Classic Audiobook Collection - Rip Foster Rides the Gray Planet by Harold L. Goodwin ~ Full Audiobook [scifi]
Episode Date: January 24, 2023Rip Foster Rides the Gray Planet by Harold L. Goodwin audiobook. Genre: scifi 'Foster, Lieutenant, R. I. P.,' blared the voice horn, and five minutes later Rip Foster was off into space on an assignm...ent more exciting than any he had ever imagined. He could hardly believe his ears. Could a green young Planeteer, just through his training, possibly carry out orders like these? Sunny space, what a trick it would be! From the moment Rip boards the space ship Scorpius there is a thrill a minute. He and his nine daring Planeteers must cope with the merciless hazing of the spacemen commanding the ship, and they must outwit the desperate Connies, who threaten to plunge all of space into war. There are a thousand dangers to be faced in high vacuum—and all of this while carrying out an assignment that will take every reader's breath away. For ad-free listening try our premium subscription Chapters (Approximate) (00:00:00) Chapter 01 (00:18:33) Chapter 02 (00:38:28) Chapter 03 (00:57:19) Chapter 04 (01:15:31) Chapter 05 (01:33:11) Chapter 06 (01:53:50) Chapter 07 (02:13:55) Chapter 08 (02:32:38) Chapter 09 (02:52:37) Chapter 10 (03:13:17) Chapter 11 (03:34:29) Chapter 12 (03:46:28) Chapter 13 (04:02:37) Chapter 14 (04:17:56) Chapter 15 (04:35:30) Chapter 16 (04:45:45) Chapter 17 (05:00:58) Chapter 18 (05:23:33) Chapter 19 (05:30:56) Chapter 20 Learn more about your ad choices. Visit megaphone.fm/adchoices
Transcript
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Rip Foster rides the gray planet.
Chapter 1. SCN. Scorpius, spacebound.
A thousand miles above the Earth's surface, the great space platform sped from daylight
into darkness. Once every two hours it circle the Earth completely,
spinning along through space like a mighty wheel of steel and plastic.
Through a telescope on Earth, the platform looked to be a lifeless, lonely disk,
but within it hundreds of spacemen and planetiers went about their work.
In a ready room at the outer edge of the platform,
a planetier officer faced a dozen slim, black-clad young men
who wore the single golden orbits of lieutenants.
This was a graduating class already commissioned
having a final informal get-together.
The officer, who wore the three-orbit insignia of a major,
was lean and trim.
His short-cropped hair covered his head like a great,
fur-scull cap. One cheek was marked with the crisp whiteness of an old radiation burn.
"'Stand easy,' he ordered briskly. The general instructions of the Special Order Squadrons
say that it's my duty as senior officer to make a farewell speech. I intend to make a speech
if it kills me, and you too.' The dozen new officers facing him broke into grins. Major
Joe Barris had been their friend, teacher, and senior officer during six long
years of training on the space platform. He could no more make a formal speech than he could
breathe high vacuum, and they all knew it. Lieutenant Richard Ingalls Peter Foster, whose initials
had given him the nickname Rip, asked, Why don't you sing for us instead, Joe? Major
Bear's fixed Rip with a cold eye. Foster, three orbital turns, then front and center. Rip
obediently spun around three times, then walked forward and stood at attention, trying to
conceal his grin.
"'Foster, what does SOS mean?'
"'Special Order Squadron, sir.'
"'Right.
And what else does it mean?'
"'It means help, sir.'
"'Right.
And what else does it mean?'
"'Superman or Simp, sir.'
This was a ceremony in which questions and answers never changed.
It was supposed to make planetary cadets and junior officers feel properly humble,
but it didn't work.
tradition, the planetaires were the cockiest gang that ever blasted through high vacuum."
Major Beres shook his head sadly.
You admit you're a simp, Foster. The rest of your simps, too, but you don't believe
it. You finished six years on the platform. You made a few little trips out into space.
You've landed on the moon a couple of times, so now you think you're seasoned space spooks.
Well, you're not. You're simps."
stopped grinning. He had heard this before. It was part of the routine, but he sensed
that this time Joe Barris wasn't kidding. The Major absently rubbed the radiation scar on his
cheek as he looked them over. They were like twelve chicks out of the same nest. They were
about the same size, a compact five feet eleven inches, 175 pounds. They wore belted loose black
tunics over full trousers, which gathered into white cruiser boots. The comfortable uniform
forms concealed any slight differences in build. All twelve were lean a face, with hair
cropped to the regulation half-inch. Rip was the only redhead among them.
"'Set down,' Beres commanded. "'Here's my speech.'
The twelve seated themselves on plastic stools. Major Barris remained standing.
"'Well,' he began soberly, "'you are now officers of the Special Order Squadrons. You are
planeters. You are lieutenants by order of the Space Council, Federation of Free
Governments. And, Space Protect You, to yourselves, you're Superman. But never forget
this. To ordinary spacemen, you're just plain simps. Your trouble in a black tunic. They
have about as much use for you as they have for leaks in their airlocks. Some of the
spacemen have been high vacking for twenty years or more, and they're tough. They're as nasty as a
Calistin T-Cal. They like to eat planeter junior officers for breakfast."
Lieutenant Felipe Flip Villa asked,
We assault, Joe? Major Barris sighed.
No, you're trying to tell you space chicks anything.
You're lieutenants now, and Lieutenant has the thickest skull of any rank,
no matter what service he belongs to.
Ripp realized that Barris had not been joking, no matter how flippant his speech.
Go ahead, he urged.
Finish what you were going to say.
Okay, I'll make it short.
Then you can catch the Terra rocket and take your eight weeks'
Earth leave.
You won't really know what I'm talking about until you've batted around
space for a while.
All I have to say adds up to one thing.
You won't like it because it doesn't sound scientific.
That doesn't mean it isn't good science, because it is.
Just remember this.
When you're in a jam, trust your hunch,
and not your head." The Twelve stared at him, open-mouthed. For six years they have been taught
to rely on scientific methods. Now their best instructor and senior officer was telling them
just the opposite. Rip started to object, but then he caught a glimmer of meaning. He stuck out
his hand. "'Thanks, Joe. I hope we'll meet again.' Berris grinned. "'We will, Rip. I'll ask for you as a
platoon commander when they assigned me to cleaning up the goopies on Ganymede. This was
the Major's idea of the worst planeteer job in the solar system. The group shook hands
all around. Then the young officers broke for the door on the run. The Terra rocket was blasting
off in five minutes, and they were to be on it. Rip joined Flip Via, and they jumped on the high-speed
track that would whisk them to valve two on the other side of the platform. Their gear was already
loaded. They had only to take seats on the rocket, and their six years on the space platform
would be at an end.
"'I wonder what it would be like to get back to high gravity,' Rip mused.
The centrifugal force of the spinning platform acted as artificial gravity, but it was considerably
less than Earth's.
"'We probably won't be able to walk straight until we get our Earth-legs back,' Flip answered.
"'I wish I could stay in Colorado with you instead of going back to Mexico City, Rip.
We could have a lot of fun in eight weeks."
Rip nodded.
Tough luck, flip.
But, anyway, we have the same assignment.
Both planetaires have been assigned to Special Order Squadron 4,
which was attached to the cruiser Bolide.
The cruiser was in high space beyond the orbits of Jupiter and Saturn,
doing comet research.
They got off the track at Valve 2 and stepped through into the rocket's interior.
Two seats just ahead of the fins were vacant, and they slid into them.
Rip looked through the thick port beside him and saw the distinctive blue glow of a nuclear-drive
cruiser sliding toward the platform.
"'Wave your ice-docks at that job,' Flip said admiringly.
"'Wonder what it's doing here.'
The space platform was a refueling depot, where conventional chemical fuel rockets topped
off their tanks before flaming for space.
The newer nuclear-drive cruisers had no need to stop.
Their atomic piles needed new neutron sources only once every few years.
and they carried thousands of tons of methane compressed into solid form for the
reaction mass."
The voice horn in the rocket cabin sounded.
The SCN Scorpius is passing valve two, landing at Valve Eight.
I thought that ship was with Squadron One on Mercury, RIP recalled.
Wonder why they pulled it back here.
Flip had no chance to reply, because the chief rocket officer took up his station at the
valve and began to call the roll.
answer to his name. The rocket officer finished the roll, then announced,
Buttoning up in 20 seconds, blast off in 45. Don't bother with acceleration harness. We'll fall
free with just enough flame going for control, after ten seconds of retro thrust to de-orbit.
The ten-second warning bell sounded, and before the bell had ceased, the voice horn blasted.
Get it! Foster R.I.P. Lieutenant. Report to the platform commander.
Show an exhaust!"
Rip leapt to his feet.
Hold on, Flip.
I'll see what the old man wants and be right back.
Get flaming!
The rocket officer called.
Show an exhaust, like the man said.
This bucket leaves on time, and we're sealing the port.
Rip hesitated.
The rocket would leave without him.
Flip said urgently.
You'll better ram it, Rip...
He knew he had no choice.
Tell my folks I'll make the next.
"'Next rocket!' he called and ran. He leapt through the valve, jumped for the high-speed track,
and was whisked around the rim of the space platform. He ran a hand through his short red hair,
a gesture of bewilderment. His records had cleared. So far as he knew, all his papers were in
order, and he had his next assignment. He couldn't figure why the platform commander would want
to see him, but the horn had called, show an exhaust, which meant to get there in a hurry.
He jumped off the track at the main cross-run and hurried toward the center of the platform.
In a moment he was at the commander's door waiting to be identified.
The door swung open and a junior officer in the blue tunic and trousers of a spaceman
motioned him to the inner room.
Go in, Lieutenant.
Thank you.
He hurried into the commander's room and stood at attention.
Commander Jensen, the Norwegian spaceman who had commanded the platform since before Rip's arrival
as a raw cadet, was a man.
dictating into his command relay circuit. As he spoke, printed copies were being received
in the platform personnel office, at Special Order Squadron headquarters on Earth, aboard the cruiser
bolide in high space, and aboard the newly landed cruiser, Scorpius. Rip listened, spellbound.
Foster, R.I.P. Lieutenant S.O.S. Cereal 7943. Assigned S.O.S. 4. Change orders, effective this
date time. Cancel Earth leave. Subject officer will report to Commander SCN Scorpius with
detachment of nine men. Senior non-commissioned officer and second-in-command, COA, AP, Sergeant
Major, SOS. Serial 2941. Commander of Scorpius will transport detachment to coordinates given in basic
cruiser astro course. Deliver orders to detachment en route. Take required steps for maximum security.
This is Federation Priority A Space Council Security Procedures."
RIP swallowed hard. The highest possible priority, given by the Federation itself,
had cancelled his leave. Not only that, but the cruiser to which he was assigned was instructed
to follow Space Council security procedures, which meant that the job, whatever it was, was more
urgent than secret. Commander Yensen looked up and saw Rip waiting. He snapped,
Did you get all of that?
Yes, sir.
You'll get written copies on the cruiser.
Now flame out of here.
Collect your men and get aboard.
The Scorpius leaves in five minutes.
Rip ran.
The realization hit him that the big nuclear cruiser
had stopped at the platform for the sole purpose
of collecting him and nine enlisted planetaires.
The low gravity helped him cover the hundred yards
to the personnel office in five leaps.
He swung to a stop by grabbing.
the pushbar of the office door. He yelled at the enlisted spaceman on duty.
"'Where do I find nine men?' The spaceman looked at him vacantly.
"'What for? You got a requisition, Lieutenant?'
"'Never mind requisitions,' Rip snapped.
"'I've got to find nine planeteers and get them on the Scorpius before it flames off.'
The spaceman's face cleared.
"'Oh, you mean COA's detachment. They left a few minutes ago.
Where?
Where did they go?
The spaceman shrugged.
The doings of planetaires were no concern of his.
His shrug said so.
Ripp realized there was no use talking further.
He ran down the long corridor toward the outer edge of the platform.
The enlisted man's squad rooms were near Valve 10.
So was the supply department.
His gear had departed on the Terra rocket,
and he couldn't go into space with only the tunic on his back.
He swung to the high-speed track.
and braced himself as he sped along the platform's rim.
There was no moving track inward to the enlisted planetar's squad rooms.
He legged it down the corridor in long leaps, muttering apologies as blue-clad spacemen and cadets
moved to the wall to let him pass.
The squad rooms were on two levels.
He looked in the upper ones and found them deserted.
The squads were on duty somewhere.
He ran for the ladder to the lower level, took the wrong one, and ended up in a snapper-boat
He had trained in the deadly little fighting rockets, and they never failed to interest him.
But there wasn't time to admire them now.
He went back up the ladder with two strong heaves, found the right ladder, and dropped
down without touching.
His knees flexed to take up the shock.
He came out of the crouch facing a black-clad planeteer sergeant who snapped to rigid attention.
"'Coa!' Rip barked.
"'Where can I find him?'
"'He's not here, sir.
He and eight men left fifteen minutes ago.
ago. I don't know where they went, sir." Ripp shot a worried glance at his wrist
chronometer. He had two minutes left before the cruiser departed. No more time now to
search for his men. He hoped the sergeant major had sense enough to be waiting at some
reasonable place. He went up the ladder hand over hand and sped down the corridor to the
supply room. The spaceman first class in charge of supplies was turning an audio mag
through a hand-viewer, chuckling at cartoons. At the side of Ripp's full
flushed, anxious face, he dropped the machine.
"'Yes, sir?'
"'I need a space-pack. Full gear including bubble.'
"'Yes, sir.'
The spaceman looked him over with a practiced eye.
One full space-pack. Medium large, right, sir?'
"'Correct.'
Ripp took the counter-stilus and inscribed his name, serial
number, and signature on the blank plastic sheet.
Gears word as the data was recorded.
A spaceman vanished into an inner room and reappeared in a moment lugging a plastic case called
a space pack, or SPAC, for short. It contained complete personal equipment for space travel.
Rip grabbed it. Fast service. Thanks, Rocky. All spacemen were called Rocky, if you didn't know
their names. It was an abbreviation for Rocketeer, a title all of them had once carried.
Valve 8 was some distance away. Rip decided to cross-ramp.
would be faster than the moving track. He swung the spack to his shoulder and made his legs go.
Seconds were ticking off, and he had an idea that the SCN Scorpius would make space on time,
whether or not he arrived. He lengthened his stride and rounded a turn by going right up on the
wall, using a powerful leg thrust against a ventilator tube for momentum. He passed an observation
port as he reached the platform rim, and caught a glimpse of ruddy rocket exhaust flames
outlined against the dark curve of Earth. That would be the Terra rocket making its control
fall to home, with flip aboard. Without slowing, he leapt across the high-speed track,
narrowly missing a senior space officer. He shouted his apologies and gained the entrance to
Valve 8, just as the high buzz of the radiation warning sounded, signaling a nuclear-drive
cruiser preparing to take off. Nine faces of assorted colors and expressions turned to him,
He had a quick impression of black tunics and trousers. He had found his detachment.
Without slowing, he called,
Follow me!
The cruiser's safety officer had been keeping an eye on the clock. His forehead creased in a frown
as he saw that only a few seconds remained to departure time. He walked to the valve
opening and looked out. If his passengers were not in sight, he would have to reset the
clock. Rip went through the valve opening at top speed. He crashed head on into the safety officer.
The safety officer was driven across the deck, his arms pumping for balance. He grabbed at the
nearest thing, which happened to be the deputy cruiser commander. The preset clock reached
firing time. The valve slid shut and the takeoff bell reverberated through the ship. And so
it happened that the spacemen of the SCN Scorpius turned their valves,
through their controls and disengaged their boron control rods, and the great cruiser
flashed into space, while the deputy commander and the safety officer were completely tangled
with a very flustered and unhappy new planeter lieutenant.
Sergeant Major Coa and his men had made it before the valve closed.
Coa, a seven-foot Hawaiian, took in the situation and said crisply in a voice all could hear.
I'll bust the bubble of any son of a space sausage who laughs.
End of Chapter 1. Chapter 2.
Of Rip Foster Rides the Gray Planet, by Harold Goodwin.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Rip Foster Rides the Gray Planet.
Chapter 2. Rake That Radiation.
The Deputy Commander and the Safety Officer got untangled and hurried to their post.
with no more than black looks at Rip.
He got to his feet, his face crimson with embarrassment.
A fine entrance for a planeter officer,
especially one on his first orders.
Around him the spacemen were settling in their acceleration seats
or snapping belts to safety hooks.
From the direction of the stern came a rising roar
as methane, heated to a liquid,
dropped into the blast tubes,
flaming into pure carbon and hydrogen
under the terrible heat of the atomic drive.
Ripp had to lean against the acceleration.
Fighting for balance, he picked up his spack
and made his way to the nine enlisted planetaires.
They had braced against the ship's drive
by sitting with backs against bulkheads
or by lying flat on the magnesium deck.
Sergeant Major Coa was seated against a vertical brace,
his brown face wreathed in a grin
as he waited for his new officer.
RIP looked him over carefully.
There was a saying among the planetaires that an officer was only as good as his senior sergeant.
Coa's looks were reassuring.
His face was good-humored, but he had a solid jaw and a mouth that could get tough when necessary.
Rip wondered a little at his size.
Big men usually didn't go into space.
They were too subject to space sickness.
COA must be a special case."
RIP slid to the floor next to the Sergeant Major and stuck out his hand.
He sensed the strength in COA's big fist as it closed over his.
Cowa said, "'Sir, that was the best fleet I've ever seen an Earthling make.
You've been on Venus?'
Rip eyed him suspiciously, wondering if the big planeteer was laughing at him.
was grin, but it was a friendly grin.
What is a fleeting?" Rip demanded.
I've never been on Venus.
It's the way the waterhole people fight, Coe explained.
They're like a bunch of rubber balls when they get to fighting.
They ram each other with their heads.
Ripp searched his memory for data on Venus.
He couldn't recall any mention of fleeting.
Venusians, if his memory was right, had a sort of blowgun
as a main weapon. He told COSO. The Sergeant Major nodded.
That's when they mean business, Lieutenant. Fleeting is more like us fighting with our fists,
sort of a sport. Great Cosmos, the way they dive at each other is something to see.
Rip grinned. I didn't know I was going to fleeting those officers. It isn't the way I usually
enter a cruiser. He hadn't entered many. He added,
I suppose I ought to report to someone."
Koa shook his head.
No use, sir.
You can't walk around very well until the ship reaches Brenschluse.
Besides, you won't find any space officers who'll talk to you.
Ripp stared.
Why not?
Because we're planeteers.
They'll give us the treatment.
They always do.
When the commander of this bucket gets good and ready, he'll send for you.
Until then, we might as well take it easy.
He pulled a bar of Venusian true from his pocket.
Have some. It'll make breathing easier.
The terrific acceleration made breathing a little uncomfortable, but it was not too bad.
The chief effect was to make Rip feel as though a ton of invisible feathers were crushing
him against the vertical brace.
He accepted a bite of the bittersweet vegetable candy and munched thoughtfully.
Coas seemed to take it for granted that the spacemen would give them a rough time.
He asked,
"'Aren't there any spacemen who get along with the Special Order Squadrons?'
"'Never met one,' Coa chewed true,
"'and I was on the Icarus when the whole thing started.'
Rip looked at him in surprise.
Coa didn't seem that old.
The bad feeling between spacemen and Special Order squadrons
had started about 18 years ago when the cruiser Icarus
had taken the first planeteers to Mercury.
He reviewed the history of the expedition.
The spacemen's job had been to land the newly created Special Order Squadron on the hot planet.
The job of the squadron was to explore it.
Somehow confusion developed, and the spacemen, including the officers, later reported
that the squadron had instructed them to land on the sun's side of Mercury, which would have
destroyed the spaceship and its crew, or so they believed at the time.
The commanding officer of the squadron denied issuing such an order.
He said his instructions were to land as close as possible to the sun-side, but not on it.
Whatever the truth, and Rip believed the SOS version, of course, the crew of the Icarus
mutinied or tried to.
They made the landing on Mercury with squadron guns pointed at their heads.
Of course, they found that a sun-side landing wouldn't have hurt the ship.
The whole affair was pretty well hushed up, but it pretty much.
reduced bad feeling between the Special Order Squadrons and the Spacemen.
Trigger-happy space-bums the Spaceman called them, and much worse besides.
The men of the Special Order Squadrons, searching for a handy nickname, had called themselves
planeteers, because most of their work was on the planets.
As Major Joe Beres had told the officers of Rips class,
You might say the Spaceman owns space, but we planetiers own everything
solid that's found in it. The planetaires were the specialists in science, exploration,
colonization, and fighting. The spacemen carried them back and forth, kept them supplied,
and handled their message traffic. The planetaires did the hard work and the important work,
or so they believed. To become a planeter, a recruit had to pass rigid intelligence,
physical, aptitude, and psychological tests. Fewer than fifteen out of each other,
100 who applied were chosen. Then there were two years of hard training on the space platform
and the moon before a recruit was finally accepted as a planeter private. Out of each
fifteen who started training, an average of five fell by the wayside. For planeter officers,
the requirements were even tougher. Only one out of each five hundred applicants finally received
a commission. Six years of training made them proficient in the techniques of explorers.
operation, fighting, rocketeering, and both navigation and astrogation.
In addition, each became a full-fledged specialist in one field of science.
RIPP's specialty was astrophysics."
Sergeant Major Coah continued,
"'That business on the Icarus started the war, but both sides have been feeding it ever since.
I have to admit that we planetiers loaded over the spacemen like we were old men Cosmos
himself.
they get back at us with dirty little tricks while we're on their ships. We command on the
planets, but they command in space, and they sure get a great big nuclear charge out of
commanding us to do the dirty work. We'll take whatever they hand us," Rip assured him, and
pretend we like it fine." He gestured at the other planetiers. Tell me about the men, Koa.
"'They're a fine bunch, sir. I handpicked them myself. The one with the white
hair is Corporal Nels Peterson. He's a Swede. I serve with him at Marsport, and he's a real
rough space spikaroo in a fight. The other corporal is little Paulo Santos. He's a Filipino and the
best snapper boat gunner you ever saw. He pointed out the six privates. Camp and doused
were Americans. Bradshaw was an Englishman, Trudeau, a Frenchman, Domenico and Italian, and Nunes,
a Brazilian. Rip liked their looks.
They were as relaxed as acceleration would allow, but you got the impression that they would leap
into action in a microsecond if the word were given. He couldn't imagine what kind of assignment
was waiting, but he was satisfied with his planeteers. They looked capable of anything.
