Bordman knew there was something wrong
when the throbbing, acutely uncomfortable vibration
of rocket blasts shook the ship. Rockets were
strictly emergency devices, these days, so when they
were used there was obviously an emergency.
He sat still. He had been reading,
in the passenger lounge of the Warlock a
very small lounge indeed but as a senior
Colonial Survey officer he was well-traveled enough
to know when things did not go right. He looked
up from the bookscreen, waiting. Nobody came to
explain the eccentricity of a spaceship using rockets.
It would have been immediate, on a regular liner,
but the Warlock was practically a tramp.
This trip it carried just two passengers. Passenger
service was not yet authorized to the planet ahead,
and would not be until Bordman had made the report
he was on his way to compile. At the moment, though,
the rockets blasted, and stopped, and blasted again.
There was something definitely wrong.
The Warlock’s other passenger
came out of her cabin. She looked surprised.
She was Aletha Redfeather, an unusually lovely Amerind.
It was extraordinary that a girl could be so self-sufficient
on a tedious space-voyage, and Bordman approved of
her. She was making the journey to Xosa II as
a representative of the Amerind Historical Society,
but she’d brought her own bookreels and some
elaborate fancywork which woman-fashion she
used to occupy her hands. She hadn’t been
at all a nuisance. Now she tilted her head on
one side as she looked inquiringly at Bordman.
“I’m wondering, too,”
he told her, just as an especially sustained and violent
shuddering of rocket-impulsion made his chair legs
thutter on the floor.
There was a long period of stillness.
Then another violent but much shorter blast.
A shorter one still. Presently there was a half-second
blast which must have been from a single rocket tube
because of the mild shaking it produced. After
that there was nothing at all.
Bordman frowned to himself. He’d
been anticipating groundfall within a matter of hours,
certainly. He’d just gone through his specbook
carefully and re-familiarized himself with the work
he was to survey on Xosa II. It was a perfectly
commonplace minerals-planet development, and he’d
expected to clear it Fe fully established and
probably TP and NQ ratings as well, indicating that
tourists were permitted and no quarantine was necessary.
Considering the aridity of the planet, no bacteriological
dangers could be expected to exist, and if tourists
wanted to view its monstrous deserts and infernolike
wind sculptures why they should be welcome.
But the ship had used rocket drive
in the planet’s near vicinity. Emergency.
Which was ridiculous. This was a perfectly routine
sort of voyage. Its purpose was the delivery
of heavy equipment specifically a smelter and
a senior Colonial Survey officer to report the completion
of primary development.
Aletha waited, as if for more rocket
blasts. Presently she smiled at some thought
that had occurred to her.
“If this were an adventure tape,”
she said humorously, “the loudspeaker would
now announce that the ship had established itself in
an orbit around the strange, uncharted planet first
sighted three days ago, and that volunteers were wanted
for a boat landing.”
Bordman demanded impatiently:
“Do you bother with adventure
tapes? They’re nonsense! A pure waste
of time!”
Aletha smiled again.
“My ancestors,” she told
him, “used to hold tribal dances and make medicine
and boast about how many scalps they’d taken
and how they did it. It was satisfying and
educational for the young. Adolescents became
familiar with the idea of what we nowadays call adventure.
They were partly ready for it when it came. I
suspect your ancestors used to tell each other stories
about hunting mammoths and such. So I think it
would be fun to hear that we were in orbit and that
a boat landing was in order.”
Bordman grunted. There were no
longer adventures. The universe was settled;
civilized. Of course there were still frontier
planets Xosa II was one but
pioneers had only hardships. Not adventures.
The ship-phone speaker clicked. It said curtly:
“Notice. We have arrived
at Xosa II and have established an orbit about it.
A landing will be made by boat.”
Bordman’s mouth dropped open.
“What the devil’s this?” he demanded.
“Adventure, maybe,” said
Aletha. Her eyes crinkled very pleasantly when
she smiled. She wore the modern Amerind dress a
sign of pride in the ancestry which now implied such
diverse occupations as interstellar steel construction
and animal husbandry and llano-planet colonization.
“If it were adventure, as the only girl on this
ship I’d have to be in the landing party, lest
the tedium of orbital waiting make the” her
smile widened to a grin “the pent-up
restlessness of trouble-makers in the crew ”
The ship-phone clicked again.
“Mr. Bordman. Miss Redfeather.
According to advices from the ground, the ship may
have to stay in orbit for a considerable time.
You will accordingly be landed by boat. Will
you make yourselves ready, please, and report to the
boat-blister?” The voice paused and added,
“Hand luggage only, please.”
Aletha’s eyes brightened.
Bordman felt the shocked incredulity of a man accustomed
to routine when routine is impossibly broken.
Of course survey ships made boat landings from orbit,
and colony ships let down robot hulls by rocket when
there was as yet no landing grid for the handling
of a ship. But never before in his experience
had an ordinary freighter, on a routine voyage to
a colony ready for its final degree-of-completion
survey, ever landed anybody by boat.
“This is ridiculous!” said Bordman, fuming.
“Maybe it’s adventure,” said Aletha.
“I’ll pack.”
She disappeared into her cabin.
Bordman hesitated. Then he went into his own.
The colony on Xosa II had been established two years
ago. Minimum comfort conditions had been realized
within six months. A temporary landing grid for
light supply ships was up within a year. It had
permitted stock-piling, and it had been taken down
to be rebuilt as a permanent grid with every possible
contingency provided for. The eight months since
the last ship landing was more than enough for the
building of the gigantic, spidery, half-mile-high
structure which would handle this planet’s interstellar
commerce. There was no excuse for an emergency!
A boat landing was nonsensical!
But he surveyed the contents of his
cabin. Most of the cargo of the Warlock
was smelter equipment which was to complete the outfitting
of the colony. It was to be unloaded first.
By the time the ship’s holds were wholly empty,
the smelter would be operating. The ship would
wait for a full cargo of pig metal. Bordman had
expected to live in this cabin while he worked on
the survey he’d come to make, and to leave again
with the ship.
Now he was to go aground by boat.
He fretted. The only emergency equipment he could
possibly need was a heat-suit. He doubted the
urgency of that. But he packed some clothing
for indoors, and then defiantly included his specbook
and the volumes of definitive data to which specifications
for structures and colonial establishments always
referred. He’d get to work on his report
immediately he landed.
He went out of the passenger’s
lounge to the boat-blister. An engineer’s
legs projected from the boat port. The engineer
withdrew, with a strip of tape from the boat’s
computer. He compared it dourly with a similar
strip from the ship’s figurebox. Bordman
consciously acted according to the best traditions
of passengers.
“What’s the trouble?” he asked.
“We can’t land,” said the engineer
shortly.
He went away according
to the tradition by which ships’ crews are always
scornful of passengers.
Bordman scowled. Then Aletha
came, carrying a not-too-heavy bag. Bordman put
it in the boat, disapproving of the crampedness of
the craft. But this wasn’t a lifeboat.
It was a landing boat. A lifeboat had Lawlor
drive and could travel light-years, but in the place
of rockets and rocket fuel it had air-purifiers and
water-recovery units and food-stores. It couldn’t
land without a landing grid aground, but it could
get to a civilized planet. This landing boat could
land without a grid, but its air wouldn’t last
long.
“Whatever’s the matter,”
said Bordman darkly, “it’s incompetence
somewhere!”
But he couldn’t figure it out.
This was a cargo ship. Cargo ships neither took
off nor landed under their own power. It was too
costly of fuel they would have to carry. So landing
grids used local power which did not have
to be lifted to heave ships out into space,
and again used local power to draw them to ground
again. Therefore ships carried fuel only for
actual space-flight, which was economy. Yet landing
grids had no moving parts, and while they did have
to be monstrous structures they actually drew power
from planetary ionosphères. So with no moving
parts to break down and no possibility of the failure
of a power source landing grids couldn’t
fail! So there couldn’t be an emergency
to make a ship ride orbit around a planet which had
a landing grid!
The engineer came back. He carried
a mail sack full of letter-reels. He waved his
hand. Aletha crawled into the landing-boat port.
Bordman followed. Four people, with a little
crowding, could have gotten into the little ship.
Three pretty well filled it. The engineer followed
them and sealed the port.
“Sealed off,” he said into the microphone
before him.
The exterior-pressure needle moved
halfway across the dial. The interior-pressure
needle stayed steady.
“All tight,” said the engineer.
The exterior-pressure needle flicked
to zero. There were clanking sounds. The
long halves of the boat-blister stirred and opened,
and abruptly the landing boat was in an elongated
cup in the hull-plating, and above them there were
many, many stars. The enormous disk of a nearby
planet floated into view around the hull. It was
monstrous and blindingly bright. It was of a
tawny color, with great, irregular areas of yellow
and patches of bluishness. But most of it was
the color of sand. And all its colors varied
in shade some places were lighter and some
darker and over at one edge there was blinding
whiteness which could not be anything but an ice cap.
But Bordman knew that there was no ocean or sea or
lake on all this whole planet, and the ice cap was
more nearly hoarfrost than such mile-deep glaciation
as would be found at the poles of a maximum-comfort
world.
“Strap in,” said the engineer
over his shoulder. “No-gravity coming, and
then rocket-push. Settle your heads.”
Bordman irritably strapped himself
in. He saw Aletha busy at the same task, her
eyes shining. Without warning, there came a sensation
of acute discomfort. It was the landing boat
detaching itself from the ship and the diminishment
of the ship’s closely-confined artificial-gravity
field. That field suddenly dropped to nothingness,
and Bordman had the momentary sickish dizziness that
flicked-off gravity always produces. At the same
time his heart pounded unbearably in the instinctive,
racial-memory reaction to the feel of falling.
Then roarings. He was thrust
savagely back against his seat. His tongue tried
to slide back into his throat. There was an enormous
oppression on his chest. He found himself thinking
panicky profanity.
Simultaneously the vision ports went
black, because they were out of the shadow of the
ship. The landing boat turned but there
was no sensation of centrifugal force and
they were in a vast obscurity with merely a dim phantom
of the planetary surface to be seen. But behind
them a blue-white sun shone terribly. Its light
was warm hot even though it
came through the polarized shielding ports.
“Did ... did you say,”
panted Aletha happily breathless because
of the acceleration “that there weren’t
any adventures?”
Bordman did not answer. But he
did not count discomfort as an adventure.
The engineer did not look out the
ports at all. He watched the screen before him.
There was a vertical line across the side of the lighted
disk. A blip moved downward across it, showing
their height in thousands of miles. After a long
time the blip reached the bottom, and the vertical
line became double and another blip began to descend.
It measured height in hundreds of miles. A bright
spot a square appeared at one
side of the screen. A voice muttered metallically,
and suddenly seemed to shout, and then muttered again.
Bordman looked out one of the black ports and saw
the planet as if through smoked glass. It was
a ghostly reddish thing which filled half the cosmos.
It had mottlings. Its edge was curved. That
would be the horizon.
The engineer moved controls and the
white square moved. It went across the screen.
He moved more controls. It came back to the center.
The height-in-hundreds blip was at the bottom, now,
and the vertical line tripled and a tens-of-miles-height
blip crawled downward.
There were sudden, monstrous plungings
of the landing boat. It had hit the outermost
fringes of atmosphere. The engineer said words
it was not appropriate for Aletha to hear. The
plungings became more violent. Bordman held on to
keep from being shaken to pieces despite the straps and
stared at the murky surface of the planet. It
seemed to be fleeing from them and they to be trying
to overtake it. Gradually, very gradually, its
flight appeared to slow. They were down to twenty
miles, then.
Quite abruptly the landing boat steadied.
The square spot bobbed about in the center of the
astrogation screen. The engineer worked controls
to steady it.
The ports cleared a little. Bordman
could see the ground below more distinctly. There
were patches of every tint that mineral coloring could
produce. There were vast stretches of tawny sand.
A little while more, and he could see the shadows
of mountains. He made out mountain flanks which
should have had valleys between them and other mountain
flanks beyond, but they had tawny flatnesses between,
instead. These, he knew, would be the sand plateaus
which had been observed on this planet and which had
only a still-disputed explanation. But he could
see areas of glistening yellow and dirty white, and
splashes of pink and streaks of ultramarine and gray
and violet, and the incredible red of iron oxide covering
square miles too much to be believed.
The landing-boat’s rockets cut
off. It coasted. Presently the horizon tilted
and all the dazzling ground below turned sedately beneath
them. There came staccato instructions from a
voice-speaker, which the engineer obeyed. The
landing boat swung low below the tips of
giant mauve mountains with a sand plateau beyond them and
its nose went up. It stalled.
Then the rockets roared again and
now, with air about them and after a momentary pause,
they were horribly loud and the boat settled
down and down upon its own tail of fire.
There was a completely blinding mass
of dust and rocket fumes which cut off all sight of
everything else. Then there was a crunching crash,
and the engineer swore peevishly to himself.
He cut the rockets again. Finally.
Bordman found himself staring straight
up, still strapped in his chair. The boat had
settled on its own tail fins, and his feet were higher
than his head, and he felt ridiculous. He saw
the engineer at work unstrapping himself. He
duplicated the action, but it was absurdly difficult
to get out of the chair.
Aletha managed more gracefully. She didn’t
need help.
“Wait,” said the engineer ungraciously,
“till somebody comes.”
So they waited, using what had been chair backs for
seats.
The engineer moved a control and the
windows cleared further. They saw the surface
of Xosa II. There was no living thing in sight.
The ground itself was pebbles and small rocks and
minor boulders all apparently tumbled from
the starkly magnificent mountains to one side.
There were monstrous, many-colored cliffs and mesas,
every one eaten at in the unmistakable fashion of
wind-erosion. Through a notch in the mountain
wall before them a strange, fan-shaped, frozen formation
appeared. If such a thing had been credible,
Bordman would have said that it was a flow of sand
simulating a waterfall. And everywhere there was
blinding brightness and the look and feel of blistering
sunshine. But there was not one single leaf or
twig or blade of grass. This was pure desert.
This was Xosa II.
Aletha regarded it with bright eyes.
“Beautiful!” she said happily. “Isn’t
it?”
“Personally,” said Bordman,
“I never saw a place that looked less homelike
or attractive.”
Aletha laughed.
“My eyes see it differently.”
Which was true. It was accepted,
nowadays, that humankind might be one species but
was many races, and each saw the cosmos in its own
fashion. On Kalmet III there was a dense, predominantly
Asiatic population which terraced its mountainsides
for agriculture and deftly mingled modern techniques
with social customs not to be found on say Demeter
I, where there were many red-tiled stucco towns and
very many olive groves. In the llano planets
of the Equis cluster, Amerinds Aletha’s
kin zestfully rode over plains dotted with
the descendants of buffalo and antelope and cattle
brought from ancient Earth. On the oases of Rustam
IV there were date palms and riding camels and much
argument about what should be substituted for the
direction of Mecca at the times for prayer, while
wheat fields spanned provinces on Canna I and highly
civilized emigrants from the continent of Africa on
Earth stored jungle gums and lustrous gems in the
warehouses of their spaceport city of Timbuk.
So it was natural for Aletha to look
at this wind-carved wilderness otherwise than as Bordman
did. Her racial kindred were the pioneers of
the stars, these days. Their heritage made them
less than appreciative of urban life. Their inborn
indifference to heights made them the steel-construction
men of the cosmos, and more than two-thirds of the
landing grids in the whole galaxy had their coup-feather
symbols on the key posts. But the planet government
on Algonka V was housed in a three-thousand-foot white
stone tepee, and the best horses known to men were
raised by ranchers with bronze skins and high cheekbones
on the llano planet Chagan.
Now, here, in the Warlock’s
landing boat, the engineer snorted. A vehicle
came around a cliff wall, clanking its way on those
eccentric caterwheels that new-founded colonies find
so useful. The vehicle glittered. It crawled
over tumbled boulders, and flowed over fallen scree.
It came briskly toward them. The engineer snorted
again.
“That’s my cousin Ralph!”
said Aletha in pleased surprise.
Bordman blinked and looked again.
He did not quite believe his eyes. But they told
the truth. The figure controlling the ground car
was Indian Amerind wearing a
breechcloth and thick-soled sandals and three streamlined
feathers in a band about his head. Moreover, he
did not ride in a seat. He sat astride a semi-cylindrical
part of the ground car, over which a gaily-colored
blanket had been thrown.
The ship’s engineer rumbled
disgustedly. But then Bordman saw how sane this
method of riding was here. The ground
vehicle lurched and swayed and rolled and pitched
and tossed as it came over the uneven ground.
To sit in anything like a chair would have been foolish.
A back rest would throw one forward in a frontward
lurch, and give no support in case of a backward one.
A sidewise tilt would tend to throw one out. Riding
a ground car as if in a saddle was sense!
But Bordman was not so sure about
the costume. The engineer opened the port and
spoke hostilely out of it:
“D’you know there’s a lady in this
thing?”
The young Indian grinned. He
waved his hand to Aletha, who pressed her nose against
a viewport. And just then Bordman did understand
the costume or lack of it. Air came in the open
exit port. It was hot and desiccated. It
was furnace-like!
“How, ’Letha,” called
the rider on the caterwheel steed. “Either
dress for the climate or put on a heat-suit before
you come out of there!”
Aletha chuckled. Bordman heard
a stirring behind him. Then Aletha climbed to
the exit port and swung out. Bordman heard a dour
muttering from the engineer. Then he saw her
greeting her cousin. She had slipped out of the
conventionalized Amerind outfit to which Bordman was
accustomed. Now she was clad as Anglo-Saxon girls
dressed for beaches on the cool-temperature planets.
For a moment Bordman thought of sunstroke,
with his own eyes dazzled by the still-partly-filtered
sunlight. But Aletha’s Amerind coloring
was perfectly suited to sunshine even of this intensity.
Wind blowing upon her body would cool her skin.
Her thick, straight black hair was at least as good
protection against sunstroke as a heat-helmet.
She might feel hot, but she would be perfectly safe.
She wouldn’t even sunburn. But he, Bordman
He grimly stripped to underwear and
put on the heat-suit from his bag. He filled
its canteens from the boat’s water tank.
He turned on the tiny, battery-powered motors.
The suit ballooned out. It was intended for short
periods of intolerable heat. The motors kept it
inflated away from his skin and
cooled its interior by the evaporation of sweat plus
water from its canteen tanks. It was a miniature
air-conditioning system for one man, and it should
enable him to endure temperatures otherwise lethal
to someone with his skin and coloring. But it
would use a lot of water.
He climbed to the exit port and went
clumsily down the exterior ladder to the tail fin.
He adjusted his goggles. He went over to the chattering
young Indians, young man and girl. He held out
his gloved hand.
“I’m Bordman,” he
said painfully. “Here to make a degree-of-completion
survey. What’s wrong that we had to land
by boat?”
Aletha’s cousin shook hands cordially.
“I’m Ralph Redfeather,”
he said, introducing himself. “Project engineer.
About everything’s wrong. Our landing grid’s
gone. We couldn’t contact your ship in
time to warn it off. It was in our gravity field
before it answered, and its Lawlor drive couldn’t
take it away not working because of the
field. Our power, of course, went with the landing
grid. The ship you came in can’t get back,
and we can’t send a distress message anywhere,
and our best estimate is that the colony will be wiped
out thirst and starvation in
six months. I’m sorry you and Aletha have
to be included.”
Then he turned to Aletha and said amiably:
“How’s Mike Thundercloud
and Sally Whitehorse and the gang in general, ’Letha?”
The Warlock rolled on in her
newly-established orbit about Xosa II. The landing
boat was aground, having removed the two passengers.
It would come back. Nobody on the ship wanted
to stay aground, because they knew the conditions
and the situation below unbearable heat
and the complete absence of hope. But nobody
had anything to do! The ship had been maintained
in standard operating condition during its two-months’
voyage from Trent to here. No repairs or overhaulings
were needed. There was no maintenance-work to
speak of. There would be only stand-by watches
until something happened. There would be nothing
to do on those watches. There would be off-watch
time for twenty-one out of every twenty-four hours,
and no purposeful activity to fill even half an hour
of it. In a matter of probably years,
the Warlock should receive aid. She might
be towed out of her orbit to space in which the Lawlor
drive could function, or the crew might simply be taken
off. But meanwhile, those on board were as completely
frustrated as the colony. They could not do anything
at all to help themselves.
In one fashion the crewmen were worse
off than the colonists. The colonists had at
least the colorful prospect of death before them.
They could prepare for it in their several ways.
But the members of the Warlock’s crew
had nothing ahead but tedium.
