The Space Opera Megapack

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The Space Opera Megapack Page 65

by John W. Campbell


  “But only,” I pointed out, “if, when, and as you go make that gadget gadge. While we’re gnawing the avoirdupois Cap Hanson’s up there biting his fingernails to the knuckle. So shall we join the laddies?”

  So he patted Diane’s picture good-by, and we went.

  Like I figured, Hanson was practically meat for the looney-bin by the time we reached the bridge. He manhandled Biggs avidly and propelled him to the plot-table. “Where’ve you been, Biggs?” he demanded. “No, don’t tell me now. Get going on them figgers. They don’t make sense to me, nowise! And when do we turn on that thingamajigger of your’n? Bert, where’d you find him? Shut up, you blabbermouth! Don’t you know better than to talk when a space officer is cogitating? Can I help, Biggs?”

  The one-man wordstorm was deafening. But it didn’t seem to phase Biggs. He plunked himself down at the pilot’s desk, scribbled for a while, and came up with an orbit chart for Second Mate Dick Todd, seated at the control-board.

  Then he heaved a volley of orders over the audio to Chief Engineer Garrity, and that was that. He relaxed. The skipper said nervously, “Is—is that all?”

  “That’s all, sir,” said Biggs.

  The Old Man looked dubious.

  “I don’t hear nothing unusual,” he said.

  “You will in a minute,” said Biggs. “Ah! There it goes now?”

  And darned if it didn’t! One minute my ears hummed with the familiar drone of the hypatomics, the next, a weird and piercing whine rose in high, shrill crescendo, torturing our ear-drums for a brief instant until it lost itself in an oblivion of super-sonic inaudibility.

  That was all. No moment of oppressive weight as if we were lifting gravs at extra gees, no thunderous bellow of rockets, no anything. The ship rode easily, freely. I must have looked disappointed. To Biggs I said, “Too bad, sir.”

  “Eh, Sparks?”

  “Too bad it didn’t work,” I said.

  Biggs chuckled.

  “But it did work, Sparks. We’re now traveling at a speed in excess of five hundred million miles per hour!”

  Cap Hanson gulped and looked green. “F-five-—?”

  “That’s right, sir. If you don’t believe me take a peek through the viewpanes.”

  I moved to the fore-wall, slid back the metal slide that covered the quartzite viewpane. Space lay before us—but what space! Not the dark, velvety pall, brightly agleam with an infinitude of starry jewels, that all spacemen know. This was a blotched, striped crazy-quilt of color! Crimson, ochre, emerald—all the hues of the rainbow, of the Aurora. It was beautiful in a mad, fantastic way; there was a faery, magic loveliness to that swift-streaming space that fascinated and at the same time drilled me with dread.

  Hanson’s eyes bulged, and his voice was fearful.

  “We—we’ve done it again, Biggs! Busted clean out of our universe into something else!”

  “No, sir. This is our universe. But we are seeing it as no man has ever seen it before. Our speed is so great that we are seeing the ‘landmarks’ of space with a distorted viewpoint. Our relationship—or I should say relativity—is no longer to Earth, or any of its sister planets, but to the Greater Constant, the fundamental motion of the universe itself.

  “Thus, at one and the same time, we see the planets as they are and as they were; they are no longer mere points in space, they are streaks of color.” And he grinned. “The stars, too. Pretty, aren’t they?”

  Cap Hanson made weak motions at the viewpane.

  “Close it, Sparks! It’s giving me the meemies! So if you’re right, Biggs—then what? How do we know when we get to Uranus, or near it? If it’s just a streak of color?”

  “You must reconcile yourself to an entirely new system of astrogation. Up to this time, pilots have just jetted along until they found their goal, then set course for a landing. But with the V-I unit in operation, we ‘fly blind’ and set our course by strict, mathematical figuring. I have given Mr. Todd a plot-chart. Four days hence when I cut out the V-I unit and return to normal operation on the hypos, we will find Uranus immediately beneath us. And now, if you’ll excuse—”

  “Wait a minute!” said the skipper. “Suppose we was to meet up with something in space? Like a rogue asteroid?”

  Biggs shrugged.

  “That hazard is neither heightened nor decreased,” he said. “Our monitor-beams will still shunt off the smaller ones. As for the larger—well, you know as well as I that we have never yet found a method of overcoming that danger. It is one of the chances we take when we don space blues. As far as I’m concerned, I’d just as soon not see it coming as to watch it grow larger and larger in the perilens—”

  Well, he was right there. So since Hanson was fresh out of questions, Biggs hoisted hips back to his quarters. My guess is that he went back to billy-dooing with Diane’s picture. What’s yours?

  I could build this up if I wanted to, and offer you a blow-by-blow account of what happened in the next quartet of days. But why bother? The truth is—nothing did. The V-I unit continued to chug along like a dream; our old crate went flashing through space like a quantum with a hot date; tempus squirmed; and me—I was in seventh heaven. I don’t mean fifth or sixth, either. This was the easiest shuttle I had ever made. We were traveling so fast, and the V-I unit surrounded the Saturn with such a force-field, that my radio was utterly useless.

  So I got a vacation with pay. I ate and slept with what you might call ‘monotonous regularity’, and I spent all of my waking hours curled up with a good (i.e. torrid) book.

  And at the end of four days, Mr. Biggs disconnected his V-I unit, as called for on his plot-chart, and just like he said, there was Uranus gleaming beneath us! So we landed and spent a night swapping yarns and drinks with the S.S.P. officers garrisoned at New Oslo, then we took on a hold-full of gallium, and tootle-oo to the refrigerated seventh planet.

  “And (this gets tiresome, doesn’t it?) we accelerated for a day and a haf, then Biggs plotted a course, pushed a button, and once again we were free-wheeling through colorful and star-spangled space.

  Life was swell, and life was wonderful, and if there was any fly in my celestial ointment it was the fact that after the first week Lieutenant Romeo “Lovesick” Biggs got tired of staring at his fiancée’s image and insisted on strolling up to my turret to tell me (1) what a wonderful girl she was, (2) how much he missed her, and (3) how he was simply going to die if he didn’t see her again soon.

  Which boring details I had (1) known for years, once having had a heart-throb for Diane myself, (2) figured from his conversation, and (3) high hope that he would. Quietly!

  So somehow it was the afternoon, ship’s time, of the fourth day of the return shuttle and Biggs was in my turret, not to mention my hair, and I was hearing for the thousandth time about he wasn’t worthy of a gal like Diane, when all of a sudden bells jangled all over the ship, lights flashed the DANGER! signal, and my turret-audio broke into frantic voice, and the voice was that of the pilot on duty, our Third Mate, Bud Wilson.

  “Sparks, is Biggs there! Yes? Get him here quick! And find the Old Man! Hurry! For God’s sake—”

  We were out of there like a flash—make that two flashes—and pounding through the corridors, up the ramp to the bridge. We met Cap Hanson on the way. The three of us burst into the control-room to find Wilson tearing his hair, and Dick Todd, sweating, white-faced, poring over diagrams on the chart-board.

  Somebody yelled, “What’s the matter?” and I can’t tell you who, because it was probably all of us. And Dick’s eyes were haggard pockets in his face.

  “Jupiter!” he said.

  “What about it?” yelled the skipper. “Talk, man!”

  Todd shoved the chart at Biggs, pointed with a finger that wobbled.

  “It’s on our trajectory! Right before us now! We can see it—Look!”

  And he threw back the shield, and my heart gave an awful lurch. For no longer was the scene before us one of changing iridescent beauty—the entire pane wa
s covered by a gigantic, menacing platter. A monstrous missile of death. The planet Jupiter—dead on our course!

  Lancelot Biggs’ face, which had been keen and alert a moment before, was suddenly a dull, blank mask of horror. Strangled words fought their way from his throat.

  “I—I didn’t realize! I forgot all about Jupiter when I plotted the return course!

  “Forgot!” roared the skipper. “Great comets-—forgot!” Then his wrath died in anxiety. “Do something. Turn off that blasted unit of yours so we can loft over her—”

  But Todd shook his head.

  “That’s no use, Skipper. I thought of that. We’re too close. We’re caught in her gravitational attraction anyway. Even if we were to turn off Biggs’ device, there still wouldn’t be time to get the rockets hot.”

  “Lance—” began the skipper. Then, “Where did he go?”

  Because Biggs had turned, suddenly, and raced from the room! Fled, still clutching the space-chart. Fled, and not a word of advice, regret or hope. And with him went our last dwindling hope of salvation.

  Dick Todd’s voice was thin.

  “Maybe he has an idea, sir?”

  Hanson grasped at the thought as a drowning man.

  “That’s it, Todd. He’ll pull us out of this. He’s never failed us in the past—”

  But even this wishful expression was doomed to swift contradiction. For at that moment the bridge audio flashed, and the voice of a sailor clacked from somewhere below.

  “Captain Hanson, sir? There—there’s trouble down here! Lieutenant Biggs has violated regulations, sir! He knocked down two men and forced his way into the auxiliary lifeboat! He—he’s locked the door, sir. What shall we do?”

  In the moment of silence that followed, I saw something I hope I shall never be forced to look upon again. I saw a proud man wilt before my eyes; I saw a strong man age ten years in as many seconds.

  The man was Captain Hanson. The strength sloughed from his shoulders; pain burned deep furrows in his eyes; I could barely hear the whisper that crept from his lips.

  “A coward!” he husked. “The man my daughter loves—a coward!”

  And there was nothing I could say to refute the accusation. Lancelot Biggs’ action had branded him more damningly than any mere words. A crisis had come—and it had found him wanting. He had deserted his comrades, his ship, and had fled to a lifeboat. Perhaps even now he was getting ready to cast off.

  In a swift burst of comprehension, I thought I could understand the reason for this last, unreasonable defection. Lancelot Biggs had met difficulties before and without flinching.

  But that was an old, a different, Biggs. Love had come into his life now. Love, and a woman, and all the dreams that happy men dare wish upon.

  And these things, staunch and noble in themselves, had weakened the moral fibre of Biggs. Weakened it to the point where, in the face of danger, nothing was important except that he live to return to the arms of his loved one.

  These things I could understand. But I could not forgive them. Because love or no love, fear or no fear, a spaceman has a tradition to live up to. And Lancelot Biggs had tossed into the discard the very tradition now upheld by Dick Todd as he said, quietly, “Shall I advise the men, sir?”

  And by Captain Hanson who said, “Yes, Todd. And—and order Garrity to cut off Mr. Biggs’ intensifier. We may die, but we can die trying to escape. And a slower speed will give us more time—”

  “Yes, sir,” said Todd, and moved toward the audio. But he had barely reached out his hand toward it when sharp speech rasped from its black throat in remembered tones.

  “Stop, Todd! Don’t give that order, Skipper!”

  It was the voice of Lancelot Biggs!

  Captain hanson had subdued his rage once. But now his face crimsoned, his great hands clenched, and fury was a ponderable vigor in his voice.

  “You! Where are you, sir!”

  “In the life-skiff,” replied Biggs imperturbably.

  Almost insolently, I thought. As if he knew he were speaking from the only place of possible security in a doomed ship. “Todd, do as I say and do it fast! There’s no time to lose! Tell Chief Garrity to turn the verniers of my V-I unit all the way to the red line on the extreme right! Understand?”

  Once again Hanson’s roar interrupted.

  “Come back here, you coward, and die with your fellow-officers like the man you once pretended to be! What do you mean by skulking in a hideaway, giving orders aboard my ship?”

  “Shut up!” bellowed Biggs. And it was not just his audacity in speaking thus to a space commander that shocked me, it was the razor-edged intensity of his voice.

  “Todd—give that order immediately! For God’s sake, act! We’ve no time to lose!”

  Todd’s eyes sought mine. He knew, as well as I did, that the skipper was too furious to give an intelligent command.

  “That—that’s the limiting velocity, Sparks!” Todd choked. “Biggs must be insane. We’ll be translated again into the negative universe. And no way to get back—ever!”

  I didn’t have to answer. Biggs answered.

  “I’ve taken care of that, Todd! Now, do as I say! Hurry, hurry!”

  And—well, am I a fool? After all, Lancelot Biggs and I are old buddies. Once we were bunkmates, even. There came back to me a measure of the confidence I had once had in him. And I nodded to Todd.

  “Try it, Dick. We’ve got nothing to lose and everything to gain. Give the order.”

  He did. Chief Garrity must have been startled but he was too good a spaceman to argue an order from the bridge. He said, succinctly, “Aye, sirr!” And then—

  I felt the rocking plunge. The moment of brief, incredible dizziness of frightful speed being intensified to the limiting velocity of light. My head whirled, but somehow I managed to turn, stare at that ominous viewpane. And what I saw there brought a shocked cry from my lips!

  White—white—dazzling white—then grayness! No other scene than dim and vacant void, gray, infinite, inpenetrable. A glimpse of the lost universe—the matrix negative wherein are flung such mad things as attain a speed beyond that of the limiting velocity.

  Then crackling across the room agonizedly, “We’re clear, Todd? We’re through?”

  And Todd replying dazedly, “I—I don’t know what you mean?”

  “The chronometer, man! Has it touched 9.14?”

  “Yes, sir. But—but we’re slipping into the negative, Lanse! We’ve escaped one death to find another!”

  But there was infinite sadness to Lancelot Biggs’ denial.

  “No you’re not, Todd. You’re going back to your own universe—now. When you feel the ship lurch, turn the V-I unit dial back to where it was before. Ready? Now!”

  And there came, inexplicably, a swift unsteadiness a lurching halt of the ship. At that instant Todd spoke to Garrity; Garrity obeyed, and—

  We were once again traveling smoothly on our proper course. But Jupiter—monstrous missile of solid, terrible death—was no longer before us! It was behind us!

  As we saw that, Captain Hanson laughed aloud. And vast was the joy of that laughter. Relief, happiness, sheer triumph. And apology. And he cried:

  “You’ve done it, son! Forgive me for doubting you. We’re safe! I don’t know how, but—come on in, boy, and tell us all about it!”

  But there came no answer. Only the echo of our own harsh breathing, the dry scrape of our own feet shuffling restlessly. And new terror loomed suddenly in the Old Man’s eyes.

  “Biggs! he cried. “Lanse, my boy! Lanse!”

  And then—

  It was like the faintest, winnowed chaff of sound, breathing from far, far away. A voice speaking. To us. A voice that said:

  “—can’t come back…Skipper…Sparks will understand. Tell him…mass-energy…relationships. And tell…Diane…I love…”

  That was all. And my brain reeled beneath the import of those fading words. Suddenly I knew! I didn’t need to hear Cap Hanson screaming wi
ld orders to the sailors to the aft deck below, nor to hear their answer.

  “He’s not here, sir. He cast off the auxiliary a moment or so ago.”

  I knew!

  Later, I told them. My explanation was short, for the solution was simple. Simple, once you grant that a man possess infinite loyalty, infinite courage, in one lean and gangling frame.

  “Biggs saw,” I said, “that there was only one way to save us all from death. Oh, he bad blundered, yes, but we all blunder sometimes. But not all of us pay the penalty as willingly, as bravely, as he did.

  “Jupiter was upon us. Within minutes we would have crashed into the greatest of the solar planets. Only Biggs saw a way out. And that was—to make the speed of our ship exactly approximate the speed of light at the moment of impact!”

  Dick said. “But how—”

  “He told us the answer. Mass-energy relationships. You know the fundamental theory of the Lorentz-Fitzgerald contraction. Objects moving in space are contracted along their major axis in dire proportion to their speed, with the limiting velocity, the speed of light, as their ultimate limit. In other words, at the precise speed of light, this ship existed in only a unilateral dimension!”

  Hanson said, “You mean we—hurled over Jupiter?”

  “No, sir. We went right through it! At that tremendous speed, our dimension-extension was zero. Hence it did not affect, nor was it affected in any way by, the bulk and mass of Jupiter.

  “It’s as though an exceedingly fine wire, moving at lightning speed, were to be propelled through a cake of ice. Only in our case, the ‘wire’ was of zero dimension, and the cake of ice—Jupiter—did not even recognize that it had been penetrated.

  “But—” I shook, my head. “But Mr. Biggs realized what this daring scheme meant. It meant that in addition to our size being reduced to the infinitesimal, our mass would be raised to the infinite—for that is the corollary of the contraction theory.

  “There had to be some way of getting us back to our normal shape and size. The only possible method was by the forcible alteration of our mass. And—Biggs adopted this method. He placed himself in the life-skiff, gave the necessary orders from there. Then, after the danger had been averted, he deliberately cast off from the Saturn, tossed himself away from us, a living sacrifice to the mathematical gods, that we might be safe.”

 

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