He made himself as comfortable as possible and encouraged COA to talk about his service in the
Special Order squadrons. Coa had plenty to tell, and he talked interestingly. Rip learned that
the tall Hawaiian had been to every planet in the system, had fought the Venusians on the
central desert, and had mined nuclite with SOS-1 on Mercury. He also found that COA was one of
the seventeen pure-blooded Hawaiians left. During the three hours that acceleration kept them
from moving around the ship, Rip got a new view of space and of service with the SOS. It was
the view of a planeteer who had spent years around the solar system.
I'm glad they assigned you to me, Rip told Koa, frankly.
This is my first job, and I'll be pretty green, no matter what it is.
I'll depend on you for a lot of things.
To his surprise, Koa thrust out his hand.
Shake, Lieutenant.
His grin showed strong white teeth.
You're the first junior officer I ever met who admitted he didn't know everything about
everything.
You can depend on me, sir.
I won't steer you into it.
any meteor swarms.
Koa had half turned to shake hands.
Suddenly, he spun on around, his head banging against the deck.
Ripp felt a surge of loosened muscles that had embraced against acceleration.
At the same time, silence flooded in on them with an almost physical shock.
He murmured.
Brenschluss, and the murmur was like a trumpet blast.
The Scorpius had reached velocity, and the nuclear drive had caught.
out. From terrific acceleration they had dropped to zero. The ship was making high speed, but
velocity cannot be felt. For the moment the men were weightless. A nearby spaceman had heard
Ripp's comment. He spoke in an undertone to the man nearest. His voice was pitched low enough
that Ripp couldn't object officially, but loud and clear enough to be heard by everyone.
Get this, gang. The planeteer officer knows what branch luce is.
doesn't look old enough to know which end his bubble goes on."
Ripp started to his feet, but Koa's hand on his arm restrained him.
With a violent kick, the big sergeant major shot through the air.
His line of flight took him past the spaceman, and somehow their arms got linked.
The spaceman was jerked from his post, and the two came to a stop against the ceiling.
Koa's voice echoed through the ship.
"'Sorry!
I'm not used to no-wait.
Didn't mean to grab you.
Here, I'll help you back to your post."
He whirled the helpless spaceman like a bag of feathers and slung him through the air.
The force of the action only flattened Koa against the ceiling, but the hapless
spaceman shot forward head first and landed with a clang against the bulkhead.
He didn't hit hard enough to break any bones, but he would carry a bump on his head for
a day or two.
Coa's voice floated after him.
"'Great, Cosmos! I sure am sorry, spaceman.
I guess I don't know my own strength."
He kicked away from the ceiling, landing accurately at Rip's side.
He added in a hard voice all could hear.
"'They sure are a nice gang, these spacemen.
They'd never say anything about planetaires.'
No spaceman answered, but Ko's meaning was clear.
No spaceman had better say anything about the planetaires.
Ripp saw that the deputy commander and the safety officer had appeared not
to notice the incident. Technically, there was no reason for an officer to take action. It had all
been an accident. He smiled. There was a lot he had to learn about dealing with spacemen. A lot
COA evidently knew very well indeed. Suddenly he began to feel weight. The ship was going into
rotation. The feeling increased until he felt normally heavy again. There was no other sensation,
even though the space cruiser was now spinning on its axis through space at unaltered speed.
The centrifugal force produced by the spinning gave them an artificial gravity.
Now that he thought about it, Brenschluss had come pretty early.
The trip apparently was going to be a short one.
Brenschluss. Funny he thought, how words stay on in a language even after their original meaning is changed.
Brinschluse was German for burnout.
It was rocket talk, and it meant the moment when all the fuel in a rocket burned out.
It had come into common use because the English, burnout, could also mean that the engine
itself had burned out.
The German word meant only the one thing.
Now, in nuclear driveships, the same word was used for the moment when power was cut off.
Words interested him.
He started to mention it to Coa just as the telescreen lit up.
An officer's face appeared.
"'Send that planeter officer to the commander,' the voice said.
"'Tell him to show an exhaust.'
Rip called instantly to the safety officer.
"'Where's his office?'
The safety officer motioned to a spaceman.
"'Show him, Nelson.'
Rip followed the spaceman through a maze of passages,
growing more weightless with each step.
The closer to the center of the ship they went, the less he weighed.
He was drawing himself along the way.
by plastic pull cords when they finally reached the door marked, Commander.
The spaceman left without a word or a salute. Rip pushed the lock bar and pulled himself
in by grabbing the door frame. He couldn't help thinking it was a rather undignified way to make
an entrance. Seated in an acceleration chair, a safety belt across his middle, was Space Commander
Kevin O'Brien, an Irishman out of Dublin. He was short, as compact as a Dito rocket, and
and obviously unfriendly. He had a mathematically square jaw, a lopsided nose, green eyes, and
sandy hair. He spoke with a pronounced Irish brogue. Ripp started to announce his name,
rank, and the fact that he was reporting as ordered. Commander O'Brien brushed his words aside
and stated flatly, "'You're a planeteer. I don't like planetaires.'
Ripp didn't know what to say, so he kept still, but sharp anger was
was rising inside of him. O'Brien went on.
Instruction say, I'm to hand you your orders en route. They don't say when. I'll decide that.
Until I do decide, I have a job for you and your men. Do you know anything about nuclear physics?
Ripp's eyes narrowed, he said cautiously.
A little, sir. I'd assume you know nothing. Foster, the designation SCN means space cruiser
nuclear. This ship is powered by a nuclear reactor, in other words, an atomic pile. You've heard of one?
Ripp controlled his voice, but his red hair stood on end with anger. O'Brien was being deliberately
insulting. This was stuff any planeteer recruit knew. I've heard, sir. Fine, it's more than I had
expected. Well, Foster, a nuclear reactor produces heat, great heat. We're a nuclear reactor. We're
We use that heat to turn a chemical called methane into its component parts.
Methane is known as marsh gas, Foster.
I wouldn't expect a planeteer to know that.
It's composed of carbon and hydrogen.
When we pump it into the heat coils of the reactor,
it breaks down and creates a gas that burns and drives us through space.
But that isn't all it does.
Ripp had an idea what was coming, and he didn't like it.
Nor did he like Commander O'Brien.
It was not until much later that he learned that O'Brien had been on his way to Tara to
see his family for the first time in four years, when the cruiser's orders were changed.
To the commander, whose assignments had been made necessary by the needs of the Special
Order squadrons, it was too much. So he took his disappointment out on the nearest planeteer,
who happened to be ripped.
"'Tegasas go through tubes,' O'Brien went on.
A little nuclear material also leaks into the tubes.
The tubes get coated with carbon, Foster.
They also get coated with nuclear fuel.
We use thorium.
Thorium is radioactive.
I won't give you a lecture on radioactivity, Foster,
but thorium mostly gives off the kind of radiation known as alpha particles.
Alpha is not dangerous unless breathed or eaten.
It won't go through clothes or skin.
But when mixed with fine carbon,
Thorium alpha contamination makes a mess.
It's a dirty mess, Foster, so dirty that I don't want my spacemen to fool with it.
I want you to take care of it instead, you and your men.
The deputy commander will assign you to a squad room.
Settle in, then draw equipment for the supply room and get going.
When I want to talk to you again, I'll call for you.
Now blast off, Lieutenant, and rake that radiation.
Rake it clean.
Rip forced a bright and friendly smile.
"'Yes, sir,' he said sweetly.
"'We'll rake it so clean you can see your face in it, sir.'
He paused, then added politely,
"'If you don't mind looking at your face, sir, to see how clean the tubes are, I mean.'
Rip turned and got out of there.
Koa was waiting in the passageway outside.
Rip told him what had happened, mimicking O'Brien's Irish accent.
The Sergeant Major shook his head.
sadly.
This is what I meant, Lieutenant.
Cruises don't clean their tubes more than once in ten
accelerations.
The commander's just thinking up dirty work for us to do, like I said.
Never mind, Rip told him.
Let's find our squad room and get settled, then draw some protective
clothing and equipment.
We'll clean his tubes for him.
Our turn will come later."
He remembered the last thing Joe Barris had said only a few
hours before. Joe was right, he thought. To ourselves we're supermen, but to the space men
were just simps. Evidently, O'Brien was the kind of space officer who ate planeteers
for breakfast. Rip thought of the way the commander had turned red with rage at that crack about
his face, and he resolved, He may eat me for breakfast, but I'll be a very tough mouthful.
End of Chapter 2.
of Rip Foster Rides the Grey Planet by Harold Goodwin.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Rip Foster Rides the Gray Planet
Chapter 3. Capture and Drive
Commander O'Brien had not exaggerated.
The residue of carbon and thorium on the blast tube walls was
stubborn, dirty, and penetrating.
It was caked on in a solid,
sheet, but when scraped, it broke up into fine powder.
The planetaires were coveralls, gloves, and face masks with respirators, but that didn't
prevent the stuff from sifting through onto their bodies.
RIP, who directed the work and kept track of the radiation with a gamma-beta ion chamber
and an alpha-proportional counter, knew they would have to undergo personal decontamination.
He took a reading on the ion chamber.
only a few millerentons of beta and gamma radiation.
That was the dangerous kind, because both beta particles and gamma rays could penetrate
clothing and skin.
But the planetaires wouldn't get enough of a dose to do any harm at all.
The alpha count was high, but so long as they didn't breathe any of the dust, it was not
dangerous.
The Scorpius had six tubes.
Rip divided the planetaires into two squads, one under his.
his direction and one under Coas. Each tube took a couple of hours hard work. Several times during
the cleaning the men would leave the tube and go into the main mixing chamber, while the tube was
blasted with live steam to throw the stuff they had scraped off out into space. Each squat
was on its last tube when a spaceman arrived. He saluted Rip. Sir, the safety officer says to
secure the tubes. That could mean only one thing. De-suffalo.
acceleration. Rip rounded up his men. We're finished. The safety officer passed the word to secure
the tubes, which means we're going to decelerate. He smiled grimly. You all know they gave us this job
just out of pure love for the planetaires. So remember it when you go through the control room
to the decontamination chamber. The planetaires nodded enthusiastically. Rip led the way from
the mixing chamber through the heavy safety door,
and into the engine control room. His entrance was met with poorly concealed grins by the
spacemen. Halfway across the room, Rip turned suddenly and bumped into Sergeant Major Coa.
Coa fell to the deck, arms flailing for balance, but flailing against his protective clothing.
The other planetaires rushed to pick him up, and somehow all their hands beat against each other.
The protective clothing was saturated with fine dust. It rose from them in a choking cloud,
and was picked up and dispersed by the ventilating system. It was contaminated dust.
The automatic radiation safety equipment filled the ship with an ear-splitting buzz of warning.
Spacemen clapped emergency respirators to their faces, and spoke unkindly of Ripp's planeteers
in the saltiest spacelang which they could think of. Rip and his men picked up COA and
continued the march to the decontamination room, grinning under the respirators at the consternation
around them. There was no danger to the spaceman, since they'd clapped on respirators the
moment the warning sounded. But even a little contamination meant the whole ship had to be gone
over with instruments, and the ventilating system would have to be cleaned. The deputy commander
met Rip at the door of the radiation room. Above the respirator, his face looked furious.
"'Lieutenant!' he bellowed. "'Have it you any more sense than to bring contaminated clothing into
the engine control room?
Rip was sorry the deputy commander
couldn't see him grinning under his respirator.
He said innocently,
No, sir, I haven't any more sense than that.
The deputy grated,
I'll have you up before the discipline board for this.
Rip was enjoying himself thoroughly.
I don't think so, sir.
The regulations are very clear.
They say, it is the responsibility
of the safety officer to ensure
compliance with all safety regulations by both complete instructions to personnel and personal supervision.
Your safety officer didn't instruct us, and he didn't supervise us. You'd better run him up before
the board. The deputy commander made harsh sounds into his respirator. Rip had him, and he knew it.
He thought even a stupid planeteer had sense enough to obey radiation safety rules, he yelled.
He was wrong.
Ripp said gently. Then, just to make himself perfectly clear, he added,
Commander O'Brien was within his rights when he made us rake radiation. But he forgot one thing.
Planetaires know the regulations, too. Excuse me, sir, I have to get my men decontaminated.
Inside the decontamination chamber, the planetaires took off their masks and faced Rip
with admiring grins. For a moment he grinned back, feeling pretty good.
He had held his own with the spacemen, and he sensed that his men liked him.
"'All right,' he said briskly.
"'Stripped down and get into the showers.'
In a few moments they were all standing under the chemically treated water,
washing off the contaminated dust. Rip paid special attention to his hair,
because that was where the dust was most likely to stick.
He had it well lathered when the water suddenly cut off.
At the same moment the cruiser shuddered slightly as control bladders,
stopped its spinning and left them all weightless. Ripp saw instantly what had happened.
He called,
All right, men, down on the floor. The planetaires instantly slid to the shower deck.
In a few seconds, the pressure of deceleration pushed at them.
I like spacemen, Ripp said wryly. They wait until just the right moment before they cut
the water and decelerate. Now we're stuck in our birthday suits until we land,
wherever that may be. Corporal Nels Peterson spoke up in a soft Stockholm accent.
Never mind, sir. We'd get back at them. We always do.
While the Scorpius decelerated and started maneuvering for a landing, Rip did some rapid
calculations. He knew the acceleration and deceleration rates of cruisers of this class,
measured in terms of time, and part of his daily routine on the space platform had been to examine
in the daily astroplot, which gave the positions of all planets and other large bodies within
the solar system. There was only one possible destination. Mars. Ripp's pulse quickened. He had
always wanted to visit the red planet. Of course, he had seen all the films, audio mags, and books
concerning it, and he had tried to see the weekly spacecast. He had a good idea of what the planet
was like, but reading or viewing was not like actually landing and taking a love.
look for himself. Of course they would land at Marsport. It was the only landing area equipped to
handle nuclear-drive cruisers. The cruiser landed and deceleration cut to zero. At the same moment,
the water came on. Rip hurriedly finished cleaning up, dressed, then took his radiation instruments
and carefully monitored his men as they came from the shower. Private doused had to go back for
another try at getting his hair clean, but the rest were all right.
Ripp handed his instruments to Coa. You monitor doused when he finishes. I want to see what's
happening. He hurried down from the chamber and made his way down the corridors toward the
engine control room. There was a good possibility he might get a call from O'Brien, with
instructions to take his men off the ship. He might finally learn what he was assigned to do.
As he reached the engine control room, Commander O'Brien was giving instructions to his spacemen
on the stowage of equipment that evidently was expected aboard. Ripp felt a twinge of disappointment.
If the Scorpius had landed to take on supplies of some kind, his assignment was probably not on
Mars. He started to approach the commander with a question about his orders, then thought better of it.
He stood quietly near the control panel and watched.
The airlock hissed, then slid open. A Martian stood in the entryway, a case on his shoulder.
Rip watched him with interest. He had seen Martians before on the space platform, but he had
never gotten used to them. They were human, still. He tried to figure out, as he had before,
what it was that made them strange. It wasn't the blue whiteness of their skins, nor the very large,
expressionless eyes.
It was something about their bodies.
He studied the Martian's figure carefully.
He was slightly taller and more slender than the average Earth-man,
but his chest measurements would be about the same.
Nor were his legs very much longer.
Suddenly, Rip thought he had it.
The Martian's legs and arms joined his torso at a slightly different angle,
giving him an angular look.
That was what made him look like a correct.
of a human, although he was human, of course, as human as any of them.
Ripp saw that other Martians were in the airlock, all carrying cases of various sizes and
shapes. They came through into the control room and put them down, then turned without a word
and hurried back into the lock. They were all breathing heavily, Rip noticed. Of course, the
artificial atmosphere inside the spaceship must seem very heavy and moist to them, after the thin,
dry air of Mars. The lock worked, and the Martians were replaced by others. They, too, deposited their
cases. But these cases were bigger and heavier. It took four Martians to carry one, which meant
they weighed close to half a ton each. The Martians could carry more than double in Earth-man's
capacity. When the lock worked next time a planeteer captain came in. He breathed the heavy air
appreciatively, fingering the oxygen mask he had to wear outside. He saluted Commander O'Brien
and reported, "'This is all, sir. We fill the order exactly as Tara sent it. Is there anything else
you need?' O'Brien turned to his deputy. "'Find out,' he ordered. "'This is our last chance. We have plenty of basic
supplies, but we may be short of audio mags and other things for the men.' He turned his back on the
planeter captain and walked away. The captain grinned at O'Brien's retreating back,
then walked over to Rip. They shook hands. I'm Southwick. S-O-S-2, Canadian. Rip
introduced himself and said he was an American. He added, and aside from my men, you're the
first human being I've seen since we made space. Southwick chuckled.
Trouble with the spaceman. Well, you're not the first.
Talking about assignments wasn't considered good practice, but Rip was burning with curiosity.
"'You don't by chance know what my assignment is, do you?'
The captain's eyebrows went up.
"'Don't you?' Rip shook his head.
"'O'Brien hasn't told me.'
"'I don't know a thing,' Southwick said.
"'We got instructions to pack up a pretty strange assortment of supplies for the Scorpius,
and that's all I know.
The order was in special cipher, though. So, we're all wondering about it.
The deputy commander returned, reported to O'Brien, then walked up to Rip and Southwick.
Nothing else needed, he said curtly. We'll get off at once.
Southwick nodded, shook hands with Rip, and said in a voice the deputy could hear,
Don't let these spacemen bother you. Trouble with them is they all wanted to be planeteers
and couldn't pass the intelligence tests.
He winked, then hurried to the airlock.
Spacemen worked quickly to clear the deck of the new supplies, stowing them in a nearby workroom.
Within five minutes, the engine control room was clear.
The safety officer signaled, and the radiation warning sounded.
Taking off.
Rip hurried to the squad room and climbed into an acceleration chair.
The other planetaires were already in the room, most of them in their bunks.
Coa slid into the chair beside him.
"'Find out anything, sir?'
"'Nothing useful. A bunch of equipment came aboard, but it was in plain crates. I couldn't tell
what it was.'
Acceleration pressed them against the chairs. Rip sighed, picked up an audio circuit set,
and put it over his ears. Might as well listen to what the circuit had to offer.
There was nothing else to do. Music was playing, and it was the kind he liked. He settled
back to relax and listen.
Brinchloose came
sometime later. It woke
rip up from a sound sleep.
He blinked, glancing at his chronometer.
Great Cosmos.
With that length of acceleration,
they must be high vacking for Jupiter.
He waited until the ship went
into the gravity spin, then got out of
his chair and stretched. He was
hungry. Coel was still sleeping.
He decided not to wake him.
The Sergeant Major would see
that the men ate when they wanted to.
In the mess room only one table was occupied, by Commander O'Brien.
Ripp gave him a civil hello and started to sit alone at another table.
To his surprise, O'Brien beckoned to him.
"'Set down,' the spaceman invited gruffly.
Rip did and wondered what was coming next.
"'Well, start to decelerate in about ten minutes,' O'Brien said.
"'Ait while you can.'
He signaled, and a spaceman,
man brought rip the day's ration in an individual plastic carton with thermo lining.
The planeter opened it and found a block of mixed vegetables, a slab of space meat,
and two units of biscuit. He wrinkled his nose. Space meat, he did mind. It was chewy,
but tasty. The mixed vegetable ration was chosen for its food value and not for taste.
A good mouthful of earth grass would be a lot more palatable. He sliced off by
pieces of the warm stuff and chew thoughtfully, watching O'Brien's face for a clue as to why
the commander had invited him to sit down. It wasn't long in coming.
"'Your orders are the strangest things I've ever read,' O'Brien stated.
"'Do you know where we're going?'
Rip figured quickly. They had accelerated for six and a half hours. Now, ten minutes after
Branchloose, they were going to start deceleration.
That meant they had really high-vacted to get somewhere in a hurry.
He calculated swiftly.
"'I don't know exactly,' he admitted.
"'But from the ship's actions, I'd say we were aiming for the far side of the asteroid belt.
Anyway, we'll fall short of Jupiter.'
There was a glimmer of respect in O'Brien's glance.
"'That's right. Know anything about asteroids, Foster?'
Rip considered. He knew what he had been taught in astronomy and astrogation. Between Mars and Jupiter
lay a broad belt in which the asteroids swung. They ranged from series, a tiny world only
four hundred eighty miles in diameter, down to chunks of rock the size of a house. No accurate
count of asteroids, or minor planets, as they were called, had been made, but the observatory
on Mars had charted the orbits of over one hundred thousand.
of them were only a mile or two in diameter. Others, much smaller, had never been charted by
anyone. One leading astronomer had estimated that as many as fifty thousand asteroids
filled the belt.
"'I know the usual stuff about them,' he told O'Brien.
"'I haven't any special knowledge.'
O'Brien blinked.
"'Then why did they assign you? What's your specialty?'
"'Astrophysics.'
"'That might explain it.
Second specialty?
Astrogation.
He couldn't resist, adding,
That's what scientists call space navigation, commander.
O'Brien started to retort, then apparently thought better of it.
I hope you'll be able to carry out your orders, Lieutenant, he said stiffly.
I hope, but not much.
I don't think you can.
Ripp asked, What are my orders, sir?
O'Brien waved in the general direction of the wall.
Out there somewhere in the asteroid belt-fuster,
there's a little chunk of matter about 1,000 yards in diameter,
a very minor planet.
We know its approximate coordinates as of two days ago,
but we don't know much else.
It happens to be a very important minor planet.
Ripp waited intent on the commander's words.
It's important, O'Brien continued,
because it happens to be pure thorium.
Rip gasped.
Thorium, the rare, radioactive element
just below uranium in the periodic table of the elements.
The element used to power this very ship.
What a find, he said in a hushed voice.
No wonder the job was Federation Priority A,
with Space Council Security.
What do I do about it? he asked.
O'Brien Grimmie.
end. "'Ride it,' he said.
"'Your orders say, you're to capture this asteroid, blast it out of its orbit, and drive it back to
Earth.'
End of Chapter 3.
Chapter 4 of Rip Foster Rides the Grey Planet by Harold Goodwin.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Rip Foster Rides the Grey Planet.
Chapter 4.
First, find the needle.
Rip walked into the squad room with a copy of the orders in his hand.
After one look at his face, the planetaires clustered around him.
Santos woke those who were sleeping while Rip waited.
"'We have our orders, men,' he announced.
Suddenly he laughed.
He couldn't help it.
At first he had been completely overcome by the responsibility and the magnitude of the job,
but now he was getting used to the idea and he could see the adventure in it.
Ten wild planetiers riding an asteroid.
Sunny space! What a great big thermonuclear stunt!
Koa remarked,
It must be good. The lieutenant is getting a real atomic charge out of it.
Sit down, reported.
You'd better, because you might fall over when you hear this.
Listen, men, two days ago, the freighter Altair passed.
through the asteroid belt on a run from Jupiter to Mars. He sat down, too, because deceleration was
starting. As his men looked at each other in surprise at the quickness of it, he continued.
The old bucket found something we need, an asteroid of pure thorium. The enlisted planetaires
knew as well as he what that meant. There were whistles of astonishment. Koas slapped his thigh.
"'By, Gemini! What do we do about it, sir?'
"'We capture it,' Rip said.
"'We blast it loose from its orbit and ride it back to Earth.'
He sat back and watched their reactions. At first they were stunned.
Trudeau, the Frenchman, muttered to himself in French.
Domenico, the Italian, held up his hands and exclaimed,
"'Santa Maria!' Kemp, one of the American privates, asked,
How do we do it, sir?"
Rip grinned.
That's a good question.
I don't know.
That stopped them.
They stared at him.
He added quickly,
supplies came aboard at Marsport.
We'll get the clue when we opened them.
Headquarters must have known the method when they assigned us and ordered the equipment.
Koa stood up.
He was the only one who could have moved upright against the terrific deceleration.
He walked to Iraq at one side.
of the squad room and took down a copy of the space navigator.
Then, resuming his seat, he looked questioningly at Rip.
Anything else, sir? I thought I'd read what there is about asteroids.
Go ahead, Rip agreed. He sat back as Coa began to recite what data there was,
but he didn't listen. His mind was going ten astro units a second. He thought he knew
why he had been chosen for the job. Word of the priceless asteroid must have reached
headquarters only a short time before he was scheduled to leave the space platform. He could imagine
the speed with which the specialists at Terra Base had acted. They had sent orders instantly to the
fastest cruiser in the area, the Scorpius, to stand by for further instructions. Then their personnel
machines must have whirred rapidly, electronic brains searching for the nearest available
planetier officer with an astrophysics specialty and astrogation training. He could imagine the reactions
when the machine turned up the name of a brand-new lieutenant.
But the choice was logical enough.
He knew that most, if not all, of the planeter astrophysicists
were in either high or low space on special work.
Chances were there was no astrophysicist nearer than Ganymede.
So the choice had fallen to him.
He had a mental image of the Terra-based scientists,
feeding data into the electronic brain,
taking the results and writing fast orders for the men and supplies,
If his estimate was correct, work at the planeter base had been finished within an hour of the
time word was received. When they opened the cases brought aboard by the Martians, he would
see that the method of blasting the asteroid into a course for Earth was all figured out for him.
Rip was anxious to get at those cases. Not until he saw the method of operation could he begin
to figure his course. But there was no possibility of getting at the stuff until Brenschley
loose. He put the problem out of his mind and concentrated on what his men were saying.
And he slugged into the asteroid going close to seven AUs, Santos was saying.
The little Filipino corporal shrugged expressively. Rip recognized the story. It was about a supply
ship, a chemical drive rocket job that had blasted into an asteroid a few years before.
Private doused shrugged too. Too bad. High Vak was waiting for.
him. Nothing you could do when old man nothing wants you."
RIP listened, interested. This was the talk of old space hands, who had given the
high vacuum of empty space a personality, calling it High VAC or Old Man Nothing. With understandable
fatalism they believed, or said they believed, that when High Vacuum really wanted
you, there was nothing you could do. Ripp had come across an interesting bit of word knowledge.
Spacemen and planetiers alike had a way of using the phrase, by Gemini.
Gemini, of course, was the constellation of the twins, Castor and Pollux.
Both were useful stars for astrogation.
The Roman horse soldiers of ancient history had sworn by Gemini or by the twins.
The Romans believed the stars were the famous Greek warriors, Castor and Pollux,
placed in the heavens after their deaths.
In later years, the phrase degenerated to the simple, by Jiminy, and its meaning had been lost.
Now, although few spacemen knew the history of the phrase, they were using it again correctly.
Other space talk grew out of space itself, not out of history. For instance, the worst thing
that could happen to a man was to have his helmet broken, let the transparent glow be shattered,
and the results were both quick and final.
Hence, the oft-heard threat, I'll bust your bubble.
Speaking of bubbles, Rip realized suddenly that he and his men would have to live in bubbles
and spacesuits while on the asteroid. None of the minor planets were big enough to have an atmosphere
or much gravity. If only he could get a look into those cases. But the ship was still
decelerating, and he would have to wait. He put his head against the chair rest and
settled down to wait as patiently as he could.
Brenchluse was a long time coming. When the deceleration finally stopped, Rip didn't wait
for gravity. He hauled himself out of the chair and the squad room and went down the corridor
hand over hand. He headed straight for where the supplies were stacked, his planet tears
close behind him. Commander O'Brien arrived at the same time.
"'We're starting to scan for the asteroid,' he greeted Rip. "'Maybe some time before we find it.'
"'Where are we, sir?'
Rip asked.
Just above the asteroid belt, near the outer edge.
We're beyond the position where the asteroid was sighted,
moving along what the Altair figured as its orbit.
I'm not stretching space, Foster,
when I tell you we're hunting for a needle in a junk pile.
Tess part of space is filled with more objects than you would imagine,
and they all register on the red screens.
We'll find it, Rip said confidently.
O'Brien nodded.
Yes, but it probably will take some hunting.
Meanwhile, let's get at those cases.
The supply clerk is on his way.
The supply clerk arrived, issued tools to the planetaires,
then opened a plastic case attached to one of the boxes and produced lists.
As the planetaires opened and unpacked the crates,
Rip and O'Brien inspected, and the clerk checked off the items.
The first case produced a complete chemical cutting unit,
with an assortment of cutting tips and adapters.
RIP looked around for the gas cylinders and saw none.
Something's wrong, he objected.
Where's the fuel supply for the torch?
The supply clerk inspected the lists,
shuffled papers, and found the answer.
The following, he read,
are to be supplied from the Scorpius complement.
One landing boat large, Model 28.
Eight each, oxygen cutting unit gas bottles.
Four each chemical cutting unit fuel tanks.
That's that, Rip said, relieved.
Apparently he was supposed to do a lot of cutting on the asteroid, probably of the thorium
itself.
The hot flame of the torch could melt any known substance.
The torch itself could melt in unskilled hands.
The next case yielded a set of astrogation instruments, carefully cradled in a soft,
rubbery plastic.
Rip left them in the case and put them to one side.
side. As he did so, Sergeant Major Koa led out a whistle of surprise.
Lieutenant, look at this. Corporal Santos exclaimed,
Well, stunker me for a stupid space squid. Do they expect us to find any people on this asteroid?
The object was a portable rocket launcher designed to fire light attack rockets. It was a standard
item of fighting equipment for the planetaires.
I recognize the shape of those cases over there now, Coa said.
said, ten racks of rockets for the launcher, one rack to a case.
Ripp scratched his head. He was as puzzled as Santos. Why supply fighting equipment for a
crew on an asteroid that couldn't possibly have any living thing on it? He left the puzzle for
the future and called for more cases. The next two yielded projectile-type handguns for ten men
with ammunition and standard planet-tier space knives. The space knives had hidden blades,
which were driven forth violently when the operator pushed a thumb lever, releasing the gas in a
cartridge contained in the handle. The blade snapped forth with enough force to break a bubble
or to cut through a spacesuit. They were designed for the sole purpose of space hand-to-hand
combat. The planetaires looked at each other. What were they up against that such equipment
was needed on a barren asteroid? Private Dost opened a box that contained a complete toolkit,
the tools designed to be handled by men in spacesuits. Yards of wire, for several purposes,
were wound on reels. Two hand-driven dynamos capable of developing great power were included.
Corporal Peterson found a small case which contained books, the latest astronomical data
sheets, and a space computer and scratchboard. These were obviously for RIP's personal use.
He examined them. There were all the references he would need for computing orbit,
speed, and just about anything else that might be required.
He had to admire the thoroughness of whoever had written the order.
The unknown planeter had assumed that the space cruiser
would not have all the astrophysics references necessary
and had included a copy of each.
Several large cases remained.
Koa ripped aside from one and let out an exclamation.
Rip hurried over and looked in.
His stomach did a quick orbital reverse.
Great, Cosmos.
The thing was an atomic bomb. Commander O'Brien leaned over his shoulder and peered at the
lettering on the cylinder. Equivalent 10KT. In other words, the explosion the harmless-looking
cylinder could reduce was equivalent to 10,000 tons of TNT, a chemical explosive no longer
in actual use, but still used for a comparison.
Ripp asked huskily,
Any more of those things?
The importance of the job was becoming increasingly clear to him.
Nuclear explosives were not used without good reason.
The fissionable material was too valuable for other purposes.
The size came off the remaining cases.
Some of them held fat tubes of conventional rocket fuel in solid form,
the igniters carefully packed separately.
There were three other atomic bombs, making four in all.
There were two bombs each of 5KT and 10KT.
Commander O'Brien looked at the amazing assortment of stuff.
"'Does that, check, clerk?'
The spaceman nodded.
"'Yes, sir.
I found another notation that says food supplies
and personal equipment to be supplied by the Scorpius.'
"'Wed ervak me for a Venusian rabbit,' O'Brien muttered.
He tugged at his ear.
"'Yolka dump me on that asteroid with
this assortment of junk, and I'd spend the rest of my life there. I don't see how you can use
this stuff to move an asteroid." Maybe that's why the Federation sent planetiers, Ripp said,
and was sorry the moment the words were out. O'Brien's jaw muscles bulged, but he held his temper.
"'I'm going to pretend I didn't hear that, Foster. We have to get along until the asteroid is
safely in an orbit around Earth. After that, I'm going to take a great deal of
pleasure in feeding you to the space fish, piece by piece.
It was RIPP's turn to get red.
I'm sorry, Commander.
Accept my apologies.
He certainly had a lot to learn about space etiquette.
Apparently, there was a time for spacemen and planetaires to fight each other,
and a time for them to cooperate like friends.
He hoped he'd catch on after a while.
I'm sure you'll be able to figure out what to do with this stuff, O'Brien said.
If you need help, let me know."
And Rip knew his apology was accepted.
The deputy commander arrived, drew O'Brien aside, and whispered in his ear.
The commander led out an exclamation and started out of the room.
At the door he turned,
"'Better come along, Foster!'
Rip followed as the commander led the way to his own quarters.
At the door two space officers were waiting, their faces grave.
O'Brien motioned them to chairs.
All right, let's have it.
The senior space officer held out a sheet of flimsy.
It was pale blue the color used for highly confidential documents.
Sir, this came in Space Council Special Cipher.
Read it aloud, O'Brien ordered.
Yes, sir. It's addressed to you, this ship.
From Planetare Intelligence, Marsport.
Consop's cruiser departed general direction your area.
Agents report crew Altair may have leaked data re-asteroid.
Take appropriate action.
It signed Williams' SOS commanding.
Ripp saw the meaning of the message instantly.
The consolidation of people's governments of Earth,
traditional enemies and rivals of the Federation of Free Governments,
needed radioactive minerals as badly as, or worse than, the Federation.
In space, it was first come, first.
take. They had to find the asteroid quickly. It was to prevent consops from knowing of the
asteroid that security measures had been taken. They hadn't worked because of loose space chatter
at Marsport. O'Brien issued quick orders. Now get this. We have to work fast. Accelerate 50 percent.
Same course. I want two men on eight screen. If anything of the right size shows up,
decelerate until we can get mass and albedo measurements.
Snap to it.
The space officer started out, but O'Brien stopped them.
Use one long-range screen for scanning high space toward Mars.
Let me know the minute you'll get a blip, because it probably would be the Consop's
cruiser.
Have the missile parts cleared for action.
Ripp's eyes opened.
Clear the missile ports?
That meant getting the cruiser in fighting shape, ready for instant action.
You wouldn't fire on that Consop's cruiser, would you, sir?
O'Brien gave him a grim smile.
"'Certainly not, Foster.
It's against orders to start anything with Consop's cruisers.
You know why.
The situation is so tense that a fight between two spaceships might plunge Earth into war.'
His smile got even grimmer.
But you never know.
The Consop's ship might fire first, or an accident might happen.
The commander leaned forward.
We'll find that asteroid for you.
you, Mr. Planetir. We'll put you on it and see you on your way. Then we'll ride space along
with you, and if any consop thieves try to take over and collect that thorium for themselves,
they'll find Kevin O'Brien waiting. That's a promise. Ripp felt a lot better. He sat back
in his chair and regarded the commander with mixed respect and something else. Against his will,
he was beginning to like the man. No doubt of it, the Scorpius was well,
named, and the sting in the scorpion's tail was O'Brien himself.
End of Chapter 4. Chapter 5. Of Rip Foster Rides the Gray Planet, by Harold Goodwin.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Rip Foster Rides the Grey Planet. Chapter 5. The Small Gray World
Rip rejoined his planetiers in the supply room.
and motion for them to gather around him.
"'I know White Terra Bay sent us the fighting equipment,' he announced.
"'They were afraid word of this Thorium asteroid would leak out to Consops, and it has.
A Connie cruiser blasted off from Marsport and headed this way.'
He watched the faces of his men carefully to see how they would take the news.
They merely looked at each other and shrugged.
Conflict with Consops was nothing new to them.
The freighter that found the asteroid landed at Marsport, didn't it?
Coa asked.
Getting a knot from Rip, he went on.
Then I know what probably happened.
The two things spacemen can't do are breathe high vac and keep their mouths shut.
Some of the crew blabbed about the asteroid, probably at the Space Club.
That's where they hang out.
The Connie's hang out there, too.
Results, we get a Connie cruiser after the asteroid.
You hit it, Rip acknowledged.
Corporal Santos shrugged.
If the Connie tried to take the asteroid away, they'll have a real warm time.
We have ten racks of rockets, twenty-four to a rack.
That's a lot of snapper boats we can pick off if they try to make a landing.
The planet here stopped talking as the voice horn sounded.
Get it!
We are going into no-weight.
Prepare to stand in no-weight indefinitely.
Rotation stops in two minutes.
Rip realized why the order was given. The Scorpius could not maneuver while in a gravity
spin, and O'Brien wanted to be free to take action if necessary. The voice horn came on again.
"'Now get it again. The ship may maneuver suddenly. Prepare for acceleration or deceleration without
warning. One minute to no wait.' Rip gave quick orders. Get lines around the equipment and
prepare to halt it. I'll get landing boats assigned to weaken load. Then prepare space packs.
Lay out suits and bubbles. We want to be ready the moment we get the word. Lines were taken from
a locker and secured to the equipment. As the planeteers worked, the ship's spinning slowed and
stopped. They were in no weight. Rip grabbed for a hand cord that hung from the wall and hauled
himself out into the engine control room. The deputy commander was at his post, waiting
intensely for orders. Rip thrust against a bulkhead with one foot and floated to his side.
"'I need two landing-boats, sir,' he requested. One stays on the asteroid with us.
Take numbers five and six. I'll assign a pilot to bring number five back to the ship after you've landed.
Thank you. Rip would have been surprised at the deputy's quick assent if Commander O'Brien
hadn't shown him that the spacemen were ready to do anything possible to, to be able to,
aid the planetiers. He went back to the supply room and told COA which boats were to be used,
instructed him to get the supplies aboard, then made his way to Commander O'Brien's office.
O'Brien was not in. Ripps searched and found him in the astroplot room watching a scope.
Green streaks called blips marked the panel, each one indicating an asteroid.
"'All too small,' O'Brien said. "'We've only seen two large ones,
and they were too large.
Space is certainly full of junk, Rip commented.
At least this corner of it is full.
A junior space officer overheard him.
This is nothing. We're on the edge of the asteroid belt.
Closer to the middle, there's so much stuff a ship has to crawl through it.
Rip wandered over to the main control desk.
A senior space officer was seated before a simple panel
in which there were only a dozen small levers, a visiphone, and a radar screen.
The screen was circular, with numbers around the rim, like those on an Earth clock.
In the center of the screen was a tiny circle.
The central circle represented the Scorpius.
The rest of the screen was the area dead ahead.
Ripp watched and saw several blips on it that indicated asteroids.
They were all small.
He watched, interested, as the cruiser overtook them.
Once, according to the screen, the cruiser passed under an asteroid with a clearance of
only a few hundred feet.
"'You didn't miss that one by much,' Rip told the space officer.
"'Don't have to miss by much,' he retorted.
A few feet are as good as a mile in space.
Our blast might kick them around a little, and maybe there's a little mutual mass
attraction, but we don't worry about it.'
He pointed to a blip that was just a little.
swimming into view, a sharp green point against the screen.
"'We do have to worry about that one.'
He selected a lever and pulled it toward him.
Ripp felt sudden weight against his feet. The green point on the screen moved
downward below center. The feeling of weight ceased. He knew what had happened, of
course. Around the hull of the ship, set in evenly spaced lines were a series of blast
holes, through which steam was fired. The steam was produced instantly by running water through
the heat coils of the nuclear engine. By using groups or combinations of steam tubes,
the control officer could move the ship in any direction, or set it rolling, spin at end over
end, or whirl it in an eccentric pattern. How do you decide which tubes to use?
Ripp asked. Depends on what's happening. If we were ducking missiles from an enemy, I'd get
orders from the commander. But to duck asteroids, there's no problem. I go over them by firing
the steam tubes along the bottom of the ship. That way, you feel the acceleration on your feet.
If I fired the top tubes, the ship would drop out from under those who were standing. They'd all
end up on the ceiling. Rip watched for a while longer, then wandered back to Commander O'Brien.
He was getting anxious. At first, the task of capturing an asteroid and moving
it back to Earth had been rather unreal, like some of the problems he had worked out
while training on the space platform. Now he was no longer calm about it. He had faith in the
Terra-based planetar specialists, but they couldn't figure everything out for him. Most of the
problems of getting the asteroid back to Earth would have to be solved by Lieutenant Richard
Ingle's Peter Foster. A junior space officer suddenly called,
"'Sir, I have a reading at two-70 degrees, 23 degrees, eight minutes high.'
Commander O'Brien jumped up so fast that the action shot him to the ceiling.
He kicked down again and leaned over the officer's scope.
Rip got there by pulling himself right across the top of the chart table.
The green point of light on the scope was bigger than any other he had seen.
"'It's about the right size,' O'Brien said.
There was excitement in his voice.
Correct course. Let's take a look at it.
All hands gripped something with which to steady themselves as the cruiser spun swiftly
onto the new course. The control officer called,
"'I have it centered, sir. We'll reach it in about an hour at this speed.'
"'Jack it up,' O'Brien ordered.
"'Heave some neutrons into it. Double speed, then decelerate to reach it in 30 minutes.'
The control officer issued orders to the engine control room.
In a moment, acceleration plucked at them.
O'Brien motioned to Rip.
Come on, Foster.
Let's see what analysis makes of this ruck.
Rip followed the commander to the deck below
where the technical analysts were located.
His heart was pounding a little faster than usual,
and not from acceleration either.
He found himself wetting his lips frequently and thought,
"'Get hold of it, boy, you've got nothing to worry,
about but high vacuum. He didn't really believe it. There would be plenty to worry
about, like detonating nuclear bombs and trying to figure their blast reaction, like figuring
out the course that would take them closest to the sun without pulling them into it,
like a thousand things, all of them up to him. The chief analyst greeted them.
"'We got the orders to change course, Commander. That gave us the location of the asteroid. We're
already working on it.
Anything yet? No, sir. We'll have the albedo measurement in a few minutes. It will take longer
to figure the mass. The asteroid's efficiency in reflecting sunlight was its albedo.
The efficiency depended on the material of which it was made. The albedo of pure
metallic thorium was known. If the asteroid's albedo matched it, that would be one piece of
evidence. In the same way, the mass of thorium was known.
The measurements of the asteroid were being taken. They would be compared with a chunk of thorium
of the same size. If it worked out, that would be evidence enough. Commander O'Brien motioned
to chairs. Might as well sit down while we're waiting, Foster. He took one of the chairs and
looked closely at Rip. Suddenly he grinned. I thought planetaires never got nervous.
Who's nervous? Rip retorted, then answered his own question.
question truthfully. I am. You're right, sir. The closer we get, the more scared I get.
That's a good sign, O'Brien replied. It means you'll be careful. Got any real doubts about the job?
Rip thought it over and didn't think so. Not any real ones. I think we can do it, but I'm nervous
just the same. Great Cosmos, Commander, this is my first assignment, and they
give me a whole world to myself and tell me to bring it home. Maybe it isn't a very big world,
but that doesn't change things much." O'Brien chuckled. I never expected to get an
admission like that from a planeteer. And I, Rip retorted, never expected to make one like
that to a spaceman. The chief analyst returned a sheet of computations in his hand.
"'Report, sir, the albedo measurement is correct.
Looks like this may be the one.
How long before we get measurements and comparisons?
Ten minutes, perhaps.
Ripp spoke up.
Sir, there's some data I'll need.
What, Lieutenant?
The chief analyst pulled a notebook from his pocket.
I'll need all possible data on the asteroid's speed, orbit, and physical measurements.
I have to figure a new orbit and what it will take to blast the mass into it.
We'll get those.
The orbit will not be exact, of course. We have only two reference points.
But I think we'll come pretty close."
O'Brien nodded. Do what you can, Chief. And when Foster gets down to doing his
calculations, have your men run them through the electronic computer for him.
Rip thanked them both, then stood up.
Sir, I'm going back to my men. I want to be sure everything is ready.
If there's a Connie cruiser headed this way, we don't want to lose any time.
Good idea. I think we'd dump you on the asteroid, Foster, and then blast off. Not too far,
of course, just enough to lead the Connie away from you if its screen picks us up.
That sounded good to Rip. We'll be ready when you are, sir.
The chief analyst took less than the estimated ten minutes for his next set of figures.
Commander O'Brien called personally while Rip was still searching for the right landing boat
reports." The voice horn bellowed.
"'Get it. Lieutenant Foster. The mass measurements are correct. This is your asteroid.
Estimated twelve minutes before we reach it. Your data will be ready by the time you get back
here. Show and exhaust.' Rib found Koa and the men and asked the Sergeant Major for a report.
"'We're ready, sir,' Coa told him. "'We can get out there in three minutes. It will take us that long to
get into space gear. Your stuff is laid out to.
sir. Give me the books and charts from the supplies, Rip directed. Have Santos bring them to the
chief analyst. I'm going back and figure our course. No use doing it the hard way on the asteroid,
when I can do it in a few minutes here with the ship's computer. He turned and hurried back,
hauling himself along by handholds. The ship had stopped acceleration and was at no wait again.
As he neared the analysis section, it went into deceleration, but the pressure was
not too bad. He made his way against it easily. The chief analyst was waiting for him.
We have everything you need, Lieutenant, except the orbital stuff. We'll do the best we can on that
and have a good estimate in a few minutes. Meanwhile, you can mark up your figures.
Incidentally, what power you're going to use to move the asteroid? Nuclear explosions, Rip said,
and saw the chief's eyes pop. He added, with conventional
chemical fuel for corrections. He felt rising excitement. The whole ship seemed to have come to life.
There was excited tension in the computer room when he went in with the chief. Spacemen,
all mathematicians, were waiting for him. As the chief led him to a table, they gathered around him.
Rip took command. Here's what we're after. I need to plot an orbit that will get us out of the
asteroid belt without any collisions. Take us as close to the sun.
as possible, without having it capture us, and land us in space about ten thousand miles from
Earth. From then on, I'll throw the asteroid into a breaking ellipse around the Earth,
and I'll be able to make any small corrections necessary. He spread out a solar system chart
and marked in the positions of the planets as of that moment, using the Daily Almanac.
Then he put down the position of the asteroid, taking it from the paper the chief analyst
handed him.
"'Will you make assignments, chief?'
The chief shook his head.
"'Make them yourself, Lieutenant. We're at your service.'
Rip felt a little ashamed of some of the unkind things he had said about spaceman.
"'Thank you,' he pointed to a spaceman.
"'Will you calculate the inertia of the asteroid, please?'
The spaceman hurried off.
"'First thing to do is plot the orbit as though there were no other bodies in the system,'
Ripp said.
Where's Santos?
Here, sir.
The corporal had come in unnoticed with Ripp's reference books.
Ripp had plotted orbits before, but never one for actual use.
His palms were wet as he laid it out, using prepared tables.
When he had finished, he pointed to a spaceman.
That's it.
Will you translate it into analog figures for the computer, please?
He assigned to others the task of figuring out the effect mercury,
the sun and Earth would have on the orbit, using an assumed speed for the asteroid.
To the chief analyst, he gave the Java putting all the data together in proper form for feeding
it to the electronic brain. It would have taken all spacemen present about ten days to
complete the job by regular methods, but the electronic computer produced the answer in three minutes.
Thanks a million, chief, Rip said. I'll be calling on you again before this is over.
He tucked the sheets into his pocket.
"'Any time, Lieutenant.
We'll keep rechecking the figures as we go along.
If there are any corrections, we'll send them to you.
That will give you a check on your own figures.'
"'Don't worry,' Riff assured him.
"'We'll have plenty of corrections.'
Deceleration had been dropping steadily.
It ceased altogether, leaving them weightless.
O'Brien's voice came over the speaker.
"'Get it!
Valve crews take stations at landing boats five and six.
The planetaires will depart in five minutes.
Lieutenant Foster will report to central control if he cannot be ready in that time.
Santos grinned at Rip.
Here we go, Lieutenant.
Ripp's heart would have dropped into his shoes if there had been any gravity.
Only a little excitement showed on his face, though.
He waved his thanks at the analysts and grinned back at Santos.
Show an exhaust, Corporal.
High VAC is waiting.
End of Chapter 5.
Chapter 6.
Of Rip Foster Rides the Gray Planet by Harold Goodwin.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Rip Foster Rides the Gray Planet.
Chapter 6.
Ripp's Personal Planet
Rip rechecked his spacesuit before putting on his helmet.
The air seal was intact, and his heating and ventilation units worked.
He slapped his knee-pouches to make sure the space knife was handy to his left hand and the pistol to his right.
Koa was already fully dressed. He handed Rip the shoulder case that contained the plotting board.
Santos had taken charge of Ripp's astrogation instruments.
A spaceman was waiting with Ripp's bubble. At a nod, the spaceman slipped it on his head.
Rip reached up and gave it a quarter turn. The locking mechanism clamped into place.
He turned his belt ventilator control on full, and the space suit puffed out. When it was
fully inflated, he watched the pressure gauge. It was steady. No leaks in suit or helmet.
He let the pressure go down to normal.
Koa's voice buzzed in his ears.
"'Hear me, sir?'
Rip turned the volume of his communicator down a little and spoke in a normal voice.
"'I hear you. Am I clear?'
"'Yes, sir. All men dressed and ready.'
Ritt made a final check. He counted his men, then personally inspected their suits.
The boats were next. They were typical landing craft, shaped like rectangular boxes.
There was no need for streamlining in the vacuum of space. They were not pressurized.
Only men in space suits rode in the ungainly boxes.
He checked all blast tubes to make sure they were clear.
There were small single tubes on each side of the craft.
A clogged one could explode and blow the boat up.
Coa, he knew, had checked everything, but the final responsibility was his.
In space, no officer or sergeant took anyone's word for anything that might mean lives.
Each checked every detail personally.
Rip looked around and saw the planet tears watching him.
There was approval on the faces behind the clear helmets,
and he knew they were satisfied with his thoroughness.
At last, certain that everything was in good order, he said quietly,
Pilots, man your boats.
Doust got into one and a spaceman into the other.
Dost's boat would stay with them on the asteroid.
The spaceman would bring the other to the ship.
Commander O'Brien stepped through the valve into the boatlock.
A spaceman handed him a hand communicator.
He spoke into it.
Ripp couldn't have heard him through the helmet otherwise.
I'll set, Foster?
Ready, sir.
Good.
The long-range screen picked up a blip a few minutes ago.
It's probably that Connie Cruiser.
Ripp swallowed.
The planet tears froze, waiting for the commander's next words.
Our screens are a little better than theirs, so there's a slim chance they haven't picked us up yet.
We'll drop you and get out of here, but don't worry. We have your orbit fixed, and we'll find you
when the screens are clear.
Suppose they find us while you're gone, Rip asked.
It's a chance, O'Brien admitted. You'll have to take spaceman's luck on that one,
but we won't be far away. We'll duck behind Vesta or another.
of the big asteroids and hide so their screens won't pick up our motion. Every now and then,
we'll sneak out for a look, if the screen seems clear. If those high vac vermin do find you,
get on the landing boat radio and yell for help. We'll come blasting. He waved a hand,
thumb and forefinger held together in the ancient symbol for everything right, then ordered,
Get flaming! He stepped through the valve.
Clear the lock, Rip ordered.
Open outer valve when ready.
He took a quick final look around.
The pilots were in the boats.
His planetaires were standing by,
safety lines already attached to the boats and their belts.
He moved into position and snapped his own line to a ring on Dost's boat.
The spacemen vanished through the valve and the massive door slid closed.
The overhead lights flicked out.
Ripp snapped on his belt light and the others followed suit.
In front of the box-like landing-boats, a great door slid open and air from the lock rushed
out. Rip knew it was only imagination, but he felt for a moment as though the bitter cold of
space, near absolute zero, had penetrated his suit. Beyond the lights from their belts,
he saw stars, and recognized the constellation for which the space cruiser was named.
A superstitious spaceman would have taken that as a good sign.
Rip admitted that it was nice to see.
Floatum, he ordered.
The planetaires gripped handholds at the entrance with one hand
and launching rails on the boats with the other and heaved.
The boat slid into space.
As the safety lines tightened, the planetaires were pulled after the boat.
Rip left his feet with a little spring and shot through the door.
Directly below him, the asteroid gleamed darkly in the light of the tiny sun.
His first reaction was,
Great Cosmos!
What a little chunk of rock!
But that was because he was used to looking from the space platform
at the great curve of Terra, or at the big ball of the moon.
Actually, the asteroid was fair-sized when compared with most of its kind.
The planetaires hauled themselves into the boats by their safety lines.
Ripp waited until all were in,
then pulled himself along his own line to the black school.
of the door. COA was waiting to give him a hand into the craft. The planetaires were standing,
except for doused. Rip had never seen an old-type railroad, or he might have likened the landing
boat to a railroad box car. It was about the same size and shape, but it had huge windows
on both sides and in front of the pilot, windows that were not enclosed. The space-suited men
needed no protection.
Blast, Rip ordered.
A pulse of fire spurred from the top of each boat, driving them bottom first toward the asteroid.
Land at will, Rip said.
The asteroid loomed large as he looked through an opening.
It was rocky, but there were plenty of smooth places.
Doused picked one.
He was an expert pilot, and Rip watched him with pleasure.
The exhaust from the top lessened, and fire spurred it soundlessly from a
the bottom. Dost balanced the opposite thrust of the top and bottom blasts with the delicacy of a man
threading a needle. In a few moments, the boat was hovering a foot above the asteroid. Doused
cut the exhausts and Rips stepped out onto the tiny planet. The planetaires knew what to do.
Corporal Peterson produced hard and steel spikes with ring tops. Private Trudeau had a sledge.
Driving the first spike would be the hardest, because the action of swinging.
a hammer would propel the planeteer like a rocket exhaust. In space, the law that every action
has an equal and opposite reaction had to be remembered every moment. Rip watched, interested in how
his men would tackle the problem. He didn't know the answer himself, because he had never driven
a spike on an airless, almost gravityless world, and no one had ever mentioned it to him.
Peterson searched the gray metal with his torch and found a slender spitz.
spur of thorium, perhaps two feet high, a short distance from the boat.
"'Here's a hold,' he said.
"'Come on, Frenchie. You too, Bradshaw.'
Trudeau, carrying the sledge, walked up to the spur of rock and stood with his heels
against it. Peterson sat down on the ground with the spur between his legs.
He stretched, hooking his heels around Trudeau's ankles, anchoring him.
With his gloves, he grabbed the seat of the Frenchman's spacesuit.
Bradshaw took a spike and held it against the gray metal ground.
The Frenchman swung, his hammer, noiseless as it drove the tough spike in.
A few inches into the metal was enough.
Bradshaw took a wrench from his belt, put it on the head of the spike, and turned it.
Below the surface, teeth on the spike bit into the metal.
It would hold.
The rest was easy.
The spike was used to anchor Trudeau while he drove another, at his longest
reach. Then the second spike became his anchor, and so on, until enough spikes had been set to
lace the boat down against any sudden shock. The boat piloted by the spaceman was tied to the
one that would remain, and the planetaires floated its supplies through a window. It took only a few
moments, with planetaires forming a chain from inside the boat to a spot a little distance away.
Even the heaviest crates weighed almost nothing. They passed them from one to the other, like
balloons."
"'All clear, sir,' Koa called.
Ripp stepped inside and made a quick inspection.
The box was empty, except for the spaceman pilot.
He put a hand on the pilot's shoulder.
"'On your way, Rocky.
Thanks.'
"'You're welcome, sir,' the pilot added.
"'Watch out for Hivak.'
Rip and Koa stepped out and walked a little distance away.
Santos and Peterson cast the landing boat adrift and shoved it
away from the anchored boat. In a moment, fire spurred from the bottom tube, spreading over
the dull metal and licking at the feet of the planeteers. Rip watched the boat rise upward
to the great, sleek, dark bulk of the Scorpius. The landing boat maneuvered into the airlock
with brief flares from its exhausts. In a few moments the sparkling blast of auxiliary rocket
tubes moved the spaceship away. O'Brien was putting a little distance between the air-esquired.
the ship and the asteroid before turning on the nuclear drive. The ship decreased in size until
Ripp saw it only as a dark oval silhouette against the Milky Way. Then the exhaust of the
nuclear drive grew into a mighty column of glowing blue and the ship flamed into space.
For a moment Rip had a wild impulse to yell for the ship to come back. He had been in vacuum
before, but only as a cadet, with an officer in charge.
Now, suddenly, he was the one responsible.
The job was his.
He stiffened.
Planeteteer officers didn't worry about things like that.
He forced his mind to the job in hand.
The next step was to establish a base.
The base would have to be on the dark side of the asteroid, once it was in its new orbit.
That meant a temporary base now and a better one later,
when they blasted the little planet onto its new course.
He estimated roughly the approximate positions where he would place his charges,
using the sun and the star Canopus as visual guides.
This will do for a temporary base, he announced. Rig the boat compartment.
While two of you are doing that, the rest break out the rocket launcher and the rocket racks
and assemble the cutting torch.
Koa will make assignments.
While the Sergeant Major translated RIP's general instructions into specific orders
for each man, the young lieutenant walked to the edge of the sunbelt. There was no atmosphere,
so the edge was a sharp line between dark and light. There wasn't much light either.
They were too far from the sun for that, but as they neared the sun, the darkness would be their
protection. They would get so close to Saul that the metal on the sunside would get soft as butter.
He bent close to the uneven surface. It was clean metal, not oxen,
oxidized at all. The thorium had never been exposed to oxygen. Here and there, pyramids of metal
thrust up from the asteroid, sometimes singly, sometimes in clusters. They were metal crystal formations.
He guessed that once, long ages ago, the asteroid had been part of something much bigger,
perhaps a planet. One theory said the asteroids were formed when a planet exploded. This asteroid might have
been a pocket of pure thorium in the planet. There would be plenty to do in a short while,
but meanwhile he enjoyed the sensation of being on a tiny world in space with only a handful
of planeteers for company. He smiled. King Foster, he said to himself, Monarch of a thorium
space speck. It was a rather nice feeling, even though he laughed at himself for thinking it.
Since he was in command of the detachment, he could, in all truth, say,
this was his own personal planet.
It would be a good bit of space humor to bring on the folks back on Terra.
"'Yep, I was boss of a whole world once.
Made myself king, emperor of all the metal molecules and king of the thorium spurs.
And my subjects obeyed my every command,' he added.
"'Thanks to planetar discipline.'
The detachment commander is boss.
He reminded himself that he'd better stop gathering space dust
and start acting like a detachment commander.
He walked back to the landing boat, stepping with care.
With such low gravity, a false step could send him high above the asteroid.
Of course, that would not be dangerous, since the spacesuits were equipped with six small
compressed air bottles for emergency propulsion.
But it would be embarrassing.
Inside the boat, Dost and Nunes were setting up the compartment.
Sections of the rear wall swung out and locked into place against airtight seals,
forming a box at the rear end of the boat.
Equipments sealed in the stern next to the rocket tube supplied light, heat, and air.
It was a simple but necessary arrangement.
Without it, the planeteers could not have eaten.
There was no airlock for the compartment.
The half of the detachment not on duty would walk in, seal it up, turn on the equipment,
and wait until the gauges registered sufficient air and heat, then remove their space suits.
When it was time to leave again, they would donned suits, open the door, and walk out,
and the next shift would enter and repeat the process.
Earlier models had permanent compartments, but they took up too much room in craft
designed for carrying as many men and as much equipment as possible.
They were strictly workboats, and hard experience had shown the best design.
The rocket launcher was already set up near the boat.
It was a simple affair, with four adjustable legs bolted to ground spikes.
The legs held a movable cradle in which the rocket racks were placed.
High-geared hand controls enabled the gunner to swing the cradle at high speed in any direction
except straight down. A simple, illuminated optical sight was all the gunner needed.
Since there was no gravity and no atmosphere in space, the missiles flashed out in a straight
line, continuing on into infinity if they missed their targets. Proximity fuses made this a remote
possibility. If the rocket got anywhere near the target, the shell would explode.
Ripp found his astrogation instruments set carefully to one side.
He took the data sheets from his case and examined them.
Now came the work of finding the exact spots in which to place his atomic charges.
Since the computer aboard ship had done all the mathematics necessary, he needed only to take
sights to determine the precise positions.
He took a transit-like instrument from the case, pulled out the legs of itself-contained
tripod, then carried it to a spot near where he had estimated the first charge would be placed.
The instrument was equipped with three movable rings to be set for the celestial equator,
for the zero meridian, and for the right ascension of any convenient star.
Using a regular level would have been much simpler.
The instrument had one, but, with so little gravity to activate it, the thing was useless.
The sights were specially designed for use in space, and his bubble was no obstacle in taking
observations. He merely put the clear plastic against the curved sight and looked into it,
much as he would have looked through a telescope on Earth. As he did so, a hint of pale pink
light caught the corner of his eye. He backed away from the instrument and turned his head
quickly, looking at the colorimeter-type radiation detector at the side of his helmet. It was
glowing. An icy chill sent a shiver through him. Great, gorgeous galaxies!
He had forgotten. Had Koa and the others? He turned so fast, he lost balance and floated
above the surface, like a captive balloon. Santos, who had been standing nearby to help
if requested, hooked a toe on a ground spike, caught him, and set him upright on the ground
again. Get me the radiation detection instruments, he ordered.
Koa sensed the urgency in his voice and got the instruments himself. Rips switched them on
and read the illuminated dial on the alpha counter.
Plenty high, as was natural.
But no danger there.
Alpha particles couldn't penetrate the spacesuits.
Then, his hand clammy inside the space glove,
he switched on the other meter.
The gamma counter was far below the alpha,
but there were too many of the rays around for comfort.
Inside the helmet, his face turned pale.
There was no immediate danger.
It would take many days to build up a duster.
of gamma that could hurt them. But gamma was not the only radiation. They were in space,
fully exposed to equally dangerous cosmic radiation. The planetaires had gathered while he
read the instruments. Now they stood watching him. They knew the significance of what he had found.
I ought to be busted to recruit, he told them. I knew this asteroid was thorium,
and that thorium is radioactive. If I had used to be busted to recruit, he told them. I knew this asteroid was thorium, and that
thorium is radioactive. If I had used my head, I would have added nucleite shielding to the
list of supplies the Scorpius provided. We could have had enough of it to protect us while around our
base, even if we could be protected while working on the charges. That would at least have kept
our dosage down enough for safety. No one else thought of it either, sir, Coa reminded. It was my job
to think of it, and I didn't. So I've put us in a time.
If the Scorpius gets back soon, we can get the shielding before our radiation dosage has
built up very high. If the ship doesn't come back, the dosage will mount." He looked at them grimly.
"'It won't kill us, and it won't even make us very sick. I'll have the ship take us off
before we build up that much dosage.'
Santos started.
"'But, sir, that means—'
"'I know what it means,' Ripp stated bitterly.
It means that ship has got to return in time to give us some nucleite shielding,
or we'll be the laughingstock of the Special Order squadrons,
the detachment that started a job the spaceman had to finish.
End of Chapter 6.
Chapter 7 of Rip Foster Rides the Grey Planet by Harold Goodwin.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Rip Foster Rides the Grey Planet.
Chapter 7
Earthbound
There was something else that Rip didn't add, although he knew the planetaires would
realize it in a few minutes.
Probably some of them already had thought of it.
To move the asteroid into a new orbit, they were going to fire nuclear bombs.
Most of the highly radioactive fission products would be blown into space,
but some would be drawn back by the asteroid's slight gravity.
The craters would be highly radioactive, and some would be highly radioactive, and some would be
some radioactive debris would be scattered around, too. Every particle would add to the problem.
"'Is there anything we can do, sir?' Coa asked. Rip shook his head inside the transparent
bubble. "'If you have a good luck charm in your pocket, you might talk to it. That's about all.'
Nuclear physics had been part of his training. He read the gamma meter again and did some quick
mental calculations. They would be exposed to radiation for the entire trip, at a daily
dosage of—' Koa interrupted his train of thought. Evidently, the Sergeant Major had been doing
some calculations of his own. "'How long will we be on this rock, sir? You've never told us how
long the trip will take?' Ripp said quietly. "'With luck, it will take us a little more than
three weeks. He could see their faces faintly in the dim sunlight. They were shocked.
Spaceships blasted through space between the inner planets in a matter of hours.
The nuclear drive cruisers, which could approach almost half the speed of light,
had brought even distant Pluto within easy reach.
The inner planets could be covered in a matter of minutes on a straight speed run,
although to take off from one and land on the other meant considerable time used in
acceleration and deceleration. The planetaires were used to such speed, hearing that it would take
over three weeks to reach Earth had jarred them. This piece of metal isn't a spaceship, Rip reminded
them. At the moment, our speed around the sun is just slightly more than ten miles a second.
If we just shifted orbits and kept the same speed, it would take us months to reach Terra.
but we'll use two bombs to kick the asteroid into the orbit, then fire one to increase speed.
The estimate is that we'll push up to about 40 miles a second.
Koa spoke up.
That's not bad when you think that Mercury is the fastest planet, and it only makes about 30 miles a second.
Right, Rip agreed.
And when we really have the sun's gravity pulling us, we'll increase speed.
We'll lose a little after we pass the sun, but by then,
will be almost home." It was just space luck that Terra was on the other side of the sun from
the asteroid's present position. By the time they approached, it would be in a good place,
just far enough from the line to the sun to avoid changing course. Of course Ripp's planned orbit
was not aiming the asteroid at Earth, but at where the Earth would be at the end of the trip.
That means more than three weeks of radiation, then, Corporal Santos observed.
Can we take it, sir?
Rip shrugged, but the gesture couldn't be seen inside his spacesuit.
At the rate we're getting radiation now, plus what I estimate we'll get from the nuclear
explosions, we'll get the maximum safety limit in just three weeks.
That leaves us no margin, even if we risk getting radiation sickness.
So we have to get shielding pretty soon.
If we do, we can last the trip.
Private Domenico saluted, clumsy in his space suit.
suit. Sir, I ask a permission to speak.
Ripp had a smile at the little Italian's formal manner. In space, formality was forgotten.
What is it, Domenico?
Sir, I think we not worry so much about this irradiation, eh? You would think of some
ways to take care of it, sir. What I want to ask, sir, is, when did we let it go the bombs?
Radiation I do not know much about, but I can set it those bombs like.
you want them."
RIP was touched by the Italian planeter's faith in his ability to solve the radiation
problem.
That was why being an officer in the Special Order squadrons was so challenging.
The men knew the kind of training their officers had, and they expected them to come up with
technical solutions as the situation required.
You'll have a chance to set the bombs in just a short while," he said crisply.
Let's get busy.
Coa, load all the bombs but one 10kT on the landing boat. Stake the rest of the equipment down.
While you're doing that, I'll find the spots where we plant the charges. I'll need two men now and more later.
He went back to his instrument, putting the radiation problem out of his mind, a rather hard thing to do with the colorimeter glowing pink next to his shoulder.
Coa detailed men to load the nuclear bombs into the landing craft, left Peterson to supervise, and then brought
Santos with him to help rip.
"'The bombs are being put on the boat, sir,' Coa reported.
"'Fine. There isn't too much chance of the blast setting them off, but we'll take no chances
at all. Coa, I'm going to shoot a line straight out toward Alpha Centauri.
You walk that way and turn on your belt light. I'll tell you which way to move.'
He adjusted his siding rings while the Sergeant Major glided away. Moving around on a no-weight world
was more like skating than walking.
