The Tom Corbett Space Cadet Megapack: 10 Classic Young Adult Sci-Fi Novels

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The Tom Corbett Space Cadet Megapack: 10 Classic Young Adult Sci-Fi Novels Page 6

by Norton, Andre


  Tom managed a fleeting smile.

  “Now, Corbett”—Strong’s voice became businesslike—“as you know, these manual tests are the last tests before actually blasting off. In the past weeks, you cadets have been subjected to every possible examination, to discover any flaw in your work that might later crop up in space. This manual operations test of the control board, like Manning’s on the radar bridge and Astro’s on the power deck, is designed to test you under simulated space conditions. If you pass this test, your next step is real space.”

  “Yes, sir.”

  “I warn you, it isn’t easy. And if you fail, you personally will wash out, and if other members of the unit do not get a high enough mark to average out to a passing grade for all of you, you fail as a unit.”

  “I understand, sir,” said Tom.

  “All right, then we’ll begin. Your crew is aboard, the air lock is closed. What is the first thing you do?”

  “Adjust the air circulating system to ensure standard Earth conditions.”

  “How do you do that?”

  “By pressing this button which will activate the servo units. They automatically keep the circulating pumps in operation, based on thermostatic readings from the main gauge.” Tom pointed to a black clock face, with a luminous white hand and numbers.

  “All right, carry on,” said Strong.

  Tom reached over the huge control board that extended around him for some two feet on three sides. He placed a nervous finger on a small button, waited for the gauge below to register with a swing of the hand, and then released it. “All pressures steady, sir.”

  “What next?”

  “Check the crew, sir—all departments—” replied Tom.

  “Carry on,” said Strong.

  Tom reached out and pulled a microphone toward him.

  “All hands! Station check!” said Tom, and then was startled to hear a metallic voice answer him.

  “Power deck, ready for blast-off!” And then another voice: “Radar deck, ready for blast-off!”

  Tom leaned back in the pilot‘s seat and turned to the captain. “All stations ready, sir.”

  “Good! What next?” asked Strong.

  “Ask spaceport tower for blast-off clearance—”

  Strong nodded. Tom turned back to the microphone, and without looking, punched a button in front of him.

  “Rocket cruiser—” He paused and turned back to Strong. “What name do I give, sir?”

  Strong smiled. “Noah’s Ark—”

  “Rocket cruiser Noah’s Ark to spaceport control! Request blast-off clearance and orbit.”

  Once again a thin metallic voice answered him and gave the necessary instructions.

  On and on, through every possible command, condition or decision that would be placed in front of him, Tom guided his imaginary ship on its imaginary flight through space. For two hours he pushed buttons, snapped switches and jockeyed controls. He gave orders and received them from the thin metallic voices. They answered him with such accuracy, and sometimes with seeming hesitation, that Tom found it difficult to believe that they were only electronically controlled recording devices. Once, when supposedly blasting through space at three-quarters space speed, he received a warning from the radar bridge of an approaching asteroid. He asked for a course change, but in reply received only static. Believing the recording to have broken down, he turned inquiringly to Captain Strong, but received only a blank stare in return. Tom hesitated for a split second, then turned back to the controls. He quickly flipped the teleceiver button on and began plotting the course of the approaching asteroid, ignoring for the moment his other duties on the control deck. When he had finished, he gave the course shift to the power deck and ordered a blast on the starboard jet. He waited for the course change, saw it register on the gauges in front of him, then continued his work.

  Strong suddenly leaned over and clapped him on the back enthusiastically.

  “Good work, Corbett. That broken recording was put there intentionally to trap you. Not one cadet in twenty would have had the presence of mind you showed in plotting the course of that asteroid yourself.”

  “Thank you, sir,” stammered Tom.

  “That’s all—the test is over. Return to your quarters.” He came over and laid a hand on Tom’s shoulder. “And don’t worry, Corbett. While it isn’t customary to tell a cadet, I think you deserve it. You’ve passed with a perfect score!”

  “I have, sir? You mean—I really passed?”

  “Next step is Manning,” said Strong. “You’ve done as much as one cadet can do.”