The skipper faced the future with extreme, grim distaste.
The ride to the colony was torment.
Aletha rode behind her cousin on the saddle-blanket,
and apparently suffered little if at all. But
Bordman could only ride in the ground-car’s
cargo space, along with the sack of mail from the
ship. The ground was unbelievably rough and the
jolting intolerable. The heat was literally murderous.
In the metal cargo space, the temperature reached
a hundred and sixty degrees in the sunshine and
given enough time, food will cook in no more heat than
that. Of course a man has been known to enter
an oven and stay there while a roast was cooked, and
to come out alive. But the oven wasn’t throwing
him violently about or bringing sun-heated blue-white-sun
heated metal to press his heat-suit against
him.
The suit did make survival possible,
but that was all. The contents of its canteens
gave out just before arrival, and for a short time
Bordman had only sweat for his suit to work with.
It kept him alive by forced ventilation, but he arrived
in a state of collapse. He drank the iced salt
water they gave him and went to bed. He’d
get back his strength with a proper sodium level in
his blood. But he slept for twelve hours straight.
When he got up, he was physically
normal again, but abysmally ashamed. It did no
good to remind himself that Xosa II was rated minimum-comfort
class D a blue-white sun and a mean temperature
of one hundred and ten degrees. Africans could
take such a climate with night-relief quarters.
Amerinds could do steel construction work in the open,
protected only by insulated shoes and gloves.
But Bordman could not venture out-of-doors except
in a heat-suit. He couldn’t stay long then.
It was not a weakness. It was a matter of genetics.
But he was ashamed.
Aletha nodded to him when he found
the Project Engineer’s office. It occupied
one of the hulls in which colony-establishment materials
had been lowered by rocket power. There were
forty of the hulls, and they had been emptied and
arranged for inter-communication in three separate
communities, so that an individual could change his
quarters and ordinary associates from time to time
and colony fever frantic irritation with
one’s companions was minimized.
Aletha sat at a desk, busily making
notes from a loose leaf volume before her. The
wall behind the desk was fairly lined with similar
volumes.
“I made a spectacle of myself!” said Bordman,
bitterly.
“Not at all!” Aletha assured
him. “It could happen to anybody. I
wouldn’t do too well on Timbuk.”
There was no answer to that.
Timbuk was essentially a jungle planet, barely emerging
from the carboniferous stage. Its colonists thrived
because their ancestors had lived on the shores of
the Gulf of Guinea, on Earth. But Anglos
did not find its climate healthful, nor would many
other races. Amerinds died there quicker than
most.
“Ralph’s on the way here
now,” added Aletha. “He and Dr. Chuka
were out picking a place to leave the records.
The sand dunes here are terrible, you know. When
an explorer-ship does come to find out what’s
happened to us, these buildings could be covered up
completely. Any place could be. It isn’t
easy to pick a record-cache that’s quite sure
to be found.”
“When,” said Bordman skeptically,
“there’s nobody left alive to point it
out. Is that it?”
“That’s it,” agreed
Aletha. “It’s pretty bad all around.
I didn’t plan to die just yet.”
Her voice was perfectly normal.
Bordman snorted. As a senior Colonial Survey
officer, he’d been around. But he’d
never yet known a human colony to be extinguished
when it was properly equipped and after a proper pre-settlement
survey. He’d seen panic, but never real
cause for a matter-of-fact acceptance of doom.
There was a clanking noise outside
the hulk which was the Project Engineer’s headquarters.
Bordman couldn’t see clearly through the filtered
ports. He reached over and opened a door.
The brightness outside struck his eyes like a blow.
He blinked them shut instantly and turned away.
But he’d seen a glistening, caterwheel ground
car stopping not far from the doorway.
He stood wiping tears from his light-dazzled
eyes as footsteps sounded outside. Aletha’s
cousin came in, followed by a huge man with remarkably
dark skin. The dark man wore eyeglasses with a
curiously thick, corklike nosepiece to insulate the
necessary metal of the frame from his skin. It
would blister if it touched bare flesh.
“This is Dr. Chuka,” said
Redfeather pleasantly, “Mr. Bordman. Dr.
Chuka’s the director of mining and mineralogy
here.”
Bordman shook hands with the ebony-skinned
man. He grinned, showing startlingly white teeth.
Then he began to shiver.
“It’s like a freeze-box
in here,” he said in a deep voice. “I’ll
get a robe and be with you.”
He vanished through a doorway, his
teeth chattering audibly. Aletha’s cousin
took half a dozen deliberate deep breaths and grimaced.
“I could shiver myself,”
he admitted “but Chuka’s really acclimated
to Xosa. He was raised on Timbuk.”
Bordman said curtly:
“I’m sorry I collapsed
on landing. It won’t happen again.
I came here to do a degree-of-completion survey that
should open the colony to normal commerce, let the
colonists’ families move in, tourists, and so
on. But I was landed by boat instead of normally,
and I am told the colony is doomed. I would like
an official statement of the degree of completion
of the colony’s facilities and an explanation
of the unusual points I have just mentioned.”
The Indian blinked at him. Then
he smiled faintly. The dark man came back, zipping
up an indoor warmth-garment. Redfeather dryly
brought him up to date by repeating what Bordman had
just said. Chuka grinned and sprawled comfortably
in a chair.
“I’d say,” he remarked
humorously, in that astonishingly deep-toned voice
of his, “sand got in our hair. And our colony.
And the landing grid. There’s a lot of
sand on Xosa. Wouldn’t you say that was
the trouble?”
The Indian said with elaborate gravity:
“Of course wind had something to do with it.”
Bordman fumed.
“I think you know,” he
said fretfully, “that as a senior Colonial Survey
officer, I have authority to give any orders needed
for my work. I give one now. I want to see
the landing grid if it is still standing.
I take it that it didn’t fall down?”
Redfeather flushed beneath the bronze
pigment of his skin. It would be hard to offend
a steelman more than to suggest that his work did not
stand up.
“I assure you,” he said
politely, “that it did not fall down.”
“Your estimate of its degree of completion?”
“Eighty per cent,” said Redfeather formally.
“You’ve stopped work on it?”
“Work on it has been stopped,” agreed
the Indian.
“Even though the colony can
receive no more supplies until it is completed?”
“Just so,” said Redfeather without expression.
“Then I issue a formal order
that I be taken to the landing-grid site immediately,”
said Bordman angrily. “I want to see what
sort of incompetence is responsible! Will you
arrange it at once?”
Redfeather said in a completely emotionless voice:
“You want to see the site of the landing grid.
Very good. Immediately.”
He turned and walked out into the
incredible, blinding sunshine. Bordman blinked
at the momentary blast of light, and then began to
pace up and down the office. He fumed. He
was still ashamed of his collapse from the heat during
the travel from the landed rocket-boat to the colony.
Therefore he was touchy and irritable. But the
order he had given was strictly justifiable.
He heard a small noise. He whirled.
Dr. Chuka, huge and black and spectacled, rocked back
and forth in his seat, suppressing laughter.
“Now, what the devil does that
mean?” demanded Bordman suspiciously. “It
certainly isn’t ridiculous to ask to see the
structure on which the life of the colony finally
depends!”
“Not ridiculous,” said Dr. Chuka.
“It’s hilarious!”
He boomed laughter in the office with
the rounded ceiling of a remade robot hull. Aletha
smiled with him, though her eyes were grave.
“You’d better put on a heat-suit,”
she said to Bordman.
He fumed again, tempted to defy all
common sense because its dictates were not the same
for everybody. But he marched away, back to the
cubbyhole in which he had awakened. Angrily, he
donned the heat-suit that had not protected him adequately
before, but had certainly saved his life. He
filled the canteens topping full he suspected
he hadn’t done so the last time. He went
back to the Project Engineer’s office with a
feeling of being burdened and absurd.
Out a filter-window, he saw that men
with skins as dark as Dr. Chuka’s were at work
on a ground car. They were equipping it with a
sunshade and curious shields like wings. Somebody
pushed a sort of caterwheel handtruck toward it.
They put big, heavy tanks into its cargo space.
Dr. Chuka had disappeared, but Aletha was back at
work making notes from the loose-leaf volume on the
desk.
“May I ask,” asked Bordman
with some irony, “what your work happens to
be just now?”
She looked up.
“I thought you knew,”
she said in surprise. “I’m here for
the Amerind Historical Society. I can certify
coups. I’m taking coup-records for the
Society. They’ll go in the record-cache
Ralph and Dr. Chuka are arranging, so no matter what
happens to the colony, the record of the coups won’t
be lost.”
“Coups?” demanded Bordman.
He knew that Amerinds painted feathers on the key-posts
of steel structures they’d built, and he knew
that the posting of such “coup-marks”
was a cherished privilege and undoubtedly a survival
or revival of some American Indian tradition back on
Earth. But he did not know what they meant.
“Coups,” repeated Aletha
matter-of-factly. “Ralph wears three eagle-feathers.
You saw them. He has three coups. Pinions,
too! He built the landing grids on Norlath and Oh,
you don’t know!”
“I don’t,” admitted
Bordman, his temper not of the best because of what
seemed unnecessary condescensions on Xosa II.
Aletha looked surprised.
“In the old days,” she
explained, “back on Earth, if a man scalped an
enemy, he counted coup. The first to strike an
enemy in a battle counted coup, too a lesser
one. Nowadays a man counts coups for different
things, but Ralph’s three eagle-feathers mean
he’s entitled to as much respect as a warrior
in the old days who, three separate times, had killed
and scalped an enemy warrior in the middle of his own
camp. And he is, too!”
Bordman grunted.
“Barbarous, I’d say!”
“If you like,” said Aletha.
“But it’s something to be proud of and
one doesn’t count coup for making a lot of money!”
Then she paused and said curtly: “The word
‘snobbish’ fits it better than ‘barbarous.’
We are snobs! But when the head of a clan stands
up in Council in the Big Tepee on Algonka, representing
his clan, and men have to carry the ends of the feather
headdress with all the coups the members of his clan
have earned why one is proud to belong
to that clan!” She added defiantly, “Even
watching it on a vision-screen!”
Dr. Chuka opened the outer door.
Blinding light poured in. He did not enter and
his body glistened with sweat.
“Ready for you, Mr. Bordman!”
Bordman adjusted his goggles and turned
on the motors of his heat-suit. He went out the
door.
The heat and light outside were oppressive.
He darkened the goggles again and made his way heavily
to the waiting, now-shaded ground car. He noted
that there were other changes beside the sunshade.
The cover-deck of the cargo space was gone, and there
were cylindrical riding seats like saddles in the
back. The odd lower shields reached out sidewise
from the body, barely above the caterwheels. He
could not make out their purpose and irritably failed
to ask.
“All ready,” said Redfeather
coldly. “Dr. Chuka’s coming with us.
If you’ll get in here, please ”
Bordman climbed awkwardly into the
boxlike back of the car. He bestrode one of the
cylindrical arrangements. With a saddle on it,
it would undoubtedly have been a comfortable way to
cover impossibly bad terrain in a mechanical carrier.
He waited. About him there were the squatty hulls
of the space-barges which had been towed here by a
colony ship, each one once equipped with rockets for
landing. Emptied of their cargoes, they had been
huddled together into the three separate, adjoining
communities. There were separate living quarters
and mess halls and recreation rooms for each, and
any colonist lived in the community of his choice
and shifted at pleasure, or visited, or remained solitary.
For mental health a man has to be assured of his free
will, and over-regimentation is deadly in any society.
With men psychologically suited to colonize, it is
fatal.
Above but at a distance,
now there was a monstrous scarp of mountains,
colored in glaring and unnatural tints. Immediately
about there was raw rock. But it was peculiarly
smooth, as if sand grains had rubbed over it for uncountable
aeons and carefully worn away every trace of unevenness.
Half a mile to the left, dunes began and went away
to the horizon. The nearer ones were small, but
they gained in size with distance from the mountains which
evidently affected the surface-winds hereabouts and
the edge of seeing was visibly not a straight line.
The dunes yonder must be gigantic. But of course
on a world the size of ancient Earth, and which was
waterless save for snow-patches at its poles, the size
to which sand dunes could grow had no limit.
The surface of Xosa II was a sea of sand, on which
islands and small continents of wind-swept rock were
merely minor features.
Dr. Chuka adjusted a small metal object
in his hand. It had a tube dangling from it.
He climbed into the cargo space and fastened it to
one of the two tanks previously loaded.
“For you,” he told Bordman.
“Those tanks are full of compressed air at rather
high pressure a couple of thousand pounds.
Here’s a reduction-valve with an adiabatic expansion
feature, to supply extra air to your heat-suit.
It will be pretty cold, expanding from so high a pressure.
Bring down the temperature a little more.”
Bordman again felt humiliated.
Chuka and Redfeather, because of their races, were
able to move about nine-tenths naked in the open air
on this planet, and they thrived. But he needed
a special refrigerated costume to endure the heat.
More, they provided him with sunshades and refrigerated
air that they did not need for themselves. They
were thoughtful of him. He was as much out of
his element, where they fitted perfectly, as he would
have been making a degree-of-completion survey on
an underwater project. He had to wear what was
practically a diving suit and use a special air supply
to survive!
He choked down the irritation his
own inadequacy produced.
“I suppose we can go now,” he said as
coldly as he could.
Aletha’s cousin mounted the
control-saddle though it was no more than
a blanket and Dr. Chuka mounted beside
Bordman. The ground car got under way. It
headed for the mountains.
The smoothness of the rock was deceptive.
The caterwheel car lurched and bumped and swayed and
rocked. It rolled and dipped and wallowed.
Nobody could have remained in a normal seat on such
terrain, but Bordman felt hopelessly undignified riding
what amounted to a hobbyhorse. Under the sunshade
it was infuriatingly like a horse on a carousel.
That there were three of them together made it look
even more foolish. He stared about him, trying
to take his mind from his own absurdity. His goggles
made the light endurable, but he felt ashamed.
“Those side-fins,” said
Chuka’s deep voice pleasantly, “the bottom
ones, make things better for you. The shade overhead
cuts off direct sunlight, and they cut off the reflected
glare. It would blister your skin even if the
sun never touched you directly.”
Bordman did not answer. The caterwheel
car went on. It came to a patch of sand tawny
sand, heavily mineralized. There was a dune here.
Not a big one for Xosa II. It was no more than
a hundred feet high. But they went up its leeward,
steeply slanting side. All the planet seemed to
tilt insanely as the caterwheels spun. They reached
the dune’s crest, where it tended to curl over
and break like a water-comber, and here the wheels
struggled with sand precariously ready to fall, and
Bordman had a sudden perception of the sands of Xosa
II as the oceans that they really were. The dunes
were waves which moved with infinite slowness, but
the irresistible force of storm-seas. Nothing
could resist them. Nothing!
They traveled over similar dunes for
two miles. Then they began to climb the approaches
to the mountains. And Bordman saw for the second
time the first had been through the ports
of the landing-boat where there was a notch
in the mountain wall and sand had flowed out of it
like a waterfall, making a beautifully symmetrical
cone-shaped heap against the lower cliffs. There
were many such falls. There was one place where
there was a sand-cascade. Sand had poured over
a series of rocky steps, piling up on each in turn
to its very edge, and then spilling again to the next.
They went up a crazily slanting spur
of stone, whose sides were too steep for sand to lodge
on, and whose narrow crest had a bare thin coating
of powder.
The landscape looked like a nightmare.
As the car went on, wabbling and lurching and dipping
on its way, the heights on either side made Bordman
tend to dizziness. The coloring was impossible.
The aridness, the desiccation, the lifelessness of
everything about was somehow shocking. Bordman
found himself straining his eyes for the merest, scrubbiest
of bushes and for however stunted and isolated a wisp
of grass.
The journey went on for an hour.
Then there came a straining climb up a now-windswept
ridge of eroded rock, and the attainment of its highest
point. The ground car went onward for a hundred
yards and stopped.
They had reached the top of the mountain
range, and there was doubtlessly another range beyond.
But they could not see it. Here, at the place
to which they had climbed so effortfully, there were
no more rocks. There was no valley. There
was no descending slope. There was sand.
This was one of the sand plateaus which were a unique
feature of Xosa II. And Bordman knew, now, that
the disputed explanation was the true one.
Winds, blowing over the mountains,
carried sand as on other worlds they carried moisture
and pollen and seeds and rain. Where two mountain
ranges ran across the course of long-blowing winds,
the winds eddied above the valley between. They
dropped sand into it. The equivalent of trade
winds, Bordman considered, in time would fill a valley
to the mountain tops, just as trade winds provide
moisture in equal quantity on other worlds, and civilizations
have been built upon it. But
“Well?” said Bordman challengingly.
“This is the site of the landing grid,”
said Redfeather.
“Where?”
“Here,” said the Indian
dryly. “A few months ago there was a valley
here. The landing grid had eighteen hundred feet
of height built. There was to be four hundred
feet more the lighter top construction justifies
my figure of eighty per cent completion. Then
there was a storm.”
It was hot. Horribly, terribly
hot, even here on a plateau at mountaintop height.
Dr. Chuka looked at Bordman’s face and bent down
in the vehicle. He turned a stopcock on one of
the air tanks brought for Bordman’s necessity.
Immediately Bordman felt cooler. His skin was
dry, of course. The circulated air dried sweat
as fast as it appeared. But he had the dazed,
feverish feeling of a man in an artificial-fever box.
He’d been fighting it for some time. Now
the coolness of the expanded air was almost deliriously
refreshing.
Dr. Chuka produced a canteen.
Bordman drank thirstily. The water was slightly
salted to replace salt lost in sweat.
“A storm, eh?” asked Bordman,
after a time of contemplation of his inner sensations
as well as the scene of disaster before him. There’d
be some hundreds of millions of tons of sand in even
a section of this plateau. It was unthinkable
that it could be removed except by a long-time sweep
of changed trade winds along the length of the valley.
“But what has a storm to do ”
“It was a sandstorm,”
said Redfeather coldly. “Probably there
was a sunspot flare-up. We don’t know.
But the pre-colonization survey spoke of sandstorms.
The survey team even made estimates of sandfall in
various places as so many inches per year. Here
all storms drop sand instead of rain. But there
must have been a sunspot flare because this storm
blew for” his voice went flat and
deliberate because it was stating the unbelievable “for
two months. We did not see the sun in all that
time. And we couldn’t work, naturally.
The sand would flay a man’s skin off his body
in minutes. So we waited it out.
“When it ended, there was this
sand plateau where the survey had ordered the landing
grid to be built. The grid was under it.
It is under it. The top of eighteen hundred feet
of steel is still buried two hundred feet down in
the sand you see. Our unfabricated building-steel
is piled ready for erection under two thousand
feet of sand. Without anything but stored power
it is hardly practical” Redfeather’s
tone was sardonic “for us to try
to dig it out. There are hundreds of millions
of tons of stuff to be moved. If we could get
the sand away, we could finish the grid. If we
could finish the grid, we’d have power enough
to get the sand away in a few years, and
if we could replace the machinery that wore out handling
it. And if there wasn’t another sandstorm.”
He paused. Bordman took deep
breaths of the cooler air. He could think more
clearly.
“If you will accept photographs,”
said Redfeather politely, “you can check that
we actually did the work.”
Bordman saw the implications.
The colony had been formed of Amerinds for the steel
work and Africans for the labor the Amerinds were congenitally
averse to the handling of complex mining-machinery
underground and the control of modern high-speed smelting
operations. Both races could endure this climate
and work in it provided that they had cooled
sleeping quarters. But they had to have power.
Power not only to work with, but to live by.
The air-cooling machinery that made sleep possible
also condensed from the cooled air the minute trace
of water vapor it contained and that they needed for
drink. But without power they would thirst.
Without the landing grid and the power it took from
the ionosphere, they could not receive supplies from
the rest of the universe. So they would starve.
And the Warlock, now in orbit
somewhere overhead, was well within the planet’s
gravitational field and could not use its Lawlor drive
to escape with news of their predicament. In
the normal course of events it would be years before
a colony ship capable of landing or blasting out of
a planetary gravitational field by rocket-power was
dispatched to find out why there was no news from
Xosa II. There was no such thing as interstellar
signaling, of course. Ships themselves travel
faster than any signal that could be sent, and distances
were so great that mere communication took enormous
lengths of time. A letter sent to Earth from
the Rim even now took ten years to make the journey,
and another ten for a reply. Even the much shorter
distances involved in Xosa II’s predicament
still ruled out all hope. The colony was strictly
on its own.
Bordman said heavily:
“I’ll accept the photographs.
I even accept the statement that the colony will die.