A regular walk would have lifted COA into space with every step.
Of course, the asteroid had some gravity,
but it was so slight that it didn't count.
Ripp centered the top of the instrument's vertical hairline on Alpha Centauri,
then waited until COA was almost out of sight over the asteroid's horizon,
which was only a few hundred yards away.
He turned up the volume on his helmet communicator.
"'Coa, move about ten feet to your left.'
"'Coa did so.'
Rip sighted past the vertical hairline at the beltlight.
"'That's a little too far.
"'Take a small step to the right.
"'Good. Just a few inches more.
"'Hold it. You're right in position.
"'Stand where you are.'
"'Yes, sir.'
"'Rip turned to Santos.
"'Stand here, Corporal.
"'Take a sight at Koa through the instrument to get your bearings.
then hold position.
Santos did so.
Now the two lights gave Rip one of the lines he needed.
He called for two more men,
and Trudeau and Nunes joined him.
Follow me, he directed.
Rip picked up the instrument and carried it to a point
90 degrees from the line represented by Coa and Santos.
He put the instrument down and zeroed it in on Messier-44,
the Beehive Star Cluster in the Constellation Cancer,
For the second sighting star, he chose Beta Pixus as being closest to the line he wanted,
made the slight adjustments necessary to set the line of sight since Pixus wasn't exactly on it,
then directed Trudeau into position as he had COA.
Nunes took position behind the instrument, and Ripp had the cross fix he wanted.
He called for doused, then carried the instrument to the center of the cross formed by the four men.
Using the instrument, he rechecked the lines from the center out.
They were within a hair or two of being exactly on, and a slight error wouldn't hurt anyway.
He knew he would have to correct with rocket blasts once the asteroid was in the new orbit.
X marks the spot, he told Doused.
He put his toe on the place where the cross lines met.
Doused took a spike from his belt and made an X in the metal ground.
All set, Rip announced.
You four men can move now. Let's have the cutting equipment over here, Coa.
The planetaires were all waiting for instructions now. In a few moments, the equipment was ready,
fuel and oxygen bottles attached.
Who's the champion torchman? Rip asked.
Koa replied, Kemp is, sir. Kemp, one of the two American privates, took the torch and waited
for orders.
We need a hole six feet across and twenty feet deep.
Rip told him.
Go to it.
How about direction, sir?
Kemp asked.
Straight down.
We'll take a bearing on an overhead star when you're in a few feet.
Doused inscribed a circle around the X he had made and stood back.
Kemp pushed the striker button and the torch flared.
Watch your eyes, he warned.
The planetaires reach for belt controls and turn the rheostats that darkened the clear bubbles electronically.
Kemp adjusted his flared.
flame until it was blue-white, a knife of fire brighter by far than the sun.
Koa stepped behind Kemp and leaned against his back, because the flame of the torch was like
an exhaust, driving Kemp backward. Kemp bent down and the torch sliced into the metal of the
asteroid like a hot knife into ice. The metal splintered a little as the heat raised it
instantly from almost absolute zero to many thousands of degrees. When the circle was completed,
Kemp adjusted his torch again, and the flame lengthened. He moved inside the circle and cut at an
angle toward the perimeter. His control was quick and certain. In a moment he stood aside and Koa
lifted out a perfect ring of thorium. It varied from a knife edge on the inner side to
18 inches thick on the outer edge. In the middle of the circle there was now a cone of metal. Kemp cut
around it, the torch angling toward the center.
a pea-shaped like two cones set base to base came free. Since the metal cooled in the bitter
chill of space almost as fast as Kemp could cut it, there was no heat to worry about. Alternately
cutting from the outside and the center of the hole, Kemp worked his way downward until his
head was below ground level. Ripp called a halt. Kemp gave a little jump and floated straight
upward. Koa caught him and swung him to one side. Ripp stepped into the hole and Santos gave him
a slight push to send him to the bottom.
Rip knelt and sighted upward.
Kemp had done a good job.
The star Rip had chosen as an overhead guide was straight up.
He bounced out of the hole, and as Koa caught him, he told Kemp to go ahead.
Domenico, here's your chance.
Get tools and wire.
Find a timer and connect up the ten-kilaton bomb.
Nunes, bring it here while Domenico gets what he needs.
Kemp was burning his own.
way into the asteroid at a good rate. Every few moments he pushed another circle or spindle of thorium
out of the hole. Rip directed some of the men to carry them away, to the other side of the asteroid.
He didn't want chunks of thorium flying around from the blast. The sergeant major had a sudden
thought. He cut off his communicator, motioned to Rip to do the same, then put his helmet against
Rips for direct communication. He didn't want the others to hear what he had to say.
His voice came like a roar from the bottom of a well.
"'Lieutenant, do you suppose there's any chance
the blast might break up the asteroid?
Maybe split it in two?'
The same thought had occurred to rip on the Scorpius.
His calculations had showed that the metal would do little more than compress,
except where it melted from the terrific heat of the bomb.
That would be only in and around the shaft.
He was sure the men at Terra Base had figured it out before they decided that A-bombs would be
necessary to throw the asteroid into a new orbit. He wasn't worried. Cracks in the asteroid would
be dangerous, but he hadn't seen any. This rock will take more nuclear blast than we have,
he assured Coa. He turned his communicator back on and went to the edge of the hole for a look
at Kemp's progress. He was far down now. Peterson was holding one end of a man.
measuring tape. The other end was fastened to Kemp's shoulder strap. The Swedish corporal
showed Ripp that he had only about eight feet of tape left. Kemp was almost down. Rip called,
Kemp, when you reach bottom, cut toward the center. Leave an inverted cone.
Got it, sir. Be up in two more cuts. Domenico had connected cable to the bomb terminals
and was attaching a timer to the other end. Without the wooden case, the bomb was like a fat
oversized can. It had been shipped without a combat casing.
Coa, make a final check. You can untie the landing boat, except for one line. We'll be
taking off in a few minutes. Right, sir. Coa glided toward the landing boat, which was
out of sight over the horizon. It was nearly time. Rip had a moment's misgiving. Had his
figures or his sightings been off? His red hair prickly.
at the thought. But the ship's computer had done the work, and it was not capable of making a mistake.
Kemp tossed up the last section of Thorium and then came out of the hole himself,
carrying his torch. Rip inspected the hole, saw with satisfaction it was in almost perfect alignment,
and ordered the bomb placed. He bent over the edge of the hole and watched Trudeau pay out
wire while Domenico pushed the bomb to the bottom. The Italian made a last-minute check,
called to Rip. "'Ready, sir!' He dropped into the hole and inspected the connections himself,
then personally pulled the safety lever. The bomb was armed. When the timer acted, it would go off.
Back at ground level, he turned up his communicator.
"'CoA, is everything ready at the boat?'
"'Ready, sir.'
The planetaires had already carried away the torch and its fuel and oxygen supplies. The area was
clear of pieces of thorium.
Ripp announced,
We're setting the explosion for ten minutes.
He leaned over the timer, which rested near the lip of the hole,
took the dial control in his glove, and turned it to position ten.
He held it long enough to glance at his chronometer and say,
Starting now!
Then he let it go.
Wasting no time, but not hurrying,
he and Domenico returned to the landing boat.
The planetaires were already aboard, except for,
for Koa, who stood by to cast off the remaining tie line. Rip stepped inside and counted the men.
All present. He ordered,
Cast off! As Coa did so and stepped aboard, he added,
Pilot, take off, straight up. The landing boat rose from the asteroid.
Rip counted the men again, just to be sure. The boat seemed a little crowded,
but that was because the rear compartment took up quite a bit of room.
Rip watched his chronometer. They had plenty of time.
When the boat reached a point about ten miles above the asteroid, he ordered,
Stern tube! The boat moved at an angle.
He let it go until a sight at the star showed they were about in the right position,
90 degrees from the line of blast where they would be behind the asteroid as it moved toward the new course.
He looked at his chronometer again.
Two minutes. Line up at the side if you were to be.
if you want to watch, but darken your helmets to full protection. This thing will light
up like nothing you've ever seen before."
It was a good thing space cruisers depended on their radar and not on sight, he thought.
Usually spacemen opened up visual ports only when landing or taking a star site for an astral
plot. The clear plastic of the domes had to be shielded from chance meteors. Besides, radar
screens were more dependable than eyes, even though they could pick up only solid
objects. If the Consopps cruiser happened to be searching visually, it would see the blast.
But the chance had to be taken. It wasn't really much of a chance.
One minute, he said. He faced the asteroid, then darkened his helmet, counting to himself.
The minute ticked off slowly, though his count was a little fast. When he reached five,
brilliant, incandescent light lit up the interior of the boat.
Rip saw it even though his helmet was dark. The light faded slowly, and he put his helmet back
on full transparent. A mighty column of fire now reached out from the asteroid into space.
Rip held his breath until he saw that the little planet was shearing off its course
under the Great Blast. Then he sighed with relief. All was well so far.
Someone muttered,
By Gemini, I'm glad we're out here instead of down there.
The column of fire lengthened, thinned out, grew fainter until there was only a glow behind the asteroid.
Ripp took his astrogation instruments and made a number of sights.
They looked good.
The first blast had worked about as predicted, although he wouldn't be able to tell how much
correction was needed until he had taken star sites over a period of five or six days.
Let's go home, he ordered.
Back on the asteroid, a pit that glowed with radioactivity marked the sight of the first blast.
Ripp ordered it covered as much as possible with the thorium that had been taken from the hole.
While the men worked, he plotted the lines for the second blast, found the spot, and put Kemp back to work on a new hole.
Two hours later, the second blast threw fire into space.
In another three hours, with the asteroid now speeding on its new course,
Ripp set off the explosion that blasted straight back and gave extra speed.
Three radioactive craters marked the asteroid.
Rip checked the radiation level and didn't like it a bit.
He decided to set up the landing boat in their supplies as far away from the craters as possible,
which was on the sun's side.
They could move to the dark side as they approached the orbit of Earth.
By then, the radioactivity from the blasts would have died down considerably.
He was selecting the location for a base when Doused suddenly called,
Lieutenant, Lieutenant Foster!
There was urgency in the planeteer's voice.
What is it, Doused?
Sir, take a look.
About two degrees south of Rijal!
He found the constellation Orion and looked at bright Rijal.
For a moment he saw nothing.
Then, south of the star, he saw a thin orange line.
Nuclear drive cruisers didn't have exhausts of that color,
and there was only one rocket-drive ship around, so far as they knew.
Ripp said softly,
"'Let's get our house in order, gang.
Looks like we're going to get a visit from our friends, the Connie's.'
End of Chapter 7.
Chapter 8 of Rip Foster Rides the Grey Planet
by Harold Goodwin.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Rip Foster Rides the Grey Planet
Chapter 8. Duck or Die
Sergeant Major Coa's great frame loomed in front of Rip.
Think they spotted us, sir?
Rip hated to say it.
Probably.
Coa, can you estimate from the exhaust how far away they are?
Not very well, Lieutenant.
From the position of the streak, I'd say they're decelerating.
The planetaires looked at Rip.
He was in command, and they expected him to do something about the situation.
Rip didn't know what to do.
The rocket launcher, their only weapon, wasn't designed for fighting spaceships.
It was useful against snapper boats and people, but firing at a cruiser would be like sending mosquitoes to fight elephants.
He sized up their position.
For one thing, they were right out in the open, exposed to anything the Connie cruiser might throw at them.
If they could get undercover, there might be a chance. It would at least take the Connie's a while to find them.
For a moment he thought of hurrying into the landing boat and sending out a call for help to the Scorpius,
but he thought better of it. They weren't certain that Connie had spotted them. He would wait until there was no doubt.
Meanwhile, they had to find cover.
His searching eyes fell on the cutting torch.
If they could use that to cut themselves right into the asteroid,
suddenly he knew how it could be done.
On the sun side, he remembered a series of high-piled giant crystals of thorium.
They could cut into the side of one of those,
and with Kemp's skill they might be able to do it in time.
He called,
Kemp, Koa, bring the torch and fuel, and follow me.
In his haste, he took a misstep and flew headlong a few feet above the metal surface.
Koa, gliding along behind him, turned him upright again.
He saw that the giant Hawaiian was grinning.
Rip grinned back.
It was the second time he had lost his footing.
They reached the peaks of Thorium, and Rip looked them over.
The tallest was perhaps forty feet high.
It was roughly pyramidal with a base about sixty feet thick.
It would do.
Kemp, the private hurried to his side.
Take the torch and make us a cave.
Make it big enough for all hands and the equipment.
Kemp was a good planeteer.
He didn't stop to ask questions.
He said,
I'll make a small entrance and open the cave out inside.
He picked up the torch and got busy.
Ripp smiled.
The planetar was right.
He should have thought of it himself.
but it was good to see increasing proof that his men were smart as well as tough and disciplined.
"'Bring up all supplies,' he told Coa.
"'Move the boat over here, too. We won't be able to bury that, but we want it close by.'
He had an idea for the landing-boat. It could maneuver infinitely faster than the big cruiser.
They could put the supplies in the cave, then take to the boat, depending on its ability to turn quickly
and on doused skill at piloting to play hide and seek.
Doused certainly could keep the asteroid between them and the cruiser.
The plan would fail when the cruiser sent a landing party.
They would certainly come in snapper boats,
and the deadly little fighting craft could blast rings around the landing boat.
The snapper boats had gotten their name because fast acceleration
and quick changes of position could snap a man right out of his seat
if he forgot to buckle his harness tightly.
The solution would be to keep the landing boat close to the asteroid.
At the first sign of a landing party, they would blast in and take to the cave,
using the rocket launcher as a defense.
The supplies began to arrive.
The planetaires towed them two crates at a time in a steady line of hurrying men.
Kemp's torts sent an incandescent knife three feet into the metal at each cut.
He was rapidly slicing out a cave.
He cut the metal out in great trance.
triangular bars, angling the torch from first one side, then the other.
Koa came and stood beside Rip.
"'I haven't seen the Connie's exhaust for a while, sir.
Looks like they've stopped decelerating. We can't see them at all.'
"'Meaning what?' Rip asked.
He thought he knew, but he wanted Coa's opinion.
"'They're in free fall now, sir. That could mean they're just hunting in the area,
or it could mean that they've stopped somewhere close by.
They could be looking us over for all we know."
Ripp surveyed the stars.
"'If that's so, they're not too close, Coa. Otherwise, they block out a patch of stars.'
"'Well, sir,' Coa hesitated.
I mean, if you were looking over this asteroid and you weren't sure whether the enemy had it
or not, how close would you get?'
"'Probably about one A.U,' Ripp said jokingly.
That was one astronomical unit, equal to about 93 million miles, the distance from the Earth to the sun.
"'That would be a good safe distance, sir,' Koa agreed with a grin.
"'But let's suppose that Connie isn't as timid as I am,' Rip went on.
He might be only a few miles out. The question is, would he wait to get closer before launching his snapper boats?'
The Big Hawaiian answered frankly,
"'I've never been in a space grab like this before.
I don't know what the answer is.'
"'We'll soon know,' Rip replied grimly.
A thought had just struck him.
The Scorpius had trouble finding the asteroid
because it was just one of many sailing along through the belt,
but now the asteroid was the only one traveling across the belt.
It would make an outstanding blip on any radar scope.
It wasn't possible that the Connie cruiser had missed the blip and its significance.
The Connie may be looking us over, Rip added, but I can tell you one thing for sure.
He knows we've taken the asteroid.
Only human hands could swerve a heavenly body from its orbit.
Koea looked wistfully at the atomic bomb, which remained.
If we had a way to throw that thing at them,
But we haven't, and the thing wouldn't explode anyway.
We don't have the outside casing with an exploder mechanism,
so it has to be turned on electrically.
Ripp could see no way to use the atomic bomb against the Connie's.
It was too big for use against a landing party.
Besides, it would put the planetaires in danger.
"'Ever have trouble with the Connie's before?' he asked Coa.
"'More than once, sir.
sometimes it seems like I'll never get a job where I don't have to fight Connie's.
RIP was trained in science and planetary techniques,
and he didn't pretend to know the ins and outs of interplanetary politics.
Just the same, he couldn't help wondering about this strange relationship
between the consolidation of people's governments and the Federation of Free Nations.
Connie's and feds, mostly planetiers, but sometimes spacemen,
were constantly skirmishing. They fought over property, over control of ports on distant planets and moons,
and over space salvage. Often there was bloodshed. Sometimes there were pitched battles between groups
of platoon size. But at that point the struggle ended. The Law of the Federation said that
no spaceship could fire on a Connie spaceship or on Connie land bases, except with special permission
of the Space Council.
The theory was that small struggles between men,
or even between small fighting craft like snapper boats,
was not war, but firing on a spaceship was war,
and the first such act could mean starting war throughout the solar system.
It made a sort of sense to rip when he thought about it.
Little fights here and there were better than a full war among the planets.
Cowa suddenly gripped his arm.
Sir, look up.
The short hairs on the back of Rip's neck prickled.
Far above, blackness blotted out stars in the shape of a spaceship.
The Connie had arrived.
Ripp ordered urgently,
Kemp, stop cutting.
The rest of you, get the stuff under cover.
Ram it!
He hurried to lend a hand himself, hustling crates into the cave.
Kemp had made astonishing progress.
There was room for the crates, if stacked properly, and for the men besides.
Ripp supervised the stacking, then the placement of the rocket launcher at the entrance.
All hands inside the boat, he ordered. Dousd, be ready to take off at a moment's notice.
You'll have to buck this box around like never before. He explained to the pilot his plan to
dodge, keeping the asteroid between the boat and the cruiser.
We'll make it, sir, Dost said. I'm not worried, Ripp replied, and wished it were true.
He looked up at the Connie again. It was getting larger.
The cruiser was within a few miles of the asteroid. As Rip watched, fire spurred it from the
cruiser, and it moved with gathering speed toward the asteroid's horizon. He watched the
exhaust trail, wondering why the Connie had blasted off.
"'He has something up his sleeve,' Koa muttered. Wish we knew what.
"'Let's take no chances,' Rip stated. "'Come on.
The men were already in the boat. He and Koa joined them. They stood at a window watching the
Connie's trail. The trail dwindled. Coa said,
Something's up. Suddenly, new fire shot from one side of the cruiser, and it spun.
Balancing fire came from the other side, and for an instant the three exhaust formed across
with the darkness of the Connie's hulled in the center. Then they could see only the exhaust from the
sides. The stern flame was out of sight.
"'He's made a full turn to come back this way,' Rip stated tensely.
"'Doust! Get ready!'
The Connie was perhaps twenty miles away. It grew larger, and the side jets winked out.
A few seconds later, fire spurted from the nose.
Rip figured rapidly. The cruiser had gone away far enough to make a turn.
It had straightened out, heading right for them. Now the nose tube was blasted.
blasting, slowing the cruiser down.
He sighted, holding out one glove,
engaging the Connie's distance above the horizon,
and his heart speeded.
The Connie was right on the horizon.
Ram it, Rip called.
Around the asteroid, quick!
Acceleration jammed him back against his men as doused blasted.
No sooner had he recovered,
then acceleration in a different direction,
shoved him up to the ceiling so hard that his bubble rang.
He clawed his way to the window as the Connie cruiser flashed by, bathing the asteroid in glowing flame.
There was a chorus of gasps from the men as they saw the thing Rip had realized a moment before.
The Consop's cruiser was playing it safe, using its rocket exhaust as a great blowtorch to burn the surface of the asteroid clean.
The sheer inhumanity of the thing made Rip's stomach-tighten into a knot.
No asking for surrender.
No taking of prisoners.
Not even a clean fight.
The Connie was doing its arguing with fire,
knowing that the exhaust would char every man on the asteroid surface.
The planetaires washed as the Connie sped away,
blasted with its side jets, and turned to come back.
Douse tensed over the controls,
trying to anticipate the next move.
He touched the firing levers delicately,
letting out just enough flame to maneuver.
He slid the craft over the asteroid surface
to the side away from the Connie, going slowly enough so they could watch the enemy's every move.
Here he comes, Rip snapped and braced for acceleration. The Landoncraft shot to safety as the
cruiser's nose jet flamed. Doused was just in time. Tiny sparks from the edge of the fiery column
brushed past the boat. Rip realized that the Connie couldn't know the Federation men were in a boat
dodging. The cruiser would make about two more runs, just enough to allow for hitting every
bit of the asteroid. Then it would assume that anything on it was finished and send a landing
party. He'll be back, he stated. About twice more, three at most. He suddenly remembered the
landing boat radio. Doused, where is the radio connection? The pilot handed him a wire with a jack
plug on the end of it. Rip plugged it into his belt. Now his
voice would be heard on the Scorpius.
Calling Scorpius! Calling Scorpius! Calling Scorpius! Foster reporting! We are under attack. Repeat, we are under
attack. Over to you. The answer rang in his helmet.
Scorpius to Foster. Hold them, planetaires. We're on our way.
Here comes the Connie! Koa yelled. Rip braced. The landing boat shot forward, then piled the
planeters in a heap on the bottom as doused accelerated upward.
There was a sudden wrenching crash that sent the planetaires in a jumbled mass into the front of the boat.
It whirled crazily, then stopped.
Rip was not hurt.
He shoved at someone whose bubble was in his stomach and cleared the way.
Turn on belt lights, he called, quick.
Lights flared on.
He searched quickly, swinging his light.
The planetaires were getting to their feet.
His light focused on Private Bradshaw, and he gasped.
Bradshaw's face was scarlet, and his skin was flecked with drops of blood.
His eyes were closed and bulging terribly.
Rip jumped forward, but Big Coa was even faster.
The Hawaiian jerked a repair strip from a belt pouch,
slapped it on the crack in Bradshaw's bubble.
Rip wasted no time either.
By the time Coa had the strip in place,
he had pulled the connections from his belt light.
He ran the tips of the wires over the edges of the strip.
The current sealed the strip.
a patch in place instantly.
Cowa grabbed the atmosphere control on Bradshaw's belt and turned it.
The suit puffed up.
Ripp watched the repair anxiously in the light from Cora's belt.
It held.
Rip reconnected his light as he asked swiftly,
"'Anyone else hurt? Answer by name.'
There were quick replies.
No one else had been injured.
"'Run for the cave,' Rip commanded.
"'Follow Coa.
Santos and Peterson drag Bradshaw.'
The Englishman's voice sounded bubbly.
"'I can make it.'
"'Good for you,' Rip exclaimed.
"'Call for help if you need it.'
Koa was already out of the craft in leading the way.
Rip went out through a window and saw the cause of the trouble.
Doused had been a hair too close to the asteroid.
A particularly high crystal of thorium had snagged the craft.
Ripp looked for the Connie and saw it starting another turn.
They had only a moment or two before the next run.
Show an exhaust, he called.
The Connie must have blasted the opposite side of the asteroid while they were hung up.
The cave was a quarter of the asteroid away.
Rip stayed in the rear, watching for stragglers.
But even Bradshaw was moving rapidly.
Koa reached the cave well ahead of the rest,
reached for a rack of rockets, and slapped it into the launcher.
Rip urged the men on.
the Connie was squared off for another run.
They catapulted to safety as the cruiser flamed past,
the exhaust splashing over the metal and sending sparks into the cave.
Rip looked out.
That, if he guessed right, was the last run.
He watched the Connie's stern jet cut off,
saw the nose exhaust as the cruiser decelerated to a fast stop.
Check your weapons, he ordered.
He pulled his pistol from the knee pocket,
and checked it carefully. There was a clip in the magazine. Other clips were in his pocket.
The clips were loaded with high-velocity shells that exploded on contact. One slug could
stop a Venusian crel, a mammoth beast that had been described as a cross between a sea lion
and a cactus plant. His knife was in place in the other knee pocket. The Connie Cruiser
decelerated, went into reverse, and came to a full stop about a mile from the asteroid.
The planetaires saw fire in two places along the hull,
marking the exhausts of two small craft.
"'Snapper boats,' Coa said tonelessly.
"'Five men in each, if those are the regular Connie kind.'
Ripp made a quick decision.
With only one launcher, they couldn't guard the whole asteroid.
"'We'll stay under cover except for Santos and Peterson.
You two sneak out.
Take advantage of every bit of cover you can find.
I don't want you spotted. When the boat lands, report its position. The Connie's operate on different
communicator frequencies, so they won't overhear. We'll let them think they've burned the asteroid
clean. He paused. They'll search for a while. Then, when they're pretty well satisfied that
all is quiet, we'll show up. Rip grinned at his planeteers. We can have a real, old-fashioned
surprise party. Coa slid the safety catch for.
from his pistol.
With fireworks, he added.
End of Chapter 8.
Chapter 9.
Of Rip Foster Rides the Grey Planet.
By Harold Goodwin.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Rip Foster Rides the Grey Planet.
Chapter 9.
Repel Invaders.
The snapper boats came out of the darkness of space,
leaving a glowing trail of fire. They were not graceful. Rip could see no beauty in their lines,
but to his professional eye there was plenty of deadly efficiency. The Connie Fighting Craft
looked like three globes strung evenly on a steel tube. The middle globe was larger than the
end ones, and it was transparent. From it projected the barrels of two kinds of weapons,
explosive and ultrasonic. Five men used.
usually rode in the middle ball. One piloted, the other four were gunners. The end globes were
pierced by five large holes. They were blast holes for the rocket exhaust. Unlike the landing boats,
each tube did not have its own fuel supply. One fuel tank served each globe. The pilot could direct
the exhaust through any tube or combination of tubes he wished, by operating valves that either
sealed or opened the vents. The system gave high maneuverability to the boat. The boat, and
By playing on the controls with the skill of an organist, the pilot could shift direction with dazzling speed.
Snapper boats, used by the Federation, operated on the same principle, but they were of American
design, and they showed the Americans' love of clean lines.
Federation fighter craft were slim and streamlined, even though the streamlining was of no use
whatever in space.
With blast holes at each end, they looked like double-ended needles.
The pilot's canopy in the center controlled guns that fired through the front only.
Rear guns were handled by a gunner who sat with back to the pilot.
Where Connie's snapper boats carried five men, the Federation boats carried two.
The Connie's could fire in any direction.
The Federation pilots aimed by pointing the snapper boat itself, as fighter pilots of conventional aircraft had once aimed their guns.
Rip watched the boat's approach.
He was ready to duck inside if they decided to look the asteroid over before landing.
He hoped they wouldn't catch sight of his two scouts. He also hoped his nervousness would
vanish when the fight started. He knew what to do, at least in theory. He had gone through
combat problems on the moon during training. But this was different. This was real. The lives
of his men depended on his being right, and he was afraid of making a wrong decision.
Sergeant Major Coa, an experienced planetier with a lot of understanding,
came and stood beside him. He said,
"'Guess I'll never get over being jittery while waiting for the fight to start.
I'm sweating so hard, my dehumidifier is humming like a Calliston honey lizard.
But it doesn't last long once the shooting begins.
I get so busy, I forget to be jittery.'
Before Rip could reply, the snapper boats flashed over the cage.
circle the asteroid once, and landed on the dark side close by the bomb craters.
The first scout reported,
"'Santo, sir, I'm fifty yards beyond the stakes where we had the first base.
The snapper boats landed between the first two craters, men coming out of one boat.
I count six.
Now they're coming out of the other boat, but I can't see very well.'
The other scout picked up the report, his Swedish accent thick with excitement.
I can see them, sir. By Cosmos. There be seven in this boat on my side. I am behind the rock
forty yards to sunward of the second crater. Rip turned up the volume of his communicator.
How are they armed? Santos report. One is carrying a pneumatic chatter gun. The rest have nothing in their
hands. Peterson, report. No weapons I can see, sir. Coa looked at Rip. They must think the asteroid is
clean, otherwise they'd have more than a chatter gun in sight. You can bet they have knives and
pistols, too. Rip had been playing with an idea. He tried it on his men. These Connie's would be
useful to us alive, if we could capture them. It was doused who caught his meaning first.
You mean as hostages, sir? That's it. If we could capture them, the Connie Cruiser would be
helpless. We could use the snapper boat radios to warn the ship that any false move would mean
harm to their men. Koa shook his head, doubtfully. I'm not sure that Connie's worry about their
men, but it's worth the try. We can capture some of them if they split up to search the asteroid,
but we won't be able to sneak up on them all. We have an advantage, Ripp reminded them.
We've been on the asteroid longer. We know our way around, and we're used to be able to sneak up on them. We're
used to spacewalking. They've just come out of deceleration, and they won't have their space
legs yet. Santos reported,
"'They're breaking up into groups of two. Three are guarding the snapper boats. One is the man
with the cheddar gun.' "'Are their belt lights on?'
"'Yes. Then keep out of the beams. Don't let them walk into you. Keep low and keep moving.
Stay over on the dark side.' "'We'd better get to the dark side ourselves,' Coa warm.
He was right, Rip knew. The Connie's didn't have far to search before reaching the sunside.
Coa, you take Trudeau and Kemp. I'll take Dowson, Domenico. Nunes and Bradshaw, stay here to guard
the cave. If they arrive in twos, let them get into the cave before you jump them. Bradshaw,
how do you feel? I'm all right, Lieutenant.
Ripp admired the planetar's nerve. He knew Bradshaw was in pain because bleeding into high vacuum
was always painful. The crack in the Englishman's helmet had let most of the air out,
and his own blood pressure had done the rest. He would carry the marks for days. A few more
moments, and all air and all heat would have been gone with fatal results. Fortunately, bubbles
didn't shatter easily when cracked. To destroy them took a good blow that knocked out a piece.
All right, let's travel. Coa, go right. I'll go the other way, and we'll work around the
asteroid until we meet.
Rip led the way, gliding as rapidly as he could toward the edge of darkness.
He called,
Santos, any coming in the direction of the cave?
To pair.
About fifty yards apart.
They will be out of my sight in a few seconds.
Which meant they would be within sight of Rip and the others.
He knew Koa had heard the message too.
Both groups put on more speed and reached the safety of darkness.
"'Get down,' Rip ordered.
They could still be seen if silhouetted against the edges of sunlight.
Starlight gave a little light, but it was too faint to see much.
Ripp's plan was that the Connie's would supply the light needed for an attack.
In a few seconds, as Santos had predicted, belt-light beams cut sharp pass through the darkness.
Ripp sized up the possibilities.
There were two beams of two men each, and they were getting farther apart with
each step. One team was coming almost directly toward them. The other team was slanting
away from them, and would soon be out of sight behind the thorium crystals in which the cave was
located. Fortunately, the Connie's were going away from the cave. A Connie from the nearby team
swung his beam back and forth, and it cut space over their heads. Rip saw a few low pyramids of
thorium a few rods away. He directed swiftly. Doused, take my boots.
"'Dominico, take doused's boots.'
They lay face down on the metal ground until he felt hands grip his boots.
Then he asked,
"'All set?'
Two voices answered.
"'Ready!'
Rip put his gloves on the ground and pulled himself forward and slightly upward.
Since there was very little gravity, the action both lifted and pulled him.
He slid parallel to the surface and a foot above it,
heading for the crystals.
Once or twice he reached down and gave another push.
It was like swimming, except that only the tips of his gloves touched the ground,
and there was no resistance of any kind.
He felt douse's grip on his boots, but he couldn't feel the weight of his men.
He reached the first crystal and directed,
Get behind these rocks and stay down.
Feel your way.
Use me for a guide.
I'll hold on until you're undercover.
He gripped a crystal.
Come on.
Domenico pulled himself along Dousd's prone form, and then along Rips.
When Domenico had reached the shelter of the crystals, Dousd crawled along with Ripp's body for
his guide, passed over him, and reached cover.
Rip followed.
The beltlights of the two Kani's were almost abreast of them.
Far to their left, Ripp saw another pair of lights.
That was a pair he hadn't seen before.
"'We'll wait until they pass,' he told his men.
Then we'll get up and rush them from behind. They can't hear us coming. Doused, you take the near one.
I'll take the far one. Domenico, you help as needed, but concentrate on cutting off their equipment.
The first thing we must do is cut their communicators. Otherwise, they'll warn the rest. Then turn off their air supplies and collapse their suits.
One thing was in their favor. The spacesuits worn by the Connie's were almost the same as there.
stairs. The controls were of the same kind. The only way to know a Connie was by his bubble,
which was a little more tubular than the round bubbles of the Federation. Ripps suddenly realized
that he wasn't nervous anymore. He grinned, licking his lips. After all, this was what he had
been trained for. The Connie's came abreast and passed. "'Let's go,' Rip said, and as he rose,
he heard Cowa's voice. The sergeant major said,
Kemp, kneel on their right side. Trudeau and I will hit them from the left and tumble
them over you. Get their communicators first. Koa had methods of his own, apparently, and they
sounded good. Ripp started slowly. He wanted to get directly behind the Connie's. He stayed
down low until he was sure they couldn't see him unless they turned. Doused and Domenico were
right with him. "'Come on,' he said, and started gliding after the helmeted
figures. He kept his eyes on the one he had selected, and he called on all the myriad stars of
space to give him luck. If the men turned, his plan for quick victory would fail. He sensed his
planetaires beside him as the figures loomed ahead. He gave a final spring that sent him
through space with knees bent and outthrust, his hands reaching. His knees connected solidly with
the Connie's thighs, and his hands groped around the bulky space suit.
He felt a rheostat control and twisted savagely, then groped for the distinctive star-shaped
button of the air supply.
The Connie wrenched violently and threw them both upward.
Ripp felt the star-shape and twisted.
If he could only deflate the Connie's suit, but the man was writhing from his grip,
clawing for a weapon.
Ripp stopped reaching for the deflation valve.
He grabbed for his knife, jerked it free, and thrust it against the middle of the
Connie's back.
Then he clanged his bubble against the man's helmet for direct communication and shouted,
"'Grab some space, or I'll let back into you!'
The Connie understood English.
Most earthlings did, but even better was his understanding of the pressure on his back.
He stopped struggling, and his arm shot starward.
Rib breathed freely for the first time since he had leapt, and his exultation grew in him.
He had his first man, his first hand-to-hand fall.
fight had ended in victory so easy that he could hardly believe it.
He took time to look around him and saw that he was a good five feet above the asteroid.
Below him, a Connie beltlight sent its shaft parallel with the ground, and he knew the
second man was down. The question was, had either of them shouted before their communicators
were cut off.
"'Doust,' he called urgently, "'all okay?'
"'No,' doused,' said grimly.
We got the Connie, but he got Domenico.
Cut his leg with a space knife.
I'm putting a patch on it.
You okay?
Yes.
When you can, pull me down.
Right.
Domenico spoke up.
Don't worry about me, sir.
Nothing bad.
I don't lose much air.
Fine, Diminico.
Glad it wasn't worse.
But Ripp knew it wasn't good either.
A cut with a space knife let air out of the suit
and created at least a partial vacuum.
If it also cut flesh, the vacuum let the blood pressure force out blood and tissue to turn a minor wound into an ugly one.
They would have to bring this space flap with the Connie's to a quick end, Rip thought.
He had to get his men into air somehow to take look at their wounds. Bradshaw needed attention,
and now so did Domenico.
Doused reached up, took Rip's ankle, and pulled him down.
Ripp held onto his captive.
Then the private bound the Connie's hands, jerked his communicator control completely off,
and turned his air back on. Since Ripp had been unable to collapse the suit, the Connie was comfortable
enough. The reason for collapsing the suit was to deprive the enemy of air instantly,
so that he could be tied up while helpless from lack of oxygen. There was enough air in this suit
to last for a few minutes. The connie on the ground was neatly trust. Ripp's prisoner joined him.
Doused switched off his beltlight.
"'Now what, sir?'
Domenico was standing patiently nearby.
He said nothing.
Ripp knew that no more could be done for the Italian at present.
"'Get back to the cave, Domenico,' he ordered.
"'I cannot stay with you, sir.'
"'No, Domenico, thanks for the offer, but we'll get along.
Go back to the cave.'
"'Yes, sir.'
Ripp was a little worried.
He had heard nothing from Koa since that
first exchange. He told, doused as much. Coa himself heard and answered,
"'Lieutenant, we're all right. We got two Connie's, and I don't think they had a chance to yell.
But I'm sorry about one, sir. Camp had to swing at him and busted his bubble.'
"'Fatal? No, we got a patch on in time, but worse than Bradshaw.'
"'Tough.'
Ripp couldn't feel too sympathetic. After all, it was the
Connie Cruiser's fault Bradshaw had felt high vac.
All right, we have four.
That leaves nine.
Santos came on the circuit.
Sir, D.C. Santos.
Only three men are at the snapper boats.
If you can get here without being seen,
maybe we could knock them off.
The rest wouldn't be much good if we had their boats.
You're right, Santos.
Ripp replied instantly.
Why hadn't he seen that for himself?
He knew how he and Doust could approach the craters without being spotted,
now that they had removed two teams of Connie's.
"'We're on our way. Coa, make it if you can.'
"'Yes, sir.'
Domenico was already making his way back to the cave.
Rip and Doused started for the horizon at a good walk,
not afraid now to use their lights, at least for a few yards.
If any of the remaining Connie search team saw the lights,
they would think it was two of their own men.
Rip remembered the lay of the ground
and Santos's description of the snapper boats' position.
He circled almost to the horizon,
then told Douse to cut his light.
He cut his own.
In a moment they topped the horizon,
and standing with only helmets visible
from the snapper boats,
looked the situation over.
The three counties were standing between him and the boats.
To the left of the boats was the second crater.
Ripp studied the ground as best he could in the Connie beltlights and decided on a plan of action.
Calling to Dousd, he circled again.
Presently they were approaching the crater.
The Konys were about twenty-five yards from the crater's opposite rim.
Ripp said,
I hate to do this, Doused, but I can't see any way out.
We have to go into the crater.
Doused merely said,
Yes, sir.
The extra radiation might put both of the water.
of them well over the safety limits long before Earth was reached, and they both knew it.
Rip didn't hesitate. He reached the crater's edge and walked right down into it. They were
out of sight of the Connie's now. Rip walked up the other side of the crater until his
bubble was just below ground level. The chunks of thorium he had ordered thrown in to block
some of the radiation made walking a little difficult.
"'Santos,' he said, "'we're in the second crater.'
sir i'm beyond the first between two crystals peterson is near you somewhere good when i give the word turn up your helmet light until they can see a pretty good glow keep watching them
the bubbles were equipped with lights but they were seldom used he outlined his plan swiftly both santos and doused acknowledged koa reported in we're after two more conies near the wreck of the landing-boat sir be careful
Peterson, go help COA. Nunes, how are things at the cave?
Nunez reporting, sir, Tulkani's in sight, but they haven't seen us yet.
Let me know when they spot the cave. Yes, sir.
Santos, go ahead. For long moments there was silence.
Ripp felt for a solid foothold, found one, and flexed his knees. He kept his back straight
in his eyes on the crater rim. His hands were occupied with two air-boats.
bottles taken from his belt, and his thumbs were on their valve releases.
He waited patiently for word from Santos that his helmet glow had been seen.
Santos yelled,
Now!
Ripp's legs straightened with a mighty thrust.
He flashed into space headfirst at an angle that took him over the crater's rim and
fifty feet above the ground.
He caught a glimpse of Santos's helmet glowing like a pink balloon, and of the three
conies facing it, one with gun upraised.
Ripp's arms flashed above his head, his thumbs compressed, air spurted from the two bottles,
driving him downward, feet first, directly at the heads of the Connie's.
End of Chapter 9
Chapter 10 of Rip Foster Rides the Gray Planet by Harold Goodwin.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Rip Foster Rides the Gray Planet
Chapter 10
Get the Scorpion
From the corner of his eye
Rip saw doused heavy space boots
and knew the private was right with him.
As they drove down,
one of the Connie stepped a little distance away from the others,
probably to get a better look at Santos.
The Connie sensed something and turned,
just as Rip and Doused flashed downward on his two mates.
Ripp's boots caught one Connie where his bubble joined his suit,
and the impact drove the man downward
to the unyielding surface of the Alps.
asteroid with a soundless smash. Rip threw up his arms to cushion his helmet as he struck the ground
beyond his enemy. He threw the air-bottles away. He fought to keep his feet under him and almost
succeeded, but his knees hit the ground and pistol and knife bit into them painfully. Two figures
came into his view, locked tightly together, arms flailing. It was doused and the second Connie.
He got to his feet and was moving to the planeter's aid when Santos' voice shrilled.
in his helmet. Sir, look left. Rip whirled. The Connie who had stepped aside was advancing,
pistol in hand. His light caught Rip full in the face. The young officer thought quickly,
the Connie hadn't fired. Why? Suddenly he had it. The man hadn't fired for fear of hitting his friend,
who was battling with doused. Rip was in front of them. Quickly he dropped to one knee,
reaching for his own pistol. The Connie wouldn't dare fire now. The high-velocity slug would go right
through him to explode in one of the struggling figures behind, and the wrong one might get it.
The Connie saw Ripp's action and tossed his pistol aside. He too knew he couldn't fire. He reached
into a knee-pouch and drew out his space-knife. He leapt for the planetar. Rip pulled frantically
at his pistol. It was stuck fast, probably caught it.
in the fabric by his knee landing.
The space knife wouldn't be caught.
It was smooth, with no projections to catch.
He shifted knees and jerked it out.
The Connie's flying body hit him, and a powerful arm circled his waist.
Rip thrust upward with his knees, one hand reaching for the Connie's suit valve.
But the Connie had one arm free, too.
He drove his glove up under Rip's heart.
Rip let go of the valve and used his elbow to lever away, just as the Connie pressed
his knife's release valve. The blade slammed outward, drove into the inside of Ripp's right arm
just above the elbow. Pain lanced through him, and he felt the blood rushed to the wound
as air poured through the gap in his suit. He gritted his teeth and smashed at the Connie with his own
knife. It rammed home, and he squeezed the release. The blade connected solidly. He was suddenly
free. He pressed the wounded arm to his side, stopping the outpouring of air.
cut hurt like all the devils of space. With his other hand, he increased the air in his suit,
then looked swiftly around. The Connie was on his knees, both gloves pressed tightly to his side.
Douse was just finishing a nod in the safety line that bound a second enemy's hands.
The Connie Ripp had rocketed down on was still lying where he had fallen. And Corporal Santos,
the enemy's pneumatic chatter gun at the ready, was standing guard.
Ripp turned up the volume in his communicator. He tried to sound calm, but the shakiness of triumph
and excitement was in his voice. All planetaires, we have the Connie Snapper Boats. Coa, bring your men here.
He felt someone working on his arm and turned to see Corporal Peterson, his face one vast grin
in the glare from doused's beltlight.
"'Coa didn't need me,' he said.
Rip grinned back.
Nunes, he called.
How are things at the cave?
Sir, this is Nunes.
Two khanis were prowling around, but they didn't see the entrance.
Then a minute ago they turned and hurried away.
Rip considered.
Coa, how many khanis have you?
Four, sir.
With the five he endowsed had taken, that meant four still at large,
and from Nunes's report, some Connie yelling have been
going on. The four certainly knew by this time there were federal men on the asteroid.
Unless something were done quickly, the four connies would be shooting at them from the darkness.
He ordered,
All planetaires, kill your beltlights!
The lights on the connies they had just taken still glowed.
Douse was putting a patch on the Connie RIP had stabbed.
He waited until the private had finished, then said,
Turn out the Connie lights, too.
If he could get in touch, he could get in touch.
with the Connie's, he could tell them they were finished, but using the snapper boat radios was out,
because the enemy cruiser would hear. The cruiser couldn't hear the helmet communicators, though,
because they carried only a short distance. The cruiser was close enough so that a helmet
communicator turned on full volume might barely be heard, although it was unlikely. He couldn't stick his
head in a Connie helmet, but he could talk to Akani by direct communication and have him give
instructions. There was complete darkness with all belt lights out, but he groped his way to the
Connie doused had been patching, felt for his helmet, and put his own against it. He yelled,
"'Do you hear me?' "'Yes.' Then, why did you patch me?'
It was a perfect opening. "'Because we don't want to kill you. Listen, we have all but four of you,
Understand?
Yes, what will you do with us?
Treat you as prisoners, if you behave.
Get on your communicator and tell those four men to surrender.
Tell them to come to the boats with lights on.
Tell them, we'll give them five minutes.
If they don't come, we'll hunt them with rockets.
They will come, the Connie said.
They don't want to die.
I will do it.
Ripp kept his helmet against the Kani.
but the man spoke in another language, which Rip identified as the main Consop's tongue.
When he had finished, Rip told his planeteers to have weapons ready and to keep lights off.
Time enough for light when the Connie's were all disarmed.
It didn't take five minutes.
The Connie teams came quickly and willingly, and they seemed almost glad to give up their pistols and knives.
This was not unusual.
Rip had seen many planetar reports that spoke of the same thing.
Many Connie's, it seemed, were glad to get away from the Iron Consop's rule,
even if it meant becoming Federation prisoners.
Inside one of the snapper boats, a light glowed.
Ripp put his helmet against that of the man who had given the surrender order,
and demanded,
"'What's that light?'
"'The cruiser wants us!'
Rip considered demanding that the Connie answer, then thought better of it.
He would do it himself.
After all, they had hostages.
The cruiser wouldn't take any further action.
He climbed into the snapper boat and hunted for the plug-in terminal.
It fitted his own beltjack. He plugged in and said,
Go ahead. There was an instant of silence. Then an accented voice demanded,
Why are you speaking English?
Rip replied formally.
This is Lieutenant Foster, Federation Special Order squadrons, in charge on the asteroid.
"'Your landing party is in our hands as prisoners.
"'Two wounded, none dead.
"'If you agree to withdraw,
"'we will send the wounded men back to you in one boat.
"'The rest will remain here as hostages for your good behavior.'
"'Stand by,' the voice said.
"'There was silence for several moments,
"'then a new voice said,
"'This is the cruiser commander.
"'We make a counter-offer.
"'If you release our men and surrender to them,
"'we will spare the lives of you and you,
your men. Rip listened incredulously. The commanding officer didn't understand. He, Rip,
held the whip hand, because the lives of the county prisoners were in his hands. He repeated
what he had said before. And I repeat, the commander retorted. Surrender or die. Choose now.
I refuse, Rip stated flatly. Try anything and your men will suffer, not us. You are mistaken.
The harsh voice said,
"'We were sweeped the asteroid clean with our exhaust,
"'but this time we will be more thorough.
"'When we have finished, we will hammer you with guided missiles.
"'Then we were sent snapper boats with rockets
"'and hunt down any who remain.
"'We intend to have that thorium.
"'You had better surrender.'
Rip couldn't believe it.
"'The cruiser commander had no hesitation
"'in sacrificing his own men.
"'But it was not a bluff.
He knew instinctively that the Connie commander meant it.
Instantly, he unplugged the radio connection from his belt and spoke urgently.
Koa, get everyone undercover in the cave.
Hurry!
Collect all the Connie's and take them with you.
Then he plugged in again.
Commander, I must have time to think this over.
You have one minute.
He watched his chronometer, planning the next move.
When the minute ended, he asked,
"'Commander, how do we know you will spare our lives if we surrender?'
"'Through the transparent shell of the snapper boat, he saw lights moving toward the horizon,
and new COA was following orders.
"'You don't know,' the cruiser answered.
"'You must take our word for it.
"'But if you surrender, we have no reason to wish you harm.'
RIP remained silent.
The seconds ticked past until the commander snapped,
"'Quickly, you have no more time.'
"'Sir,' Rip said plaintively,
"'two of my men do not wish to surrender.
"'Shute them, fool! Are you in command or not?'
Rip grinned. He made his voice whine.
"'But, sir, it is against the law of the Federation to shoot men without a trial.'
The commander lapsed into his own language, caught himself, then barked.
"'You are no longer under Federation law. You are under consolidation of people's governments.
Do you surrender or not?
Answer at once, or we take action anyway.
Quick.
Rip knew he could stall no longer, he said coolly.
If you had brains in your head instead of high vacuum,
you'd know that planet tears never surrender.
Blast away, you filthy space pirate.
He jerked the plug loose, hesitated for a second over whether or not
to take the snapper boat and decided against it.
He wasn't familiar with Connie control.
and there wasn't time to experiment. He headed for the cave as fast as he could glide.
The Connie cruiser lost no time. Its stern tubes flamed, then its steering tubes.
It was going to drive directly at the asteroid without making a long run. Rip estimated quickly
and realized that the Connie would get to the asteroid at the same time that he reached the cave,
if he made it. He speeded up as fast as he dared. With little gravity on the asteroid,
He couldn't fall, but a false step could lift him into space and make him lose time while he
got out an air bottle to propel him down again. The thought gave him an idea. Without slowing,
he took two bottles from his belt, turned them so the openings were to his rear and squeezed
the release valves. The Connie was gaining speed, blasting straight toward him. Rips sped forward and
crossed to the sunside intent on the cave entrance, but no longer sure he would make it. The Connie's
nose-tube shot a cylinder of flame forward, reaching for the asteroid. He saw the fire
licked downward and sweep toward him with appalling speed, as he put everything he had in a
frantic dive for the cave entrance. The flaming rocket exhaust seemed to snatch at him as a dozen
hands pulled him to safety, then beat the sparks from his suit. He was safe. He leaned
against Coa, his heart thumping wildly. For a moment or two he couldn't speak. Then he
managed. Thanks.
Coa spoke for the planetaires.
We're the ones to say thanks, sir.
If you hadn't thought of stalling the cruiser, and if you hadn't stayed behind to give us
time, we'd have some casualties, and so would the conies we captured.
There wasn't anything else I could do, RIP replied.
Come on, Coa, let's see what the cruiser is doing.
They stepped outside.
The metal was already cold again.
Things didn't stay hard in the vacuum of space.
face. They didn't see the Connie until the fire of its exhaust suddenly blasted above the horizon.
Then they ducked for cover. The cruiser had taken a swing at the other side of the asteroid.
They peered out again and saw it making a turn to come back.
"'He won't get us,' Rip said confidently.
"'Our tough time will come when he sends a fleet of snapper boats.'
"'We'll get a few,' Cole replied.
"'Wait, what's he doing?'
The cruiser had started for the asteroid. Suddenly, jets flamed from every quarter of the ship.
He was using all steering jets at once. Rip watched, bewildered, as the great ship spun slowly,
advanced, then settled to a stop just at the horizon.
He can't be launching boats already, he said worriedly.
What's he up to? They ran forward a short distance until they could see below the cave's horizon level.
The cruiser released exhaust from both sides of the ship, the outer ones the slightest bit stronger.
Rip exclaimed,
Great Cosmos! He's cuddling right up to the asteroid. Why?
Hiding, Koa said.
By, Gemini! Come on, sir!
Ripp saw his meaning instantly, and they raced to the side of the asteroid away from the ship.
As they crossed into the dark half, Rip looked back.
He couldn't see the cruiser from here.
But he looked out into space across the horizon and knew that Koa's guess had been right.
The distinctive glow of a nuclear-drive cruiser was clear among the stars.
The Scorpius had returned.
The Connie saw it, Rip said warily, but didn't blast away.
That means he's intending to ambush the Scorpius.
Koa, if he does, that means war.
The big Hawaiian shook his head.
Sir, the Connie has guided missiles with atomic warheads, just like our ship does.
If he can launch one from ambush and hit our ship, that's the end of it.
The Scorpius will be nothing but space junk.
Commander O'Brien will never have time to get off a message,
because he'll be dead before he knows there is danger.
The logic of it sent chill fear down Rips' spine.
The Connie could get the Scorpius with one nuclear blast, then clean up the asteroid at leisure.
The Federation would suspect, but it would be unable to prove anything, because there would be no
witnesses. If the Connie took time to tow the remains of the Scorpius deep into the asteroid belt,
it likely would never be found, no matter how the Federation searched.
They had to warn the ship. But how? Their helmet communicators wouldn't reach it until it was
right at the asteroid, and that would be too late. They had no other radio. If only the radio's in
snapper boats were on federation frequency. Hey, they could take one of the boats and intercept
the cruiser. He was hurrying toward them before COA understood what he was saying. He tried to make
his legs go faster, but they were unsteady. He knew he was losing blood. He had lost plenty. He
gritted his teeth and kept going. The snapper boat seemed miles away to rip, but he plugged
ahead until his beltlight picked them up. He took a long look, then turned away, heart-sick.
The Connie's exhaust had charred them into wreckage.
"'Now what?' he asked.
"'I don't know, sir,' Coa answered somberly.
They went back to the cave, not hurrying, because Rip no longer had the strength to hurry.
Weakness and a deep desire to sleep almost overcame him, and he knew that he was finished
anyway.
His wound must be too deep to clot, which meant it would bleed until he bled to death.
Whether he warned the Scorpius or not, his end was the same.
Back in the cave, he leaned against the wall and asked tiredly,
"'How is Domenico?'
"'I'm fine, sir. My wound has stopped bleeding.'
"'How is the Connie I got?'
"'Unconscious, sir,' Santos replied.
"'He must be bleeding badly, but we can't tell.
"'The one you landed on is all right now, but he may have a broken rib or two.'
Because his voice was weak, Rip had to turn up the volume on his communicator to tell the
planetaires about the Scorpius. They were silent when he finished. Then, Doused spoke up.
Looks like they have us, sir. But we'll take plenty of them with us before we're finished.
That's the spirit, Rip approved. He told them,
I won't last much longer. When I get too weak, coal will take over. Meanwhile, I want to get
outside. Bring the rocket launcher outside, too. Who's the gunner? Santos? Stand by then. We'll need you in case
the Connie decides to send a few snappers before it goes after the Scorpius. The Cruiser's
glow was plain above the horizon now. It was so close that could make out its form against the
background of stars. O'Brien was decelerating and Rip was certain he was watching his screens
for a sign of the enemy. He would see nothing because the enemy was in the shadow.
of the asteroid. He would think the coast was clear and come to a stop nearby while he asked why
Rip had called for help. Failing to get a reply, since the landing boat was wrecked, he would send a
landing party and the Connie would attack while he was launching boats off guard.
Rip watched the prediction come true. The nuclear cruiser slowed gradually, its great bulk
nearing the asteroid. O'Brien was operating as expected. Rip was having trouble keeping
his vision from blurring. He leaned against the rocket launcher, and his glove caressed one of
the sharp noses in the rack. He heard his own voice before the idea had even taken full form.
Santos, do you hear me? Santos! Get the Scorpius! Fire before it comes to a stop, and don't miss!
Santos started to protest, but Coa bellowed,
"'Do it! The lieutenant's right! It's the only chance we've got to warn the ship! Get that scorpion,
Santos, dead amid ships. The Filipino corporal swung into action. His space gloves flew as he cranked
the launcher around, turned on the illuminated sight, and bent low over it. Ripps stood behind the
corporal. He saw the cruiser's shape stand out in the glow of the sight, saw the sighting
rings move as Santos corrected for its speed. The corporal fired. Fire flared back past his
shoulder. The rocket flashed away. Its trail dwindling as it sped toward
the great bulk above. It reached branch loose, and there was darkness. Rip held his breath for long
seconds, then he gave a weak cry of victory. A blossom of orange fire marked up perfect hit.
End of Chapter 10. Chapter 11 of Rip Foster Rides the Gray Planet by Harold Goodwin.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Chapter 11. Hard words for O'Brien
The Scorpius could have taken direct hits with little or no major damage from a hundred
rockets of the kind RIP had used, but Commander O'Brien took no chances.
When the alarm bell signaled that the outer hull had been hit, the commander acted instantly
with a bellowed order. The planetaires on the asteroid blinked with the speed of the
cruiser's getaway. Fire flamed from the stern tube for an instant.
instant, and then there was nothing but a fading glow where the Scorpius had been.
Ripp had a mental image of everything movable in the ship crashing against bulkheads
with the terrific acceleration. And in the same moment the Consop's cruiser reacted. The
Connie commander was ready to fire guided missiles, when his target suddenly, mysteriously,
blasted into space at optimum acceleration. There was only one reason that Connie could imagine.
his cruiser had been spotted. The ambush had failed. It was one thing for the Connie to lie in ambush
for a single deadly surprise blast at the Federation cruiser. It was quite another to face the nuclear
drive ship with its missile ports cleared for action. The Connie knew he had lost.
Ripp and the planeteer saw the Kansop's ship suddenly flame away, then turn and dive for low space
below the asteroid belt in a direction opposite the one the Scorpius had taken.
The helmet communicators rang with their cheers.
The young officer clapped Santos on the shoulder and exclaimed weakly,
"'Good shooting!'
The corporal turned anxiously to Coa.
"'The lieutenant's pretty weak. Can't we do something?'
"'Forget it,' Rip said.
There was nothing anyone could do.
He was trapped inside his spacesuit.
There was nothing anyone could do for.
his wound until he got into air.
Koa untied his safety line and moved to Rip's side.
Sir, this is dangerous, but there's just as much danger without.
I'm going to tie off that arm.
Rip knew what Koa meant.
He stood quietly as the big Sergeant Major put the line around his arm above the wound,
then put his massive strength into the task of pulling the line tight.
The heavy fabric of the suit was stiff,
and the air pressure gave further resistance.
that had to be overcome. Rip let most of the air out of the suit, then fought for breath until
the pain in his arm told him that COA had succeeded. He inflated the suit again and thanked
the sergeant major weakly. The tight line stopped the bleeding, but it also cut off the air
circulation. Without the air, the heating system couldn't operate efficiently. It was only a matter
of time before the arm froze.
"'Stand easy,' Rip told his men. "'Nothing to do now but wait. The Scorpius will be back.'
He set an example by leaning against the thorium crystal in which the cave was located.
It was a natural but meaningless gesture. With no gravity pulling at them, they could remain
standing indefinitely, sleeping upright. Rip closed his eyes and relaxed. The pain in his arm was less
now, and he knew the cold was setting in. He was getting light-headed, and most of all,
he wanted to sleep. Well, why not? He slumped a little inside the suit. He awoke with COA
shaking him violently. Rip stood upright and shook his head to clear his vision.
What is it? Sir, the Scorpius has returned. Rip blinked as he stared out into space to where
Koa was pointing. He had trouble focusing his eyes at first, and then he saw the glow of the
cruiser. "'Good,' he said. They'll send a landing-boat first thing.'
"'I hope so,' Koa replied. Ripp wanted to ask why the big planet Teer doubted, but he was
too tired to phrase the question. He contended himself with watching the cruiser.
In a short time the Scorpius was balanced with nose-tubes counteracting the thrust of stern-tube,
ready to flash into space again at a second's notice.
Rip watched, puzzled.
The cruiser was miles away.
Why didn't it come any closer?
Then suddenly it erupted a dozen fiery streaks.
Snapper boats, someone gasped.
Rip jerked fully awake.
In the ruddy glow of the fighting rockets tubes,
he had seen that the cruiser's missile ports were yawning wide,
ready to spew forth deadly nuclear charges.
The snapper boats flashed toward the asteroid in a group, sheared off and broke formation.
They came back in pairs, streaking space with the sparks of their exhausts.
"'In to the cave!' Koa shouted. The planetaires obeyed instantly.
Koa took Ripp's arm to lead him inside, but the young officer shook him off.
"'No, Koa, I'll take my chances out here. I want to see what's
they're up to. Great Cosmos, sir. They'll go over this rock like Martian beetles. You'll get it for sure.
Get inside, Rip ordered. He gathered strength enough to make his voice firm. I'm staying here
until I figure out some way to call them off. We can't just stand here and let them blast us.
They're our own men. Then I'm staying too, Coa stated. A pair of snapper boats flashed overhead
and vanished below the horizon. Two more swept past from another direction.
Rip watched, curious. What were they up to? Another pair quartered past them at high speed,
then two more. The dozen boats seemed to be criss-crossing the asteroid in a definite pattern.
Why? A pair streaked past, and something sped downward from one of them, trailing yellow flame.
It exploded in a ball of molten fire that licked across the asteroid.
in waves. Rip tensed, then saw that the chemical would burn out before it reached them.
Fire bomb, Coa muttered. Rip nodded. He had recognized it. The planetaires were trained in the
use of fire bombs, tanks of chemicals that burned even in an airless world. They were equipped
with simple jets for use in space. The snapper boats drew off, back toward the Scorpius.
Rip watched, searching for some reason for their actions.
Then one of the boats pulled away from the others.
It returned to the asteroid with stern jet burning fitfully.
Is he landing? Coa asked.
Rip didn't know. The snapper boat was moving slowly enough to make a landing.
Directly over the asteroid it changed direction, circled, and returned over their heads.
Rip could almost have picked it off with a pistol shot.
Santos could have blasted it into space dust with one rocket.
The snapper boat changed direction,
and for a fraction of a second, stern and side tubes fought each other,
making the boat yaw wildly, then it straightened out on a new course.
Koa exclaimed,
That's a drone!
Rip got it then, a pilotless snapper boat.
That's why its actions were a little uneven.
Only one thing could explain its deliberate slowness.
It was bait. The Scorpius had sent piloted snapper boats over the asteroid at high speed,
criss-crossing in order to cover the thorium world completely, expecting to have the unknown
rocketeer fire at them. Then a fire-bomb had been dropped as a further means of getting the asteroid
to fire. But no rockets have been fired from the asteroid, so the pilot in control of the drone
had sent it at low speed, a perfect target. That meant O'Brien wasn't sure of what
what was going on. He must have seen the blip on his screen as the Connie cruiser flamed off,
Rip reasoned. But the commander probably suspected that the Connie's had overcome the
planetaires and were in control of the asteroid. He had sent the snapper boats to try and draw
fire in an attempt to find out more surely whether planeteers or Connie's had the thorium rock.
The Scorpius doesn't know what's going on, Rip told his planetaires. O'Brien didn't know the
cruiser was waiting to ambush him, so the rocket we fired made him think the Connie's had taken
us over. He put himself in O'Brien's place. What would his next step be? The snapper boats hadn't
drawn fire, even when a drone was sent over at low speed. The next thing would be to send a piloted
boat over slowly enough to take a look. Rip hoped O'Brien would hurry. There was no longer
any feeling in his arm below Coa's safety line. That meant the arm had frozen. He had to get medical
attention from the Scorpius pretty soon. He gritted his teeth. At least he was no longer losing blood.
He wasn't getting any weaker, but every now and then his vision fogged and he had to shake his
head to clear it. The pilotless snapper boat made another slow run, then put on speed and flashed back
to the group of boats near the cruiser.
Another boat detached itself from the squadron and moved toward the asteroid.
Ripp wished for a communicator powerful enough to reach the Scorpius, but knew it was
useless to try with this helmet circuit. The carrier waves of the snabber boats were on the same
frequency, and they would smother the faint signal from his bubble.
But the boats might be able to hear if they got close enough. He had a swift memory of the
communication circuits. The pilots were plugged into their boat communicators. If a boat got near enough,
he could turn up his bubble to full volume and yell. Not only would the boat pilot hear him,
but his voice would go through the pilot circuit and be heard in the ship. Rip grabbed Coe's arm.
Let's move away from the cave a little farther. The two of them stepped away from the cave and
stood in full view as the snapper boat moved cautiously down toward the asteroid. Rip planned,
what he would say.
Commander O'Brien, this is Foster.
No, that wouldn't do.
Connie's would know that Kevin O'Brien commanded the Scorpius,
and if they had taken over the planetaires on the asteroid,
they would also have learned Ripp's name.
He had to say something that would identify him beyond a doubt.
The snapper boat was closing in slowly.
Ripp knew the pilot and gunner must be tense, frightened,
ready to blast with their guns at the first wrong move on the
asteroid. He groped with his good arm and turned up his helmet communicator to full volume.
The fighting rocket drew closer, cut in its nose tube, and hovered only a few hundred feet
above the planetaires. Rip summoned enough strength to make his voice sharp and clear.
His words sped through space into the bubble of the pilot, echoed in the helmets and were
picked up by the pilot's microphone, then hurled through the snapper boat circuit through
space to the control room of the cruiser. O'Brien stiffened as the speaker threw Ripp's voice at him,
amplified and hollow sounding from the reverberations in the boat pilot's helmet.
O'Brien is so ugly, he won't look at his face in a clean blast tube. That no good Irishman
wouldn't know what to do with an asteroid if he had one. The commander turned purple with
rage. He bellowed,
"'Faster!'
A junior space officer had a grin and murmured,
"'Looks like the planetaires still have the asteroid!'
O'Brien bent over the communicator and yelled,
"'Depity Commander! Launch landing boats!
Get those planetaires and bring them here under armed guard!
Ram it!'
The snapper boat pilot, through whose circuit Rip had yelled,
turned to look wide-eyed at his gunner.
"'Did you hear that?'
Thou a light down on the asteroid. It must have come from there.
The gunner threw a switch, and a searchlight port opened in the boat's belly.
Its beam searched downward, swept past, then steadied on two space-clad figures.
It worked, Ripp said tiredly. He closed his eyes to guard them against the brilliant glare,
then waved his good arm. Santos called from the cave entrance,
Sir, landing boats are being launched.
"'Bring out the prisoners,' Rip ordered.
"'Line them up. Planetaires, fallen behind them.'
The landing boats, with snapper boats in watchful attendance,
blasted down to the surface of the asteroid.
Spaceman jumped out, awkward at first on the no-weight surface.
An officer glided to meet Rip, and he had a pistol in his hand.
"'It's all right,' Rip told him.
"'The Connie's are our prisoners. You won't need guns.'
The spaceman snapped.
You are under arrest."
Rip stared incredulously.
What for?
The commander's orders.
Don't give me any arguments.
Just get aboard.
I can't argue with a loaded gun,
Ripp said wearily.
He called to his men.
We're under arrest.
I don't know why.
Don't try to resist.
Do as the spaceman order.
Rip got aboard the nearest landing boat.
his head spinning. O'Brien had made a mistake of some kind.
The landing boats, loaded with planetaires and Connie's, lifted from the asteroid to the cruiser.
They slid smoothly into the airlocks and settled. The massive lock-door slid closed,
and lights flickered on. Rip waited, trying to keep consciousness from slipping away.
The lock-gages registered normal air, and the inner valve slid open.
Commander O'Brien stepped through, his square,
jaw out-thrust, and his face flushed with anger. He bellowed,
"'Where's Foster?' His voice was so loud. Rip heard him faintly even through the bubble.
He stepped out of the landing boat and faced the irate commander. O'Brien ordered,
"'Get him out of that suit!' Two spacemen jumped forward. One twisted Rips bubble-free
and lifted it off. The heavy air of the ship hit him with physical force. O'Brien grated.
"'You're under arrest, Foster, for firing on the Scorpius,
for insubordination, and for conduct unbecoming an officer.
Get out of that suit and get flaming.
It's the space-pot for you.'
Ripp had to grin.
He couldn't help it.
He started to reply, but the heavy air of the cruiser,
so much richer and denser than that of the suits, was too much.
He slumped unconscious.
There was no gravity to pull him to the floor.
But the action of his relaxing muscles swung him slowly until he lay face down in the air
a few feet above the floor.
Commander O'Brien stared for a moment, then he took the unconscious planeteer and swung him upright.
His quick eyes took in the patch on the arm, the safety line tied tightly.
He roared, quick, get him to the wound ward.
Ripp came back to consciousness on the operating table.
The wound in his arm had been neatly repaired, and below the wound where his arm
had frozen, a plastic temperature bag was slowly bringing the cold flesh back to normal.
