FAR FROM HOME
BY
J. A. TAYLOR
"Far” is strictly
a relative term. Half a world away from home is, sometimes, no distance
at all!
Someone must have talked over the
fence because the newshounds were clamoring on the
trail within an hour after it happened.
The harassed Controller had lived
in an aura of “Restricteds,” “Classifieds”
and “Top Secrets” for so long it had become
a mental conditioning and automatically hedged over
information that had been public property for years
via the popular technical mags; but in time they pried
from him an admittance that the Station Service Lift
rocket A. J. “Able Jake” Four had
indeed failed to rendezvous with Space Station One,
due at 9:16 Greenwich that morning.
The initial take-off and ascent had
gone to flight plan and the pilot, in the routine
check-back after entering free flight had reported
no motor or control faults. At this point, unfortunately,
a fault in the tracking radar transmitter had resulted
in it losing contact with the target. The Controller
did not, however, mention the defection of the hungover
operator in fouling up the signal to the standby unit,
or the consequent general confusion in the tracking
network with no contact at all thereafter, and fervently
hoped that gentlemen of the press were not too familiar
with the organization of the tracking system.
At least one of the more shrewd looking
reporters appeared as though he were mentally baiting
a large trap so the Controller, throwing caution to
the winds, plunged headlong into a violent refutal
of various erroneous reports already common in the
streets.
Able Jake did not carry explosives
or highly corrosive chemicals, only some Waste Disposal
cylinders, dry foodstuffs and sundry Station Household
supplies.
Furthermore there was no truth in
the oft-revived rumors of weaknesses in the so-called
“spine-and-rib” construction of the Baur
and Hammond Type Three vessel under acceleration strain.
The type had been discontinued solely because the
rather complicated structure raised certain stowage
difficulties in service with overlong turnabout times
resulting.
There may have been a collision with
a meteor he conceded, but, it was thought, highly
unlikely. And now, the urgent business of the
search called, the Controller escaped, perspiring
gently.
Able Jake was sighted a few minutes
later but it was another three hours before a service
ship could be readied and got away without load to
allow it as much operating margin as possible.
Getting a man aboard was yet another matter.
At this stage of space travel no maneuver of this
nature had ever been accomplished outside of theory.
Fuel-thrust-mass ratios were still a thing of pretty
close reckoning, and the service lift ships were simply
not built for it.
The ship was in an elliptical orbit
and a full degree off its normal course. A large
part of the control room was demolished and there was
a lengthy split in the hull. There was no sign
of the pilot and some of the cargo was missing also.
The investigating crew assumed the obvious and gave
it as their opinion that the pilot had been literally
disintegrated by the intense heat of the collision.
The larger part of the world’s
population made it a point to listen in on the first
space burial service in history over the absent remains
of Johnny Melland.
Such a small thing to cause such a
fury. A mere twenty Earth pounds of an indifferent
grade of rock and a little iron, an irregular, ungraceful
lump, spawned somewhere a billion years before as a
star died. But it still had most of the awesome
velocity and inertia of its birth.
Able Jake, with the controlling influence
of the jets cut, had yawed slightly and was now traveling
crabwise. The meteor on its own course, a trifle
oblique to that of the ship, struck almost directly
the slender spring steel spine, the frightful energy
of the impact transmuted on the instant into a heat
that vaporized several feet of the nose and spine
before the dying shock caused an anguished flexing
of the ship’s backbone; thrust violently outward
along the radial members and so against the ribs and
hull sheathing on that side. Able Jake’s
hull split open like a pea pod for fully half its
length and several items of its cargo burst from their
lashings, erupted from the wound.
Johnny was not inboard at the time,
but floating, spacesuited alongside, freeing a fouled
lead to the radar bowl, swearing occasionally but
without any real passion at the stupidity of the unknown
maintenance man who failed to secure it properly.
For some odd reason he had never quite lost the thrill
of his first trip “outside,” and, donning
pressure suit with the speed of long practice, sneaked
as many “inspections” as possible, with
or without due cause.
