<h2>20</h2>
<p>If you ignite a jet of oxygen-nitrogen in an atmosphere of
hydrogen-methane, you get a flame that doesn’t differ much from
the flame from a hydrogen-methane jet in an oxygen-nitrogen atmosphere.
A flame doesn’t particularly care which way the electrons jump,
just so long as they jump.</p>
<p>All of which was due to give Mike the Angel more headaches than he
already had, which was 100 per cent too many.</p>
<p>Three days after the <i>Brainchild</i> landed, the scout group arrived from
the base that had been built on Eisberg to take care of Snookums. The
leader, a heavy-set engineer named Treadmore, who had unkempt brownish
hair and a sad look in his eyes, informed Captain Quill that there was a
great deal of work to be done. And his countenance became even sadder.</p>
<p>Mike, who had, perforce, been called in to take part in the conference,
listened in silence while the engineer talked.</p>
<p>The officers’ wardroom, of which Mike the Angel was becoming
heartily sick, seemed like a tomb which echoed and re-echoed the
lugubrious voice of Engineer Treadmore.</p>
<p>“We were warned, of course,” he said, in a normally dismal
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_179" id="Page_179">[179]</SPAN></span>
tone, “that it would be extremely difficult to set down the ship
which carried Snookums, and that we could expect the final base to be
anywhere from ten to thirty miles from the original, temporary
base.” He looked round at everyone, giving the impression of a
collie which had just been kicked by Albert Payson Terhune.</p>
<p>“We understand, naturally, that you could not help landing so far
from our original base,” he said, giving them absolution with
faint damns, “but it will entail a great deal of extra labor. A
hundred and nine miles is a great distance to carry equipment, and,
actually, the distance is a great deal more, considering the
configuration of the terrain. The....”</p>
<p>The upshot of the whole thing was that only part of the crew could
possibly be spared to go home on the <i>Fireball</i>, which was orbiting high
above the atmosphere. And, since there was no point in sending a small
load home at extra expense when the <i>Fireball</i> could wait for the
others, it meant that nobody could go home at all for four more weeks.
The extra help was needed to get the new base established.</p>
<p>It was obviously impossible to try to move the <i>Brainchild</i> a hundred
miles. With nothing to power her but the Translation drive, she was as
helpless as a submarine on the Sahara. Especially now that her drive was
shot.</p>
<p>The Eisberg base had to be built around Snookums, who was, after all,
the only reason for the base’s existence. And, too, the power
plant of the <i>Brainchild</i> had been destined to be the source of power
for the permanent base.</p>
<p>It wasn’t too bad, really. A little extra time, but not much.</p>
<p>The advance base, commanded by Treadmore, was fairly well equipped. For
transportation, they had one jet-powered <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_180" id="Page_180">[180]</SPAN></span>
aircraft, a couple of ’copters, and fifteen ground-crawlers with
fat tires, plus all kinds of powered construction machinery. All of them
were fueled with liquid HNO<sub>3</sub>, which makes a pretty good fuel in an
atmosphere that is predominantly methane. Like the gasoline-air engines
of a century before, they were spark-started reciprocating engines,
except for the turbine-powered aircraft.</p>
<p>The only trouble with the whole project was that the materials had to be
toted across a hundred miles of exceedingly hostile territory.</p>
<p>Treadmore, looking like a tortured bloodhound, said: “But
we’ll make it, won’t we?”</p>
<p>Everyone nodded dismally.</p>
<hr class='minor' />
<p>Mike the Angel had a job he emphatically didn’t like. He was
supposed to convert the power plant of the <i>Brainchild</i> from a spaceship
driver into a stationary generator. The conversion job itself
wasn’t tedious; in principle, it was similar to taking the engine
out of an automobile and converting it to a power plant for an electric
generator. In fact, it was somewhat simpler, in theory, since the
engines of the <i>Brainchild</i> were already equipped for heavy drainage to
run the electrical systems aboard ship, and to power and refrigerate
Snookums’ gigantic brain, which was no mean task in itself.</p>
<p>But Michael Raphael Gabriel, head of one of the foremost—if not <i>the</i>
foremost—power design corporations in the known Galaxy, did not like
degrading something. To convert the <i>Brainchild’s</i> plant from a
spaceship drive to an electric power plant seemed to him to be on the
same order as using a turboelectric generator to power a flashlight. A
waste.</p>
<p>To make things worse, the small percentage of hydrogen <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_181" id="Page_181">[181]</SPAN></span>
in the atmosphere got sneaky sometimes. It could insinuate itself into
places where neither the methane nor the ammonia could get. Someone once
called hydrogen the “cockroach element,” since, like that
antediluvian insect, the molecules of H<sub>2</sub> can insidiously infiltrate
themselves into places where they are not only unwelcome, but
shouldn’t even be able to go. At red heat, the little molecules
can squeeze themselves through the crystalline interstices of quartz and
steel.</p>
<p>Granted, the temperature of Eisberg is a long way from red hot, but
normal sealing still won’t keep out hydrogen. Add to that the fact
that hydrogen and methane are both colorless, odorless, and tasteless,
and you have the beginnings of an explosive situation.</p>
<p>The only reason that no one died is because the Space Service is what it
is.</p>
<p>Unlike the land, sea, and air forces of Earth, the Space Service does
not have a long history of fighting other human beings. There has never
been a space war, and, the way things stand, there is no likelihood of
one in the foreseeable future.</p>
<p>But the Space Service <i>does</i> fight, in its own way. It fights the
airlessness of space and the unfriendly atmospheres of exotic planets,
using machines, intelligence, knowledge, and human courage as its
weapons. Some battles have been lost; others have been won. And the war
is still going on. It is an unending war, one which has no victory in
sight.</p>
<p>It is, as far as we can tell, the only war in human history in which
Mankind is fully justified as the invading aggressor.</p>
<p>It is not a defensive war; neither space nor other planets have attacked
Man. Man has invaded space “simply because <span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_182" id="Page_182">[182]</SPAN></span>
it is there.” It is war of a different sort, true, but it is
nonetheless a war.</p>
<p>The Space Service was used to the kind of battle it waged on Eisberg. It
was prepared to lose men, but even more prepared to save them.</p>
<hr /><p class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_183" id="Page_183">[183]</SPAN></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />