<p>They heard the skipper’s grunt as they hurried through the door. A moment
later the ship’s normal gravity returned—also through the Plumie
generator. Up was up again, and down was down, and the corridors and
cabins of the <em>Niccola</em> were brightly illuminated. Had the ship been
other than an engineless wreck, falling through a hundred and fifty
million miles of emptiness into the flaming photosphere of a sun,
everything would have seemed quite normal, including the errand Baird and
Diane were upon, and the fact that they
<span class="pagebreak" title="35"> </span><SPAN name="Page_35" id="Page_35"></SPAN>
held hands self-consciously as
they went about it.</p>
<p>They skirted the bulkhead of the main air tank. They headed along the
broader corridor which went past the indented inner door of the air lock.
They had reached that indentation when Baird saw that the inner air-lock
door was closing. He saw a human pressure suit past its edge. He saw the
corner of some object that had been put down on the air-lock floor.</p>
<p>Baird shouted, and rushed toward the lock. He seized the inner handle and
tried to force open the door again, so that no one inside it could emerge
into the emptiness without. He failed. He wrenched frantically at the
control of the outer door. It suddenly swung freely. The outer door had
been put on manual. It could be and was being opened from inside.</p>
<p>“Tell the skipper,” raged Baird. “Taine’s taking something out!” He tore
open a pressure-suit cupboard in the wall beside the lock door. “He’ll
make the Plumies think it’s a return-gift for the generator!” He eeled
into the pressure suit and zipped it up to his neck. “The man’s crazy! He
thinks we can take their ship and stay alive for a while! Dammit, our air
would ruin half their equipment! Tell the skipper to send help!”</p>
<p>He wrenched at the door again, jamming down his helmet with one hand. And
this time the control worked. Taine, most probably, had forgotten that
the inner control was disengaged only when the manual was actively in
use. Diane raced away, panting. Baird swore bitterly at the slowness of
the outer door’s closing. He was tearing at the inner door long before it
could be opened. He flung himself in and dragged it shut, and struck the
emergency air-release which bled the air lock into space for speed of
operation. He thrust out the outer door and plunged through.</p>
<p>His momentum carried him almost too far. He fell, and only the magnetic
soles of his shoes enabled him to check himself. He was in that singular
valley between the two ships, where their hulls were impregnably welded
fast. Round-hulled Plumie ship, and ganoid-shaped <em>Niccola</em>, they stuck
immovably together as if they had been that way since time began. Where
the sky appeared above Baird’s head, the stars moved in stately
procession across the valley roof.</p>
<p>He heard a metallic rapping through the fabric of his space armor. Then
sunlight glittered, and the valley filled with a fierce glare, and a man
in a human spacesuit stood on the <em>Niccola’s</em> plating, opposite the
Plumie air lock. He held a bulky object under his arm. With his other
gauntlet he rapped again.</p>
<p>“You fool!” shouted Baird. “Stop that! We couldn’t use their ship,
anyhow!”</p>
<p>His space phone had turned on with the air supply. Taine’s voice snarled:</p>
<p>“<em>We’ll try! You keep back! They are not human!</em>”</p>
<p>But Baird ran toward him. The sensation of running upon magnetic-soled
shoes was unearthly: it was like
<span class="pagebreak" title="36"> </span><SPAN name="Page_36" id="Page_36"></SPAN>
trying to run on fly-paper or
bird-lime. But in addition there was no gravity here, and no sense of
balance, and there was the feeling of perpetual fall.</p>
<p>There could be no science nor any skill in an encounter under such
conditions. Baird partly ran and partly staggered and partly skated to
where Taine faced him, snarling. He threw himself at the other man—and
then the sun vanished behind the bronze ship’s hull, and only stars moved
visibly in all the universe.</p>
<hr />
<p>But the sound of his impact was loud in Baird’s ears inside the suit.
