<SPAN name="startofbook"></SPAN>
<h1>OPERATION: OUTER SPACE</h1>
<h2>by Murray Leinster</h2>
<p> </p>
<p> </p>
<h2 style="margin-top: 3em;">CONTENTS</h2>
<div style="margin-left: 15%;">
<ul><li><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_ONE">CHAPTER ONE</SPAN><span class="ralign"><SPAN href="#Page_5">5</SPAN></span></li>
<li><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_TWO">CHAPTER TWO</SPAN><span class="ralign"><SPAN href="#Page_25">25</SPAN></span></li>
<li><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_THREE">CHAPTER THREE</SPAN><span class="ralign"><SPAN href="#Page_39">39</SPAN></span></li>
<li><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_FOUR">CHAPTER FOUR</SPAN><span class="ralign"><SPAN href="#Page_54">54</SPAN></span></li>
<li><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_FIVE">CHAPTER FIVE</SPAN><span class="ralign"><SPAN href="#Page_69">69</SPAN></span></li>
<li><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_SIX">CHAPTER SIX</SPAN><span class="ralign"><SPAN href="#Page_81">81</SPAN></span></li>
<li><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_SEVEN">CHAPTER SEVEN</SPAN><span class="ralign"><SPAN href="#Page_98">98</SPAN></span></li>
<li><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_EIGHT">CHAPTER EIGHT</SPAN><span class="ralign"><SPAN href="#Page_110">110</SPAN></span></li>
<li><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_NINE">CHAPTER NINE</SPAN><span class="ralign"><SPAN href="#Page_126">126</SPAN></span></li>
<li><SPAN href="#CHAPTER_TEN">CHAPTER TEN</SPAN><span class="ralign"><SPAN href="#Page_142">142</SPAN></span></li></ul></div>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_5" id="Page_5">[Pg 5]</SPAN></span></p>
<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_ONE" id="CHAPTER_ONE"></SPAN>CHAPTER ONE</h2>
<p>Jed Cochrane tried to be cynical as the helicab
hummed softly through the night over the city. The cab
flew at two thousand feet, where lighted buildings seemed
to soar toward it from the canyons which were streets.
There were lights and people everywhere, and Cochrane
sardonically reminded himself that he was no better than
anybody else, only he'd been trying to keep from realizing
it. He looked down at the trees and shrubbery on the
roof-tops, and at a dance that was going on atop one
of the tallest buildings. All roofs were recreation-spaces
nowadays. They were the only spaces available. When you
looked down at a city like this, you had cynical thoughts.
Fourteen million people in this city. Ten million in that.
Eight in another and ten in another still, and twelve million
in yet another ... Big cities. Swarming millions of
people, all desperately anxious—so Cochrane realized
bitterly—all desperately anxious about their jobs and
keeping them.</p>
<p>"Even as me and I," said Cochrane harshly to himself.
"Sure! I'm shaking in my shoes right along with the rest
of them!"</p>
<p>But it hurt to realize that he'd been kidding himself.
He'd thought he was important. Important, at least, to
the advertising firm of Kursten, Kasten, Hopkins and
Fallowe. But right now he was on the way—like a common
legman—to take the moon-rocket to Lunar City,
and he'd been informed of it just thirty minutes ago. Then
he'd been told casually to get to the rocket-port right
away. His secretary and two technical men and a writer
were taking the same rocket. He'd get his instructions
from Dr. William Holden on the way.</p>
<p>A part of his mind said indignantly, "<i>Wait till I get
Hopkins on the phone! It was a mixup! He wouldn't
send me off anywhere with the Dikkipatti Hour depending
on me! He's not that crazy!</i>" But he was on his way<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_6" id="Page_6">[Pg 6]</SPAN></span>
to the space-port, regardless. He'd raged when the message
reached him. He'd insisted that he had to talk to
Hopkins in person before he obeyed any such instructions.
But he was on his way to the space-port. He was
riding in a helicab, and he was making adjustments
in his own mind to the humiliation he unconsciously
foresaw. There were really three levels of thought in
his mind. One had adopted a defensive cynicism, and
one desperately insisted that he couldn't be as unimportant
as his instructions implied, and the third watched the
other two as the helicab flew with cushioned booming
noises over the dark canyons of the city and the innumerable
lonely lights of the rooftops.</p>
<p>There was a thin roaring sound, high aloft. Cochrane
jerked his head back. The stars filled all the firmament,
but he knew what to look for. He stared upward.</p>
<p>One of the stars grew brighter. He didn't know when
he first picked it out, but he knew when he'd found it.
He fixed his eyes on it. It was a very white star, and
for a space of minutes it seemed in no wise different
from its fellows. But it grew brighter. Presently it was
very bright. It was brighter than Sirius. In seconds more
it was brighter than Venus. It increased more and more
rapidly in its brilliance. It became the brightest object in
all the heavens except the crescent moon, and the cold
intensity of its light was greater than any part of that.
Then Cochrane could see that this star was not quite
round. He could detect the quarter-mile-long flame of the
rocket-blast.</p>
<p>It came down with a rush. He saw the vertical, stabbing
pencil of light plunge earthward. It slowed remarkably
as it plunged, with all the flying aircraft above the
city harshly lighted by its glare. The space-port itself
showed clearly. Cochrane saw the buildings, and the
other moon-rockets waiting to take off in half an hour
or less.</p>
<p>The white flame hit the ground and splashed. It spread
out in a wide flat disk of intolerable brightness. The
sleek hull of the ship which still rode the flame down
glinted vividly as it settled into the inferno of its own
making.</p>
<p>Then the light went out. The glare cut off abruptly.
There was only a dim redness where the space-port tarmac
had been made incandescent for a little while. That
glow faded—and Cochrane became aware of the enormous<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_7" id="Page_7">[Pg 7]</SPAN></span>
stillness. He had not really noticed the rocket's
deafening roar until it ended.</p>
<p>The helicab flew onward almost silently, with only
the throbbing pulses of its overhead vanes making any
sound at all.</p>
<p>"<i>I kidded myself about those rockets, too</i>," said Cochrane
bitterly to himself. "<i>I thought getting to the moon
meant starting to the stars. New worlds to live on. I had
a lot more fun before I found out the facts of life!</i>"</p>
<p>But he knew that this cynicism and this bitterness came
out of the hurt to the vanity that still insisted everything
was a mistake. He'd received orders which disillusioned
him about his importance to the firm and to the business
to which he'd given years of his life. It hurt to find out that
he was just another man, just another <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's note: original reads 'expendible'">expendable</ins>. Most
people fought against making the discovery, and some succeeded
in avoiding it. But Cochrane saw his own self-deceptions
with a savage clarity even as he tried to keep
them. He did not admire himself at all.</p>
<p>The helicab began to slant down toward the space-port
buildings. The sky was full of stars. The earth—of course—was
covered with buildings. Except for the space-port
there was no unoccupied ground for thirty miles in any direction.
The cab was down to a thousand feet. To five
hundred. Cochrane saw the just-arrived rocket with tender-vehicles
running busily to and fro and hovering around it.
He saw the rocket he should take, standing upright on the
faintly lighted field.</p>
<p>The cab touched ground. Cochrane stood up and paid
the fare. He got out and the cab rose four or five feet
and flitted over to the waiting-line.</p>
<p>He went into the space-port building. He felt himself
growing more bitter still. Then he found Bill Holden—Doctor
William Holden—standing dejectedly against a
wall.</p>
<p>"I believe you've got some orders for me, Bill," said
Cochrane sardonically. "And just what psychiatric help
can I give you?"</p>
<p>Holden said tiredly:</p>
<p>"I don't like this any better than you do, Jed. I'm
scared to death of space-travel. But go get your ticket
and I'll tell you about it on the way up. It's a special
production job. I'm roped in on it too."</p>
<p>"Happy holiday!" said Cochrane, because Holden
looked about as miserable as a man could look.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_8" id="Page_8">[Pg 8]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>He went to the ticket desk. He gave his name. On
request, he produced identification. Then he said sourly:</p>
<p>"While you're working on this I'll make a phone-call."</p>
<p>He went to a pay visiphone. And again there were different
levels of awareness in his mind—one consciously
and defensively cynical, and one frightened at the revelation
of his unimportance, and the third finding the others
an unedifying spectacle.</p>
<p>He put the call through with an over-elaborate confidence
which he angrily recognized as an attempt to deceive
himself. He got the office. He said <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Original reads 'calmy'.">calmly</ins>:</p>
<p>"This is Jed Cochrane. I asked for a visiphone contact
with Mr. Hopkins."</p>
<p>He had a secretary on the phone-screen. She looked at
memos and said pleasantly:</p>
<p>"Oh, yes. Mr. Hopkins is at dinner. He said he couldn't
be disturbed, but for you to go on to the moon according
to your instructions, Mr. Cochrane."</p>
<p>Cochrane hung up and raged, with one part of his
mind. Another part—and he despised it—began to argue
that after all, he had better wait before thinking there was
any intent to humiliate him. After all, his orders must
have been issued with due consideration. The third part
disliked the other two parts intensely—one for raging without
daring to speak, and one for trying to find alibis for
not even raging. He went back to the ticket-desk. The
clerk said heartily:</p>
<p>"Here you are! The rest of your party's already on
board, Mr. Cochrane. You'd better hurry! <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Hyphenated to correspond with other usage in text.">Take-off's</ins> in
five minutes."</p>
<p>Holden joined him. They went through the gate and
got into the tender-vehicle that would rush them out to
the rocket. Holden said heavily:</p>
<p>"I was waiting for you and hoping you wouldn't come.
I'm not a good traveller, Jed."</p>
<p>The small vehicle rushed. To a city man, the dark
expanse of the space-port was astounding. Then a spidery
metal framework swallowed the tender-truck, and them.
The vehicle stopped. An elevator accepted them and lifted
an indefinite distance through the night, toward the stars. A
sort of gangplank with a canvas siderail reached out
across emptiness. Cochrane crossed it, and found himself
at the bottom of a spiral ramp inside the rocket's passenger-compartment.
A stewardess looked at the tickets.
She led the way up, and stopped.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_9" id="Page_9">[Pg 9]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"This is your seat, Mr. Cochrane," she said professionally.
"I'll strap you in this first time. You'll do it later."</p>
<p>Cochrane lay down in a contour-chair with an eight-inch
mattress of foam rubber. The stewardess adjusted
straps. He thought bitter, ironic thoughts. A voice said:</p>
<p>"Mr. Cochrane!"</p>
<p>He turned his head. There was Babs Deane, his secretary,
with her eyes very bright. She regarded him from a
contour-chair exactly opposite his. She said happily:</p>
<p>"Mr. West and Mr. Jamison are the science men, Mr.
Cochrane. I got Mr. Bell as the writer."</p>
<p>"A great triumph!" Cochrane told her. "Did you get
any idea what all this is about? Why we're going up?"</p>
<p>"No," admitted Babs cheerfully. "I haven't the least
idea. But I'm going to the moon! It's the most wonderful
thing that ever happened to me!"</p>
<p>Cochrane shrugged his shoulders. Shrugging was not
comfortable in the straps that held him. Babs was a good
secretary. She was the only one Cochrane had ever had
who did not try to make use of her position as secretary
to the producer of the Dikkipatti Hour on television.
Other secretaries had used their nearness to him to wangle
acting or dancing or singing assignments on other
and lesser shows. As a rule they lasted just four public
appearances before they were back at desks, spoiled for
further secretarial use by their taste of fame. But Babs
hadn't tried that. Yet she'd jumped at a chance for a
trip to the moon.</p>
<p>A panel up toward the nose of the rocket—the upper
end of this passenger compartment—glowed suddenly.
Flaming red letters said, "<i><ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Hyphenated to correspond with other usage in text.">Take-off</ins>, ninety seconds.</i>"</p>
<p>Cochrane found an ironic flavor in the thought that
splendid daring and incredible technology had made his
coming journey possible. Heroes had ventured magnificently
into the emptiness beyond Earth's atmosphere. Uncountable
millions of dollars had been spent. Enormous
intelligence and infinite pains had been devoted to making
possible a journey of two hundred thirty-six thousand
miles through sheer nothingness. This was the most splendid
achievement of human science—the reaching of a
satellite of Earth and the building of a human city there.</p>
<p>And for what? Undoubtedly so that one Jed Cochrane
could be ordered by telephone, by somebody's secretary,
to go and get on a passenger-rocket and get to the moon.
Go—having failed to make a protest because his boss<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_10" id="Page_10">[Pg 10]</SPAN></span>
wouldn't interrupt dinner to listen—so he could keep his
job by obeying. For this splendid purpose, scientists had
labored and dedicated men had risked their lives.</p>
<p>Of course, Cochrane reminded himself with conscious
justice, of course there was the very great value of moon-mail
cachets to devotees of philately. There was the value
of the tourist facilities to anybody who could spend that
much money for something to brag about afterward.
There were the solar-heat mines—running at a slight loss—and
various other fine achievements. There was even
a <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Hyphen removed to correspond with other usage in text.">nightclub</ins> in Lunar City where one highball cost the
equivalent of—say—a week's pay for a secretary like
Babs. And—</p>
<p>The panel changed its red glowing sign. It said: "<i>Take-off
forty-five seconds.</i>"</p>
<p>Somewhere down below a door closed with a cushioned
soft definiteness. The inside of the rocket suddenly
seemed extraordinarily still. The silence was oppressive.
It was dead. Then there came the whirring of very many
electric fans, stirring up the air.</p>
<p>The stewardess' voice came matter-of-factly from below
him in the upended cylinder which was the passenger-space.</p>
<p>"We take off in forty-five seconds. You will find yourself
feeling very heavy. There is no cause to be alarmed.
If you observe that breathing is oppressive, the oxygen
content of the air in this ship is well above earth-level,
and you will not need to breathe so deeply. Simply relax
in your chair. Everything has been thought of. Everything
has been tested repeatedly. You need not disturb
yourself at all. Simply relax."</p>
<p>Silence. Two heart-beats. Three.</p>
<p>There was a roar. It was a deep, booming, numbing
roar that came from somewhere outside the rocket's hull.
Simultaneously, something thrust Cochrane deep into the
foam-cushions of his contour-chair. He felt the cushion
piling up on all sides of his body so that it literally surrounded
him. It resisted the tendency of his arms and
legs and abdomen to flatten out and flow sidewise, to
spread him in a thin layer over the chair in which he
rested.</p>
<p>He felt his cheeks dragged back. He was unduly conscious
of the weight of objects in his pockets. His stomach
pressed hard against his backbone. His sensations were<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_11" id="Page_11">[Pg 11]</SPAN></span>
those of someone being struck a hard, prolonged blow all
over his body.</p>
<p>It was so startling a sensation, though he'd read about
it, that he simply stayed still and blankly submitted to it.
Presently he felt himself gasp. Presently, again, he noticed
that one of his feet was going to sleep. He tried to move
it and succeeded only in stirring it feebly. The roaring
went on and on and on....</p>
<p>The red letters in the panel said: "<i>First stage ends in
five seconds</i>."</p>
<p>By the time he'd read it, the rocket hiccoughed and
stopped. Then he felt a surge of panic. He was falling!
He had no weight! It was the sensation of a suddenly
dropping elevator a hundred times multiplied. He bounced
out of the depression in the foam-cushion. He was prevented
from floating away only by the straps that held
him.</p>
<p>There was a sputter and a series of jerks. Then he had
weight again as roarings began once more. This was not
the ghastly continued impact of the take-off, but still it
was weight—considerably greater weight than the normal
weight of Earth. Cochrane wiggled the foot that had
gone to sleep. Pins and needles lessened their annoyance
as sensation returned to it. He was able to move his arms
and hands. They felt abnormally heavy, and he experienced
an extreme and intolerable weariness. He wanted to
go to sleep.</p>
<p>This was the second-stage rocket-phase. The moon-rocket
had blasted off at six gravities acceleration until
clear of atmosphere and a little more. Acceleration-chairs
of remarkably effective design, plus the pre-saturation of
one's blood with oxygen, made so high an acceleration
safe and not unendurable for the necessary length of
time it lasted. Now, at three gravities, one did not feel
on the receiving end of a violent thrust, but one did feel
utterly worn out and spent. Most people stayed awake
through the six-gravity stage and went heavily to sleep
under three gravities.</p>
<p>Cochrane fought the sensation of fatigue. He had not
liked himself for accepting the orders that had brought
him here. They had been issued in bland confidence that
he had no personal affairs which could not be abandoned
to obey cryptic orders from the secretary of a boss he
had actually never seen. He felt a sort of self-contempt
which it would have been restful to forget in three-gravity<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_12" id="Page_12">[Pg 12]</SPAN></span>
sleep. But he grimaced and held himself awake to
contemplate the unpretty spectacle of himself and his
actions.</p>
<p>The red light said: "<i>Second stage ends ten seconds.</i>"</p>
<p>And in ten seconds the rockets hiccoughed once more
and were silent, and there was that sickening feeling of
free fall, but he grimly made himself think of it as soaring
upward instead of dropping—which was the fact, too—and
waited until the third-stage rockets boomed suddenly
and went on and on and on.</p>
<p>This was nearly normal acceleration; the effect of this
acceleration was the feel of nearly normal weight. He
felt about as one would feel in Earth in a contour-chair
tilted back so that one faced the ceiling. He knew approximately
where the ship would be by this time, and
it ought to have been a thrill. Cochrane was hundreds of
miles above Earth and headed eastward out and up. If
a port were open at this height, his glance should span
continents.</p>
<p>No.... The ship had taken off at night. It would still
be in Earth's shadow. There would be nothing at all to be
seen below, unless one or two small patches of misty
light which would be Earth's too-many great cities. But
overhead there would be stars by myriads and myriads,
of every possible color and degree of brightness. They
would crowd each other for room in which to shine. The
rocket-ship was spiralling out and out and up and up, to
keep its rendezvous with the space platform.</p>
<p>The platform, of course, was that artificial satellite of
Earth which was four thousand miles out and went around
the planet in a little over four hours, traveling from west
to east. It had been made because to break the bonds of
Earth's gravity was terribly costly in fuel—when a ship
had to accelerate slowly to avoid harm to human cargo.
The space platform was a filling station in emptiness, at
which the moon-rocket would refuel for its next and longer
and much less difficult journey of two hundred thirty-odd
thousand miles.</p>
<p>The stewardess came up the ramp, moving briskly.
She stopped and glanced at each passenger in each chair
in turn. When Cochrane turned his open eyes upon her,
she said soothingly:</p>
<p>"There's no need to be disturbed. Everything is going
perfectly."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_13" id="Page_13">[Pg 13]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I'm not disturbed," said Cochrane. "I'm not even
nervous. I'm perfectly all right."</p>
<p>"But you should be drowsy!" she observed, concerned.
"Most people are. If you nap you'll feel better for it."</p>
<p>She felt his pulse in a <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Hyphen removed to correspond with other usage in text.">businesslike</ins> manner. It was
normal.</p>
<p>"Take my nap for me," said Cochrane, "or put it back
in stock. I don't want it. I'm perfectly all right."</p>
<p>She considered him carefully. She was remarkably
pretty. But her manner was strictly detached. She said:</p>
<p>"There's a button. You can reach it if you need anything.
You may call me by pushing it."</p>
<p>He shrugged. He lay still as she went on to inspect
the other passengers. There was nothing to do and nothing
to see. Travellers were treated pretty much like parcels,
these days. Travel, like television entertainment and most
of the other facilities of human life, was designed for
the seventy-to-ninety-per-cent of the human race whose
likes and dislikes and predilections could be learned exactly
by surveys. Anybody who didn't like what everybody
liked, or didn't react like everybody reacted, was
subject to annoyances. Cochrane resigned himself to them.</p>
<p>The red light-letters changed again, considerably later.
This time they said: "<i>Free flight, thirty seconds.</i>"</p>
<p>They did not say "free fall," which was the technical
term for a rocket coasting upward or downward in space.
But Cochrane braced himself, and his stomach-muscles
were tense when the rockets stopped again and stayed
off. The sensation of continuous fall began. An electronic
speaker beside his chair began to speak. There were other
such mechanisms beside each other passenger-chair, and
the interior of the rocket filled with a soft murmur which
was sardonically like choral recitation.</p>
<p>"<i>The sensation of weightlessness you now experience</i>,"
said the voice soothingly, "<i>is natural at this stage of your
flight. The ship has attained its maximum intended speed
and is still rising to meet the space platform. You may
consider that we have left atmosphere and its limitations
behind. Now we have spread sails of inertia and glide on
a wind of pure momentum toward our destination. The
feeling of weightlessness is perfectly normal. You will be
greatly interested in the space platform. We will reach it
in something over two hours of free flight. It is an artificial
satellite, with an air-lock our ship will enter for refueling.
You will be able to leave the ship and move about<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_14" id="Page_14">[Pg 14]</SPAN></span>
inside the Platform, to lunch if you choose, to buy souvenirs
and mail them back and to view Earth from a height
of four thousand miles through quartz-glass windows.
Then, as now, you will feel no sensation of weight. You
will be taken on a tour of the space platform if you wish.
There are rest-rooms—.</i>"</p>
<p>Cochrane grimly endured the rest of the taped lecture.
He thought sourly to himself: "<i>I'm a captive audience
without even an interest in the production tricks.</i>"</p>
<p>Presently he saw Bill Holden's head. The psychiatrist
had squirmed inside the straps that held him, and now
was staring about within the rocket. His complexion was
greenish.</p>
<p>"I understand you're to brief me," Cochrane told him,
"on the way up. Do you want to tell me now what all
this is about? I'd like a nice dramatic narrative, with
gestures."</p>
<p>Holden said sickly:</p>
<p>"Go to hell, won't you?"</p>
<p>His head disappeared. Space-nausea was, of course, as
definite an ailment as seasickness. It came from no weight.
But Cochrane seemed to be immune. He turned his mind
to the possible purposes of his journey. He knew nothing
at all. His own personal share in the activities of Kursten,
Kasten, Hopkins and Fallowe—the biggest advertising
agency in the world—was the production of the Dikkipatti
Hour, top-talent television show, regularly every
Wednesday night between eight-thirty and nine-thirty
o'clock central U. S. time. It was a good show. It was
among the ten most popular shows on three continents.
It was not reasonable that he be ordered to drop it and
take orders from a psychiatrist, even one he'd known
unprofessionally for years. But there was not much, these
days, that really made sense.</p>
<p>In a world where cities with populations of less than
five millions were considered small towns, values were
peculiar. One of the deplorable results of living in a
world over-supplied with inhabitants was that there were
too many people and not enough jobs. When one had
a good job, and somebody higher up than oneself gave
an order, it was obeyed. There was always somebody
else or several somebodies waiting for every job there
was—hoping for it, maybe praying for it. And if a good
job was lost, one had to start all over.</p>
<p>This task might be anything. It was not, however, connected<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_15" id="Page_15">[Pg 15]</SPAN></span>
in any way with the weekly production of the Dikkipatti
Hour. And if that production were scamped this
week because Cochrane was away, he would be the one
to take the loss in reputation. The fact that he was on
the moon wouldn't count. It would be assumed that he
was slipping. And a slip was not good. It was definitely
not good!</p>
<p>"<i>I could do a documentary right now</i>," Cochrane told
himself angrily, "<i>titled 'Man-afraid-of-his-job.' I could
make a very authentic production. I've got the material</i>!"</p>
<p>He felt weight for a moment. It was accompanied by
booming noises. The sounds were not in the air outside,
because there was no air. They were reverberations of
the rocket-motors themselves, transmitted to the fabric of
the ship. The ship's steering-rockets were correcting the
course of the vessel and—yes, there was another surge of
power—nudging it to a more correct line of flight to
meet the space platform coming up from behind. The
platform went around the world six times a day, four
thousand miles out. During three of its revolutions anybody
on the ground, anywhere, could spot it in daylight
as an infinitesimal star, bright enough to be seen against
the sky's blueness, rising in the west and floating eastward
to set at the place of sunrise.</p>
<p>There was again weightlessness. A rocket-ship doesn't
burn its rocket-engines all the time. It runs them to get
started, and it runs them to stop, but it does not run them
to travel. This ship was floating above the Earth, which
might be a vast sunlit ball filling half the universe below
the rocket, or might be a blackness as of the Pit. Cochrane
had lost track of time, but not of the shattering effect
of being snatched from the job he knew and thought
important, to travel incredibly to do something he had
no idea of. He felt, in his mind, like somebody who climbs
stairs in the dark and tries to take a step that isn't there.
It was a shock to find that his work wasn't important even
in the eyes of Kursten, Kasten, Hopkins and Fallowe.
That he didn't count. That nothing counted ...</p>
<p>There was another dull booming outside and another
touch of weight. Then the rocket floated on endlessly.</p>
<p>A long time later, something touched the ship's outer
hull. It was a definite, positive clanking sound. And then
there was the gentlest and vaguest of tuggings, and Cochrane
could feel the ship being maneuvered. He knew it<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_16" id="Page_16">[Pg 16]</SPAN></span>
had made contact with the space platform and was being
drawn inside its lock.</p>
<p>There was still no weight. The stewardess began to unstrap
the passengers one by one, supplying each with
magnetic-soled slippers. Cochrane heard her giving instructions
in their use. He knew the air-lock was being
filled with air from the huge, globular platform. In time
the door at the back—bottom—base of the passenger-compartment
opened. Somebody said flatly:</p>
<p>"Space platform! The ship will be in this air-lock for
some three hours plus for refueling. Warning will be given
before departure. Passengers have the freedom of the platform
and will be given every possible privilege."</p>
<p>The magnetic-soled slippers did hold one's feet to the
spiral ramp, but one had to hold on to a hand-rail to make
progress. On the way down to the exit door, Cochrane
encountered Babs. She said breathlessly:</p>
<p>"I can't believe I'm really here!"</p>
<p>"I can believe it," said Cochrane, "without even liking
it particularly. Babs, who told you to come on this trip?
Where'd all the orders come from?"</p>
<p>"Mr. Hopkins' secretary," said Babs happily. "She
didn't tell me to come. I managed that! She said for me
to name two science men and two writers who could
work with you. I told her one writer was more than enough
for any production job, but you'd need me. I assumed
it was a production job. So she changed the orders and
here I am!"</p>
<p>"Fine!" said Cochrane. His sense of the ironic deepened.
He'd thought he was an executive and reasonably
important. But somebody higher up than he was had disposed
of him with absent-minded finality, and that man's
secretary and his own had determined all the details, and
he didn't count at all. He was a pawn in the hands of
firm-partners and assorted secretaries. "Let me know what
my job's to be and how to do it, Babs."</p>
<p>Babs nodded. She didn't catch the sarcasm. But she
couldn't think very straight, just now. She was on the
space platform, which was the second most glamorous
spot in the universe. The most glamorous spot, of course,
was the moon.</p>
<p>Cochrane hobbled ashore into the platform, having
no weight whatever. He was able to move only by the
curious sticky adhesion of his magnetic-soled slippers to
the steel floor-plates beneath him. Or—were they beneath?<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_17" id="Page_17">[Pg 17]</SPAN></span>
There was a crew member walking upside down on a
floor which ought to be a ceiling directly over Cochrane's
head. He opened a door in a side-wall and went in, still
upside down. Cochrane felt a sudden dizziness, at that.</p>
<p>But he went on, using hand-grips. Then he saw Dr.
William Holden looking greenish and ill and trying sickishly
to answer questions from West and Jamison and
Bell, who had been plucked from their private lives just
as Cochrane had and were now clamorously demanding
of Bill Holden that he explain what had happened to
them.</p>
<p>Cochrane snapped angrily:</p>
<p>"Leave the man alone! He's space-sick! If you get him
too much upset this place will be a mess!"</p>
<p>Holden closed his eyes and said gratefully:</p>
<p>"Shoo them away, Jed, and then come back."</p>
<p>Cochrane waved his hands at them. They went away,
stumbling and holding on to each other in the eerie dream-likeness
and nightmarish situation of no-weight-whatever.
There were other passengers from the moon-rocket in this
great central space of the platform. There was a fat woman
looking indignantly at the picture of a weighing-scale
painted on the wall. Somebody had painted it, with a
dial-hand pointing to zero pounds. A sign said, "<i>Honest
weight, no gravity.</i>" There was the stewardess from the
rocket, off duty here. She smoked a cigarette in the blast
of an electric fan. There was a party of moon-tourists
giggling foolishly and clutching at everything and buying
souvenirs to mail back to Earth.</p>
<p>"All right, Bill," said Cochrane. "They're gone. Now
tell me why all the not inconsiderable genius in the employ
of Kursten, Kasten, Hopkins and Fallowe, in my
person, has been mobilized and sent up to the moon?"</p>
<p>Bill Holden swallowed. He stood up with his eyes
closed, holding onto a side-rail in the great central room
of the platform.</p>
<p>"I have to keep my eyes shut," he explained, queasily.
"It makes me ill to see people walking on side-walls and
across ceilings."</p>
<p>A stout tourist was doing exactly that at the moment.
If one could walk anywhere at all with magnetic-soled
shoes, one could walk everywhere. The stout man did
walk up the side-wall. He adventured onto the ceiling,
where he was head-down to the balance of his party. He
stood there looking up—down—at them, and he wore a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_18" id="Page_18">[Pg 18]</SPAN></span>
peculiarly astonished and half-frightened and wholly foolish
grin. His wife squealed for him to come down: that
she couldn't bear looking at him so.</p>
<p>"All right," said Cochrane. "You're keeping your eyes
closed. But I'm supposed to take orders from you. What
sort of orders are you going to give?"</p>
<p>"I'm not sure yet," said Holden thinly. "We are sent
up here on a private job for Hopkins—one of your bosses.
Hopkins has a daughter. She's married to a man named
Dabney. He's neurotic. He's made a great scientific discovery
and it isn't properly appreciated. So you and I
and your team of tame scientists—we're on our way to
the Moon to save his reason."</p>
<p>"Why save his reason?" asked Cochrane cynically. "If
it makes him happy to be a crackpot—"</p>
<p>"It doesn't," said Holden, with his eyes still closed. He
gulped. "Your job and a large part of my practice depends
on keeping him out of a looney-bin. It amounts to
a public-relations job, a production, with me merely censoring
aspects that might be bad for Dabney's psyche.
Otherwise he'll be frustrated."</p>
<p>"Aren't we all?" demanded Cochrane. "Who in hades
does he think he is? Most of us want appreciation, but
we have to be glad when we do our work and get paid
for it! We—"</p>
<p>Then he swore bitterly. He had been taken off the job
he'd spent years learning to do acceptably, to phoney a
personal satisfaction for the son-in-law of one of the partners
of the firm he worked for. It was humiliation to be
considered merely a lackey who could be ordered to perform
personal services for his boss, without regard to the
damage to the work he was really responsible for. It was
even more humiliating to know he had to do it because
he couldn't afford not to.</p>
<p>Babs appeared, obviously gloating over the mere fact
that she was walking in magnetic-soled slippers on the
steel decks of the space platform. Her eyes were very
bright. She said:</p>
<p>"Mr. Cochrane, hadn't you better come look at Earth
out of the quartz Earthside windows?"</p>
<p>"Why?" demanded Cochrane bitterly. "If it wasn't that
I'd have to hold onto something with both hands, in order
to do it, I'd be kicking myself. Why should I want to do
tourist stuff?"</p>
<p>"So," said Babs, "so later on you can tell when a writer<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_19" id="Page_19">[Pg 19]</SPAN></span>
or a scenic designer tries to put something over on you
in a space platform show."</p>
<p>Cochrane grimaced.</p>
<p>"In theory, I should. But do you realize what all this
is about? I just learned!" When Babs shook her head he
said sardonically, "We are on the way to the Moon to
stage a private production out of sheer cruelty. We're
hired to rob a happy man of the luxury of feeling sorry
for himself. We're under Holden's orders to cure a man of
being a crackpot!"</p>
<p>Babs hardly listened. She was too much filled with the
zest of being where she'd never dared hope to be able to go.</p>
<p>"I wouldn't want to be cured of being a crackpot,"
protested Cochrane, "if only I could afford such a luxury!
I'd—"</p>
<p>Babs said urgently:</p>
<p>"You'll have to hurry, really! They told me it starts in
ten minutes, so I came to find you right away."</p>
<p>"What starts?"</p>
<p>"We're in eclipse now," explained Babs, starry-eyed.
"We're in the Earth's shadow. In about five minutes we'll
be coming out into sunlight again, and we'll see the new
Earth!"</p>
<p>"Guarantee that it will be a new Earth," Cochrane
said morosely, "and I'll come. I didn't do too well on the
old one."</p>
<p>But he followed her in all the embarrassment of walking
on magnetic-soled shoes in a total absence of effective
gravity. It was quite a job simply to start off. Without
precaution, if he merely tried to march away from where
he was, his feet would walk out from under him and he'd
be left lying on his back in mid-air. Again, to stop without
putting one foot out ahead for a prop would mean
that after his feet paused, his body would continue onward
and he would achieve a full-length face-down flop.
And besides, one could not walk with a regular up-and-down
motion, or in seconds he would find his feet churning
emptiness in complete futility.</p>
<p>Cochrane tried to walk, and then irritably took a hand-rail
and hauled himself along it, with his legs trailing behind
him like the tail of a swimming mermaid. He thought
of the simile and was not impressed by his own dignity.</p>
<p>Presently Babs halted herself in what was plainly a
metal blister in the outer skin of the platform. There was
a round quartz window, showing the inside of steel-plate<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_20" id="Page_20">[Pg 20]</SPAN></span>
windows beyond it. Babs pushed a button marked "<i>Shutter</i>,"
and the valves of steel drew back.</p>
<p>Cochrane blinked, lifted even out of his irritableness
by the sight before him.</p>
<p>He saw the immensity of the heavens, studded with innumerable
stars. Some were brighter than others, and they
were of every imaginable color. Tiny glintings of lurid
tint—through the Earth's atmosphere they would blend
into an indefinite faint luminosity—appeared so close together
that there seemed no possible interval. However
tiny the appearance of a gap, one had but to look at it
for an instant to perceive infinitesimal flecks of colored
fire there, also.</p>
<p>Each tiniest glimmering was a sun. But that was not
what made Cochrane catch his breath.</p>
<p>There was a monstrous space of nothingness immediately
before his eyes. It was round and vast and near. It
was black with the utter blackness of the Pit. It was Earth,
seen from its eight-thousand-mile-wide shadow, unlighted
even by the Moon. There was no faintest relief from its
absolute darkness. It was as if, in the midst of the splendor
of the heavens, there was a chasm through which one
glimpsed the unthinkable nothing from which creation
was called in the beginning. Until one realized that this
was simply the dark side of Earth, the spectacle was one
of hair-raising horror.</p>
<p>After a moment Cochrane said with a carefully steadied
voice:</p>
<p>"My most disparaging opinions of Earth were never as
black as this!"</p>
<p>"Wait," said Babs confidently.</p>
<p>Cochrane waited. He had to hold carefully in his mind
that this visible abyss, this enormity of purest dark, was
not an opening into nothingness but was simply Earth at
night as seen from space.</p>
<p>Then he saw a faint, faint arch of color forming at its
edge. It spread swiftly. Immediately, it seemed, there was
a pinkish glowing line among the multitudinous stars. It
was red. It was very, very bright. It became a complete
half-circle. It was the light of the sun refracted around
the edge of the world.</p>
<p>Within minutes—it seemed in seconds—the line of light
was a glory among the stars. And then, very swiftly, the
blazing orb which was the sun appeared from behind
Earth. It was intolerably bright, but it did not brighten<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_21" id="Page_21">[Pg 21]</SPAN></span>
the firmament. It swam among all the myriads of myriads
of suns, burning luridly and in a terrible silence, with
visibly writhing prominences rising from the edge of its
disk. Cochrane squinted at it with light-dazzled eyes.</p>
<p>Then Babs cried softly:</p>
<p>"Beautiful! Oh, beautiful!"</p>
<p>And Cochrane shielded his eyes and saw the world new-born
before him. The arc of light became an arch and
then a crescent, and swelled even as he looked. Dawn
flowed below the space platform, and it seemed that seas
and continents and clouds and beauty poured over the
disk of darkness before him.</p>
<p>He stood here, staring, until the steel shutters slowly
closed. Babs said in regret:</p>
<p>"You have to keep your hand on the button to keep
the shutters open. Else the window might get pitted with
dust."</p>
<p>Cochrane said cynically:</p>
<p>"And how much good will it have done me to see that,
Babs? How can that be faked in a studio—and how much
would a television screen show of it?"</p>
<p>He turned away. Then he added sourly:</p>
<p>"You stay and look if you like, Babs. I've already had
my vanity smashed to little bits. If I look at that again I'll
want to weep in pure frustration because I can't do anything
even faintly as well worth watching. I prefer to cut
down my notions of the cosmos to a tolerable size. But
you go ahead and look!"</p>
<p>He went back to Holden. Holden was painfully dragging
himself back into the rocket-ship. Cochrane went
with him. They returned, weightless, to the admirably
designed contour-chairs in which they had traveled to this
place, and in which they would travel farther. Cochrane
settled down to stare numbly at the wall above him. He
had been humiliated enough by the actions of one of the
heads of an advertising agency. He found himself resenting,
even as he experienced, the humbling which had been
imposed upon him by the cosmos itself.</p>
<p>Presently the other passengers returned, and the moonship
was maneuvered out of the lock and to emptiness
again, and again presently rockets roared and there was
further feeling of intolerable weight. But it was not as bad
as the <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Hyphenated to correspond with other usage in text.">take-off</ins> from Earth.</p>
<p>There followed some ninety-six hours of pure tedium.
After the first accelerating blasts, the rockets were silent.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_22" id="Page_22">[Pg 22]</SPAN></span>
There was no weight. There was nothing to hear except
the droning murmur of unresting electric fans, stirring the
air ceaselessly so that excess moisture from breathing
could be extracted by the dehumidifiers. But for them—if
the air had been left stagnant—the journey would have
been insupportable.</p>
<p>There was nothing to see, because ports opening on
outer space were not safe for passengers to look through.
Mere humans, untrained to keep their minds on technical
matters, could break down at the spectacle of the universe.
There could be no activity.</p>
<p>Some of the passengers took dozy-pills. Cochrane did
not. It was against the law for dozy-pills to produce a
sensation of euphoria, of well-being. The law considered
that pleasure might lead to addiction. But if a pill merely
made a person drowsy, so that he dozed for hours halfway
between sleeping and awake, no harm appeared to
be done. Yet there were plenty of dozy-pill addicts. Many
people were not especially anxious to feel good. They
were quite satisfied not to feel anything at all.</p>
<p>Cochrane couldn't take that way of escape. He lay
strapped in his chair and thought unhappily of many
things. He came to feel unclean, as people used to feel
when they traveled for days on end on railroad trains.
There was no possibility of a bath. One could not even
change clothes, because baggage went separately to the
moon in a robot freight-rocket, which was faster and
cheaper than a passenger transport, but would kill anybody
who tried to ride it. Fifteen-and twenty-gravity acceleration
is economical of fuel, and six-gravity is not, but
nobody can live through a twenty-gravity lift-off from
Earth. So passengers stayed in the clothes in which they
entered the ship, and the only possible concession to
fastidiousness was the disposable underwear one could get
and change to in the rest-rooms.</p>
<p>Babs Deane did not take dozy-pills either, but Cochrane
knew better than to be more than remotely friendly with
her outside of office hours. He did not want to give her any
excuse to tell him anything for his own good. So he spoke
pleasantly and kept company only with his own thoughts.
But he did notice that she looked rapt and starry-eyed even
through the long and dreary hours of free flight. She was
mentally tracking the moonship through the void. She'd
know when the continents of Earth were plain to see, and
the tints of vegetation on the two hemispheres—northern<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_23" id="Page_23">[Pg 23]</SPAN></span>
and southern—and she'd know when Earth's ice-caps could
be seen, and why.</p>
<p>The stewardess was not too much of a diversion. She
was brisk and calm and soothing, but she became a trifle
reluctant to draw too near the chairs in which her passengers
rode. Presently Cochrane made deductions and
maliciously devised a television commercial. In it, a moon-rocket
stewardess, in uniform and looking fresh and charming,
would say sweetly that she went without bathing for
days at a time on moon-trips, and did not offend because
she used whoosit's antistinkum. And then he thought
pleasurably of the heads that would roll did such a commercial
actually get on the air.</p>
<p>But he didn't make plans for the production-job he'd
been sent to the moon to do. Psychiatry was specialized,
these days, as physical medicine had been before it. An
extremely expensive diagnostician had been sent to the
moon to tap Dabney's reflexes, and he'd gravely diagnosed
frustration and suggested young Dr. Holden for the curative
treatment. Frustration was the typical neurosis of the rich,
anyhow, and Bill Holden had specialized in its cure. His
main reliance was on the making of a dramatic production
centering about his patient, which was expensive enough
and effective enough to have made him a quick reputation.
But he couldn't tell Cochrane what was required of him.
Not yet. He knew the disease but not the case. He'd have
to see and know Dabney before he could make use of the
extra-special production-crew his patient's father-in-law
had provided from the staff of Kursten, Kasten, Hopkins
and Fallowe.</p>
<p>Ninety-some hours after blast-off from the space platform,
the rocket-ship turned end for end and began to
blast to kill its velocity toward the moon. It began at half-gravity—the
red glowing sign gave warning of it—and
rose to one gravity and then to two. After days of no-weight,
two gravities was punishing.</p>
<p>Cochrane thought to look at Babs. She was rapt, lost
in picturings of what must be outside the ship, which she
could not see. She'd be imagining what the television screens
had shown often enough, from film-tapes. The great pock
marked face of Luna, with its ring-mountains in incredible
numbers and complexity, and the vast open "seas" which
were solidified oceans of lava, would be clear to her mind's
eye. She would be imagining the gradual changes of the
moon's face with nearness, when the colorings appear.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_24" id="Page_24">[Pg 24]</SPAN></span>
From a distance all the moon seems tan or sandy in tint.
When one comes closer, there are tawny reds and slate-colors
in the mountain-cliffs, and even blues and yellows,
and everywhere there is the ashy, whitish-tan color of the
moondust.</p>
<p>Glancing at her, absorbed in her satisfaction, Cochrane
suspected that with only half an excuse she would explain
to him how the several hundreds of degrees difference in
the surface-temperature of the moon between midnight
and noon made rocks split and re-split and fracture so that
stuff as fine as talcum powder covered every space not too
sharply tilted for it to rest on.</p>
<p>The feeling of deceleration increased. For part of a
second they had the sensation of three gravities.</p>
<p>Then there was a curious, yielding jar—really very slight—and
then the feeling of excess weight ended altogether.
But not the feeling of weight. They still had weight. It
was constant. It was steady. But it was very slight.</p>
<p>They were on the moon, but Cochrane felt no elation.
In the tedious hours from the space platform he'd thought
too much. He was actually aware of the humiliations and
frustrations most men had to conceal from themselves because
they couldn't afford expensive psychiatric treatments.
Frustration was the disease of all humanity, these days.
And there was nothing that could be done about it.
Nothing! It simply wasn't possible to rebel, and rebellion
is the process by which humiliation and frustration is cured.
But one could not rebel against the plain fact that Earth
had more people on it than one planet could support.</p>
<p>Merely arriving at the moon did not seem an especially
useful achievement, either to Cochrane or to humanity at
large.</p>
<p>Things looked bad.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_25" id="Page_25">[Pg 25]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />