TIGHT SQUEEZE
By
DEAN C. ING
He knew the theory of repairing
the gizmo all right. He had that nicely
taped. But there was the little matter of threading
a wire through a too-small hole while under zero-g,
and working in a spacesuit!
MacNamara ambled across the loading
ramp, savoring the dry, dusty air that smelled unmistakable
of spaceship. He half-consciously separated the
odors; the sweet, volatile scent of fuel, the sharp
aroma of lingering exhaust gases from early morning
test-firing, the delicate odor of silicon plastic
which was being stowed as payload. He shielded
his eyes against the sun, watching as men struggled
with the last plastic girders to be strapped down,
high above the dazzling ground of White Sands.
The slender cargo doors stood open around Valier’s
girth, awaiting his own personal O.K.
This flight would be the fourth for
Major Edward MacNamara; as he neared the great, squatting
shock absorbers he could feel the tension begin to
knot his stomach. He had, of course, been overwhelmed
by the opportunity to participate in Operation Doughnut.
The fact that he had been one of the best mechanical
engineers in the Air Force never occurred to him at
the time. He was a pilot, and a good one, but
he had languished as C.O. of a maintenance squadron
for nearly two years before he was given another crack
at glory. Now, he wasn’t at all sure he
was happy with the transition. They needed master
mechanics for Operation Doughnut, but he felt they
should be left on the ground when the towering supply
rockets lifted.
He stopped, leaning against scaffolding
as he saw a familiar figure turn toward him.
He cupped his hands before his face.
“Hey, douse that butt!
Can’t you ... oh, Mac!” The commanding
voice trailed off in a chuckle. Better to clown
his way through the inspection, MacNamara thought,
than to let Ruiz notice his nervousness. The
co-pilot, Ruiz, walked toward him, still smiling.
“One of these days, boy, you gonna go too far.
Thought you were a real, eighteen carat saboteur.”
He clapped MacNamara on the shoulder and gazed aloft.
“Good day for it. No weather, no hangover,
no nothing.”
“Yeah. You know, Johnny,
I’ve been thinking about a modification for our
breathing oxy.” He sniffed appreciatively.
“What’s that?”
“Put a little dust in it, a
few smells. That stuff we breathe is just too
sanitary!”
“I know what you mean.
I sure begin to crave this filthy, germ-filled air
after a few hours out there.” They both
smiled at the thought, then turned to the business
at hand.
“By the way, Johnny, what’re
you doing out so early? Didn’t expect to
see you cabbies before ten.”
“I donno,” the bronzed
Ruiz replied. “Went to bed early, woke up
at six and couldn’t drop off again. And
here I am. Carl ought to be along around nine-thirty.
Thought I’d help you preflight, if you want me
to.”
“Sure.” He wanted
nothing of the sort, but had the tact not to say so.
Edward MacNamara was as familiar with
the Valier as he was with the tip of his nose.
He had been on the scene when Dan Burke test-hopped
the third stage, had made improvements and re-routing
jobs, and had memorized every serial number of every
bearing that went into Valier. As Flight
Engineer, he was supposed to.
With Johnny Ruiz helping a little
and hindering a little, he finished his tour of the
cargo sections and grinned his approval to a muscular
loading technician. “They can button her
up, sergeant. I couldn’t do a better job
myself.” It was a compliment of the highest
order, and they both knew it.
Riding the tiny lift down to ground
level, MacNamara stopped them every ten feet or so
to circle the catwalks. He noticed Ruiz’s
impatience about halfway down. “No hurry,
Johnny. I don’t want another Wyld
on our hands.” He knew he shouldn’t
have said it, but it slipped out anyway. Everyone
tried to forget the Wyld disaster, particularly
the flight personnel. The Wyld, one of
the first ships to be built, had made only two orbits
before being destroyed. Observers stated that
a cargo hatch had somehow swung open when the Wyld
was only a thousand feet in the air. At any rate,
the pilot reported damage to one second-stage fin
and tried to brake his way down. The Wyld
settled beautifully, tilted, then fell headlong.
The resultant explosion caused such destruction that,
had there not been a number of men in orbit and waiting
for supplies, the project might have been halted, “temporarily.”
It was generally conceded that a more thorough preflight
could have prevented the Wyld’s immolation.
Ruiz was noticeably quieter during
the remainder of the inspection. The external
check completed, MacNamara strapped a small flashlight
to his wrist and began the internal inspection, jokingly
called the autopsy.
An hour and over a hundred and fifty
feet later, MacNamara wheezed as he swung over the
bulkhead at the base of Valier’s third
and top stage. His aching limbs persuaded him
to take a breather. After all, his complete inspection
of the day before really made a final preflight unnecessary,
and passing near the frigid oxygen tanks was a day’s
work in itself. He listened to the innumerable
noises around and below him. The clicks and hums
near him meant that Ruiz, having given up following
him, was checking out the flight controls, with power
on only in the top stage. From below came a vibrational
rushing noise, nearly subsonic, which told him of
the fueling operation. He thought of the electrical
relays governing the fuel input and shuddered.
He violently disliked the idea of having hot wires
near fuel of any kind, and rocket fuel in particular.
MacNamara swept his light over his
wrist watch. Fifteen after. Logan should
be along soon, he thought, and hastened to finish checking
the conduits, servos, pumps and hydraulic actuators
below the cabin level. This done, he crawled
up the final ladder to the cabin, or “dome.”
“Well,” cried a cheerful
voice, “if it isn’t our grimy Irishman.”
MacNamara shook the sweat from his
brow and muttered, “Irishman, is it? How
about ‘Logan’? That’s a good
Scandinavian name.”
“How about Logan? He’s
great, as usual. Just look at me, Mac. What
a specimen!” Logan, the inevitable optimist,
bounced out of his acceleration couch and spread his
arms wide as if to show the world what a superman
he, Carl Logan, was. The gesture and its intimations
made MacNamara smile. Logan wasn’t much
over five feet tall, and his flight suit made him
look like a bald pussycat. His small physique
covered a fantastic set of reflexes, however, and
Logan’s sense of humor was a quality of utmost
importance. He hadn’t an enemy in the world.
His enemy was out of this world by definition; Logan
wanted to conquer space and, so far, was doing just
that.
“O.K., O.K. Laugh.
Just remember this, Gargantua; I may not be tall, but
I sure am skinny.” MacNamara smiled again,
nodding agreement. “Well, don’t everybody
talk at once. How is she, Mac?”
“With luck,” answered
MacNamara, “we might get ten feet off the turf.”
He paused for effect. “Seriously, Carl,
she never looked better. You could take her up
right now. Say, where’s Johnny? I thought
you’d just be checking in to the medics; looks
like everybody’s early today.”
“He’s probably over in
some corner, making out his will. He was down
below a while ago with a face a mile long.”
Probably, thought Mac, he’s
still thinking about the Wyld. Why did I have
to bring that up? Aloud, he said, “I ought
to check the ground crew. Did you bring the forms?”
“Nope. Just my magnificent
self. If anything had gone astray, they’d
have told you.”
“All the same, I think I’ll
go down and question the troops. Don’t leave
without me.” He clambered out onto the catwalk,
leaving the air lock open. The sun was riding
higher every minute. In a little over an hour,
he’d be a thousand miles away vertically.
The knot in his stomach began to form again.
He wasn’t scared, exactly; he kept telling himself
“excited” was a nicer word.
The inspection forms signed, Mac held
a short interrogation with the crew chief. The
grizzled lieutenant, commissioned because of his long
experience and responsibilities, gave Valier
a clean bill of health. Each engine of the booster
stage had been fired separately, before dawn.
A cubic foot of mercury seemed to roll from Mac’s
shoulders as he saw Logan and Ruiz lounging at the
bottom of the lift; there wasn’t anything to
worry about. He recalled feeling the tension before
the other three flights, then chided himself. Ya,
ya, scared-y cat. Well, why not? It’s
a helluva risk every time you make a shot, in spite
of all the propaganda. Hooey; if you didn’t
know everything’s O.K., you wouldn’t be
getting ready to make the shot. Yeah, but you
never can tell. He stopped his
inward battle and forced some spring into his step
as he moved toward Logan and Ruiz.
“I’ve tried my best to
abort this big bug, but I can’t find anything
amiss.”
“That’s Granny MacNamara
for you,” jibed Logan. “Always trying
to find fault.” He winked at Ruiz and rubbed
his hands together. “Well tennis,
anyone?”
Mac knew without asking that Logan,
for all his apparent indifference, had painstakingly
gone over every phase of the flight, checking distribution,
radar, final instructions from Operations, weather,
et al. Ruiz, as usual, watched and took
notes as Logan gathered data.
At minus fifteen minutes, the trio
was in the dome, checking personal equipment, while
outside, the scaffolding ponderously slid away, section
by section.
There was little time for soliloquies
of to go, or not to go; within the quarter-hour,
Captain Ruiz and Majors MacNamara and Logan would be
in readiness for the final count-down. With the
emergency bail-out equipment checked, the men busied
themselves on another continuity test of the myriad
circuits spread like a human neural system throughout
the ship. All relays, servo systems and instrument
leads were in perfect condition as expected, and the
trio was settled comfortably in acceleration couches
with minutes to spare.
Logan contacted Ground Control a few
seconds after the minus-three minute signal, informing
all and sundry that Gridley could fire when ready.
MacNamara sighed, thinking that if Logan’s humor
wasn’t exactly original, it was surely tenacious.
The ship was brought to dim half-life
at minus one minute by Logan’s agile fingers,
and as the final countdown rasped in his headset, Mac
felt his innards wrestle among themselves.
Valier bellowed her enthusiasm
suddenly, lifting her eight thousand-odd tons from
the ground almost instantly. Inside, her occupants
grimaced helplessly as they watched various instruments
guide tiny pointers across calibrated faces.
Mac’s throat mike threatened to crush his Adam’s
apple, weighing five times its usual few ounces.
Of his senses, sound was the one that dominated him;
an intolerable, continuous explosion from the motors
racked his mind like tidal waves of formic acid.
He forced himself to overcome the numbness which his
brain cast up to defend itself. Then, as quickly
as it had begun, Valier fell deafeningly silent;
that meant Mach 1 was passed.
It was an eternity before stage one
separated. The loss of the empty hulk was hardly
felt as Valier streaked high over the Texas
border. Ruiz, watching the radarscope, saw Lubbock
slide into focus miles below. Next stop, Fort Worth,
he thought. I used to drive that in five hours.
The jagged line of the caprock told him they were well
on their way to Fort Worth already.
The altimeter showed slightly over
forty-two miles when stage two detached itself.
Logan, in constant contact with White Sands, was informed
that they were tracking perfectly as Valier
arrowed over central Texas toward rendezvous at the
doughnut. The exhausted lower stages were forgotten
now; only the second stage was of any concern anyway.
The radar boys tracked it all the way down, ready to
detonate it high in the air if its huge ’chutes
wafted it near any inhabited community.
The motors of stage three blasted
for a carefully calculated few seconds, then cut out
automatically. With the destitution of his weight,
Mac felt his spirits soar also. They were almost
in orbit, now, climbing at a slight angle with a velocity
sufficient to carry them around Earth forever, a streamlined,
tiny satellite.
After the first few moments of disorientation,
rocket crews found that a weightless condition gave
them, ambiguously, a buoyant feeling. Only the
doughnut crew had really adapted to this condition,
living as they did without the effects of gravity
for hours at a time every day. The temporary
“housing” was rotated for comfort of the
crews during rest periods, but while moving the plates
and girders of the giant doughnut into place, they
had no such luxuries. For these men, weightlessness
became an integral part of their activities, but the
rocket crews were subjected to this phenomenon only
during the few hours needed to rendezvous, unload
the cargo, and coast back after another initial period
of acceleration.