The second’s fury that reduced
the third stage of a $5,000,000 rocket to junk was
evident to him only as a brilliant blue-white flash,
a hammer-like shock through the antennæ support that
left his wrist and forearm numb. Then a violent
wrench as a long cylinder, expelled from the split
hull, caught the loop of his life line and dragged
him in till he clashed hard against it, the suddenly
increased tension or a sharp edge parting the line
close to the anchored end. He clawed blindly for
a hold, found something he could not at that moment
identify and hung on.
For a short time his vision seemed
dulled and that part of his mind, trained to the quick
analysis of sudden situations groped but feebly through
a haze of shock to understand what had happened.
Orienting himself he found he was gripping a brace
of the open-mounted motor on one of the Waste Disposal
Cylinders. About him he could see other odd items
of the cargo, some clustering fairly closely, others
just perceptibly drifting farther away. To one
side, or “downwards” the Earth rolling
vastly, pole over pole, and with her own natural rotation
giving an odd illusion of slipping sideways from under
him.
Only a sudden sun glint on the stubby
swept-back wings showed him where Able Jake was.
Far away too far, spinning slowly end over
end. His sideways expulsion from the ship then
had been enough to give him and his companion debris
a divergent course.
Spacemen accept without question the
fact of a ship or a station always at hand with a
safety man on watch at all times over those outside
and a “bug” within signaling distance
constantly. They do not conceive of any other
state of affairs.
Now Johnny had to face the fact that
he was in such a position entirely and
utterly alone, except for the useless flotsam that
came with him. He might have flung himself into
a mad chase after the ship on his suit jets except
that the thought of leaving his little island, cold
comfort though it was, to plunge into those totally
empty depths was suddenly horrible.
The tide of panic rose within him.
He knew the sickening bodily revolt of blind unreasoning
terror the terror of the lost, the terror
of certain untimely death, but mostly of death so
dreadfully alone.
He might have gone insane. In
the face of the insoluble problem his mind might have
retreated into a shadow world of its own, perhaps to
prattle happily the last few hours away. But
there was something else there. The pre-flight
school psychiatrist had recognized it, Johnny himself
probably wouldn’t have and it wasn’t their
policy to tell him. It saved him. The labored
heart pounding and the long shuddering gasps slowed
in time and with the easing of his physical distress
he found enough heart to muster a wry little smile
at the thought that of the castaways of history he
at least stood fair to be named the most unique.
And after a while, shaking himself
mentally, a little ashamed of his temporary fall from
grace, he followed the example of the more intelligent
of his predecessors and settled down to itemize his
assets, analyze his position and conjecture the chances
of survival.
Item: He was encased in a Denby
Bros. spacesuit, Mark III, open space usage, meant
for no gravity use. Therefore it had no legs as
such, the lower half being a rigid cylinder allowing
considerable movement within and having a swivel mounted
rocket motor at its base controlled by toe pedals
inside.
The upper half, semiflexible with
jointed arms ending in gloves from which by contorting
the shoulders the hands could be withdrawn into the
sleeves when not in use.
A metal and tinted plastic helmet
with earphones, mike and chin switch. An oxy
air-conditioning and reprocessing unit with its spare
pure oxygen tank; on this he could possibly depend
for twelve hours given no undue exertion and with
the most rigid economy all the time.
The power pack for suit operation
and radio had a safety margin of one hour over the
maximum air supply, if the radio wasn’t used.
At this time Johnny couldn’t see much use for
it.
Item: One Waste Disposal Cylinder,
expendable, complete with motor and full fuel tanks,
packed, according to his loading manifest with sundry
supplies to avoid dead stowage space. Seldom used,
since most station waste was ferried down in the otherwise
empty service ships, they occasionally handled certain
laboratory refuse it was considered best to destroy
in space. The cylinders were decelerated and allowed
to fall into atmosphere where the friction of the
unchecked plunge burned up what the magnesium charge
inside had not already. The rest of the shipwrecked
material had by now drifted beyond easy reach and Johnny
did not feel like wasting fuel rounding it up.
Position? A matter of memory
and some guesswork by now. Some ten minutes out
of powered flight at the time of collision, coasting
up to station orbit where a quick boost from the jets
would have made up his lost velocity to orbit standard.
But there would be no boost now. So he’d
just fall off around the other side, falling around
and into Mother Earth, to skim atmosphere and climb
on past and up to touch orbit altitude and
down again. A nice elliptical orbit, apogee a
thousand odd miles, perigee, sixty-seventy perhaps.
How much speed had he left? How long would it
be before he brushed the fringe of atmosphere once
too often and too deep? Just another meteor.
And survival. A comparatively
simple problem since the mechanics of it were restricted
by a simple formula in which his rôle would seem to
be a passive one. To survive he must be rescued
by his own kind in twelve hours or less. To be
rescued he must be seen or heard. Since his radio
was a simple short-range intercom it followed that
he must be seen first and heard later. Being
seen meant making a sufficiently distinguishable blip
on somebody’s radar screen to arouse comment
over a blip where, according to schedule no
orbiting blip should be.
Johnny was painfully aware that the
human body is very small in space. The cylinder
would be a help but he doubted it would be enough.
Then he thought of the material inside the cylinder.
He pried back the lugs holding the cover in place
with the screwdriver from his belt kit. He started
pulling out packages, bags, boxes, thrusting them behind
him, above him, downwards; cereals, ready mixed pastries,
bundles of disposable paper overalls toilet
paper! He worked furiously, now stuck halfway
down the cylinder, kicking the bundles behind him.
He emerged finally in a flurry of articles clutching
a large plastic bag that had filled the entire lower
end of the tank.
About him drifted a sizable cloud
of station supplies, stirring sluggishly after his
emergence. He pushed them a bit more, distributing
them as much as possible without losing them altogether.
Johnny tore open the big bag and was
instantly enveloped in clinging folds of ribbon released
from the pressure of its packing. He knew what
it was now, the big string of ribbon chutes for the
Venus Expedition, intended for dropping a remote controlled
mobile observer to the as yet unseen and unknown surface.
Johnny had ferried parts of the crab-like mechanical
monster on the last run, and illogically found himself
worrying momentarily over the set-back to the Probe
his mischance would cause.
But in the next minute he was making
fast the lower end of the string to the WD cylinder,
then, finding the top chute he toed his pedals and
jetted himself out, trailing the string out to its
full extent.
Now the period of action was over
and he had done all he could, Johnny found himself
dreading the time of waiting to follow. He would
have time for thinking, and thinking wasn’t
profitable under the circumstances unless it were
something definitely constructive and applicable to
his present and future well-being. Waiting was
always bad.
Surely they would find him soon.
Surely they would press the search farther even when
they found Able Jake as they couldn’t fail to
in time.
A tightness started in his throat.
Johnny quickly drowned the thought in a flood of inconsequential
nonsense, a trick he had learned as a green pilot.
He might sleep though, if sleep were a possible thing
in this cold emptiness. No one, to his recollection,
had ever done so outside a ship or station the
space psychology types would be interested doubtless.
Johnny tied his life line to the WD
cylinder and then jetted clear of his artificial cloud,
positioning himself so that it formed a partial screen
between himself and the sun. He turned his oxygen
down to the bare minimum and the thermostat as low
as he dared. He commenced a relaxation exercise
and was pleased when it worked after a fashion a
mental note for Beaufort at the station. A drowsiness
crept over him, dulling a little the thin edge of
fear that probed his consciousness.
Face down towards the earth he hung.
The slow noise of his breathing only intensified the
complete silence outside. The well padded suit
encompassed him so gently there was no sense of pressure
on his body to make up for the weightlessness.
Johnny felt as though he were bodiless, a naked brain
with eyes only hanging in nothingness.