  “Thank you, sir”—Tom could only repeat it over and over—“thank you, sir—thank you.”

  Dazed, he saluted his superior and turned to the door. Two hours in the pilot’s chair had made him dizzy. But he was happy.

  Five minutes later he slammed back the sliding door and entered the quarters of 42-D with a lusty shout.

  “Meet Space Cadet Corbett—an Earthworm who’s just passed his control-deck manual operations exam!”

  Astro looked up from a book of tables on astrogation and gave Tom a wan smile.

  “Congratulations, Tom,” he said, and turned back to his book, adding bitterly, “but if I don’t get these tables down by this afternoon for my power-deck manual, you’re sunk.”

  “Say—what’s going on here?” asked Tom. “Where’s Roger? Didn’t he help you with them?”

  “He left. Said he had to see someone before taking his radar-bridge manual. He helped me a little. But when I’d ask him a question, he’d just rattle the answer off so fast—well, I just couldn’t follow him.”

  Suddenly slamming the book shut, he got up. “Me and these tables”—he indicated the book—“just don’t mix!”

  “What’s the trouble?”

  “Ah—I can get the easy ones about astrogation. They’re simple. But it’s the ones where I have to combine it with the power deck.”

  “Well—I mean—what specifically?” asked Tom softly.

  “For instance, I’ve got to find the ratio for compression on the main firing tubes, using a given amount of fuel, heading for a given destination, and taking a given time for the passage.”

  “But that’s control-deck operations—as well as astrogation and power!” exclaimed Tom.

  “Yeah—I know,” answered Astro, “but I’ve still got to be able to do it. If anything happened to you two guys and I didn’t know how to get you home, then what?”

  Tom hesitated. Astro was right. Each member of the unit had to depend on the other in any emergency. And if one of them failed…? Tom saw why the ground manuals were so important now.

  “Look,” offered Tom. “Suppose we go over the whole thing again together. Maybe you’re fouled up on the basic concept.”

  Tom grabbed a chair, hitched it close to the desk and pulled Astro down beside him. He opened the book and began studying the problem.

  “Now look—you have twenty-two tons of fuel—and considering the position of your ship in space—”

  As the two boys, their shoulders hunched over the table, began reviewing the table of ratios, across the quadrangle in the examination hall Roger Manning stood in a replica of a rocket ship’s radar bridge and faced Captain Strong.

  “Cadet Manning reporting for manual examination, sir.” Roger brought up his arm in a crisp salute to Captain Strong, who returned it casually.

  “Stand easy, Manning,” replied Strong. “Do you recognize this room?”

  “Yes, sir. It’s a mock-up of a radar bridge.”

  “A workable mock-up, cadet!” Strong was vaguely irritated by Roger’s nonchalance in accepting a situation that Tom had marveled at. “You will take your manuals here!”

  “Yes, sir.”

  “On these tests you will be timed for both efficiency and speed and you’ll use all the tables, charts and astrogation equipment that you’d find in a spaceship. Your problems are purely mathematical. There are no decisions to make. Just use your head.�


  Strong handed Roger several sheets of paper containing written problems. Roger shuffled them around in his fingers, giving each a quick glance.

  “You may begin any time you are ready, Manning,” said Strong.

  “I’m ready now, sir,” replied Roger calmly. He turned to the swivel chair located between the huge communications board, the adjustable chart table and the astrogation prism. Directly in front of him was the huge radar scanner, and to one side and overhead was a tube mounted on a swivel joint that looked like a small telescope, but which was actually an astrogation prism for taking sights on the celestial bodies in space.

  Roger concentrated on the first problem.

  “…you are now in the northwest quadrant of Mars, chart M, area twenty-eight. You have been notified by the control deck that it has been necessary to jettison three quarters of your fuel supply. For the last five hundred and seventy-nine seconds you have been blasting at one-quarter space speed. The four main drive rockets were cut out at thirty-second intervals. Making adjustment for degree of slip on each successive rocket cutout, find present position by using cross-fix with Regulus as your starboard fix, Alpha Centauri as your port fix.”

  Suddenly a bell began to ring in front of Roger. Without hesitation he adjusted a dial that brought the radar scanner into focus. When the screen remained blank, he made a second adjustment, and then a third and fourth, until the bright white flash of a meteor was seen on the scanner. He quickly grabbed two knobs, one in each hand, and twisted them to move two thin, plotting lines, one horizontal and one vertical, across the surface of the scanner. Setting the vertical line, he fingered a tabulating machine with his right hand, as he adjusted the second line with his left, thus cross-fixing the meteor. Then he turned his whole attention to the tabulator, ripped off the answer with lightning moves of his fingers and began talking rapidly into the microphone.

  “Radar bridge to control deck! Alien body bearing zero-one-five, one-point-seven degrees over plane of the ecliptic. On intersecting orbit. Change course two degrees, hold for fifteen seconds, then resume original heading. Will compensate for change nearer destination!”

  Roger watched the scanner a moment longer. When the rumbling blast of the steering jets sounded in the chamber and the meteor flash shifted on the scanner screen, he returned to the problem in his hand.

  Seven minutes later he turned to Strong and handed him the answer.

  “Present position by dead reckoning is northwest quadrant of Mars, chart O, area thirty-nine, sir,” he announced confidently.

  Strong tried to mask his surprise, but a lifted eyebrow gave him away. “And how did you arrive at this conclusion, Manning?”

  “I was unable to get a sight on Alpha Centauri due to the present position of Jupiter, sir,” replied Roger easily. “So I took a fix on Earth, allowed for its rotational speed around the sun and took the cross-fix with Regulus as ordered in the problem. Of course, I included all the other factors of the speed and heading of our ship. That was routine.”

  Strong accepted the answer with a curt nod, motioning for Roger to continue. It would not do, thought Strong, to let Manning know that he was the first cadet in thirty-nine years to make the correct selection of Earth in working up the fix with Regulus, and still have the presence of mind to plot a meteor without so much as a half-degree error. Of course the problem varied with each cadet, but it remained essentially the same.

  “Seven-and-a-half minutes. Commander Walters will be surprised, to say the least,” thought Steve.

  Forty-five minutes later, Roger, as unruffled as if he had been sitting listening to a lecture from a sound slide, handed in the rest of his papers, executed a sharp salute and walked out.

  “Two down and one to go,” thought Strong, and the toughest one of them all coming up. Astro. The big Venusian was unable to understand anything that couldn’t be turned with a wrench. The only thing that would prevent Unit 42-D from taking Academy unit honors over Unit 77-K, the unit assigned to Lieutenant Wolcheck, would be Astro. While none of the members of the other units could come up to the individual brilliance of Corbett or Manning, they worked together as a unit, helping one another. They might make a higher unit rating, simply because they were better balanced.

  He shrugged his shoulders and collected the papers. It was as much torture for him, as it was for any cadet, he thought, and turned to the door. “All right, Astro,” he said to himself, “in ten minutes it’ll be your turn and I’m going to make it tough!”

  Back in the quarters of Unit 42-D, Tom and Astro still pored over the books and papers on the desk.

  “Let’s try again, Astro,” sighed Tom as he hitched his chair closer to the desk. “You’ve got thirty tons of fuel—you want to find the compression ratio of the number-one firing-tube chamber—so what do you do?”

  “Start up the auxiliary, burn a little of the stuff and judge what it’ll be,” the big cadet replied. “That’s the way I did it on the space freighters.”

  “But you’re not on a space freighter now!” exclaimed Tom. “You’ve got to do things the way they want it done here at the Academy. By the book! These tables have been figured out by great minds to help you, and you just want to burn a little of the stuff and guess at what it’ll be!” Tom threw up his hands in disgust.

  “Seems to me I heard of an old saying back in the teen centuries about leading a horse to water, but not being able to make him drink!” drawled Roger from the doorway. He strolled in and kicked at the crumpled sheets of paper that littered the floor, stark evidence of Tom’s efforts with Astro.

  “All right, wise guy,” said Tom, “suppose you explain it to him!”

  “No can do,” replied Roger. “I tried. I explained it to him twenty times this morning while you were taking your control-deck manual.” He tapped his head delicately with his forefinger. “Can’t get through—too thick!”

  Astro turned to the window to hide the mist in his eyes.

  “Lay off, Roger,” snapped Tom. He got up and walked over to the big cadet. “Come on, Astro, we haven’t got much time. You’re due in the examination hall in a few minutes.”

  “It’s no good, Tom, I just can’t understand that stuff.” Astro turned and faced his unit-mates, his voice charged with sudden emotion. “Just fifteen minutes on the power deck of anything with rockets in her and I’ll run her from here to the next galaxy. I—I can’t explain it, but when I look at those motors, I can read ‘em like you read an astrogation chart, Roger, or you the gauges on the control deck, Tom. But I just can’t get those ratios out of a book. I gotta put my hands on those motors—touch ‘em—I mean really touch ‘em—then I know what to do!”

  As suddenly as he had started, he stopped and turned, leaving Tom and Roger staring at him, startled by this unusual outburst.

  “Cadets—stand to!” roared a voice from the doorway.

  The three cadets snapped to attention and faced the entrance.

  “Take it easy, Earthworms!” said Tony Richards. A tall cadet with closely cut black hair and a lazy, smiling face stood in the doorway.

  “Lay off, Richards,” said Tom. “We haven’t time for gags now. Astro’s going to take his power-deck manual in a few minutes and we’re cramming with him.”

  “O.K.—O.K.—don’t blow your jets,” said Richards. “I just wanted to see if there were any bets on which unit would cop honors in the manuals this afternoon.”

  “I suppose you think your Unit 77-K will finish on top?” drawled Roger.

  “I’d like to bet all the galley demerits we have in 77-K against yours.”

  “With Astro on our team?” complained Roger.

  “What’s the matter with Astro?” asked Richards. “From what I hear, he’s hot stuff!” It wasn’t a compliment, but a sharp dig made with a sly smile. Astro balled his huge hands into fists.

  “Astro,” said Roger, “is the type that can smell out trouble on any power deck. But today he came down with a cold. No, I’m afraid it’s n
o bet, Richards.”

  “I’ll give you two to one,” Richards offered.

  “Nothing doing,” replied Roger. “Not even at five to one. Not with Astro.”

  Richards grinned, nodded and disappeared.

  Roger turned to face the hard stare of Tom.

  “That was the dirtiest sellout I’ve ever heard, Manning,” Tom growled.

  “Sorry, Corbett,” said Roger. “I only bet on sure things.”

  “That’s O.K. with me, Manning,” said Astro, “but I’m afraid you sold yourself a hot rocket, because I’m going to pass!”

  “Who are you kidding?” Roger laughed and sprawled on his bunk.

  Astro took a quick step forward, his fists clenched, his face a mask of burning anger, but Tom quickly jumped in front of him.

  “You’ll be late for the exam, Astro!” he shouted. “Get going or it’ll count against your mark!”

  “Huh. What’s a few points more or less when you’re going to fail anyway,” snorted Roger from the bunk.

  Again, Astro started to lunge forward and Tom braced himself against the Venusian’s charge, but suddenly the burly cadet stopped. Disengaging Tom’s restraining arms, he spoke coldly to the sneering boy on the bed.

  “I’m going to pass the exam, Manning. Get that? I’m going to pass and then come back and beat your head off!” Turning on his heel, he stalked out of the room.

  Tom immediately wheeled to face Roger, fire in his eyes, and the arrogant cadet, sensing trouble, jumped to his feet to meet him.

  “What’s the idea of giving Astro a hard time?” demanded Tom.

  “Cool off, Corbett,” replied Roger warily. “You’re fusing your tubes you’re so hot.”

  “You bet I’m hot! Hot enough to blast you—again!” Tom deliberately spat out the last word.

  Roger flushed and brought his fists up quickly as though to charge in, then suddenly dropped them again. He turned to the door and slowly walked out.

  “Go blow your jets,” his voice drifted back to Tom as he disappeared.

  Tom stood there, looking at the empty door, almost blind with rage and frustration. He was failing in the main job assigned to him, that of keeping the unit on an even keel and working together. How could he command a crew out in space if he couldn’t keep the friction of his own unit under control?

 

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