Hence, Mac felt a strange elation
when he tapped his fingers on the arm of his couch
and saw his arm float upward, due to reaction from
the tap.
Against all regulations, Logan unstrapped
himself and motioned his comrades to do the same.
This unorthodox seventh-inning stretch was prohibited
because it left the pilot’s arm-rest controls
without an operator, hence could prove disastrous
if, through some malfunction, the ship should veer
off course.
The autopilot functioned perfectly,
however, and Logan trusted it to the point of insouciance.
The three men lounged in midair, grinning foolishly
as they “swam” about the tiny cabin.
No more satisfying stretch was ever enjoyed.
A few minutes of this was enough.
Ruiz was the first to gingerly pull himself into his
couch and his companions followed. Not a word
had passed between them, since they were at all times
in contact with monitor stations spaced across the
world below. The first time they had enjoyed
this irregular horseplay, on the second trip, Logan
had made the mistake of saying, “Race you to
the air lock!”, and was hard put to explain
those words. Nor could Logan switch to “intercom
only,” since a sudden radio silence would create
anxiety below. Only their heavy breathing would
indicate unusual activity to Earthside.
They were nearing the intercept point,
a thousand miles above the Atlantic, when they realized
their predicament.
“I’m in a fix, Carl,”
said Ruiz, meaning that he had tentatively fixed a
position of intercept. “Correct our elevation;
we’re point-nine degrees high.”
“Right-o. Correction in five seconds from
my mark mark!”
For slight corrections in the flight
path, small steering motors were utilized. These
motors were located near the rear lip of Valier’s
conical cargo section on retractable booms. Extension
of the motors with no resultant air friction gave
a longer pivot arm and consequently better efficiency.
Mac pressed the “Aux. Steer” stud
and immediately three amber lights winked on in their
respective instrument consoles.
Carl Logan fired the twelve o’clock
motor briefly only it didn’t fire.
The change in momentum wouldn’t be much in any
case, but it was always perceptible by feel and by
instrument. There was no change.
Logan tried the firing circuit again,
and again. Still Valier streaked along,
now miles above the intended point of intercept.
By this time, the embryo space station was quite near,
sailing along in the ’scope beneath them.
It slowly moved toward the top of the ’scope,
passing Valier in its slightly higher relative
velocity.
“We’ve got troubles, Mac find
’em!” Logan had finally lost the devil-may-care
attitude, but that fact was small consolation to MacNamara.
“Keep your mitts off those firing
studs, Carl,” he growled, unstrapping himself
quickly. The malfunction was definitely in the
auxiliary motor setup, he thought. A common trouble?
It wouldn’t pay to find out. If the other
motors fired, it would only throw them farther off-course.
If worst came to worst, they could roll Valier
over and use the six o’clock auxiliary; there
was a small arc through which the motors could turn
on their mounts. But the trouble was unknown,
and they might end up rifling or pinwheeling if they
didn’t let bad enough alone.
During his mental trouble-shooting,
Mac was busily worming his bulk into a balloonish-looking
suit identical to those worn by the doughnut’s
construction crew. Ruiz gave him some aid, helping
him thrust his arms past the spring-folded elbow joints.
For some reason, the legs gave less trouble.
Within a fumbling few moments, he was ready for work.
He glanced at Logan through his visor,
feeling a vicious pleasure over the beads of sweat
on Logan’s forehead. Time he sweated a little,
thought the mechanic.
A final check of his headset followed,
after which Mac oozed into the Lilliputian air lock
at the bottom, now rear, wall of the cabin. He
nodded to Ruiz, who secured the air lock, then adjusted
his suit control to force a little pressure into his
suit. Gradually the suit became livable.
Then he cracked the other air-lock valve and allowed
pressure to leak out around him.
His suit puffed out with soft popping
noises and Mac heard the last vestige of air hiss
out of the chamber. He found the hatchway too
tight for comfort and had a moment of fear when his
tool pack caught in the orifice, wedging him neatly.
He could hear Logan and Ruiz through his earphones,
explaining their plight to Ground Control. They
wanted to know why in blue blazes Valier hadn’t
contacted the doughnut when it came within range,
and Logan had no defense save preoccupation with his
own plight. Belatedly, Ruiz made radio contact
with the doughnut, which was still well within range.
All this time, Mac busied himself with his inspection
light, tracing the electrical leads to the small, turbine
operated auxiliary motor fuel pumps.
“Mac?” Logan’s voice
startled him. “Can you brace yourself?
I’m going to try to match velocities with the
doughnut. Won’t take over one ‘g’
for a few seconds.”
“Wait a minute.”
He looked wildly about him. Valier hadn’t
been built with a view toward stowaways; and every
cubic inch of space was crammed with something, except
for the passageway with its ladder, leading up from
the main motor section. Well, if it wasn’t
over a “g,” he could hang on to the ladder.
Suit weighs another fifty pounds, though. My
weight plus fifty, he thought. “Give me
a chance to get set,” he said aloud. He
hooked one bulbous leg over a ladder rung and braced
the other against a lower rung, hugging the ladder
with both arms. “Any time you say, but
kill it if you hear me holler!”
“Then five seconds from my mark mark!”
Mac tightened his grip, and then sagged backward as
the main motors fired. The vibrations shook him
slightly but deeply, and he fought to keep his hold.
He felt his back creak and pop with the sudden surge
of weight. Then the motors shut off, and Mac
skidded several feet up the ladder. No matter
how fast a man’s reactions were, they couldn’t
be applied quickly enough to keep him from starting
an involuntary leap after bracing against a suddenly
removed gravity load. “All over, Mac.
You O.K.?”
“Guess so, but I feel like a
ping-pong ball. How’re we sittin’?”
“Just fine,” Ruiz cut in. “Find
anything?”
“Not yet.” Mac started
his search anew. Everything seemed in perfect
order up to the turbine pumps. Then, he feared,
the trouble was near the little motors. That
was tough, really tough. With the motors retracted
it was next to impossible to get to them, past their
hydraulically operated booms and actuators. Extended,
he’d have to go outside. He cringed from
the thought, although he knew that there was little
to fear if he linked himself to the ship.
He peered along the beam of light,
searching for some telltale discoloration in wiring,
or a gleaming icy patch which would indicate a fuel
leak. “Might be the firing plugs,”
he muttered.
“Let’s hope not.
Where are you, Mac? Maybe you better give us a
blow-by-blow.” Logan sounded worried.
“Good idea. Right now I’m
at the nine o’clock actuator. Nothing so
far.” He looked around himself, forgetting
for the moment how he was supposed to get past the
equipment to the other auxiliary motor stations.
“Johnny,” he said slowly,
“I think you’d best break out the tapes.
Auxiliary motor system; you’ll find them under
power plant.” Months before, MacNamara
had made a complete set of tape recordings of his own
voice, recorded as he made a thorough-going rundown
of every system and its components. This was
a personal innovation which his fellow flight engineers
considered folly. Extra weight, they scoffed.
Undue complication. Mac nodded and went on with
his impromptu speechmaking; a professional psychiatrist
might have said, correctly, that Mac felt an unconscious
need for supervision, a forgivable deficiency dating
back to his cadet days. Mac simply claimed that
the best of men could forget or omit when alone with
a few million dollars’ worth of Uncle’s
equipment. This way he could remind himself of
each step to be taken ahead of time, in his own way.
The co-pilot rushed to comply.
Mac, waiting, suddenly remembered how to get past
his obstacle. Internal braces which helped keep
the tanks rigidly in place on Earth were of little
use while in “freeloading,” or gravity-less,
state. The braces were removable, and Mac had
loosened a single wing-nut to let the brace swing
loose when he heard Johnny Ruiz’s answer.
“Ready with your tape, Mac. Where shall
I start it?”
“Run it through ’til you
get to a blank spot, then another, then stop it.”
He was certain he didn’t really need the tape,
but it was a maintenance aid and he was determined
to use it.
He heard a click, then a hum, as the
recorder was jacked into his headset circuit.
Immediately, a familiar voice began a slow dissertation
on power leads from the dome, speeded up in the space
of a second or two to a high-pitched alien gibberish,
then to a faint scream. He began squirming around
the turbine tanks, got past the first brace, and turned
to attach it again. Of course it wasn’t
necessary, but “PLAY IT SAFE”
was embroidered on his brain by years of maintenance
experience; back in his old maintenance squadron,
he’d been called “the old lady” instead
of “the old man,” due to his insistence
on precautions.
Ruiz slowed the tape suddenly, on
cue, and Mac heard himself saying, “...
Brace back in its slot and pin it. Be careful
of those linkages on the turbine pumps. Now crawl
around to the next brace and unpin it.”
Pause, scraping noises, and a muttered oath. “Pin
sticks, but it won’t without a load on it.”
It didn’t.
He worked slower than he had on the
ground, fumbling with the heavy gloves and cursing
mightily. His voice rambled on, warning him of
obstacles and reminding him about minor points that
could give trouble. He listened carefully, discarding
each suggestion.
Floating near the twelve o’clock
auxiliary, Mac peered at each tubing connection, tugging
and twisting. “Wait a minute,” he
said. His light flashed out at the motor, riding
perched on its swivel, limned against cold, hard points
of light that were the stars. His heart gave a
bound. “I think I’ve found it!”
His other voice droned on morbidly. “Turn
that thing off a minute, Johnny. Listen; there’s
a lead to the twelve o’clock fuel valve solenoid
that looks like ... yes, I’m sure of it.
It’s pulled away from a bracket and looks like
it might be charred.” Mac twisted around
to view the wiring better.
“Can you fix it?”
“Oh, sure, if that’s all
there is wrong. But I’d rather do the work
with the motors retracted. Tell you what; retract
them about forty-five degrees when I give the word.”
Mac judged the distance the booms
would cover during semiretraction and half floated,
half crawled out of the way. He found himself
breathing heavily, despite the freeload conditions.
His suit was simply too cumbersome. The thought
came to him that he didn’t even know how long
he’d been out of the dome. His breathing
oxygen gauge showed half empty, so he must have been
on the job for around a half hour. He rationed
his supply a bit, hoping he could finish the job without
a refill.
“O.K., Johnny, you can run the
tape again. And retract the motors while you’re
at it.” He heard the tape start again on
its course, watching the booms.
They leaped inward, then, and Mac
felt a crushing blow across his back. He shook
his head groggily and yelled.
He tried to scramble from his place
between motor and turbine fuel lines without success;
he was trapped like a wild animal by the heavy actuator
which had swung past his head. He heard himself
say, “And be sure to stay clear of the actuator.
It swings through a ninety-degree arc when it’s
operated.”
“Oh, shut up! I know it;
I just judged it wrong.” The tape moved
on unperturbedly, reminding him to inspect the actuator
bearings and extension rods.
“Mac,” came Logan’s
voice, “you might try to hurry it. If you
can’t get it fixed in an hour or two, we’ll
have to try rolling Valier down to the doughnut.
But it’s up to you, fella. Take your time.”
“Well, you might help me a bit
by raising this hydraulic unit offa my shoulders.
Lucky it didn’t squash me.” The actuator
stayed where it was. “Johnny! Carl!
Do you read me?” No answer. Obviously, the
actuator had smashed his transmitter, but left the
receiver section intact. Then all he could hope
for would be a suspicion from one of the others that
all was not well. If they asked him any questions
and he failed to reply, they’d figure something
was wrong. Well, he couldn’t count on that.
He struggled with his vulcanized suit,
trying to squeeze from under the actuator. If
I’d had them retract it completely, he thought,
I’d be a dead man. It was a tight squeeze,
but he inched his way out of the trap by using every
ounce of strength at his command. If his suit
tore, he’d know it in a hurry.
Gasping for breath, Mac drew himself
into a crouch and regarded the offending wire.
His flashlight still operated, and he could see the
heavy insulation which had been scraped away.
No charring; then it must have been the extension
rods that had scissored through the insulation.
The wire hung together by a thread, the strands of
metal severed completely. He groped for his tool
kit, trying to ignore the voice in his headset.
“Well, that takes care of the
actuators. Now for these dinky motors. The
swivel mounts have to work without any lubricant, so
look for indications of wear and ”
Mac cursed under his breath.
He sounded so cocksure, so all-knowing. He felt
like beating himself. His earlier self, who had
blithely toured Valier trailing the microphone
wires without any real premonition of trouble.
It always happens to the other guy Not this
time, chum, he reminded himself.
The gloves were systematically foiling
his attempts to withdraw the coil of wire at his side.
The tool kit was the ultimate in maintenance work,
compact and complete with extension handles for the
cutters and wrenches. Everything was there, but
practically impossible to use. His fingers finally
closed over the wire; he jerked it out and with it
the splice tool. The little pliers caromed from
the brace above him and sailed out toward the motor,
beyond the ship. He watched, horrified, as the
tool slowly cartwheeled away into space.
“All right,” he muttered,
“scratch one splice tool. It was also my
only pair of pliers, but I’ll manage.”
He knew he could use the wire cutters in a pinch.
“In a pinch,” he repeated. “Oh,
that’s a hot one. That’s about all
that’s happened this trip, so far. Pinch
me, pinch the wiring What a pinch!”
Holding the roll of wire tightly in
one hand, he grasped the cutters and pulled them from
the kit with utmost care. He unrolled a foot-long
section of wire and clipped it off, laying his flashlight
in the tool kit so that it would shine out in front
of him. He managed to attach the tiny splice
lugs by pinching them with the cutters, then moved
cautiously to the wire which still drooped from the
jumble of machinery. “Drooped” wasn’t
precisely the word; actually the wire had been bent
into its position and stayed that way.
As the harried major reached for the
brace on which the wire had been bracketed, his tool
kit vomited flashlight, wrenches and screwdrivers,
leaving him in total darkness. His cursing was
regular, now, monotonous and uninspired. There
was another pencil light in the kit, snapped tightly
to the case, and Mac reached for the whole business.
The spare light was a maintenance problem in itself.
Question: How to retrieve a fountain pen sized
object, when it’s held by a small snap and the
retriever is encumbered by three pairs of arctic mittens?
Mac saw his errant flashlight out
of the corner of his eye, its beam fastened on a collapsed
screw driver while both swam sluggishly toward the
inspection ladder. He located the pencil light
and jerked it loose, holding the short wire and cutters
in his other hand.
This, Mac knew, was the crucial point.
If he could splice the wire hanging in front of him,
Valier would once more be in perfect shape.
He would have welcomed an extra hand or two, as he
straddled a brace and shoved the tiny flash between
his headpiece and shoulder fabric. The wire should
be stripped, he knew, but he hadn’t the tools.
They were scarcely ten feet from him, but could have
rested atop the Kremlin for all the good they did
him. He got most of the strands of one end of
wire shoved into a splice lug, and called it good
enough. It was like trying to thread a needle
whose eye was deeper than it was wide, while in a
diving suit, using the business end of a paintbrush
to start the thread.
He withdrew one hand and searched
the kit for friction tape. It might be mentioned
that an insulating tape which would be adhesive at
minus two hundred degrees centigrade yet keep its
properties at plus one thousand, was the near culmination
of chemical science. Silicon plastic research
provided the adhesive, an inert gum which changed almost
none through a fantastic range of temperatures and
pressures. The tape Mac used to insure his connection
had an asbestos base, with adhesive gum insinuated
into the tape. He wrapped the wire tightly, then
bound it to the brace. He noticed his visor fogging
up and felt a faint, giddy sensation. Anoxemia!
He let the tape drift as he reached for his regulator
dial. What a fool he was, he thought, to
starve his lungs. He turned the dial to emergency
maximum and gulped precious liters of oxygen-helium
mixture. The gauge showed a store of the gas which
might possibly be enough to last him, if nothing else
went wrong; perhaps ten minutes.
The pencil flash, mercifully, still
rested in a fold of his shoulder joint fabric.
The insulation tape floated near his waist; he grabbed
it and stowed it between his knee and the brace, then
reached once again for the wiring.
This time the splice went on without
a hitch. He pinched the splice lug and taped
the whole works feverishly. It was done; he had
won. The trip back should take only a couple
of minutes. Replacing the wire cutters in his
kit, he held the pencil flash before him and started
retracing his route.
He passed the twelve o’clock
brace, pinned it in place again and saw one of his
tools floating to the right of his head. He gathered
it in and swept his tiny flash around in search of
other jetsam from his tool kit. He collected
a wrench and the skittish flashlight, started toward
the last brace between him and the ladder, and felt
his legs go limp. He wasn’t particularly
alarmed about it; his arms and vision failed him too,
but his brain hadn’t enough incoming oxygen to
care much, one way or the other. The few remaining
feet seemed to lengthen into a sewerlike passageway,
then vanished as did all else as his perceptions died.
MacNamara was not the sort to wonder
about heaven or hell when he first awoke. He
saw a faintly rounded ceiling, a soft yellow tint accentuating
its featurelessness. “How the devil “,
he began. His voice failed him.
“Hi, Mac.” Logan’s
beaming face loomed over him. “You rugged
character, you. Cold as a pickle an hour ago,
and already you’re askin’ silly questions.”
He held up his hand as Mac started to speak. “I
hear you thinkin’. ‘How the devil
did I get here, and where is here?’ In reverse
order, this is the most comfortable berth in the doughnut’s
facilities, and you got here courtesy of one Johnny
Ruiz. Myself, I wouldn’t have taken the
trouble.”
Mac grinned back at his pilot and
cleared his throat. “Well, where is he?
I wanta shake his hand, or give him half my kingdom,
or something.”
“You know Johnny; the shy type.
He’ll be along after a while. You know,
I think he kinda likes you; when you quit transmitting
out there, Johnny was like a cat on a hot skillet.
Finally decided to go back and have a look for himself,
but I told him you probably had a hot game of solitaire
going. Anyway, he went back and found you asleep
on the job, and lost a good ten pounds getting your
fat carcass through the air lock.” That
was a job that must have taxed both Ruiz and Logan,
but Mac held his silence. “And that was
about the size of it. Valier’s parked
outside with some of the boys, good as ever. Come
on, we’ll sop up some coffee.”
Mac swung himself up to a sitting
position and realized dizzily that he was mother-naked.
His ribs felt pulverized. “You guys sure
mauled me up,” he said accusingly.
“Unavoidable, my dear grease-monkey.
You needed a little artificial respiration; I never
was too good at that.”
“Well, whoever did the job rates
a prize of some sort,” Mac answered, “but
my ribs tell me he had more enthusiasm than practice.”
Logan smiled his old familiar smile,
relieved to find his engineer in joking spirits.
“The credit again goes to Johnny. But,”
he added, “try not to be too hard on him.
Try giving artificial respiration to a big lump like
yourself sometime, without any gravity.”
Mac digested this tidbit as he pulled
on a fresh pair of coveralls. “O.K.,”
he said, standing on the foamex “floor.”
“How did he do it?”
“Strapped you into your couch
face down and locked his legs around it. I didn’t
dare apply any g’s. Come on,” he finished,
“you’ve managed to upset every timetable
in the project. Johnny’s shaking like a
leaf, or was when I left him. A bulb of coffee
will do us both a world of good.”
“I’m sold,” Mac
grunted, zipping up a flight boot. “But
there’s something I’d like to do, first
chance I get.”
“Which is?”
“Which is jettison every last
strip of tape I have in Valier. I tell
you, Logan,” he went on as they entered the recreation
bar, “you’ll never know how degrading
it is to hear useless, insipid information offered
to you when you’re in a tight spot, knowing full
well the voice is your own!”