Beneath, Earth rolled over with slow
majesty, once every two hours. His altered course
was evident now, passing almost directly over the
geographic poles proper instead of paralleling the
twilight zone where night and day met. Sometimes
he caught the faint glow of a big city on the night
side but the sight only stirred the worm of anxiety
and he closed his eyes.
Johnny was beginning to feel very
comfortable. He supposed sleepily that this was
the way you were assumed to feel while freezing to
death in a snowbank, or so he’d heard.
Air and heat too low perhaps. He should really
turn it up a notch.
On the other hand it was perhaps a
solution to the problem of dying a gentle
sleep while the stomach was still full enough from
the last meal to be reasonably comfortable and the
throat yet unparched. Would it be the act of
an unbalanced mind or one of the most supreme sanity?
He dozed and dreamed a bit in fragments
and snatches but it was not a good sleep there
was no peace in it. At one time he seemed to be
standing outside the old fretworked boarding house
he lived in looking in at the window of
the “sitting room” where the ancient, wispy
landlady sat among her antimacassared chairs and the
ridiculous tiny seashell ashtrays that overflowed
after two butts. He wanted desperately to get
in and sprawl in the huge bat-winged chair by the fire
and stroke the enormous old gray cat that would leap
up and trample and paw his stomach before settling
down to grumble to itself asthmatically for hours.
It was cold and dark out here and
he wanted to get in to the friendliness and the warmth
and the peaceful, familiar security, but he didn’t
dare go around to the door because he knew if he did
the vision would vanish and he’d never find
it again.
He scratched and beat at the window
but his fingers made no sound, he tried to shout but
his cries were only strangled whispers and the old
lady sat and rocked and talked to the big gray cat
and never turned her head.
The fire seemed to be flaring up suddenly,
it was filling the whole room a monstrous
furnace; it shouldn’t do that he knew, but the
old lady didn’t seem to mind sitting there rocking
amid the flames and it was so nice and
warm. The fire kept growing and swelling though soon
it burst through the window and engulfed him.
Too hot. Too hot.
Johnny swam hazily back to consciousness
with an aching head and thick mouth. He saw that
he had drifted clear of his protective screen somehow
and the sun beat full on him. With clumsy, fumbling
hands that seemed to belong to somebody else he managed
the air valve; the increased oxygen reviving him enough
to find the pedals and jet erratically about till he
gained the shadow once more.
Now he was entering upon the worst
phase of the living nightmare. Awake, the doubts
and fears of his position tormented him; wearied, he
feared to sleep, yet continually he found himself
nodding only to jerk awake with that suddenness that
is like a physical blow. Each one of these awakenings
took away a little more of his self-control till he
was reduced to near hysteria, muttering abstractly,
sometimes whimpering like a lost child; now seized
with a feverish concern for his air supply. He
would at one instant cut it down to a dangerous minimum,
then, remembering the near disaster of his first attempt
at economy, frantically turn it up till he was in
danger of an oxygen jag. In a moment he would
forget and start all over again.
In addition, he was now realizing
bitterly what he had subconsciously denied to himself
for so long, that they had found Able Jake and drawn
the obvious conclusion. That he had been obliterated
or blown out through the hull by the collision without
warning or preparation. That he was undoubtedly
dead if not vaporized altogether and, as they must,
considering the expense of a probably fruitless search,
abandon him.
There came the moment when Johnny
accepted this in full. This was directly after
the time when, sliding down the long hill to the perigee
of his orbit, he turned on his radio and cried for
help. It was a bare hundred miles or less to
that wonderful world below, but there was the Heaviside
layer, and the weak signals beat but feebly against
it. All that seeped through by some instant’s
freak of transmission was a fragment of incoherent
babble to reach the uncomprehending ear of an Arkansas
ham and give that gentleman uneasy sleep for some time
to come.
He kept calling mechanically even
after perigee was long past, praying for an answer
from the powerful transmitters below or from a searching
ship. But when there was no slightest whisper
in his phones or answering flare among the stars,
Johnny came to the end of faith. Even of awareness,
for his own ears did not register the transition of
his calls to an insane howling of intermixed pleas,
threats, condemnation a sewer flood of
foul vilification against those who had betrayed him.
Bright and beautiful, Earth rolled
blandly beneath him, the sun was a remote impersonal
thing and the stars mocked silently. After a while
the radio carried only the agonized sounds of a man
who had forgotten how to cry and must learn again.
There were times after this when he observed incuriously
a parade of mind pictures, part memory, part pure
hallucination and containing nothing of reason; other
times when he thought not at all. The sun appeared
to dwindle, retreating and fading far away into a
remote place where there were no stars at all.
It became a feeble candle, guttered unsteadily a moment
and suddenly winked out. Abruptly Johnny was
asleep.
He opened his eyes and surveyed the
scene with an oddly calm and dispassionate curiosity,
not that he expected to find his status changed in
any way but because he had awakened with a queer sense
of unreality about the whole business. He knew
vaguely that he’d had a bad time in the last
few hours but could remember little of the details
save that it was like one of those fragmentary nightmares
in the instant between sleeping and waking when it
is difficult to divide the fact from the dream.
Now he must reassure himself that this facet of it
was real and when he had done so, realized with a
faint shock that he was no longer afraid.
Fear, it seemed, had by its incessant
pressure dulled its own edge. The acceptance
of inevitable death was still there, but now it seemed
to have little more significance than the closing
of a book at the last page.
It is possible that Johnny was not
wholly sane at this point, but there is no one to
witness this and Johnny, not given to introspection
at any time, felt no spur to self-analysis, beyond
a brief mental registration of the fact.
So he made his visual survey, saw
that it was real, nothing had changed; noted with
mild surprise that he’d somehow remained in the
shadow of his screen this time. He had lost track
of time entirely but the suit’s air supply telltale
was in the yellow indicating about two hours more or
less to go on breathing. In quick succession he
reviewed the events, accepted the probability of the
abandoned search without a qualm and made his decision.
There was no need to wait about any longer.
A quick flip of the helmet lock, a
moment’s unpleasantness perhaps, and out.
As for the rest a spaceman needs no sanctified
ground, the incorruptible vault of space is as good
a place as any and perhaps the more fitting for one
of the first to travel its ways.
Well then quickly. Johnny raised his
hands.
But still
Man has his pride and his vanity.
Johnny, though not necessarily prone to inflated valuation
of himself still has just enough vanity left to resent
the thought of this anonymous snuffing out in the dark.
There should be, he thought, at least some outward
evidence of his passing, something like a
flare of light perhaps, that would in effect say, if
only to one solitary star gazer: “Here at
this position, at this instant, Johnny Melland, Spaceman,
had his time.”
The whimsy persisted. Johnny,
casting about mentally for some means to the end recalled
the thermite bomb for the WD cylinder and was hauling
himself in to it when he remembered the charges for
this lot had gone up with Sally Uncle One two days
before. But now he’d actually touched the
metal cylinder and, as though the brief contact had
completed some obscure mental circuit, the mad idea
was conceived, flared up into an irrepressible brilliance
and exploded in a harsh bark of laughter.
One last push to his luck then, hardly
worse than a gambler’s last chip except that
the consequences of failure were somewhat more certain.
Either way he’d have what he wanted survival
or, in the brief incandescence of friction’s
heat, a declaration of his passing.
A waste disposal cylinder will carry
the equivalent of about three tons of refuse.
Its motor is designed to decelerate that mass by 1,075
mph in order to allow it to assume a descending orbit.
Less the greater part of the customary
mass, it should be considerably more effective, and
since he was already in what constituted a descent
path, but for a few miles and a little extra velocity,
there would not be the long fall afterwards to pick
up what he’d lost.
From there on his plan entered the realm of
pure hypothesis; except for the broad detail the rest
depended on luck and whatever freakish conditions
might arise in his favor during the operation.
These, too, would be beyond his control and any move
to take advantage of them would have to be instinctive,
providing he was in any shape to do so.
The tendency to gnaw worriedly at
a thousand disturbing possibilities drowned quickly
in a rapidly rising sense of reckless abandon that
possessed him. The prospect of positive action
of any sort served to release any tension left in
him and almost gayly he moved to set his plan in action.
He jimmied the timer on the rocket
motor so it would fire to the last drop. The
string of ribbon chutes he reeled in hand over hand
stuffing it into the cylinder, discovering in the
process why the chute Section hands at Base wore that
harried look. The mass of slithering, incompressible
white-and-yellow ribbon and its shrouds resisted him
like a live thing; in the end Johnny managed to bat
and maul the obstreperous stuff down the length of
the tank. Even so, it filled it to within a couple
of inches of the opening.
Now he cut off a length of his life
line and attached one end to the spring-loaded trigger
release on the motor control, leaving enough to trail
the length of the cylinder and double back inside when
he wanted it. He blessed the economically minded
powers that insisted on manual firing control on these
one-shot units instead of the complex radio triggers
beloved of the technical brains.
Making fast to the chutes was a major
problem but eventually he managed a makeshift harness
of the remainder of the safety line. He wound
it awkwardly around himself with as many turns as
possible, each returned again and again through, the
ring at the end of the master shroud.
By now he was casting anxious glances
at the Earth below, aware that he must have passed
apogee several minutes before and that not more than
some twenty minutes were left before the low point
of this swing would be near. He was grimly aware
also that it must be this time or not at all.
The air telltale was well through the yellow band and
the next possible chance after this one was an hour’s
time away, when conditions inside the suit would be
getting pretty sticky.
Jockeying the unwieldy cylinder into
line of flight and making it stay there took a lot
longer than Johnny counted on. With no other manual
purchase than that afforded by his own lesser mass,
the job proved almost impossible and he had to use
his suit motor. This caused some concern over
his meager fuel supply since his plan called for some
flat-out jetting later on. In the frantic flurry
of bending, twisting, over and under controlling,
the veneer of aplomb began to wear. Johnny was
sweating freely by the time he had the cylinder stabilized
as best he could judge and had gingerly worked himself
into the open end as far as he could against the cushioning
mass of ribbon chute. He took the trigger lanyard
loosely in hand and craning his neck to see past the
bulk of the cylinder he watched and waited.
To the experienced lift pilot there
are certain subtle changes in color values over the
Earth’s surface as one approaches more closely
the outer fringe of atmosphere. While braking
approaches are auto-controlled, the pilot taking over
only after his ship is in atmosphere, the conscientious
man makes himself familiar with the “feel”
of a visually timed approach just in case and
Johnny was a good pilot.
Watching Equatorial Africa sliding
obliquely towards him Johnny suddenly gave thought
to a possible landing spot for the first time.
Not that he had any choice but a picture of a cold,
wet immersion in any of several possible bodies of
water was not encouraging. The suit would probably
float but which end first was a matter for conjecture
and out of it he would be as badly off for Johnny
could not swim a stroke.
Nor had he any clear idea how long
it would take to slow down to a vertical drop.
Able Jake made a full half swing of the globe to brake
down but Able Jake was an ultra-streamlined object
with many times the mass and weight of Johnny and
his rig; furthermore the ships were controllable to
a certain degree while Johnny was not. Beyond
the certain knowledge that the effect of the chutes
would be quite violent and probably short-lived, the
rest was unpredictable.
He tried to shake off gloomy speculation, uneasily aware that
much of the carefree confidence of the last hour had deserted him. In a
more normal state of mind again he became prey to tension once more, a pounding
heart and dry mouth recalling mercilessly the essential frailties of his kind.
So, with aching neck and burning eyes he strained for a clear view past the
length of the cylinder and
There! The preliminary to the
visual changes, a sudden sweep of distortion over
the landscape as his angle of sight through the refracting
particles became more shallow. Now was the time
he had judged the throat vane gyros should begin their
run-up.
He worked the lanyard back carefully,
fearful an awkward movement might upset the cylinder’s
line-up, pulling the trigger lever over to half-cock
where the micro switch should complete circuit with
the dry power pack. There should be approximately
one minute before the major color changes began, which
was also the minimum time for gyro run up. Johnny
resumed the watching and the waiting.
How long is a minute?
Is it the time it takes the fear-frozen
trainee, staring glass-eyed at the fumbled grenade
to realize that this one at his feet is a dud?
Or is it the time before the rock-climber,
clinging nail and toe to the rock face with the rope
snapped suddenly taut, feels it at last slacken and
sees the hands gripping safely come into sight?
Perhaps the greenhorn, rifle a-waver,
watching the glimpse of tawny color in the veldt-grass
and waiting the thunder and the charge, could say.
They’d all be wrong. It’s much longer.
Long enough for Johnny to think of
a dozen precautions he could have taken, a dozen better
ways to rig this or that. Long enough to worry
about whether the gyros were really running up as they
should. A thousand queries and doubts piled mountainously
upward to an almost unbearable peak of tension till
suddenly the browns and greens below flashed a shade
lighter and it was time, and the savage snap on the
lanyard a blessed relief and total committal.
In the few seconds after the firing
of the prime and before the busy little timer snapped
the valves wide open Johnny managed to slip his toes
under the jet pedals to avoid accidental firing.
At the same time he braced himself as rigidly as possible
with aching arms against the walls of the cylinder.
He saw briefly the flare of the jet
reflected off the remnants of his cloud of station
stores before deceleration with all its unpleasantness
began.
The lip of the cylinder’s mouth
swept up past his helmet as he was rammed deep into
the absorbent mass of ribbon chute. This wasn’t
a padded contour chair under a mild 3G lift.
The chutes took the first shock, but Johnny took the
rest the hard way, standing bolt upright.
He found with some surprise his head
was right down through the neck ring and inside the
suit proper, his arms half withdrawn from the sleeves,
knees buckled to an almost unbelievable angle considering
the dimensions of the lower case.
He had time to hope fervently the
cheap expendable motor wouldn’t burn out its
throat and send him cart-wheeling through space, or
blow the surrounding tanks before the blackout came
down.
He came out of it sluggishly, to find
the relief from the dreadful pressure almost as stupefying
as the deceleration itself. While his conscious
mind screamed the urgency of immediate action, his
bruised and twisted body answered but feebly.
The condition of complete weightlessness and the springy
reaction of the ribbon mass was all that allowed him
finally to claw himself out of the cylinder to where
he could use the suit jet without fear of burning
the precious chutes.
He was so tired. His muscles
of their own accord seemed to relax intermittently,
interfering with the control of his movements.
Only the sudden sight of the Earth, transformed by
a weird illusion of position from a bright goal to
an enormous, distorted thing, looming, apparently,
over him with glowing menace, spurred his flagging
resolution to frantic activity.
He jetted straight back trailing his
string of chutes behind him, then, before the last
was free of the cylinder, kicked himself around to
assume the original course once more.
At this stage it was no longer possible,
even granted the time, to judge visually how near
he was to the atmosphere. The uneasy feeling that
he must already be brushing the Troposphere jarred
his nerve so that he merely gave himself a short flat-out
boost in the right direction before spinning bodily
one hundred eighty degrees so that he was traveling
feet first.
Reflected in the curved helmet face,
the string of chutes obediently followed-my-leader
around a ragged U-shape, the last the small
pilot-chute trailed limply around as he watched.
There could surely be but a few seconds
left before the grand finale. Johnny found he
was unconsciously holding his breath, and, as he deliberately
inhaled long slow draughts of his already staling air,
realized abstractly that he seemed to be attempting
to meet his possible end with some degree of dignity
if not with resignation, and wondered if he were the
exception or the rule.
Possibly, he thought sardonically,
because there is so little room for dignity in our
living years, and was mildly surprised at an uncharacteristic
excursion into the realm of philosophy.
There was a faintly perceptible tug
on the harness. It was sustained and now there
came a definite strain. Reflected for a moment
in the helmet face was a glimpse of the lead chute
slowly opening out like a gigantic flower.
Then swiftly, in half a breath the
harness coils were tightening about him like steel
fingers, the heavy ring at the end of the master shroud
clashed against the back of his helmet and began a
sickening, thrumming vibration there.
The harness encompassed his torso
like a vise but his legs were unsupported and weighed
what seemed a thousand tons. He could feel them
stretching. Somewhere a coil slipped a fraction.
His arms were jerked suddenly upwards and Johnny knew
a sensation he’d never believed possible.
At the same time his leaden feet crashed down on the
jet pedals. For a few, brief, blessed moments
the intolerable extension eased a fraction with the
firing of the suit jets.
He cringed mentally from the thought
of what was to come and thought hazily: “This
is what the rack was like. This is going to be
bad, bad, bad!”
It was impossible and Johnny went
out with the last drop of fuel.
Somewhere there was a queer coughing
sound like wind through a crevice. He strained
to identify it but an awful agony swamped him and he
fled before it back into the darkness.
And later still a thumping and a rushing, gurgling
sound.
Dim, grotesque figures moved about
him or swooped and hovered over him. He felt
an unreasoning fear of them and tried to shut them
out. They were holding him down, hurting him.
One was pulling and twisting at his arm. He shouted
and swore at it telling it to leave him alone, but
it ignored him or didn’t seem to hear.
There was a sudden dull snapping sound and a little
of the pain abated.
The figures flowed together and swirled
around like some great oily vortex but never quite
left him.
Then there was a time when they separated
jerkily and became the hazy but definable figures
of men in rough seaman’s clothes. Johnny
had never heard Breton French before; in his dazed
condition the apparently insane gabble might well
have been the tongue of another world and gave him
little assurance. He hurt so badly and so generally
that he could not have determined that he was lying
down save for a view of white clouds scudding overhead.
Some of the men were holding up what
looked like a crumpled parody of a man. He recognized
it without surprise as the soaking remains of his
spacesuit, battered and with tattered shreds of outer
cover and insulation hanging in festoons.
A sharp, bearded face shot into focus
abruptly, waving a hypodermic needle. It spoke
English and observed passionately either to Johnny
or itself that: “Name of a Spanish cow!
What is it in men that they must abuse themselves
so? Now here is one who was both squeezed and
stretched alternately as well as hammered, dehydrated
and almost asphyxiated, is it not? This will
bear watching. It is alive but there will have
to be X-rays in profusion.”
It danced long sensitive fingers over
the welts and bruises and commented bluntly that it
was well the fishermen had returned his arms and legs
into their sockets before he fully regained consciousness.
It muttered and clucked to itself as it used the hypo
which Johnny could not feel. “Formidable!”
The pleasant drowsiness came down
just as he was identifying the queer smell as ozone,
brine and good fresh air.
After a while they moved him to a
small hospital in an upcoast town, where he slept
much, suffered not a little and, even waking, viewed
the world incuriously through drug-laden eyes.
Finally they allowed him to waken fully and the sharp-faced
doctor, together with half a dozen others from various
parts of the world decided that, after all, he seemed
to be surviving.
Johnny lay and itched intolerably
in the cast that covered him from nape to thigh and
listened to the bustling of the elderly nursing sister
who, good soul, having never been more than ten miles
from her town in her life, reminded him that it wanted
but two days to Christmas and opined that: “Such
a tragedy for M’sieu. To be so far from
home!”
Johnny smiled at the ceiling, not
daring to laugh yet, and sniffed at the salt sea air
with its undertone of rank seaweed and gloried in it;
even a chance whiff of that particular cigarette tobacco
that only a Frenchman can appreciate. He thought
that here, as across the water, night and day followed
each other in their proper order and the ground was
a solid thing beneath the feet.
Why he could never be closer.