There was a slightly different sound when his armor struck Taine’s, and
when it struck the heavier metal of the two ships. He fought. But the
suits were intended to be defense against greater stresses than human
blows could offer. In the darkness, it was like two blindfolded men
fighting each other while encased in pillows.</p>
<p>Then the sun returned, floating sedately above the valley, and Baird
could see his enemy. He saw, too, that the Plumie air lock was now open
and that a small, erect, and somehow jaunty figure in golden space armor
stood in the opening and watched gravely as the two men fought.</p>
<p>Taine cursed, panting with hysterical hate. He flung himself at Baird,
and Baird toppled because he’d put one foot past the welded boundary
between the <em>Niccola’s</em> cobalt steel and the Plumie ship’s bronze. One
foot held to nothing. And that was a ghastly sensation, because if Taine
only rugged his other foot free and heaved—why—then Baird would go
floating away from the rotating, now-twinned ships, floating farther and
farther away forever.</p>
<p>But darkness fell, and he scrambled back to the <em>Niccola’s</em> hull as a
disorderly parade of stars went by above him. He pantingly waited fresh
attack. He felt something—and it was the object Taine had meant to offer
as a return present to the Plumies. It was unquestionably explosive,
either booby-trapped or timed to explode inside the Plumie ship. Now it
rocked gently, gripped by the magnetism of the steel.</p>
<p>The sun appeared again, and Taine was yards away, crawling and fumbling
for Baird. Then he saw him, and rose and rushed, and the clankings of his
shoe-soles were loud. Baird flung himself at Taine in a savage tackle.</p>
<p>He struck Taine’s legs a glancing blow, and the cobalt steel held his
armor fast, but Taine careened and bounced against the round bronze wall
of the Plumie, and bounced again. Then he screamed, because he went
floating slowly out to emptiness, his arms and legs jerking
spasmodically, while he shrieked ...</p>
<p>The Plumie in the air lock stepped out. He trailed a cord behind him. He
leaped briskly toward nothingness.</p>
<p>There came quick darkness once more, and Baird struggled erect despite
the adhesiveness of the <em>Niccola’s</em> hull. When he was fully upright, sick
with horror at what had come about, there was sunlight yet again, and men
<span class="pagebreak" title="37"> </span><SPAN name="Page_37" id="Page_37"></SPAN>
were coming out of the <em>Niccola’s</em> air lock, and the Plumie who’d leaped
for space was pulling himself back to his own ship again. He had a loop
of the cord twisted around Taine’s leg. But Taine screamed and screamed
inside his spacesuit.</p>
<p>It was odd that one could recognize the skipper even inside space armor.
But Baird felt sick. He saw Taine received, still screaming, and carried
into the lock. The skipper growled an infuriated demand for details. His
space phone had come on, too, when its air supply began. Baird explained,
his teeth chattering.</p>
<p>“<em>Hah!</em>” grunted the skipper. “<em>Taine was a mistake. He shouldn’t ever
have left ground. When a man’s potty in one fashion, there’ll be cracks
in him all over. What’s this?</em>”</p>
<p>The Plumie in the golden armor very soberly offered the skipper the
object Taine had meant to introduce into the Plumie’s ship. Baird said
desperately that he’d fought against it, because he believed it a booby
trap to kill the Plumies so men could take their ship and fill it with
air and cut it free, and then make a landing somewhere.</p>
<p>“<em>Damned foolishness!</em>” rumbled the skipper. “<em>Their ship’d begin to
crumble with our air in it! If it held to a landing—</em>”</p>
<p>Then he considered the object he’d accepted from the Plumie. It could
have been a rocket war head, enclosed in some container that would
detonate it if opened. Or there might be a timing device. The skipper
grunted. He heaved it skyward.</p>
<p>The misshapen object went floating away toward emptiness. Sunlight smote
harshly upon it.</p>
<p>“<em>Don’t want it back in the <i>Niccola</i></em>,” growled the skipper, “<em>but just to
make sure—</em>”</p>
<p>He fumbled a hand weapon out of his belt. He raised it, and it spurted
flame—very tiny blue-white sparks, each one indicating a pellet of metal
flung away at high velocity.</p>
<p>One of them struck the shining, retreating container. It exploded with a
monstrous, soundless, violence. It had been a rocket’s war head. There
could have been only one reason for it to be introduced into a Plumie
ship. Baird ceased to be shaky. Instead, he was ashamed.</p>
<p>The skipper growled inarticulately. He looked at the Plumie, again
standing in the golden ship’s air lock.</p>
<p>“<em>We’ll go back, Mr. Baird. What you’ve done won’t save our lives, and
nobody will ever know you did it. But I think well of you. Come along!</em>”</p>
<p>This was at 11 hours 5 minutes ship time.</p>
<hr />
<p>A good half hour later the skipper’s voice bellowed from the speakers all
over the <em>Niccola</em>. His heavy-jowled features stared doggedly out of
screens wherever men were on duty or at ease.</p>
<p>“<em>Hear this!</em>” he said forbiddingly. “<em>We have checked our course and
speed. We have verified that there is no possible jury-rig for our
engines that could get us into any sort of orbit, let alone land us on
the only planet in this system with air we could
<span class="pagebreak" title="38"> </span><SPAN name="Page_38" id="Page_38"></SPAN>
breathe. It is
officially certain that in thirteen days nine hours from now, the <i>Niccola</i>
will be so close to the sun that her hull will melt down. Which will be
no loss to us because we’ll be dead then, still going on into the sun to
be vaporized with the ship. There is nothing to be done about it. We can
do nothing to save our own lives!</em>”</p>
<p>He glared out of each and every one of the screens, wherever there were
men to see him.</p>
<p>“<em>But</em>,” he rumbled, “<em>the Plumies can get away if we help them. They
have no cutting torches. We have. We can cut their ship free. They can
repair their drive—but it’s most likely that it’ll operate perfectly
when they’re a mile from the <i>Niccola’s</i> magnetic field. They can’t help
us. But we can help them. And sooner or later some Plumie ship is going
to encounter some other human ship. If we cut these Plumies loose,
they’ll report what we did. When they meet other men, they’ll be cagey
because they’ll remember Taine. But they’ll know they can make friends,
because we did them a favor when we’d nothing to gain by it. I can offer
no reward. But I ask for volunteers to go outside and cut the Plumie ship
loose, so the Plumies can go home in safety instead of on into the sun
with us!</em>”</p>
<p>He glared, and cut off the image.</p>
<p>Diane held tightly to Baird’s hand, in the radar room. He said evenly:</p>
<p>“There’ll be volunteers. The Plumies are pretty sporting
characters—putting up a fight with an unarmed ship, and so on. If there
aren’t enough other volunteers, the skipper and I will cut them free by
ourselves.”</p>
<p>Diane said, dry-throated:</p>
<p>“I’ll help. So I can be with you. We’ve got—so little time.”</p>
<p>“I’ll ask the skipper as soon as the Plumie ship’s free.”</p>
<p>“Y-yes,” said Diane. And she pressed her face against his shoulder, and
wept.</p>
<p>This was at 01 hours, 20 minutes ship time. At 03 hours even, there was
peculiar activity in the valley between the welded ships. There were men
in space armor working cutting-torches where for twenty feet the two
ships were solidly attached. Blue-white flames bored savagely into solid
metal, and melted copper gave off strangely colored clouds of
vapor—which emptiness whisked away to nothing—and molten iron and
cobalt made equally lurid clouds of other colors.</p>
<p>There were Plumies in the air lock, watching.</p>
<p>At 03 hours 40 minutes ship time, all the men but one drew back. They
went inside the <em>Niccola</em>. Only one man remained, cutting at the last
sliver of metal that held the two ships together.</p>
<p>It parted. The Plumie ship swept swiftly away, moved by the centrifugal
force of the rotary motion the joined vessels had possessed. It dwindled
and dwindled. It was a half mile away. A mile. The last man on the
outside of the <em>Niccola’s</em> hull thriftily
<span class="pagebreak" title="39"> </span><SPAN name="Page_39" id="Page_39"></SPAN>
brought his torch to the air
lock and came in.</p>
<p>Suddenly, the distant golden hull came to life. It steadied. It ceased to
spin, however slowly. It darted ahead. It checked. It swung to the right
and left and up and down. It was alive again.</p>
<hr />
<p>In the radar room, Diane walked into Baird’s arms and said shakily:</p>
<p>“Now we ... we have almost fourteen days.”</p>
<p>“Wait,” he commanded. “When the Plumies understood what we were doing,
and why, they drew diagrams. They hadn’t thought of cutting free, out in
space, without the spinning saws they use to cut bronze with. But they
asked for a scanner and a screen. They checked on its use. I want to
see—”</p>
<p>He flipped on the screen. And there was instantly a Plumie looking
eagerly out of it, for some sign of communication established. There were
soprano sounds, and he waved a hand for attention. Then he zestfully held
up one diagram after another.</p>
<p>Baird drew a deep breath. A very deep breath. He pressed the
navigation-room call. The skipper looked dourly at him.</p>
<p>“<em>Well?</em>” said the skipper forbiddingly.</p>
<p>“Sir,” said Baird, very quietly indeed, “the Plumies are talking by
diagram over the communicator set we gave them. Their drive works.
They’re as well off as they ever were. And they’ve been modifying their
tractor beams—stepping them up to higher power.”</p>
<p>“<em>What of it?</em>” demanded the skipper, rumbling.</p>
<p>“They believe,” said Baird, “that they can handle the <em>Niccola</em> with
their beefed-up tractor beams.” He wetted his lips. “They’re going to tow
us to the oxygen planet ahead, sir. They’re going to set us down on it.
They’ll help us find the metals we need to build the tools to repair the
<em>Niccola</em>, sir. You see the reasoning, sir. We turned them loose to
improve the chance of friendly contact when another human ship runs into
them. They want us to carry back—to be proof that Plumies and men can be
friends. It seems that—they like us, sir.”</p>
<p>He stopped for a moment. Then he went on reasonably;</p>
<p>“And besides that, it’ll be one hell of a fine business proposition. We
never bother with hydrogen-methane planets. They’ve minerals and
chemicals we haven’t got, but even the stones of a methane-hydrogen
planet are ready to combine with the oxygen we need to breathe! We can’t
carry or keep enough oxygen for real work. The same thing’s true with
them on an oxygen planet. We can’t work on each other’s planets, but we
can do fine business in each other’s minerals and chemicals from those
planets. I’ve got a feeling, sir, that the Plumie cairns are
location-notices; markers set up over ore deposits they can find but
can’t hope to work, yet they claim against the day when their scientists
find a way to make them worth owning.
<span class="pagebreak" title="40"> </span><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40"></SPAN>
I’d be willing to bet, sir, that
if we explored hydrogen planets as thoroughly as oxygen ones, we’d find
cairns on their-type planets that they haven’t colonized yet.”</p>
<p>The skipper stared. His mouth dropped open.</p>
<p>“And I think, sir,” said Baird, “that until they detected us they thought
they were the only intelligent race in the galaxy. They were upset to
discover suddenly that they were not, and at first they’d no idea what
we’d be like. But I’m guessing now, sir, that they’re figuring on what
chemicals and ores to start swapping with us.” Then he added, “When you
think of it, sir, probably the first metal they ever used was
aluminum—where our ancestors used copper—and they had a beryllium age
next, instead of iron. And right now, sir it’s probably as expensive for
them to refine iron as it is for us to handle titanium and beryllium and
osmium—which are duck soup for them! Our two cultures ought to thrive as
long as we’re friends, sir. They know it already—and we’ll find it out
in a hurry!”</p>
<p>The skipper’s mouth moved. It closed, and then dropped open again. The
search for the Plumies had been made because it looked like they had to
be fought. But Baird had just pointed out some extremely commonsense
items which changed the situation entirely. And there was evidence that
the Plumies saw the situation the new way. The skipper felt such enormous
relief that his manner changed. He displayed what was almost effusive
cordiality—for the skipper. He cleared his throat.</p>
<p>“<em>Hm-m-m. Hah! Very good, Mr. Baird</em>,” he said formidably. “<em>And of
course with time and air and metals we can rebuild our drive. For that
matter, we could rebuild the <i>Niccola</i>! I’ll notify the ship’s company, Mr.
Baird. Very good!</em>” He moved to use another microphone. Then he checked
himself. “<em>Your expression is odd, Mr. Baird. Did you wish to say
something more?</em>”</p>
<p>“Y-yes, sir,” said Baird. He held Diane’s hand fast. “It’ll be months
before we get back to port, sir. And it’s normally against regulations,
but under the circumstances ... would you mind ... as skipper ...
marrying Lieutenant Holt and me?”</p>
<p>The skipper snorted. Then he said almost—almost—amiably;</p>
<p>“Hm-m-m. You’ve both done very well, Mr. Baird. Yes. Come to the
navigation room and we’ll get it over with. Say—ten minutes from now.”</p>
<p>Baird grinned at Diane. Her eyes shone a little.</p>
<p>This was at 04 hours 10 minutes ship time. It was exactly twelve hours
since the alarm-bell rang.</p>
<p class="center gap">THE END</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />