<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_THREE" id="CHAPTER_THREE"></SPAN>CHAPTER THREE</h2>
<p>It is a matter of record that the American continents
were discovered because ice-boxes were unknown
in the fifteenth century. There being no refrigeration, meat
did not keep. But meat was not too easy to come by, so
it had to be eaten, even when it stank. Therefore it was
a noble enterprise, and to the glory of the kingdoms of
Castile and Aragon, to put up the financial backing for
even a crackpot who might get spices cheaper and thereby
make the consumption of slightly spoiled meat less unpleasant.
Which was why Columbus got three ships and
crews of jailbirds for them from a government still busy
<ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Original read 'tryin'.">trying</ins> to drive the Moors out of the last corner of Spain.</p>
<p>This was a precedent for the matter on hand now. Cochrane
happened to know the details about Columbus because
he'd checked over the research when he did a show
on the Dikkipatti Hour dealing with him. There were more
precedents. The elaborate bargain by which Columbus
was to be made hereditary High Admiral of the Western
Oceans, with a bite of all revenue obtained by the passage
he was to discover—he had to hold out for such terms to
make the package he was selling look attractive. Nobody
buys anything that is underpriced too much. It looks phoney.
So Cochrane made his preliminaries rather more impressive
than they need have been from a strictly practical
point of view, in order to make the enterprise practical
from a financial aspect.</p>
<p>There was another precedent he did not intend to follow.
Columbus did not know where he was going when he
set sail, he did not know where he was when he arrived at
the end of his voyage, and he didn't know where he'd been
when he got back. Cochrane expected to improve on the
achievement of the earlier explorer's doings in these respects.</p>
<p>He commandeered the legal department of Kursten,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_40" id="Page_40">[Pg 40]</SPAN></span>
Kasten, Hopkins, and Fallowe to set up the enterprise with
strict legality and discretion. There came into being a corporation
called "Spaceways, Inc." which could not possibly
be considered phoney from any inspection of its
charter. Expert legal advice arranged that its actual stock-holders
should appear to be untraceable. Deft manipulation
contrived that though its stock was legally vested in
Cochrane and Holden and Jones—Cochrane negligently
threw in Jones as a convenient name to use—and they
were officially the owners of nearly all the stock, nobody
who checked up would believe they were anything but
dummies. Stockholdings in West's, and Jamison's and
Bell's names would look like smaller holdings held for
other than the main entrepreneurs. But these <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Hyphenated to correspond with other usage in text.">stock-holders</ins>
were not only the legal owners of record—they were the
true owners. Kursten, Kasten, Hopkins and Fallowe wanted
no actual part of Spaceways. They considered the enterprise
merely a psychiatric treatment for a neurotic son-in-law.
Which, of course, it was. So Spaceways, Inc., quite
honestly and validly belonged to the people who would
cure Dabney of his frustration—and nobody at all believed
that it would ever do anything else. Not anybody
but those six owners, anyhow. And as it turned out, not
all of them.</p>
<p>The psychiatric treatment began with an innocent-seeming
news-item from Lunar City saying that Dabney, the
so-and-so scientist, had consented to act as consulting
physicist to Spaceways, Inc., for the practical application
of his recent discovery of a way to send messages faster
than light.</p>
<p>This was news simply because it came from the moon.
It got fairly wide distribution, but no emphasis.</p>
<p>Then the publicity campaign broke. On orders from
Cochrane, Jamison the extrapolating genius got slightly
plastered, in company with the two news-association reporters
in Lunar City. He confided that Spaceways, Inc.,
had been organized and was backed to develop the Dabney
faster-than-light-signalling field into a faster-than-light-travel
field. The news men pumped him of all his
extrapolations. Cynically, they checked to see who might
be preparing to unload stock. They found no preparations
for stock-sales. No registration of the company for raising
funds. It wasn't going to the public for money. It wasn't
selling anybody anything. Then Cochrane refused to see
any reporters at all, everybody connected with the enterprise<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_41" id="Page_41">[Pg 41]</SPAN></span>
shut up tighter than a clam, and Jamison vanished
into a hotel room where he was kept occupied with beverages
and food at Dabney's father-in-law's expense. None
of this was standard for a phoney promotion deal.</p>
<p>The news story exploded. Let loose on an overcrowded
planet which had lost all hope of relief after fifty years in
which only the moon had been colonized—and its colony
had a population in the hundreds, only—the idea of faster-than-light
travel was the one impossible dream that everybody
wanted to believe in. The story spread in a manner
that could only be described as chain-reaction in character.
And of course Dabney—as the scientist responsible for the
new hope—became known to all peoples.</p>
<p>The experts of Kursten, Kasten, Hopkins and Fallowe
checked on the publicity given to Dabney. Strict advertising
agency accounting figured that to date the cost-per-customer-mention
of Dabney and his discovery were the
lowest in the history of advertising. Surveys disclosed that
within three Earth-days less than 3.5 of every hundred
interviews questioned were completely ignorant of Dabney
and the prospect of travel to the stars through his discovery.
More people knew Dabney's name than knew the
name of the President of the United States!</p>
<p>That was only the beginning. The leading popular-science
show jumped eight points in audience-rating. It
actually reached top-twenty rating when it assigned a regular
five-minute period to the Dabney Field and its <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Original read 'possiblities'.">possibilities</ins>
in human terms. On the sixth day after Jamison's
calculated indiscretion, the public consciousness was literally
saturated with the idea of faster-than-light transportation.
Dabney was mentioned in every interview of every
stuffed shirt, he was referred to on every comedy show
(three separate jokes had been invented, which were developed
into one thousand eight hundred switcheroos, most
of them only imperceptibly different from the original
trio) and even Marilyn Winters—Little Aphrodite Herself—was
demanding a faster-than-light-travel sequence in
her next television show.</p>
<p>On the seventh day Bill Holden came into the office
where Cochrane worked feverishly.</p>
<p>"Doctor Cochrane," said Holden, "a word with you!"</p>
<p>"Doctor?" asked Cochrane.</p>
<p>"Doctor!" repeated Holden. "I've just been interviewing
my patient. You're good. My patient is adjusted."</p>
<p>Cochrane raised his eyebrows.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_42" id="Page_42">[Pg 42]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"He's famous," said Holden grimly. "He now considers
that everybody in the world knows that he is a great
scientist. He is appreciated. He is happily making plans to
go back to Earth and address a few learned societies and
let people admire him. He can now spend the rest of his
life being the man who discovered the principle by which
faster-than-light-travel will some day be achieved. Even
when the furor dies down, he will have been a great man—and
he will stay a great man in his own estimation. In
short, he's cured."</p>
<p>Cochrane grinned.</p>
<p>"Then I'm fired?"</p>
<p>"We are," said Holden. "There are professional ethics
even among psychiatrists, Jed. I have to admit that the guy
now has a permanent adjustment to reality. He has been
recognized as a great scientist. He is no longer frustrated."</p>
<p>Cochrane leaned back in his chair.</p>
<p>"That may be good medical ethics," he observed, "but
it's lousy business practice, Bill. You say he's adjusted to
reality. That means that he will now have a socially acceptable
reaction to anything that's likely to happen to
him."</p>
<p>Holden nodded.</p>
<p>"A well-adjusted person does. Dabney's the same person.
He's the same fool. But he'll get along all right. A
psychiatrist can't change a personality! All he can do is
make it adjust to the world about so the guy doesn't have
to be tucked away in a straight-jacket. In that sense, Dabney
is adjusted."</p>
<p>"You've played a dirty trick on him," said Cochrane.
"You've stabilized him, and that's the rottenest trick anybody
can play on anybody! You've put him into a sort of
moral deep-freeze. It's a dirty trick, Bill!"</p>
<p>"Look who's talking!" said Holden wearily. "I suppose
the advertising business is altruistic and unmercenary?"</p>
<p>"The devil, no!" said Cochrane indignantly. "We serve
a useful purpose! We tell people that they smell bad, and
so give them an alibi for the unpopularity their stupidity
has produced. But then we tell them to use so-and-so's
breath sweetener or whosit's non-immunizing deodorant
they'll immediately become the life of every party they attend!
It's a lie, of course, but it's a dynamic lie! It gives
the frustrated individual something to do! It sells him
hope and therefore activity—and inactivity is a sort of
death!"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_43" id="Page_43">[Pg 43]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>Holden looked at Cochrane with a dreary disinterest.</p>
<p>"You're adjusted, Jed! But do you really believe that
stuff?"</p>
<p>Cochrane grinned again.</p>
<p>"Only on Tuesdays and Fridays. It's about two-sevenths
true. But it does have that much truth in it! Nobody ever
gets anything done while they merely make socially acceptable
responses to the things that happen to them!
Take Dabney himself! We've got a hell of a thing coming
along now just because he wouldn't make the socially
acceptable response to having a rich wife and no brains.
He rebelled. So mankind will start moving to the stars!"</p>
<p>"You still believe it?"</p>
<p>Cochrane grimaced.</p>
<p>"Yesterday morning I sweated blood in a space-suit out
in the crater beyond Jones' laboratory. He tried his trick.
He had a small signal-rocket mounted on the far side of
that crater,—twenty-some miles. It was in front of the
field-plate that established the Dabney field across the crater
to another plate near us. Jones turned on the field. He
ignited the rocket by remote control. I was watching with
a telescope. I gave him the word to fire.... How long do
you think it took that rocket to cross the crater in that field
that works like a pipe? It smashed into the plate at the
lab!"</p>
<p>Holden shook his head.</p>
<p>"It took slightly," said Cochrane, "slightly under three-fifths
of a second."</p>
<p>Holden blinked. Cochrane said:</p>
<p>"A signal-rocket has an acceleration of about six hundred
feet per second, level flight, no gravity component,
mass acceleration only. It should have taken a hundred
seconds plus to cross that crater—over twenty miles. It
shouldn't have stayed on course. It did stay on course, inside
the field. It did take under three-fifths of a second.
The gadget works!"</p>
<p>Holden drew a deep breath.</p>
<p>"So now you need more money and you want me not to
discharge my patient as cured."</p>
<p>"Not a bit of it!" snapped Cochrane. "I don't want him
as a patient! I'm only willing to accept him as a customer!
But if he wants fame, I'll sell it to him. Not as something
to lean his fragile psyche on, but something to wallow in!
Do you think he could ever get too famous for his own
satisfaction?"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_44" id="Page_44">[Pg 44]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Of course not," said Holden. "He's the same fool."</p>
<p>"Then we're in business," Cochrane told him. "Not
that I couldn't peddle my fish elsewhere. I'm going to! But
I'll give him old-customer preference. I'll want him out at
the distress-torp tests this afternoon. They'll be public."</p>
<p>"This afternoon?" asked Holden. "Distress-torp?"</p>
<p>A lunar day is two Earth-weeks-long. A lunar night is
equally long-drawn-out. Cochrane said impatiently:</p>
<p>"I got out of bed four hours ago. To me that's morning.
I'll eat lunch in an hour. That's noon. Say, three hours
from now, whatever o'clock it is lunar time."</p>
<p>Holden glanced at his watch and made computations.
He said:</p>
<p>"That'll be half-past two hundred and three o'clock, if
you're curious. But what's a distress-torp?"</p>
<p>"Shoo!" said Cochrane. "I'll send Babs to find you and
load you on the jeep. You'll see then. Now I'm busy!"</p>
<p>Holden shrugged and went away, and Cochrane stared
at his own watch. Since a lunar day and night together
fill twenty-eight Earth days of time, a strictly lunar "day"
contains nearly three hundred forty Earth-hours. To call
one-twelfth of that period an hour would be an affectation.
To call each twenty-four Earth hours a day would have
been absurd. So the actual period of the moon's rotation
was divided into familiar time-intervals, and a bulletin-board
in the hotel lobby in Lunar City notified those interested
that: "<i>Sunday will be from 143 o'clock to 167
o'clock A.M.</i>" There would be another Sunday some time
during the lunar afternoon.</p>
<p>Cochrane debated momentarily whether this information
could be used in the publicity campaign of Spaceways,
Inc. Strictly speaking, there was some slight obligation
to throw extra fame Dabney's way regardless, because
the corporation had been formed as a public-relations
device. Any other features, such as changing the history
of the human race, were technically incidental. But Cochrane
put his watch away. To talk about horology on the
moon wouldn't add to Dabney's stature as a phoney scientist.
It didn't matter.</p>
<p>He went back to the business at hand. Some two years
before there had been a fake corporation organized strictly
for the benefit of its promoters. It had built a rocket-ship
ostensibly for the establishment of a colony on Mars. The
ship had managed to stagger up to Luna, but no farther. Its
promoters had sold stock on the promise that a ship that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45" id="Page_45">[Pg 45]</SPAN></span>
could barely reach Luna could take off from that small
globe with six times as much fuel as it could lift off of
Earth. Which was true. Investors put in their money on that
verifiable fact. But the truth happened to be, of course,
that it would still take an impossible amount of fuel to
accelerate the ship—so heavily loaded—to a speed where
it would reach Mars in one human lifetime. Taking off
from Luna would solve only the problem of gravity. It
wouldn't do a thing about inertia. So the ship never rose
from its landing near Lunar City. The corporation that
had built it went profitably bankrupt.</p>
<p>Cochrane had been working feverishly to find out who
owned that ship now. Just before the torp-test he'd mentioned,
he found that the ship belonged to the hotel desk-clerk,
who had bought it in hope of renting it sooner or
later for television background-shots in case anybody was
crazy enough to make a television film-tape on the moon.
He was now discouraged. Cochrane chartered it, putting
up a bond to return it undamaged. If the ship was lost, the
hotel-clerk would get back his investment—about a week's
pay.</p>
<p>So Cochrane had a space-ship practically in his pocket
when the public demonstration of the Dabney field came
off at half-past 203 o'clock.</p>
<p>The site of the demonstration was the shadowed, pitch-dark
part of the floor of a crater twenty miles across, with
walls some ten thousand jagged feet high. The furnace-like
sunshine made the plain beyond the shadow into a sea of
blinding brightness. The sunlit parts of the crater's walls
were no less terribly glaring. But above the edge of the cliffs
the stars began; infinitely small and many-colored, with innumerable
degrees of brightness. The Earth hung in mid-sky
like a swollen green apple, monstrous in size. And the
figures which moved about the scene of the test could be
seen only faintly by reflected light from the lava plain, because
one's eyes had to be adjusted to the white-hot moon-dust
on the plain and mountains.</p>
<p>There were not many persons present. Three jeeps
waited in the semi-darkness, out of the burning sunshine.
There were no more than a dozen moon-suited individuals
to watch and to perform the test of the Dabney field. Cochrane
had scrupulously edited all fore-news of the experiment
to give Dabney the credit he had paid for. There
were present, then, the party from Earth—Cochrane and
Babs and Holden, with the two tame scientists and Bell<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46" id="Page_46">[Pg 46]</SPAN></span>
the writer—and the only two reporters on the moon. Only
news syndicates could stand the expense-account of a field
man in Lunar City. And then there were Jones and Dabney
and two other figures apparently brought by Dabney.</p>
<p>There was, of course, no sound at all on the moon itself.
There was no air to carry it. But from each plastic helmet
a six-inch antenna projected straight upward, and the
microwaves of suit-talkies made a jumble of slightly metallic
sounds in the headphones of each suit.</p>
<p>As soon as Cochrane got out of the jeep's air-lock and
was recognized, Dabney said agitatedly:</p>
<p>"Mr. Cochrane! Mr. Cochrane! I have to discuss something
with you! It is of the utmost importance! Will you
come into the laboratory?"</p>
<p>Cochrane helped Babs to the ground and made his way
to the airlock in the dust-heap against the cliff. He went in,
with two other space-suited figures who detached themselves
from the rest to follow him. Once inside the odorous,
cramped laboratory, Dabney opened his face-plate and began
to speak before Cochrane was ready to hear him. His
companion beamed amiably.</p>
<p>"—and therefore, Mr. Cochrane," Dabney was saying
agitatedly, "I insist that measures be taken to protect my
scientific reputation! If this test should fail, it will militate
against the acceptance of my discovery! I warn you—and
I have my friend Mr. Simms here as witness—that I will not
be responsible for the operation of apparatus made by a
subordinate who does not fully comprehend the theory of
my discovery! I will not be involved—"</p>
<p>Cochrane nodded. Dabney, of course, didn't understand
the theory of the field he'd bought fame-rights to. But there
was no point in bringing that up. Johnny Simms beamed
at both of them. He was the swimmer Babs had pointed
out in the swimming-pool. His face was completely unlined
and placid, like the face of a college undergraduate. He
had never worried about anything. He'd never had a care
in the world. He merely listened with placid interest.</p>
<p>"I take it," said Cochrane, "that you don't mind the
test being made, so long as you don't have to accept responsibility
for its failure—and so long as you get the credit
for its success if it works. That's right, isn't it?"</p>
<p>"If it fails, I am not responsible!" insisted Dabney
stridently. "If it succeeds, it will be because of my discovery."</p>
<p>Cochrane sighed a little. This was a shabby business,<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47" id="Page_47">[Pg 47]</SPAN></span>
but Dabney would have convinced himself, by now, that
he was the genius he wanted people to believe him.</p>
<p>"Before the test," said Cochrane gently, "you make a
speech. It will be recorded. You disclaim the crass and
vulgar mechanical details and emphasize that you are like
Einstein, dealing in theoretic physics only. That you are
naturally interested in attempts to use your discovery, but
your presence is a sign of your interest but not your responsibility."</p>
<p>"I shall have to think it over—," began Dabney nervously.</p>
<p>"You can say," promised Cochrane, "that if it does not
work you will check over what Jones did and tell him why."</p>
<p>"Y-yes," said Dabney hesitantly, "I could do that. But
I must think it over first. You will have to delay—"</p>
<p>"If I were you," said Cochrane confidentially, "I would
plan a speech to that effect because the test is coming off
in five minutes."</p>
<p>He closed his face-plate as Dabney began to protest.
He went into the lock. He knew better than to hold anything
up while waiting for a neurotic to make a decision.
Dabney had all he wanted, now. From this moment on he
would be frantic for fear of losing it. But there could be
no argument outside the laboratory. In the airlessness, anything
anybody said by walkie-talkie could be heard by
everybody.</p>
<p>When Dabney and Simms followed out of the lock,
Cochrane was helping Jones set up the device that had been
prepared for this test. It was really two devices. One was
a very flat cone, much like a coolie-hat and hardly larger,
with a sort of power-pack of coils and batteries attached.
The other was a space-ship's distress-signal rocket, designed
to make a twenty-mile streak of red flame in emptiness.
Nobody had yet figured out what good a distress
signal would do, between Earth and moon, but the idea
was soothing. The rocket was four feet long and six inches
in diameter. At its nose there was a second coolie-hat
cone, with other coils and batteries.</p>
<p>Jones set the separate cone on the ground and packed
stones around and under it to brace it. His movements
were almost ridiculously deliberate. Bending over, he bent
slowly, or the motion would lift his feet off the ground.
Straightening up, he straightened slowly, or the upward
impetus of his trunk would again lift him beyond contact
with solidity. But he braced the flat cone carefully.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48" id="Page_48">[Pg 48]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>He set the signal-torpedo over that cone. The entire
set-up was under six feet tall, and the coolie-hat cones
were no more than eighteen inches in diameter. He said
flatly:</p>
<p>"I'm all ready."</p>
<p>The hand and arm of a space-suited figure lifted, for
attention. Dabney's voice came worriedly from the headphones
of every suit:</p>
<p>"I wish it understood," he said in some agitation, "that
this first attempted application of my discovery is made
with my consent, but that I am not aware of the mechanical
details. As a scientist, my work has been in pure science. I
have worked for the advancement of human knowledge,
but the technological applications of my discovery are not
mine. Still—if this device does not work, I will take time
from my more important researches to inquire into what
part of my discovery has been inadequately understood
and applied. It may be that present technology is not
qualified to apply my discovery—"</p>
<p>Jones said without emotion—but Cochrane could imagine
his poker-faced expression inside his helmet:</p>
<p>"That's right. I consulted Mr. Dabney about the principles,
but the apparatus is my doing, I take the responsibility
for that!"</p>
<p>Then Cochrane added with pleasant irony:</p>
<p>"Since all this is recorded, Mr. Dabney can enlarge upon
his disinterest later. Right now, we can go ahead. Mr.
Dabney disavows us unless we are successful. Let us let it
go at that." Then he said: "The observatory's set to
track?"</p>
<p>A muffled voice said boredly, by short-wave from the observatory
up on the crater's rim:</p>
<p>"<i>We're ready. Visual and records, and we've got the
timers set to clock the auto-beacon signals as they come
in.</i>"</p>
<p>The voice was not enthusiastic. Cochrane had had to
put up his own money to have the nearside lunar observatory
put a low-power telescope to watch the rocket's
flight. In theory, this distress-rocket should make a twenty-mile
streak of relatively long-burning red sparks. A tiny
auto-beacon in its nose was set to send microwave signals
at ten-second intervals. On the face of it, it had looked
like a rather futile performance.</p>
<p>"Let's go," said Cochrane.</p>
<p>He noted with surprise that his mouth was suddenly<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49" id="Page_49">[Pg 49]</SPAN></span>
dry. This affair was out of all reason. A producer of television
shows should not be the person to discover in an
abstruse scientific development the way to reach the stars.
A neurotic son-in-law of an advertising tycoon should not
be the instrument by which the discovery should come
about. A psychiatrist should not be the means of associating
Jones—a very junior physicist with no money—and
Cochrane and the things Cochrane was prepared to bring
about if only this unlikely-looking gadget worked.</p>
<p>"Jones," said Cochrane with a little difficulty, "let's follow
an ancient tradition. Let Babs christen the enterprise
by throwing the switch."</p>
<p>Jones pointed there in the shadow of the crater-wall,
and Babs moved to the switch he indicated. She said
absorbedly:</p>
<p>"Five, four, three, two, one—"</p>
<p>She threw the switch. There was a spout of lurid red
flame.</p>
<p>The rocket vanished.</p>
<p>It vanished. It did not rise, visibly. It simply went away
from where it was, with all the abruptness of a light going
out. There was a flurry of the most brilliant imaginable carmine
flame. That light remained. But the rocket did not
so much rise as disappear.</p>
<p>Cochrane jerked his head up. He was close to the line
of the rocket's ascent. He could see a trail of red sparks
which stretched to invisibility. It was an extraordinarily thin
line. The separate flecks of crimson light which comprised
it were distant in space. They were so far from each other
that the signal-rocket was a complete failure as a device
making a streak of light that should be visible.</p>
<p>The muffled voice in the helmet-phones said blankly:</p>
<p>"<i>Hey! What'd you do to that rocket?</i>"</p>
<p>The others did not move. They seemed stunned. The
vanishing of the rocket was no way for a rocket to act. In
all expectation, it should have soared skyward with a
reasonable velocity, and should have accelerated rather
more swiftly from the moon's surface than it would have
done from Earth. But it should have remained visible
during all its flight. Its trail should have been a thick red
line. Instead, the red sparks were so far separated—the
trail was so attenuated that it was visible only from a spot
near its base. The observatory voice said more blankly still:</p>
<p>"<i>Hey! I've picked up the trail! I can't see it nearby,
but it seems to start, thin, about fifty miles up and go on</i><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_50" id="Page_50">[Pg 50]</SPAN></span>
<i>away from there! That rocket shouldn't ha' gone more than
twenty miles! What happened?</i>"</p>
<p>"<i>Watch for the microwave signals</i>," said Jones' voice in
Cochrane's headphones.</p>
<p>The voice from the observatory squeaked suddenly. This
was not one of the highly-placed astronomers, but part of
the mechanical staff who'd been willing to do an unreasonable
chore for pay.</p>
<p>"<i>Here's the blip! It's crazy! Nothing can go that fast!</i>"</p>
<p>And then in the phones there came the relayed signal
of the auto-beacon in the vanished rocket. The signal-sound
was that of a radar pulse, beginning at low pitch and rising
three octaves in the tenth of a second. At middle C—the
middle of the range of a piano—there was a momentary
spurt of extra volume. But in the relayed signal that louder
instant had dropped four tones. Cochrane said crisply:</p>
<p>"Jones, what speed would that be?"</p>
<p>"<i>It'd take a slide-rule to figure it</i>," said Jones' voice, very
calmly, "<i>but it's faster than anything ever went before.</i>"</p>
<p>Cochrane waited for the next beep. It did not come in
ten seconds. It was easily fifteen. Even he could figure out
what that meant! A signal-source that stretched ten seconds
of interval at source to fifteen at reception ...</p>
<p>The voice from the observatory wailed:</p>
<p>"<i>It's crazy! It can't be going like that!</i>"</p>
<p>They waited. Fifteen seconds more. Sixteen. Eighteen.
Twenty. The beep sounded. The spurt of sound had
dropped a full octave. The signal-rocket, traveling normally,
might have attained a maximum velocity of some two
thousand feet per second. It was now moving at a speed
which was an appreciably large fraction of the speed of
light. Which was starkly impossible. It simply happened
to be true.</p>
<p>They heard the signal once more. The observatory's
multiple-receptor receiver had been stepped up to maximum
amplification. The signal was distinct, but very faint indeed.
And the rocket was then traveling—so it was later computed—at
seven-eighths of the speed of light. Between the
flat cone on the front of the distress-torpedo, and the flat
cone on the ground, a field of force existed. The field
was not on the back surface of the torpedo's cone, but before
the front surface. It went back to the moon from there,
so all the torpedo and its batteries were in the columnar
stressed space. And an amount of rocket-push that should
have sent the four-foot torpedo maybe twenty miles during<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_51" id="Page_51">[Pg 51]</SPAN></span>
its period of burning, had actually extended its flight to
more than thirty-seven hundred miles before the red sparks
were too far separated to be traced any farther, and by
then had kicked the torpedo up impossibly close to light-speed.</p>
<p>In a sense, the Dabney field had an effect similar to the
invention of railways. The same horsepower moved vastly
more weight faster, over steel rails, than it could haul over
a rutted dirt road. The same rocket-thrust moved more
weight faster in the Dabney field than in normal space.
There would be a practical limit to the speed at which a
wagon could be drawn over a rough road. The speed of
light was a limit to the speed of matter in normal space.
But on a railway the practical speed at which a vehicle
could travel went up from three miles an hour to a hundred
and twenty. In the Dabney field it was yet to be discovered
what the limiting velocity might be. But old formulas for
acceleration and increase-of-mass-with-velocity simply did
not apply in a Dabney field.</p>
<p>Jones rode back to Lunar City with Cochrane and
Holden and Babs. His face was dead-pan.</p>
<p>Babs tried to recover the mien and manner of the perfect
secretary.</p>
<p>"Mr. Cochrane," she said professionally, "will you want
to read the publicity releases Mr. Bell turns out from what
Mr. West and Mr. Jamison tell him?"</p>
<p>"I don't think it matters," said Cochrane. "The newsmen
will pump West and Jamison empty, anyhow. It's all
right. In fact, it's better than our own releases would be.
They'll contradict each other. It'll sound more authentic
that way. We're building up a customer-demand for information."</p>
<p>The small moon-jeep rolled and bumped gently down
the long, improbable highway back to Lunar City. Its engine
ran smoothly, as steam-engines always do. It ran on seventy
per cent hydrogen peroxide, first developed as a fuel back
in the 1940s for the pumps of the V2 rockets that tried to
win the Second World War for Germany. When hydrogen
peroxide comes in contact with a catalyst, such as permanganate
of potash, it breaks down into oxygen and water.
But the water is in the form of high-pressure steam, which
is used in engines. The jeep's fuel supplied steam for power
and its ashes were water to drink and oxygen to breathe.
Steam ran all motorized vehicles on Luna.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_52" id="Page_52">[Pg 52]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"What are you thinking about, Jones?" asked Cochrane
suddenly.</p>
<p>Jones said meditatively:</p>
<p>"I'm wondering what sort of field-strength a capacity-storage
system would give me. I boosted the field intensity
this time. The results were pretty good. I'm thinking—suppose
I made the field with a strobe-light power-pack—or
maybe a spot-welding unit. Even a portable strobe-light
gives a couple of million watts for the forty-thousandth of
a second. Suppose I fixed up a storage-pack to give me a
field with a few billion watts in it? It might be practically
like matter-transmission, though it would really be only
high-speed travel. I think I've got to work on that idea a
little ..."</p>
<p>Cochrane digested the information in silence.</p>
<p>"Far be it from me," he said presently, "to discourage
such high-level contemplation. Bill, what's on your mind?"</p>
<p>Holden said moodily:</p>
<p>"I'm convinced that the thing works. But Jed! You
talk as if you hadn't any more worries! Yet even if you
and Jones do have a way to make a ship travel faster than
light, you haven't got a ship or the capital you need—."</p>
<p>"I've got scenery that looks like a ship," said Cochrane
mildly. "Consider that part settled."</p>
<p>"But there are supplies. Air—water—food—a crew—.
We can't pay for such things! Here on the moon the cost
of everything is preposterous! How can you try out this idea
without more capital than you can possibly raise?"</p>
<p>"I'm going to imitate my old friend Christopher Columbus,"
said Cochrane. "I'm going to give the customers what
they want. Columbus didn't try to sell anybody shares in
new continents. Who wanted new continents? Who wanted
to move to a new world? Who wants new planets now?
Everybody would like to see their neighbors move away and
leave more room, but nobody wants to move himself.
Columbus sold a promise of something that had an already-established
value, that could be sold in every town and
village—that had a merchandising system already set up!
I'm going to offer just such a marketable commodity. I'll
have freight-rockets on the way up here within twenty-four
hours, and the freight and their contents will all be paid
for!"</p>
<p>He turned to Babs. He looked more sardonic and cynical
than ever before.</p>
<p>"Babs, you've just witnessed one of the moments that<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_53" id="Page_53">[Pg 53]</SPAN></span>
ought to be illustrated in all the grammar-school history-books
along with Ben Franklin flying a kite. What's topmost
in your mind?"</p>
<p>She hesitated and then flushed. The moon-jeep crunched
and clanked loudly over the trail that led downhill. There
was no sound outside, of course. There was no air. But the
noise inside the moon-vehicle was notable. The steam-motor,
in particular, made a highly individual racket.</p>
<p>"I'd—rather not say," said Babs awkwardly. "What's
your own main feeling, Mr. Cochrane?"</p>
<p>"Mine?" Cochrane grinned. "I'm thinking what a hell
of a funny world this is, when people like Dabney and Bill
and Jones and I are the ones who have to begin operation
outer space!"</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_54" id="Page_54">[Pg 54]</SPAN></span></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />