<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_SIX" id="CHAPTER_SIX"></SPAN>CHAPTER SIX</h2>
<p>Jamison declaimed, wearing a throat-mike as Bell
zestfully panned his camera and the ship swung down. It
was an impressive broadcast. The rockets roared. With
the coming of air about the ship, they no longer made a
mere rumbling. They created a tumult which was like the
growl of thunder if one were in the midst of the thunder-cloud.
It was a numbing noise. It was almost a paralyzing
noise. But Jamison talked with professional smoothness.</p>
<p>"This planet," he orated, while pictures from Bell's
camera went direct to the transmitter below, "this planet is
the first world other than Earth on which a human ship
has landed. It is paradoxic that before men have walked
on Mars' red iron-oxide plains and breathed its thin cold
air, or fought for life in the formaldehyde gales of Venus,
that they should look upon a world which welcomes them
from illimitable remoteness. Here we descend, and all mankind
can watch our descent upon a world whose vegetation
is green; whose glaciers prove that there is air and water
in plenty, whose very smoking volcanoes assure us of its
close kinship to Earth!"</p>
<p>He lifted the mike away from his throat and framed
words with his lips. "<i>Am I still on?</i>" Cochrane nodded.
Cochrane wore headphones carrying what the communicator
carried, as this broadcast went through an angled
Dabney field relay system back to Lunar City and then to
Earth. He spoke close to Jamison's ear.</p>
<p>"Go ahead! If your voice fades, it will be the best possible
sign-off. Suspense. Good television!"</p>
<p>Jamison let the throat-mike back against his skin. The
roaring of the rockets would affect it only as his throat
vibrated from the sound. It would register, even so.</p>
<p>"I see," said Jamison above the rocket-thunder, "forests
of giant trees like the sequoias of Mother Earth. I see
rushing rivers, foaming along their rocky beds, taking their<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_82" id="Page_82">[Pg 82]</SPAN></span>
rise in glaciers. We are still too high to look for living
creatures, but we descend swiftly. Now we are level with
the highest of the mountains. Now we descend below their
smoking tops. Under us there is a vast valley, miles wide,
leagues long. Here a city could be built. Over it looms a
gigantic mountain-spur, capped with green. One would expect
a castle to be built there."</p>
<p>He raised his eyebrows at Cochrane. They were well
in atmosphere, now, and it had been an obvious defect—condition—necessity
of the Dabney field that both of its
plates should be in a vacuum. One was certainly in air
now. But Cochrane made that gesture which in television
production-practice informs the actors that time to cutting
is measured in tens of seconds, and he held up two fingers.
Twenty seconds.</p>
<p>"We gaze, and you gaze with us," said Jamison, "upon
a world that future generations will come to know as home—the
site of the first human colony among the stars!"</p>
<p>Cochrane began to beat time. Ten, nine, eight—.</p>
<p>"We are about to land," Jamison declaimed. "We do
not know what we shall find—What's that?" He paused
dramatically. "A living creature?—A living creature
sighted down below! We sign off now—from the stars!"</p>
<p>The ending had been perfectly timed. Allowing for a
three-second interval for the broadcast to reach the moon,
and just about two more for it to be relayed to Earth, his
final word, "Stars!" had been uttered at the precise instant
to allow a four-minute commercial by Intercity Credit, in
the United States, by Citroen in Europe, by Fabricanos
Unidos in South and Central America, and Near East Oil
along the Mediterranean. At the end of that four minutes
it would be time for station identification and a time-signal,
and the divers eight-second flashes before other programs
came on the air.</p>
<p>The rockets roared and thundered. The ship went down
and down. Jamison said:</p>
<p>"I thought we'd be cut off when we hit air!"</p>
<p>"That's what Jones thought," Cochrane assured him.
He bellowed above the outside tumult, "Bell! See anything
alive down below?"</p>
<p>Bell shook his head. He stayed at the camera aimed
out a blister-port, storing up film-tape for later use. There
was the feel of gravitation, now. Actually, it was the fact
that the ship slowed swiftly in its descent.</p>
<p>Cochrane went to a port. The ship continued its descent.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_83" id="Page_83">[Pg 83]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Living creature? Where?"</p>
<p>Jamison shrugged. He had used it as a sign-off line.
An extrapolation from the fact that there was vegetation
below. He looked somehow distastefully out the port at a
swiftly rising green ground below. He was a city man. He
had literally never before seen what looked like habitable
territory of such vast extent, with no houses on it. In a
valley easily ten miles long and two wide, there was not a
square inch of concrete or of glass. There was not a man
made object in view. The sky was blue and there were
clouds, but to Jamison the sight of vegetation implied
rooftops. There ought to be parapets where roofs ended to
let light down to windows and streets below. He had never
before seen grass save on elevated recreation-areas, nor
bushes not arranged as landscaping, and certainly not trees
other than the domesticated growths which can grow on
the tops of buildings. To Jamison this was desolation. On
the moon, absence of structures was understandable. There
was no air. But here there should be a city!</p>
<p>The ship swayed a little as the rockets swung their blasts
to balance the descending mass. The intended Mars-ship
slowed, and slowed, and hovered—and there was terrifying
smoke and flame suddenly all about—and then there was a
distinct crunching impact. The rockets continued to burn,
their ferocity diminished. They slackened again. And yet
again. They were reduced to a mere faint murmur.</p>
<p>There was a remarkable immobility of everything. It
was the result of gravity. Earth-value gravity, or very near
it. There was a distinct pressure of one's feet against the
floor, and a feeling of heaviness to one's body which was
very different from Lunar City, and more different still
from free flight in emptiness.</p>
<p>Nothing but swirling masses of smoke could be seen out
the ports. They had landed in a forest, of sorts, and the
rocket-blasts had burned away everything underneath,
down to solid soil. In a circle forty yards about the ship
the ground was a mass of smoking, steaming ash. Beyond
that flames licked hungrily, creating more dense vapor.
Beyond that still there was only coiling smoke.</p>
<p>Cochrane's headphones yielded Babs' voice, almost
wailing:</p>
<p>"<i>Mr. Cochrane! We must have landed! I want to see!</i>"</p>
<p>Cochrane pressed the hand-mike button.</p>
<p>"Are we still hooked up to Lunar City?" he demanded.
"We can't be, but are we?"<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_84" id="Page_84">[Pg 84]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"<i>We are,</i>" said Babs' voice mutinously. "<i>The broadcast
went through all right. They want to talk to you. Everybody
wants to talk to you!</i>"</p>
<p>"Tell them to call back later," commanded Cochrane.
"Then leave the beam working—however it works!—and
come up if you like. Tell the moon operator you'll be
away for ten minutes."</p>
<p>He continued to stare out the window. Al, the pilot,
stayed in his cushioned seat before the bank of rocket-controls.
The rockets were barely alight. The ship stayed
as it had landed, upright on its triple fins. He said to Jones:</p>
<p>"It feels like we're solid. We won't topple!"</p>
<p>Jones nodded. The rocket-sound cut off. Nothing
happened.</p>
<p>"I think we could have saved fuel on that landing,"
said Jones. Then he added, pleased, "Nice! The Dabney
field's still on! It has to be started in a vacuum, but it looks
like it can hold air away from itself once it's established.
Nice!"</p>
<p>Babs rushed up the stairs. She gazed impassionedly out
of a vision-port. Then she said disappointedly:</p>
<p>"It looks like—"</p>
<p>"It looks like hell," said Cochrane. "Just smoke and
steam and stuff. We can hope, though, that we haven't
started a forest fire, but have just burned off a landing-place."</p>
<p>They stared out. Presently they went to another port
and gazed out of that. The smoke was annoying, and yet
it could have been foreseen. A moon-rocket, landing at its
space-port on Earth, heated the tarmac to red-hotness in
the process of landing. Tender-vehicles had to wait for it
to cool before they could approach. Here the ship had
landed in woodland. Naturally its flames had seared the
spot where it came down. And there was inflammable stuff
about, which caught fire. So the ship was in the situation
of a phoenix, necessarily nesting in a conflagration.
Anywhere it landed the same thing would apply, unless
it tried landing on a glacier. But then it would settle down
into a lake of boiling water, amid steam, and could expect
to be frozen in as soon as its landing-place cooled.</p>
<p>Now there was nothing to do. They had to wait. Once
the whole ship quivered very slightly, as if the ground
trembled faintly under it. But there was nothing at which
to be alarmed.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_85" id="Page_85">[Pg 85]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>They could see that this particular forest was composed
mainly of two kinds of trees which burned differently. One
had a central trunk, and it burned with resinous flames
and much black and gray-black smoke. The other was a
curious growth—a solid, massive trunk which did not touch
ground at all, but was held up by aerial roots which supported
it aloft through very many slender shafts widely
spread. Possibly the heavier part was formed on the ground
and lifted as its air-roots grew.</p>
<p>It was irritating, though, to be unable to see from the
ship so long as the fire burned outside. The pall of smoke
lasted for a long time. In three hours there were no longer
any fiercely blazing areas, but the ashes still smouldered
and smoke still rose. In three hours and a half, the local
sun began to set. There were colorings in the sky, beyond
all comparison glorious. Which was logical enough. When
Krakatoa, back on Earth, blew itself to bits in the eighteen
hundreds, it sent such volumes of dust into the air
that sunsets all around the globe were notably improved
for three years afterward. On this planet, smoking cones
were everywhere visible. Volcanic dust, then, made nightfall
magnificent past description. There was not only gold
and crimson in the west. The zenith itself glowed carmine
and yellow, and those in the space-ship gazed up at a
sky such as none of them could have imagined possible.</p>
<p>The colors changed and changed, from yellow to gold
all over the sky, and still the glory continued. Presently
there was a deep, deep red, deep past imagining, and
presently faint bluish stars pierced it, and they stared up
at new strange constellations-some very bright indeed—and
all about the ship there was a bed of white ash with
glowing embers in it, and a thin sheet of white smoke
still flowed away down the valley.</p>
<p>It was long after sunset when Cochrane got up from
the communicator. Communication with Earth was broken
at last. There was a balloon out in space somewhere with
an atomic battery maintaining all its surface as a Dabney
field plate. The ship maintained a field between itself and
that plate. The balloon maintained another field between
itself and another balloon a mere 178.3 light-years from the
solar system. But the substance of this planet intervened
between the nearer balloon and the ship. Jones made tests
and observed that the field continued to exist, but was
plugged by the matter of this newly-arrived-at world.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_86" id="Page_86">[Pg 86]</SPAN></span>
Come tomorrow, when there was no solid-stone barrier
to the passage of radiation, they could communicate with
Earth again.</p>
<p>But Cochrane was weary and now discouraged. So long
as talk with Earth was possible, he'd kept at it. There
was a great deal of talking to be done. But a good deal of
it was extremely unsatisfactory.</p>
<p>He found Bill Holden having supper with Babs, on the
floor below the communicator. Very much of the recent
talk had been over Cochrane's head. He felt humiliated
by the indignation of scientists who would not tell him
what he wanted to know without previous information he
could not give.</p>
<p>When he went over to the dining-table, he felt that he
creaked from weariness and dejection. Babs looked at
him solicitously, and then jumped up to get him something
to eat. Everybody else was again watching out the ship's
ports at the new, strange world of which they could see
next to nothing.</p>
<p>"Bill," said Cochrane fretfully, "I've just been given the
dressing-down of my life! You're expecting to get out of
the airlock in the morning and take a walk. But I've been
talking to Earth. I've been given the devil for landing on
a strange planet without bringing along a bacteriologist,
an organic chemist, an ecologist, an <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Original read 'epidomologist'.">epidemiologist</ins>, and a
complete laboratory to test everything with, before daring
to take a breath of outside air. I'm warned not to open
a port!"</p>
<p>Holden said:</p>
<p>"You sound as if you'd been talking to a biologist with
a reputation. You ought to know better than that!"</p>
<p>Cochrane protested:</p>
<p>"I wanted to talk to somebody who knew more than I
did! What could I do but get a man with a reputation?"</p>
<p>Holden shook his head.</p>
<p>"We psychiatrists," he observed, "go around peeping
under the corners of rugs at what people try to hide from
themselves. We have a worm's-eye view of humanity. We
know better than to throw a difficult problem at a man
with an established name! They're neurotic about their reputations.
Like Dabney, they get panicky at the idea of
anybody catching them in a mistake. No big name in medicine
or biology would dare tell you that of course it's
all right for us to take a walk in the rather pretty landscape
outside."<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_87" id="Page_87">[Pg 87]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Then who will?" demanded Cochrane.</p>
<p>"We'll make what tests we can," said Holden comfortingly,
"and decide for ourselves. We can take a chance.
We're only risking our lives!"</p>
<p>Babs brought Cochrane a plate. He put food in his
mouth and chewed and swallowed.</p>
<p>"They say we can't afford to breathe the local air at all
until we know its bacteriology; we can't touch anything
until we test it as a possible allergen; we can't."</p>
<p>Holden grunted.</p>
<p>"What would those same authorities have told your
friend Columbus? On a strange continent he'd be sure to
find strange plants and strange animals. He'd find strange
races of men and he ought to find strange diseases. They'd
have warned him not to risk it. <i>They</i> wouldn't!"</p>
<p>Cochrane ate with a sort of angry vigor. Then he
snapped:</p>
<p>"If you want to know, we've got to land! We're sunk
if we don't go outside and move around! We'll spoil our
story-line. This is the greatest adventure-serial anybody
on Earth ever tuned in to follow! If we back down on exploration,
our audience will be disgusted and resentful
and they'll take it out on our sponsors!"</p>
<p>Babs said softly, to Holden:</p>
<p>"That's my boss!"</p>
<p>Cochrane glared at her. He didn't know how to take
the comment. He said to Holden:</p>
<p>"Tomorrow we'll try to figure out some sort of test and
try the air. I'll go out in a space-suit and crack the face-plate!
I can close it again before anything lethal gets in.
But there's no use stepping out into a bed of coals tonight.
I'll have to wait till morning."</p>
<p>Holden smiled at him. Babs regarded him with intent,
enigmatic eyes.</p>
<p>Neither of them said anything more. Cochrane finished
his meal. Then he found himself without an occupation.
Gravity on this planet was very nearly the same as on
Earth. It felt like more, of course, because all of them had
been subject only to moon-gravity for nearly three weeks.
Jones and the pilot had been in one-sixth gravity for a
much longer time. And the absence of gravity had caused
their muscles to lose tone by just about the amount that
the same time spent in a hospital bed would have done.
They felt physically worn out.</p>
<p>It was a healthy tiredness, though, and their muscles<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_88" id="Page_88">[Pg 88]</SPAN></span>
would come back to normal as quickly as one recovers
strength after illness—rather faster, in fact. But tonight
there would be no night-life on the space-ship. Johnny
Simms disappeared, after symptoms of fretfulness akin to
those of an over-tired small boy. Jamison gave up, and
Bell, and Al the pilot fell asleep while Jones was trying
to discuss something technical with him. Jones himself
yawned and yawned and when Al snored in his face he
gave up. They retired to their bunks.</p>
<p>There was no point in standing guard over the ship.
If the bed of hot ashes did not guard it, it was not likely
that an individual merely sitting up and staring out its
ports would do much good. There were extremely minor,
practically unnoticeable vibrations of the ship from time
to time. They would be volcanic temblors—to be expected.
They were not alarming, certainly, and the forest outside
was guarantee of no great violence to be anticipated. The
trees stood firm and tall. There was no worry about the
ship. It was perfectly practical, and even necessary simply
to turn out the lights and go to sleep.</p>
<p>But Cochrane could not relax. He was annoyed by the
soreness of his muscles. He was irritated by the picture
given him of the expedition as a group of heedless ignoramuses
who'd taken off without star-charts or bacteriological
equipment—without even apparatus to test the air
of planets they might land on!—and who now were sternly
warned not to make any use of their achievement. Cochrane
was not overwhelmed by the achievement itself, though
less than eighteen hours since the ship and all its company
had been aground on Luna, and now they were landed on
a new world twice as far from Earth as the Pole Star.</p>
<p>It is probable that Cochrane was not awed because he
had a television-producer's point of view. He regarded this
entire affair as a production. He was absorbed in the details
of putting it across. He looked at it from his own,
quite narrow, professional viewpoint. It did not disturb him
that he was surrounded by a wilderness. He considered
the wilderness the set on which his production belonged,
though he was as much a city man as anybody else. He
went back to the control-room. With the ship standing on
its tail that was the highest point, and as the embers
burned out and the smoke lessened it was possible to look
out into the night.</p>
<p>He stared at the dimly-seen trees beyond the burned<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_89" id="Page_89">[Pg 89]</SPAN></span>
area, and at the dark masses of mountains which blotted
out the stars. He estimated them, without quite realizing
it, in view of what they would look like on a television
screen. When light objects in the control-room rattled
slightly, he paid no attention. His rehearsal-studio had been
rickety, back home.</p>
<p>Babs seemed to be sleepless, too. There was next to
no light where Cochrane was—merely the monitor-lights
which assured that the Dabney field still existed, though
blocked for use by the substance of a planet. Babs arrived
in the almost-dark room only minutes after Cochrane. He
was moving restlessly from one port to another, staring
out.</p>
<p>"I thought I'd tell you," Babs volunteered, "that Doctor
Holden put some algae from the air-purifier tanks in the
airlock, and then opened the outer door."</p>
<p><ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Original lacked the closing quote mark.">"Why?"</ins> asked Cochrane.</p>
<p>"Algae's Earth plant-life," explained Babs. "If the air
is poisonous, it will be killed by morning. We can close
the outer door of the lock, pump out the air that came
from this planet, and then let air in from the ship so we
can see what happens."</p>
<p>"Oh," said Cochrane.</p>
<p>"And then I couldn't sleep," said Babs guilelessly. "Do
you mind if I stay here? Everybody else has gone to bed."</p>
<p>"Oh, no," said Cochrane. "Stay if you like."</p>
<p>He stared out at the dark. Presently he moved to another
port. After a moment he pointed.</p>
<p>"There's a glow in the sky there," he said curtly.</p>
<p>She looked. There was a vast curving blackness which
masked the stars. Beyond it there was a reddish glare, as
if of some monstrous burning. But the color was not right
for a fire. Not exactly.</p>
<p>"A city?" asked Babs breathlessly.</p>
<p>"A volcano," Cochrane told her. "I've staged shows
that pretended to show intellectual creatures on other
planets—funny how we've been dreaming of such things,
back on Earth—but it isn't likely. Not since we've actually
reached the stars."</p>
<p>"Why since then?"</p>
<p>"Because," said Cochrane, half ironically, "man was
given dominion over all created things. I don't think we'll
find rivals for that dominion. I can't imagine we'll find
another race of creatures who could be—persons. Heaven<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_90" id="Page_90">[Pg 90]</SPAN></span>
knows we try to rob each other of dignity, but I don't
think there's another race to humiliate us when we find
them!"</p>
<p>After a moment he added:</p>
<p>"Bad enough that we're here because there are deodorants
and cosmetics and dog-foods and such things that
people want to advertise to each other! We wouldn't be
here but for them, and for the fact that some people are
neurotics and some don't like their bosses and some are
crazy in other fashions."</p>
<p>"Some crazinesses aren't bad," argued Babs.</p>
<p>"I've made a living out of them," agreed Cochrane
sourly. "But I don't like them. I have a feeling that I
could arrange things better. I know I couldn't, but I'd like
to try. In my own small way, I'm even trying."</p>
<p>Babs chuckled.</p>
<p>"That's because you are a man. Women aren't so foolish.
We're realists. We like creation—even men—the way
creation is."</p>
<p>"I don't," Cochrane said irritably. "We've accomplished
something terrific, and I don't get a kick out of it! My head
is full of business details that have to be attended to tomorrow.
I ought to be uplifted. I ought to be gloating!
I ought to be happy! But I'm worrying for fear that this
infernal planet is going to disappoint our audience!"</p>
<p>Babs chuckled again. Then she went to the stair leading
to the compartment below.</p>
<p>"What's the matter?" he demanded.</p>
<p>"After all, I'm going to leave you alone," said Babs
cheerfully. "You're always very careful not to talk to me
in any personal fashion. I think you're afraid I'll tell you
something for your own good. If I stayed here, I might.
Goodnight!"</p>
<p>She started down the stairs. Cochrane said vexedly:</p>
<p>"Hold on! Confound it, I didn't know I was so transparent!
I'm sorry, Babs. Look! Tell me something for my
own good!"</p>
<p>Babs hesitated, and then said very cheerfully:</p>
<p>"You only see things the way a man sees them. This
show, this trip—this whole business doesn't thrill you because
you don't see it the way a woman would."</p>
<p>"Such as how? What does a woman see that I don't?"</p>
<p>"A woman," said Babs, "sees this planet as a place that
men and women will come to live on. To live on! You<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_91" id="Page_91">[Pg 91]</SPAN></span>
don't. You miss all the real implications of people actually
living here. But they're the things a woman sees first of
all."</p>
<p>Cochrane frowned.</p>
<p>"I'm not so conceited I can't listen to somebody else.
If you've got an idea—"</p>
<p>"Not an idea," said Babs. "Just a reaction. And you
can't explain a reaction to somebody who hasn't had it.
Goodnight!"</p>
<p>She vanished down the stairs. Some time later, Cochrane
heard the extremely minute sound of a door closing
on one of the cabins three decks down in the space-ship.</p>
<p>He went back to his restless inspection of the night outside.
He tried to make sense of what Babs had said. He
failed altogether. In the end he settled in one of the over-elaborately
cushioned chairs that had made this ship so
attractive to deluded investors. He intended to think out
what Babs might have meant. She was, after all, the most
competent secretary he'd ever had, and he'd been <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Original read 'wrily'.">wryly</ins>
aware of how helpless he would be without her. Now he
tried painstakingly to imagine what changes in one's view
the inclusion of women among pioneers would involve. He
worked out some seemingly valid points. But it was not a
congenial mental occupation.</p>
<p>He fell asleep without realizing it, and was waked by
the sound of voices all about him. It was morning again,
and Johnny Simms was shouting boyishly at something he
saw outside.</p>
<p>"Get at it, boy!" he cried enthusiastically. "Grab him!
That's the way—"</p>
<p>Cochrane opened his eyes. Johnny Simms gazed out
and down from a blister-port, waving his arms. His wife
Alicia looked out of the same port without seeming to
share his excited approval. Bell had dragged a camera
across the control-room and was in the act of focussing
it through a particular window.</p>
<p>"What's the matter?" demanded Cochrane.</p>
<p>He struggled out of his chair. And Johnny Simms'
pleasure evaporated abruptly. He swore nastily, viciously,
at something outside the ship. His wife touched his arm
and spoke to him in a low tone. He turned furiously upon
her, mouthing foulnesses.</p>
<p>Cochrane was formidably beside him, and Johnny
Simms' expression of fury smoothed out instantly. He
looked pleasant and amiable.<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_92" id="Page_92">[Pg 92]</SPAN></span></p>
<p>"The fight stopped," he explained offhandedly. "It was
a good fight. But one of the creatures wouldn't stay and
take his licking."</p>
<p>Alicia said steadily:</p>
<p>"There were some animals there. They looked rather
like bears, only they had enormous ears."</p>
<p>Cochrane looked at Johnny Simms with hot eyes. It
was absurd to be so chivalrous, perhaps, but he was enraged.
After an instant he turned away and went to the
port. The burned-over area was now only ashes. At its
edge, charcoal showed. And now he could see trees and
brushwood on beyond. The trees did not seem strange,
because no trees would have seemed familiar. The brush
did not impress him as exotic, because his experience with
actual plants was restricted to the artificial plants on television
sets and the artificially arranged plants on rooftops.
He hardly let his eyes dwell on the vegetation at all. He
searched for movement. He saw the moving furry rumps
of half a dozen unknown creatures as they dived into concealment
as if they had been frightened. He looked down
and could see the hull of the ship and two of the three
take-off fins on which it rested.</p>
<p>The airlock door was opening out. It swung wide. It
swung back against the hull.</p>
<p>"Holden's making some sort of test of the air," Cochrane
said shortly. "The animals were scared when the outside
door swung open. I'll see what he finds out."</p>
<p>He hurried down. He found Babs standing beside the
inner door of the airlock. She looked somehow pale. There
were two saucers of greenish soup-like stuff on the floor
at her feet. That would be, of course, the algae from the
air-purifying-system tanks.</p>
<p>"The algae were alive," said Babs. "Dr. Holden went
in the lock to try the air himself. He said he'd be very
careful."</p>
<p>For some obscure reason Cochrane felt ashamed. There
was a long, a desperately long wait. Then sounds of machinery.
The outer door closing. Small whistlings—compressed
air.</p>
<p>The inner door opened. Bill Holden came out of the
lock, his expression zestfully surprised.</p>
<p>"Hello, Jed! I tried the air. It's all right! At a guess,
maybe a little high in oxygen. But it feels wonderfully
good to breathe! And I can report that the trees are wood<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_93" id="Page_93">[Pg 93]</SPAN></span>
and the green is <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Original read 'chlorophyl'.">chlorophyll</ins>, and this is an Earth-type
planet. That little smoky smell about is completely familiar—and
I'm taking that as an analysis. I'm going to take a
walk."</p>
<p>Cochrane found himself watching Babs' face. She looked
enormously relieved, but even Cochrane—who was looking
for something of the sort without realizing it—could
not read anything but relief in her expression. She did not,
for example, look admiring.</p>
<p>"I'll borrow one of Johnny Simms' guns," said Holden,
"and take a look around. It's either perfectly safe or we're
all dead anyhow. Frankly, I think it's safe. It feels right
outside, Jed! It honestly feels right!"</p>
<p>"I'll come with you," said Cochrane, "Jones and the
pilot are necessary if the ship's to get back to Earth. But
we're expendable."</p>
<p>He went back to the control-room. Johnny Simms zestfully
undertook to outfit them with arms. He made no
proposal to accompany them. In twenty minutes or so,
Cochrane and Holden went into the airlock and the door
closed. A light came on automatically, precisely like the
light in an electric refrigerator. Cochrane found his lips
twitching a little as the analogy came to him. Seconds later
the outer door opened, and they gazed down among the
branches of tall trees. Cochrane winced. There was no
railing and the height bothered him. But Holden swung
out the sling. He and Cochrane descended, dangling,
down fifty feet of unscarred, shining, metal hull.</p>
<p>The ground was still hot underfoot. Holden cast off the
sling and moved toward cooler territory with an undignified
haste. Cochrane followed him.</p>
<p>The smells were absolutely commonplace. Scorched
wood. Smokiness. There were noises. Occasional cracklings
from burned tree-trunks not wholly consumed. High-pitched,
shrill musical notes. And in and among the smells
there was an astonishing freshness in the feel of the air.
Cochrane was especially apt to notice it because he had
lived in a city back on Earth, and had spent four days in
the moon-rocket, and then had breathed the Lunar City
air for eighteen days more and had just come from the
space-ship whose air was distinctly of the canned variety.</p>
<p>He did not notice the noise of the sling again in motion
behind him. He was all eyes and ears and acute awareness
of the completely strange environment. He was the more<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_94" id="Page_94">[Pg 94]</SPAN></span>
conscious of a general strangeness because he was so completely
an urban product. Yet he and Holden were vastly
less aware of the real strangeness about them than men of
previous generations would have been. They did not notice
the oddity of croaking sounds, like frogs, coming from
the tree-tops. When they had threaded their way among
leaning charred poles and came to green stuff underfoot
and merely toasted foliage all around, Cochrane heard a
sweet, high-pitched trilling which came from a half-inch
hole in the ground. But he was not astonished by the place
from which the trilling came. He was astonished at the
sound itself.</p>
<p>There was a cry behind them.</p>
<p><i>"Mr. Cochrane! Doctor Holden!"</i></p>
<p>They swung about. And there was Babs on the ground,
just disentangling herself from the sling. She had followed
them out, after waiting until they had left the airlock and
could not protest.</p>
<p>Cochrane swore to himself. But when Babs joined them
breathlessly, after a hopping run over the hot ground, he
said only:</p>
<p>"Fancy meeting you here!"</p>
<p>"<i>I—I couldn't resist it</i>," said Babs in breathless apology.
"And you do have guns. It's safe enough—oh, look!"</p>
<p>She stared at a bush which was covered with pale purple
flowers. Small creatures hovered in the air about it.
She approached it and exclaimed again at the sweetness of
its scent. Cochrane and Holden joined her in admiration.</p>
<p>In a sense they were foolishly unwary. This was completely
strange territory. It could have contained anything.
Earlier explorers would have approached every bush with
caution and moved over every hilltop with suspicion, anticipating
deadly creatures, unparalleled monsters, and
exotic and peculiar circumstances designed to entrap the
unprepared. Earlier explorers, of course, would probably
have had advice from famous men to prepare them for
all possible danger.</p>
<p>But this was a valley between snow-clad mountains.
The river that ran down its length was fed by glaciers.
This was a temperate climate. The trees were either coniferous
or something similar, and the vegetation grew
well but not with the frenzy of a tropic region. There
were fruits here and there. Later, to be sure, they would
prove to be mostly astringent and unpalatable. They were<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_95" id="Page_95">[Pg 95]</SPAN></span>
broad-leafed, low-growing plants which would eventually
turn out to be possessed of soft-fleshed roots which were
almost unanimously useless for human purposes. There
were even some plants with thorns and spines upon them.
But they encountered no danger.</p>
<p>By and large, wild animals everywhere are ferocious
only when desperate. No natural setting can permanently
be so deadly that human being will be attacked immediately
they appear. An area in which peril is continuous
is one in which there is so much killing that there is no
food-supply left to maintain its predators. On the whole,
there is simply a limit to how dangerous any place can be.
Dangerous beasts have to be relatively rare, or they will
not have enough to eat, when they will thin out until
they are relatively rare and do have enough to eat.</p>
<p>So the three explorers moved safely, though their boldness
was that of ignorance, below gigantic trees nearly as
tall as the space-ship standing on end. They saw a small
furry biped, some twelve inches tall, which waddled insanely
in the exact line of their progress and with no apparent
hope of outdistancing them. They saw a gauzy
creature with incredibly spindly legs. It flew from one
tree-trunk to another, clinging to rough bark on each in
turn. Once they came upon a small animal which looked
at them with enormous, <ins class="correction" title="Transcriber's Note: Original read 'panic-striken'.">panic-stricken</ins> blue eyes and then
fled with a sinuous gait on legs so short that they seemed
mere flippers. It dived into a hole and vanished.</p>
<p>But they came out to clear space. They could look for
miles and miles. There was a savannah of rolling soil
which gradually sloped down to a swift-running river. The
grass—if it was grass—was quite green, but it had multitudes
of tiny rose-colored flowers down the central rib
of each leaf. Nearby it seemed the color of Earth-grass,
but it faded imperceptibly into an incredible old-rose tint
in the distance. The mountain-scarps on either side of the
valley were sheer and tall. There was a great stony spur
reaching out above the lowland, and there was forest at
its top and bare brown stone dropping two thousand feet
sheer. And up the valley, where it narrowed, a waterfall
leaped out from the cliff and dropped hundreds of feet in
an arc of purest white, until it was lost to view behind
tree-tops.</p>
<p>They looked. They stared. Cochrane was a television
producer, and Holden was a psychiatrist, and Babs was a<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_96" id="Page_96">[Pg 96]</SPAN></span>
highly efficient secretary. They did not make scientific observations.
The ecological system of the valley escaped
their notice. They weren't qualified to observe that the
flying things around seemed mostly to be furry instead of
feathered, and that insects seemed few and huge and fragile,—and
they did not notice that most of the plants appeared
to be deciduous, so indicating that this planet had
pronounced seasons. But Holden said:</p>
<p>"Up in Greenland there's a hospital on a cliff like that.
People with delusions of grandeur sometimes get cured
just by looking at something that's so much greater and
more splendid than they are. I'd like to see a hospital up
yonder!"</p>
<p>Babs said, shining-eyed:</p>
<p>"A city could be built in this valley. Not a tall city,
with gray streets and gardens on the roofs. This could be
a nice little city like people used to have. There would be
little houses, all separate, and there'd be grass all around
and people could pluck flowers if they wanted to, to take
inside.... There could be families here, and homes—not
living-quarters!"</p>
<p>Cochrane said nothing. He was envious of the others.
They saw, and they dreamed according to their natures.
Cochrane somehow felt forlorn. Presently he said
depressedly:</p>
<p>"We'll go back to the ship. You can work out your
woman's viewpoint stuff with Bell, Babs. He'll write it, or
you can give it to Alicia to put over when we go on the
air."</p>
<p>Babs made no reply. The absence of comment was almost
pointed. Cochrane realized that she wouldn't do it,
though he couldn't see why.</p>
<p>They did go back to the ship. Cochrane sent Babs and
Holden up the sling, first, while he waited down below.
It was a singular sensation to stand there. He was the only
human being afoot on a planet the size of Earth or larger,
at the foot of a cliff of metal which was the space-ship's
hull. He had a weapon in his hand, and it should defend
him from anything. But he felt very lonely.</p>
<p>The sling came down for him. He felt sick at heart as
it lifted him. He had an overwhelming conviction of incompetence,
though he could not detail the reasons. The
rope hauled him up, swaying, to the dizzy height of the<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_97" id="Page_97">[Pg 97]</SPAN></span>
air-lock door. He could not feel elated. He was partly responsible
for humankind's greatest achievement to date.
But he had not quite the viewpoint that would let him
enjoy its contemplation.</p>
<p>The ground quivered very faintly as he rose. It was
not an earthquake. It was merely a temblor, such as anyone
would expect to feel occasionally with six smoking
volcanic cones in view. The green stuff all around was proof
that it could be disregarded.</p>
<hr style="width: 65%;" />
<p><span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_98" id="Page_98">[Pg 98]</SPAN></span></p>
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