<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_13" id="CHAPTER_13">CHAPTER 13</SPAN></h2>
<p>Latham's Triplets, Alpha, Beta, and Gamma, were at the corners of an
equilateral triangle about a quarter of a light year on a side. Beta
III was a small planet possessed of a somewhat odorous atmosphere
that was unpleasant but not deadly by any means. Beta III was not
capable of supporting human life—if by 'supporting' is meant that the
planet shall be called upon to accept, foster, and maintain in growing
population a colony from Terra without outside assistance. A dearth
of light metals on Beta III meant that man got insufficient salt to
maintain the chemical balance established over a few million of Terran
years. There was an abundance of heavy metals there which eventually
caused an upset of the digestive tract. There was also something—or
lack of something—in the make-up of the planet and its edible flora
and fauna that tended to lower the birth-expectancy rate among couples
who lived there. Paul did not care to ask which side of the fence
Huston was on; one cultural faction wanted this something—or lack
of something—isolated because knowing what it was would permit its
eradication and thus cause a rise in the birth rate. The other faction
wanted this something isolated for reasons best explained by Margaret
Sanger.</p>
<p>But for Paul's purpose, Latham's Triplets was an ideal laboratory and
proving ground.</p>
<p>Huston's offer was valid enough; he backed it with a half dozen young
technicians to do whatever Paul wanted, and included a group of three
small but very fast spacecraft for making tests in space itself.</p>
<p>While the galactic survey had picked Latham Alpha IV because of its
ecliptic tilt, and Latham Beta III was semipopulated by a few hundred
botanical researchers, none of the other planets of the system were
being used. Paul selected Gamma II as the third relay station and his
group set up both radio beacons and Z-wave equipment on each planet,
one of them being not far from the Survey Station on Alpha IV.</p>
<p>Setting both Z-wave gear and radio beacons in operation complete
with their timing gear, it was Paul's hope to show that the arrival
of the radio beacon wave was coincident with the establishment of
Z-wave contact. Then because this short distance did compare to true
interstellar separation, Paul would have a talking point to make the
big attempt across some real distance when one of the Beacon Stations
checked in.</p>
<p>He considered for some time the possibility of sneaking in to one of
the already-closed contacts, of which there were many, with many more
being completed every week. The thing that stopped him was that the
success at the Proxima I to Terra original contact had established
the fact that the Galactic Network was functional, and now every
station along the line that had contact already made was more than
likely to be visited regularly by various technicians for one checking
job or another. He would never know just how much time he would have
unmolested.</p>
<p>While he had few qualms about working on the stuff, Paul still felt
a vague fear at the idea of getting involved with the Bureau of
Astrogation, for he was undoubtedly a wanted man on Terra, even if
Neoterra did not seem to care. With his crew checking each of his own
stations, Paul took off in his spacecraft at a speed just below the
speed of light. A micro-wave beam went spearheading into space, and the
velocity of Paul's ship created a Doppler shift that permitted him to
receive the micro-wave frequency as one of the extremely long waves of
low-frequency radio. Hour after hour he raced into space, checking both
the radio and the Z-wave, raced ahead of the long finger of energy,
then slowed until it caught up with him.</p>
<p>Suddenly the idea struck Paul. If he could not safely remain in the
vicinity of a radio beacon station that had been checked-in, why
couldn't he tap one end of the radio beam while one of his men coupled
onto, not at, but near the other end?</p>
<p>Paul flopped ends with his ship and raced back to Beta III.</p>
<p>Twelve days later Paul was floating free a couple of million miles
above a planet known only as 'The Ninth Planet of General Star Catalog
Number 311' or in bureaucratic lingo: G.S.C. 311 was the star, and
the planet was IX. As nearly as he could recall the lineup of the
Galactic Survey network, G.S.C. 311 IX had checked-in some weeks ago
with another star with a catalog number some five and a fraction light
years distant.</p>
<p>The beacon signal from the planet below him roared in like thunder. It
overrode the 'zero' position of the volume control enough to drive the
loudspeaker into a blubber of noise.</p>
<p>Somewhere five light years distant, Toby Morrow, one of his men, should
be waiting. He might have a bit of trouble finding the beacon with
his spacecraft receiver at that distance. Noise was bothersome stuff,
and the nature of the signal after crossing light years of space was
not often high enough to come in strong and clear on anything but the
specialized Survey Stations, where the input coils were immersed in
liquid air to cut the random thermal agitation of the electrons in the
wire.</p>
<p>Paul watched the clock and promptly at 0600 hours he snapped on the
Z-wave transmitter and receiver, clutched the microphone and tried to
think of something heroic to say. He gave up trying to be heroic after
a few seconds, and merely said: "Toby! Toby Morrow! Can you hear me?"</p>
<p>The Z-wave receiver was silent.</p>
<p>Paul tried again and again, calling until his throat was dry, wishing
ruefully that he had made a record to play into the transmitter. He
pondered on the uncertainty angle; he could not be sure that Toby
was observing the same set of conditions as he was, since they were
separated in time and space; very well separated by five light years,
in a universe that would not permit gross matter to exceed the speed of
light, but forced such high-velocity matter into a completely-enclosed
bubble of its own type of space.</p>
<p>It had been demonstrated that matter increases in mass as its
velocity rises, and the formula claims that the mass becomes infinite
as the velocity of light is reached. But space itself is warped
by mass, and as the velocity rises toward the speed of light the
mass increases until space is warped completely around it, creating
a special transitory space of its own. Tests had been made with
timed supervelocity missiles running toward an uninhabited, useless
planet. The missile in its own warp of space had passed through the
planet without making any fuss or mark on either the planet or the
missile. Then men had tried it. Obviously matter occupies space, but
specially-warped space did no more exist for real space than otherwise.</p>
<p>Only the law of equal and opposite reaction brought the ship back to
real space once the drive was cut. The potential energy caused by the
warping of space released once the power was withdrawn, and like a
spring tightly wound and then released, the whole condition returned to
its original state of inert stability.</p>
<p>Paul had no way of knowing whether Toby had hit a snag somewhere along
the line. Again he thought of the short-term experiments that had been
made and smiled unhappily. He would have liked to check Toby, whether
his watch was properly set; if his receiver was turned on. But once
checked, what was to prevent Toby from falling ill, his watch from
running down, the blowup of some bit of vital equipment, the failure
of something basic like a power supply filter condenser, or even to
prevent Toby from turning off the Z-wave receiver just because the
slight speaker hiss annoyed the man, running continuously for better
than a week.</p>
<p>All Paul could do was to keep on calling. His first attempt had been
steady for a half hour. He waited for a half hour and then called again:</p>
<p>"Toby! Toby Morrow. Can you hear me?" Paul went into a ramble of talk,
just to keep the circuit alive. He recited poetry, discussed physics,
and finally he broke into song:</p>
<div class="poetry">
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">"<i>Round and round and round go the deuterons,</i></div>
<div class="verse"><i>Round and round the magnet swings 'em</i></div>
<div class="verse"><i>Round and round and round go the deutrons.</i></div>
<div class="verse"><i>Look at those neutrons pouring out there!</i>"</div>
</div></div>
<p>Then the Z-wave chattered into life. Paul jumped with excitement and
reached for the volume control to bring the roar of voice down to a
recognizable level.</p>
<p>"That's a lousy program we've got."</p>
<p>"Well, turn it off."</p>
<p>"Better we should shut the station off!"</p>
<p>"Hey! This is Paul Grayson—"</p>
<p>"We know who it is," came the sharp reply. At the same instant a
powerful light flashed into the viewport, and Paul looked to see a
spacer bearing down on him. As he watched, there was a flash of orange
flame at the nose.</p>
<p>He did not see the shell. But whether it was one of the standard solid
rounds used to check whether a planet or meteor were contraterrene, or
whether it was loaded with high explosives, a four-inch projectile is
nothing to be hit with in space.</p>
<p>His hand reached for the high drive, Paul could outrun any projectile
that way, once his ship got started.</p>
<p>But another spacecraft passed at his side close enough to count the
rivets, and as it passed him it began strewing space with a myriad of
baseball sized chunks of solid matter. To start the high drive now
would be death in a matter of seconds. The first few would be pushed
aside, the next batch would ricochet from his hull. The batch he met
just before he reached the high-space velocity would come through like
a shotgun blast shattering a brick of cheese.</p>
<p>"Turn off the Z-wave!" came the command. "Turn it off or the next shot
will drill dead center."</p>
<p>Paul hesitated.</p>
<p>Another flare came from the oncoming ship and the shell drilled deep
into Paul's spacecraft, among the machinery and stores. Bulkhead doors
clanged shut, the whistle of air rose and then fell as some compartment
or other down in the bowels of the ship blasted its air out through a
jagged hole in the hull.</p>
<p>"Next one will be through your department!"</p>
<p>Paul shrugged unhappily and snapped the toggle switch on the Z-wave
transmitter. The other ship came alongside, threw out magnetic
grapples, and then they came aboard in space suits through the airlock.
They waved him aside and took over the controls of his ship.</p>
<p>Stolidly and silently they drove him toward G.S.C. 311; IX, landed him
on a crude spaceport and escorted him to a new building where he faced
a hard-looking man who chewed a cold cigar and eyed him with a great
amount of pleasure.</p>
<p>"Well look who's here!" he gibed.</p>
<p>"What of it," snapped Paul.</p>
<p>"Lucky us. To think that of all the stars in the galaxy Paul Grayson
would fasten his eye on us! My friend, you have no idea what a shock
that Z-wave gave us. We broke three necks getting out there before you
could do some harm."</p>
<p>"So you've caught me. But catching me isn't going to stop progress."</p>
<p>"How vitally correct you are."</p>
<p>"You—"</p>
<p>"Pardon me. I am called Westlake. I am what is known as a henchman,
hireling, or employee of people who prefer to see the Z-wave
communications stalled."</p>
<p>"How long can you prevent it?"</p>
<p>"Long enough," said Westlake. "After that it can start with a big bang.
It would be helpful."</p>
<p>"You aren't going to get away with this, you know."</p>
<p>"Who—me? I'll bet I do. Just wait and see. I do admit that Z-wave
communications would be helpful. For instance, if we had Z-wave
contact with Neoterra I could find out what happened between the last
information I got—which came from Terra—and your subsequent arrival
here. Last dope I had was your capture and transmittal to Neoterra
where some plan was being cooked up for you. Now, confound it, we've
got a few months to wait between my telling the folks back home that
I've collected you and what do they want me to do about it.</p>
<p>"Another angle, Grayson, is that if we had Z-wave networks, I could be
sure that our friends on the other end of the line were as quick as we
were. If we knew that—"</p>
<p>Westlake paused and then laughed. "Hell, if we had Z-wave networks
running, I wouldn't have been the happiest guy in the galaxy to catch
you."</p>
<p>"You're one of Hoagland's gang."</p>
<p>"That's as good a guess as any."</p>
<p>"Then suppose you tell me where Stacey and Nora Phillips are?"</p>
<p>"Oh, I don't mind. They came with the first line of information about
you. In fact, I'll have you meet them. They'll let you in on a lot of
things about this place—which will save me a lot of time. Burroughs!
Burroughs! Burroughs, see that Grayson gets to talk to John Stacey and
Nora Phillips in the closed conference room."</p>
<p>"Right!"</p>
<p>Stacey came first. He looked, nodded, and said: "I was wondering when
you'd show up."</p>
<p>"I'm here. But about you?"</p>
<p>"So very simple. The rooker rooked, the seeker sucked in. It's a long
time ago, Paul but do you remember when I called you just before you
went to lecture?"</p>
<p>"Yes. You'd been to the house on 7111 Bridge Street."</p>
<p>"I left the upright coffin labelled 'Telephone Booth' and walked right
between two large determined characters who insisted that I continue
walking in their direction. I gathered from their conversation that
someone responsible for their movements was irked at one Paul Grayson,
and anger at Grayson included anybody else who had been seen talking to
him for the past eight years. I was then bundled aboard a spacecraft
and brought here. When did you miss me?"</p>
<p>"That's all you know?"</p>
<p>"The Oberspinnenführer is not exactly loquacious. Nor am I an honored
guest to be greeted with shouts and glee. These spiders close their
trap doors when I am around."</p>
<p>"Oh, then you didn't know that a couple of burly policemen arrested me
for your murder."</p>
<p>"They did?" blinked Stacey. "What did they use for corpus delectable?"</p>
<p>"They didn't have to. They were probably the same pair of large
determined gents that corralled you. This time they were dressed in
clothing that belonged to a couple of real cops."</p>
<p>"And from there where?"</p>
<p>"I was hauled off to Harrigan's Horror."</p>
<p>"Where in the name of—?"</p>
<p>"Planet near to Neosol, next Survey link station from Neoterra. I was
to be used as a decoy or something." Paul went on to explain. "The one
thing that did occur to me along the trip to Neosol was that if these
guys would lie about their status, there was no reason to expect the
truth about you. Nora now—?"</p>
<p>"She was here when I arrived under lock and key. She is quite a dish of
tea, old man."</p>
<p>The door opened again to let Nora Phillips come in. Paul had been right
in his appraisal of the woman. Imperfections in her dress or make-up
did not lessen her appeal. She had been more than a year and a half
without a hairdresser, her clothing was rough-woven crude and cheap.
Not a trace of cosmetic was on her face. The light in her eye was
dulled, and her litheness had become apathetic. Month after month of
hopeless waiting had taken the ambition out of her.</p>
<p>But she was Nora Phillips nonetheless. Paul went to her and put his
arms around her. She looked up at him quietly and then put her head
down on his shoulder. She did not cry. She did not have to cry.</p>
<p>She relaxed against him and let him hold her; letting Paul give her
some of his strength. It was a futile thing, Paul felt that he had no
real comfort to offer. In fact he was in just as bad a position as she
was.</p>
<p>His hand stroked her head, and she moved slightly, wriggling close to
him.</p>
<p>Stacey coughed slightly. "I hate to bust this up," he said softly.
"And maybe I shouldn't, because you may not get another chance. But
now—after a year and a half—maybe we all could learn something about
what the hell is going on. At least tell me."</p>
<p>Paul tightened his grip on Nora for a moment, holding her close.
Raising her face, he kissed her gently before he moved to sit across
the conference table from John Stacey.</p>
<p>"Don't you know anything about it?"</p>
<p>"I did mention a slight reticence; a certain lack of volubility on the
part of mine host. This," said Stacey pointedly, "is the first time
I've seen Nora Phillips close enough to let someone else touch her."</p>
<p>"Careful," said Paul. "This place is wired for sound, no doubt."</p>
<p>"We're not telling anything that the Management does not know," said
Stacey. "And if we are, they'll not interrupt. Go on, Nora. Give.
Remember, I'm the detective. In the novels I'm the guy who knows all
the answers, forms the decisions, finds the clues, and solves the
case. Just furnish me with one answer, one clue, one decision, and one
solution and we'll have Professor Moriarity in gaol by morning."</p>
<p>Nora frowned at Stacey. "You take this lightly."</p>
<p>"I shall—as soon as I can get some—bedeck me out in sackcloth."</p>
<p>Paul, who knew Stacey's manner, shook his head at Nora. He pressed her
hand a moment and then said, "Nora, some people get mad at the milkman
and then take out their mad at everybody else they meet for a week. The
other extreme is Stacey, who has the viewpoint that he and we are still
alive."</p>
<p>"I'm that way," nodded Stacey. "No one ever got anywhere by yelling
about the bum deal they got. It's the guy who puts his head down
and shoves—and the bird that gets mad at the universe because some
bum stepped on his foot in the subway is the guy who loses a lot of
friends."</p>
<p>"I'm—"</p>
<p>"Forget it and tell us," suggested Stacey.</p>
<p>"This is a political battle," said Nora. Then she went on to explain,
as Huston had explained to Paul. When she finished, Paul smiled
knowingly.</p>
<p>"What?" she asked him.</p>
<p>"Hoagland's gang bumped off the guy that clipped me because he flopped.
But on Proxima there was another guy made up to resemble me—and he was
clipped by someone else."</p>
<p>Paul looked at Nora. "Probably the same guy that so conveniently
provided a recording of your voice to convince me that I'd solved the
problem of Z-wave transmission," he said sharply.</p>
<p>Nora shrugged. "That was Ed Link," she said simply. "What happened?"</p>
<p>"Someone dropped what looked like a meteor shower on the bird."</p>
<p>"That sounds like Link's idea of handling it," she said.</p>
<p>"But the deceased?" asked Stacey. "Upon whose side was he aligned?"</p>
<p>"Not on Hoagland's."</p>
<p>"Certainly not on Huston's."</p>
<p>"Nora—tell me—why did you make that false recording?"</p>
<p>Nora looked at Paul, and then pulled him to her and hugged his head
against her cheek for a moment. "Paul, as a scientist you couldn't
understand the man on the street. We wanted something to show Neoterra.
You don't understand this. But Paul, what would have happened if you
had gotten away with it?"</p>
<p>"But I did not."</p>
<p>"Just pretend. Set up a hypothesis for a minute. Suppose that you had
been able to convince the Terran Physical Society that you had received
Z-waves from Terra while you were on Proxima I."</p>
<p>"I'd have been the man of the hour. I'd have been handed a large
appropriation and a project of my own to pursue this—But Nora, it will
work. Why did you feel that you had to falsify?"</p>
<p>"Paul, you are the only man in the known universe that does not think
Haedaecker's Theory is valid. Please go on—please?"</p>
<p>"So I'd have been able to pursue my work unhampered. And—"</p>
<p>"Now suppose that you were unable to make the Z-wave contact again?"
suggested Nora. "Remember, the recording was the only contact but the
Z-wave—regardless of your belief—does not really work."</p>
<p>Paul shrugged: "Lacking a repeat, I'd have begun to study the
connection a bit more," he said.</p>
<p>"So the upshot would have been—<i>Hope</i>—for those who wanted
communications between Terra and Neoterra."</p>
<p>Stacey looked wistful. "Quoting some great poet that I don't remember
other than that it was not Edgar Guest or John Paul Jones:</p>
<div class="poetry">
<div class="stanza">
<div class="verse">"<i>Of all sad words of tongue or pen</i></div>
<div class="verse"><i>The saddest are these: It might have been!</i>"</div>
</div></div>
<p>"So what do we do now?"</p>
<p>Paul looked at Stacey. "This is G.S.C. 113; IX. Hoagland's gang have
Z-wave equipment here, probably trying to see whether or not I am
right. So the thing to do is to get free long enough to use the Z-wave
equipment for a call for help."</p>
<p>Nora shook her head. Paul looked at Stacey. Stacey looked at Nora and
said, "I don't know anything about it." Paul looked at Nora.</p>
<p>"Don't you believe either?"</p>
<p>Nora clung to him, hugged him to her, cradled his head against her soft
breasts and caressed his cheek. "Paul—Paul—Paul; I do so desperately
<i>want</i> to believe—I want you to be—everything—I want you—"</p>
<p>Paul relaxed in her arms for a moment then moved away from her; holding
her by the shoulders and looking her straight in the face, he said,
"But—?"</p>
<p>Nora buried her face in his shoulder. A sob wrenched her and she
clutched at him frantically.</p>
<p>Then she looked up with tears welling on the brim of her eyes, tried to
speak but choked and buried her head in his shoulder once more.</p>
<p>Paul put his hand under her chin, lifted it from his shoulder and with
his other hand dashed the tears from Nora's eyes.</p>
<p>"Tell me," he said gently.</p>
<p>"Paul—Paul—Oh Paul, I love you and this hurts—but for all of your
faith, you have not one shred of evidence."</p>
<hr class="chap" />
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />