Authors: E. E. 'Doc' Smith
‘In short, dad, everything’s slick,’ remarked Seaton to Mr Vaneman, after the others had gone.
‘Yes; your plan of getting the best men possible, paying them well, and giving them complete authority and sole responsibility, has worked to perfection. I have never seen an undertaking of such size go forward so smoothly and with such fine cooperation.’
‘That’s the way we wanted it. We hand-picked the
directors, and put it up to you, strictly. You did the same to the managers. They passed it along. Everybody knows that his end is up to him, and him alone – so he digs in.’
‘However, Dick, while everything at the Works is so fine, when is this other thing going to break?’
‘We’ve won all the way so far, but I’m afraid something’s about due. That’s the big reason I want to get Dot away for a while. You know what they’re up to.’
‘Too well,’ the older man answered. ‘Dottie or Mrs Crane, or both. Her mother – she is telling her goodbye now – and I agree that the danger here is greater than out there.’
‘Danger out there? With the
Skylark
fixed the way she is now, Dot’s a lot safer than you are, in bed. Your house might fall down, you know.’
‘You’re probably right, son – I know you, and I know Martin Crane. Together, and in the
Skylark
, I believe you invincible.’
‘All set, Dick?’ asked Dorothy, appearing in the doorway.
‘All set. You’ve the dope for Prescott and everybody, dad. We may be back in six months, and we may see something to investigate, and have to be gone a year or so. Don’t begin to lose any sleep until after we’ve been out – oh, say three years. We’ll make it a point to be back by then.’
Farewells were said, the party embarked, and
Skylark Two
shot upward. Seaton flipped a phone set over his head and spoke.
‘Dunark! … Coming out, heading directly for X … No, better stay quite a ways off to one side when we get going good … Yeah, I’m accelerating twenty six point oh oh oh … Yes, I’ll call you now and then, until the radio waves get lost, to check the course with you. After that, keep on the last course, reverse at the calculated distance, and by the time we’re pretty well slowed down we’ll feel around for each other with the compasses and go in together … Yeah … Uh-huh … Fine! So-long!’
In order that the two vessels should keep reasonably close together, it had been agreed that each should be held at an acceleration of exactly twenty-six feet per second, positive and negative. This figure represented a compromise between the gravitational forces of the two worlds upon which the different parties lived. While considerably less than the acceleration of gravitation at the surface of the Earth, the Tellurians could readily accustom themselves to it; and it was not enough greater than that of Osnome to hamper seriously the activities of the green people.
Well clear of the Earth’s influence, Seaton assured himself that everything was functioning properly, then stretched to his full height, writhed his arms over his head, and heaved a deep sigh of relief.
‘Folks,’ he declared, ‘this is the first time I’ve felt right since we got out of this old bottle. Why, I feel so good a cat could walk up to me and scratch me right in the eye, and I wouldn’t even scratch back. Yowp! I’m a wild Siberian catamount, and this is my night to
howl. Whee-ee-yerow!’
Dorothy laughed, a gay, lilting carol.
‘Haven’t I always told you he had cat blood in him, Peggy? Just like all tomcats, every once in a while he has to stretch his claws and yowl. But go ahead, Dickie, I like it – this is the first uproar you’ve made in weeks. I believe I’ll join you!’
‘It most certainly is a relief to get this load off our minds: I could do a little ladylike yowling myself,’ Margaret said; and Crane, lying completely at ease, a thin spiral of smoke curling up from his cigarette, nodded agreement.
‘Dick’s yowling is quite expressive at times. All of us feel the same way, but some of us are unable to express ourselves quite so vividly. However, it is past bedtime, and we should organize our crew. Shall we do it as we did before?’
‘No, it isn’t necessary. Everything is automatic. The bar is held parallel to the guiding compass, and signal bells ring whenever any of the instruments show a trace of abnormal behavior. Don’t forget that there is at least one meter registering and recording every factor of our flight. With this control system we can’t get into any such jam as we did last trip.’
‘Surely you are not suggesting that we run all night with no one at the controls?’
‘Exactly that. A man camping at this board is painting the lily and gilding fine gold. Awake or asleep, nobody need be closer to it than is necessary to hear a bell if one should ring, and you can hear them all over the ship. Furthermore, I’ll bet a hat we won’t hear a signal a week. Simply as added precaution, though, I’ve run lines so that any time one of these signals lets go it sounds a buzzer on the head of our bed; so I’m automatically taking the night shift. Remember, Mart, these instruments are thousands of times as sensitive as the keenest human senses – they’ll spot trouble long before we could, even if we were looking right at it.’
‘Of course, you understand these instruments much better than I do, as yet. If you trust them, I am perfectly willing to do the same. Goodnight.’
Seaton sat down and Dorothy nestled beside him, her head snuggled into the curve of his shoulder.
‘Sleepy?’
‘Heavens, no! I couldn’t sleep now – could you?’
‘Not any. What’s the use?’
His arm tightened around her. Apparently motionless to its passengers, the cruiser bored serenely on into space, with ever-mounting velocity. There was not the faintest sound, not the slightest vibration – only the peculiar violet glow surrounding the shining copper cylinder in its massive universal bearing gave any indication of the thousands of kilowatts being generated in that mighty atomic power plant. Seaton studied it thoughtfully.
‘You know, Dottie, if that violet aura and copper bar
were a little different in hue and chroma, they’d be just like your eyes and hair,’ he remarked finally.
‘What a comparison!’ Dorothy’s entrancing low chuckle bubbled through her words. ‘You say the weirdest things at times! Possible they would – and if the moon were made of different stuff than it is and had a different color it might be green cheese, too! What say we go over and look at the stars?’
‘As you were, Rufus!’ he commanded sternly. ‘Don’t move a millimeter – you’re a perfect fit, right where you are. I’ll get you any stars you want, and bring them right in here to you. What constellation would you like? I’ll even get you the Southern Cross – we never see it in Washington.’
‘No, I want something familiar; the Pleiades or the Big Dipper – no, get me Canis Major – “where Sirius, brightest jewel in the diadem of the firmament, holds sway”,’ she quoted. ‘There! Thought I’d forgotten all the astronomy you ever taught me, didn’t you? Think you can find it?’
‘Sure. Declination about minus twenty, as I remember it, and right ascension between six and seven hours. Let’s see – where would that be from our course?’
He thought for a moment, manipulated several levers and dials, snapped off the lights, and swung number one exterior visiplate around, directly before their eyes.
‘Oh … Oh … this is magnificent, Dick!’ she exclaimed. ‘It’s stupendous. It seems as though we were right out there in space itself, and not in here at all. It’s … it’s perfectly wonderful!’
Although neither of them was unacquainted with deep space, it presents a spectacle that never fails to awe even the most seasoned observer; and no human being had ever before viewed the wonders of space from such a coign of vantage. Thus the two fell silent and awed as they gazed out into the abysmal depths of the interstellar void. The darkness of Earthly night is ameliorated by light-rays scattered by the atmosphere; the stars twinkle and scintillate and their light is diffused, because of the same medium. But here, what a contrast! They saw the utter, absolute darkness of the complete absence of all light; and upon that indescribable blackness they beheld superimposed the almost unbearable brilliance of enormous suns concentrated into mathematical points, dimensionless. Sirius blazed in blue-white splendor, dominating the lesser members of his constellation, a minute but intensely brilliant diamond upon a field of black velvet – his refulgence unmarred by any trace of scintillation or distortion.
As Seaton slowly shifted the field of vision, angling toward and across the celestial equator and the ecliptic, they beheld in turn mighty Rigel: the Belt, headed by dazzlingly brilliant-white Delta-Orionis; red Betelgause; storied Aldebaran, the friend of mariners; and the astronomically constant Pleiades.
Seaton’s arm contracted, swinging Dorothy into his embrace; their
lips met and held.
‘Isn’t it wonderful, lover,’ she murmured, ‘to be out here in space this way, together, away from all our troubles and worries?
Really
wonderful … I’m so happy, Dick.’
‘So am I, sweetheart.’ The man’s arm tightened. I’m not going to try to say anything …’
‘I almost died, every time they shot at you.’ Dorothy’s mind went back to what they had gone through. ‘Suppose that your armor had cracked or something? I wouldn’t want to go on living. I would simply lie down and die.’
‘I’m glad it didn’t crack – and I’m twice as glad that they didn’t succeed in grabbing you away from me …’ His jaw set rigidly, his eyes became gray ice. ‘Blackie DuQuesne has got something coming to him. So far, I have always paid my debts; and I will settle with him … IN FULL.
‘That was an awfully quick change of subject,’ he went on, his voice changing markedly, ‘but that’s the penalty we pay for being human – if we lived at peak all the time, there could be no thrill in it, any time. And even though we have been married so long, I still get a tremendous kick out of those peaks.’
‘So long!’ Dorothy giggled. ‘Of course we do, we’re unique. I know that everybody thinks that they are, but you and I
really
are – and we
know
that we are. Also, Dick, I know that it’s thinking of that DuQuesne that keeps on dragging you down off of the high points. Why wouldn’t now be a good time to unload whatever it is that you’ve got on your mind besides that tangled mop of hair?’
‘Nothing much …’
‘Come on, ’fess up. Tell it to Red-Top.’
‘Let me finish, woman! I was going to. Nothing much to go on but a hunch, but I think that DuQuesne’s somewhere out here in the great open spaces, where men are sometimes schemers as well as men; and if so, I’m after him – foot, horse, and marines.’
‘That object compass?’
‘Yeah. You see, I built that thing myself, and I know darn well it isn’t out of order. It’s still on him, but doesn’t indicate. Therefore he is too far away to reach – and with his mass, I could find him anywhere up to about one and a half light-years. If he wants to go that far away from home, where is his logical destination? – It can’t be anywhere but Osnome, since that is the only place we stopped for any length of time – the only place where he could have learned anything. He’s learned something, or found something useful to him there, just as we did. That’s sure, since he is not the type of man to do anything without a purpose. Uncle Dudley is on his trail – and will be able to locate him pretty soon.’
‘When you get that new compass-case exhausted to a
skillionth of a whillimeter or something, whatever it is? I thought Dunark said it took five hundred hours of pumping to get it where he wanted it?’
‘It did him – but while the Osnomians are wonders on some things, they ain’t so hot on others. You see, I’ve got three pumps on that job, in series. First, a Rodebush-Michalek super-pump; then, backing that, an ordinary mercury-vapor pump; and last, backing both the others, a Cenco-Hyvac motor-driven oil pump. In less than fifty hours that case will be emptier than any Dunark ever pumped. Just to make sure of cleaning up the last infinitesimal traces, though – painting the lily, as it were – I’m going to flash a getter charge in it. After that, the atmosphere in that case will be tenuous – take my word for it.’
‘I’ll have to, most of that contribution to science being over my head like a circus tent. What say we let
Skylark Two
drift by herself for a while, and catch us some of Nature’s sweet restorer?’
Seaton strode into the control room with a small oblong box in his hand. Crane was seated at the desk, poring over an abstruse mathematical treatise in
Science
. Margaret was working upon a bit of embroidery. Dorothy, seated upon a cushion on the floor with one foot tucked under her, was reading, her hand straying from time to time to a box of chocolates conveniently near.
‘Well, this is a peaceful, home-like scene – too bad to break it up. Just finished sealing off and flashing out this case, Mart. Going to see if she’ll read. Want to take a look?’
He placed a compass upon the plane table, so that its final bearing could be read upon the master circles controlled by the gyroscopes; then simultaneously started his stop-watch and pressed the button which caused a minute couple to be applied to the needle. Instantly the needle began to revolve, and for many minutes there was no apparent change in its motion in either the primary or secondary bearings.
‘Do you suppose it is out of order, after all?’ asked Crane, regretfully.
‘I don’t think so.’ Seaton pondered. ‘You see, they weren’t designed to indicate such distances on such small objects as men, so I threw a million ohms in series with the impulse. That cuts down the free rotation to less than half an hour, and increases the sensitivity to the limit. There, ain’t she trying to quit it?’
‘Yes, it is settling down. It must be on him still.’
Finally the ultra-sensitive needle came to rest. When it
had done so Seaton calculated the distance, read the direction, and made a reading upon Osnome.
‘He’s there, all right. Bearings agree, and distances check to within a few light-years, which is as close as we can hope to check on as small a mass as a man. Well, that’s that – nothing to do about it until after we get there. One sure thing, Mart – we ain’t coming straight back home from “X”. ’