and then blinding white. It splashed down into the
ground baffles and curled back up through the ground vents. She lifted.
She hung
there for a breath and you could see the hills shimmer through her jet. And she
was gone.
Just like
that—she was gone. She went up out of there like a scared bird, just a pencil
of white fire in the sky, and was gone while we could still hear and feel the
thunder of her jets inside the compartment.
My ears
were ringing. I heard someone behind me say, "But I haven't had breakfast.
The Captain will just have to wait. Tell him, Joseph."
It was the
woman who hadn't known that the Mayflower was a space-to-space ship. Her
husband tried to hush her up, but he didn't have any luck. She called over the
stewardess. I heard her answer, "But, madam, you can't speak to the
Captain now. He's preparing for blast-off."
Apparently
that didn't make any difference. The stewardess finally got her quiet by
solemnly promising that she could have breakfast after blast-off. I bent my
ears at that and I decided to put in a bid for breakfast, too.
The Icarus
took off twenty minutes later and then the speaker said, "All hands!
Acceleration stations–prepare to blast off." I went back to my couch and
the stewardess made sure that we were all strapped down. She cautioned us not
to unstrap until she said we could. She went down to the deck below.
I felt my
ears pop and there was a soft sighing in the ship. I swallowed and kept
swallowing. I knew what they were doing: blowing the natural air out and
replacing it with the standard helium-oxygen mix at half sea-level pressure.
But the woman—the same one—didn't like it. She said, "Joseph, my head
aches. Joseph, I can't breathe. Do something!"
Then she
clawed at her straps and sat up. Her husband sat up, too, and forced her back
down.
The Bifrost
tilted over a little and the speaker said, "Minus three minutes!"
After a
long time it said, "Minus two minutes!"
And then
"Minus one minutel" and another voice took up the count:
"Fifty-nine!
Fifty-eight! Fifty-seven!"
My heart
started to pound so hard I could hardly hear it. But it went on:
"-thirty-five! Thirty-four! Thirty-three! Thirty-two! Thirty-one! Half!
Twenty-nine! Twenty-eight!"
And it got
to be: "Ten!"
And
"Nine!"
"Eight!
"Seven!
"And
six!
"And
five!
"And
four!
"And
three!
"And
two—"
I never did
hear them say "one" or "fire" or whatever they said. About
then something fell on me and I thought I was licked. Once, exploring a cave
with the fellows, a bank collapsed on me and I had to be dug out. It was like
that—but nobody dug me out.
My chest
hurt My ribs seemed about to break. I couldn't lift a finger. I gulped and
couldn't get my breath.
I wasn't
scared, not really, because I knew we would take off with a high g, but I was
awfully uncomfortable. I managed to turn my head a little and saw that the sky
was already purple. While I watched, it turned black and the stars came out,
millions of stars. And yet the Sun was still streaming in through the port
The roar of
the jets was unbelievable but the noise started to die out almost at once and
soon you couldn't hear it at all. They say the old ships used to be noisy even
after you passed the speed of sound; the Bifrost was not. It got as
quiet as the inside of a bag of feathers.
There was
nothing to do but lie there, stare out at that black sky, try to breathe, and
try not to think about the weight sitting on you.
And then,
so suddenly that it made your stomach turn flip-flops, you didn't weigh
anything at all.
Let me tell
you that the first time you fall is no fun. Sure, you get over it. If you
didn't you would starve. Old space hands even get so they like
it—weightlessness, I mean. They say that two hours of weightless sleep is equal
to a full night on Earth. I got used to it, but I never got to like it.
The
Bifrost had blasted for a little more than three minutes. It seemed lots
longer because of the high acceleration; we had blasted at nearly six g. Then
she was in free orbit for better than three hours and we fell the whole time,
until the Captain started to maneuver to match orbits with the Mayflower.
In other
words we fell straight up for more than twenty thousand miles.
Put that
way, it sounds silly. Everybody knows that things don't fall up; they
fall down.
Everybody
knew the world was flat, too.
We fell up.
Like
everybody, I had had the elements of space ballistics in grammar school
physics, and goodness knows there have been enough stories about how you float
around in a spaceship when it's in a free orbit. But, take it from me, you
don't really believe it until you've tried it.
Take Mrs.
Tarbutton—the woman who wanted breakfast. I suppose she went to school like
everybody else. But she kept insisting that the Captain had to do something
about it. What he could do I don't know; find her a small asteroid, maybe.
Not that I
didn't sympathize with her—or with myself, I guess. Ever been in an earthquake?
You know how everything you ever depended on suddenly goes back on you and terra
firma isn't firma any longer? It's like that, only much worse. This
is no place to review grammar school physics but when a spaceship is in a free
trajectory, straight up or any direction, the ship and everything in it moves
along together and you fall, endlessly—and your stomach darn near falls
out of you.
That was
the first thing I noticed. I was strapped down so that I didn't float away, but
I felt weak and shaky and dizzy and as if I had been kicked in the stomach.
Then my mouth filled with saliva and I gulped and I was awfully sorry I had
eaten that chocolate.
But it
didn't come up, not quite.
The only
thing that saved me was no breakfast. Some of the others were not so lucky. I
tried not to look at them. I had intended to unstrap as soon as we went free
and go to a port so I could look at Earth, but I lost interest in that project
entirely. I stayed strapped down, and concentrated on being miserable.
The
stewardess came floating out the hatch from the next deck, shoved herself along
with a toe, checked herself with a hand at the center stanchion, and hovered in
the air in a swan dive, looking us over. It was very pretty to watch if I'd
been in shape to appreciate it.
"Is
everybody comfy?" she said cheerfully.
It was a
silly remark but I suppose nurses get that way. Somebody groaned and a baby on
the other side of the compartment started to cry. The stewardess moved over to
Mrs. Tarbutton and said, "You may have breakfast now. What would you like?
Scrambled eggs?"
I clamped
my jaw and turned my head away, wishing she would shut up. Then I looked back.
She had paid for that silly remark—and she had to clean it up.
When she
was through with Mrs. Tarbutton I said, "Uh-oh, Miss—"
"Andrews."
"Miss
Andrews, could I change my mind about that drop-sick injection?"
"Righto,
chum," she agreed, smiling, and whipped out an injector from a little kit
she had at her belt. She gave me the shot. It burned and for a moment I thought
I was going to lose the chocolate after all. But then things quieted down and I
was almost happy in a miserable sort of way.
She left me
and gave shots to some others who had kidded themselves the same way I had.
Mrs. Tarbutton she gave another sort of shot to knock her out entirely. One or
two of the hardier souls unstrapped themselves and went to the ports; I decided
I was well enough to try it.
It's not as
easy as it looks, this swimming around in free fall. I undid the safety belts
and sat up; that's all I meant to do. Then I was scrambling in the air, out of
control, trying frantically to grasp at anything.
I turned
over in the air and cracked the back of my head against the underside of the
control room deck and saw stars, not the ones out the ports—some of my own.
Then the deck with the couches on it was approaching me slowly.
I managed
to grab a safety belt and came to anchor. The couch it belonged to was occupied
by a little plump man. I said, "Excuse me."
He said,
"Don't mention it," and turned his face away, looking as if he hated
me. I couldn't stay there and I couldn't even get back to my own couch without
grabbing handholds on other couches that were occupied, too, so I pushed off
again, very gently this time, and managed to grab hold when I bumped against
the other deck.
It had
handholds and grab lines all over it. I didn't let go again, but pulled myself
along, monkey fashion, to one of the ports.
And there I
got my first view of Earth from space.
I don't
know what I expected, but it wasn't what I expected. There it was, looking just
like it does in the geography books, or maybe more the way it does in the
station announcements of Super-New-York TV station. And yet it was different. I
guess I would say it was like the difference between being told about a good
hard kick in the rear and actually being kicked.
Not a
transcription. Alive.
For one
thing it wasn't prettily centered in a television screen; it was shouldering
into one side of the frame of the port, and the aft end of the ship cut a big
chunk out of the Pacific Ocean. And it was moving, shrinking. While I hung
there it shrunk to about half the size it was when I first got there and got
rounder and rounder. Columbus was right.
From where
I was it was turned sideways; the end of Siberia, then North America, and
finally the north half of South America ran across from left to right. There
were clouds over Canada and the eastern part of the rest of North America; they
were the whitest white I ever saw—whiter than the north pole cap. Right
opposite us was the reflection of the Sun on the ocean; it hurt my eyes. The
rest of the ocean was almost purple where there weren't clouds.
It was so
beautiful my throat ached and I wanted to reach out and touch it.
And back of
it were stars, even brighter and bigger and more of them than the way they look
from Little America.
Pretty soon
there were more people crowding around, trying to see, and kids shoving and their
mothers saying, "Now, now, darling!" and making silly remarks
themselves. I gave up. I pulled myself back to my couch and put one belt around
me so I wouldn't float away and thought about it. It makes you proud to know
that you come from a big, fancy planet like that. I got to thinking that I
hadn't seen all of it, not by a long sight, in spite of all the geography trips
I had made and going to one Scout round-up in Switzerland and the time George
and Anne and I went to Siam.
And now I
wasn't going to see any more of it. It made me feel pretty solemn.
I looked
up; there was a boy standing in front of me. He said, "What's the trouble,
William, my boy? Dropsick?"
It was that
twerp Jones. You could have knocked me out with a feather. If I had known he
was going to emigrate, I would have thought twice about it.
I asked him
where in the world he had come from.
"The
same place you did, naturally. I asked you a question."
I informed
him that I was not dropsick and asked him whatever gave him that silly notion.
He reached out and grabbed my arm and turned it so that the red spot the
injection had made showed. He laughed and I jerked my arm away.
He laughed
again and showed me his arm; it had a red spot on it, too. "Happens to the
best of us," he said. "Don't be shy about it."
Then he
said, "Come on. Let's look around the joint before they make us strap down
again."
I went
along. He wasn't what I would pick for a buddy but he was a familiar face. We
worked our way over to the hatch to the next deck. I started to go through but
Jones stopped me. "Let's go into the control room," he suggested.
"Huh?
Oh, they wouldn't let us!"
"Is it
a crime to try? Come on." We went back the other way and through a short
passage. It ended in a door that was marked: CONTROL ROOM-STAY OUT! Somebody
had written under it: This means you!!! and somebody else had added: Who?
Me?
Jones tried
it; it was locked. There was a button beside it; he pushed it.
It opened
and we found ourselves staring into the face of a man with two stripes on his
collar. Behind him was an older man with four stripes on his; he called out,
"Who is it, Sam? Tell 'em we're not in the market."
The first
man said, "What do you kids want?"
Jones said,
"Please, sir, we're interested in astrogation. Could we have permission to
visit the control room?"
I could see
he was going to chuck us out and I had started to turn away when the older man
called out, "Oh, shucks, Sam, bring 'em in!"
The younger
fellow shrugged and said, "As you say, Skipper."
We went in
and the Captain said, "Grab on to something; don't float around. And don't
touch anything, or I'll cut your ears off. Now who are you?"
We told
him; he said, "Glad to know you, Hank–same to you, Bill. Welcome aboard."
Then he reached out and touched the sleeve of my uniform—it had come loose
again. "Son, your underwear is showing."
I blushed
and told him how I happened to be wearing it. He laughed and said, "So you
swindled us into lifting it anyway. That's rich—eh, Sam? Have a cup of
coffee."
They were
eating sandwiches and drinking coffee— not from cups, of course, but from
little plastic bags like they use for babies. The bags even had nipples on
them. I said no, thanks. While the shot Miss Andrews gave me had made me feel
better, it hadn't made me feel that much better. Hank Jones turned it down,
too.
The control
room didn't have a port in it of any sort. There was a big television screen
forward on the bulkhead leading to the nose, but it wasn't turned on. I wondered
what Mrs. Tarbutton would think if she knew that the Captain couldn't see where
we were going and didn't seem to care.
I asked him
about the ports. He said ports were strictly for tourists. "What would you
do with a port if you had one?" he asked. "Stick your head out the
window and look for road signs? We can see anything we need to see. Sam, heat
up the video and show the kids."
"Aye
aye, Skipper." The other chap swam over to his couch and started turning
switches. He left his sandwich hanging in the air while he did so.
I looked
around. The control room was circular and the end we came in was bigger than
the other end; it was practically up in the nose of the ship and the sides
sloped in. There were two couches, one for the pilot and one for the co-pilot,
flat against the wall that separated the control room from the passenger
compartments. Most of the space between the couches was taken up by the
computer.
The couches
were fancier than the ones the passengers had; they were shaped to the body and
they lifted the knees and the head and back, like a hospital bed, and there
were arm rests to support their hands over the ship's controls. An instrument
board arched over each couch at the middle, where the man in the couch could
see the dials and stuff even when his head was pushed back into the cushions by
high g.
The TV
screen lighted up and we could see Earth; it filled most of the screen.
"That's 'View Aft'," the copilot said, "from a TV camera in the
tail. We've got 'em pointing in all directions. Now we'll try 'View
Forward'." He did, but it didn't amount to anything, just a few tiny
little dots that might have been stars. Hank said you could see more stars out
a port.
"You
don't use it to look at stars," he answered. "When you need to take a
star sight, you use the coelostats. Like this." He lay back on the couch
and reached behind his head, pulling an eye piece arrangement over his face
until the rubber guard fitted over one eye without lifting his head off the
couch. "Coelostat" is just a trick name for a telescope with a
periscope built into it. He didn't offer to let us look through it, so I looked
back at the instrument board. It had a couple of radar presentations, much like
you'll find in any atmosphere ship, even in a copter, and a lot of other instruments,
most of which I didn't understand, though some of them were pretty obvious,
like approach rate and throat temperature and mass ratio and ejection speed and
such.
"Watch
this," said the co-pilot. He did something at his controls; one of the
tiny blips on the TV screen lit up very brightly, blinked a few times, then
died away. "That was Supra-New-York; I triggered her radar beacon. You are
not seeing it by television; it's radar brought on to the same screen." He
fiddled with the controls again and another light blinked, two longs and a
short. "That's where they're building the Star Rover."
"Where's
the Mayflower?" Hank asked.
"Want
to see where you're going, eh?" He touched his controls again; another
light came on, way off to one side, flashing in groups of three.
I said it
didn't look much like we were going there. The Captain spoke up. "We're
taking the long way round, past the fair grounds. That's enough, Sam. Lock your
board."
We all went
back where the Captain was still eating. "You an Eagle Scout?" he
asked me. I said yes and Hank said he was too.
"How
old were you when you made it?" he wanted to know. I said I had been
thirteen, so Hank said twelve, whereupon the Captain claimed he had made it at
eleven. Personally I didn't believe either one of them.
The Captain
said so now we were going out to Ganymede; he envied both of us. The co-pilot
said what was there to envy about that?
The Captain
said, "Sam, you've got no romance in your soul. You'll live and die
running a ferry boat."
"Maybe
so," the co-pilot answered, "but I sleep home a lot of nights."
The Captain
said pilots should not marry. "Take me," he said, "I always
wanted to be a deep-space man. I was all set for it, too, when I was captured
by pirates and missed my chance. By the time I had the chance again, I was
married."
"You
and your pirates," said the co-pilot.
I kept my
face straight. Adults always think anybody younger will swallow anything; I try
not to disillusion them.
"Well,
all that's as may be," said the Captain. "You two young gentlemen run
along now. Mr. Mayes and I have got to fake up a few figures, or we'll be
landing this bucket in South Brooklyn."
So we
thanked him and left.
I found Dad
and Molly and the Brat in the deck aft of my own. Dad said, "Where have
you been, Bill? I've been looking all over the ship for you."
I told
them, "Up in the control room with the Captain."
Dad looked
surprised and the Brat made a face at me and said, "Smarty, you have not.
Nobody can go up there."
I think
girls should be raised in the bottom of a deep, dark sack until they are old
enough to know better. Then when it came time, you could either let them out or
close the sack and throw them away, whichever was the best idea.
Molly said,
"Hush, Peggy."
I said,
"You can just ask Hank. He was with me. We—" I looked around but Hank
was gone. So I told them what had happened, all but the part about pirates.
When I
finished the Brat said, "I want to go into the control room, too."
Dad said he
didn't think it could be arranged. The Brat said, "Why not? Bill
went."
Molly said
hush again. "Bill is a boy and older than you are." The Brat said it
wasn't fair.
I guess she
had something there—but things hardly ever are. Dad went on, "You should
feel flattered, Bill, being entertained by the famous Captain DeLongPre."
"Huh?"
"Maybe
you are too young to remember it. He let himself be sealed into one of the
robot freighters used to jump thorium ore from the lunar mines—and busted up a
ring of hijackers, a gang the newscasters called the 'Ore Pirates.'"
I didn't
say anything.
I wanted to
see the Mayflower from space, but they made us strap down before I could
locate it. I got a pretty good view of Supra-New-York though; the Mayflower was
in the 24-hour orbit the space station rides in and we were closing almost
directly on it when the word came to strap down.
Captain
DeLongPre was quite some pilot. He didn't fiddle around with jockeying his ship
into the new groove; he gave one long blast on the jet, the right time, the
right amount, and the right direction. As it says in the physics book,
"every one-plane correction-of-orbit problem which can be solved at all,
can be solved with a single application of acceleration"—provided the
pilot is good enough.
He was good
enough. When we went weightless again, I looked over my shoulder out a port and
there was the Mayflower, with the Sun gleaming on her, large as life and
not very far away. There was the softest sort of a correction bump and the
loudspeaker sang out, "Contact completed. You may unstrap."
I did and
went to the port from which we could see the Mayflower. It was easy to see
why she could never land; she had no airfoils of any sort, not even fins, and
she was the wrong shape—almost spherical except that one side came out to a
conical point.
She looked
much too small—then I realized that a little bulge that was sticking out past
her edge at one point was actually the bow of the Icarus, unloading on
the far side. Then suddenly she was enormous and the little flies on her were
men in space suits.
One of them
shot something at us and a line came snaking across. Before the knob on the end
of it quite reached us there was a bright purple brush discharge from the end
of it and every hair on my head stood straight up and my skin prickled. A
couple of the women in the compartment squealed and I heard Miss Andrews
soothing them down and telling them that it was just the electrical potential
adjusting between the two ships. If she had told them it was a bolt of
lightning she would have been just as correct, but I don't suppose that would
have soothed them.
I wasn't
scared; any kid who had fooled around with radio or any sort of electronics
would have expected it.
The knob on
the line clunked against the side of the ship and after a bit the little line
was followed by a heavier line and then they warped us together, slowly. The Mayflower
came up until she filled the port.
After a bit
my ears popped and the loudspeaker said, "All hands—prepare to
disembark."
Miss
Andrews made us wait quite a while, then it was our deck's turn and we pulled
ourselves along to the deck we had come in by. Mrs. Tarbutton didn't come
along; she and her husband were having some sort of a discussion with Miss
Andrews.
We went
right straight out of our ship, through a jointed steel drum about ten feet
long, and into the Mayflower.
Do you know
the worst thing about spaceships? They smell bad.
Even the Mayflower
smelled bad and she was brand new. She smelled of oil and welding and
solvents and dirty, sweaty smells of all the workmen who had lived in her so
long. Then we came, three shiploads of us, most of us pretty whiff with that
bad odor people get when they're scared or very nervous. My stomach still
wasn't happy and it almost got me.
The worst
of it is that there can't be very good 'freshers in a ship; a bath is a luxury.
After the ship got organized we were issued tickets for two baths a week, but
how far does that go, especially when a bath means two gallons of water to
sponge yourself off with?
If you felt
you just had to have a bath, you could ask around and maybe buy a ticket
from somebody who was willing to skip one. There was one boy in my bunk room
who sold his tickets for four weeks running until we all got sick of it and
gave him an unscheduled bath with a very stiff brush. But I'm getting ahead of
myself.
And you
couldn't burn your clothes either; you had to wash them.
When we
first got into the Mayflower it took them maybe half an hour to get us
all sorted out and into our acceleration couches. The people from the Daedalus
and the Icarus were supposed to be stowed away by the time we got
there, but they weren't and the passageways were traffic jams. A traffic jam
when everybody is floating, and you don't know which end is up, is about eight
times as confusing as an ordinary one.
There weren't
any stewardesses to get us straight, either; there were emigrants instead, with
signs on their chests reading SHIP'S AIDE–but a lot of them needed aid
themselves; they were just as lost as anybody else. It was like amateur
theatricals where the ushers don't know how to find the reserved seats.
By the time
I was in the bunk room I was assigned to and strapped down there were bells
ringing all over the place and loudspeakers shouting: "Prepare for
acceleration! Ten minutes!"
Then we
waited.
It seemed
more like half an hour. Presently the count-off started. I said to myself,
William, if the blast-off from Earth was rugged, this is going to knock the
teeth right out of your head. I knew what we were going to build up to—better
than ninety-three miles per second. That's a third of a million miles an hour!
Frankly I was scared.
The seconds
ticked away; there was a soft push that forced me down against the cushions—and
that was all. I just lay there; the ceiling was the ceiling again and the floor
was under me, but I didn't feel extra heavy, I felt fine.
I decided
that was just the first step; the next one would be a dilly.
Up overhead
in the bunk room was a display screen; it lighted up and I was looking into the
face of a man with four collar stripes; he was younger than Captain DeLongPre.
He smiled and said, "This is your Captain speaking, friends—Captain
Harkness. The ship will remain at one gravity for a little more than four
hours.I think it is time to serve lunch, don't you?"
He grinned
again and I realized that my stomach wasn't bothering me at all—except that I
was terribly hungry. I guess he knew that all of us ground hogs would be
starving to death as soon as we were back to normal weight. He went on:
"We'll
try to serve you just as quickly as possible. It is all right for you to
unstrap now, sit up, and relax, but I must ask you to be very careful about one
thing:
"This
ship is precisely balanced so that the thrust of our drive passes exactly
through our center of gravity. If that were not so, we would tend to spin
instead of moving in a straight line—and we might fetch up in the heart of the
Sun instead of at Ganymede.
"None
of us wants to become an impromptu barbecue, so I will ask each of you not to
move unnecessarily from the neighborhood of your couch. The ship has an
automatic compensator for a limited amount of movement, but we must not
overload it—so get permission from your ship's aide before moving as much as
six inches from your present positions."
He grinned
again and it was suddenly a most unpleasant grin. "Any one violating this
rule will be strapped down by force—and the Captain will assign punishment to
fit the crime after we are no longer under drive."
There
wasn't any ship's aide in our compartment; all we could do was wait. I got
acquainted with the boys in the bunkroom, some older, some younger. There was a
big, sandy-haired boy about seventeen, by the name of Edwards—"Noisy"
Edwards. He got tired of waiting.
I didn't
blame him; it seemed like hours went past and still nothing to eat. I thought
we had been forgotten.
Edwards had
been hanging around the door, peering out. Finally he said, "This is
ridiculous! We can't sit here all day. I'm for finding out what's the hold up.
Who's with me?"
One of the
fellows objected, "The Captain said to sit tight."
"What
if he did? And what can he do if we don't? We aren't part of the crew."
I pointed
out that the Captain had authority over the whole ship, but he brushed me off.
"Tommyrot! We got a right to know what's going on—and a right to be fed.
Who's coming along?"
Another boy
said, "You're looking for trouble, Noisy."
Edwards
stopped; I think he was worried by the remark but he couldn't back down.
Finally he said, "Look, we're supposed to have a ship's aide and we
haven't got one. You guys elect me ship's aide and I'll go bring back chow.
How's that?"
Nobody
objected out loud. Noisy said, "Okay, here I go."
He couldn't
have been gone more than a few seconds when a ship's aide showed up carrying a
big box of packaged rations. He dealt them out and had one left over. Then he
counted the bunks. "Weren't there twenty boys in here?" he asked.
We looked
at each other but nobody said anything. He pulled out a list and called our
names. Edwards didn't answer, of course, and he left, taking Noisy's ration
with him.
Then Noisy
showed up and saw us eating and wanted to know where his lunch was. We told
him; he said, "For the love of Mike! Why didn't you guys save it for me? A
fine bunch you turned out to be." And he left again.
He came back shortly, looking mad. A ship's aide followed him and strapped him down.
We had
about reached the teeth-picking stage when the screen on the ceiling lit up
again and there was the Moon. It looked as if we were headed right toward it
and coming up fast. I began to wonder if Captain Harkness had dropped a decimal
point.
I lay back
on my couch and watched it grow. After a while it looked worse. When it had
grown until it filled the screen and more and it seemed as if we couldn't
possibly miss, I saw that the mountains were moving past on the screen from
right to left. I breathed a sigh of relief; maybe the Old Man knew what he was
doing after all.
A voice
came over the speaker: "We are now passing the Moon and tacking slightly
in so doing. Our relative speed at point of closest approach is more than fifty
miles per second, producing a somewhat spectacular effect."
I'll say it
was spectacular! We zipped across the face of the Moon in about half a minute,
then it faded behind us. I suppose they simply kept a TV camera trained on it,
but it looked as if we had dived in, turned sharply, and raced out again. Only
you don't make sharp turns at that speed.
About two
hours later they stopped gunning her. I had fallen asleep and I dreamed I was
making a parachute jump and the chute failed to open. I woke up with a yell,
weightless, with my stomach dropping out of me again. It took me a moment to
figure out where I was.
The
loudspeaker said: "End of acceleration. Spin will be placed on the ship at
once."
But it did
not happen all at once; it happened very slowly. We drifted toward one wall and
slid down it toward the outer wall of the ship. That made what had been the
outer wall the floor; we stood on it— and the side with the bunks on it was now
a wall and the side with the TV screen on it, which had been the ceiling, was
now the opposite wall. Gradually we got heavier.
Noisy was
still strapped to his couch; the ship's aide had moved the buckles so that he
could not reach them himself. Now he was up against the wall, hanging on the
straps like a papoose. He began to yell for us to help him down.
He was not
in any danger and he could not have been too uncomfortable, for we weren't up
to a full gravity, not by a whole lot. It turned out later that the Captain had
brought the spin up to one-third g and held it there, because Ganymede has
one-third g. So there wasn't any urgent need to turn Noisy loose.
Nor was
there any rush to do so. We were still discussing it and some of the fellows
were making comical remarks which Noisy did not appreciate when the same ship's
aide came in, unstrapped Noisy, and told all of us to follow him.
That's how
I happened to attend Captain's mast.
"Captain's
mast" is a sort of court, like when in ancient times the lord of the
countryside would sit and dispense the high and middle justice. We followed the
aide, whose name was Dr. Archibald, to Captain Harkness's cabin. There were a
lot of other people waiting there in the passage outside the cabin. Presently
Captain Harkness came out and Noisy was the first case.
We were all
witnesses but the Captain didn't question but a few of us; I wasn't questioned.
Dr. Archibald told about finding Noisy wandering around the ship while we were
under acceleration and the Captain asked Noisy if he had heard the order to
stay at his bunk?
Noisy beat
around the bush a good deal and tried to spread the blame on all of us, but
when the Captain pinned him down he had to admit that he had heard the order.
Captain
Harkness said, "Son, you are an undisciplined lunk. I don't know what sort
of trouble you'll run into as a colonist, but so far as my ship is concerned,
you've had it."
He mused
for a moment, than added, "You say you did this because you were
hungry?"
Noisy said
yes, he hadn't had anything since breakfast and he still hadn't had his lunch.
"Ten
days bread and water," said the Captain. "Next case."
Noisy
looked as if he couldn't believe his ears.
The next
case was the same thing, but a woman-one of those large, impressive ones who
run things. She had had a row with her ship's aide and had stomped off to tell
the Captain about it personally— while we were under acceleration.
Captain
Harkness soon cut through the fog. "Madam," he said, with icy
dignity, "by your bull-headed stupidity you have endangered the lives of
all of us. Do you have anything to say for yourself?"
She started
a tirade about how "rude" the aide had been to her and how she never
heard of anything so preposterous in her life as this kangaroo
court, and so forth, and so forth. The Captain cut her short.
"Have
you ever washed dishes?" he asked.
"Why,
no!"
"Well,
you are going to wash dishes—for the next four hundred million miles."
I looked up
dad after they let us go. It was like finding a needle in a haystack but I kept
asking and presently I found him. Molly and he had a room to themselves. Peggy
was there and I thought she was rooming with them, which annoyed me some, until
I saw that there were only two couches and realized that Peggy must be in a
dormitory. It turned out that all the kids over eight were in dormitories.
Dad was
busy unclamping their couches and moving them to what was the floor, now that
the ship was spinning. He stopped when I came in and we sat around and talked.
I told him about Captain's mast. He nodded. "We saw it in the screen. I
didn't notice your shining face, however."
I said I
hadn't been called on.
"Why
not?" Peggy wanted to know.
"How
should I know?" I thought about mast for a bit and said, "Say,
George, the skipper of a ship in space is just about the last of the absolute
monarchs, isn't he?"
Dad
considered it and said, "Mmm . . . no, he's a constitutional monarch. But
he's a monarch all right."
"You
mean we have to bow down to him and say 'Your Majesty?" Peggy wanted to
know.
Molly said,
“I don't think that would be advisable, Peg."
"Why
not? I think it would be fun."
Molly
smiled. "Well, let me know how you make out. I suspect that he will just
turn you over his knee and paddle you."
"Oh,
he wouldn't dare! I'd scream."
I wasn't so
sure. I remembered those four hundred million miles of dirty dishes. I decided
that, if the Captain said "Frog," I'd hop.
If Captain
Harkness was a monarch, he didn't seem anxious to rule; the first thing he had
us do was to hold an election and set up a ship's council. After that we hardly
laid eyes on him.
Everybody
over eighteen could vote. The rest of us got to vote, too; we were told to
setup a junior council—not that it was ever good for anything.
But the
senior council, the real council, ran the ship from then on. It even
acted as a court and the Captain never handed out punishments again. Dad told
me that the Captain reviewed everything that the council did, that he had to,
to make it legal—but I never heard of him overruling their decisions.
And you
know what the first thing was that that council did—after setting up meal hours
and simple things like that? They decided we had to go to school!
The junior
council promptly held a meeting and passed a resolution against it, but it
didn't mean anything. We had school, just the same.
Peggy was
on the junior council. I asked her why she didn't resign if she wasn't going to
do anything. I was just teasing—as a matter of fact she put up quite a battle
for us.
School
wasn't so bad, though. There is very h'ttle to do in space and when you've seen
one star you've seen 'em all. And the first thing we had in school was a tour
of the ship, which was all right.
We went in
groups of twenty and it took all day–“day" by ship's time, I mean. The Mayflower
was shaped like a ball with a cone on one side—top shaped. The point of the
cone was her jet—although Chief Engineer Ortega, who showed us around, called
it her "torch."
If you
count the torch end as her stern, then the round end, her bow, was where the
control room was located; around it were the Captain's cabin and the staterooms
of the officers. The torch and the whole power plant space were cut off from
the rest of the ship by a radiation shield that ran right through the ship.
From the shield forward to the control room was a big cargo space. It was a
cylinder more than a hundred feet in diameter and was split up into holds. We
were carrying all sorts of things out to the colony —earth moving machinery,
concentrated soil cultures, instruments, I don't know what all.
Wrapped
around this central cylinder were the decks for living, "A" deck just
inside the skin of the ship, "B" deck under it, and "C"
deck just inside that, with "D" deck's ceiling being the outer wall
of the cargo space. "D" deck was the mess rooms and galley and
recreation rooms and sick bay and such; the three outer decks were bunk rooms
and staterooms. "A" deck had steps in it every ten or fifteen feet
because it was fitted into the outer curve of the ship; this made the ceilings
in it of various heights. The furthest forward and furthest aft on
"A" deck were only about six feet between floor and ceiling and some
of the smaller kids lived in them, while at the greatest width of the ship the
ceilings in "A" deck must have been twelve or thirteen feet high.
From inside
the ship it was hard to see how it all fitted together. Not only was it all
chopped up, but the artificial gravity we had from spinning the ship made
directions confusing—anywhere you stood on a deck it seemed level, but it
curved sharply up behind you and in front of you. But you never came to the
curved part; if you walked forward it was still level. If you walked far enough
you looped the loop and came back to where you started, having walked clear
around the ship.
I never
would have figured it out if Mr. Ortega hadn't drawn a sketch for us.
Mr. Ortega
told us that the ship was spinning three and six-tenths revolutions per minute
or two hundred and sixteen complete turns an hour, which was enough to give
"B" deck a centrifugal force of one-third g. "B" deck was
seventy-five feet out from the axis of the Mayflower; "A" deck
where I lived was further out and you weighed maybe a tenth more there, while
"C" deck caught about a tenth less. "D" deck was quite a
lot less and you could make yourself dizzy if you stood up suddenly in the mess
room.
The control
room was right on the axis; you could float in it even when the ship was
spinning—or so they told me; I never was allowed inside.
Spinning
the ship had another odd effect: all around us was "down." I mean to
say that the only place you could put a view port was in the floor plates of
"A" deck and that's where they were, four of them—big ones, each in
its own compartment.
Mr. Ortega
took us into one of these view galleries. The view port was a big round quartz
plate in the floor, with a guard rail around it.
The first
ones into the room went up to the guard rail and then backed away from it quick
and two of the girls squealed. I pushed forward and got to the rail and looked
down , . . and I was staring straight into the very bottom of the universe, a
million trillion miles away and all of it down.
I didn't
shy away—George says I'm more acrobat than acrophobe—but I did sort of grip the
railing. Nobody wants to fall that far. The quartz was surface-treated so that
it didn't give off reflections and it looked as if there were nothing at all
between you and Kingdom Come.
The stars
were reeling across the hole from the ship spinning, which made it worse. The
Big Dipper came swinging in from the left, passed almost under me, and slid
away to the right—and a few seconds later it was back again. I said, "This
is where I came in," and gave up my place so that someone else could have
a look, but nobody seemed anxious to.
Then we
went through the hydroponics plant, but there wasn't anything fancy about
that—just enough plants growing to replace the oxygen we used up breathing. Eel
grass, it was mostly, but there was a vegetable garden as well. I wondered how
they had gotten it going before they had the passengers aboard? Mr. Ortega
pointed to a CO2 fitting in the wall. "We had to subsidize them,
of course."
I guess I
should have known it; it was simple arithmetic.
The Chief
led us back into one of the mess rooms, we sat down, and he told us about the
power plant.
He said
that there had been three stages in the development of space ships: first was
the chemical fuel rocket ship that wasn't very different from the big German
war rockets used in the Second World War, except that they were step rockets.
"You kids are too young to have seen such rockets," he said,
"but they were the biggest space ships ever built. They had to be big
because they were terribly inefficient. As you all know, the first rocket to
reach the Moon was a four-stage rocket. Its final stage was almost as long as
the Mayflower—yet its pay load was less than a ton.
"It is
characteristic of space ship development that the ships have gotten smaller
instead of bigger. The next development was the atom-powered rocket. It was a
great improvement; steps were no longer necessary. That meant that a ship like
the Daedalus could take off from Earth without even a catapult, much
less step rockets, and cruise to the Moon or even to Mars. But such ships still
had the shortcomings of rockets; they depended on an atomic power plant to heat
up reaction mass and push it out a jet, just as their predecessors depended on
chemical fuel for the same purpose.
"The
latest development is the mass-conversion ship, such as the Mayflower, and
it may be the final development—a mass-conversion ship is theoretically capable
of approaching the speed of light. Take this trip: we accelerated at one
gravity for about four hours and twenty minutes which brought us up to more
than ninety miles a second. If we had held that drive for a trifle less
than a year, we would approach the speed of light.
"A
mass-conversion ship has plenty of power to do just that. At one hundred per
cent efficiency, it would use up about one per cent of her mass as energy and
another one per cent as reaction mass. That's what the Star Rover is
going to do when it is finished."
One of the
younger kids was waving his hand. "Mister Chief Engineer?"
"Yes,
son?"
"Suppose
it goes on a few weeks longer and passes the speed of light?"
Mr. Ortega
shook his head. "It can't."
"Why
not, sir?"
"Eh,
how far have you gone in mathematics, sonny?"
"Just
through grammer school calculus," the kid answered.
'Tm afraid
there is no use in trying to explain it, then. Just take it from me that the
big brains are sure it can't be done."
I had
worried about that very point more than once. Why can't you go faster
than light? I know all that old double-talk about how the Einstein equations
show that a speed faster than light is a meaningless quantity, like the weight
of a song or the color of a sound, because it involves the square root of minus
one—but all of that is just theory and if the course we had in history of
science means anything at all, it means that scientists change their theories
about as often as a snake changes his skin. I stuck up my hand.
"Okay,"
he says. "You with the cowlick. Speak up."
"Mr.
Ortega, admitting that you can't pass the speed of light, what would happen if
the Star Rover got up close to the speed of light—and then the Captain
suddenly stepped the drive up to about six g and held it there?"
"Why,
it would— No, let's put it this way—" He broke off and grinned; it made
him look real young. "See here, kid, don't ask me questions like that. I'm
an engineer with hairy ears, not a mathematical physicist." He looked
thoughtful and added, "Truthfully, I don't know what would happen, but I would
sure give a pretty to find out. Maybe we would find out what the square root of
minus one looks like— from the inside."
He went on
briskly, "Let's go on about the Mayflower. You probably know that
when the original Star Rover failed to come back, the Mayflower was
designed to be the Star Rover II, but the design was obsolete before
they ever started putting her together. So they shifted the name over to the
new intersteller ship, the Star Rover III, renamed this one the Mayflower
and grabbed her for the colonial service.
"You
kids should consider how lucky you are. Up to now, emigrants to Ganymede have
had to spend two years and nine months in space, just to get there. You're
making it in two months."
"Couldn't
we go faster?" somebody wanted to know.
"We
could," he told us. "But we don't need to and it runs up the
astrogation and control difficulties. In these new ships the power plant has
gotten 'way ahead of the instrumentation. Be patient; your grandchildren will
make the trip in a week, blasting at one g all the way. There'll be so many
ships they'll have to have traffic cops and maybe we can come close to shipping
out as many people as there are extras bom each year.
"Enough
about that," he went on. "Who here can tell me what 'E equals M C
squared' means?"
I could
have answered but I had already spoken up once and it doesn't do to get a
reputation for apple polishing. Finally one of the older kids said, "It
means that mass can be converted into energy."
"Right!"
Mr. Ortega agreed. "The first real demonstration of that was the atom bomb
they set off 'way back in 1945 at Alamogordo, New Mexico. That was a special
case; they still didn't know how to control it; all they could do was to make
one whale of a big bang. Then came the uranium power plants, but that still
didn't amount to much because it was a very special case and only a microscopic
percentage of the mass was converted into energy. It wasn't until Kilgore's
energy transformation equations—don't worry about them; you'll study them when
you are older if you are interested—it wasn't until Kilgore showed how it could
be done that we had any idea of how to do what Dr. Einstein's
energy-mass equation said, clear back in 1905.
"And
we still didn't know how to control it. If we were going to turn mass into
energy, we needed more mass with which to surround the reaction, a very special
sort of mass that would not turn into energy when we didn't want it to and
would hold the reaction where we wanted it. Ordinary metal wouldn't do; one
might as well use soft butter.
"But
the Kilgore equations showed how to do that, too, when they were read
correctly. Now has anyone here any notion of how much energy you get when you
convert a chunk of mass into raw energy?"
Nobody
knew. "It's all in that one equation," he said, "good old Doc
Einstein's 'E equals M C squared.' It comes out that one gram of mass gives
nine times ten to the twentieth power ergs." He wrote it down for us: 1
gm. = 9 x l020 ergs.
"Doesn't
look like much, does it?" he said. "Now try it this way:" He
wrote down
900,000,000,000,000,000,000
ergs.
"Read
it off. Nine hundred thousand million billion ergs. It still doesn't mean much,
does it? Figures like that are impossible to comprehend. The nuclear physicists
keep a barrel of zeroes around handy the way a carpenter does a keg of nails.
"I’ll
try once more," he went on. "A pound of mass, any old mass, say a
pound of feathers, when converted into energy equals fifteen billion horsepower-hours.
Does that give anyone a notion of why the Mayflower was assembled out in
an orbit and will never ever land anywhere?"
"Too
hot," somebody said.
"'Too
hot' is an understatement. If the Mayftower had blasted off from Mojave
space port the whole Los Angeles Borough of the City of Southern California
would have been reduced to a puddle of lava and people would have been killed
by radiation and heat from Bay City to Baja California. And that will give you
an idea of why the shielding runs right through the ship between here and the
power plant, with no way at all to get at the torch."
We had the
misfortune to have Noisy Edwards along, simply because he was from the same
bunk room. Now he spoke up and said, "Suppose you have to make a
repair?"
"There
is nothing to go wrong," explained Mr. Ortega. "The power plant has
no moving parts of any sort"
Noisy
wasn't satisfied. "But suppose something did go wrong, how would you fix
it if you can't get at it?"
Noisy has
an irritating manner at best; Mr. Ortega sounded a little impatient when he
answered. "Believe me, son, even if you could get at it, you wouldn't want
to. No indeed!"
"Humph!"
said Noisy. "All I've got to say is, if there isn't any way to make a
repair when a repair is needed, what's the use in sending engineer officers
along?"
You could
have heard a pin drop. Mr. Ortega turned red, but all he said was, "Why,
to answer foolish questions from youngsters like yourself, I suppose." He
turned to the rest of us. "Any more questions?"
Naturally
nobody wanted to ask any then. He added, "I think that's enough for one
session. School's out."
I told Dad
about it later. He looked grim and said, "I'm afraid Chief Engineer Ortega
didn't tell you the whole truth."
"Huh?"
"In
the first place there is plenty for him to do in taking care of the auxiliary
machinery on this side of the shield. But it is possible to get at the torch,
if necessary."
"Huh?
How?"
"There
are certain adjustments which could conceivably have to be made in extreme
emergency. In which case it would be Mr. Ortega's proud privilege to climb into
a space suit, go outside and back aft, and make them."
"You
mean——"
"I mean
that the assistant chief engineer would succeed to the position of chief a few
minutes later. Chief engineers are very carefully chosen, Bill, and not just
for their technical knowledge."
It made me
feel chilly inside; I didn't like to think about it.
Making a
trip in a space ship is about the dullest way to spend time in the world, once
the excitement wears off. There's no scenery, nothing to do, and no room to do
it in. There were nearly six thousand of us crowded into the Mayflower and
that doesn't leave room to swing a cat.
Take
"B" deck—there were two thousand passengers sleeping in it. It was
150 feet across—fore and aft, mat is—and not quite 500 feet around, cylinder
fashion. That gives about forty square feet per passenger, on the average, but
a lot was soaked up in stairs, passageways, walls, and such. It worked out that
each one had about room enough for his bunk and about that much left over to
stand on when he wasn't sleeping.
You can't
give a rodeo in that kind of space; you can't even get up a game of
ring-around-the-rosy.
"A"
deck was larger and "C" deck was smaller, being nearer the axis, but
they averaged out the same. The council set up a staggered system to get the
best use out of the galley and the mess rooms and to keep us from falling over
each other in the 'freshers. "A" deck was on Greenwich time; "B"
deck was left on zone plus-eight time, or Pacific West Coast time; and
"C" deck drew zone minus-eight time, Philippine time.
That would
have put us on different days, of course, but the day was always figured
officially on Greenwich time; the dodge was just to ease the pressure on eating
facilities.
That was
really all we had to worry about. You would wake up early, not tired but bored,
and wait for breakfast Once breakfast was over, the idea was to kill time until
lunch. All afternoon you could look forward to the terrific excitement of
having dinner.
I have to
admit that making us go to school was a good plan; it meant that two and a half
hours every morning and every afternoon was taken care of. Some of the grown
ups complained that the mess rooms and all the spare space was always crowded
with classes, but what did they expect us to do? Go hang on sky hooks? We used
up less space in class than if we had been under foot.
Still, it
was a mighty odd sort of school. There were some study machines in the cargo
but we couldn't get at them and there wouldn't have been enough to go around.
Each class consisted of about two dozen kids and some adult who knew something
about something. (You'd be surprised how many adults don't know anything about
anything!) The grown up would talk about what he knew best and the kids would
listen, then we would ask questions and he would ask questions. No real
examinations, no experiments, no demonstrations, no stereos.
Dad says
this is the best kind of a school, that a university consists of a log with a
teacher on one end and a pupil on the other. But Dad is a sort of romantic.
Things got
so dull that it was hardly worth while to keep up my diary, even if I had been
able to get microfilm, which I wasn't.
Dad and I
played an occasional game of cribbage in the evening—somehow Dad had managed to
squeeze the board and a pack of cards into his weight allowance. Then he got
too busy with technical planning he was doing for the council and didn't have
time. Molly suggested that I teach her to play, so I did.
After that
I taught Peggy to play and she pegged a pretty sharp game, for a girl. It
worried me a little that I wasn't being loyal to Anne in getting chummy with
Peg and her mother, but I decided that Anne would want me to do just what I
did. Anne was always friendly with everybody.
It still
left me with time on my hands. What with only one-third gravity and no exercise
I couldn't sleep more than six hours a night. The lights were out eight hours
but they didn't make us go to bed, not after the trouble they had with it the
first week. I used to fool around the corridors after lights out, usually with
Hank Jones, until we both would get sleepy. We talked a lot. Hank turned out
not to be such a bad guy as long as you kept him trimmed down to size.
I still had
my Scout suit with me and kept it folded up in my bunk. Hank came in one
morning while I was making up my bunk and noticed it. "See here,
William," he said, "why do you hang on to that? Let the dead past
bury its dead."
"I
don't know," I admitted. "Maybe there will be Scouting on
Ganymede."
"Not
that I ever heard of."
"Why
not? There is Scouting on the Moon."
"Proves
nothing," he answered.
But it got
us to talking about it and Hank got a brilliant idea. Why not start up Scouting
right now, in the Mayflower?
We called a
meeting. Peggy spread the word around for us, through the junior council, and
we set it for fifteen-thirty that same afternoon, right after school.
Fifteen-thirty Greenwich, or "A" deck time, that is. That made it
seven-thirty in the morning for the "B" deck boys and a half hour
before midnight for the fellows on "C" deck. It was the best we could
do. "B" deck could hurry through breakfast and get to the meeting if
they wanted to and we figured that those who were really interested from
"C" would stay up for the meeting.
I played my
accordion while they were drifting in because Hank's father said that you
needed music to warm up a meeting before it got down to work. The call had read
"all Scouts and former Scouts;" by fifteen-forty we had them packed
in and spilling into the corridors, even though we had the use of the biggest
mess room. Hank called them to order and I put away my accordion and acted as
Scribe pro tem, having borrowed a wire recorder from the Communications
Officer for the purpose.
Hank made a
little speech. I figure him for politics when he grows up. He said that all of
us had enjoyed the benefits, the comradeship, and the honorable traditions of
Scouting on Earth and it seemed a shame to lose them. He said that the Scouting
tradition was the tradition of the explorer and pioneer and there could be no
more fitting place and time for it than in the settlement of a new planet In
fact the spirit of Daniel Boone demanded that we continue as Scouts.
I didn't
know he had it in him. It sounded good.
He stopped
and slipped me the wink. I got up and said that I wanted to propose a
resolution. Then I read it—it had been a lot longer but we cut it down. It
read: "Be it resolved—we the undersigned, Scouts and former Scouts of many
jurisdictions and now passengers in the good ship Mayflower, having as
our purpose to continue the Scouting tradition and to extend the Scouting trail
out to the stars, do organize ourselves as the Boy Scouts of Ganymede in
accordance with the principles and purpose of Scouting and in so doing do
reaffirm the Scout Law."
Maybe it
was flowery but it sounded impressive; nobody laughed. Hank said, "You
have heard the resolution; what is your pleasure? Do I hear a second?"
He surely
did; there were seconds all over the place. Then he asked for debate.
Somebody
objected that we couldn't call ourselves the Boy Scouts of Ganymede because we
weren't on Ganymede yet. He got a chilly reception and shut up. Then somebody
else pointed out that Ganymede wasn't a star, which made that part about
"Carrying the Scouting trail out to the stars" nonsense.
Hank told
him that was poetic license and anyhow going out to Ganymede was a step in the
right direction and that there would be more steps; what about the Star Rover
III? That shut him up.
The worst
objection was from "Millimetre" Muntz, a weary little squirt too big
for his britches. He said, "Mr. Chairman, this is an outlaw meeting. You
haven't any authority to set up a new Scouting jurisdiction. As a member in
good standing of Troop -Ninety-Six, New Jersey, I object to the whole
proceeding."
Hank asked
him just what authority he thought Troop Ninety-Six, New Jersey, had out around
the orbit of Mars? Somebody yelled, "Throw him out!"
Hank banged
on the mess table. "It isn't necessary to throw him out—but, since Brother
Millimetre thinks this is not a proper meeting, then it isn't proper for him to
take part in it. He is excused and the chair will recognize him no further. Are
you ready to vote?"
It was
passed unanimously and then Hank was elected organizational chairman. He
appointed a flock of committees, for organization and for plans and programs
and for credentials and tests and for liaison, and such. That last was to dig
out the men in the ship who had been troop masters and commissioners and things
and get a Court of Honor set up. There were maybe a dozen of the men passengers
at the meeting, listening. One of them, a Dr. Archibald who was an aide on
"A" deck, spoke up.
"Mr.
Chairman, I was a Scoutmaster in Nebraska. I'd like to volunteer my services to
this new organization."
Hank looked
him straight in the eye. "Thank you, sir. Your application will be
considered."
Dr. Archibald
looked startled, but
Hank went smoothly on, "We
want and need and will appreciate the help of all you older Scouts. The liaison
committee is instructed to get the names of any who are willing to serve."
It was
decided that we would have to have three troops, one for each deck, since it
wasn't convenient to try to meet all at the same time. Hank asked all the
Explorer Scouts to stand up. There were too many of them, so he asked those who
were Eagles to remain standing. There were about a dozen of us.
Hank
separated us Eagles by decks and told us to get busy and organize our troops
and to start by picking an acting senior patrol leader. "A" deck had
only three Eagles, me, Hank, and a kid from another bunk room whom I hadn't met
before, Douglas MacArthur Okajima. Doug and Hank combined on me and I found
myself tagged with the job.
Hank and I
had planned to finish the meeting with setting up exercises, but there just
wasn't room, so I got out my accordion again and we sang The Scouting Trail and
followed it with The Green Hills of Earth. Then we took the oath
together again:
"Upon
my honor I will do my best to do my duty to God and my planet, and to keep
myself physically fit, mentally alert, and morally straight."
After that
the meeting busted up.
For a while
we held meetings every day. Between troop meetings and committee meetings and
Explorer meetings and patrol leader meetings we didn't have time to get bored.
At first the troops were just "A" troop, "B" troop, and
"C" troop, after the decks, but we wanted names to give them some
personality. Anyhow I wanted a name for my troop; we were about to start a
membership drive and I wanted something with more oomph to it than “’A’” deck
troop."
Somebody
suggested "The Space Rats" but that was voted down, and somebody else
suggested "The Mayflowers"; they didn't bother to vote on that; they
simply sat on him.
After that
we turned down "The Pilgrims," "Deep Space Troop,"
"Star Rovers," and "Sky High." A kid named John Edward
Forbes-Smith got up. "Look," he said, "we're divided into three
troops on the basis of the time zones we use, aren't we? "B" deck has
California time; "C" deck has Philippine time; and we have Greenwich
or English time. Why don't we pick names that will show that fact? We could
call ourselves the Saint George Troop."
Bud Kelly
said it was a good idea as far as it went but make it Saint Patrick instead of
Saint George; after all, Dublin was on Greenwich time, too, and Saint Patrick
was a more important saint.
Forbes-Smith
said, "Since when?"
Bud said,
"Since always, you limey—" So we sat on both of them, too, and it was
decided not to use saints. But Johnny Edwards had a good idea, just the same; we
settled on the Baden-Powell Troop, Boy Scouts of Ganymede, which tied in with
the English time zone and didn't offend anybody.
The idea
took hold; "C" deck picked Aguinaldo as a name and "B" deck
called themselves the Junipero Serra Troop. When I heard that last I was kind
of sorry our deck didn't have California time so that we could have used it.
But I got over it; after all "Baden-Powell" is a mighty proud name,
too.
For that
matter they were all good names—scouts and explorers and brave men, all three
of them. Two of them never had a chance to be Scouts in the narrow, organized
meaning, but they were all Scouts in the wider sense—like Daniel Boone.
Dad says
there is a lot in a name.
As soon as
they heard about what we were doing the girls set up Girl Scouting, too, and
Peggy was a member of the Florence Nightingale Troop. I suppose there was no
harm in it, but why do girls copy what the boys do? We were too busy to worry
about them, though; we had to revamp Scouting activities to fit new conditions.
We decided
to confirm whatever ranks and badges a boy had held in his former
organization—permanent rankings, I mean, not offices. Having been a patrol
leader or a scribe didn't mean anything, but if you were an Eagle on Earth, you
stayed one in the B.S.G.; if you were a Cub, then you were still a Cub. If a
boy didn't have records—and about half of them didn't— we took his Scout oath
statement as official.
That was
simple; working over the tests and the badges was complicated. After all you
can't expect a boy to pass beekeeping when you haven't any bees.
(It turned
out that there were several swarms of bees sleep-frozen in the cargo,
but we didn't have the use of them.)
But we
could set up a merit badge in hydroponics and give tests right there in the
ship. And Mr. Ortega set up a test for us in spaceship engineering and Captain
Harkness did the same for ballistics and astrogation. By the end of the trip we
had enough new tests to let a boy go up for Eagle Scout, once we had a Court of
Honor.
That came
last. For some reason I couldn't figure Hank had kept putting off the final
report of the liaison committee, the committee which had as its job getting
Scout Masters and Commissioners and such. I asked him about it, but he just
looked mysterious and said that I would see.
I did see,
eventually. At last we had a joint meeting of all three troops to install Scout
Masters and dedicate the Court of Honor and such. And from then on the adults
ran things and we went back to being patrol leaders at the most. Oh well—it was
fun while it lasted.
When we
were fifty-three days out and about a week to go to reach Ganymede, Captain
Harkness used the flywheel to precess the ship so that we could see where we
were going—so that the passengers could see, that is; it didn't make any
difference to his astrogation.
You see,
the axis of the Mayflower had been pointed pretty much toward Jupiter
and the torch had been pointed back at the Sun. Since the view ports were
spaced every ninety degrees around the sides, while we had been able to see
most of the sky, we hadn't been able to see ahead to Jupiter nor behind to the
Sun. Now he tilted the ship over ninety degrees and we were rolling, so to
speak, along our line of flight. That way, you could see Jupiter and the Sun
both, from any view port, though not both at the same time.
Jupiter was
already a tiny, ruddy-orange disc. Some of the boys claimed they could make out
the moons. Frankly, I couldn't, not for the first three days after the Captain
precessed the ship. But it was mighty fine to be able to see Jupiter.
We hadn't
seen Mars on the way out, because Mars happened to be on the far side of the
Sun, three hundred million miles away. We hadn't seen anything but the same old
stars you can see from Earth. We didn't even see any asteroids.
There was a
reason for that. When we took off from the orbit of Supra-New-York, Captain
Harkness had not aimed the Mayflower straight for where Jupiter was
going to be when we got there; instead he had lifted her north of the ecliptic
high enough to give the asteroid belt a wide berth. Now anybody knows that
meteors are no real hazard in space. Unless a pilot does deliberately foolish
things like driving his ship through the head of a comet it is almost
impossible to get yourself hit by a meteor. They are too far between.
On the
other hand the asteroid belt has more than its fair share of sky junk. The
older power-pile ships used to drive straight through the belt, taking their
chances, and none of them was ever hit to amount to anything. But Captain
Harkness, having literally all the power in the world, preferred to go around
and play it safe. By avoiding the belt there wasn't a chance in a blue moon
that the Mayflower would be hit.
Well, it
must have been a blue moon. We were hit.
It was just
after reveille, "A" deck time, and I was standing by my bunk, making
it up. I had my Scout uniform in my hands and was about to fold it up and put
it under my pillow. I still didn't wear it. None of the others had uniforms to
wear to Scout meetings so I didn't wear mine. But I still kept it tucked away
in my bunk.
Suddenly I
heard the goldarnest noise I ever heard in my life. It sounded like a rifle
going off right by my ear, it sounded like a steel door being slammed, and it
sounded like a giant tearing yards and yards of cloth, all at once.
Then I
couldn't hear anything but a ringing in my ears and I was dazed. I shook my
head and looked down and I was staring at a raw hole in the ship, almost
between my feet and nearly as big as my fist.
There was
scorched insulation around it and in the middle of the hole I could see
blackness—then a star whipped past and I realized that I was staring right out
into space.
There was a
hissing noise.
I don't
remember thinking at all. I just wadded up my uniform, squatted down, and
stuffed it in the hole. For a moment it seemed as if the suction would pull it
on through the hole, then it jammed and stuck and didn't go any further. But we
were still losing air. I think that was the point at which I first realized
that we were losing air and that we might be suffocated in vacuum.
There was
somebody yelling and screaming behind me that he was killed and alarm bells
were going off all over the place. You couldn't hear yourself think. The
air-tight door to our bunk room slid across automatically and settled into its
gaskets and we were locked in.
That scared
me to death.
I know it
has to be done. I know that it is better to seal off one compartment and kill
the people who are in it than to let a whole ship die—but, you see, I was in
that compartment, personally. I guess I'm just not the hero type.
I could
feel the pressure sucking away at the plug my uniform made. With one part of my
mind I was recalling that it had been advertised as "tropical weave, self
ventilating" and wishing that it had been a solid plastic rain coat
instead. I was afraid to stuff it in any harder, for fear it would go all the
way through and leave us sitting there, chewing vacuum. I would have passed up
desserts for the next ten years for just one rubber patch, the size of my hand.
The
screaming had stopped; now it started up again. It was Noisy Edwards, beating
on the air-tight door and yelling, "Let me out of here! Get me out of
here!"
On top of
that I could hear Captain Harkness's voice coming through the bull horn. He was
saying,
"H-twelve!
Report! H-twelve! Can you hear me?"
On top of
that everybody was talking at once.
I yelled:
"Quiet!" at the top of my voice—and for a second or so there was quiet.
Peewee
Brunn, one of my Cubs, was standing in front of me, looking big-eyed.
"What happened, Billy?" he said.
I said,
"Grab me a pillow off one of the bunks. Jump!"
He gulped
and did it. I said, "Peel off the cover, quick!"
He did,
making quite a mess of it, and handed it to me—but I didn't have a hand free. I
said, "Put it down on top of my hands."
It was the
ordinary sort of pillow, soft foam rubber. I snatched one hand out and then the
other, and then I was kneeling on it and pressing down with the heels of my
hands. It dimpled a little in the middle and I was scared we were going to have
a blowout right through the pillow. But it held. Noisy was screaming again and
Captain Harkness was still asking for somebody, anybody, in compartment
H-12 to tell him what was going on. I yelled "Quiet!" again,
and added, "Somebody slug Noisy and shut him up."
That was a
popular idea. About three of them jumped to it. Noisy got clipped in the side
of the neck, then somebody poked him in the pit of his stomach and they swarmed
over him. "Now everybody keep quiet," I said, "and keep on
keeping quiet. If Noisy lets out a peep, slug him again," I gasped and
tried to take a deep breath and said, "H-twelve, reporting!"
The
Captain's voice answered, "What is the situation there?"
"There
is a hole in the ship, Captain, but we got it corked up."
"How?
And how big a hole?"
I told him
and that is about all there was to it. They took a while to get to us because—I
found this out afterward—they isolated that stretch of corridor first, with the
air-tight doors, and that meant they had to get everybody out of the rooms on
each side of us and across the passageway. But presently two men in space suits
opened the door and chased all the kids out, all but me. Then they came back.
One of them was Mr. Ortega. "You can get up now, kid," he said, his
voice sounding strange and far away through his helmet. The other man squatted
down and took over holding the pillow in place.
Mr. Ortega
had a big metal patch under one arm. It had sticky padding on one side. I
wanted to stay and watch him put it on but he chased me out and closed the
door. The corridor outside was empty but I banged on the air-tight door and
they let me through to where the rest were waiting. They wanted to know what
was happening but I didn't have any news for them because I had been chased
out.
After a
while we started feeling light and Captain Harkness announced that spin would
be off the ship for a short time. Mr. Ortega and the other man came back and
went on up to the control room. Spin was off entirely soon after that and I got
very sick. Captain Harkness kept the ship's speaker circuits cut in on his
conversations with the men who had gone outside to repair the hole, but I
didn't listen. I defy anybody to be interested in anything when he is drop sick
Then spin
came back on and everything was all right and we were allowed to go back into
our bunk-room. It looked just the same except that there was a plate welded
over the place where the meteorite had come in.
Breakfast
was two hours late and we didn't have school that morning.
That was
how I happened to go up to Captain's mast for the second time. George was there
and Molly and Peggy and Dr. Archibald, the Scoutmaster of our deck, and all the
fellows from my bunk room and all the ship's officers. The rest of the ship was
cut in by visiplate. I wanted to wear my uniform but it was a mess—torn and
covered with sticky stuff. I finally cut off the merit badges and put it in the
ship's incinerator.
The First
Officer shouted, "Captain's Mast for punishments and rewards!"
Everybody sort of straightened up and Captain Harkness walked out and faced us.
Dad shoved me forward.
The Captain
looked at me. "William Lermer?" he said.
I said,
"Yessir."
He said,
"I will read from yesterday's log: 'On twenty-one August at
oh-seven-oh-four system standard, while cruising in free fall according to
plan, the ship was broached by a small meteorite. Safety interlocks worked
satisfactorily and the punctured volume, compartment H-twelve, was isolated
with no serious drop in pressure elsewhere in the ship.
"
'Compartment H-twelve is a bunk room and was occupied at the time of the
emergency by twenty passengers. One of the passengers, William J. Lermer,
contrived a makeshift patch with materials at hand and succeeded in holding
sufficient pressure for breathing until a repair party could take over.
" 'His
quick thinking and immediate action unquestionably saved the lives of all
persons in compartment H-twelve.' "
The Captain
looked up from the log and went on, "A certified copy of this entry, along
with depositions of witnesses, will be sent to Interplanetary Red Cross with
recommendation for appropriate action. Another copy will be furnished you. I
have no way to reward you except to say that you have my heart-felt gratitude.
I know that I speak not only for the officers but for all the passengers and
most especially for the parents of your bunk mates."
He paused
and waggled a finger for me to come closer. He went on in a low voice, to me
alone, "That really was a slick piece of work. You were on your toes. You
have a right to feel proud."
I said I
guessed I had been lucky.
He said,
"Maybe. But that sort of luck comes to the man who is prepared for
it."
He waited a
moment, then said, "Lermer, have you ever thought of putting in for space
training?"
I said I
suppose I had but I hadn't thought about it very seriously. He said,
"Well, Lermer, if you ever do decide to, let me know. You can reach me
care of the Pilots' Association, Luna City."
With that,
mast was over and we went away, George and I together and Molly and Peggy
following along. I heard Peggy saying, "That's my brother."
Molly said,
"Hush, Peggy. And don't point."
Peggy said,
"Why not? He is my brother—well, isn't he?"
Molly said,
"Yes, but there's no need to embarrass him."
But I
wasn't embarrassed.
Mr. Ortega
looked me up later and handed me a little, black, twisted piece of metal, about
as big as a button. "That's all there was left of it," he said,
"but I thought you would like to have it—pay you for messing up your Scout
suit, so to speak."
I thanked
him and said I didn't mind losing the uniform; after all, it had saved my neck,
too. I looked at the meteorite. "Mr. Ortega, is there any way to tell
where this came from?"
"Not
really," he told me, "though you can get the scientific johnnies to
cut it up and then express an opinion—if you don't mind them destroying
it."
I said no,
I'd rather .keep it—and I have; I've still got it as a pocket piece. He went
on, "It's either a bit of a comet or a piece of the Ruined Planet. We
can't tell which because where we were there shouldn't have been either
one."
"Only
there was," I said.
"As
you say, there was."
"Uh,
Mr. Ortega, why don't they put enough armor on a ship to stop a little bitty
thing like this?" I remembered what the skin of the ship looked like where
it had been busted; it seemed awful thin.
"Well,
now, in the first place, this meteor is a real giant, as meteors go. In the
second place—do you know anything about cosmic rays, Bill?"
"Uh,
not much, I guess."
"You
undoubtedly know that the human body is transparent to primary cosmic radiation
and isn't harmed by it. That is what we encounter out here in space. But metal
is not completely transparent to it and when it passes through metal it kicks
up all sorts of fuss—secondary and tertiary and quaternary cosmic radiation.
The stuff cascades and it is not harmless, not by a darn sight. It can
cause mutations and do you and your descendants a lot of harm. It adds up to
this: a man is safest in space when he has just enough ship around him to keep
the air in and ultraviolet out."
Noisy
didn't have much to say around the compartment for the next couple of days and
I thought maybe he had learned his lesson. I was wrong. I ran into him in one
of the lower passageways when there was nobody else around. I started to go
around him but he stepped in my way. "I want to talk to you," he
said.
"Okay,"
I answered. "What's on your mind?" "You think you're pretty
smart, don't you?" I didn't like the way he said it, nor what he said. I
said, "I don't think I'm smart; I am smart." He made me
tired.
"Pretty
cocky, aren't you? You think I ought to be kissing your hand and telling you
how grateful I am for saving my life, don't you?"
I said,
"Oh, yeah? If that's what is worrying you, you can just skip it; I didn't
do it for you."
"I
know that," he answered," and I'm not grateful, see?"
"That's
fine with me," I told him. "I wouldn't want a guy like you being
grateful to me."
He was
breathing hard. "I've had just about enough of you," he said slowly.
And the next thing I knew I had a mouthful of knuckles and I was down.
I got up
cautiously, trying to surprise him. But it was no good; he knocked me down
again. I tried to kick him while I was down, but he danced out of my way.
The third
time he hit me I stayed down. When I quit seeing stars he was gone—and I hadn't
managed to lay a finger on him. I never was any good in a fight; I'm still
talking when I ought to be slugging.
I went to a
scuttlebutt and bathed my face. Hank ran across me there and asked me what in
the world I had been doing. I told him I had run into a door. I told Dad the
same thing.
Noisy
didn't bother me any more and we never had anything to say to each other again.
I lay awake a long time that night, trying to figure it out. I didn't get it.
The chap who thought up that malarkey about "my strength is as the
strength of ten because my heart is pure" certainly had never met Noisy
Edwards. For my taste Noisy was a no good so-and-so and I wished I had been
able to use his face to stuff the hole the meteor made. I thought about a
number of ways to fix him, but none of them was any good. As Dad says, sometimes
there just isn't any cure for a situation.
Nothing
much happened until it was time to make our approach to Jupiter, except that a
four-year-old kid turned up missing. The kid's parents searched all around and
they passed the word from the control room for everybody to keep an eye open
but they still couldn't find him.
So we had a
chance to try out the Scouts' emergency organization. The ship's officers
couldn't search the ship, since there was just the Captain and two watch
officers and Mr. Ortega and his assistant chief. Captain Harkness supplied
plans to each of the Scoutmasters and we went through that ship like a kid
searching his clothes for a half credit. We turned the kid up, all right, in
about twenty minutes. Seems the little devil had snuck into the hydroponics
room while it was being serviced and had got himself locked in.
While he
was in there he had got thirsty and had tried to drink the solutions they raise
the plants in–had drunk some, in fact. The result was just about what you would
expect. It didn't do him any real harm but, boy, was that place a mess!
I was
talking to Dad about it that night over a game. Peggy had a Girl Scout meeting
and Molly was off somewhere; we were alone for once. The baby's mother had
raised particular Ned, just as if there had really been something wrong—I mean,
what can happen in a space ship? The kid couldn't fall overboard.
Dad said
her reaction was perfectly natural.
I said,
"See, here, George, does it seem to you that some of the emigrants don't
have what it takes to be colonists?"
"Mmmm
.. . possibly."
I was
thinking of Noisy but the ones I mentioned were Mrs. Tarbutton, who gave up and
didn't even come along, and that female—Mrs. Grigsby—who got in trouble and had
to wash dishes. And another fellow named Saunders who was continually in
trouble with the council for trying to live his own life, wild and free, no
matter what it did to the rest of us. "George, how did those characters
get past the psycho tests?"
George
stopped to peg fifteen-four, then said, "Bill, haven't you ever heard of
political influence?"
All I said
was, "Huh?"
"It's
a shocking thought I know, but you are old enough to get used to the world as
it is, instead of the way it ought to be. Take a hypothetical case: I don't
suppose that a niece of a state councilor would be very likely to fail the
psycho tests. Oh, she might fail the first tests, but a review board might find
differently–if the councilor really wanted her to pass."
I chewed
this over a while. It did not sound like George; he isn't the cynical type. Me,
I'm cynical, but George is usually naive. "In that case, George, there is
no use in having psycho tests at all, not if people like that can sneak
past."
"Contrariwise.
The tests are usually honest. As for those who sneak past, it doesn't matter.
Old Mother Nature will take care of them in the long run. Survivors
survive." He finished dealing and said, "Wait till you see what I'm
going to do to you this hand. You haven't a chance."
He always
says that. I said, "Anybody who would use public office like that ought to
be impeached!"
George said
mildly, "Yep. But don't bum out your jets, son; we've got human beings,
not angels, to work with."
On the
twenty-fourth of August Captain Harkness took spin off and started bringing us
in. We decelerated for better than four hours and then went into free fall
about six hundred thousand miles out from Jupiter and on the opposite side from
where Ganymede was then. Weightlessness still wasn't any fun but this time we
were ready and everyone got shots for it who wanted them. I took mine and no
nonsense.
Theoretically
the Mayflower could have made it in one compound maneuver, ending up at
the end of deceleration in a tight circular orbit around Ganymede. Practically
it was much better to sneak in easy and avoid any more trouble with
meteorites—with the "false rings," that is.
Of course
Jupiter doesn't have rings like Saturn, but it does have quite a lot of sky
junk traveling around in the same plane as its moons. If there were enough of
it, it would show up like Saturn's rings. There isn't that much, but there is
enough to make a pilot walk on eggs coming in. This slow approach gave us a
fine front seat for a tour of Jupiter and its satellites.
Most of
this stuff we were trying to avoid is in the same plane as Jupiter's equator,
just the way Saturn's rings are—so Captain Harkness brought us in over the
top of Jupiter, right across Jupiter's north pole. That way, we never did
get in the danger zone until we had curved down on the other side to reach
Ganymede—and by then we were going fairly slow.
But we
weren't going slow when we passed over Jupiter's north pole, no indeedy! We
were making better than thirty miles a second and we were close in, about
thirty thousand miles. It was quite a sight.
Jupiter is
ninety thousand miles thick; thirty thousand miles is close—too close for
comfort.
I got one
good look at it for about two minutes from one of the view ports, then had to
give up my place to somebody who hadn't had a turn yet and go back to the bunk
room and watch through the vision screen. It was an odd sight; you always think
of Jupiter with equatorial bands running parallel across it. But now we were
looking at it end on and the bands were circles. It looked like a giant archery
target, painted in orange and brick red and brown— except that half of it was
chewed away. We saw it in half moon, of course.
There was a
dark spot right at the pole. They said that was a zone of permanent clear
weather and calm and that you could see clear down to the surface there. I
looked but I couldn't see anything; it just looked dark.
As we came
over the top, Io—that's satellite number one—suddenly came out of eclipse. Io
is about as big as the Moon and was about as far away from us at the time as
the Moon is from the Earth, so it looked about Moon size. There was just black
sky and then there was a dark, blood red disc and in less than five minutes it
was brilliant orange, about the color of Jupiter itself. It simply popped up,
like magic.
I looked
for Barnard's satellite while we were close in, but missed it. It's the little
one that is less than one diameter from the surface of Jupiter—so close that it
whirls around Jupiter in twelve hours. I was interested in it because I knew
that the Jovian observatory was on it and also the base for Project Jove.
I probably
didn't miss anything; Barnard's satellite is only about a hundred and fifty
miles in diameter. They say a man can come pretty close to jumping right off
it. I asked George about it and he said, no, the escape speed was about five
hundred feet per second and who had been filling me up with nonsense?
I looked it
up later; he was right. Dad is an absolute mine of useless information. He says
a fact should be loved for itself alone.
Callisto
was behind us; we had passed her on the way in, but not very close. Europa was
off to the right of our course nearly ninety degrees; we saw her in half moon.
She was more than four hundred thousand miles away and was not as pretty a
sight as the Moon is from Earth.
Ganymede
was straight ahead, almost, and growing all the time—and here was a funny
thing; Callisto was silvery, like the Moon, but not as bright; Io and Europa
were bright orange, as bright as Jupiter itself. Ganymede was downright dull!
I asked
George about it; he came through, as usual "Ganymede used to be about as
bright as Io and Europa," he told me. "It's the greenhouse effect—the
heat trap. Otherwise we wouldn't be able to live on it."
I knew
about that, of course; the greenhouse effect is the most important part of the
atmosphere project When the 1985 expedition landed Ganymede had a surface
temperature a couple of hundred degrees below zero—that's cold enough to freeze
the milk of human kindness! "But look, George," I objected,
"sure, I know about the heat trap, but why is it so dark? It looks like
the inside of a sack."
"Light
is heat; heat is light," he answered. "What's the difference?
It's not dark on the ground; it goes in and doesn't come out—and a good thing,
too."
I shut up.
It was something new to me and I didn't understand it, so I decided to wait and
not pound my teeth about it.
Captain
Harkness slowed her down again as we came up to Ganymede and we got in one good
meal while she was under drive. I never did get so I could eat at free fall,
even with injections. He leveled her off in a tight circular orbit about a
thousand miles up from Ganymede. We had arrived—just as soon as we could get
somebody to come and get us.
It was on
the trip down to Ganymede's surface that I began to suspect that being a
colonist wasn't as glamorous and romantic as it had seemed back on Earth.
Instead of three ships to carry us all at once, there was just one ship, the Jitterbug,
and she would have fitted into one of the Bifrost's compartments.
She could carry only ninety of us at a time and that meant a lot of trips.
I was
lucky; I had to wait only three days in free fall. But I lost ten pounds.
While I
waited, I worked, helping to stow the freight that the Jitterbug brought
up each trip. At last it came our turn and we piled into the Jitterbug. She
was terrible; she had shelves rather than decks—they weren't four feet apart.
The air was stale and she hadn't been half way cleaned up since the last trip.
There weren't individual acceleration couches; there were just pads covering
the deck space and we covered the pads, shoulder to shoulder—and foot in
your eye, for that matter.
The skipper
was a loud-mouthed old female they called "Captain Hattie" and she
kept bawling us out and telling us to hurry. She didn't even wait to make sure
that we were all strapped down.
Fortunately
it didn't take very long. She drove away so hard that for the first time except
in tests I blacked out, then we dropped for about twenty minutes; she gunned
her again, and we landed with a terrible bump. And Captain Hattie was shouting,
"Out you come, you ground hogsl This is it."
The Jitterbug
carried oxygen, rather than the helium-oxygen mix of the Mayflower. We
had come down at ten pounds pressure; now Captain Hattie spilled the pressure
and let it adjust to Ganymede normal, three pounds. Sure, three pounds of
oxygen is enough to live on; that's all Earth has—the other twelve pounds are
nitrogen. But a sudden drop in pressure like that is enough to make you gasp
anyhow. You aren't suffocating but you feel as if you were.
We were
miserable by the time we got out and Peggy had a nose bleed. There weren't any
elevators; we had to climb down a rope ladder. And it was cold!
It was
snowing; the wind was howling around us and shaking the ladder—the smallest
kids they had to lower with a line. There was about eight inches of snow on the
ground except where the splash of the Jitterbugs jet had melted it. I
could hardly see, the wind was whipping the snow into my face so, but a man
grabbed me by the shoulder, swung me around, and shouted, "Keep moving!
Keep moving! Over that way."
I headed
the way he pointed. There was another man at the edge of the blast clearing,
singing the same song, and there was a path through the snow, trampled to
slush. I could see some other people disappearing in the snow ahead and I took
out after them, dogtrotting to keep warm.
It must
have been half a mile to the shelter and cold all the way. We weren't dressed
for it. I was chilled through and my feet were soaking wet by the time we got
inside.
The shelter
was a big hangarlike building and it was not much warmer, the door was open so
much, but it was out of the weather and it felt good to be inside. It was
jammed with people, some of them in ship suits and some of them Ganymedeans—you
couldn't miss the colonial men; they were bearded and some of them wore their
hair long as well. I decided that was one style I was not going to copy; I'd be
smooth shaven, like George.
I went
scouting around, trying to find George & Co. I finally did. He had found a
bale of something for Molly to sit on and she was holding Peggy on her lap.
Peg's nose had stopped bleeding. I was glad to see, but there were dried tears
and blood and dirt on her face. She was a sight.
George was
looking gloomy, the way he did the first few days without his pipe. I came up
and said, "Hi, folks!"
George
looked around and smiled and said, "Well, Bill, fancy meeting you here!
How is it going?"
"Now
that you ask me," I answered, "it looks like a shambles."
He looked
gloomy again and said, "Oh, I suppose they will get things straightened
out presently."
We didn't
get a chance to discuss it. A colonist with snow on his boots and hair on his
face stopped near us, put his little fingers to his lips, and whistled.
"Pipe down!" he shouted. "I want twelve able-bodied men and boys
for the baggage party." He looked around and started pointing.
"You—and you—and you—"
George was
the ninth "You"; I was the tenth.
Molly
started to protest. I think George might have balked if she had not. Instead he
said, "No, Molly, I guess it has to be done. Come on, Bill."
So we went
back out into the cold.
There was a
tractor truck outside and we were loaded in it standing up, then we lumbered
back to the rocket site. Dad saw to it that I was sent up into the Jitterbug
to get me out of the weather and I was treated to another dose of Captain
Hattie's tongue; we couldn't work fast enough to suit her. But we got our
baggage lowered finally; it was in the truck by the time I was down out of the
ship. The trip back was cold, too.
Molly and
Peggy were not where we had left them. The big room was almost empty and we
were told to go on into another building through a connecting door. George was
upset, I could see, from finding Molly gone.
In the next
building there were big signs with arrows: MEN & BOYS-TO THE RIGHT and
WOMEN & GIRLS-TO THE LEFT. George promptly turned to the left. He got about
ten yards and was stopped by a stem-faced woman dressed like a colonial, in a
coverall. "Back the other way," she said firmly. "This is
the way to the ladies' dormitory."
"Yes,
I know," agreed Dad, "but I want to find my wife."
"You
can look for her at supper."
"I
want to see her now."
"I haven't any facilities for seeking out any one person
at this time. You'll have to wait."
"But—"
There were several women crowding past us and going on inside. Dad spotted one
from our deck in the Mayflower. "Mrs. Archibald!"
She turned
around. "Oh—Mr. Lermer. How do you do?"
"Mrs.
Archibald," Dad said intently, "could you find Molly and let her know
that I'm waiting here?"
"Why,
I'd be glad to try, Mr. Lermer."
"Thanks,
Mrs. Archibald, a thousand thanks!"
"Not
at all." She went away and we waited, ignoring the stern-faced guard.
Presently Molly showed up without Peggy. You would have thought Dad hadn't seen
her for a month.
"I
didn't know what to do, dear," she said. "They said we had to come
and it seemed better to get Peggy settled down. I knew you would find us."
"Where
is Peggy now?"
"I put
her to bed."
We went
back to the main hall. There was a desk there with a man behind it; over his
head was a sign: IMMIGRATION SERVICE-INFORMATION. There was quite a line up at
it; we took our place in the queue.
"How
is Peggy?" Dad asked.
"I'm
afraid she is catching a cold."
"I
hope-" Dad said. "Ah, I HOPE-Atchoo!"
"And
so are you," Molly said accusingly.
"I
don't catch cold," Dad said, wiping his eyes. "That was just a
reflex."
"Hmm—"
said Molly.
The line up
took us past a low balcony. Two boys, my age or older, were leaning on the rail
and looking us over. They were colonials and one was trying to grow a beard,
but it was pretty crummy.
One turned
to the other and said, "Rafe, will you look at what they are sending us
these days?"
The other
said, "It's sad."
The first
one pointed a thumb at me and went on, "Take that one, now—the artistic
type, no doubt."
The second
one stared at me thoughtfully. "Is it alive?" he asked.
"Does
it matter?" the first one answered.
I turned my
back on them, whereupon they both laughed. I hate self-panickers.
Mr.
Saunders was ahead of us in line. He was crabbing about the weather. He said it
was an outrage to expose people the way we had been. He had been with us on the
working party, but he had not worked much.
The man at
the desk shrugged. "The Colonial Commission set your arrival date; we had
nothing to say about it. You can't expect us to postpone winter to suit your
convenience."
"Somebody's
going to hear about this!"
"By
all means." The man at the desk handed him a form, "Next,
please!" He looked at Dad and said, "What may I do for you,
citizen?"
Dad
explained quietly that he wanted to have his family with him. The man shook his
head. "Sorry. Next case, please."
Dad didn't
give up his place. "You can't separate a man and wife. We aren't slaves,
nor criminals, nor animals. The Immigration Service surely has some
responsibilities toward us."
The man
looked bored. "This is the largest shipload we've ever had to handle.
We've made the best arrangements we could. This is a frontier town, not the
Astor."
"All
I'm asking for is a minimum family space, as described in the Commission's
literature about Ganymede."
"Citizen,
those descriptions are written back on Earth. Be patient and you will be taken
care of."
"Tomorrow?”
"No,
not tomorrow. A few days—or a few weeks."
Dad
exploded. "Weeks, indeed! Confound it, I'll build an igloo out on the
field before I'll put up with this."
"That's
your privilege." The man handed Dad a sheet of paper. "If you wish to
lodge a complaint, write it out on this."
Dad took it
and I glanced at it. It was a printed form—and it was addressed to the Colonial
Commission back on Earth! The man went on, "Turn it in to me any time
this phase and it will be ultramicro-filmed in time to go back with the mail in
the Mayflower."
Dad looked
at it, snorted, crumpled it up, and stomped away. Molly followed him and said,
"George! Georgel Don't be upset. We'll live through it."
Dad grinned
sheepishly. "Sure we will, honey. It's the beauty of the system that gets
me. Refer all complaints to the head office—half a billion miles away!"
The next
day George's reflexes were making his nose run. Peggy was worse and Molly was
worried about her and Dad was desperate. He went off somewhere to raise a stink
about the way things were being handled.
Frankly, I
didn't have it too bad. Sleeping in a dormitory is no hardship to me; I could
sleep through the crack of doom. And the food was everything they had promised.
Listen to
this: For breakfast we had corn cakes with syrup and real butter, little
sausages, real ham, strawberries with cream so thick I didn't know what
it was, tea, all the milk you could drink, tomato juice, honey-dew melon,
eggs—as many eggs as you wanted.
There was
an open sugar bowl, too, but the salt shaker had a little sign on it; DON'T
WASTE THE SALT.
There
wasn't any coffee, which I wouldn't have noticed if George had not asked for
it. There were other things missing, too, although I certainly didn't notice it
at the time. No tree fruits, for example—no apples, no pears, no oranges. But
who cares when you can get strawberries and watermelon and pineapples and such?
There were no tree nuts, too, but there were peanuts to burn.
Anything
made out of wheat flour was a luxury, but you don't miss it at first.
Lunch was
choice of corn chowder or jellied consomme, cheese souffle, fried chicken,
corned beef and cabbage, hominy grits with syrup, egg plant au gratin, little
pearl onions scalloped with cucumbers, baked stuffed tomatoes, sweet potato
surprise, German-fried Irish potatoes, tossed endive, coleslaw with sour cream,
pineapple and cottage cheese with lettuce. Then there was peppermint ice cream,
angel berry pie, frozen egg nog, raspberry ice, and three kinds of pudding—but
I didn't do too well on the desserts. I had tried to try everything, taking a
little of this and a dab of that, and by the time desserts came along I was
short on space. I guess I ate too much.
The cooking
wasn't fancy, about like Scout camp, but the food was so good you couldn't ruin
it. The service reminded me of camp, too—queueing up for servings, no table
cloths, no napkins. And the dishes had to be washed; you couldn't throw them
away or burn them—they were imported from Earth and worth their weight in
uranium.
The first
day they took the first fifty kids in the chow line and the last fifty lads to
leave the mess hall and made them wash dishes. The next day they changed pace
on us and took the middle group. I got stuck both times.
The first
supper was mushroom soup, baked ham, roast turkey, hot corn bread with butter,
jellied cold meats, creamed asparagus, mashed potatoes and giblet gravy,
spinach with hard boiled egg and grated cheese, corn pudding, creamed peas and
carrots, smothered lettuce and three kinds of salad. Then there was frozen
custard and raisin pudding with hard sauce and Malaga and Thompson grapes and
more strawberries with powdered sugar.
Besides
that you could drop around to the kitchen and get a snack any time you felt
like it.
I didn't go
outside much the first three days. It snowed and although we were in Sun phase
when we got there it was so murky that you couldn't see the Sun, much less
Jupiter. Besides, we were in eclipse part of the time. It was as cold as
Billy-be-switched and we still didn't have any cold weather clothes.
I was sent
along with the commissary tractor once to get supplies over in town. Not that I
saw much of the town—and not that Leda is much of a town, anyhow, to a person
who has lived in Diego Borough—but I did see the hydroponics farms. There were
three of them, big multiple sheds, named for what they grew in them,
"Oahu," "Imperial Valley," and "Iowa." Nothing
special about them, just the usual sort of soiless gardening. I didn't hang
around because the flicker lighting they use to force the plants makes my eyes
burn.
But I was
interested in the tropical plants they grew in "Oahu"—I had never
seen a lot of them before. I noticed that most of the plants were marked
"M-G" while a few were tagged "N. T." I asked one of the
gardeners; he said that "M-G" meant "mutation-Ganymede" and
the other meant "normal terrestrial."
I found out
later that almost everything grown on Ganymede was a special mutation adapted
to Ganymede conditions.
Beyond
there was another of the big multiple sheds named “Texas"; it had real
cows in it and was very interesting. Did you know a cow moves its lower jaw
from side to side? And no matter what you've heard, there is not one
teat that is especially for cream.
I hated to
leave, but "Texas" shed smelled too much like a space ship. It was
only a short dash through the snow to the Exchange where all of Leda's retail
buying and selling takes place—big and little shops all under one roof.
I looked
around, thinking I might take a present back to Peggy, seeing that she was
sick. I got the shock of my life. The prices!
If I had
had to buy in the Exchange the measly fifty-eight pounds of stuff they had let
me bring with me, it would have cost—I'm telling the truth!—several thousand
credits. Everything that was imported from Earth cost that kind of money. A
tube of beard cream was two hundred and eighty credits.
There were
items for sale made on Ganymede, hand work mostly, and they were expensive,
too, though not nearly as expensive as the stuff brought up from Earth.
I crept out
of that place in a hurry. As nearly as I could figure the only thing cheap on
Ganymede was food.
The driver
of the commissary tractor wanted to know where I had been when there was
loading to do? "I should have left you behind to walk back," he
groused. I didn't have a good answer so I didn't say anything.
They shut
off winter soon after that. The heat trap was turned on full force, the skies
cleared and it was lovely. The first view I got of the Ganymede sky was a
little after dawn next Sun phase. The heat trap made the sky a pale green but
Jupiter shone right through it, ruddy orange, and big. Big and
beautiful—I've never gotten tired of looking at Jupiter!
A harvest
moon looks big, doesn't it? Well, Jupiter from Ganymede is sixteen or seventeen
times as wide as the Moon looks and it covers better than two hundred and fifty
times as much sky. It hangs there in the sky, never rising, never setting, and
you wonder what holds it up.
I saw it
first in half-moon phase and I didn't see how it could be any more beautiful
than it was. But the Sun crept across the sky and a day later Jupiter was a
crescent and better than ever. At the middle of Sun phase we went into eclipse,
of course, and Jupiter was a great red, glowing ring in the sky, brightest
where the Sun had just passed behind it.
But the
best of all is during dark phase.
Maybe I
ought to explain how the phases work; I know I didn't understand it until I
came to Ganymede. Ganymede is such a small planet and so close to its primary
that it is tide-locked, just the way the Moon is; it keeps one face always
toward Jupiter and therefore Jupiter does not move in the sky. The sun moves,
the other Jovian moons move, the stars move—but not good old Jove; it just
hangs there.
Ganymede
takes just over an Earth week to revolve around Jupiter, so we have three and a
half days of sunlight and then three and a half days of darkness. By Ganymede
time the period of rotation is exactly one week; twenty-four Ganymede
hours is one seventh of the period. This arrangement makes a Ganymede minute
about a standard second longer than an Earth minute, but who cares? Except
scientists, of course, and they have clocks that keep both sorts of time.
So here is
the way a week goes on Ganymede: the Sun rises at Sunday midnight every week;
when you get up Monday morning it's a little above the eastern horizon and
Jupiter is in half-moon phase. The Sun keeps climbing higher and about
suppertime on Tuesday it slides behind Jupiter and Ganymede is in eclipse;
eclipse can last an hour or so up to a maximum of about three hours and a half.
The stars come out and Jupiter shows that beautiful red ring effect because of
its thick atmosphere. Then it's light again by bedtime Tuesday.
At noon on
Thursday the Sun goes down and we start the dark phase; that's best of all.
Jupiter's colors really show and the other moons are easier to see. They can be
almost anywhere and in almost any combination.
Jupiter and
its satellites is sort of a miniature solar system; from Ganymede you have a
front seat for the show. There is always something new in the sky. Besides the
eleven "historical" satellites ranging in size from Ganymede down to
Jay-ten or Nicholson-Alpha, which is a ball of rock and ice only fifteen miles
thick, there are maybe a dozen more a few miles or less in diameter but big
enough to be called moons and heaven knows how many smaller than that. Sometimes
these little ones come close enough to Ganymede to show discs; they mostly have
very eccentric orbits. Any time there will be several that are conspicuous
lights in the sky, like the planets are from Earth.
Io, and
Europa, and Callisto are always discs. When Europa passes between Jupiter and
Ganymede it is as big in the sky as the Moon is from Earth. It actually is as
big as the Moon and at that time it is only about a quarter of a million miles
away.
Then it
swings around to the far side and is very much smaller—more than a million
miles away and less than a quarter as wide. Io goes through the same sorts of
changes, but it never gets as big.
When Io and
Europa pass between Ganymede and Jupiter you can see them move with your naked
eye, chasing their shadows or running ahead of them, depending on the phase. Io
and Europa, being inside Ganymede's orbit, never get very far away from
Jupiter, Io sticks within a couple of diameters of the big boy; Europa can get
about sixty degrees away from it. Callisto is further out than Ganymede and
goes all around the sky.
It's a show
you never get tired of. Earth's sky is dull.
By six
o'clock Saturday morning Jupiter would be in full phase and it was worthwhile
to get up to see it. Not only was it the most gorgeous thing I had ever seen,
but there was always the reverse eclipse, too, and you could see Ganymede's
shadow, a little round black dot, crawling across old Jupiter's face. It gave
you an idea of just how colossally big Jupiter was— there was the shadow
of your whole planet on it and it wasn't anything more than a big freckle.
Jupiter is
ninety thousand miles across the equator, eighty-four thousand from pole to
pole. Ganymede is only a little better than three thousand.
For the
next couple of days after full phase Jupiter would wane and at Sunday midnight
it would be in half phase again, the Sun would rise and a new light phase would
start. One thing I expected but didn't find was dim sunlight. Jupiter is a long
way out; it gets only one twenty-seventh the sunlight that Earth does. I
expected that we would always be in a sort of twilight.
It didn't
work out that way. It seemed to me that the sunlight was just as bright as on
Earth.
George says
that this is an optical illusion and that it has to do with the way the human
eye works, because the iris of the eye simply shuts out light it doesn't need.
Bright desert sunlight back on Earth is maybe ten thousand foot-candles; the
same thing on Ganymede is only four hundred foot-candles. But really good
bright artificial light is only twenty-five foot candles and a
"well-lighted" room is seldom that bright.
If you've
got only a two-gallon bucket does it make any difference whether you fill it
from the ocean or from a small pond? Sunlight on Ganymede was still more than
the eye could accept, so it looked just as bright as sunlight on Earth.
I did
notice, however, that it was almost impossible to get a sunburn.
George got
us a place to live when we had been there about a week, which was a lot better
than most of the other immigrants did, but it didn't suit him and it didn't
suit Molly and it didn't really suit me.
The trouble
was he had to take a job as a staff engineer with the colonial government to
get quarters for us—and that meant he would be too tied down to prove a piece
of land for homestead. But it did carry private family quarters with it, if you
could call two rooms twelve feet square a home.
It was like
this: the colony was made up of homesteaders and townies. The townies worked
for the government and lived in government-owned buildings —except for a very
few who were in private trade. The townies included the Colonial Commission
representative, Captain Hattie the pilot, the hydroponics engineers, the hospital
staff, the engineers who ran the power plant and the heat trap, the staff of
the local office of Project Jove, and everybody else who worked at anything but
land farming. But most of the colonials were homesteaders and that's what
George had meant us to be. Like most everybody, we had come out there on the
promise of free land and a chance to raise our own food.
There was
free land, all right, a whole planet of it. Putting up a house and proving a
farm was another matter.
Here is the
way it was supposed to work: A colonist comes out from Earth with his family
and lands at Leda. The Colonial Commission gives him an apartment in town on
arrival, helps him pick out a piece of land to improve and helps him get a
house up on it. The Commission will feed him and his family for one Earth
year—that is, two Ganymede years—while he gets a couple of acres under
cultivation. Then he has ten G-years in which to pay back the Commission by
processing at least twenty acres for the Commission— and he is allowed to process
as much land for himself as for the Commission during the time he is paying
what he owes. At the end of five Earth years he owns a tidy little farm, free
and clear. After that, he can spread out and acquire more land, get into trade,
anything he likes. He has his toehold and has paid off his debt.
The
Colonial Commission had a big expensive investment in having started the
atmosphere project and made the planet fit to live on in the first place. The
land processed by the colonists was its return on the investment; the day would
come when the Colonial Commission would own thousands of acres of prime
farmland on Ganymede which it could then sell Earthside to later settlers ...
if you wanted to emigrate from Earth you would have to pay for the privilege
and pay high. People like us would not be able to afford it.
By that
time, although Ganymede would be closed to free immigration, Callisto would
have an atmosphere and pioneers could move in there and do it all over again.
It was what the bankers call "Self-liquidating," with the original
investment coming from Earth.
But here is
the way it actually did work out: when we landed there were only about thirty
thousand people on Ganymede and they were geared to accept about five hundred
immigrants an Earth year, which was about all the old-type ships could bring
out. Remember, those power-pile ships took over five years for the round trip;
it took a fleet of them to bring in that many a year.
Then the Star
Rover II was renamed the Mayflower and turned over to the Colonial
Commission, whereupon six thousand people were dumped on them all at once. We
were about as welcome as unexpected overnight guests when there is sickness in
the family.
The
colonists had known, for a full Earth year, that we were coming, but they had
not been able to protest. While Earth Sender can punch a message through to
Ganymede anytime except when the Sun is spang in the way, at that time the best
radio the colony could boast had to relay via Mars to reach Earth—and then only
when Mars was at its closest approach to Jupiter— which it wasn't.
I've got to
admit that they did what they could for us. There was plenty to eat and they
had managed to fix up places for us to sleep. The Immigrants' Receiving Station
had formerly been split up into family apartments; they had torn out the
partitions and used the partitions to build bunks for the big dormitories we
were stacked in. They had moved their town hall and made it over into a mess
hall and kitchen for us. We were in out of the weather and well fed, even if we
were about as crowded as we had been in the Mayflower.
You may ask
why, with a year to get ready, they had not built new buildings for us? Well,
we asked the same thing, only we weren't asking, we were demanding, and we were
sore about it!
They hadn't
built new buildings because they could not. Before the Earthmen moved in,
Ganymede was bare rock and ice. Sure, everybody knows that—but does everybody
know what that means? I'm sure I didn't.
No lumber.
No sheet metal. No insulation. No wires, No glass. No pipe. The settlers in
North America built log cabins—no logs.
The big
hydroponics sheds, the Receiving Station and a few other public buildings had
been built with materials lifted a half a billion miles from Earth. The rest of
Leda and every homesteader's farm house had been built the hard way, from
country rock. They had done their best for us, with what they had.
Only we
didn't appreciate it.
Of course
we should not have complained. After all, as George pointed out, the first
California settlers starved, nobody knows what happened to the Roanoke Colony,
and the first two expeditions to Venus died to the last man. We were
safe.
Anyhow,
even if we had to put up with barracks for a while, there was all that free
land, waiting for us.
On close
inspection, it looked as if it would have to wait quite a while. That was why
George had given in and taken a staff engineering job. The closest land to town
open to homesteading was nine miles away. To find enough land for six thousand
people meant that most of them would have to go about eighteen to twenty miles
away.
"What's
twenty miles? A few minutes by tube, an up-and-down hop for a copter—brother,
have you ever walked twenty miles? And then walked back again?
It wasn't
impossible to settle six thousand people that far from town; it was just
difficult—and slow. The pioneer explorer used to set out with his gun and an
axe; the settler followed by hitching his oxen to a wagonload of furniture and
farm tools. Twenty miles meant nothing to them.
They weren't
on Ganymede.
The colony
had two tractor trucks; another had come in the Mayflower. That's all
the transportation there was on the whole planet—not just to settle six
thousand people but for the daily needs of thirty thousand people who were
there ahead of us.
They
explained it all to us at a big meeting of heads of families. I wasn't supposed
to be there but it was held outdoors and there was nothing to stop me. The
chief ecologist and the chief engineer of the planet were there and the
chairman of the colony council presided. Here was the proposition:
What
Ganymede really needed was not more farmers, but manufacturing. They needed
prospectors and mines and mills and machine shops. They needed all the things
you can make out of metal and which they simply could not afford to import from
Earth. That's what they wanted us to work on and they would feed any of us who
accepted, not just for a year, but indefinitely.
As for any
who insisted on homesteading—well, the land was there; help ourselves. There
wasn't enough processing machinery to go around, so it might be two or three
years before any particular immigrant got a chance to process his first acre of
ground.
Somebody
stood up near the front of the crowd and yelled, "We've been
swindled!"
It took Mr.
Tolley, the chairman, quite a while to calm them down. When they let him talk
again, he said, "Maybe you have been swindled, maybe you haven't. That's a
matter of opinion. I'm quite willing to concede that conditions here are not
the way they were represented to you when you left Earth. In fact—"
Somebody
yelled. "That's mighty nice of you!" only the tone was sarcastic.
Mr. Tolley
looked vexed. "You folks can either keep order, or I'll adjourn this
meeting."
They shut
up again and he went on. Most of the present homesteaders had processed more
land than they could cultivate. They could use hired hands to raise more crops.
There was a job waiting for every man, a job that would keep him busy and teach
him Ganymede farming—and feed his wife and family-while he was waiting his turn
to homestead.
You could
feel a chill rolling over the crowd when the meaning of Mr. Tolley's words sunk
in. They felt the way Jacob did when he had labored seven years and then was
told he would have to labor another seven years to get the girl he really
wanted. I felt it myself, even though George had already decided on the staff
job.
A man spoke
up. "Mr. Chairman!"
"Yes?
Your name, please."
"Name
of Saunders. I don't know how the rest of them feel, but I'm a farmer. Always
have been. But I said 'farmer,' not sharecropper. I didn't come here to hire
out to no boss. You can take your job and do what you see fit with it. I stand
on my rights!"
There was
scattered applause and the crowd began to perk up. Mr. Tolley looked at him and
said, "That's your privilege, Mr. Saunders."
"Huh?
Well, I'm glad you feel that way, Mr. Chairman. Now let's cut out the nonsense.
I want to know two things: what piece of land am I going to get and when do I
lay hands on some machinery to start putting it into condition?"
Mr. Tolley
said, "You can consult the land office about your first question. As to
the second, you heard the chief engineer say that he estimates the average wait
for processing machinery will be around twenty-one months."
"That's
too long."
"So it
is, Mr. Saunders."
"Well,
what do you propose to do about it?" Mr. Tolley shrugged and spread his
hands. "I'm not a magician. We've asked the Colonial Commission by urgent
message going back on the Mayflower not to send us any more colonists on
the next trip, but to send us machinery. If they agree, there may be some
relief from the situation by next winter. But you have seen—all of you have
already seen—that the Colonial Commission makes decisions without consulting
us. The first trip of the Mayflower should have been all cargo; you
folks should have waited."
Saunders
thought about it. "Next winter, eh? That's five months away. I guess I can
wait—I'm a reasonable man. But no sharecropping; that's outl"
"I
didn't say you could start homesteading in five months, Mr. Saunders. It may be
twenty-one months or longer."
"No,
indeedy!"
"Suit
yourself. But you are confronted with a fact, not a theory. If you do have to
wait and you won't work for another farmer, how do you propose to feed yourself
and your family in the mean time?"
Mr.
Saunders looked around and grinned, "Why, in that case, Mr. Chairman, I
guess the government will just have to feed us until the government can come
through on its end of the deal. I know my rights."
Mr. Tolley
looked at him as if he had just bitten into an apple and found Saunders inside.
"We won't let your children starve," he said slowly, "but as for
you, you can go chew rocks. If you won't work, you won't eat."
Saunders
tried to bluster. "You can't get away with it! I'll sue the government and
I'll sue you as the responsible government official You can't—"
"Shut
up!" Mr. Tolley went on more
quietly, speaking to all of us. "We might as well get this point straight.
You people have been enticed into coming out here by rosy promises and you are
understandably disappointed. But your contract is with the Colonial Commission back
on Earth. But you have no contract with the common council of Ganymede,
of which I am chairman, and the citizens of Ganymede owe you nothing. We are
trying to take care of you out of common decency.
"If
you don't like what we offer you, don't start throwing your weight around with
me; I won't stand for it. Take it up with the representative of the Immigration
Service. That's what he is here for. Meeting's adjourned!"
But the
immigration representative wasn't there; he had stayed away from the meeting.
We had been
swindled all right. It was equally clear that there was no help for it. Some of
the immigrants did see the Colonial Commission representative, but they got no
comfort out of him. He had resigned, he said, fed up with trying to carry out
impossible instructions five hundred million miles from the home office. He was
going home as soon as his relief arrived.
That set
them off again; if he could go home so could they. The Mayflower was
still in orbit over us, taking on cargo. A lot of people demanded to go back in
her.
Captain Harkness
said no, he had no authority to let them deadhead half way across the system.
So they landed back on the Commission representative, squawking louder than
ever.
Mr. Tolley
and the council finally settled it. Ganymede wanted no soreheads, no weak sisters.
If the Commission refused to ship back those who claimed they were gypped and
didn't want to stay, then the next shipload wouldn't even be allowed to land.
The representative gave in and wrote Captain Harkness out a warrant for their
passage.
We held a
family powwow over the matter, in Peggy's room in the hospital—it had to be
there because the doctors were keeping her in a room pressurized to Earth
normal
Did we
stay, or did we go back? Dad was stuck in a rut. Back Earthside he at least had
been working for himself; here he was just an employee. If he quit bis job and
elected to homestead, it meant working two or three G-years as a field hand
before we could expect to start homesteading.
But the
real rub was Peggy. In spite of having passed her physical examination
Earthside she hadn't adjusted to Ganymede's low pressure. "We might as
well face it," George said to Molly. "We've got to get Peg back to
the conditions she's used to."
Molly
looked at him; his face was as long as my arm. "George, you don't want to
go back, do you?"
"That's
not the point, Molly. The welfare of the kids comes first." He turned to
me and added, "You're not bound by this, Bill. You are big enough to make
up your own mind. If you want to stay, I am sure it can be arranged."
I didn't
answer right away. I had come into the family get-together pretty disgusted
myself, not only because of the run-around we had gotten, but also because of a
run-in I had had with a couple of the Colonial kids. But you know what it was
that swung me around? That pressurized room. I had gotten used to low pressure
and I liked it. Peggy's room, pressurized to Earth normal, felt like swimming
in warm soup. I could hardly breath. "I don't think I want to go
back," I said.
Peggy had
been sitting up in bed, following the talk with big eyes, like a little lemur.
Now she said, "I don't want to go back, eitherl"
Molly
patted her hand and did not answer her, "George," she said,
"I've given this a lot of thought You don't want to go back, I know.
Neither does Bill But we don't all have to go back. We can—"
"That's
out, Molly," Dad answered firmly. "I didn't marry you to split up. If
you have to go back, I go back."
"I
didn't mean that. Peggy can go back with the O'Farrells and my sister will meet
her and take care of her at the other end. She wanted me to leave Peggy with
her when she found I was determined to go. It will work out all right."
She didn't look at Peggy as she said it.
"But,
Molly!" Dad said.
"No
George," she answered, "I've thought this all out. My first duty is
to you. It's not as if Peggy wouldn't be well taken care of; Phoebe will be a
mother to her and—"
By now
Peggy had caught her breath. "I don't want to go live with Aunt
Phoebe!" she yelled and started to bawl.
George
said, "It won't work, Molly."
Molly said,
"George, not five minutes ago you were talking about leaving Bill behind,
on his own."
"But
Bill is practically a man!"
"He's
not too old to be lonesome. And I'm not talking about leaving Peggy alone;
Phoebe will give her loving care. No, George, if the womenfolk ran home at the
first sign of trouble there never would be any pioneers. Peggy has to go back,
but I stay."
Peggy
stopped her blubbering long enough to say, "I won't go back! I'm a
pioneer, too—ain't I, Bill?"
I said,
"Sure kid, sure!" and went over and patted her hand. She grabbed onto
mine.
I don't
know what made me say what I did then. Goodness knows the brat had never been
anything but a headache, with her endless questions and her insistence that she
be allowed to do anything I did. But I heard myself saying, "Don't worry,
Peggy. If you go. back, I'll go with you."
Dad looked
at me sharply, then turned to Peggy. "Bill spoke hastily, Baby. You
mustn't hold him to that."
Peggy said,
"You did so mean it, didn't you, Bill?"
I was
regretting it already. But I said, "Sure, Peggy."
Peggy
turned back to Dad. "See? But it doesn't matter; we're not going back, not
any of us. Please Daddy —I'll get well, I promise you I will. I'm getting
better every day."
Sure, she
was—in a pressurized room. I sat there, sweating, and wishing I had kept my big
mouth shut. Molly said, "It defeats me, George. What do you think?"
"Mmmm—"
"Well?"
"Uh, I
was thinking we could pressurize one room in our quarters. I could rig some
sort of an impeller in the machine shop."
Peggy was
suddenly all over her tears. "You mean I can get out of the
hospital?"
"That's
the idea, Sugar, if Daddy can work it."
Molly
looked dubious. "That's no answer to our problems, George."
"Maybe
not." Dad stood up and squared his shoulders. "But I have decided one
thing; we all go, or we'll all stay. The Lermers stand together. That's
settled."
Homesteading
wasn't the only thing we had been mistaken about. There was Scouting on
Ganymede even if the news hadn't gotten back to Earth. There hadn't been any
meetings of the Mayflower troops after we landed; everybody had been
just too busy to think about it. Organized Scouting is fun, but sometimes there
just isn't time for it.
There
hadn't been any meetings of the Leda Troop, either. They used to meet in their
town hall; now we had their town hall as a mess hall, leaving them out in the
cold. I guess that didn't tend to make them fee! chummy towards us.
I ran into
this boy over in the Exchange. Just as he was passing me I noticed a little
embroidered patch on his chest. It was a homemade job and not very good, but I
spotted it. "Hey!" I said.
He stopped.
" 'Hey' yourself! Were you yelling at me?"
"Uh,
yes. You're a Scout, aren't you?"
"Certainly."
"So am
I. My name's Bill Lermer. Shake." I slipped him the Scout grip.
He returned
it. "Mine's Sergei Roskov." He looked me over. "You're one of
the Johnny-Come-Latelies, aren't you?"
"I came
over in the Mayflower" I admitted.
"That's
what I meant. No offense— I was born Earth-side, myself. So you used to be a
Scout, back home. That's good. Come around to meeting and we'll sign you up
again."
"I'm still
a Scout," I objected.
"Huh?
Oh, I get you—'Once a Scout, always a Scout.' Well, come around and we'll make
it official."
That was a
very good time for me to keep my lip zipped. But not me—oh, no! When comes the
Tromp of Doom, I'll still be talking instead of listening. I said, "It's
as official as it can be. I'm senior patrol leader, Baden-Powell Troop."
"Huh?
You're kind of far away from your troop, aren't you?"
So I told
him all about it. He listened until I was through, then said quietly, "And
you laddie bucks had the nerve to call yourselves the 'Boy Scouts of Ganymede.'
Anything else you would like to grab? You already have our meeting hall; maybe
you'd like to sleep in our beds?"
"What
do you mean?"
"Nothing."
He seemed to be thinking it over. "Just a friendly warning, Bill——"
"Huh?"
"There
is only one senior patrol leader around here–and you're looking right at him.
Don't make any mistake about it. But come on around to meeting anyhow," he
added. "You'll be welcome. We're always glad to sign up a new
tenderfoot."
I went back
to the Receiving Station and looked up Hank Jones and told him all about it. He
looked at me admiringly. "William, old son," he said, "I've got
to hand it to you. It takes real talent to louse things up that thoroughly.
It's not easy."
"You
think I've messed things up?"
"I
hope not. Well, let's look up Doc Archibald and see what can be done."
Our troop
master was holding clinic; we waited until the patients were out of the way,
then went in. He said, "Are you two sick, or just looking for a ticket to
gold brick?"
"Doc,"
I said, "we were wrong. There are so Scouts on Ganymede."
"So I
know," he answered.
I said,
"Huh?"
"Mr.
Ginsberg and Mr. Bruhn and I have been negotiating with the senior Scout
officials here to determine just how our troops will be taken into the parent
organization. It's a bit complicated as there are actually more Mayflower Scouts
than there are in the local troop. But they have jurisdiction, of course."
I said,
"Oh."
"Well
have a joint meeting in a few days, after we get the rules ironed out."
I thought
it over and decided I had better tell him what had happened, so I did.
He
listened, not saying anything. Finally I said, "Hank seems to think I've
messed things up. What do you think, Doc?"
"Mmmm—"
he said. "Well, I hope he's wrong. But I think I may say you haven't
helped the situation any."
I didn't
know what to say. "Don't look so tragic about it," he urged.
"You'll get well. Now run along and forget it. It may not make any
difference."
But it did
make a difference. Doc and the others had been pitching for our troops to be
recognized as properly constituted troops, with all ratings acknowledged. But
after Sergei spread the word around, the regular Ganymede Scouts all squawked
that we were nothing but a bunch of tenderfeet, no matter what we had been back
on Earth. The place for us to start was the bottom; if we were any good, we
could prove it— by tests.
It was
compromised; George says things like that are always compromised. Ratings were
confirmed on probation, with one G-year to make up any tests that were
different. Our troops were kept intact But there was one major change:
All patrol
leaders had to be from the original Ganymede Scouts; they were transferred from
the Leda troop. I had to admit the justice of it. How could I be a patrol
leader on Ganymede when I was still so green that I didn't know northwest from
next week? But it didn't set well with the other fellows who had been patrol
leaders when the word got around that I was responsible for the flies in the
soup.
Hank talked
it over with me. "Billy my boy," he told me, "I suppose you
realize that you are about as popular as ants at a picnic?"
"Who
cares?" I objected.
"You
care. Now is the time for all good men to perform an auto da fé"
"What
in great blazing moons is an auto da fé?"
"In
this case it means for you to transfer to the Leda Troop."
"Have
you gone crazy? You know what those guys think of us, especially me. I'd be
lucky to get away with my life."
"Which
just goes to show how little you know about human nature. Sure, it would be a
little rough for a while, but it's the quickest way to gain back some
respect."
"Hank,
you really are nuts. In that troop I really would be a tenderfoot—and
how!"
"That's
just the point," Hank went on quietly, "We're all tenderfeet—only
here in our own troop it doesn't show. If we stay here, we'll keep on being
tenderfeet for a long time. But if we transfer, we'll be with a bunch who
really know their way around—and some of it will rub off on us."
"Did
you say 'we'?"
"I
said 'we'."
"I
catch on. You want to transfer, so you worked tip this gag about how I ought to
do so, so you would have company. A fine chum you are!"
He just
grinned, completely unembarrassed. "Good old Bill! Hit him in the head
eight or nine times and he can latch on to any idea. It won't be so bad, Bill.
In precisely four months and nine days we won't be tenderfeet; we'll be old
timers."
"Why
the exact date?"
"Because
that is the due date of the Mayflower on her next trip—as soon as they
arrive they'll be the Johnny-Come-Latelies."
"Oh!"
Anyhow, we
did it—and it was rough at first, especially on me . . . like the night they
insisted that I tell them how to be a hero. Some twerp had gotten hold of the
meteorite story. But the hazing wasn't too bad and Sergei put a stop to it
whenever he caught them at it. After a while they got tired of it.
Sergei was
so confounded noble about the whole thing that I wanted to kick him.
The only
two merit badges to amount to anything that stood in the way of my getting off
probation and back up to my old rating of Eagle Scout were agronomy and
planetary ecology, Ganymede style. They were both tough subjects but well worth
studying. On Ganymede you had to know them to stay alive, so I dug in.
Ecology is
the most involved subject I ever tackled. I told George so and he said possibly
politics was worse—and on second thought maybe politics was just one aspect of
ecology. The dictionary says ecology is "the science of the interrelations
of living organisms and their environment." That doesn't get you much,
does it? It's like defining a hurricane as a movement of air.
The trouble
with ecology is that you never know where to start because everything affects
everything else. An unseasonal freeze in Texas can affect the price of
breakfast in Alaska and that can affect the salmon catch and that can affect
something else. Or take the old history book case: the English colonies took
England's young bachelors and that meant old maids at home and old maids keep
cats and the cats catch field mice and the field mice destroy the bumble bee
nests and bumble bees are necessary to clover and cattle eat clover and cattle
furnish the roast beef of old England to feed the soldiers to protect the
colonies that the bachelors emigrated to, which caused the old maids.
Not very
scientific, is it? I mean you have too many variables and you can't put figures
to them. George says that if you can't take a measurement and write it down in
figures you don't know enough about a thing to call what you are doing with it
"science" and, as for him, hell stick to straight engineering, thank
you.
But there
were some clear cut things about applied ecology on Ganymede which you could
get your teeth into. Insects, for instance—on Ganymede, under no circumstances
do you step on an insect. There were no insects on Ganymede when men first
landed there. Any insects there now are there because the bionomics board
planned it that way and the chief ecologist okayed the invasion. He wants that
insect to stay right where it is, doing whatever it is that insects do; he
wants it to wax and grow fat and raise lots of little insects.
Of course a
Scout doesn't go out of his way to step on anything but black widow spiders and
the like, anyhow—but it really brings it up to the top of your mind to know
that stepping on an insect carries with it a stiff fine if you are caught, as
well as a very pointed lecture telling you that the colony can get along very
nicely without you but the insects are necessary.
Or take
earthworms. I know they are worth their weight in uranium because I was
buying them before I was through. A farmer can't get along without earthworms.
Introducing
insects to a planet isn't as easy as it sounds. Noah had less trouble with his
animals, two by two, because when the waters went away he still had a planet
that was suited to his load. Ganymede isn't Earth. Take bees—we brought bees in
the Mayflower but we didn't turn them loose; they were all in the shed
called "Oahu" and likely to stay there for a smart spell. Bees need
clover, or a reasonable facsimile. Clover would grow on Ganymede but our real
use for clover was to fix nitrogen in the soil and thereby refresh a worn out
field. We weren't planting clover yet because there wasn't any nitrogen in the
air to fix—or not much.
But I am
ahead of my story. This takes us into the engineering side of ecology. Ganymede
was bare rock and ice before we came along, cold as could be, and no atmosphere
to speak of—just traces of ammonia and methane. So the first thing to do was to
give it an atmosphere men could breathe.
The
material was there—ice. Apply enough power, bust up the water molecule into
hydrogen and oxygen. The hydrogen goes up—naturally—and the oxygen sits on the
surface where you can breathe it. That went on for more than fifty years.
Any idea
how much power it takes to give a planet the size of Ganymede three
pressure-pounds of oxygen all over its surface?
Three
pressure-pounds per square inch means nine mass pounds, because Ganymede has
only one third the surface gravitation of Earth. That means you have to start
with nine pounds of ice for every square inch of Ganymede—and that ice is cold
to start with, better than two hundred degrees below zero Fahrenheit
First you
warm it to die freezing point, then you melt it, then you dissociate the water
molecule into oxygen and hydrogen—not in the ordinary laboratory way by
electrolysis, but by extreme heat in a mass converter. The result is three
pressure pounds of oxygen and hydrogen mix for that square inch. It's not an
explosive mixture, because the hydrogen, being light, sits on top and the
boundary layer is too near to being a vacuum to maintain burning.
But to
carry out this breakdown takes power and plenty of it—65,000 Btus for each
square inch of surface, or for each nine pounds of ice, whichever way you like
it. That adds up; Ganymede may be a small planet but it has
135,000,000,000,000,000 square inches of surface. Multiply that by 65,000 Btus
for each square inch, then convert British thermal units to ergs and you get:
92,500,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000,000
ergs.
Ninety-two-and-a-half
million billon quadrillion ergs! That figure is such a beauty that I
wrote it down in my diary and showed it to George.
He wasn't
impressed. George said that all figures were the same size and nobody but a
dimwit is impressed by strings of zeroes. He made me work out what the figure
meant in terms of mass-energy, by the good old E = MC2 formula,
since mass-energy converters were used to give Ganymede its atmosphere.
By
Einstein's law, one gram mass equals 9x1020 ergs, so that fancy long
figure works out to be 1.03x1011 grams of energy, or 113,200 tons.
It was ice, mostly, that they converted into energy, some of the same ice that
was being turned into atmosphere—though probably some country rock crept in
along with the ice. A mass converter will eat anything.
Let's say
it was all ice; that amounts to a cube of ice a hundred and sixty feet on an
edge. That was a number I felt I could understand.
I showed my
answer to George and he still was not impressed. He said I ought to be able to
understand one figure just as easily as the other, that both meant the same
thing, and both figures were the same size.
Don't get
the idea that Ganymede's atmosphere was made from a cube of ice 160 feet on a
side; that was just the mass which had to be converted to energy to turn the
trick. The mass of ice which was changed to oxygen and hydrogen would, if
converted back into ice, cover the entire planet more than twenty
feet deep —like the ice cap that used to cover Greenland.
George says
all that proves is that there was a lot of ice on Ganymede to start with and
that if we hadn't had mass converters we could never have colonized it.
Sometimes I think engineers get so matter of fact that they miss a lot of the
juice in life.
With three
pressure-pounds of oxygen on Ganymede and the heat trap in place and the place
warmed up so that blood wouldn't freeze in your veins colonists could move in
and move around without wearing space suits and without living in pressure
chambers. The atmosphere project didn't stop, however. In the first place,
since Ganymede has a low escape speed, only 1.8 miles per second compared with
Earth's 7 m/s, the new atmosphere would gradually bleed off to outer space,
especially the hydrogen, and would be lost— in a million years or so. In the
second place, nitrogen was needed.
We don't
need nitrogen to breathe and ordinarily we don't think much about it. But it
takes nitrogen to make protein—muscle. Most plants take it out of the ground;
some plants, like clover and alfalfa and beans, take it out of the air as well
and put it back into the ground. Ganymede's soil was rich in nitrogen; the
original scanty atmosphere was partly ammonia—but the day would come when we
would have to put the nitrogen back in that we were taking out. So the
atmosphere project was now turned to making nitrogen.
This wasn't
as simple as breaking up water; it called for converting stable isotope
oxygen-16 into stable isotope nitrogen-14, an energy consuming reaction
probably impossible in nature—or so the book said—and long considered
theoretically impossible. I hadn't had any nucleonics beyond high school
physics, so I skipped the equations. The real point was, it could be done, in
the proper sort of a mass-energy converter, and Ganymede would have nitrogen in
her atmosphere by the time her fields were exhausted and had to be replenished.
Carbon
dioxide was no problem; there was dry ice as well as water ice on Ganymede and
it had evaporated into the atmosphere long before the first homesteader staked
out a claim.
Not that
you can start farming with oxygen, carbon dioxide, and a stretch of land. That
land was dead. Dead as Christopher Columbus. Bare rock, sterile, no life
of any sort—and there never had been any life in it. It's a far piece from dead
rock to rich, warm, black soil crawling with bacteria and earthworms, the sort
of soil you have to have to make a crop.
It was the
job of the homesteaders to make the soil.
See how
involved it gets? Clover, bees, nitrogen, escape speed, power, plant-animal
balance, gas laws, compound interest laws, meteorology—a mathematical ecologist
has to think of everything and think of it ahead of time. Ecology is
explosive; what seems like a minor and harmless invasion can change the whole
balance. Everybody has heard of the English sparrow. There was the Australian
jack rabbit, too, that darn near ate a continent out of house and home. And the
Caribbean mongoose that killed the chickens it was supposed to protect. And the
African snail that almost ruined the Pacific west coast before they found a
parasite to kill it.
You take a
harmless, useful insect, plant, or animal to Ganymede and neglect to bring
along its natural enemies and after a couple of seasons you'll wish you had
imported bubonic plague instead.
But that
was the chief ecologist's worry; a farmer's job was engineering agronomy—making
the soil and then growing things in it.
That meant
taking whatever you came to—granite boulders melted out of the ice, frozen lava
flows, pumice, sand, ancient hardrock—and busting it up into little pieces,
grinding the top layers to sand, pulverizing the top few inches to flour, and
finally infecting the topmost part with a bit of Mother Earth herself–then
nursing what you had to keep it alive and make it spread. It wasn't easy.
But it was
interesting. I forgot all about my original notion of boning up on the subject
just to pass a merit badge test. I asked around and found out where I could see
the various stages going on and went out and had a look for myself. I spent
most of one light phase just looking.
When I got
back to town I found that George had been looking for me. "Where in blazes
have you been?" he wanted to know.
"Oh,
just out and around," I told him, "seeing how the 'steaders do
things."
He wanted
to know where I had slept and how I had managed to eat? "Bill, it's all
very well to study for your merit badges but that's no reason to turn into a
tramp," he objected. "I guess I have neglected you lately—I'm
sorry." He stopped and thought for a moment, then went on, "I think
you had better enter school here. It's true they haven't much for you, but it
would be better than running around at loose ends."
"George?"
"Yes,
that's probably the best-huh?"
"Have
you completely given up the idea of home-steading?"
Dad looked
worried. "That's a hard question, Bill. I still want us to, but with Peggy
sick—it's difficult to say. But our name is still in the hat. I'll have to make
up my mind before the drawing."
"Dad,
I'll prove it."
"Eh?"
"You
keep your job and take care of Peggy and Molly. I'll make us a farm."
The drawing
of our division took place three weeks later; the next day George and I walked
out to see what we had gotten. It was west of town out through Kneiper's Ridge,
new country to me; I had done my exploring east of town, over toward the power
plant, where most of the proved land was located.
We passed a
number of farms and some of them looked good, several acres in cultivation,
green and lush, and many more acres already chewed level. It put me in mind of
Illinois, but there was something missing. I finally figured out what it was—no
trees.
Even
without trees it was beautiful country. On the right, north of us, were the
foothills of the Big Rock Candy Mountains. Snow-covered peaks thrust up beyond
them, twenty or thirty miles away. On the left, curving in from the south and
closer than it came to Leda, was Laguna Serenidad. We were a couple of hundred
feet higher than the lake. It was a clear day and I tried to see the far shore,
but I couldn't be sure.
It was a
mighty cheerful scene. Dad felt it, too. He strode along, whistling
"Beulah Land" off key. I get my musical talent from Anne.
He broke
off and said, "Bill, I envy you."
I said,
"We'll all be together yet, George. I'm the advance guard." I thought
a bit and said, "George, do you know what the first thing I raise is going
to be–after I get some food crops in?"
"What?"
"I'm
going to import some seed and raise you some tobacco."
"Oh,
no, Son!"
"Why
not?" I knew he was touched by it, because he called me 'Son'. "I
could do it, as well as not."
"It's
a kind thought, but we'll have to stick to the main chance. By the time we can
afford that, I will have forgotten how to light a pipe. Honest, I don't miss
it."
We slogged
along a bit further, not saying anything but feeling close together and good.
Presently the road played out. Dad stopped and took his sketch map out of his
pouch. "This must be about it."
The sketch
showed where the road stopped, with just a dotted line to show where it would
be, some day. Our farm was outlined on it, with the nearest comer about half a
mile further along where the road ought to be and wasn't. By the map, the edge
of our property—or what would be ours if we proved it—ran along the north side
of the road about a quarter of a mile and from there back toward the foothills.
It was marked "Plot 117-H-2" and had the chief engineer's stamp on
it.
Dad was
staring at where the road ended. There was a lava flow right across it, high as
my head and rough as a hard winter in Maine. "Bill," he said,
"How good an Indian are you?"
"Fair,
I guess."
"We'll
have to try to pace it off and hold a straight line due west."
But it was
almost impossible to do it. We struggled and slipped on the lava and made
detours. Lava looks soft and it isn't. Dad slipped and skinned his shin and I
discovered that I had lost track of how many paces we had come. But presently
we were across the flow and in a boulder field. It was loose rubble, from
pieces the size of a house down to stuff no bigger than your fist—stuff dropped
by the ice when it melted and formed Laguna Serenidad.
George says
that Ganymede must have had a boisterous youth, covered with steam and
volcanoes.
The boulder
field was somewhat easier going but it was even harder to hold a straight line.
After a bit Dad stopped. "Bill," he said, "do you know where we
are?"
"No,"
I admitted, "but we aren't really lost. If we head back east we are bound
to come to proved ground."
"Perhaps
we had better."
"Wait
a minute." There was a particularly big boulder ahead of us. I picked a
way and managed to scramble to the top with nothing worse than a cut on my
hand. I stood up. "I can see the road," I told Dad. "We're north
of where we ought to be. And I think maybe we've come too far." I marked a
spot with my eye and came down.
We worked
south the amount I thought was right and then headed east again. After a bit I
said, "I guess we missed it, George. I'm not much of an In-
He said,
"So? What's this?" He was a little ahead of me and had stopped.
It was a
cairn with a flat rock on top. Painted on it was: "117-H-2, SE
corner."
We had been
on our farm for the past half hour; the big boulder I had climbed up on was on
it.
We sat down
on a fairly flat rock and looked around. Neither of us said anything for a
while; we were both thinking the same thing: if this was a farm, I was my own
great uncle.
After a bit
Dad muttered something. I said, "What did you say?"
"Golgotha,"
he said out loud. "Golgotha, the place of skulls." He was staring
straight ahead.
I looked
where he was looking; there was a boulder sitting on top of another and the way
the sun caught it, it did look like a skull. It leered at us.
It was so
darn quiet you could hear your hair grow. The place was depressing me. I would
have given anything to hear something or see something move. Anything—just a
lizard darting out from behind a rock, and I could have kissed it.
But there
were no lizards here and never had been.
Presently
Dad said, "Bill, are you sure you want to tackle this?"
"Sure
I'm sure."
"You
don't have to, you know. If you want to go back to Earth and go to M.I.T., I
could arrange it for the next trip."
Maybe he
was thinking that if I went back, I could take Peggy with, me and she would be
willing to go. Maybe I should have said something about it. But didn't; I said,
"Are you going back?"
"No."
"Neither
am I." At the moment is was mostly stubbornness. I had to admit that our
"farm" wasn't flowing with milk and honey; in fact it looked grim.
Nobody but a crazy hermit would want to settle down in such a spot.
"Think
it over, Bill."
"I've
thought it over."
We sat
there a while longer, not saying anything, just thinking long thoughts.
Suddenly we were almost startled out of our boots by somebody yodelling at us.
A moment before I had been wishing to hear just anything, but when it came it
was like unexpectedly encountering a clammy hand in the dark.
We both jumped
and Dad said, "What in the—?" I looked around. There was a large man
coming toward us. In spite of his size he skipped through the rocks like a
mountain goat, almost floating in the low gravity. As he got closer I knew I
had seen him before; he was on the Court of Honor, a Mr. Schultz.
Dad waved
to him and pretty soon he reached us. He stood half a head taller than Dad and
would have made the pair of us, he was so big. His chest was as thick as my
shoulders were broad and his belly was thicker than that. He had bushy, curly
red hair and his beard spread out over his chest like a tangle of copper
springs. "Greetings, citizens," he boomed at us, "my name is
Johann Schultz."
Dad
introduced us and he shook hands and I almost lost mine in his. He fixed his eyes
on me and said, "I've seen you before, Bill."
I said I
guessed he had, at Scout meetings. He nodded and added, "A patrol leader,
no?"
I admitted
that I used to be. He said, "And soon again," as if the matter were
all settled. He turned to Dad. "One of the kinder saw you going past on
the road, so Mama sent me to find you and bring you back to the house for tea
and some of her good coffee cake."
Dad said
that was very kind but that we didn't want to impose. Mr. Schultz didn't seem
to hear him. Dad explained what we were there for and showed him the map and
pointed out the cairn. Mr. Schultz nodded four or five times and said, "So
we are to be neighbors. Good, good!" He added to Dad "My neighbors
call me John, or sometimes 'Johnny'." Dad said his name was George and
from then on they were old friends.
Mr. Schultz
stood by the cairn and sighted off to the west and then north to the mountains.
Then he scrambled up on a big boulder where he could see better and looked
again. We went up after him.
He pointed
to a rise west of us. "You put your house so, not too far from the road,
but not on it. And first you work this piece in here and next season you work
back further toward the hills." He looked at me and added. "No?"
I said I
guessed so. He said, "It is good land, Bill. You will make a fine
farm." He reached down and picked up a piece of rock and rubbed it between
his fingers. "Good land," he repeated.
He laid it
down carefully, straightened up, and said, "Mama will be waiting for
us."
Mama was
waiting for us, all right, and her idea of a piece of coffee cake was roughly
what they used to welcome back the Prodigal Son. But before we got into the
house we had to stop and admire the Tree.
It was a
real tree, an apple tree, growing in a fine bluegrass lawn out in front of his
house. Furthermore it was bearing fruit on two of its limbs. I stopped and
stared at it.
"A
beauty, eh, Bill?" Mr. Schultz said, and I agreed. "Yes," he
went on, "it's the most beautiful tree on Ganymede—you know why? Because
it's the only tree on Ganymede." He laughed uproariously and dug me
in the ribs as if he had said something funny. My ribs were sore for a week.
He
explained to Dad all the things he had had to do to persuade it to grow and how
deep down he had had to go to prepare for it and how he had had to channel out
to drain it. Dad asked why it was bearing only on one side. "Next year we
pollenate the other side," he answered, "and then we have Stark's
Delicious. And Rome Beauties. This year, Rhode Island Greenings and
Winesaps." He reached up and picked one. "A Winesap for you,
Bill."
I said
thanks and bit into it. I don't know when I've tasted anything so good.
We went
inside and met Mama Schultz and four or five other Schultzes of assorted sizes,
from a baby crawling around in the sand on the floor up to a girl as old as I
was and nearly as big. Her name was Gretchen and her hair was red like her
father's, only it was straight and she wore it in long braids. The boys were
mostly blond, including the ones I met later.
The house
was mainly a big living room, with a big table down the middle of it. It was a
solid slab of rock, maybe four feet wide and twelve or thirteen feet long,
supported by three rock pillars. A good thing it was rock, the way Mama Schultz
loaded it down.
There were rock
slab benches down the long sides and two real chairs, one at each end, made out
of oil drums and padded with stuffed leather cushions.
Mama
Schultz wiped her face and hands on her apron and shook hands and insisted that
Dad sit down in her chair; she wouldn't be sitting down much, she explained.
Then she turned back to her cooking while Gretchen poured tea for us.
The end of
the room was the kitchen and was centered around a big stone fireplace. It had
all the earmarks of being a practical fireplace—and it was, as I found out
later, though of course nothing had ever been burned in it. It was really just
a ventilation hole. But Papa Schultz had wanted a fireplace so he had a
fireplace. Mama Schultz's oven was set in the side of it.
It was
faced with what appeared to be Dutch tile, though I couldn't believe it. I
mean, who is going to import anything as useless as Ornamental tile all the way
from Earth? Papa Schultz saw me looking at them and said, "My little girl
Kathy paints good, huh?" One of the medium-sized girls blushed and giggled
and left the room.
I had the
apple down to a very skinny core and was wondering what to do with it in that
spotless room when Papa Schultz stuck out his hand. "Give it to me,
Bill."
I did. He
took out his knife and very gently separated out the seeds. One of the kids
left the room and fetched him a tiny paper envelope in which he placed the
seeds and then sealed it. He handed it to me. "There, Bill," he said.
"I have only one apple tree, but you have eight!"
I was sort
of surprised, but I thanked him. He went on, "That place just this side of
where you will build your house—if you will fill that gully from the bottom,
layer by layer, building your soil as you go, with only a very little 'pay
dirt' you will have a place that will support a whole row of trees. When your
seedlings are big, we’ll bud from my tree."
I put them
very carefully in my pouch.
Some of the
boys drifted in and washed up and soon we were all sitting around the table and
digging into fried chicken and mashed potatoes and tomato preserves and things.
Mama Schultz sat beside me and kept pressing food on me and insisting that I
wasn't eating enough to keep body and soul together which wasn't true.
Afterwards
I got acquainted with the kids while George and Papa Schultz talked. Four of
the boys I knew; they were Scouts. The fifth boy, Johann Junior —they called
him “Yo"—was older than I, almost twenty, and worked in town for the chief
engineer. The others were Hugo and Peter, both Cubs, then Sam, and then Vic,
who was an Explorer Scout, same as I was. The girls were the baby, Kathy and
Anna, who seemed to be twins but weren't, and Gretchen. They all talked at
once.
Presently
Dad called me over. "Bill, you know we don't rate a chance at a rock
crusher for several months."
"Yes,"
I said, somewhat mystified.
"What
are your plans in the meantime?"
"Uh,
well, I don't know exactly. Study up on what I'll have to do."
"Mmrn
. . . Mr. Schultz has very kindly offered to take you on as a farm hand in the
meantime. What do you think of the idea?"
Papa
Schultz needed a field hand about as much as I need four ears, but that didn't
keep me from moving in. In that family everybody worked but the baby and you could
count on it that she would be washing dishes as soon as she was up off the
floor. Everybody worked all the time and seemed to enjoy it. When the kids
weren't working they were doing lessons and the boys were punished when they
weren't up on their lessons by being required to stay in from the fields.
Mama would
listen to them recite while she cooked. Sometimes she listened to lessons in
things I'm pretty sure she never had studied herself, but Papa Schultz checked
up on them, too, so it didn't matter.
Me, I
learned about pigs. And cows. And chickens. And how you breed pay dirt to make
more pay dirt. "Pay dirt" is the stuff that is actually imported from
Earth, concentrated soil cultures with the bacteria and so forth in it you have
to have to get a field alive.
There was
an awful lot to learn. Take cows, now–half the people you meet can't tell their
left hands from their right so who would think that a cow would care about such
things? But they do, as I found out when I tried to milk one from the left.
Everything
was stoop labor around the place, as primitive as a Chinese farm. The standard
means of transportation was a wheelbarrow.
I learned
not to sneer at a wheelbarrow after I priced one at the Exchange.
The total
lack of power machinery wasn't through lack of power; the antenna on the farm
house roof could pick up as much power as necessary—but there wasn't any
machinery. The only power machinery in the colony belonged to the whole colony
and was the sort of thing the colony absolutely couldn't get along without,
like rock chewers and the equipment for the heat trap and the power
plant itself.
George
explained it this way: every load that was sent up from Earth was a compromise
between people and cargo. The colonists were always yapping for more machinery
and fewer immigrants; the Colonial Commission always insisted on sending as
many people as possible and holding the imports down to a minimum.
"The
Commission is right, of course," he went on. "If we have people,
we'll get machinery—we'll make it ourselves. By the time you have a family of
your own, Bill, immigrants will arrive here bare-handed, no cargo at all, and
we'll be able to outfit a man with everything from plastic dishes for his
cupboard to power cultivators for his fields."
I said,
"If they wait until I have a family, they'll have a long wait. I figure a
bachelor travels faster and further."
Dad just
grinned, as if he knew something I didn't know and wouldn't tell. I had walked
into town to have dinner with him and Molly and the kid. I hadn't seen much of
them since I went to work for Papa Schultz. Molly was teaching school, Peggy
couldn't come out to the farm, of course, and Dad was very busy and very
excited over a strike of aluminum oxides twenty miles east of town. He was in
the project up to his ears and talking about having sheet aluminum on sale in
another G-year.
As a matter
or fact, cultivating a farm by stoop labor wasn't too bad, not on Ganymede. Low
gravity was a big help; you didn't wear yourself out just dragging your own
carcass around. I grossed a hundred and forty-two mass pounds, what with the
way Mama Schultz stuffed me; that meant I weighed less than fifty pounds, field
boots and all A wheelbarrow was similarly light when loaded.
But the
real advantage that made the work easy was something you might not guess.
No weeds.
No weeds at
all; we had very carefully not imported any. Once the land was built, making a
crop was darn near a case of poking a seed into the ground and then stepping
back quick before the stalk shot up and hit you in the eye.
Not that we
didn't work. There is plenty of work around a farm even with no weeds to worry
about. And a light wheelbarrow load simply meant that we piled three times as
much on. But we had fun, too; I never met a family that laughed so much.
I brought
my squeeze box out from town and used to play it after supper. We would all
sing, with Papa Schultz booming away on his own and leaving it up to the rest
of us to find the key he was singing in. We had fun.
It turned
out that Gretchen was an awful tease when she got over being shy. But I could
always get her goat by pretending that her head was on fire and either warming
my hands over her hair or threatening to pour water on her before she burned
the place down.
The day
finally came when it was my turn to have the colony's crushers work on my land
and I was almost sorry to see it arrive; I had had such a nice time at the
Schultz's. But by then I could caponize a rooster or plant a row of corn; I
still had a lot to learn, but there wasn't any good reason why I shouldn't
start making my own farm.
Dad and I
had had to prepare our farm for the crusher by dynamiting the biggest boulders.
A crusher will choke on anything much bigger than a barrel but it will handle
up to that size very nicely. Dynamite is cheap, thank goodness, and we used
plenty of it. The raw material is nitroglycerine which we didn't have to import
from Earth, the glycerine being refined from animal fats and the nitric acid
being a synthetic byproduct of the atmosphere project.
Dad spent
two weekends with me, making medium-sized ones out of big ones, then decided it
was safe to trust me to set powder by myself and I finished the job. There was
a little stream of melted snow water coming down from the hills at the far side
of our property; we blew out a new bed for it to lead it close to the place
where the house would go. We left it dry for the time being, with a natural
rock dam to blow up later. One fair-sized hill we moved entirely and blew it
into a gully on the lake side of the land. Big charges that took and I
almost got fitted for a halo through underestimating how far some of the stuff
would throw.
It was easy
work and lots of fun. I had a vibro-drill, borrowed from the engineer's office;
you could sink a charge hole with it twenty feet into rock as easily as you
could sink a hot knife into butter. Then drop in the powder, fill the rest of
the hole with rock dust, light the fuse, and run like the dickens!
But the
most fun was blowing up that rock that looked like a grinning skull. I fixed it
properly, it and its leer!
We had a
visitor while we were dynamiting the land. Dad and I had just knocked off for
lunch one day when Saunders, "The One-Man Lobby"—that's George's name
for him—showed up. We invited him to share what we had; he had brought nothing
but his appetite.
He
complained about this and that. Dad tried to change the subject by asking him
how he was getting along with his blasting. Saunders said it was slow work. Dad
said, "You have the crusher the day after us, don't you?"
Saunders
admitted it and said he wanted to borrow some powder; he was running short of
time. Dad let him have it, though it meant another trip out from town, after
work, for him the next day. Saunders went on, "I've been looking this
situation over, Mr. Lermer. We're tackling it all wrong."
George
said, "So?"
Saunders
said, "Yes, indeedy! Now in the first place this blasting ought not to be
done by the homesteader; it should be done by trained crews, sent out by the
government. It's really part of the contract anyway; we're supposed to receive
processed land."
Dad said
mildly that, while that might be a nice idea, he didn't know where they would
find enough trained crews to do the work for fifteen hundred new farms.
"Let
the government hire them!" Mr. Saunders answered. "Bring them in from
Earth for that purpose. Now, see here, Mr. Lermer, you are in the chief
engineer's office. You ought to put in a word for the rest of us."
George
picked up the vibro and got ready to set a charge. Presently he answered,
"I'm afraid you've come to the wrong party. I'm in an entirely different
department."
I guess Mr.
Saunders saw he was off on the wrong tack for he went on, "In the second
place, I have been looking into the matter of the soil, or what they call
'soil'—again they are off on the wrong foot." He kicked a rock. "This
stuff isn't good for anything. You can't grow anything in stuff like
that."
"Naturally
not," agreed Dad. "You have to make soil first."
"That's
just what I'm getting at," Saunders went on. "You have to have
soil—good, black, rich soil. So they tell us to breed it, a square foot at a
time. Plough garbage into it, raise earthworms—I don't know how many tomfool
stunts."
"Do
you know of a better way?"
"You
bet you I do! That's just what I'm getting at. Here we are, piddling along,
doing things the way a bunch of bureaucrats who never made a crop tell us to,
all for a few inches of second-rate soil—when there are millions of cubic feet
of the richest sort of black soil going begging."
Dad looked
up sharply. "Where?"
"In
the Mississippi Delta, that's where! Black soil goes down there for hundreds of
feet."
We both
looked at him, but he was quite serious about it. "Now here's what you've
got to have—Level the ground off, yes. But after that spread real Earth soil
over the rock to a depth of at least two feet; then it will be worth while to
farm. As it is, we are just wasting our time."
Dad waited
a bit before answering, "Have you figured out what this would cost?"
Mr.
Saunders brushed that aside. "That's not the point; the point is, that's
what we've got to have. The government wants us to settle here, doesn't it?
Well, then, if we all stick together and insist on it, we'll get it." He
jerked his chin triumphantly.
George
started to say something, then stopped. He patted rock dust in on top of his
charge, then straightened up and wiped the sweat off his beard. "Listen,
citizen," he said, "can't you see that we are busy? I'm about to
light this fuse; I suggest that you back away out of danger."
"Huh?"
said Saunders. "How big a charge is it? How far?"
If he had
kept his eyes open, he would have seen how big a charge it was and known how
far to give back. Dad said, "Oh, say a mile and a half—or even two
miles. And keep backing."
Saunders
looked at him, snorted disgustedly, and stalked away. We backed out of range
and let her blow.
While we
were setting the next charge I could see George's lips moving. After a while he
said, "Figuring gumbo mud conservatively at a hundred pounds per cubic
foot it would take one full load of the Mayflower to give Mr. Saunders
alone the kind of a farm he would like to have handed to him. At that rate it
would take just an even thousand G-years—five hundred Earth years—for the Mayflower
to truck in top-soil for farms for our entire party."
"You
forgot the Covered Wagon," I said brightly.
George
grinned. "Oh, yes! When the Covered Wagon is commissioned
and in service we could cut it down to two hundred and fifty years—provided no
new immigrants came in and there was a ban on having babies!" He frowned
and added, "Bill, why is it that some apparently-grown men never learn to
do simple arithmetic?" I didn't know the answer, so he said, "Come
on, Bill, let's get on with our blasting. I'm afraid we'll just have to piddle
along in our inefficient way, even if it doesn't suit our friend
Saunders."
The morning
the crusher was scheduled to show up I was waiting for it at the end of the
road. It came breezing down the road at twenty miles an hour, filling it from
side to side. When it came to the wall of lava, it stopped. I waved to the
operator; he waved back, then the machine grunted a couple of times, inched
forward, and took a bite out of the lava.
Lava didn't
bother it; it treated it like peanut brittle. A vibro-cutter built into its
under carriage would slice under the flow like a housewife separating biscuit
from a pan, the big steel spade on the front of the thing would pry under and
crack the bite off, and the conveyor would carry the chunk up into the jaws.
The driver
had a choice of dropping the chewed up material under the rear rollers or
throwing it off to the side. Just now he was throwing it away, leaving the
clean slice made by the vibro-cutter as a road bed —a good road, a little dusty
but a few rains would fix that.
It was
terrifically noisy but the driver didn't seem to mind. He seemed to enjoy it;
there was a good breeze taking the dust away from him and he had his
anti-silicosis mask pushed up on his forehead, showing the grin on his face.
By noon he
was down to our place and had turned in. We had a bite to eat together, then he
started in levelling a farm for me—five acres, the rest would have to wait. At
that I was lucky for I was to get land to work months ahead of the original
schedule. The second trip of the Mayflower had brought in three more
crushers and very few immigrants, just enough to replace those who had given up
and gone back out of our party, that being the compromise the town council had
worked out with the Colonial Commission.
The racket
was still worse when the crusher bit into hard rock, instead of lava, but it
was music to me and I didn't get tired of watching. Every bite was a piece of
land to me. At suppertime the second-shift driver showed up with Dad. We
watched together for a while, then Dad went back to town. I stayed. About
midnight I went over into a stretch that was not to be processed now, found a
big rock to keep the Sun out of my eyes and lay down for a quick nap.
Then the
relief driver was shaking me and saying, "Wake up, kid—you got a
farm."
I stood up
and rubbed my eyes and looked around. Five acres, with just enough contour for
drainage and a low hummock in the middle where the house would sit. I had a
farm.
The next
logical thing to do would have been to get the house up, but, under the
schedule, I rated the use of a cud-chewer for the following week. A cud-chewer
is a baby rock crusher. It uses a power pack instead of an antenna, it is
almost fool proof and anybody can run one, and it finishes up what the crusher
starts. It is small and low-powered compared with a crusher. The colony had
about forty of them.
The crusher
left loose rubble several feet deep in pieces as big as my fist. The cud-chewer
had a fork spade on the front of it, several sizes of spade forks, in fact. The
coarse fork went down into the loose rocks about eighteen inches and picked up
the big ones. These drifted back into the hopper as the machine moved forward
and were busted into stuff about the size of walnuts.
When you
had been over the ground once with the coarse fork, you unshipped it and put on
the medium fork and reset the chewing rollers. This time you went down only ten
inches and the result was gravel. Then you did it again for medium-fine and
then fine and when you were done the upper six inches or so was rock flour,
fine as the best loam—still dead, but ready to be bred into life.
Round and
round and round, moving forward an inch at a time. To get real use out of your
time allotment the cud-chewer had to be moving twenty-four hours a day until
they took it away from you. I stayed at it all through the first day, eating my
lunch in the saddle. Dad spelled me after supper and Hank came out from town
and we alternated through the night-light phase it was, actually, it being Monday
night.
Papa
Schultz found me asleep with my head on the controls late next afternoon and
sent me back to his house to get some real sleep. Thereafter one of the
Schultzes always showed up when I had been at it alone for four or five hours.
Without the Schultzes I don't know how Dad and I would have gotten through the
dark phase of that week.
But they
did help and by the time I had to pass the cud-chewer along I had nearly three
and a half acres ready to be seeded with pay dirt.
Winter was
coming on and I had my heart set on getting my house up and living in it during
the winter month, but to do so I really had to hump. I had to get some sort of
a holding crop in or the spring thaw would wash my top soil away. The short
Ganymede year is a good idea and I'm glad they run it that way; Earth's winters
are longer than necessary. But it keeps you on the jump.
Papa
Schultz advised grass; the mutated grass would grow in sterile soil much like
growing things in hydroponic solutions. The mat of rootlets would hold my soil
even if the winter killed it and the roots would furnish something through
which the infection could spread from the "pay dirt."
Pay dirt is
fundamentally just good black soil from Earth, crawling with bacteria and fungi
and microscopic worms—everything you need but the big fishing worms; you have
to add those. However, it wouldn't do simply to ship Earth dirt to Ganymede by
the car load. In any shovelful of loam there are hundreds of things, plant and
animal, you need for growing soil—but there are hundreds of other things you
don't want. Tetanus germs. Plant disease viruses. Cut worms. Spores. Weed
seeds. Most of them are too small to be seen with the naked eye and some of
them can't even be filtered out
So to make
pay dirt the laboratory people back on Earth would make pure cultures of
everything they wanted to keep in the way of bacteria, raise the little worms
under laboratory conditions, do the same for fungi and everything else they
wanted to save—and take the soil itself and kill it deader than Luna, irradiate
it, bake it, test it for utter sterility. Then they would take what they had
saved in the way of life forms and put it back into the dead soil That was
"pay dirt," the original pay dirt. Once on Ganymede the original
stuff would be cut six ways, encouraged to grow, then cut again. A hundred
weight of pay dirt supplied to a ‘steader might contain a pound of Terra's own
soil.
Every
possible effort was made to "limit the invasion," as the ecologists
say, to what was wanted. One thing that I may not have mentioned about the trip
out was the fact that our clothes and our baggage were sterilized during the
trip and that we ourselves were required to take a special scrub before we put
our clothes back on. It was the only good bath I got the whole two months, but
it left me smelling like a hospital.
The
colony's tractor trucks delivered the pay dirt I was entitled to in order to
seed my farm; I left the Schultz place early that morning to meet them. There
is difference of opinion as to the best way to plant pay dirt; some 'steaders
spread it all over and take a chance on it dying; some build up little pockets
six or eight feet apart, checker board style . . . safe but slow. I was
studying the matter, my mind not made up, when I saw something moving down the
road.
It was a
line of men, pushing wheelbarrows, six of them. They got closer and I could see
that it was all the male Schultzes. I went out to meet them.
Every one
of those wheelbarrows was loaded with garbage and all for me!
Papa
Schultz had been saving it as a surprise for me. I didn't know what to say.
Finally I blurted out, "Gee, Papa Schultz, I don't know when I'll be able
to pay you back!"
He looked
fierce and said, "Who is speaking of paying back when we have compost running
out of our ears yet?" Then he had the boys dump their loads down on top of
my pay dirt, took a fork and began mixing it as gently as Mama Schultz folding
in beaten egg white.
He took
charge and I didn't have to worry about the best way to use it. In his
opinion—and you can't bet that I didn't buck itl—what we had was good for about
an acre and his method was to spread it through the soil. But he did not select
one compact acre; he laid out strips, seven of them, a couple of hundred yards
long each and stretching across my chewed soil thirty-five or forty feet apart.
Each of us took a wheelbarrow—their six and my one—and distributed the mix
along each line.
When that
was done and cairns had been set to show where the strips ran, we raked the
stuff into the rock dust five or six feet on each side of each line. Around
noon Mama and Gretchen showed up, loaded down, and we stopped and had a picnic.
After lunch
Yo had to go back to town but he had almost finished his strip. Papa had
finished his and proceeded to help Hugo and Peter who were too small to swing a
good rake. I dug in and finished mine soon enough to be able to finish what Yo
had left. Dad showed up at the end of the day, expecting to help me all
evening—it was light phase and you could work as late as you could stand up
under it— but there was nothing left to do. And he didn't know how to thank
them either.
I like to
think that we would have gotten the farm made anyhow, without the Schultzes,
and maybe we would have—but I'm sure not sure. Pioneers need good neighbors.
The
following week I spent working artificial nitrates from the colony's power pile
into the spaces between the strips—not as good as pay dirt from Earth, but not
as expensive, either.
Then I
tackled sowing the grass, by hand, just like in the Bible, and then raking it
gently in. That old pest Saunders showed up. He still did so every now and
then, but never when Dad was around. I guess he was lonely. His family was
still in town and he was camping out in a ten-foot rock shed he had built. He
wasn't really making a farm, not properly; I couldn't figure out what he was up
to. It didn't make sense.
I said,
"Howdy," and went on with my work.
He watched
me, looking sour, and finally said, "You still bent on breaking your heart
on this stuff, aren't you, youngster?"
I told him
I hadn't noticed any wear and tear on my pump, and anyhow, wasn't he making a
farm, too?
He snorted.
"Not likely!"
"Then
what are you doing?"
"Buying
my ticket, that's what."
"Huh?"
"The
only thing you can sell around this place is improved land. I'm beating them at
their own game, that's what. I'll get that land in shape to unload it on some
other sucker and then me and mine are heading straight back for that
ever-lovin' Earth. And that's just what you'll be doing if you aren't an utter
fool. You'll never make a farm here. It can't be done."
I was
getting very tired of him but I'm short on the sort of point-blank guts it
takes to be flatly rude. "Oh, I don't know," I said. "Look at
Mr. Schultz—he's got a good farm."
Saunders
snorted again. "You mean 'Johnny Apple-seed?"
"I
mean Mr. Johann Schultz."
"Sure,
sure—Johnny Appleseed. That's what everybody calls him in town. He's nuts. You
know what he did? He gave me a handful of apple seeds and acted like he had
handed me the riches of Solomon."
I stopped
raking. "Well, hadn't he?"
Saunders
spat on the ground between us. "He's a clown."
I lifted up
the head of the rake. I said, "Mr. Saunders, you are standing on my land,
my property. I'll give you just two shakes to get off it and never set foot on
it again!"
He backed
away and said, "Hey! You stop that! Watch what you are doing with that
rake!"
I said,
"Git!"
He got.
The house
was a problem. Ganymede has little quakes all the time. It has to do with
"isostasy" which doesn't mean a thing but "equal-pressure"
when you get right down to it, but it's the science of how the mountains
balance the seas and the gravitation of a planet all comes out even.
It has to
do with tidal strains, too, which is odd, since Ganymede doesn't have any
tides; the Sun is too far away to matter and Ganymede always keeps the same
face toward Jupiter. Oh, you can detect a little tide on Laguna Serenidad when
Europa is closest to Ganymede and even a trifle from Callisto and lo, but what
I mean is it doesn't have tides—not like the Pacific Ocean.
What it
does have is a frozen tidal strain. The way Mr. Hooker, the chief
meteorologist, explains it is that Ganymede was closer to Jupiter when it
cooled off and lost its rotation, so that there is a tidal bulge in the planet
itself—sort of a fossil tidal bulge. The Moon has one, you know.
Then we
came along and melted off the ice cap and gave Ganymede an atmosphere. That
rearranged the pressures everywhere and the isostatic balance is readjusting.
Result: little quakes all the time.
I'm a
California boy; I wanted a quakeproof house. Schultzes had a quakeproof
house and it seemed like a good idea, even though there had never been a quake
heavy enough to knock a man down, much less knock a house down. On the other
hand most of the colonists didn't bother; it is hard to make a rock house
really quakeproof.
Worse than
that, it's expensive. The basic list of equipment that a 'steader is promised
in his emigration contract reads all right, a hoe, a spade, a shovel, a
wheelbarrow, a hand cultivator, a bucket, and so forth down the list—but when
you start to farming you find that is only the beginning and you've got to go
to the Exchange and buy a lot of other stuff. I was already in debt a proved
acre and a half, nearly, before the house ever went up.
As usual we
compromised. One room had to be quake proof because it had to be air
tight—Peggy's room. She was getting better all the time, but she still couldn't
take low pressure for any length of time. If the family was going to move out
to the farm, her bedroom had to be sealed, it had to have an air lock on it,
and we had to have an impeller. All that runs into money.
Before I
was through I had to pledge two more acres. Dad tried to sign for it but they
told him bluntly that while a 'steader's credit was good, his wasn't. That
settled the matter. We planned on one reinforced room and hoped to build on to
it later. In the mean time the house would be a living room, ten by twelve,
where I would sleep, a separate bedroom too small to swing a cat for George and
Molly, and Peggy's room. All but Peggy's room would be dry wall rock with a
patent roof.
Pretty
small, eh? Well, what's wrong with that? Abe Lincoln started with less.
I started
in cutting the stone as soon as the seed was in. A vibro-saw is like a
vibro-drill, except that it cuts a hair line instead of drilling a hole. When
the power is on you have to be durned careful not to get your fingers or
anything into the field, but it makes easy work of stone cutting. By the contract
you got the use of one for forty-eight hours free and another forty-eight
hours, if you wanted it, at a reduced rate. I got my work lined up and managed
to squeeze it into the two free days. I didn't want to run up any more debt,
because there was another thing I was hankering for, come not later than the
second spring away—flicker flood lights. Papa Schultz had them for his fields
and they just about doubled his crops. Earth plants aren't used to three and
half days of darkness, but, if you can tickle them during the dark phase with
flicker lights, the old photosynthesis really gets in and humps itself.
But that
would have to wait.
The patrol
got the house up—the patrol I was in, I mean, the Auslanders. It was a surprise
to me and yet it wasn't, because everybody has a house raising; you can't do it
alone. I had already taken part in six myself—not just big-heartedness, don't
get me wrong. I had to learn how it was done.
But the
patrol showed up before I had even passed the word around that I was ready to
hold a house raising. They came swinging down our road; Sergei marched them up
to where the house was to be, halted them, and said to me, "Bill, are your
Scout dues paid up?" He sounded fierce. I said, "You know they
are."
"Then
you can help. But don't get in our way." Suddenly he grinned and I knew I
had been framed. He turned to the patrol and shouted, "House raising
drill! Fall out and fall to."
Suddenly it
looked like one of those TV comedies where everything has been speeded up. I
never saw anybody work the way they did. Let me tell you it doesn't take Scout
uniforms to make Scouts. None of us ever had uniforms; we couldn't afford
special clothes just for Scouting.
Besides the
Auslanders there was Vic Schultz and Hank Jones, both from the Hard Rock patrol
and Doug Okajima, who wasn't even of our troop but still with the Baden-Powell.
It did my heart good. I hadn't seen much of the fellows lately; during light
phase I always worked too late to get in to meetings; during dark phase a cold
nine miles into town after supper is something to think twice about.
I felt
sheepish to realize that while I might have forgotten them, they hadn't
forgotten me, and I resolved to get to meetings, no matter how tired I was. And
take the tests for those two merit badges, too—the very first chance I got.
That
reminded me of another item of unfinished business, too—Noisy Edwards. But you
can't take a day off just to hunt somebody up and poke him in the snoot, not
when you are making a farm. Besides it wouldn't hurt anything for me to put on
another ten pounds; I didn't want it to be a repetition of the last time.
Dad snowed
up almost immediately with two men from his office and he took charge of
bracing and sealing Peggy's room. The fact that he showed up at all let me know
that he was in on it—which he admitted. It had been Sergei's idea and that was
why Dad had put me off when I said it was about time to invite the neighbors
in.
I got Dad
aside. "Look, George," I said, "how in nation are we going to
feed 'em?"
"Don't
worry about it," he said.
"But I
do worry about it!" Everybody knows it's the obligation of the 'steader
whose house is being raised to provide the victuals and I had been taken by
surprise.
"I
said not to," he repeated. And presently I knew why; Molly showed up with
Mama Schultz, Gretchen, Sergei's sister Marushka, and two girls who were
friends of Peggy—and what they were carrying they couldn't have carried on
Earth. It was a number one picnic and Sergei had trouble getting them back to
work after lunch.
Theoretically,
Molly had done the cooking over at the Schultz's but I know Mama
Schultz—anyhow, let's face it, Molly wasn't much of a cook.
Molly had a
note for me from Peggy. It read: "Dearest Billy, Please come into town
tonight and tell me all about it. Pretty please!" I told Molly I would.
By eighteen
o'clock that afternoon the roof was on and we had a house. The door wasn't
hung; it was still down at the 'Change. And the power unit wasn't in and might
not be for a week. But we had a house that would keep off the rain, and a
pint-sized cow barn as well, even if I didn't own a cow.
According
to my diary we moved into the house on the first day of spring.
Gretchen
came over and helped me get ready for them. I suggested that we ask Marushka as
well, since there would be lots of work to do. Gretchen said, "Suit
yourself!" and seemed annoyed, so I didn't. Women are funny. Anyhow
Gretchen is a right good worker.
I had been
sleeping in the house ever since the raising and even before the technicians
from the engineer's office had come and installed the antenna on the roof and
rigged the lights and heat—but that was done before winter was started and I
passed a comfortable month, fixing up the inside of the place and getting in a
crop of ice for the summer. I stored the ice, several tons of it, in the gully
at the side of the house, where I meant to plant apple trees just as soon as I
could get fixed for it. The ice would keep there until I could build a proper
cold cellar.
The first
few months after the folks moved out are the happiest I can remember. We were
together again and it was good. Dad still spent most of each dark phase in
town, working on a part time basis, but that was quite as much because he was
interested in the manufacturing project as it was to help pay off our debts.
During light phase we worked almost around the clock, side by side or at least
within earshot.
Molly
seemed to like being a housewife. I taught her how to cook and she caught on
real fast. Ganymede cooking is an art. Most things have to be cooked under
pressure, even baked things, for water boils at just a little over a hundred
and forty degrees. You can stir boiling water with your finger if you don't
leave it in too long. Then Molly started learning from Mama Schultz but I
didn't mind that; Mama Schultz was an artist. Molly got to be a really good
cook.
Peg had to
live in her room, of course, but we had hopes that she would be out soon. We
had the pressure down to eight pounds, half oxygen and half nitrogen, and we
usually all ate in her room. I still hated the thick stuff but it was worth
while putting up with it so that the family could eat together. After a while I
got so that I could change pressure without even an earache.
Peggy could
come outside, too. We had brought her from town in a bubble stretcher—another
thing bought on credit!—and Dad had fitted it with the gas apparatus from an
old space suit he had salvaged from the Project Jove people. Peggy could get
into the stretcher and shut herself in and we could bleed off the pressure in
her room and take her outside where she could get some sunshine and look at the
mountains and the lake and watch Dad and me work in the fields. The clear
plastic of the bubble did not stop ultraviolet and it was good for her.
She was a
skinny little runt and it was no trouble to move her around, even in the
stretcher. Light phase, she spent a lot of time outdoors.
We had
started with a broody hen and fifteen fertile eggs, and a pair of rabbits.
Pretty soon we had meat of our own. We always let Peggy think that the fryers
we ate came from the Schultzes and I don't think she ever caught on. At first I
used to go to the Schultz farm every day for fresh milk for Peggy, but I got a
chance, midsummer, to get a fresh two-year-old cow on tick at a reasonable
price. Peggy named her Mabel and was much irked that she couldn't get at her to
pet her.
We were on
the move all the time. I still hadn't managed to take my merit badge tests and
I hadn't done much better about getting in to Scout meetings. There was just
too much to do. Building a pond, for example—Laguna Serenidad was being
infected with plankton and algae but there weren't fish in it yet and it would
be a long time, even after the fish were stocked, before fishing would be
allowed. So we did fish-pond gardening, Chinese style, after I got the pond
built.
And there
were always crops to work on. My cover grass had taken hold all right and
shortly after we moved in the soil seemed ready to take angle worms. Dad was
about to send a sample into town for analysis when Papa Schultz stopped by.
Hearing what we were about he took up a handful of the worked soil, crumbled
it, smelled it, tasted it, and told me to go ahead and plant my worms. I did
and they did all right; we encountered them from time to time in working the
fields thereafter.
You could
see the stripes on the fields which had been planted with pay dirt by the way
the grass came up. You could see that the infection was spreading, too, but not
much. I had a lot of hard work ahead before the stripes would meet and blend
together and then we could think about renting a cud-chewer and finishing off
the other acre and a half, using our own field loam and our own compost heap to
infect the new soil. After that we could see about crushing some more acres,
but that was a long way away.
We put in
carrots and lettuce and beets and cabbage and brussels sprouts and potatoes and
broccoli. We planted corn between the rows. I would like to have put in an acre
of wheat but it didn't make sense when we had so little land. There was one
special little patch close to the house where we put in tomatoes and Hubbard
squash and some peas and beans. Those were "bee" plants and Molly
would come out and pollenate them by hand, a very tedious business. We hoped to
have a hive of bees some day and the entomologists on the bionomics staff were
practically busting their hearts trying to breed a strain of bees which would
prosper out doors. You see, among other things, while our gravity was only a
third Earth-normal, our air pressure was only a little better than a fifth
Earth-normal and the bees resented it; it made flying hard work for them. Or
maybe bees are just naturally conservative.
I guess I
was happy, or too tired and too busy to be unhappy, right up to the following
winter.
At first
winter seemed like a good rest. Aside from getting the ice crop in and taking
care of the cow and the rabbits and the chickens there wasn't too much to do. I
was tired out and cranky and didn't know it; Molly, I think, was just quietly,
patiently exhausted. She wasn't used to farm life and she wasn't handy at it,
the way Mama Schultz was.
Besides
that, she wanted inside plumbing and it just wasn't in the cards for her to
have it any time soon. I carried water for her, of course, usually having to
crack ice in the stream to get it, but that didn't cover everything, not with
snow on the ground. Not that she complained.
Dad didn't
complain, either, but there were deep lines forming from his nose down to his
mouth which his beard didn't cover entirely. But it was mostly Peggy.
When we
first moved her out to the farm she perked up a lot. We gradually reduced the
pressure in her room and she kept insisting that she was fine and teasing for a
chance to go out without the bubble stretcher. We even tried it once, on Dr.
Archibald's advice, and she didn't have a nose bleed but she was willing to get
back in after about ten minutes.
The fact
was she wasn't adjusting. It wasn't just the pressure; something else was
wrong. She didn't belong here and she wouldn't grow here. Have
you ever had a plant that refused to be happy where you planted it? It was like
that.
She
belonged back on Earth.
I suppose
we weren't bad off, but there is a whale of a difference between being a rich
farmer, like Papa Schultz, with heaps of cow manure in your barn yard and hams
hanging in your cold cellar and every modern convenience you could want, even
running water in your house, and being poor farmers, like us, scratching for a
toe hold in new soil and in debt to the Commission. It told on us and that
winter we had time to brood about it.
We were all
gathered in Peggy's room after lunch one Thursday. Dark phase had just started
and Dad was due to go back into town; we always gave him a send off. Molly was
darning and Peg and George were playing cribbage. I got out my squeeze box and
started knocking out some tunes. I guess we all felt cheerful enough for a
while. I don't know how I happened to drift into it, but after a bit I found I
was playing The Green Hills of Earth. I hadn't played it in a long time.
I brayed
through that fortissimo part about "Out ride the sons of Terra;
Far drives the thundering jet—" and was thinking to myself that jets
didn't thunder any more. I was still thinking about it when I went on into the
last chorus, the one you play very softly: "We pray for one last
landing on the globe that gave us birth—"
I looked up
and there were tears running down Molly's cheeks.
I could
have kicked myself. I put my accordion down with a squawk, not even finishing,
and got up. Dad said, "What's the matter, Bill?"
,I muttered
something about having to go take a look at Mabel.
I went out
into the living room and put on my heavy clothes and actually did go outside,
though I didn't go near the barn. It had been snowing and it was already almost
pitch dark, though the Sun hadn't been down more than a couple of hours. The
snow had stopped but there were clouds overhead and you couldn't see Jupiter.
The clouds
had broken due west and let the sunset glow come through a bit. After my eyes
adjusted, by that tiny amount of light I could see around me—the mountains,
snow to their bases, disappearing in the clouds, the lake, just a sheet of
snow-covered ice, and the boulders beyond our fields, making weird shapes in
the snow. It was a scene to match the way I felt; it looked like the place
where you might be sent for having lived a long and sinful life.
I tried to
figure out what I was doing in such a place.
The clouds
in the west shifted a little and I saw a single bright green star, low down
toward the horizon, just above where the Sun had set.
It was Earth.
I don't
know how long I stood there. Presently somebody put a hand on my shoulder and I
jumped. It was Dad, all bundled up for a nine-mile tramp through the dark and
the snow.
"What's
the matter, Son?" he said.
I started
to speak, but I was all choked up and couldn't. Finally I managed to say,
"Dad, why did we come here?"
"Mmmm
. . . you wanted to come. Remember?"
"I
know," I admitted.
"Still,
the real reason, the basic reason, for coming here was to keep your
grandchildren from starving. Earth is overcrowded, Bill."
I looked
back at Earth again. Finally I said, "Dad, I've made a discovery. There's
more to life than three square meals a day. Sure, we can make crops here— this
land would grow hair on a billiard ball. But I don't think you had better plan
on any grandchildren here; it would be no favor to them. I know when I've made
a mistake."
"You're
wrong, Bill, Your kids will like this place, just the way Eskimos like
where they live."
"I
doubt it like the mischief."
"Remember,
the ancestors of Eskimos weren't Eskimos; they were immigrants, too. If you
send your kids back to Earth, for school, say, they'll be homesick for
Ganymede. They'll hate Earth. They'll weigh too much, they won't like
the air, they won't like the climate, they won't like the people."
"Hmm—look,
George, do you like it here? Are you glad we came?"
Dad was
silent for a long time. At last he said, “I'm worried about Peggy, Bill."
"Yeah,
I know. But how about yourself—and Molly?"
"I'm
not worried about Molly. Women have their ups and downs. You'll learn to expect
that." He shook himself and said, "I'm late. You go on inside and
have Molly fix you a cup of tea. Then take a look at the rabbits. I think the
doe is about to drop again; we don't want to lose the young 'uns." He
hunched his shoulders and set off down toward the road. I watched him out of
sight and then went back inside.
Then
suddenly it was spring and everything was all right.
Even winter
seemed like a good idea when it was gone. We had to have winter; the freezing
and thawing was necessary to develop the ground, not to mention the fact that
many crops won't come to fruit without cold weather. Anyway, anybody can live
through four weeks of bad weather.
Dad laid
off his job when spring came and we pitched in together and got our fields
planted. I rented a power barrow and worked across my strips to spread the
living soil. Then there was the back-breaking job of preparing the gully for
the apple trees. I had started the seeds soon after Papa Schultz had given them
to me, forcing them indoors, first at the Schultz's, then at our place. Six of
them had germinated and now they were nearly two feet tall.
I wanted to
try them outdoors. Maybe I would have to take them in again next winter, but it
was worth a try.
Dad was
interested in the venture, too, not just for fruit trees, but for lumber. Wood
seems like an obsolete material, but try getting along without it.
I think
George had visions of the Big Rock Candy Mountains covered with tall straight
pines . . . someday, someday.
So we went
deep and built it to drain and built it wide and used a lot of our winter
compost and some of our precious topsoil. There was room enough for twenty
trees when we got through, where we planted our six little babies. Papa Schultz
came over and pronounced a benediction over them.
Then he
went inside to say hello to Peggy, almost filling her little room. George used
to say that when Papa inhaled the pressure in the room dropped.
A bit later
Papa and Dad were talking in the living room; Dad stopped me as I was passing
through. "Bill," he asked, "how would you like to have a window
about here?" He indicated a blank wall.
I stared.
"Huh? How would we keep the place warm?"
"I
mean a real window, with glass."
"Oh."
I thought about it. I had never lived in a place with windows in my life; we
had always been apartment dwellers. I had seen windows, of course, in
country houses back Earthside, but there wasn't a window on Ganymede and it hadn't
occurred to me that there ever would be.
"Papa
Schultz plans to put one in his house. I thought it might be nice to sit inside
and look out over the lake, light phase evenings," Dad went on.
"To
make a home you need windows and fireplaces," Papa said placidly.
"Now that we glass make, I mean to have a view."
Dad nodded.
"For three hundred years the race had glazed windows. Then they shut
themselves up in little air-conditioned boxes and stared at silly television
pictures instead. One might as well be on Luna."
It was a
startling idea, but it seemed like a good one. I knew they were making glass in
town. George says that glassmaking is one of the oldest manufacturing arts, if
not the oldest, and certainly one of the simplest. But I had thought about it for
bottles and dishes, not for window glass. They already had glass buckets on
sale at the 'Change, for about a tenth the cost of the imported article.
A view
window—it was a nice idea. We could put one on the south and see the lake and
another on the north and see the mountains. Why, I could even put in a skylight
and lie on my bunk and see old Jupiter.
Stow it,
William, I said to myself; you'll be building a whole house out of glass next.
After Papa Schultz left I spoke to George about it. "Look," I said,
"about this view window idea. It's a good notion, especially for Peggy's
room, but the question is: can we afford it?"
"I
think we can," he answered.
"I
mean can we afford it without your going back to work in town? You've been
working yourself to death —and there's no need to. The farm can support us
now."
He nodded.
"I had been meaning to speak about that. I've about decided to give up the
town work, Bill—except for a class I'll teach on Saturdays."
"Do
you have to do that?"
"Happens
that I like to teach engineering, Bill And don't worry about the price of the
glass; well get it free—a spot of cumshaw coining to your old man for designing
the glass works. "The kine who tread the grain,'" he quoted.
"Now you and I had better get busy; there is a rain scheduled for fifteen
o'clock.'
It was
maybe three weeks later that the moons lined up. This is an event that almost
never happens, Ganymede, Callisto, Io, and Europa, all perfectly lined up and
all on the same side of Jupiter. They come close to lining up every seven
hundred and two days, but they don't quite make it ordinarily. You see, their
periods are all different, from less than two days for Io to more than two
weeks for Callisto and the fractions don't work out evenly. Besides that they
have different eccentricities to their orbits and their orbits aren't exactly
in the same plane.
As you can
see, a real line up hardly ever happens.
Besides
that, this line up was a line up with the Sun, too; it would occur at
Jupiter full phase. Mr. Hooker, the chief meteorologist, announced that it had
been calculated that such a perfect line up would not occur again for more than
two hundred thousand years. You can bet we were all waiting to see it. The
Project Jove scientists were excited about it, too, and special arrangements
had been made to observe it.
Having it
occur at Jupiter full phase meant not only that a sixth heavenly body—the
Sun—would be in the line up, but that we would be able to see it. The shadows
of Ganymede and Callisto would be centered on Jupiter just as Io and Europa
reached mid transit.
Full phase
is at six o'clock Saturday morning; we all got up about four-thirty and were
outside by five. George and I carried Peggy out in her bubble stretcher. We
were just in time.
It was a
fine, clear summer night, light as could be, with old Jupiter blazing overhead
like a balloon on fire. Io had just barely kissed the eastern edge of
Jupiter—"first contact" they call it. Europa was already a bit inside
the eastern edge and I had to look sharp to see it. When a moon is not in full
phase it is no trouble to pick it out while it's making its transit, but at
full phase it tends to blend into the background. However, both Ioand Europa
are just a hair brighter than Jupiter. Besides that, they break up the pattern
of Jupiter's bands and that lets you see them, too.
Well
inside, but still in the eastern half—say about half way to Jupiter's center
point—were the shadows of Ganymede and Callisto. I could not have told them
apart, if I hadn't known that the one further east had to be Ganymede's. They
were just little round black dots; three thousand miles or so isn't anything
when it's plastered against Jupiter's eighty-nine thousand mile width.
Io looked a
bit bigger than the shadows; Europa looked more than half again as big, about
the way the Moon looks from Earth.
We felt a
slight quake but it wasn't even enough to make us nervous; we were used to
quakes. Besides that, about then Io"kissed" Europa. From then on,
throughout the rest of the show, Io gradually slid underneath, or behind,
Europa.
They
crawled across the face of Jupiter; the moons fairly fast, the shadows in a
slow creep. When we had been outside a little less than half an hour the two
shadows kissed and started to merge. Io had slid halfway under Europa and looked
like a big tumor on its side. They were almost halfway to center and the
shadows were even closer.
Just before
six o'clock Europa—you could no longer see Io; Europa covered it—as I was
saying, Europa kissed the shadow, which by now was round, just one shadow.
Four or
five minutes later the shadow had crawled up on top of Europa; they were all
lined up—and I knew I was seeing the most extraordinary sight I would ever see
in my life, Sun, Jupiter, and the four biggest moons all perfectly lined up.
I let out a
deep breath: I don't know how long I had been holding it. "Gee whiz!"
was all I could think of to say.
"I
agree in general with your sentiments, Bill," Dad answered. "Molly,
hadn't we better get Peggy inside? I'm afraid she is getting cold."
"Yes,"
agreed Molly. "I know I am, for one."
"I'm
going down to the lake now," I said. The biggest tide of record was
expected, of course. While the lake was too small to show much tide, I had made
a mark the day before and I hoped to be able to measure it.
"Don't
get lost in the dark," Dad called out. I didn't answer him. A silly remark
doesn't require an answer.
I had
gotten past the road and maybe a quarter of a mile beyond when it hit.
It knocked
me flat on my face, the heaviest shake I had ever felt in my life. I've felt
heavy quakes in California; they weren't a patch on this one. I lay face down
for a long moment, digging into the rock with my finger nails and trying to get
it to hold still.
The seasick
roll kept up and kept up and kept up, and with it the noise—a deep bass rumble,
deeper than thunder and more terrifying.
A rock
rolled up against me and nipped my side. I got to my feet and managed to stay
there. The ground was still swaying and the rumble kept on. I headed for the
house, running—like dancing over shifting ice. I fell down twice and got up
again.
The front
end of the house was all caved in. The roof slanted down at a crazy angle.
"George!" I yelled. "Molly! Where are you?"
George
heard me and straightened up. He was on the other side of the house and now I
saw him over the collapsed roof. He didn't say anything. I rushed around to
where he stood. "Are you all right?" I demanded.
"Help
me get Molly out—" he gasped.
I found out
later that George had gone inside with Molly and Peggy, had helped get Peg out
of the stretcher and back into her room, and then had gone outside, leaving
Molly to get breakfast. The quake had hit while he was returning from the barn.
But we didn't have time then to talk it over; we dug—moving slabs with our bare
hands that had taken four Scouts, working together, to lay. George kept crying,
"Molly! Molly! Where are you?"
She was
lying on the floor beside the stone work bench that was penned in by the roof.
We heaved it off her; George scrambled over the rubble and reached her.
"Molly! Molly darling!"
She opened
her eyes. "George!"
"Are
you all right?"
"What
happened?"
"Quake.
Are you all right? Are you hurt?"
She sat up,
made a face as if something hurt her, and said, "I think I— George! Where s
Peggy? Get Peggy!"
Peggy's
room was still upright; the reinforcements had held while the rest of the house
had gone down around it. George insisted on moving Molly out into the open
first, then we tackled the slabs that kept us from getting at the air lock to
Peggy's room.
The outer
door of the air lock was burst out of its gaskets and stood open, the wrong
way. It was black inside the lock; Jupiter light didn't reach inside. I
couldn't see what I was doing but when I pushed on the inner door it wouldn't
give. "Can't budge it," I told Dad. "Get a light."
"Probably
still held by air pressure. Call out to Peggy to get in the stretcher and we'll
bleed it."
"I
need a light," I repeated.
"I
haven't got a light."
"Didn't
you have one with you?" I had had one; we always carried torches, outdoors
in dark phase, but I had dropped mine when the quake hit. I didn't know where
it was.
Dad thought
about it, then climbed over the slabs. He was back in a moment. "I found
it between here and the barn. I must have dropped it." He shined it on the
inner door and we looked over the situation.
"It
looks bad," Dad said softly. "Explosive decompression." There
was a gap you could poke your fingers through between the top of the door and
the frame; the door wasn't pressure held, it was jammed.
Dad called
out, "Peggy! Oh, Peggy, darling—can you hear me?"
No answer.
"Take the light, Bill—and stand aside." He reared back and then hit
the door hard with his shoulder. It gave a bit but didn't open. He hit it again
and it flew open, spilling him on his hands and knees. He scrambled up as I
shined the light in past him.
Peggy lay
half in and half out of bed, as if she had been trying to get up when she
passed out. Her head hung down and a trickle of blood was dripping from her
mouth on to the floor.
Molly had
come in right behind us; she and Dad got Peggy into the stretcher and Dad
brought the pressure up. She was alive; she gasped and choked and sprayed blood
over us while we were trying to help her. Then she cried. She seemed to quiet
down and go to sleep —or maybe fainted again—after we got her into the bubble.
Molly was
crying but not making any fuss about it. Dad straightened up, wiped his face
and said, "Grab on, Bill. We've got to get her into town."
I said,
"Yes," and picked up one end. With Molly holding the light and us
carrying, we picked our way over the heap of rock that used to be our house and
got out into the open. We put the stretcher down for a moment and I looked
around.
I glanced
up at Jupiter; the shadows were still on his face and Io and Europa had not yet
reached the western edge. The whole thing had taken less than an hour. But that
wasn't what held my attention; the sky looked funny.
The stars
were too bright and there were too many of them. "George," I said,
"what's happened to the sky?"
"No
time now——" he started to say. Then he stopped and said very slowly,
"Great Scott!"
"What?"
asked Molly. "What's the matter?"
"Back
to the house, all of you! We've got to dig out all the clothes we can get at.
And blanketsl"
"What?
Why?"
"The
heat trap! The heat trap is gone—the quake must have gotten the power
house."
So we dug
again, until we found what we had to have. It didn't take long; we knew where
things had to be. It was just a case of getting the rocks off. The blankets
were for the stretcher; Dad wrapped them around like a cocoon and tied them in
place. "Okay, Bill," he said. "Quick march, nowl"
It was then
that I heard Mabel bawl. I stopped and looked at Dad. He stopped too, with an
agony of indecision on his face. "Oh, damn!" he said, the first time
I had ever heard him really swear. "We can't just leave her to freeze;
she's a member of the family. Come, Bill."
We put the
stretcher down again and ran to the bam. It was a junk heap but we could tell
by Mabel's complaints where she was. We dragged the roof off her and she got to
her feet. She didn't seem to be hurt but I guess she had been knocked silly.
She looked at us indignantly.
We had a
time of it getting her over the slabs, with Dad pulling and me pushing. Dad
handed the halter to Molly. "How about the chickens?" I asked,
"And the rabbits?" Some of them had been crushed; the rest were loose
around the place. I felt one—a rabbit —scurry between my feet
"No
time!" snapped Dad. "We can't take them; all we could do for them
would be to cut their throats. Come!"
We headed
for the road.
Molly led
the way, leading and dragging Mabel and carrying the light. We needed the
light. The night, too bright and too clear a few minutes before, was now
suddenly overcast. Shortly we couldn't see Jupiter at all, and then you
couldn't count your fingers in front of your face.
The road
was wet underfoot, not rain, but sudden dew; it was getting steadily colder.
Then it did
rain, steadily and coldly. Presently it changed to wet snow. Molly dropped
back. "George," she wanted to know, "have we come as far as the
turn off to the Schultz's?"
"That's
no good," he answered. "We've got to get the baby into the
hospital."
That isn't
what I meant. Oughtn't I to warn them?"
They'll be
all right. Their house
is sound."
"But
the cold?"
"Oh."
He saw what she meant and so did I, when I thought about it. With the heat trap
gone and the power house gone, every house in the colony was going to be like
an ice box. What good is a power receiver on your roof with no power to
receive? It was going to get colder and colder and colder ....
And then it
would get colder again. And colder....
"Keep
moving," Dad said suddenly. "We'll figure it out when we get
there."
But we
didn't figure it out, because we never found the turn off. The snow was driving
into our faces by then and we must have walked on past it. It was a dry snow
now, little sharp needles that burned when they hit.
Without
saying anything about it, I had started counting paces when we left the walls
of lava that marked the place where the new road led to our place and out to
the new farms beyond. As near as I could make it we had come about five miles
when Molly stopped. "What's the matter?" yelled Dad.
"Dear,"
she said, "I can't find the road. I think I've lost it."
I kicked
the snow away underfoot. It was made ground, all right—soft. Dad took the torch
and looked at his watch. "We must have come about six miles," he
announced.
"Five," I corrected him. "Or five and a half at the outside," I told him I had been counting.
He
considered it. "We've come just about to that stretch where the road is
flush with the field," he said. "It can't be more than a half mile or
a mile to the cut through Kneiper's Ridge. After that we can't lose it. Bill,
take the light and cast off to the right for a hundred paces, then back to the
left. If that doesn't do it, well go further. And for heaven's sakes retrace
your steps—it's the only way you'll find us in this storm."
I took the
light and set out. To the right was no good, though I went a hundred and fifty
paces instead of a hundred, I got back to them, and reported, and started out
again. Dad just grunted; he was busy with something about the stretcher.
On the
twenty-third step to the left I found the road —by stepping down about a foot,
falling flat on my face, and nearly losing the light. I picked myself up and
went back.
"Good!"
said Dad. "Slip your neck through this."
"This"
was a sort of yoke he had devised by retying the blankets around the stretcher
so as to get some free line. With my neck through it I could carry the weight
on my shoulders and just steady my end with my hands. Not that it was heavy,
but our hands were getting stiff with cold. "Good enough!" I said,
"But, look, George—let Molly take your end."
"Nonsense!"
"It
isn't nonsense. Molly can do it—can't you, Molly? And you know this road better
than we do; you've tramped it enough times in the dark."
"Bill
is right, dear," Molly said at once. "Here—take Mabel."
Dad gave
in, took the light and the halter. Mabel didn't want to go any further; she
wanted to sit down, I guess. Dad kicked her in the rear and jerked on her neck.
Her feelings were hurt; she wasn't used to that sort of treatment—particularly
not from Dad. But there was no time to humor her; it was getting colder.
We went on.
I don't know how Dad kept to the road but he did. We had been at it another
hour, I suppose, and had left Kneiper's slot well behind, when Molly stumbled,
then her knees just seemed to cave in and she knelt down in the snow.
I stopped
and sat down, too; I needed the rest. I just wanted to stay there and let it
snow.
Dad came
back and put his arms around her and comforted her and told her to lead Mabel
now; she couldn't get lost on this stretch. She insisted that she could still
carry. Dad ignored her, just lifted the yoke business off her shoulders. Then
he came back and peeled a bit of blanket off the bubble and shined the torch
inside. He put it back into place. Molly said, "How is she?'
Dad said,
"She's still breathing. She opened her eyes when the light hit them. Let's
go." He got the yoke on and Molly took the light and the halter.
Molly
couldn't have seen what I saw; the plastic of the bubble was frosted over on
the inside. Dad hadn't seen Peggy breathe; he hadn't seen anything.
I thought
about it for a long while and wondered how you would classify that sort of a
lie. Dad wasn't a liar, that was certain—and yet it seemed to me that such a
lie, right then, was better than the truth. It was complicated.
Pretty soon
I forgot it; I was too busy putting one foot in front of the other and counting
the steps. I couldn't feel my feet any longer.
Dad stopped
and I bumped into the end of the stretcher. "Listen!" he said.
I listened
and heard a dull rumble. "Quake?"
"No.
Keep quiet." Then he added, "It's down the road. Off the road,
everybody! Off to the right."
The rumble
got louder and presently I made out a light through the snow, back the way we
had come. Dad saw it, too, and stepped out on the road and started waving our
torch.
The rumble
stopped almost on top of him; it was a rock crusher and it was loaded down with
people, people clinging to it all over and even riding the spade. The driver
yelled, "Climb on! And hurry!"
Then he saw
the cow and added, "No live stock."
"We've
got a stretcher with my little girl in it," Dad shouted back to him.
"We need help."
There was a
short commotion, while the driver ordered a couple of men down to help us. In
the mix up Dad disappeared. One moment Molly was holding Mabel's halter, then
Dad was gone and so was the cow.
We got the
stretcher up onto the spade and some of the men braced it with their backs. I
was wondering what to do about Dad and thinking maybe I ought to jump off and
look for him, when he appeared out of the darkness and scrambled up beside me.
"Where's Molly?" he asked.
"Up on
top. But where is Mabel? What did you do with her?"
“Mabel is
all right." He folded his knife and put it in his pocket. I didn't ask any
more questions.
We passed
several more people after that, but the driver wouldn't stop. We were fairly
close into town and he insisted that they could make it on their own. His
emergency power pack was running low, he said; he had come all the way from the
bend in the lake, ten miles beyond our place.
Besides, I
don't know where he would have put them. We were about three deep and Dad had
to keep warning people not to lean on the bubble of the stretcher.
Then the
power pack did quit and the driver shouted, "Everybody off! Get on in on
your own." But by now we were actually in town, the outskirts, and it
would have been no trouble if it hadn't been blowing a blizzard. The driver
insisted on helping Dad with the stretcher. He was a good Joe and turned out to
be—when I saw him in the light—the same man who had crushed our acreage.
At long,
long last we were inside the hospital and Peggy was turned over to the hospital
people and put in a pressurized room. More than that, she was alive. In bad shape,
but alive.
Molly
stayed with her. I would like to have stayed, too—it was fairly warm in the
hospital; it had its own emergency power pack. But they wouldn't let me.
Dad told
Molly that he was reporting to the chief engineer for duty. I was told to go to
the Immigration Receiving Station. I did so and it was just like the day we
landed, only worse—and colder. I found myself right back in the very room which
was the first I had ever been in on Ganymede.
The place
was packed and getting more packed every minute as more refugees kept pouring
in from the surrounding country. It was cold, though not so bitterly cold as
outside. The lights were off, of course; light and heat all came from the power
plant for everything. Hand lights had been set up here and there and you could
sort of grope your way around. There were the usual complaints, too, though
maybe not as bad as you hear from immigrants. I paid no attention to any of
them; I was happy in a dead beat sort of way just to be inside and fairly warm
and feel the blood start to go back into my feet.
We stayed
there for thirty-seven hours. It was twenty-four hours before we got anything
to eat.
Here was
the way it went: the metal buildings, such as the Receiving Station, stood up.
Very few of the stone buildings had, which we knew by then from the reports of
all of us. The Power Station was out, and with it, the heat trap. They wouldn't
tell us anything about it except to say that it was being fixed.
In the mean
time we were packed in tight as they could put us, keeping the place warm
mainly by the heat from our bodies, sheep style. There were, they say, several
power packs being used to heat the place, too, one being turned on every time
the temperature in the room dropped below freezing. If so, I never got close to
one and I don't think it ever did get up to freezing where I was.
I would sit
down and grab my knees and fall into a dopey sleep. Then a nightmare would wake
me up and I'd get up and pound myself and walk around. After a while I'd sit
down on the floor and freeze my fanny again.
I seem to
remember encountering Noisy Edwards in the crowd and waving my finger under his
nose and telling him I had an appointment to knock his block off. I seem to
remember him staring back at me as if he couldn't place me. But I don't know; I
may have dreamed it. I thought I ran across Hank, too, and had a long talk with
him, but Hank told me afterwards that he never laid eyes on me the whole time.
After a
long time—it seemed a week but the records show it was eight o'clock Sunday
morning—they passed us out some lukewarm soup. It was wonderful. After that I
wanted to leave the building to go to the hospital. I wanted to find Molly and
see how Peggy was doing.
They
wouldn't let me. It was seventy below outside and still dropping.
About
twenty-two o'clock the lights came on and the worst was over.
We had a
decent meal soon after that, sandwiches and soup, and when the Sun came up at
midnight they announced that anybody could go outside who cared to risk it. I
waited until noon Monday. By then it was up to twenty below and I made a dash
for it to the hospital.
Peggy was
doing as well as could be expected. Molly had stayed with her and had spent the
time in bed with her, huddling up to her to keep her warm. While the hospital
had emergency heat, it didn't have the capacity to cope with any such disaster
as had struck us; it was darn near as cold as the Receiving Station. But Peggy
had come through it, sleeping most of the time. She even perked up enough to
smile and say hello.
Molly's
left arm was in a sling and splinted. I asked how that happened—and then I felt
foolish. It had happened in the quake itself but I hadn't known it and George
still didn t know about it; none of the engineers were back.
It didn't
seem possible that she could have done what she did, until I recalled that she
carried the stretcher only after Dad had rigged the rope yokes. Molly is all
right.
They chased
me out and I high-tailed it back to the Receiving Station and ran into Sergei
almost at once. He hailed me and I went over to him. He had a pencil and a list
and a number of the older fellows were gathered around him. "What's
up?" I said.
"Just
the guy I'm looking for," he said. "I had you down for dead. Disaster
party—are you in?"
I was in,
all right. The parties were made up of older Scouts, sixteen and up, and the
younger men, We were sent out on the town's tractors, one to each road, and we worked
in teams of two. I spotted Hank Jones as we were loading and they let us make
up a team.
It was grim
work. For equipment we had shovels and lists—lists of who lived on which farm.
Sometimes a name would have a notation "known to be alive," but more often
not. A team would be dropped off with the lists for three or four farms and the
tractor would go on, to pick them up on the return trip.
Our job was
to settle the doubt about those other names and—theoretically—to rescue anyone
still alive.
We didn't
find anyone alive.
The lucky
ones had been killed in the quake; the unlucky ones had waited too long and
didn't make it into town. Some we found on the road; they had tried to make it
but had started too late. The worst of all were those whose houses hadn't
fallen and had tried to stick it out. Hank and I found one couple just sitting,
arms around each other. They were hard as rock.
When we
found one, we would try to identify it on the list, then cover it up with snow,
several feet deep, so it would keep for a while after it started to thaw.
When we
settled with the people at a farm, we rummaged around and found all the
livestock we could and carried or dragged their carcasses down to the road, to
be toted into town on the tractor and slapped into deep freeze. It seemed a
dirty job to do, robbing the dead, but, as Hank pointed out, we would all be
getting a little hungry by and by.
Hank
bothered me a little; he was merry about the whole thing. I guess it was better
to laugh about it, in the long run, and after a while he had me doing it. It
was just too big to soak up all at once and you didn't dare let it get you.
But I
should have caught on when we came to his own place. "We can skip
it," he said, and checked off the list.
"Hadn't
we better check for livestock?" I said.
"Nope.
We're running short of time. Let's move on to the Millers' place."
"Did
they get out?"
"I
don't know. I didn't see any of them in town."
The Millers
hadn't gotten out; we barely had time to take care of them before the tractor
picked us up. It was a week later that I found out that both of Hank's parents
had been killed in the quake. He had taken time to drag them out and put them
into their ice cellar before he had headed for town.
Like
myself, Hank had been outside when it hit, still looking at the line up. The
fact that the big shock had occurred right after the line up had kept a lot of
people from being killed in their beds—but they say that the line up caused the
quake, triggered it, that is, with tidal strains, so I guess it sort of evens
up. Of course, the line up didn't actually make the quake; it had been building
up to it ever since the beginning of the atmosphere project. Gravity's books
have got to balance.
The colony
had had thirty-seven thousand people when the quake hit. The census when we
finished it showed less than thirteen thousand. Besides that we had lost every
crop, all or almost all the livestock. As Hank said, we'd all be a little
hungry by and by.
They dumped
us back at the Receiving Station and a second group of parties got ready to
leave. I looked for a quiet spot to try to get some sleep.
I was just
dozing off, it seemed to me, when somebody shook me. It was Dad. "Are you
all right, Bill?"
I rubbed my
eyes. "I'm okay. Have you seen Molly and Peggy?"
"Just
left them. I'm off duty for a few hours. Bill, have you seen anything of the
Schultzes?"
I sat up,
wide awake. "No. Have you?"
"No."
I told him
what I had been doing and he nodded. "Go back to sleep, Bill. I'll see if
there has been a report on them."
I didn't go
to sleep. He was back after a bit to say that he hadn't been able to find out
anything one way or another. "I'm worried, Bill."
"So am
I."
"I'm
going out and check up."
"Let's
go."
Dad shook
his head. "No need for us both. You get some sleep." I went along,
just the same.
We were
lucky. A disaster party was just heading down our road and we hitched a ride.
Our own farm and the Schultz's place were among those to be covered on this trip;
Dad told the driver that we would check both places and report when we got back
to town. That was all right with him.
They
dropped us at the turn off and we trudged up toward the Schultz's house. I
began to get the horrors as we went. It's one thing to pile snow over
comparative strangers; it's another thing entirely to expect to find Mama
Schultz or Gretchen with their faces blue and stiff.
I didn't
visualize Papa as dead; people like Papa Schultz don't die–they just go on
forever. Or it feels like that.
But I still
wasn't prepared for what we did find.
We had just
come around a little hummock that conceals their house from the road. George
stopped and said, "Well, the house is still standing. His quake-proofing
held."
I looked at
it, then I stared—and then I yelled. "Hey, George! The Tree is
gone!"
The house
was there, but the apple tree—"the most beautiful tree on
Ganymede"—was missing. Just gone. I began to run.
We were
almost to the house when the door opened. There stood Papa Schultz.
They were
all safe, every one of them. What remained of the tree was ashes in the
fireplace. Papa had cut it down as soon as the power went off and the
temperature started to drop—and then had fed it, little by little, into the
flames.
Papa,
telling us about it, gestured at the blackened firebox. "Johann's folly,
they called it. I guess they will not think old Appleseed Johnny quite so
foolish now, eh?" He roared and slapped Dad on the shoulders.
"But
your tree," I said stupidly.
"I
will plant another, many others." He stopped and was suddenly serious.
"But your trees, William, your brave little baby trees—they are dead,
not?"
I said I
hadn't seen them yet. He nodded solemnly. "They are dead of the cold.
Hugo!"
"Yes,
Papa."
"Fetch
me an apple." Hugo did so and Papa presented it to me. "You will
plant again." I nodded and stuck it in my pocket.
They were
glad to hear that we were all right, though Mama clucked over Molly's broken
arm. Yo had fought his way over to our place during the first part of the
storm, found that we were gone and returned, two frost bitten ears for his
efforts. He was in town now to look for us.
But they
were all right, every one of them. Even their livestock they had saved—cows,
pigs, chickens, people, all huddled together throughout the cold and kept from
freezing by the fire from their tree.
The animals
were back in the barn, now that power was on again, but the place still showed
that they had been there—and smelled of it, too. I think Mama was more upset by
the shambles of her immaculate living room than she was by the magnitude of the
disaster. I don't think she realized that most of her neighbors were dead. It
hadn't hit her yet.
Dad turned
down Papa Schultz's offer to come with us to look over our farm. Then Papa said
he would see us on the tractor truck, as he intended to go into town and find
out what he could do. We had mugs of Mama's strong tea and some corn bread and
left.
I was
thinking about the Schultzes and how good it was to find them alive, as we
trudged over to our place. I told Dad that it was a miracle.
He shook
his head. "Not a miracle. They are survivor types."
"What
type is a survivor type?" I asked.
He took a
long time to answer that one. Finally he said, "Survivors survive. I guess
that is the only way to tell the survivor type for certain."
I said.
"We're survivor types, too, in that case."
"Could
be," he admitted. "At least we've come through this one."
When I had
left, the house was down. In the mean time I had seen dozens of houses down,
yet it was a shock to me when we topped the rise and I saw that it really was
down. I suppose I expected that after a while I would wake up safe and warm in
bed and everything would be all right.
The fields
were there, that was all that you could say for it. I scraped the snow off a
stretch I knew was beginning to crop. The plants were dead of course and the
ground was hard. I was fairly sure that even the earth worms were dead; they
had had nothing to warn them to burrow below the frost line.
My little
saplings were dead, of course.
We found
two of the rabbits, huddled together and stiff, under a drift against what was
left of the barn. We didn't find any of the chickens except one, the first old
hen we ever had. She had been setting and her nest wasn't crushed and had been
covered by a piece of the fallen roof of the barn. She was still on it, hadn't
moved and the eggs under her were frozen. I think that was what got me.
I was just
a chap who used to have a farm.
Dad had
been poking around the house. He came back to the barn and spoke to me.
"Well, Bill?"
I stood up.
"George, I've had it."
"Then
let's go back to town. The truck will be along shortly."
"I
mean I've really had it!"
"Yes,
I know."
I took a
look in Peggy's room first, but Dad's salvage had been thorough. My accordion
was in there, however, with snow from the broken door drifted over the case. I
brushed it off and picked it up. "Leave it," Dad said. "It's
safe here and you've no place to put it."
"I
don't expect to be back," I said.
"Very
well."
We made a bundle
of what Dad had gotten together, added the accordion, the two rabbits and the
hen, and carried it all down to the road. The tractor showed up presently, we
got aboard and Dad chucked the rabbits and chicken on the pile of such that
they had salvaged. Papa Schultz was waiting at his turnoff.
Dad and I
tried to spot Mabel by the road on the trip back, but we didn't find her.
Probably she had been picked up by an earlier trip, seeing that she was close
to town. I was just as well pleased. All right, she had to be salvaged—but I
didn't want the job. I'm not a cannibal.
I managed
to get some sleep and a bite to eat and was sent out on another disaster party.
The colony began to settle down into some sort of routine. Those whose houses
had stood up moved back into them and the rest of us were taken care of in the
Receiving Station, much as we had been when our party landed. Food was short,
of course, and Ganymede had rationing for the first time since the first
colonials really got started.
Not that we
were going to starve. In the first place there weren't too many of us to feed
and there had been quite a lot of food on hand. The real pinch would come
later. It was decided to set winter back by three months, that is, start all
over again with spring—which messed up the calendar from then on. But it would
give us a new crop as quickly as possible to make up for the one that we had
lost.
Dad stayed
on duty with the engineer's office. Plans called for setting up two more power
plants, spaced around the equator, and each of them capable of holding the heat
trap alone. The disaster wasn't going to be allowed to happen again. Of course
the installations would have to come from Earth, but we had been lucky on one
score; Mars was in a position to relay for us. The report had gone into Earth
at once and, instead of another load of immigrants, we were to get what we
needed on the next trip.
Not that I
cared. I had stayed in town, too, although the Schultzes had invited me to stay
with them. I was earning my keep helping to rebuild and quakeproof the houses
of the survivors. It had been agreed that we would all go back, George, Molly,
Peggy, and me, on the first trip, if we could get space. It had been unanimous
except that Peggy hadn't been consulted; it just had to be.
We weren't
the only ones who were going back. The Colonial Commission had put up a squawk
of course, but under the circumstances they had to give in. After it had been
made official and the lists were opened Dad and I went over to the Commission
agent's office to put in our applications. We were about the last to apply; Dad
had been out of town on duty and I had waited until he got back.
The office
was closed with a "Back in a half hour" sign stuck on the door. We
waited. There were bulletin boards outside the office; on them were posted the
names of those who had applied for repatriation. I started reading them to kill
time and so did Dad.
I found
Saunders' name there and pointed it out to George. He grunted and said,
"No loss." Noisy Edwards' name was there, too; maybe I had seen
him in the Receiving Station, although I hadn't seen him since. It occurred to
me that I could probably corner him in the ship and pay him back his lumps, but
I wasn't really interested in the project. I read on down.
I expected
to find Hank Jones' name there, but I couldn't find it. I started reading the
list carefully, paying attention to every name I recognized. I began to see a
pattern.
Presently
the agent got back and opened the door. Dad touched my arm. "Come on,
Bill."
I said, "Wait
a minute, George. You read all the names?"
"Yes,
I did."
"I've
been thinking. You know, George, I don't like being classed with these
lugs."
He chewed
his lip. "I know exactly what you mean."
I took the
plunge. "You can do as you like, George, but I'm not going home, if I ever
do, until I've licked this joint."
Dad looked
as unhappy as he could look. He was silent for a long time, then he said,
"I've got to take Peggy back, Bill. She won't go unless Molly and I go
along. And she's got to go."
"Yes,
I know."
"You
understand how it is, Bill?"
"Yes,
Dad, I understand." He went on in to make out his application, whistling a
little tune he used to whistle just after Anne died. I don't think he knew he
was whistling it.
I waited
for him and after a bit we went away together.
I moved
back out to the farm the next day. Not to the Schultzes—to the farm. I slept in
Peggy's room and got busy fixing the place up and getting ready to plant my
emergency allowance of seed.
Then, about
two weeks before they were to leave in the Covered Wagon, Peggy died,
and there wasn't any reason for any of us to go back to Earth.
Yo Schultz
had been in town and Dad sent word back by him. Yo came over and woke me up and
told me about it. I thanked him.
He wanted
to know if I wanted to come back to the house with him. I said, no, thanks,
that I would rather be alone. He made me promise to come over the next day and
went away.
I lay back
down on Peggy's bed.
She was
dead and there was nothing more I could do about it She was dead and it was all
my fault . . . if I hadn't encouraged her, they would have been able to get her
to go back before it was too late. She would be back Earthside, going to school
and growing up healthy and happy—right back in California, not here in this
damned place where she couldn't live, where human beings were never meant to
live.
I bit the
pillow and blubbered. I said, "Oh, Anne, Anne! Take care of her,
Anne—She's so little; she won't know what to do."
And then I
stopped bawling and listened, half way expecting Anne to answer me and tell me
she would,
But I
couldn't hear anything, not at first . . . and what I did hear was only,
"Stand tall, Billy," . .. very faint and far away, "Stand tall,
son."
After a while
I got up and washed my face and started hoofing it back into town.
We all
lived in Peggy's room until Dad and I had the seeds in, then we built on to it,
quake proof this time and with a big view window facing the lake and another
facing the mountains. We knocked a window in Peggy's room, too; it made it seem
like a different place.
We built on
still another room presently, as it seemed as if we might be needing it. All
the rooms had windows and the living room had a fireplace.
Dad and I
were terribly busy the second season after the quake. Enough seed could be had
by then and we farmed the empty farm across the road from us. Then some
newcomers, the Ellises, moved in and paid us for the crop. It was just what
they call a "book transaction," but it reduced our debt with the
Commission.
Two G-years
after the line up you would never have known that anything had happened. There
wasn't a wrecked building in the community, there were better than forty-five
thousand people, and the town was booming. New people were coming in so fast
that you could even sell some produce to the Commission in lieu of land.
We weren't
doing so badly, ourselves. We had a hive of bees. We had Mabel II, and Margie
and Mamie, and I was sending the spare milk into town by the city transport
truck that passed down our road once a day. I had broken Marge and Mamie to the
yoke and used them for ploughing as well—we had crushed five more acres—and we
were even talking about getting a horse.
Some people
had horses already, the Schultzes for instance. The council had wrangled about
it before okaying the "invasion," with conservatives holding out for
tractors. But we weren't equipped to manufacture tractors yet and the policy
was to make the planet self-sufficient—the hay burners won out. Horses can
manufacture more horses and that is one trick that tractors have never learned.
Furthermore,
though I would have turned my nose up at the idea when I was a ground hog back
in Diego Borough, horse steak is very tasty.
It turned
out we did need the extra room. Twins— both boys. New babies don't look as if
they were worth keeping, but they get over it—slowly. I bought a crib as a
present for them, made right here on Ganymede, out of glass fabric stuck
together with synthetic resin. It was getting possible to buy quite a number of
home products.
I told
Molly I would initiate the brats into the Cubs when they were old enough. I was
getting in to meetings oftener now, for I had a patrol again—the Daniel Boone
patrol, mostly new kids. I still hadn't taken my own tests but you can't do
everything at once. Once I was scheduled to take them and a litter of pigs
picked that day to arrive. But I planned to take them; I wanted to be an Eagle
Scout again, even if I was getting a little old to worry about badges in
themselves.
It may
sound as if the survivors didn't give a hoot about those who had died in the
disaster. But that isn't the truth. It was just that you work from day to day
and that keeps your mind busy. In any case, we weren't the first colony to be
two-thirds wiped out— and we wouldn't be the last. You can grieve only so much;
after that it's self pity. So George says.
George
still wanted me to go back to Earth to finish my education and I had been
toying with the idea myself. I was beginning to realize that there were a few
things I hadn't learned. The idea was attractive; it would not be like going
back right after the quake, tail between my legs. I'd be a property owner,
paying my own way. The fare was considerable—five acres—and would about clean
me out, my half, and put a load on George and Molly. But they were both for it.
Besides,
Dad owned blocked assets back Earthside which would pay my way through school.
They were no use to him otherwise; the only thing the Commission will accept as
pay for imports is proved land. There was even a possibility, if the council
won a suit pending back Earthside, that his blocked assets could be used for my
fare as well and not cost us a square foot of improved soil. All in all, it was
nothing to turn down idly.
We were
talking about me leaving on the New Ark when another matter came up—the
planetary survey.
Ganymede
had to have settlements other than Leda; that was evident even when we landed.
The Commission planned to set up two more ports-of-entry near the two new power
stations and let the place grow from three centers. The present colonists were
to build the new towns—receiving stations, hydroponics sheds, infirmaries, and
so forth—and be paid for it in imports. Immigration would be stepped up
accordingly, something that the Commission was very anxious to do, now that
they had the ships to dump them in on us in quantity.
The old Jitterbug
was about to take pioneer parties out to select sites and make plans—and
both Hank and Sergei were going.
I wanted to
go so bad I could taste it In the whole time I had been here I had never gotten
fifty miles from Leda. Suppose somebody asked me what it was like on Ganymede
when I got back on Earth? Truthfully, I wouldn't be able to tell them; I hadn't
been any place.
I had had a
chance, once, to make a trip to Barnard's Moon, as a temporary employee of
Project Jove—and that hadn't worked out either. The twins. I stayed back and
took care of the farm.
I talked it
over with Dad.
"I
hate to see you delay it any longer," he said seriously. I pointed out
that it would be only two months.
"Hmmm—"
he said. "Have you taken your merit badge tests yet?"
He knew I
hadn't; I changed the subject by pointing out that Sergei and Hank were going.
"But
they are both older than you are," he answered.
"Not
by very much!"
"But I
think they are each over the age limit they were looking for—and you are just
under."
"Look,
George," I protested, "rules were made to be broken. I've heard you
say that There must be some spot I can fill—cook, maybe."
And that's
just the job I got—cook.
I always
have been a pretty fair cook—not in Mama Schultz's class, but good. The party
had nothing to complain about on that score.
Captain
Hattie put us down at a selected spot nine degrees north of the equator and
longitude 113 west—that is to say, just out of sight of Jupiter on the far side
and about thirty-one hundred miles from Leda. Mr. Hooker says that the average
temperature of Ganymede will rise about nine degrees over the next century as
more and more of the ancient ice melts—at which time Leda will be semi-tropical
and the planet will be habitable half way to the poles. In the meantime
colonies would be planted only at or near the equator.
I was sorry
we had Captain Hattie as pilot; she is such an insufferable old scold. She
thinks rocket pilots are a special race apart—supermen. At least she acts like
it. Recently the Commission had forced her to take a relief pilot; there was
just too much for one pilot to do. They had tried to force a check pilot on
her, too—an indirect way to lead up to retiring her, but she was too tough for
them. She threatened to take the Jitterbug up and crash it ... and they
didn't dare call her bluff. At that time they were absolutely dependent on the Jitterbug.
Originally
the Jitterbug's only purpose was for supply and passengers between Leda
and the Project Jove station on Barnard's Moon—but that was back in the days
when ships from Earth actually landed at Leda. Then the Mayflower came
along and the Jitterbug was pressed into service as a shuttle. There was
talk of another shuttle rocket but we didn't have it yet, which is why Captain
Hattie had them where it hurt. The Commission had visions of a loaded ship
circling Ganymede, just going round and round and round again, with no way to
get down, like a kitten stuck up in a tree.
I’ll say this for Hattie; she could handle her ship. I think she had
nerve ends out in the skin of it. In clear weather she could even make a glide
landing, in spite of our thin air. But I think she preferred to shake up her
passengers with a jet landing.
She put us
down, the Jitterbug took on more water mass, and away it bounced. She
had three more parties to land. All in all the Jitterbug was servicing
eight other pioneer parties. It would be back to pick us up in about three
weeks.
The leader of our party was Paul du Maurier, who was the new assistant Scoutmaster of the Auslander troop and the chap who had gotten me taken on as cookie. He was younger than some of those working for him; furthermore, he shaved, which made him stand out like a white leghorn in a hog pen and made him look even younger. That is, he did shave, but he started letting his beard grow on this trip. "Better trim that grass," I advised him.
He said,
"Don't you like my beard, Doctor Slop?" —that was a nickname he had
awarded me for "Omnibus stew," my own invention. He didn't mean any
harm by it.
I said,
"Well, it covers your face, which is some help—but you might be mistaken
for one of us colonial roughnecks. That wouldn't do for one of you high-toned
Commission boys."
He smiled
mysteriously and said, "Maybe that's what I want."
I said,
"Maybe. But they'll lock you up in a zoo if you wear it back to
Earth." He was due to go back for Earthside duty by the same trip I
expected to make, via the Covered Wagon, two weeks after the end of the
survey.
He smiled
again and said, "Ah, yes, so they would," and changed the subject.
Paul was one of the most thoroughly good guys I have ever met and smart as a
whip as well. He was a graduate of South Africa University with P. G. on top of
that at the System Institute on Venus—an ecologist, specializing in planetary
engineering.
He handled
that gang of rugged individualists without raising his voice. There is
something about a real leader that makes it unnecessary for him to get tough.
But back to
the survey—I didn't see much of it as I was up to my elbows in pots and pans,
but I knew what was going on. The valley we were in had been picked from
photographs taken from the Jitterbug; it was now up to Paul to decide
whether or not it was ideally suited to easy colonization. It had the advantage
of being in direct line-of-sight with power station number two, but that was
not essential. Line-of-sight power relays could be placed anywhere on the
mountains (no name, as yet) just south of us. Most of the new villages would
have to have power relayed anyhow. Aside from a safety factor for the heat trap
there was no point in setting up extra power stations when the whole planet
couldn't use the potential of one mass-conversion plant.
So they got
busy—an engineering team working on drainage and probable annual water
resources, topographers getting a contour, a chemistry-agronomy team checking
on what the various rock formations would make as soil, and a community
architect laying out a town and farm and rocket port plot. There were several
other specialists, too, like the mineralogist, Mr. Villa, who was doodlebugging
the place for ores.
Paul was
the "general specialist" who balanced all the data in his mind,
fiddled with his slip stick, stared off into the sky, and came up with the over
all answer. The over all answer for that valley was "nix"—and we
moved on to the next one on the list, packing the stuff on our backs.
That was
one of the few chances I got to look around. You see, we had landed at
sunrise—about five o'clock Wednesday morning sunrise was, in that longitude—and
the object was to get as much done as possible during each light phase. Jupiter
light is all right for working in your own fields, but no good for surveying
strange territory—and here we didn't even have Jupiter light—just Callisto,
every other dark phase, every twelve-and-half days, to be exact. Consequently
we worked straight through light phase, on pep pills.
Now a man
who is on the pills will eat more than twice as much as a man who is sleeping
regularly. You know, the Eskimos have a saying, "Food is sleep." I
had to produce hot meals every four hours, around the clock. I had no time for
sightseeing.
We got to
camp number two, pitched our tents, I served a scratch meal, and Paul passed
out sleeping pills. By then the Sun was down and we really died for about
twenty hours. We were comfortable enough —spun glass pads under us and resin
sealed glass canvas over us.
I fed them
again, Paul passed out more sleepy pills, and back we went to sleep. Paul woke
me Monday afternoon. This time I fixed them a light breakfast, then really
spread myself to turn them out a feast. Everybody was well rested by now, and
not disposed to want to go right back to bed. So I stuffed them.
After that
we sat around for a few hours and talked. I got out my squeeze box—brought
along by popular demand, that is to say, Paul suggested it—and gave 'em a few
tunes. Then we talked some more.
They got to
arguing about where life started and somebody brought up the old theory that
the Sun had once been much brighter—Jock Montague, it was, the chemist.
"Mark my words," he said, "When we get around to exploring
Pluto, you'll find that life was there before us. Life is persistent, like
mass-energy."
"Nuts,"
answered Mr. Villa, very politely. "Pluto isn't even a proper planet; it
used to be a satellite of Neptune."
"Well,
Neptune, then," Jock persisted. "Life is all through the universe.
Mark my words—when the Jove Project straightens out the bugs and gets going,
they'll even find life on the surface of Jupiter."
"On
Jupiter?" Mr. Villa exploded. "Please, Jock! Methane and ammonia and
cold as a mother-in-law's kiss. Don't joke with us. Why, there's not even light
down under on the surface of Jupiter; it's pitch dark."
"I said it and I'll say it again," Montague
answered. "Life is persistent. Wherever there is mass and energy with
conditions that permit the formation of large and stable molecules, there you
will find life. Look at Mars. Look at Venus. Look at Earth—the most dangerous
planet of the lot. Look at the Ruined Planet."
I said,
"What do you think about it, Paul?"
The boss smiled gently. "I don't. I haven't enough data."
"There!"
said Mr. Villa. "There speaks a wise man. Tell me, Jock, how did you get
to be an authority on this subject?"
"I
have the advantage," Jock answered grandly, "of not knowing too much
about the subject. Facts are always a handicap in philosophical debate."
That ended
that phase of it, for Mr. Seymour, the boss agronomist, said, "I'm not so
much worried about where life came from as where it is going—here."
"How?"
I wanted to know. "In what way?"
"What
are we going to make of this planet? We can make it anything we want. Mars and
Venus—they had native cultures. We dare not change them much and we'll never
populate them very heavily. These Jovian moons are another matter; it's up to
us. They say man is endlessly adaptable. I say on the contrary that man doesn't
adapt himself as much as he adapts his environment. Certainly we are doing so
here. But how?"
"I
thought that was pretty well worked out," I said. "We set up these
new centers, more people come in and we spread out, same as at Leda."
"Ah,
but where does it stop? We have three ships making regular trips now. Shortly
there will be a ship in every three weeks, then it will be every week, then
every day. Unless we are almighty careful there will be food rationing here,
same as on Earth. Bill, do you know how fast the population is increasing, back
Earthside?"
I admitted
that I didn't
"More
than one hundred thousand more persons each day than there were the day before.
Figure that up."
I did.
"That would be, uh, maybe fifteen, twenty shiploads a day. Still, I
imagine they could build ships to carry them."
"Yes, but
where would we put them? Each day, more than twice as many people landing
as there are now on this whole globe. And not just on Monday, but on Tuesday,
and Wednesday, and Thursday—and the week and the month and the year after that,
just to keep Earth's population stable. I tell you, it won't work. The day will
come when we will have to stop immigration entirely." He looked
around aggressively, like a man who expects to be contradicted.
He wasn't
disappointed. Somebody said, "Oh, Seymour, come off it! Do you think you
own this place just because you got here first? You snuck in while the rules
were lax."
"You
can't argue with mathematics," Seymour insisted. "Ganymede has got to
be made self-sufficient as soon as possible—and then we've got to slam the
door!"
Paul was
shaking his head. "It won't be necessary."
"Huh?"
said Seymour. "Why not? Answer me that. You represent the Commission: what
fancy answer has the Commission got?"
"None,"
Paul told him. "And your figures are right but your conclusions are wrong.
Oh, Ganymede has to be made self-sufficient, true enough, but your bogeyman
about a dozen or more shiploads of immigrants a day you can forget."
"Why,
if I may be so bold?"
Paul looked
around the tent and grinned apologetically. "Can you stand a short
dissertation on population dynamics? I'm afraid I don't have Jock's advantage;
this is a subject I am supposed to know something about."
Somebody
said, "Stand back. Give him air."
"Okay,"
Paul went on, "you brought it on yourselves. A lot of people have had the
idea that colonization is carried on with the end purpose of relieving the
pressure of people and hunger back on Earth. Nothing could be further from the
truth."
I said.
"Huh?"
"Bear
with me. Not only is it physically impossible for a little planet to absorb the
increase of a big planet, as Seymour pointed out, but there is another reason
why well never get any such flood of people as a hundred thousand people a
day—a psychological reason. There are never as many people willing to emigrate
(even if you didn't pick them over) as there are new people born. Most people
simply will not leave home. Most of them won't even leave their native
villages, much less go to a far planet."
Mr. Villa
nodded. "I go along with you on that The willing emigrant is an odd breed
of cat. He's scarce."
"Right,"
Paul agreed. "But let's suppose for a moment that a hundred thousand
people were willing to emigrate every day and Ganymede and the other colonies
could take them. Would that relieve the situation back home—I mean "back
Earthside'? The answer is, 'No, it wouldn't'."
He appeared
to have finished. I finally said, "Excuse my blank look, Paul, but why
wouldn't it?"
"Studied
any bionomics, Bill?"
"Some."
"Mathematical
population bionomics?"
"Well–no."
"But
you do know that in the greatest wars the Earth ever had there were always more
people after the war than before, no matter how many were killed. Life is not
merely persistent, as Jock puts it; life is explosive. The basic theorem of
population mathematics to which there has never been found an exception is
that population increases always, not merely up to extent of the food supply,
but beyond it, to the minimum diet that will sustain life—the ragged edge of
starvation. In other words, if we bled off a hundred thousand people a day, the
Earth's population would then grow until the increase was around two hundred
thousand a day, or the bionomical maximum for Earth's new ecological
dynamic."
Nobody said
anything for a moment; there wasn't anything to say. Presently Sergei spoke up
with, "You paint a grim picture, boss. What's the answer?"
Paul said,
"There isn't any!"
Sergei
said, "I didn't mean it that way. I mean, what is the outcome?"
When Paul
did answer it was just one word, one monosyllable, spoken so softly that it
would not have been heard if there had not been dead silence. What he said was:
"War."
There was a
shuffle and a stir; it was an unthinkable idea. Seymour said, "Come now,
Mr. du Maurier—I may be a pessimist, but I'm not that much of one. Wars are no
longer possible."
Paul said,
"So?"
Seymour
answered almost belligerently, "Are you trying to suggest that the Space
Patrol would let us down? Because that is the only way a war could
happen."
Paul shook
his head. "The Patrol won't let us down. But they won't be able to stop
it. A police force is all right for stopping individual disturbances; it's fine
for nipping things in the bud. But when the disturbances are planet wide, no
police force is big enough, or strong enough, or wise enough. They'll
try—they'll try bravely. They won't succeed."
"You
really believe that?"
"It's
my considered opinion. And not only my opinion, but the opinion of the
Commission. Oh, I don't mean the political board; I mean the career
scientists."
"Then
what in tarnation is the Commission up to?"
"Building
colonies. We think that is worthwhile in itself. The colonies need not be
affected by the War. In fact, I don't think they will be, not much. It will be
like America was up to the end of the nineteenth century; European troubles
passed her by. I rather expect that the War, when it comes, will be of such
size and duration that interplanetary travel will cease to be for a
considerable period. That is why I said this planet has got to be
self-sufficient. It takes a high technical culture to maintain interplanetary
travel and Earth may not have it—after a bit."
I think
Paul's ideas were a surprise to everyone present; I know they were to me.
Seymour jabbed a finger at him, "If you believe this, then why are you
going back to Earth? Tell me that."
Again Paul
spoke softly. "I'm not. I'm going to stay here and become a
'steader."
Suddenly I
knew why he was letting his beard grow.
Seymour
answered, “Then you expect it soon." It was not a question; it was a
statement.
"Having
gone this far," Paul said hesitantly, "I'll give you a direct answer.
War is not less than forty Earth years away, not more than seventy."
You could
feel a sigh of relief all around the place. Seymour continued to speak for us,
"Forty to seventy, you say. But that's no reason to homestead; you
probably wouldn't live to see it. Not but what you'd make a good
neighbor."
"I see
this War," Paul insisted. "I know it's coming. Should I leave it up
to my hypothetical children and grandchildren to outguess it? No. Here I rest.
If I marry, I'll marry here. I'm not raising any kids to be radioactive
dust."
It must
have been about here that Hank stuck his head in the tent, for I don't remember
anyone answering Paul. Hank had been outside on business of his own; now he
opened the flap and called out, "Hey gents! Europa is up!"
We all
trooped out to see. We went partly through embarrassment, I think; Paul had
been too nakedly honest. But we probably would have gone anyhow. Sure, we saw
Europa every day of our lives at home, but not the way we were seeing it now.
Since
Europa goes around Jupiter inside Ganymede's orbit, it never gets very far away
from Jupiter, if you call 39 degrees "not very far." Since we were
113 west longitude, Jupiter was 23 degrees below our eastern horizon—which
meant that Europa, when it was furthest west of Jupiter, would be a maximum of
16 degrees above the true horizon.
Excuse the
arithmetic. Since we had a row of high hills practically sitting on us to the
east, what all this means is that, once a week, Europa would rise above the
hills, just peeking over, hang there for about a day—then turn around and set
in the east, right where it had risen. Up and down like an elevator.
If you've
never been off Earth, don't tell me it's impossible. That's how it is—Jupiter
and its moons do some funny things.
It was the
first time it had happened this trip, so we watched it—a little silver boat,
riding the hills like waves, with its horns turned up. There was argument about
whether or not it was still rising, or starting to set again, and much
comparing of watches. Some claimed to be able to detect motion but they weren't
agreed on which way. After a while I got cold and went back in.
But I was
glad of the interruption. I had a feeling that Paul had said considerably more
than he had intended to and more than he would be happy to recall, come light
phase. I blamed it on the sleeping pills. Sleeping pills are all right when
necessary, but they tend to make you babble and tell your right
name–treacherous things.
By the end
of the second light phase it was clear–to Paul, anyhow—that this second valley
would do. It wasn't the perfect valley and maybe there was a better one just
over the ridge—but life is too short. Paul assigned it a score of 92% by
some complicated system thought up by the Commission, which was seven points
higher than passing. The perfect valley could wait for the colonials to find it
... which they would, some day.
We named
the valley Happy Valley, Just for luck, and named the mountains south of it the
Pauline Peaks, over Paul's protests. He said it wasn't official anyway; we said
we would see to it that it was made so—and the boss topographer, Abie
Finkelstein, marked it so on the map and we all intialed it
We spent
the third light phase rounding up the details. We could have gone back then, if
there had been any way to get back. There wasn't, so we had to dope through
another dark phase. Some of them preferred to go back on a more normal schedule
instead; there was a round-the-clock poker game, which I stayed out of, having
nothing I could afford to lose and no talent for filling straights. There were
more dark phase bull sessions but they never got as grave as the first one and
nobody ever again asked Paul what he thought about the future prospects of
things.
By the end
of the third dark phase I was getting more than a little tired of seeing nothing
but the inside of our portable range. I asked Paul for some time off.
Hank had
been helping me since the start of the third dark phase. He had been working as
a topographical assistant; flash contour pictures were on the program at the
start of that dark phase. He was supposed to get an open-lens shot across the
valley from an elevation on the south just as a sunburst flash was let off from
an elevation to the west.
Hank had a
camera of his own, just acquired, and he was shutter happy, always pointing it
at things. This time he had tried to get a picture of his own as well as the
official picture. He had goofed off, missed the official picture entirely, and
to top it off had failed to protect his eyes when the sunburst went off. Which
put him on the sick list and I got him as kitchen police.
He was all
right shortly, but Finkelstein didn't want him back. So I asked for relief for
both of us, so we could take a hike together and do a little exploring. Paul
let us go.
There had
been high excitement at the end of the second light phase when lichen had been
discovered near the west end of the valley. For a while it looked as if native
life had been found on Ganymede. It was a false alarm—careful examination
showed that it was not only an Earth type, but a type authorized by the
bionomics board.
But it did
show one thing—life was spreading, taking hold, at a point thirty-one hundred
miles from the original invasion. There was much argument as to whether the
spores had been air borne, or had been brought in on the clothing of the crew
who had set up the power plant. It didn't matter, really.
But Hank
and I decided to explore off that way and see if we could find more of it.
Besides it was away from the way we had come from camp number one. We didn't
tell Paul we were going after lichen because we were afraid he would veto it;
the stuff had been found quite some distance from camp. He had warned us not to
go too far and to be back by six o'clock Thursday morning, in time to break
camp and head back to our landing point, where the Jitterbug was to meet
us.
I agreed as
I didn't mean to go far in any case. I didn't much care whether we found lichen
or not; I wasn't feeling well. But I kept that fact to myself; I wasn't going
to be done out of my one and only chance to see some of the country.
We didn't
find any more lichen. We did find the crystals.
We were
trudging along, me as happy as a kid let out of school despite an ache in my
side and Hank taking useless photographs of odd rocks and lava flows. Hank had
been saying that he thought he would sell out his place and homestead here in
Happy Valley. He said, "You know, Bill, they are going to need a few real
Ganymede farmers here to give the greenhorns the straight dope. And who knows
more about Ganymede-style farming than I do?"
"Almost
everybody," I assured him.
He ignored
it. "This place has really got it," he went on, gazing around at a
stretch of country that looked like Armageddon after a hard battle. "Much
better than around Leda."
I admitted
that it had possibilities. "But I don't think it's for me," I went
on. "I don't think I'd care to settle anywhere where you can't see
Jupiter."
"Nonsense!"
he answered. "Did you come here to stare at the sights or to make a
farm?"
"That's
a moot point," I admitted. "Sometimes I think one thing, sometimes
the other. Sometimes I don't have the foggiest idea."
He wasn't
listening. "See that slot up there?"
"Sure.
What about it?"
"If we
crossed that little glacier, we could get up to it."
"Why?"
"I
think it leads into another valley—which might be even better. Nobody has been
up there. I know—I was in the topo gang."
"I've
been trying to help you forget that," I told him. "But why look at
all? There must be a hundred thousand valleys on Ganymede that nobody has
looked at. Are you in the real estate business?" It didn't appeal to me.
There is something that gets you about virgin soil on Ganymede; I wanted to stay
in sight of camp. It was quiet as a library—quieter. On Earth there is always
some sound, even in the desert. After a while the stillness and the bare rocks
and the ice and the craters get on my nerves.
"Come
on! Don't be a sissyl" he answered, and started climbing.
The slot
did not lead to another valley; it led into a sort of corridor in the hills.
One wall was curiously flat, as if it had been built that way on purpose. We
went along it a way, and I was ready to turn back and had stopped to call to Hank,
who had climbed the loose rock on the other side to get a picture. As I turned,
my eye caught some color and I moved up to see what it was. It was the
crystals.
I stared at
them and they seemed to stare back. I called, "Hey! Hank! Come here on the
bounce!"
"What's
up?"
"Come
here! Here's something worth taking a picture of."
He
scrambled down and joined me. After a bit he let out his breath and whispered,
"Well, I'll be fried on Friday!"
Hank got
busy with his camera. I never saw such crystals, not even stalactites in caves.
They were six-sided, except a few that were three-sided and some that were
twelve-sided. They came anywhere from little squatty fellows no bigger than a
button mushroom up to tall, slender stalks, knee high. Later on and further up we
found some chest high.
They were
not simple prisms; they branched and budded. But the thing that got you was the
colors.
They were
all colors and they changed color as you looked at them. We finally decided
that they didn't have any color at all; it was just refraction of light. At
least Hank thought so.
He shot a
full cartridge of pictures then said, "Come on. Let's see where they come
from."
I didn't
want to. I was shaky from the climb and my right side was giving me fits every
step I took. I guess I was dizzy, too; when I looked at the crystals they
seemed to writhe around and I would have to blink my eyes to steady them.
But Hank
had already started so I followed. The crystals seemed to keep to what would
have been the water bed of the canyon, had it been spring. They seemed to need
water. We came to a place where there was a drift of ice across the floor of
the corridor —ancient ice, with a thin layer of last winter's snow on top of
it. The crystals had carved a passage right through it, a natural bridge of
ice, and had cleared a space of several feet on each side of where they were
growing, as well.
Hank lost
his footing as we scrambled through and snatched at one of the crystals. It
broke off with a sharp, clear note, like a silver bell.
Hank
straightened up and stood looking at his hand. There were parallel cuts across
his palm and fingers. He stared at them stupidly.
"That'll
teach you," I said, and then got out a first-lid kit and bandaged it for
him. When I had finished I said, "Now let's go back."
"Shucks,"
he said. "What's a few little cuts? Come
I said,
"Look, Hank, I want to go back. I don't feel good."
"What's
the matter?"
"Stomach
ache."
"You
eat too much; that's your trouble. The exercise will do you good."
"No,
Hank. I've got to go back."
He stared
up the ravine and looked fretful. Finally he said, "Bill, I think I see
where the crystals come from, not very far up. You wait here and let me take a
look. Then I'll come back and well head for camp. I won't be gone long; honest
I won't."
"Okay,"
I agreed. He started up; shortly I followed him. I had had it pounded into my
head as a Cub not to get separated in a strange country.
After a bit
I heard him shout. I looked up and saw him standing, facing a great dark hole
in the cliff. I called out, "What's the matter?"
He
answered:
"GREAT
JUMPING HOLY SMOKE!!!"–like that.
"What's
the matter?" I repeated irritably and hurried along until I was standing
beside him.
The
crystals continued up the place where we were. They came right to the cave
mouth, but did not go in; they formed a solid dense thicket across the
threshold. Lying across the floor of the ravine, as if it had been tumbled
there by an upheaval like the big quake, was a flat rock, a monolith,
Stonehenge size. You could see where it had broken off the cliff, uncovering
the hole. The plane of cleavage was as sharp and smooth as anything done by the
ancient Egyptians.
But that
wasn't what we were looking at; we were looking into the hole.
It was dark
inside, but diffused light, reflected off the canyon floor and the far wall,
filtered inside. My eyes began to adjust and I could see what Hank was staring
at, what he had exploded about.
There were things
in there and they weren't natural
I couldn't
have told you what sort of things because they were like nothing I had ever
seen before in my life, or seen pictures of—or heard of. How can you describe
what you've never seen before and have no words for? Shucks, you can't even see
a thing properly the first time you see it; your eye doesn't take in
the pattern.
But I could
see this: they weren't rocks, they weren't plants, they weren't animals. They
were made things, man made—well, maybe not "man" made, but not
things that just happen, either.
I wanted
very badly to get up close to them and see what they were. For the moment, I
forgot I was sick.
So did
Hank. As usual he said, "Come onl Let's go!"
But I said,
"How?"
"Why,
we just—" He stopped and took another look. "Well, let's see, we go
around— No. Hmm . . . Bill, we will have to bust up some of those crystals and
go right through the middle. There's no other way to get in."
I said,
"Isn't one chopped up hand enough for you?"
"I'll
bust 'em with a rock. It seems a shame; they are so pretty, but that's what
I'll have to do."
"I
don't think you can bust those big ones. Besides that, I'll give you two to one
that they are sharp enough to cut through your boots."
"I'll
chance it." He found a chunk of rock and made an experiment; I was right
on both counts. Hank stopped and looked the situation over, whistling softly.
"Bill—"
"Yeah?"
"See
that little ledge over the opening?"
"What
about it?"
"It
comes out to the left further than the crystals do. I'm going to pile rock up
high enough for us to reach it, then we can go along it and drop down right in
front of the cave mouth. The crystals don't come that close."
I looked it
over and decided it would work. "But how do we get back?"
"We
can pile up some of that stuff we can see inside and shinny up again. At the
very worst I can boost you up on my shoulders and then you can reach down your
belt to me, or something."
If I had my
wits about me, maybe I would have protested. But we tried it and it
worked—worked right up to the point where I was hanging by my fingers from the
ledge over the cave mouth.
I felt a
stabbing pain in my side and let go.
I came to
with Hank shaking me. "Let me alone!" I growled.
"You
knocked yourself out," he said. "I didn't know you were so
clumsy." I didn't answer. I just gathered my knees up to my stomach and
closed my eyes.
Hank shook
me again. "Don't you want to see what's in here?"
I kicked at
him. "I don't want to see the Queen of Sheba! Can't you see I'm
sick?" I closed my eyes again.
I must have
passed out. When I woke up, Hank was sitting Turk fashion in front of me, with
my torch in his hand. "You've been asleep a long time, fellow," he
said gently. "Feel any better?"
"Not
much."
'Try to
pull yourself together and come along with me. You've got to see this, Bill.
You won't believe it. This is the greatest discovery since—well, since— Never
mind; Columbus was a piker. We're famous, Bill."
"You
may be famous," I said. "I'm sick."
"Where
does it hurt?"
"All
over. My stomach is hard as a rock—a rock with a toothache."
"Bill,"
he said seriously, "have you ever had your appendix out?"
"No."
"Hmmm
. . . maybe you should have had it out."
"Well,
this is a fine time to tell me!"
"Take
it easy."
"Take
it easy, my foot!" I got up on one elbow, my head swimming. "Hank,
listen to me. You've got to get back to camp and tell them. Have them send a
tractor for me."
"Look,
Bill," he said gently, "you know there isn't anything like a tractor
at camp."
I tried to
struggle with the problem but it was too much for me. My brain was fuzzy.
"Well, have them bring a stretcher, at least," I said peevishly and
lay down again.
Some time
later I felt him fumbling around with my clothes. I tried to push him away,
then I felt something very cold on me. I took a wild swing at him; it didn't
connect.
"Steady,"
he said. "I have found some ice. Don't squirm around or you'll knock off
the pack."
"I
don't want it."
"You've
got to have it. You keep that ice pack in place until we get out of here and
you may live to be hanged, yet."
I was too
feeble to resist. I lay back down and closed my eyes again. When I opened my
eyes again, I was amazed to feel better. Instead of feeling ready to die, I
merely felt awful. Hank wasn't around; I called to him. When he didn't answer
at once I felt panicky.
Then he
came trotting up, waving the torch. "I thought you had gone," I said.
"No.
To tell the truth, I can't get out of here. I can't get back up to the ledge
and I can't get over the crystals. I tried it." He held up one boot; it
was in shreds and there was blood on it.
"Hurt
yourself?"
"I'll
live."
"I
wonder," I answered. "Nobody knows we are here—and you say we can't
get out. Looks like we starve. Not that I give a hoot."
'Speaking
of that," he said. "I saved you some of our lunch. I'm afraid I
didn't leave much; you were asleep a long, long time."
"Don't
mention food!" I retched and grabbed at my side.
"Sorry.
But look—I didn't say we couldn't get out"
"But
you did."
"No, I
said I couldn't get out."
"What's
the difference?"
"Uh,
never mind. But I think we'll get out. It was what you said about getting a
tractor——"
"Tractor?
Are you out of your head?"
"Skip
it," Bill answered. "There is a sort of tractor thing back there—or
more like a scaffolding, maybe."
"Make
up your mind."
"Call
it a wagon. I think I can get it out, at least across the crystals. We could
use it as a bridge."
"Well,
roll it out."
"It
doesn't roll. It, uh-well, it walks."
I tried to
get up. "This I got to see."
"Just
move over out of the way of the door."
I managed
to get to my feet, with Hank helping me. "I'm coming along."
"Want
the ice pack changed?"
"Later,
maybe." Hank took me back and showed me. I don't know how to describe the
walker wagon–maybe you've seen pictures since. If a centipede were a dinosaur
and made of metal to boot, it would be a walker wagon. The body of it was a
sort of trough and it was supported by thirty-eight legs, nineteen on a side.
"That,"
I said, "is the craziest contraption I ever laid eyes on. You'll never
shove it out the door."
"Wait
until you see," he advised. "And if you think this is crazy, you
should see the other things in here."
"Such
as?"
"Bill,
you know what I think this place is? I think it's a hangar for a space
ship."
"Huh?
Don't be silly; space ships don't have hangars."
"This
one has."
"You
mean you saw a space ship in here?"
"Well,
I don't know. It's not like any I ever saw before, but if it's not a space
ship, I don't know what it is good for."
I wanted to
go see, but Hank objected. "Another time, Bill; we've got to get back to
camp. We're late as it is."
I didn't
put up any fight. My side was paining me again, from the walk. "Okay, what
happens next?"
"Like
this." He led me around to the end of the contraption; the trough came
nearly down to the floor in back. Hank helped me get inside, told me to lie
down, and went up to the other end. 'The guy that built this," he said,
"must have been a hump-backed midget with four arms. Hang on."
"Do
you know what you're doing?" I asked.
"I
moved it about six feet before; then I lost my nerve. Abracadabra! Hold onto
your hat!" He poked a finger deep into a hole.
The thing
began to move, silently, gently, without any fuss. When we came out into the
sunshine, Hank pulled his finger out of the hole. I sat up. The thing was two
thirds out of the cave and the front end was beyond the crystals.
I sighed.
"You made it, Hank, Let's get going. If I had some more ice on my side I
think I could walk."
"Wait
a second," he said. "I want to try something. There are holes here I
haven't stuck a finger in yet."
"Leave
well enough alone."
Instead of
answering he tried another hole. The machine backed up suddenly.
"Woopsl" he said, jerked his finger out, and jabbed it back where it
had been before. He left it there until he regained what we had lost.
He tried
other holes more cautiously. At last he found one which caused the machine to
rear up its front end slightly and swing it to the left, like a caterpillar.
"Now we are in business," he said happily. "I can steer
it." We started down the canyon.
Hank was
not entirely correct in thinking he could guide it. It was more like guiding a
horse than a machine—or perhaps more like guiding one of those new
groundmobiles with the semi-automatic steering. The walker wagon came to the
little natural bridge of ice through which the crystals passed and stopped of
itself. Hank tried to get it to go through the opening, which was large enough;
it would have none of it. The front end cast around like a dog sniffing, then
eased gradually up hill and around the ice.
It stayed
level; apparently it could adjust its legs, like the fabulous hillside snee.
When Hank
came to the ice flow we had crossed on the way up to the notch, he stopped it
and gave me a fresh ice pack. Apparently it did not object to ice in itself,
but simply refused to go through holes, for when we started up again, it
crossed the little glacier, slowly and cautiously, but steadily.
We headed
on toward camp. "This," Hank announced happily, "is the greatest
cross-country, rough-terrain vehicle ever built. I wish I knew what makes it
go. If I had the patent on this thing, I'd be rich."
"It's
yours; you found it."
"It
doesn't really belong to me."
"Hank,"
I answered, "you don't really think the owner is going to come back
looking for it, do you?"
He got a
very odd look. "No, I don't, Bill. Say, Bill, uh, how long ago do you
think this thing was put in there?"
"I
wouldn't even want to guess."
There was
only one tent at the camp site. As we came up to it, somebody came out and
waited for us. It was Sergei.
"Where
have you guys been?" he asked. "And where in Kingdom Come did you
steal that?
"And what
is it?" he added.
We did our
best to bring him up to date, and presently he did the same for us. They had
searched for us as long as they could, then Paul had been forced to move back
to camp number one to keep the date with the Jitterbug. He had left
Sergei behind to fetch us when we showed up. "He left a note for
you," Sergei added, digging it out
It read:
"Dear
Pen Pals,
"I
am sorry to go off and leave you crazy galoots but you know the schedule as
well as I do. I would stay behind myself to herd you home, but your pal Sergei
insists that it is his privilege. Every time I try to reason with him he crawls
further back into his hole, bares his teeth, and growls.
"As
soon as you get this, get your chubby little legs to moving in the direction of
camp number one. Run, do not walk. We'll hold the Jitterbug, but you know how
dear old Aunt Hattie feels about keeping her schedule. She isn't going to like
it if you are late.
"When
I see you, I intend to beat your ears down around your shoulders.
"Good
luck,
"P.
du M.
"P.S.
to Doctor Slop: I took care of your accordion."
When we had
finished reading it Sergei said, "I want to hear more about what you
found—about eight times more. But not now; we've got to tear over to camp
number one. Hank, you think Bill can't walk it?"
I answered
for myself, an emphatic "no." The excitement was wearing off and I
was feeling worse again.
"Hmm—Hank,
do you think that mobile junk yard will carry us over there?"
"I
think it will carry us any place." Hank patted it.
"How
fast? The Jitterbug has already grounded."
"Are
you sure?" asked Hank.
"I saw
its trail in the sky at least three hours ago."
"Let's
get going!"
I don't
remember much about the trip. They stopped once in the pass, and packed me with
ice again. The next thing I knew I was awakened by hearing Sergei shout,
"There's the Jitterbug! I can see it."
"Jitterbug,
here we come," answered Hank. I
sat up and looked, too.
We were
coming down the slope, not five miles from it, when flame burst from its tail
and it climbed for the sky.
Hank
groaned. I lay back down and closed my eyes.
I woke up
again when the contraption stopped. Paul was there, hands on his hips, staring
at us. "About time you birds got home," he announced. "But where
did you find that?"
"Paul,"
Hank said urgently, "Bill is very sick."
"Oh,
oh!" Paul swung up and into the walker and made no more questions then. A
moment later he had my belly bared and was shoving a thumb into that spot
between the belly button and the hip bone. "Does that hurt?" he
asked.
I was too
weak to slug him. He gave me a pill.
I took no
further part in events for a while, but what had happened was this: Captain
Hattie had waited, at Paul's urgent insistence, for a couple of hours, and then
had announced that she had to blast. She had a schedule to keep with the Covered
Wagon and she had no intention, she said, of keeping eight thousand people
waiting for the benefit of two. Hank and I could play Indian if we liked; we
couldn't play hob with her schedule.
There was
nothing Paul could do, so he sent the rest back and waited for us.
But I
didn't hear this at the time. I was vaguely aware that we were in the walker
wagon, travelling, and I woke up twice when I was repacked with ice, but the
whole episode is foggy. They travelled east, with Hank driving and Paul
navigating—by the seat of his pants. Some long dreamy time later they reached a
pioneer camp surveying a site over a hundred miles away—and from there Paul
radioed for help.
Whereupon
the Jitterbug came and got us. I remember the landing back at Leda—that
is, I remember somebody saying, "Hurry, there! We've got a boy with a
burst appendix."
There was considerable
excitement over what we had found—and there still is—but I didn't see any of
it. I was busy playing games with the Pearly Gates. I guess I have Dr.
Archibald to thank for still being here. And Hank. And Sergei. And Paul. And
Captain Hattie. And some nameless party, who lived somewhere, a long time ago,
whose shape and race I still don't know, but who designed the perfect machine
for traveling overland through rough country.
I thanked
everybody but him. They all came to see me in the hospital, even Captain
Hattie, who growled at me, then leaned over and kissed me on the cheek as she
left. I was so surprised I almost bit her.
The
Schultzes came, of course, and Mama cried over me and Papa gave me an apple and
Gretchen could hardly talk, which isn't like her. And Molly brought the twins
down to see me and vice versa.
The Leda
daily Planet interviewed me. They wanted to know whether or not we
thought the things we found were made by men?
Now that is
a hard question to answer and smarter people than myself have worked on it
since.
What is a
man?
The things
Hank and I—and the Project Jove scientists who went later—found in that cave
couldn't have been made by men—not men like us. The walker wagon was the
simplest thing they found. Most of the things they still haven't found out the
use for. Nor have they figured out what the creatures looked like—no pictures.
That seems
surprising, but the scientists concluded they didn't have eyes—not eyes like
ours, anyhow. So they didn't use pictures.
The very
notion of a "picture" seems pretty esoteric when you think it over.
The Venetians don't use pictures, nor the Martians. Maybe we are the only race
in the universe that thought up that way of recording things.
So they
weren't "men"—not like us.
But they were
men in the real sense of the word, even though I don't doubt that I would
run screaming away if I met one in a dark alley. The important thing, as Mr.
Seymour would say, they had—they controlled their environment. They weren't
animals, pushed around and forced to accept what nature handed them; they took
nature and bent it to their will.
I guess
they were men.
The
crystals were one of the oddest things about it and I didn't have any opinions
on that. Somehow, those crystals were connected with that cave—or space ship
hangar, or whatever it was. Yet they couldn't or wouldn't go inside the cave.
Here was
another point that the follow-up party from Project Jove recorded: that big
unwieldly walker wagon came all the way down that narrow canyon-yet it did not
step on a single crystal. Hank must be a pretty good driver. He says he's not
that good.
Don't ask
me. I don't understand everything that goes on in the universe. It's a big
place.
I had lots
of time to think before they let me out of the hospital—and lots to think
about. I thought about my coming trip to Earth, to go back to school I had
missed the Covered Wagon, of course, but that didn't mean anything; I
could take the Mayflower three weeks later. But did I want to go? It was
a close thing to decide.
One thing I
was sure of: I was going to take those merit badge tests as soon as I was out
of bed. I had put it off too long. A close brush with the hereafter reminds you
that you don't have forever to get things done.
But going
back to school? That was another matter. For one thing, as Dad told me, the
council had lost its suit with the Commission; Dad couldn't use his Earthside
assets.
And there
was the matter that Paul had talked about the night he had to let his hair down—the
coming war.
Did Paul
know what he was talking about? If so, was I letting it scare me out? I
honestly didn't think so; Paul had said that it was not less than forty years
away. I wouldn't be Earthside more than four or five years—and, besides, how
could you get scared of anything that far in the future?
I had been
through the Quake and the reconstruction; I didn't really think I'd ever be
scared of anything again.
I had a
private suspicion that, supposing there was a war, I'd go join up; I wouldn't
be running away from it. Silly, maybe.
No, I
wasn't afraid of the War, but it was on my mind. Why? I finally doped it out.
When Paul called I asked him about it. "See here, Paul—this war you were
talking about: when Ganymede reaches the state that Earth has gotten into, does
that mean war here, too? Not now—a few centuries from now."
He smiled
rather sadly. "By then we may know enough to keep from getting into that
shape. At least we can hope."
He got a
far-away look and added, “A new colony is always a new hope."
I liked
that way of putting it. "A new hope—" Once I heard somebody call a
new baby that.
I still
didn't have the answer about going back when Dad called on me one Sunday night.
I put it up to him about the cost of the fare. "I know the land is technically
mine, George—but it's too much of a drain on you two."
"Contrariwise,"
said George, "well get by and that's what savings are for. Molly is for
it. We will be sending the twins back for school, you know."
"Even
so, I don't feel right about it. And what real use is there in it, George? I
don't need a fancy education. I've been thinking about Callisto: there's a
brand new planet not touched yet with great opportunities for a man in on the
ground floor. I could get a job with the atmosphere expedition—Paul would put
in a word for me—and grow up with the project. I might be chief engineer of the
whole planet some day."
"Not
unless you learn more about thermodynamics than you do now, you won't be!"
"Huh?"
"Engineers
don't just 'grow up'; they study. They go to school."
"Don't
I study? Ain't I attending two of your classes right now? I can get to be an
engineer here; I don't have to drag back half a billion miles for it."
"Fiddlesticks!
It takes discipline to study. You haven't even taken your merit badge tests.
You've let your Eagle Scoutship lapse."
I wanted to
explain that taking tests and studying for tests were two different things—that
I had studied. But I couldn't seem to phrase it right.
George
stood up. "See here, Son, I'm going to put it to you straight. Never mind
about being chief engineer of a planet; these days even a farmer needs the best
education he can get. Without it he's just a country bumpkin, a stumbling
peasant, poking seeds into the ground and hoping a miracle will make them grow.
I want you to go back to Earth and get the best that Earth has to offer. I want
you to have a degree with prestige behind it—M.I.T., Harvard, the Sorbonne.
Some place noted for scholarship. Take the time to do that and then do anything
you want to do. Believe me, it will pay."
I thought
about it and answered, "I guess you are right, George."
Dad stood
up. "Well, make up your mind. I'll have to hurry now for the bus, or I'll
be hoofing it back to the farm. See you tomorrow."
"Good
night, George."
I lay awake
and thought about it. After a while, Mrs. Dinsmore, the wing nurse, came in,
turned out my light, and said goodnight. But I didn't go to sleep.
Dad was
right, I knew. I didn't want to be an ignoramus. Furthermore, I had seen the
advantage held by men with fancy degrees—first crack at the jobs, fast
promotion. Okay, I'd get me one of those sheepskins, then come back and—well,
go to Callisto, maybe, or perhaps prove a new parcel of land. I'd go and I'd
come back.
Nevertheless
I couldn't get to sleep. After a while I glanced at my new watch and saw that
it was nearly midnight—dawn in a few minutes. I decided that I wanted to see it
It might be the last time I'd be up and around at midnight Sunday for a long,
long time.
I scouted
the corridor; Old Lady Dinsmore wasn't in sight. I ducked outside.
The Sun was
just barely below the horizon; north of me I could see its first rays touching
the topmost antenna of the power station, miles away on Pride Peak. It was very
still and very beautiful. Overhead old Jupiter was in half phase, bulging and
orange and grand. To the west of it Io was just coming out of shadow; it passed
from black to cherry red to orange as I watched.
I wondered
how I would feel to be back on Earth? How would it feel to weigh three times as
much as I did now? I didn't feel heavy; I felt just right.
How would
it feel to swim in that thick dirty soup they use for air?
How would
it feel to have nobody but ground hogs to talk to? How could I talk to a girl
who wasn't a colonial, who had never been off Earth higher than a copter hop?
Sissies. Take Gretchen, now—there was a girl who could kill a chicken and have
it in the pot while an Earthside girl would still be squealing.
The top of
the Sun broke above the horizon and caught the snow on the peaks of the Big
Rock Candy Mountains, tinting it rosy against a pale green sky. I began to be
able to see the country around me. It was a new, hard, clean place—not like
California with its fifty, sixty million people falling over each other. It was
my kind' of a place—it was my place.
The deuce
with Caltech and Cambridge and those fancy schools! I'd show Dad it didn't take
ivied halls to get an education. Yes, and I'd pass those tests and be an Eagle
again, first thing.
Hadn't
Andrew Johnson, that American President, learned to read while he was working?
Even after he was married? Give us time; we'd have as good scientists and
scholars here as anywhere.
The long
slow dawn went on and the light caught Kneiper's cut west of me, outlining it.
I was reminded of the night we had struggled through it in the storm. As Hank
put it, there was one good thing about colonial life—it sorted out the men from
the boys.
"I have
lived and worked with men." The phrase rang through my head. Rhysling?
Kipling, maybe. I had lived and worked with men!
The Sun was
beginning to reach the roof tops. It spread across Laguna Serenidad, turning it
from black to purple to blue. This was my planet, this was my home and I knew
that I would never leave it
Mrs.
Dinsmore came bustling out to the door and spotted me. "Why, the very
idea!" she scolded. "You get back where you belong!"
I smiled at
her. "I am where I belong. And I'm going to stay!"