I will prepare my report for the cache Aletha tells
me you’re preparing. And I apologize for
any affront I may have offered you.”
Dr. Chuka nodded approvingly.
He regarded Bordman with benign warmth. Ralph
Redfeather said cordially enough:
“That’s perfectly all right. No harm
done.”
“And now,” said Bordman
shortly, “since I have authority to give any
orders needed for my work, I want to survey the steps
you’ve taken to carry out those parts of your
instructions dealing with emergencies. I want
to see right away what you’ve done to beat this
state of things. I know they can’t be beaten,
but I intend to leave a report on what you’ve
tried!”
The Warlock swung in emptiness
around the planet Xosa II. It was barely five
thousand miles above the surface, so the mottled terrain
of the dry world flowed swiftly and perpetually beneath
it. It did not seem beneath, of course.
It simply seemed out away removed
from the ship. And in the ship’s hull there
was artificial gravity, and light, and there were
the humming sounds of fans which kept the air in motion
and flowing through the air apparatus. Also there
was food, and adequate water, and the temperature
was admirably controlled. But nothing happened.
Moreover, nothing could be expected to happen.
There were eight men in the crew, and they were accustomed
to space-voyages which lasted from one month to three.
But they had traveled a good two months from their
last port. They had exhausted the visireels, playing
them over and over until they were intolerable.
They had read and reread all the bookreels they could
bear. On previous voyages they had played chess
and similar games until it was completely predictable
who would beat whom in every possible contest.
Now they viewed the future with bitterness.
The ship could not land, because there was no landing
grid in operation on the planet below them. They
could not depart, because the Lawlor drive simply does
not work within five diameters of an Earth-gravity
planet. Space is warped only infinitesimally
by so thin a field, but a Lawlor drive needs almost
perfectly unstressed emptiness if it is to take hold.
They did not have fuel enough to blast out the necessary
thirty-odd thousand miles against gravity. The
same consideration made their lifeboats useless.
They could not escape by rocket-power and their Lawlor
drives, also, were ineffective.
The crew of the Warlock was
bored. The worst of the boredom was that it promised
to last without limit. They had food and water
and physical comfort, but they were exactly in the
situation of men sentenced to prison for an unknown
but enormous length of time. There was no escape.
There could be no alleviation. The prospect invited
frenzy by anticipation.
A fist fight broke out in the crew’s
quarters within two hours after the Warlock
had established its orbit as a first reaction
to their catastrophe. The skipper went through
the ship and painstakingly confiscated every weapon.
He locked them up. He, himself, already felt
the nagging effect of jangling nerves. There was
nothing to do. He didn’t know when there
would ever be anything to do. It was a condition
to produce hysteria.
There was night. Outside and
above the colony there were uncountable myriads of
stars. They were not the stars of Earth, of course,
but Bordman had never been on Earth. He was used
to unfamiliar constellations. He stared out a
port at the sky, and noted that there were no moons.
He remembered, when he thought, that Xosa II had no
moons. There was a rustling of paper behind him.
Aletha Redfeather turned a page in a loose-leaf volume
and painstakingly made a note. The wall behind
her held many more such books. From them could
be extracted the detailed history of every bit of
work that had been done by the colony-preparation
crews. Separate, tersely-phrased items could be
assembled to make a record of individual men.
There had been incredible hardships,
at first. There were heroic feats. There
had been an attempt to ferry water supplies down from
the pole by aircraft. It was not practical, even
to build up a reserve of fluid. Winds carried
sand particles here as on other worlds they carried
moisture. Aircraft were abraded as they flew.
The last working flier made a forced landing five
hundred miles from the colony. A caterwheel expedition
went out and brought the crew in. The caterwheel
trucks were armored with silicone plastic, resistant
to abrasion, but when they got back they had to be
scrapped. There had been men lost in sudden sand-squalls,
and heroic searches for them, and once or twice rescues.
There had been cave-ins in the mines. There had
been accidents. There had been magnificent feats
of endurance and achievement.
Bordman went to the door of the hull
which was Ralph Redfeather’s Project Engineer
office. He opened it. He stepped outside.
It was like stepping into an oven.
The sand was still hot from the sunshine just ended.
The air was so utterly dry that Bordman instantly
felt it sucking at the moisture of his nasal passages.
In ten seconds his feet clad in indoor
footwear were uncomfortably hot. In
twenty the soles of his feet felt as if they were
blistering. He would die of the heat at night,
here! Perhaps he could endure the outside near
dawn, but he raged a little. Here where Amerinds
and Africans lived and throve, he could live unprotected
for no more than an hour or two and that
at one special time of the planet’s rotation!
He went back in, ashamed of the discomfort
of his feet and angrily letting them feel scorched
rather than admit to it.
Aletha turned another page.
“Look, here!” said Bordman
angrily. “No matter what you say, you’re
going to go back on the Warlock before ”
She raised her eyes.
“We’ll worry about that
when the time comes. But I think not. I’d
rather stay here.”
“For the present, perhaps,”
snapped Bordman. “But before things get
too bad you go back to the ship! They’ve
rocket fuel enough for half a dozen landings of the
landing boat. They can lift you out of here!”
Aletha shrugged.
“Why leave here to board a derelict?
The Warlock’s practically that.
What’s your honest estimate of the time before
a ship equipped to help us gets here?”
Bordman would not answer. He’d
done some figuring. It had been a two-month journey
from Trent the nearest Survey base to
here. The Warlock had been expected to
remain aground until the smelter it brought could
load it with pig metal. Which could be as little
as two weeks, but would surprise nobody if it was
two months instead. So the ship would not be
considered due back on Trent for four months.
It would not be considered overdue for at least two
more. It would be six months before anybody seriously
wondered why it wasn’t back with its cargo.
There’d be a wait for lifeboats to come in, should
there have been a mishap in space. There’d
eventually be a report of noncommunication to the
Colony Survey headquarters on Canna III. But it
would take three months for that report to be received,
and six more for a confirmation even if
ships made the voyages exactly at the most favorable
intervals and then there should at least
be a complaint from the colony. There were lifeboats
aground on Xosa II, for emergency communication, and
if a lifeboat didn’t bring news of a planetary
crisis, no crisis would be considered to exist.
Nobody could imagine a landing grid failing!
Maybe in a year somebody would think
that maybe somebody ought to ask around about Xosa
II. It would be much longer before somebody put
a note on somebody else’s desk that would suggest
that when, or if, a suitable ship passed near Xosa
II, or if one should be available for the inquiry,
it might be worth while to have the noncommunication
from the planet looked into. Actually, to guess
at three years before another ship arrived would be
the most optimistic of estimates.
“You’re a civilian,”
said Bordman shortly. “When the food and
water run low, you go back to the ship. You’ll
at least be alive when somebody does come to see what’s
the matter here!”
Aletha said mildly:
“Maybe I’d rather not be alive. Will
you go back to the ship?”
Bordman flushed. He wouldn’t. But
he said doggedly;
“I can order you sent on board,
and your cousin will carry out the order!”
“I doubt it very much,” said Aletha pleasantly.
She returned to her task.
There were crunching footsteps outside
the hulk. Bordman winced a little. With
insulated sandals, it was normal for these colonists
to move from one part of the colony to another in
the open, even by daylight. He, Bordman, couldn’t
take out-of-doors at night! His lips twisted
bitterly.
Men came in. There were dark
men with rippling muscles under glistening skin, and
bronze Amerinds with coarse straight hair. Ralph
Redfeather was with them. Dr. Chuka came in last
of all.
“Here we are,” said Redfeather.
“These are our foremen. Among us, I think
we can answer any questions you want to ask.”
He made introductions. Bordman
didn’t try to remember the names. Abeokuta
and Northwind and Sutata and Tallgrass and T’ckka
and Spottedhorse and Lewanika
They were names which in combination would only be
found in a very raw, new colony. But the men who
crowded into the office were wholly at ease, in their
own minds as well as in the presence of a senior Colonial
Survey officer. They nodded as they were named,
and the nearest shook hands. Bordman knew that
he’d have liked their looks under other circumstances.
But he was humiliated by the conditions on this planet.
They were not. They were apparently only sentenced
to death by them.
“I have to leave a report,”
said Bordman curtly and he was somehow
astonished to know that he did expect to leave a report
rather than make one; he accepted the hopelessness
of the colony’s future “on the
degree-of-completion of the work here. But since
there’s an emergency, I have also to leave a
report on the measures taken to meet it.”
The report would be futile, of course.
As futile as the coup-records Aletha was compiling,
which would be read only after everybody on the planet
was dead. But Bordman knew he’d write it.
It was unthinkable that he shouldn’t.
“Redfeather tells me,”
he added, again curtly, “that the power in storage
can be used to cool the colony buildings and
therefore condense drinking water from the air for
just about six months. There is food for about
six months. If one lets the buildings warm up
a little, to stretch the fuel, there won’t be
enough water to drink. Go on half rations to
stretch the food, and there won’t be enough water
to last and the power will give out anyhow. No
profit there!”
There were nods. The matter had
been thrashed out long before.
“There’s food in the Warlock
overhead,” Bordman went on coldly, “but
they can’t use the landing boat more than a few
times. It can’t use ship fuel. No
refrigeration to hold it stable. They couldn’t
land more than a ton of supplies all told. There
are five hundred of us here. No help there!”
He looked from one to another.
“So we live comfortably,”
he told them with irony, “until our food and
water and minimum night-comfort run out together.
Anything we do to try to stretch anything is useless
because of what happens to something else. Redfeather
tells me you accept the situation. What are you
doing since you accept it?”
Dr. Chuka said amiably:
“We’ve picked a storage
place for our records, and our miners are blasting
out space in which to put away the record of our actions
to the last possible moment. It will be sandproof.
Our mechanics are building a broadcast unit we’ll
spare a tiny bit of fuel for. It will run twenty-odd
years, broadcasting directions so it can be found regardless
of how the terrain is changed by drifting sand.”
“And,” said Bordman, “the
fact that nobody will be here to give directions.”
Chuka added benignly:
“We’re doing a great deal
of singing, too. My people are ... ah ... religious.
When we are ... ah ... no longer here ... there have
been boastings that there’ll be a well-practiced
choir ready to go to work in the next world.”
White teeth showed in grins.
Bordman was almost envious of men who could grin at
such a thought. But he went on grimly:
“And I understand that athletics
have also been much practiced.”
Redfeather said:
“There’s been time for
it. Climbing teams have counted coup on all the
worst mountains within three hundred miles. There’s
been a new record set for the javelin, adjusted for
gravity constant, and Johnny Cornstalk did a hundred
yards in eight point four seconds. Aletha has
the records and has certified them.”
“Very useful!” said Bordman
sardonically. Then he disliked himself for saying
it even before the bronze-skinned men’s faces
grew studiedly impassive.
Chuka waved his hand.
“Wait, Ralph! Lewanika’s nephew will
beat that within a week!”
Bordman was ashamed again because
Chuka had spoken to cover up his own ill-nature.
“I take it back!” he said
irritably. “What I said was uncalled for.
I shouldn’t have said it! But I came here
to do a completion survey and what you’ve been
giving me is material for an estimate of morale!
It’s not my line! I’m a technician,
first and foremost! We’re faced with a
technical problem!”
Aletha spoke suddenly from behind him.
“But these are men, first and
foremost, Mr. Bordman. And they’re faced
with a very human problem how to die well.
They seem to be rather good at it, so far.”
Bordman ground his teeth. He
was again humiliated. In his own fashion he was
attempting the same thing. But just as he was
genetically not qualified to endure the climate of
this planet, he was not prepared for a fatalistic
or pious acceptance of disaster. Amerind and African,
alike, these men instinctively held to their own ideas
of what the dignity of a man called upon him to do
when he could not do anything but die. But Bordman’s
idea of his human dignity required him to be still
fighting: still scratching at the eyes of fate
or destiny when he was slain. It was in his blood
or genes or the result of training. He simply
could not, with self-respect, accept any physical situation
as hopeless even when his mind assured him that it
was.
“I agree,” he said coldly,
“but still I have to think in technical terms.
You might say that we are going to die because we cannot
land the Warlock with food and equipment.
We cannot land the Warlock because we have
no landing grid. We have no landing grid because
it and all the material to complete it is buried under
millions of tons of sand. We cannot make a new
light-supply-ship type of landing grid because we have
no smelter to make beams, nor power to run it if we
had, yet if we had the beams we could get the power
to run the smelter we haven’t got to make the
beams. And we have no smelter, hence no beams,
no power, no prospect of food or help because we can’t
land the Warlock. It is strictly a circular
problem. Break it at any point and all of it is
solved.”
One of the dark men muttered something
under his breath to those near him. There were
chuckles.
“Like Mr. Woodchuck,”
explained the man, when Bordman’s eyes fell on
him. “When I was a little boy there was
a story like that.”
Bordman said icily:
“The problem of coolness and
water and food is the same sort of problem. In
six months we could raise food if we had
power to condense moisture. We’ve chemicals
for hydroponics if we could keep the plants
from roasting as they grew. Refrigeration and
water and food are practically another circular problem.”
Aletha said tentatively:
“Mr. Bordman ”
He turned, annoyed. Aletha said almost apologetically:
“On Chagan there was a you
might call it a woman’s coup given to a woman
I know. Her husband raises horses. He’s
mad about them. And they live in a sort of home
on caterwheels out on the plains the llanos.
Sometimes they’re months away from a settlement.
And she loves ice cream and refrigeration isn’t
too simple. But she has a Doctorate in Human
History. So she had her husband make an insulated
tray on the roof of their trailer and she makes her
ice cream there.”
Men looked at her. Her cousin said amusedly:
“That should rate some sort of technical-coup
feather!”
“The Council gave her a brass
pot official,” said Aletha. “Domestic
science achievement.” To Bordman she explained:
“Her husband put a tray on the roof of their
house, insulated from the heat of the house below.
During the day there’s an insulated cover on
top of it, insulating it from the heat of the sun.
At night she takes off the top cover and pours her
custard, thin, in the tray. Then she goes to bed.
She has to get up before daybreak to scrape it up,
but by then the ice cream is frozen. Even on
a warm night.” She looked from one to another.
“I don’t know why. She said it was
done in a place called Babylonia on Earth, many thousands
of years ago.”
Bordman blinked. Then he said decisively:
“Damn! Who knows how much
the ground-temperature drops here before dawn?”
“I do,” said Aletha’s
cousin, mildly. “The top-sand temperature
falls forty-odd degrees. Warmer underneath, of
course. But the air here is almost cool when
the sun rises. Why?”
“Nights are cooler on all planets,”
said Bordman, “because every night the dark
side radiates heat to empty space. There’d
be frost everywhere every morning if the ground didn’t
store up heat during the day. If we prevent daytime
heat-storage cover a patch of ground before
dawn and leave it covered all day and uncover
it all night while shielding it from warm winds
We’ve got refrigeration! The night sky is
empty space itself! Two hundred and eighty below
zero!”
There was a murmur. Then argument.
The foremen of the Xosa II colony-preparation crew
were strictly practical men, but they had the habit
of knowing why some things were practical. One
does not do modern steel construction in contempt
of theory, nor handle modern mining tools without
knowing why as well as how they work. This proposal
sounded like something that was based on reason that
should work to some degree. But how well?
Anybody could guess that it should cool something at
least twice as much as the normal night temperature-drop.
But somebody produced a slipstick and began to juggle
it expertly. He astonishedly announced his results.
Others questioned, and then verified it. Nobody
paid much attention to Bordman. But there was
a hum of absorbed discussion, in which Redfeather
and Chuka were immediately included. By calculation,
it astoundingly appeared that if the air on Xosa II
was really as clear as the bright stars and deep day-sky
color indicated, every second night a total drop of
one hundred and eighty degrees temperature could be
secured by radiation to interstellar space if
there were no convection-currents, and they could be
prevented by
It was the convection-current problem
which broke the assembly into groups with different
solutions. But it was Dr. Chuka who boomed at
all of them to try all three solutions and have them
ready before daybreak, so the assembly left the hulk,
still disputing enthusiastically. But somebody
had recalled that there were dewponds in the one arid
area on Timbuk, and somebody else remembered that
irrigation on Delmos III was accomplished that same
way. And they recalled how it was done
Voices went away in the ovenlike night
outside. Bordman grimaced, and again said:
“Damn! Why didn’t I think of that
myself?”
“Because,” said Aletha,
smiling, “you aren’t a Doctor of Human
History with a horse-raising husband and a fondness
for ice cream. Even so, a technician was needed
to break down the problem here into really simple
terms.” Then she said, “I think Bob
Running Antelope might approve of you, Mr. Bordman.”
Bordman fumed to himself.
“Who’s he? Just what does that whole
comment mean?”
“I’ll tell you,”
said Aletha, “when you’ve solved one or
two more problems.”
Her cousin came back into the room. He said with
gratification:
“Chuka can turn out silicone-wool
insulation, he says. Plenty of material, and
he’ll use a solar mirror to get the heat he needs.
Plenty of temperature to make silicones! How
much area will we need to pull in four thousand gallons
of water a night?”
“How do I know?” demanded
Bordman. “What’s the moisture-content
of the air here, anyhow?” Then he said vexedly,
“Tell me! Are you using heat-exchangers
to help cool the air you pump into the buildings, before
you use power to refrigerate it? It would save
some power ”
The Indian project engineer said absorbedly:
“Let’s get to work on this! I’m
a steel man myself, but ”
They settled down. Aletha turned a page.
The Warlock spun around the
planet. The members of its crew withdrew into
themselves. In even two months of routine tedious
voyaging to this planet, there had been the beginnings
of irritation with the mannerisms of other men.
Now there would be years of it. At the beginning,
every man tended to become a hermit so that he could
postpone as long as possible the time when he would
hate his shipmates. Monotony was already so familiar
that its continuance was a foreknown evil. The
crew of the Warlock already knew how intolerable
they would presently be to each other, and the foreknowledge
tended to make them intolerable now.
Within two days of its establishment
in orbit, the Warlock was manned by men already
morbidly resentful of fate; with the psychology of
prisoners doomed to close confinement for an indeterminate
but ghastly period. On the third day there was
a second fist fight. A bitter one.
Fist fights are not healthy symptoms
in a spaceship which cannot hope to make port for
a matter of years.
Most human problems are circular and
fall apart when a single trivial part of them is solved.
There used to be enmity between races because they
were different, and they tended to be different because
they were enemies, so there was enmity The
big problem of interstellar flight was that nothing
could travel faster than light, and nothing could travel
faster than light because mass increased with speed,
and mass increased with speed obviously! because
ships remained in the same time-slot, and ships remained
in the same time-slot long after a one-second shift
was possible because nobody realized that it meant
traveling faster than light. And even before
there was interstellar travel, there was practically
no interplanetary commerce because it took so much
fuel to take off and land. And it took more fuel
to carry the fuel to take off and land, and more still
to carry the fuel for that, until somebody used power
on the ground for heave-off instead of take-off, and
again on the ground for landing. And then interplanetary
ships carried cargoes. And on Xosa II there was
an emergency because a sandstorm had buried the almost
completed landing grid under some megatons of sand,
and it couldn’t be completed because there was
only storage power because it wasn’t completed,
because there was only storage power because
But it took three weeks for the problem
to be seen as the ultimately simple thing it really
was. Bordman had called it a circular problem,
but he hadn’t seen its true circularity.
It was actually like all circular problems inherently
an unstable set of conditions. It began to fall
apart when he saw that mere refrigeration would break
its solidity.
In one week there were ten acres of
desert covered with silicone-wool-felt in great strips.
By day a reflective surface was uppermost, and at
sundown caterwheel trucks hooked on to towlines and
neatly pulled it over on its back, to expose gridded
black-body surfaces to the starlight. And the
gridding was precisely designed so that winds blowing
across it did not make eddies in the grid-squares,
and the chilled air in those pockets remained undisturbed
and there was no conduction of heat downward by eddy
currents, while there was admirable radiation of heat
out to space. And this was in the manner of the
night sides of all planets, only somewhat more efficient.
In two weeks there was a water yield
of three thousand gallons per night, and in three
weeks more there were similar grids over the colony
houses and a vast roofed cooling-shed for pre-chilling
of air to be used by the refrigeration systems themselves.
The fuel-store stored power was
thereupon stretched to three times its former calculated
usefulness. The situation was no longer a simple
and neat equation of despair.
Then something else happened.
One of Dr. Chuka’s assistants was curious about
a certain mineral. He used the solar furnace that
had made the silicone wool to smelt it. And Dr.
Chuka saw him. And after one blank moment he
bellowed laughter and went to see Ralph Redfeather.
Whereupon Amerind steel-workers sawed apart a robot
hull that was no longer a fuel tank because its fuel
was gone, and they built a demountable solar mirror
some sixty feet across which African mechanics
deftly powered and suddenly there was a
spot of incandescence even brighter than the sun of
Xosa II, down on the planet’s surface. It
played upon a mineral cliff, and monstrous smells
developed and even the African mining-technicians
put on goggles because of the brightness, and presently
there were threads of molten metal and slag trickling and
separating as they trickled hesitantly down
the cliff-side.
And Dr. Chuka beamed and slapped his
sweating thighs, and Bordman went out in a caterwheel
truck, wearing a heat-suit, to watch it for all of
twenty minutes. When he got back to the Project
Engineer’s office he gulped iced salt water
and dug out the books he’d brought down from
the ship. There was the specbook for Xosa II,
and there were the other volumes of definitions issued
by the Colonial Survey. They were definitions
of the exact meanings of terms used in briefer specifications,
for items of equipment sometimes ordered by the Colony
Office.
When Chuka came into the office, presently,
he carried the first crude pig of Xosa II iron in
his gloved hand. He gloated. Bordman was
then absent, and Ralph Redfeather worked feverishly
at his desk.
“Where’s Bordman?”
demanded Chuka in that resonant bass voice of his.
“I’m ready to report for degree-of-completion
credit that the mining properties on Xosa II are prepared
as of today to deliver pig iron, cobalt, zirconium
and beryllium in commercial quantities! We require
one day’s notice to begin delivery of metal
other than iron at the moment, because we’re
short of equipment, but we can furnish chromium and
manganese on two days’ notice the
deposits are farther away.”
He dumped the pig of metal on the
second desk, where Aletha sat with her perpetual loose-leafed
volumes before her. The metal smoked and began
to char the desk-top. He picked it up again and
tossed it from one gloved hand to the other.
“There y’are, Ralph!”
he boasted. “You Indians go after your coups!
Match this coup for me! Without fuel and minus
all equipment except of our own making I
credit an assist on the mirror, but that’s all we’re
set to load the first ship that comes in for cargo!
Now what are you going to do for the record?
I think we’ve wiped your eye for you!”
Ralph hardly looked up. His eyes
were very bright. Bordman had shown him and he
was copying feverishly the figures and formulae from
a section of the definition book of the Colonial Survey.
The books started with the specifications for antibiotic
growth equipment for colonies with problems in local
bacteria. It ended with definitions of the required
strength-of-material and the designs stipulated for
cages in zoos for motile fauna, subdivided into flying,
marine, and solid-ground creatures: sub-sub-divided
into carnivores, herbivores, and omnivores,
with the special specifications for enclosures to contain
abyssal creatures requiring extreme pressures, and
the equipment for maintaining a healthfully re-poisoned
atmosphere for creatures from methane planets.
Redfeather had the third volume open
at, “Landing Grids, Lightest Emergency, Commerce
Refuges, For Use Of.” There were some dozens
of non-colonized planets along the most-traveled spaceways
on which refuges for shipwrecked spacemen were maintained.
Small forces of Patrol personnel manned them.
Space lifeboats serviced them. They had the minimum
installations which could draw on their planets’
ionosphères for power, and they were not expected
to handle anything bigger than a twenty-ton lifeboat.
But the specifications for the equipment of such refuges
were included in the reference volumes for Bordman’s
use in the making of Colonial surveys. They were
compiled for the information of contractors who wanted
to bid on Colonial Survey installations, and for the
guidance of people like Bordman who checked up on the
work. So they contained all the data for the
building of a landing grid, lightest emergency, commerce
refuge for use of, in case of need. Redfeather
copied feverishly.
Chuka ceased his boasting, but still he grinned.
“I know we’re stuck, Ralph,”
he said amiably, “but it’s nice stuff to
go in the records. Too bad we don’t keep
coup-records like you Indians!”
Aletha’s cousin Project Engineer said
crisply:
“Go away! Who made your
solar mirror? It was more than an assist!
You get set to cast beams for us! Girders!
I’m going to get a lifeboat aloft and away to
Trent! Build a minimum size landing grid!
Build a fire under somebody so they’ll send
us a colony ship with supplies! If there’s
no new sandstorm to bury the radiation refrigerators
Bordman brought to mind, we can keep alive with hydroponics
until a ship can arrive with something useful!”
Chuka stared.
“You don’t mean we might actually live
through this! Really?”
Aletha regarded the two of them with impartial irony.
“Dr. Chuka,” she said
gently, “you accomplished the impossible.
Ralph, here, is planning to attempt the preposterous.
Does it occur to you that Mr. Bordman is nagging himself
to achieve the inconceivable? It is inconceivable,
even to him, but he’s trying to do it!”
“What’s he trying to do?” demanded
Chuka, wary but amused.
“He’s trying,” said
Aletha, “to prove to himself that he’s
the best man on this planet. Because he’s
physically least capable of living here! His
vanity’s hurt. Don’t underestimate
him!”
“He the best man here?”
demanded Chuka blankly. “In his way he’s
all right. The refrigeration proves that!
But he can’t walk out-of-doors without a heat-suit!”
Ralph Redfeather said dryly, without
ceasing his feverish work:
“Nonsense, Aletha. He has
courage. I give him that. But he couldn’t
walk a beam twelve hundred feet up. In his own
way, yes. He’s capable. But the best
man ”
“I’m sure,” agreed
Aletha, “that he couldn’t sing as well
as the worst of your singing crew, Dr. Chuka, and
any Amerind could outrun him. Even I could!
But he’s got something we haven’t got,
just as we have qualities he hasn’t. We’re
secure in our competences. We know what we can
do, and that we can do it better than any ”
her eyes twinkled “paleface.
But he doubts himself. All the time and in every
way. And that’s why he may be the best man
on this planet! I’ll bet he does prove
it!”
Redfeather said scornfully:
“You suggested radiation refrigeration!
What does it prove that he applied it?”
“That,” said Aletha, “he
couldn’t face the disaster that was here without
trying to do something about it even when
it was impossible. He couldn’t face the
deadly facts. He had to torment himself by seeing
that they wouldn’t be deadly if only this one
or that or the other were twisted a little. His
vanity was hurt because nature had beaten men.
His dignity was offended. And a man with easily-hurt
dignity won’t ever be happy, but he can be pretty
good!”
Chuka raised his ebony bulk from the
chair in which he still shifted the iron pig from
gloved hand to gloved hand.
“You’re kind,” he
said, chuckling. “Too kind! I don’t
want to hurt his feelings. I wouldn’t,
for the world! But really ... I’ve
never heard a man praised for his vanity before, or
admired for being touchy about his dignity! If
you’re right ... why ... it’s been convenient.
It might even mean hope. But ... hm-m-m
Would you want to marry a man like that?”
“Great Manitou forbid!”
said Aletha firmly. She grimaced at the bare
idea. “I’m an Amerind. I’ll
want my husband to be contented. I want to be
contented along with him. Mr. Bordman will never
be either happy or content. No paleface husband
for me! But I don’t think he’s through
here yet. Sending for help won’t satisfy
him. It’s a further hurt to his vanity.
He’ll be miserable if he doesn’t prove
himself to himself a better
man than that!”
Chuka shrugged his massive shoulders.
Redfeather tracked down the last item he needed and
fairly bounced to his feet.
“What tonnage of iron can you
get out, Chuka?” he demanded. “What
can you do in the way of castings? What’s
the elastic modulus how much carbon in
this iron? And when can you start making castings?
Big ones?”
“Let’s go talk to my foremen,”
said Chuka complacently. “We’ll see
how fast my ... ah ... mineral spring is trickling
metal down the cliff-face. If you can really
launch a lifeboat, we might get some help here in
a year and a half instead of five ”
They went out-of-doors together.
There was a small sound in the next office. Aletha
was suddenly very, very still. She sat motionless
for a long half-minute. Then she turned her head.
“I owe you an apology, Mr. Bordman,”
she said ruefully. “It won’t take
back the discourtesy, but I’m very
sorry.”
Bordman came into the office from
the next room. He was rather pale. He said
wryly:
“Eavesdroppers never hear good
of themselves, eh? Actually I was on the way
in here when I heard references to myself
it would embarrass Chuka and your cousin to know I
heard. So I stopped. Not to listen, but to
keep them from knowing I’d heard their private
opinions of me. I’ll be obliged if you
don’t tell them. They’re entitled
to their opinions of me. I’ve mine of them.”
He added grimly, “Apparently I think more highly
of them than they do of me!”
Aletha said contritely:
“It must have sounded horrible!
But they ... we ... all of us think better of you
than you do of yourself!”
Bordman shrugged.
“You in particular. ’Would
you marry someone like me? Great Manitou, no!’”
“For an excellent reason,”
said Aletha firmly. “When I get back from
here if I get back from here I’m
going to marry Bob Running Antelope. He’s
nice. I like the idea of marrying him. I
want to! But I look forward not only to happiness
but to contentment. To me that’s important.
It isn’t to you, or to the woman you ought to
marry. And I ... well ... I simply don’t
envy either of you a bit!”
“I see,” said Bordman
with irony. He didn’t. “I wish
you all the contentment you look for.”
Then he snapped: “But what’s this
business about expecting more from me? What spectacular
idea do you expect me to pull out of somebody’s
hat now? Because I’m frantically vain!”
“I haven’t the least idea,”
said Aletha calmly. “But I think you’ll
come up with something we couldn’t possibly
imagine. And I didn’t say it was because
you were vain, but because you are discontented with
yourself. It’s born in you! And there
you are!”
“If you mean neurotic,”
snapped Bordman, “you’re all wrong.
I’m not neurotic! I’m not. I’m
annoyed. I’ll get hopelessly behind schedule
because of this mess! But that’s all!”
Aletha stood up and shrugged her shoulders ruefully.
“I repeat my apology,”
she told him, “and leave you the office.
But I also repeat that I think you’ll turn up
something nobody else expects and I’ve
no idea what it will be. But you’ll do it
now to prove that I’m wrong about how your mind
works.”
She went out. Bordman clamped
his jaws tightly. He felt that especially haunting
discomfort which comes of suspecting that one has been
told something about himself which may be true.
“Idiotic!” he fumed, all
alone. “Me neurotic? Me wanting to
prove I’m the best man here out of vanity?”
He made a scornful noise. He sat impatiently
at the desk. “Absurd!” he muttered
wrathfully. “Why should I need to prove
to myself I’m capable? What would I do if
I felt such a need, anyhow?”
Scowling, he stared at the wall.
It was irritating. It was a nagging sort of question.
What would he do if she were right? If he did
need constantly to prove to himself
He stiffened, suddenly. A look
of intense surprise came upon his face. He’d
thought of what a self-doubtful, discontented man would
try to do, here on Xosa II at this juncture.
The surprise was because he had also
thought of how it could be done.
The Warlock came to life.
Her skipper gloomily answered the emergency call from
Xosa II. He listened. He clicked off the
communicator and hastened to an exterior port, deeply
darkened against those times when the blue-white sun
of Xosa shone upon this side of the hull. He moved
the manual control to make it more transparent.
He stared down at the monstrous, tawny, mottled surface
of the planet five thousand miles away. He searched
for the spot he bitterly knew was the colony’s
site.
He saw what he’d been told he’d
see. It was an infinitely fine, threadlike projection
from the surface of the planet. It rose at a
slight angle it leaned toward the planet’s
west and it expanded and widened and formed
an extraordinary sort of mushroom-shaped object that
was completely impossible. It could not be.
Humans do not create visible objects twenty miles
high, which at their tops expand like toadstools on
excessively slender stalks, and which drift westward
and fray and grow thin, and are constantly renewed.
But it was true. The skipper
of the Warlock gazed until he was completely
sure. It was no atomic bomb, because it continued
to exist. It faded, but was constantly replenished.
There was no such thing!
He went through the ship, bellowing,
and faced mutinous snarlings. But when the Warlock
was around on that side of the planet again, the members
of the crew saw the strange appearance, too. They
examined it with telescopes. They grew hysterically
happy. They went frantically to work to clear
away the signs of a month and a half of mutiny and
despair.
It took them three days to get the
ship to tidiness again, and during all that time the
peculiar tawny jet remained. On the sixth day
the jet was fainter. On the seventh it was larger
than before. It continued larger. And telescopes
at highest magnification verified what the emergency
communication had said.
Then the crew began to experience
frantic impatience. It was worse, waiting those
last three or four days, than even all the hopeless
time before. But there was no reason to hate
anybody, now. The skipper was very much relieved.
There was eighteen hundred feet of
steel grid overhead. It made a crisscross, ring-shaped
wall more than a quarter-mile high and almost to the
top of the surrounding mountains. But the valley
was not exactly a normal one. It was a crater,
now: a steeply sloping, conical pit whose walls
descended smoothly to the outer girders of the red-painted,
glistening steel structure. More girders for the
completion of the grid projected from the sand just
outside its half-mile circle. And in the landing
grid there was now a smaller, elaborate, truss-braced
object. It rested on the rocky ground, and it
was not painted, and it was quite small. A hundred
feet high, perhaps, and no more than three hundred
across. But it was visibly a miniature of the
great, now-uncovered, re-painted landing grid which
was qualified to handle interstellar cargo ships and
all the proper space-traffic of a minerals-colony planet.
A caterwheel truck came lurching and
rolling and rumbling down the side of the pit.
It had a sunshade and ground-reflector wings, and Bordman
rode tiredly on a hobbyhorse saddle in its back cargo
section. He wore a heat-suit.
The truck reached the pit’s
bottom. There was a tool shed there. The
caterwheel-truck bumped up to it and stopped.
Bordman got out, visibly cramped by the jolting, rocking,
exhausting-to-unaccustomed-muscles ride.
“Do you want to go in the shed
and cool off?” asked Chuka brightly.
“I’m all right,”
said Bordman curtly. “I’m quite comfortable,
so long as you feed me that expanded air.”
It was plain that he resented needing even a special
air supply. “What’s all this about?
Bringing the Warlock in? Why the insistence
on my being here?”
“Ralph has a problem,”
said Chuka blandly. “He’s up there.
See? He needs you. There’s a hoist.
You’ve got to check degree-of-completion anyhow.
You might take a look around while you’re up
there. But he’s anxious for you to see
something. There where you see the little knot
of people. The platform.”
Bordman grimaced. When one was
well started on a survey, one got used to heights
and depths and all sorts of environments. But
he hadn’t been up on steel-work in a good many
months. Not since a survey on Kalka IV nearly
a year ago. He would be dizzy at first.
He accompanied Chuka to the spot where
a steel cable dangled from an almost invisibly thin
beam high above. There was a strictly improvised
cage to ascend in planks and a handrail
forming an insecure platform that might hold four
people. He got into it, and Dr. Chuka got in beside
him. Chuka waved his hand. The cage started
up.
Bordman winced as the ground dropped
away below. It was ghastly to be dangling in
emptiness like this. He wanted to close his eyes.
The cage went up and up and up. It took many
long minutes to reach the top.
There was a platform there. Newly-made.
The sunlight was blindingly bright. The landscape
was an intolerable glare. Bordman adjusted his
goggles to maximum darkness and stepped gingerly from
the swaying cage to the hardly more solid-seeming
area. Here he was in mid-air on a platform barely
ten feet square. It was rather more than twice
the height of a metropolitan skyscraper from the ground.
There were actual mountain-crests only half a mile
away and not much higher. Bordman was acutely
uncomfortable. He would get used to it, but
“Well?” he asked fretfully.
“Chuka said you needed me here. What’s
the matter?”
Ralph Redfeather nodded very formally.
Aletha was here, too, and two of Chuka’s foremen one
did not look happy and four of the Amerind
steel-workers. They grinned at Bordman.
“I wanted you to see,”
said Aletha’s cousin, “before we threw
on the current. It doesn’t look like that
little grid could handle the sand it took care of.
But Lewanika wants to report.”
A dark man who worked under Chuka and
looked as if he belonged on solid ground said
carefully:
“We cast the beams for the small
landing grid, Mr. Bordman. We melted the metal
out of the cliffs and ran it into molds as it flowed
down.”
He stopped. One of the Indians said:
“We made the girders into the
small landing grid. It bothered us because we
built it on the sand that had buried the big grid.
We didn’t understand why you ordered it there.
But we built it.”
The second dark man said with a trace of swagger:
“We made the coils, Mr. Bordman.
We made the small grid so it would work the same as
the big one when it was finished. And then we
made the big grid work, finished or not!”
Bordman said impatiently:
“All right. Very good. But what is
this? A ceremony?”
“Just so,” said Aletha, smiling.
“Be patient, Mr. Bordman!”
Her cousin said conversationally:
“We built the small grid on
the top of the sand. And it tapped the ionosphere
for power. No lack of power then! And we’d
set it to heave up sand instead of ships. Not
to heave it out into space, but to give it up to mile
a second vertical velocity. Then we turned it
on.”
“And we rode it down, that little
grid,” said one of the remaining Indians, grinning.
“What a party! Manitou!”
Redfeather frowned at him and took up the narrative.
“It hurled the sand up from
its center. As you said it would, the sand swept
air with it. It made a whirlwind, bringing more
sand from outside the grid into its field. It
was a whirlwind with fifteen megakilowatts of power
to drive it. Some of the sand went twenty miles
high. Then it made a mushroom-head and the winds
up yonder blew it to the west. It came down a
long way off, Mr. Bordman. We’ve made a
new dune-area ten miles downwind. And the little
grid sank as the sand went away from around it.
We had to stop it three times, because it leaned.
We had to dig under parts of it to get it straight
up again. But it went down into the valley.”
Bordman turned up the power to his
heat-suit motors. He felt uncomfortably warm.
“In six days,” said Ralph,
almost ceremonially, “it had uncovered half
the original grid we’d built. Then we were
able to modify that to heave sand and to let it tap
the ionosphere. We were able to use a good many
times the power the little grid could apply to sand-lifting!
In two days more the landing grid was clear.
The valley bottom was clean. We shifted some
hundreds of millions of tons of sand by landing grid,
and now it is possible to land the Warlock,
and receive her supplies, and the solar-power furnace
is already turning out pigs for her loading. We
wanted you to see what we have done. The colony
is no longer in danger, and we shall have the grid
completely finished for your inspection before the
ship is ready to return.”
Bordman said uncomfortably:
“That’s very good. It’s excellent.
I’ll put it in my survey report.”
“But,” said Ralph, more
ceremonially still, “we have the right to count
coup for the members of our tribe and clan. Now ”
Then there was confusion. Aletha’s
cousin was saying syllables that did not mean anything
at all. The other Indians joined in at intervals,
speaking gibberish. Aletha’s eyes were shining
and she looked incredibly pleased and satisfied.
“But what ... what’s this?”
demanded Bordman when they stopped.
Aletha spoke proudly.
“Ralph just formally adopted
you into the tribe, Mr. Bordman and into
his clan and mine! He gave you a name I’ll
have to write down for you, but it means, ‘Man-who-believes-not-his-own-wisdom.’
And now ”
Ralph Redfeather licensed
interstellar engineer, graduate of the stiffest technical
university in this quarter of the galaxy, wearer of
three eagle-pinion feathers and clad in a pair of insulated
sandals and a breechcloth whipped out a
small paint-pot and a brush from somewhere and began
carefully to paint on a section of girder ready for
the next tier of steel. He painted a feather
on the metal.
“It’s a coup,” he
told Bordman over his shoulder. “Your coup.
Placed where it was earned up here.
Aletha is authorized to certify it. And the head
of the clan will add an eagle-feather to the headdress
he wears in council in the Big Tepee on Algonka, and your
clan-brothers will be proud!”
Then he straightened up and held out his hand.
Chuka said benignly:
“Being civilized men, Mr. Bordman,
we Africans do not go in for uncivilized feathers.
But we ... ah ... rather approve of you, too.
And we plan a corroboree at the colony after the Warlock
is down, when there will be some excellently practiced
singing. There is ... ah ... a song, a sort of
choral calypso, about this ... ah ... adventure you
have brought to so satisfying a conclusion. It
is quite a good calypso. It’s likely to
be popular on a good many planets.”
Bordman swallowed. He was acutely
uncomfortable. He felt that he ought to say something,
and he did not know what.
But just then there was a deep-toned
humming in the air. It was a vibrant tone, instinct
with limitless power. It was the eighteen-hundred-foot
landing grid, giving off that profoundly bass and
vibrant, note it uttered while operating. Bordman
looked up.
The Warlock was coming down.