For an instant, in mid-air, Joe was
incongruously aware of all the noises in the Shed.
The murky, girdered ceiling still three hundred feet
above him. The swelling, curving, glittering surface
of steel underneath. Then he struck. He
landed beside the lean man, with his left arm outstretched
to share his impetus with him. Alone, he would
have had momentum enough to carry himself up the slope
down which the man had begun to descend. But
now he shared it. The two of them toppled forward
together. Their arms were upon the flat surface,
while their bodies dangled. The feel of gravity
pulling them slantwise and downward was purest nightmare.
But then, as Joe’s innards crawled,
the same stocky man who had knocked the lean man back
was dragging frantically at both of them to pull them
to safety.
Then there were two men pulling.
The stocky man’s face was gray. His horror
was proof that he hadn’t intended murder.
The man who’d put down his welding torch pulled.
The man who’d been climbing the ladder put his
weight to the task of getting them back to usable footing.
They reached safety. Joe scrambled to his feet,
but he felt sick at the pit of his stomach. The
stocky man began to shake horribly. The lanky
one advanced furiously upon him.
“I didn’ mean to keel you, Haney!”
the dark one panted.
The lanky one snapped: “Okay.
You didn’t. But come on, now! We finish
this
He advanced toward the workman who
had so nearly caused his death. But the other
man dropped his arms to his sides.
“I don’ fight no more,”
he said thickly. “Not here. You keel
me is okay. I don’ fight.”
The lanky man Haney growled
at him.
“Tonight, then, in Bootstrap. Now get back
to work!”
The stocky man picked up his tools. He was trembling.
Haney turned to Joe and said ungraciously: “Much
obliged. What’s up?”
Joe still felt queasy. There
is rarely any high elation after one has risked his
life for somebody else. He’d nearly plunged
two hundred feet to the floor of the Shed with Haney.
But he swallowed.
“I’m looking for Chief Bender. You’re
Haney? Foreman?”
“Gang boss,” said Haney.
He looked at Joe and then at Sally who was holding
convulsively to the upright Joe had put her hand on.
Her eyes were closed. “Yeah,” said
Haney. “The Chief took off today. Some
kind of Injun stuff. Funeral, maybe. Want
me to tell him something? I’ll see him
when I go off shift.”
There was an obscure movement somewhere
on this part of the Platform. A tiny figure came
out of a crevice that would someday be an air lock.
Joe didn’t move his eyes toward it. He
said awkwardly: “Just tell him Joe Kenmore’s
in town and needs him. He’ll remember me,
I think. I’ll hunt him up tonight.”
“Okay,” said Haney.
Joe’s eyes went to the tiny
figure that had come out from behind the plating.
It was a midget in baggy, stained work garments like
the rest of the men up here. He wore a miniature
welding shield pushed back on his head. Joe could
guess his function, of course. There’d be
corners a normal-sized man couldn’t get into,
to buck a rivet or weld a joint. There’d
be places only a tiny man could properly inspect.
The midget regarded Joe without expression.
Joe turned to the hoist to go down
to the floor again. Haney waved his hand.
The midget lifted his, in grave salutation.
The hoist dropped down the shaft. Sally opened
her eyes.
“You saved that man’s
life, Joe,” she said unsteadily. “But
you scared me to death!”
Joe tried to ignore the remark, but
he still seemed to feel slanting metal under him and
a drop of two hundred feet below. It had been
a nightmarish sensation.
“I didn’t think,”
he said uncomfortably. “It was a crazy thing
to do. Lucky it worked out.”
Sally glanced at him. The hoist
still dropped swiftly. Levels of scaffolding
shot upward past them. If Joe had slipped down
that rolling curve of metal, he’d have dropped
past all these. It was not good to think about.
He swallowed again. Then the hoist checked in
its descent. It stopped. Joe somewhat absurdly
helped Sally off to solid ground.
“It looks to me,”
said Sally, “as if you’re bound to make
me see somebody killed. Joe, would you mind leading
a little bit less adventurous life for a while?
While I’m around?”
He managed to grin. But he still did not feel
right.
“Nothing I can do until I can
look at the plane,” he said, changing the subject,
“and I can’t find the Chief until tonight.
Could we sightsee a little?”
She nodded. They went out from
under the intricate framework that upheld the Platform.
They went, in fact, completely under that colossal
incomplete object. Sally indicated the sidewall.
“Let’s go look at the pushpots. They’re
fascinating!”
She led the way. The enormous
spaciousness of the Shed again became evident.
There was a catwalk part way up the inward curving
wall. Someone leaned on its railing and surveyed
the interior of the Shed. He would probably be
a security man. Maybe the fist fight up on the
Platform had been seen, or maybe not. The man
on the catwalk was hardly more than a speck, and it
occurred to Joe that there must be other watchers’
posts high up on the outer shell where men could search
the sunlit desert outside for signs of danger.
But he turned and looked yearningly
back at the monstrous thing under the mist of scaffolding.
For the first time he could make out its shape.
It was something like an egg, but a great deal more
like something he couldn’t put a name to.
Actually it was exactly like nothing in the world
but itself, and when it was out in space there would
be nothing left on Earth like it.
It would be in a fashion a world in
itself, independent of the Earth that made it.
There would be hydroponic tanks in which plants would
grow to purify its air and feed its crew. There
would be telescopes with which men would be able to
study the stars as they had never been able to do
from the bottom of Earth’s ocean of turbulent
air. But it would serve Earth.
There would be communicators.
They would pick up microwave messages and retransmit
them to destinations far around the curve of the planet,
or else store them and retransmit them to the other
side of the world an hour or two hours later.
It would store fuel with which men
could presently set out for the stars and
out to emptiness for nuclear experiments that must
not be made on Earth. And finally it would be
armed with squat, deadly atomic missiles that no nation
could possibly defy. And so this Space Platform
would keep peace on Earth.
But it could not make good will among men.
Sally walked on. They reached
the mysterious objects being manufactured in a row
around half the sidewall of the Shed. They were
of simple design and, by comparison, not unduly large.
The first objects were merely frameworks of metal
pipe, which men were welding together unbreakably.
They were no bigger than say half
of a six-room house. A little way on, these were
filled with intricate arrays of tanks and piping,
and still farther there was a truck and
hoist unloading a massive object into place right
now there were huge engines fitting precisely
into openings designed to hold them. Others were
being plated in with metallic skins.
At the very end of this assembly line
a crane was loading a finished object onto a flat-bed
trailer. As it swung in the air, Joe realized
what it was. It might be called a jet plane, but
it was not of any type ever before used. More
than anything else, it looked like a beetle. It
would not be really useful for anything but its function
at the end of Operation Stepladder. Then hundreds
of these ungainly objects would cluster upon the Platform’s
sides, like swarming bees. They would thrust
savagely up with their separate jet engines. They
would lift the Platform from the foundation on which
it had been built. Tugging, straining, panting,
they would get it out of the Shed. But their work
would not end there. Holding it aloft, they would
start it eastward, lifting effortfully. They
would carry it as far and as high and as fast as their
straining engines could work. Then there would
be one last surge of fierce thrusting with oversize
jato rockets, built separately into each pushpot,
all firing at once.
Finally the clumsy things would drop
off and come bumbling back home, while the Platform’s
own rockets flared out their mile-long flames and
it headed up for emptiness.
But the making of these pushpots and
all the other multitudinous activities of the Shed
would have no meaning if the contents of four crates
in the wreckage of a burned-out plane could not be
salvaged and put to use again.
Joe said restlessly: “I
want to see all this, Sally, and maybe anything else
I do is useless, but I’ve got to find out what
happened to the gyros I was bringing here!”
Sally said nothing. She turned,
and they moved across the long, long space of wood-block
flooring toward the doorway by which they had entered.
And now that he had seen the Space Platform, all of
Joe’s feeling of guilt and despondency came
back. It seemed unbearable. They went out
through the guarded door, Sally surrendered the pass,
and Joe was again checked carefully before he was
free to go.
Then Sally said: “You don’t
want me tagging around, do you?”
Joe said honestly: “It
isn’t exactly that, Sally, but if the stuff is
really smashed, I’d rather not have
anybody see me. Please don’t be angry,
but
Sally said quietly: “I
know. I’ll get somebody to drive you over.”
She vanished. She came back with
the uniformed man who’d driven Major Holt.
She put her hand momentarily on Joe’s arm.
“If it’s really bad, Joe,
tell me. You won’t let yourself cry, but
I’ll cry for you.” She searched his
eyes. “Really, Joe!”
He grinned feebly and went out to the car.
The feeling on the way to the airfield
was not a good one. It was twenty-odd miles from
the Shed, but Joe dreaded what he was going to see.
The black car burned up the road. It turned to
the right off the white highway, onto the curved short
cut and there was the field.
And there was the wreck of the transport
plane, still where it had crashed and burned.
There were still armed guards about it, but men were
working on the wreck, cutting it apart with torches.
Already some of it was dissected.
Joe went to the remains of the four crates.
The largest was bent askew by the
force of the crash or an explosion, Joe didn’t
know which. The smallest was a twisted mass of
charcoal. Joe gulped, and dug into them with
borrowed tools.
The pilot gyros of the Space Platform
would apply the torque that would make the main gyros
shift it to any desired position, or else hold it
absolutely still. They were to act, in a sense,
as a sort of steering engine on the take-off and keep
a useful function out in space. If a star photograph
was to be made, it was essential that the Platform
hold absolutely still while the exposure lasted.
If a guided missile was to be launched, it must be
started right, and the pilot gyros were needed.
To turn to receive an arriving rocket from Earth....
The pilot gyros were the steering
apparatus of the Space Platform. They had to
be more than adequate. They had to be perfect!
On the take-off alone, they were starkly necessary.
The Platform couldn’t hope to reach its orbit
without them.
Joe chipped away charred planks.
He pulled off flame-eaten timbers. He peeled
off carbonized wrappings but some did not
need to be peeled: they crumbled at a touch and
in twenty minutes he knew the whole story. The
rotor motors were ruined. The couplers pilot-to-main-gyro
connections had been heated red hot and
were no longer hardened steel; their dimensions had
changed and they would no longer fit. But these
were not disastrous items. They were serious,
but not tragic.
The tragedy was the gyros themselves.
On their absolute precision and utterly perfect balance
the whole working of the Platform would depend.
And the rotors were gashed in one place, and the shafts
were bent. Being bent and nicked, the precision
of the apparatus was destroyed. Its precision
lost, the whole device was useless. And it had
taken four months’ work merely to get it perfectly
balanced!
It had been the most accurate piece
of machine work ever done on Earth. It was balanced
to a microgram to a millionth of the combined
weight of three aspirin tablets. It would revolve
at 40,000 revolutions per minute. It had to balance
perfectly or it would vibrate intolerably. If
it vibrated at all it would shake itself to pieces,
or, failing that, send aging sound waves through all
the Platform’s substance. If it vibrated
by the least fraction of a ten-thousandth of an inch,
it would wear, and vibrate more strongly, and destroy
itself and possibly the Platform. It needed the
precision of an astronomical telescope’s lenses multiplied!
And it was bent. It was exactly as useless as
if it had never been made at all.
Joe felt as a man might feel if the
mirror of the greatest telescope on earth, in his
care, had been smashed. As if the most priceless
picture in the world, in his charge, had been burned.
But he felt worse. Whether it was his fault or
not and it wasn’t it was
destroyed.
A truck rolled up and was stopped
by a guard. There was talk, and the guard let
it through. A small crane lift came over from
the hangars. Its normal use was the lifting of
plane motors in and out of their nacelles.
Now it was to pick up the useless pieces of equipment
on which the best workmen and the best brains of the
Kenmore Precision Tool Company had worked unceasingly
for eight calendar months, and which now was junk.
Joe watched, numbed by disaster, while
the crane hook went down to position above the once-precious
objects. Men shored up the heavy things and ran
planks under them, and then deftly fitted rope slings
for them to be lifted by. It was late afternoon
by now. Long shadows were slanting as the crane
truck’s gears whined, and the slack took up,
and the first of the four charred objects lifted and
swung, spinning slowly, to the truck that had come
from the Shed.
Joe froze, watching. He watched
the second. The third did not spin. It merely
swayed. But the fourth.... The lines up to
the crane hook were twisted. As the largest of
the four crates lifted from its bed, it twisted the
lines toward straightness. It spun. It spun
more and more rapidly, and then more and more slowly,
and stopped, and began to spin back.
Then Joe caught his breath. It
seemed that he hadn’t breathed in minutes.
The big crate wasn’t balanced. It was spinning.
It wasn’t vibrating. It spun around its
own center of gravity, unerringly revealed by its
flexible suspension.
He watched until it was dropped into
the truck. Then he went stiffly over to the driver
of the car that had brought him.
“Everything’s all right,”
he said, feeling a queer astonishment at his own words.
“I’m going to ride back to the Shed with
the stuff I brought. It’s not hurt too
much. I’ll be able to fix it with a man
or two I can pick up out here. But I don’t
want anything else to happen to it!”
So he rode back out to the Shed on
the tailboard of the truck that carried the crates.
The sun set as he rode. He was smudged and disheveled.
The reek of charred wood and burnt insulation and scorched
wrappings was strong in his nostrils. But he felt
very much inclined to sing.
It occurred to Joe that he should
have sent Sally a message that she didn’t need
to cry as a substitute for him. He felt swell!
He knew how to do the job that would let the Space
Platform take off! He’d tell her, first
chance.
It was very good to be alive.