On his other side, a pulsing pressure pump forced new blood from the ship's supplies into his
veins. A senior space officer with the golden lancet of the medical service on his blue tunic
bent over him. How do you feel? Ripp's voice surprised him. It was as full and strong as ever.
I feel wonderful. Can I get up? When we get enough
blood into you, and your arm is fully restored."
Commander O'Brien appeared in the doorframe.
Can he talk?
Yes, he's fine, sir.
O'Brien glared down at Ripp.
"'Can you give me a good reason why I shouldn't have you treated for space madness,
then toss you in the spacepot until we reach Earth?'
"'Best reason in the galaxy,' Ripp said cheerfully.
But before we talk about it, I want to know how my men are.
got cut, and another had his bubble cracked. Also, one of the Connie's got badly cut, another
had some broken bones, and a third one bled into high vac when Koa cracked his bubble.
The doctor answered Ripp's question. Your men are all right. We put the one with the cracked
bubble into high compression for a while, just to relieve his pain a little. The other one didn't
bleed much. He's back in the squad room right now. Two of the prisoners are patched up, but the
third one is in the other operating room. I don't know whether we can save him or not. We're trying.
O'Brien nodded. Thanks, Doctor. Now, Foster, start talking. You fired on this ship,
scored a hit, and broke the air seal. No casualties, fortunately. But by forcing us to accelerate
at optimum speed, you'll cause so much breakage of ship's stars that we'll have to put into Mars port
for new stocks. And on top of all that, you insulted me within the
the hearing of every man on the ship. I don't mind being insulted by planetaires. I'm used to it,
but when it's done over the ship's communication system, it's bad for discipline.
Ripp tried to keep a straight face. He said mildly,
Sir, I'm surprised you even give me a chance to explain. I wouldn't have, O'Brien said frankly,
I would have shot off a special message to Earth, relieving you of command, and asking for
discipline-board action. But when I saw those Connie prisoners, I knew there was more to this than just
a young space-pup going vac-wecky. There was, Commander, Ripp recited the events of the past few hours
while the Irishman listened with growing amazement. He finished with,
I had to convince you in a hurry that we still held the asteroid, so I used some insulting
phrases that will let you know who was talking without any doubt at all. And you did know,
didn't you, sir?" O'Brien flushed. For a long moment, his glance locked with Rips,
then he roared with laughter. Rip grinned his relief. My apology, sir.
Accepted, O'Brien chuckled. I'm sorry I won't have an excuse for dumping you in the
space, Pot Foster. Your explanation is acceptable, but I have a suspicion that you enjoyed
calling me names. I might have, Rip admitted, but I won't.
wasn't in very good shape. The only thing I could think of was getting into air so I could have my
arm treated. Commander, we've moved the asteroid. Now we have to correct course, and we have to get
some new equipment, including nucleite shielding. Also, sir, I'd appreciate it if you'd let my men
clean up and eat. They haven't been in air since we left the cruiser. For answer, O'Brien strode to
the operating-room communicator. "'Get it,' he called. "'The Deputy Commander
will prepare landing boat one and issue new space suits and helmets for all planetaires with
damaged equipment. Put in two rows of nuclite. Sergeant Major Coah will see that all planetaires
have an opportunity to clean up and eat immediately. The planetaires will return to the asteroid
in one hour. Rip asked, Will I be able to go into space by then? The doctor replied,
Your arm will be normal in about twenty minutes. It will ache some, but you will ache some, but
you'll have full use of it. We'll bring you back to the ship in about 24 hours for another
look at it, just to be sure. Sixty minutes later, clean, fed, and contented, the planetaires
were again on the Thorium planet, while the Scorpius, riding the same orbit, stood by a few
miles out in space. The asteroid and the great cruiser arched high above the belt of tiny worlds
in the orbit Rip had set, traveling together toward distant Mars.
End of Chapter 11. Chapter 12. Of Rip Foster Rides the Gray Planet. By Harold Goodwin.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Rip Foster Rides the Gray Planet. Chapter 12. Mercury Transit.
The long hours passed, and only Ripp's chronometer told him when the end of a day was reached.
The planetaires alternately worked on the surface and rested in the air of the landing boat compartmental.
while the asteroid sped steadily on its way.
When a series of sightings over several days gave Rip enough exact data to work on,
he calculated the orbit, found the amount that the course had to be corrected,
and supervised the cutting of new and smaller holes in the metal.
Tubes of ordinary rocket fuel were placed in these and fired,
and the thrust moved the asteroid slightly, just enough to make the corrections Rip needed.
It was not necessary to take to the landing boat for these,
blasts. The planetaires retired to their cave, which was now lined with nuclite as a protection
against radiation. Rip watched his dosimeter climb steadily as the radiation dosage mounted.
Then he took the landing boat to the Scorpius, talked the problem over with the ship's medical
department, and arranged for his men to take injections that would keep them from coming down
with radiation sickness. They left the asteroid belt far behind, and passed within 10,000 miles of
Mars. The Scorpius sent its entire complement of snapper boats to the asteroid for protection
in case consops made another try, then flamed off to Marsport to put in new supplies to replace
those damaged when Rip had forced sudden and disastrous acceleration. The asteroid had reached Earth's
orbit before the cruiser returned. Of course, Earth was on the other side of the sun. Rip ordered
a survey and found the best place on the dark side to make a new base. The planet was a place. The
The planetaires cut out a cave with the torch, lined it with nuclite, and moved in their supplies.
It would be their permanent base to the end of the trip.
The sun was very hot now.
On the sunny side of the asteroid, the temperature had soared far past a boiling point of water,
but on the dark side, Rip measured temperatures close to absolute zero.
When the Scorpius returned, he arranged with Commander O'Brien for the planetaires
to take turns going to the cruiser for showers and decent meals. The asteroid approached the orbit
of Venus, but the bright planet was some distance away, at its greatest elongation to the east
of the sun. Mercury, however, loomed larger and larger. They would pass close to the hot planet.
O'Brien recalled Rip to the Scorpius and handed him a message.
Asteroid now within protection reach of Mercury and Terra bases. Your escort no longer
required. Proceed immediately, Titan, take on cargo and personnel. The commander sighed.
Looks like I'll never get to Earth long enough to see my family. Rip sympathized.
Tough, sir. Perhaps the cargo from Titan will be scheduled for Terra. That's what I hope,
O'Brien agreed. Well, here's where we part. Is there anything you need?
Ripp made a mental check on supplies. He had more than enough.
The only thing we need is a long-range communicator, sir.
If you're leaving, we'll have no way to contact the planet bases.
I'll see that you get one.
The Irishman thrust out his hand.
Stay out of high vac, foster.
Too bad you didn't join us instead of the planetaires.
I might have made a decent officer out of you.
Rip grinned.
That's a real compliment, sir.
I might return it by saying,
I'd be glad to have you as a planeter corporal any time.
O'Brien chuckled.
"'All right. Let's declare a truce.
Planetare, we'll meet again. Space isn't very big.'
A short time later, Ripps stood in front of his asteroid base and watched the
great cruiser drive into space. A short distance away, a snapper boat was lashed to the
landing boat. O'Brien had insisted on leaving it with a word of warning.
"'Tez-connies are plenty smart. I don't like leaving you unprotected, even within reach of
Mercury and Terra, but orders are orders. Keep the snapper boat, and you'll at least be able to put
up a fight if you bump into trouble. The asteroid sped on its lonely way for two days, and then
a cruiser came out of space, its nuclear drive glowing. The planetaires manned the rocket
launcher, and Rip and Santos stood by the snapper boat just in case, but the cruiser was
the Sagittarius out of Mercury. Captain Goh Shantek, a Chinese planeteer officer, arrived
in one of the cruiser's landing boats, accompanied by three enlisted planetiers.
They were all from the Special Order Squadron on Mercury.
Captain Goh greeted Rip and his men, then handed over a plastic stylus plate,
ordering Rip to deliver six cubic meters of thorium for use on Mercury.
While Coas supervised the cutting of the block, Rip and the captain chatted.
The Mercurian planetar base was in the twilight zone,
but the planetaires did all their work on the sun side,
using special alloy suits to mine the precious nuclite that only the hot planet provided.
At some time during its first years, Mercury had been so close to the sun
that its temperature was driven high enough to permit a subatomic thermonuclear reaction.
The reaction had shorn some elements of their electrons
and left a thin coating of material composed almost entirely of neutrons.
The nucleite was incredibly dense.
It could be handled only in low gravity because of its weight.
But nothing else provided the shielding against radiation and meteors half so well,
and it was in great demand for spaceship skins.
"'Things aren't so bad,' Go told Rip.
"'The base is comfortable, and we only work a two-hour shift out of each ten.
We've had a plague of silly-ditties recently.
They got into one-man's suit while we were working, but mostly they're just a nuisance.'
Rip had heard of the creatures. They were like Earth armadillos, except they were silicon animals
and not carbon like those of Earth. They were drawn to oxygen like iron to a magnet, and their
diamond hard tongues, used for drilling rock in order to get the minerals in which they lived,
could drive right through a space suit. Or if they could work undetected for a short while,
they could drill through the shell of a space station.
Screlibus Primus was the scientific name of the creature, but the fact that it looked like a silicon
armadillo had given it the popular name of Silly Dilly. Apart from its desire for oxygen, it was harmless.
Cowa reported, Sir, the block of thorium is ready. We've hung it on a line behind the landing boat.
The blast won't hurt it, and it's too big to get inside the boat.
Fine, Coa. Well, Captain, that does it.
The Mercurian planetiers got into their craft and blasted off, trailing the block of thorium in their exhaust.
Rip watched the cruiser take the craft and thorium aboard, then drive toward Mercury,
brilliant sunlight reflecting from its sleek sides.
The planet was only a short distance away by spaceship.
It was the largest thing in space, except for the sun, as seen from the asteroid.
To rip, it looked about three times the size of the moon as seen from Earth.
Past the orbit of Mercury, the sun's side of the asteroid grew dangerously hot for men in
space suits. Rip and the planetaires stayed in the bitter cold of the dark side, which ceased
to be entirely dark. Even the temperature rose somewhat. They were close enough to the sun
so that the prominences, great flaming tongues of hydrogen that sped many thousands of miles
into space, gave them light and enough heat to register on Ripp's instruments.
Mercury was left far behind, and the Earth could not be seen because of the sun.
There was nothing to do now, but ride out the rest of the trip as comfortably as possible
until it was time to throw the asteroid into an ever-tightening series of elliptical orbits around Earth,
known as breaking ellipses.
The method would use Earth's gravity to slow them down to the proper speed.
A single atomic bomb and a half-dozen tubes of rocket fuel remained.
Then, as Rip was enjoying the comfort of air during his off-watch hour in the boat compartment,
Coa beat an alarm on the door.
Rip and the planeteers with him hurriedly got into spacesuits and opened up.
"'It's Terra Base calling on the communicator, sir,' Coa reported.
"'Urgent message, they said, and they want to talk to you personally.'
Rip hurried to the base cave.
The communicator-indicator light was glowing red.
He plugged in his helmet circuit and said,
said, "'This is Lieutenant Foster. Go ahead.'
A voice crackled across space from Earth.
"'This is Terra Base, Foster. A Consop's cruiser has apparently been hiding behind the sun
waiting for you. Our screens just picked it up, heading your way. We've sent orders to
the Sagittarius on Mercury to give you cover, and the Aquila has taken off from here.
But get this, Foster. The Consop's cruiser will reach you first. You have about one hour.
Do you understand?"
RIP understood all right.
He understood too well.
Got you, he said shortly.
Now what?
The communicator buzzed.
Take any appropriate action.
You're on your own, Foster.
Sorry.
Sending the cruisers is all we can do.
We'll stand by for word from you.
If you think of any way we can help, let us know.
Rip asked.
How long before the cruisers arrive?
You're too close to us for them to move fast. They'll have to use time accelerating and decelerating.
The Sagittarius should arrive in something less than two hours and the Aquila a few minutes later.
The communicator paused, then continued.
One more thing, Foster. The Connie's know how badly we want that asteroid,
but they also know we don't want it enough to start a war. Got that?
Got it, Rip stated Riley.
I got it good. Thanks for the warning, Terra Base. Foster off. Terabase off. Stay out of Hivak.
Fine advice, if it could be taken. Rip stared up at the brilliant stars, thinking fast.
The Connie would have almost an hour's lead on the Space Patrol cruisers. In that hour,
if the Connie were willing to pay the price and blasted snapper boats, Consops would have the
asteroid. And Terra Base had made it clear that the Space Patrol would not try to blast the
Connie Cruiser and take back the asteroid because that would mean war. Added together, the fact
said just one thing. They had one hour in which to think of some way to hold off the Connie's
for an additional hour. The planetaires were clustered around him. Rip asked grimly,
Any of you ever study the ancient art of magic?
The planetaires remain silent and tense.
Magic is what we need, Rip told them.
We have to make the whole asteroid disappear, or else we have to conjure up a space cruiser
out of the thorium. Otherwise, we have a little more than an hour before we're either
prisoners or dead.
End of Chapter 12. Chapter 13 of Rip Foster
Rides the Gray Planet by Harold Goodwin.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Rip Foster Rides the Gray Planet
Chapter 13
Peril at Parahelian
Sergeant Major Coa had made no comment
since notifying Rip of the call from Terra Base.
Now he asked thoughtfully,
Lieutenant, can the county launch boats this close to the sun?
Won't the sun's pull suck them right in?
Corporal Peterson scoffed.
"'Nah, Coa, if Sun's gravity be that strong, it put us in, too?'
"'Not quite, Peterson,' Rep corrected.
"'Coa is on the right track. The pull of the sun is pretty strong,
but I don't think it's strong enough to capture boats.'
He had to figure the asteroid's orbit to pass as close to the Sun as possible
while maintaining a margin of safety. He had wanted to use the Sun's gravity to pick up speed.
His regular star sightings had told him several days before that the sun was dragging them.
But Coa had started a train of ideas running through Ripp's head.
If they could get close enough to the sun, so small boats would be unable to break free of its gravity,
the Connie wouldn't dare send a landing force.
The powerful engines of a cruiser could break loose from Saul's pull,
but not the chemical jets of a cruiser's boats.
Rip got his instruments and pulled out a special slide rule designed for,
use in space. He had COA stand by with stylus and computation board and take down figures as he
called them off. He recalculated the safety factor he had used when deciding how close to put the asteroid
to the sun, then took quick star sites to determine their exact position. They were within a few
miles of perihelian, the point at which they would be closest to Saul. Rip tapped glove fingers
on his helmet absently. If they could blast out of the orbit and drive into the sun, the side of the
Sun. He estimated the result. A few miles per second of extra speed would put them so far within the
Sun's field of gravity that within an hour or so small boats would venture into space only at their
peril. He reviewed the equipment. They had tubes of rocket fuel, but the tubes wouldn't give the
powerful thrust needed for this job. They had one atomic bomb. One wasn't enough. Not only must they
drive toward the Sun, they must keep reserve power to blast free again.
If only they had a pair of nuclear charges.
He called his planetaires together and outlined the problem.
Perhaps one of them would have an idea.
But no useful suggestions were forthcoming until little Dominico spoke up.
Sir, why don't we make two bombs from one?
I wish we could, Rip said.
Do you know how, Domenico?
No, Lieutenant, if we headed the parts, I could put bombs together.
I can take them apart, but I don't know.
know how to make two out of one." The Italian planeter looked accusingly at Rip.
"'I thought maybe you know, sir.'
Rip grunted. If they had parts, he could assemble nuclear bombs, too. Part of his physics
training had been concerned with fission and its various applications, but no one had taught
him how to make two bombs out of one. The theory of nuclear explosions was simple enough. Two or
more correctly sized pieces of plutonium or uranium isotope, when brought together, formed
what was known as a critical mass, which would fission. The fissioning released energy and produced
the explosion. But there was a wide gap between theory and practice. A nuclear bomb was actually
pretty complicated. It had to be complicated to keep the pieces of the fissionable material apart
until a chemical explosion drove them together, fast and hard enough to create a fission
explosion. If the pieces weren't brought together rapidly enough, the mass would fish in in a
slow chain reaction, and no explosion would result. Rip was trained in scientific analysis.
He tackled the problem logically, considering the design of a nuclear bomb and the reasons for it.
Atomic bombs had to be carried. That meant an outer casing was necessary. Probably the casing had a
to do with the design. Suppose no casing were required. What would be needed? He took the stylus and
computation board from COA and jotted down the parts required. First, two or more pieces of plutonium
large enough to form a critical mass. Second, a neutron source, some material with a type of radioactivity
that produced neutrons to start the reaction. Third, some kind of neutron reflector. And fourth,
to drive the pieces together.
Did they have all those items?
He checked them off.
Their single 5KT bomb contained at least enough plutonium
for two critical masses, if brought together inside a good neutron reflector.
Each mass should give about a two-kilaton explosion.
And they did have a good neutron reflector, nucleite.
There wasn't anything better for the purpose.
What have we got for a neutron source?
He asked aloud.
He was really asking himself, but he got a quick answer from COA.
Sir, some of the stuff left in the craters from the other explosions gives off neutrons.
You're right, Rip agreed instantly. A small piece from one of the craters,
when combined with half of the neutron source and the bomb, should be enough.
As for the explosive, they had exploding heads on their attack rockets.
In other words, he had what he needed, except for a method of putting all the pieces together.
to create a bomb.
If only they had a tube of some sort
that would withstand the chemical explosion,
the one that brought the critical mass together.
He told the planetaires what he had been thinking,
then asked,
"'Any ideas for a tube?'
"'How about a tube from this knapper boat?'
Santos suggested.
Rips shook his head.
"'Not strong enough.
They're designed to withstand the slow push of rocket fuel,
not the fast wrap of an explosion.
When I say slow, I mean slow burning when compared with explosive.
Who has another idea?
Kemp, the expert torchman, said,
"'Sir, I can burn you a tube into the asteroid.'
Rip grabbed the planetare so hard they both floated upward.
"'Kemp, that's wonderful! That's it!'
The details took form in his mind even as he called orders.
Domenico, tear down that bomb.
Santos, remove two heads from your rockets and wire them to explode on electrical impulse.
Kemp, will want the tube just a fraction of an inch wider than a rocket head.
Get your torch ready.
He took the stylus and began calculating.
He talked as he worked, telling the planetaires exactly what they were up against.
I'm figuring out where to put the charge so it will do the most good, but my data isn't
complete.
If our homemade bomb goes off, I don't know exactly.
how much power it will give. If it gives too much, we'll be driven so close to the sun
will never get free of its gravity." Bradshaw, the English planeteer, said mildly,
"'Don't worry, Lieutenant. We're caught either way. If it isn't the solar frying-pan,
it's conny fire.' A chorus of agreement came from the other planetaires.
"'What a crew,' Rip thought. "'What a great gang of space pirates!'
He finished his calculations and found the exact spot where Kemp would cut.
A few feet away from the spot was a thick pyramid of Khorium.
That would do, and they could cut into it horizontally, instead of drilling straight down.
He pointed to it,
Let's have a hole straight in for six feet, and keep it straight, Kemp, allow enough room for a lining of nuclite.
Koa, pull a sheet of nuclite out of the cave and cut it to size.
Kemp's torch already was slicing into the metal.
Rip asked,
Can you well with that thing, Kemp?
Just show me what you want, sir.
Good.
Rip motioned to Trudeau.
Frenchy will need a strong rod at least eight feet long.
The French planeteer hurried off.
Rip consulted his chronometer.
Less than ten minutes had passed since the call from Terra Base.
He went over his plan again.
It had to work.
If it didn't, asteroid and planetaires would end up as subatomic particles in the Sun's
photosphere, because he had calculated his blast to drive the asteroid past the limit of safety.
It was the only way he could be sure of putting them beyond danger from Connie landing boats or
snapper boats. The Connie would have only one chance to bring his cruiser down on the asteroid.
If he tried that, Rip thought grimly, he would get a surprise. The second nuclear charge would
be set ready to be fired. The Connie cruiser was so big that no matter how it pulled up to the asteroid,
some part of it would be close enough to the charge to be blown into space dust. No cruiser could
survive an atomic explosion within 500 yards, and the Connie would have to get closer to the nuclear
charge than that. Domenico reported that the bomb had been dismantled. Rip went to it and examined
the raw plutonium, being careful to keep the piece as widely separated.
This particular bomb design used five pieces of plutonium which were driven together to form a ball.
Ripp made a quick estimate. Two were enough to form a critical mass. He would use two to blast into the sun and three to blast out again. He would need the extra kick.
There was only one trouble. The pieces were wedge-shaped. They would have to be mounted in thorium in order to keep them rigid. Only Kemp could do that. They had no cutting-tribes.
tool but the torch. Santos appeared, carrying a rockethead under each arm. They had wires wound
around them, ready to be attached to an electrical source. Rip hurried back to where Kemp
was at work. The private was using a cutting nozzle that threw an almost invisible flame
five feet long. In air, the nozzle wouldn't have worked effectively beyond two feet, but in space
it cut right down to the end of the flame. Kemp had his arm inside the hole and was peering past it
as he finished the cut.
"'Done, sir,' he said,
and adjusted the flame to a spout of red fire.
He thrust the torch into the hole
and quickly withdrew it as pieces of thorium flew out.
A stream of water hosed into the tube
would have washed them out the same way.
Ripp took a block of plutonium from Domenico
and handed it to Kemp.
Cut a plug and fit this into it.
Then cut a second plug for the other piece.
They have to match perfectly,
and you can't put them together to try out the fit. If you do, we'll have fission right here in the open.
Kemp searched and found a piece he had cut in making the tube. It was perfectly round, ideal for the
purpose. He sliced off the inner side where it tapered to a cone, then, working only by eye
estimate, cut out a hole in which the wedge of fission material would fit. He wasn't off by a thirty-second of an inch.
skillful application of the torch melted the thorium around the wedge and sealed it tightly.
Coel was ready with a sheet of nuclite. Trudeau arrived with a long pole he had made by lashing two crate sticks together.
Rip gave directions as they formed a cylinder of nuclite. Camp spot-welded it, and they pushed it into the hole,
forming a lining. Nunes found a small piece of material in one of the earlier craters. It would provide some neutrons to start the chain react.
Ripp added it to the front of the plutonium wedge, along with a piece of beryllium from the
bomb, and Kemp welded it in place. They put the thorium block which contained the plutonium
into the hole, the plutonium facing outward. Trudeau rammed it into the bottom with his pole.
The neutron source, the neutron reflector, and one piece of fissionable material were in place.
Kemp sliced another round block of thorium out of a nearby crystal and fitted the second wedge
of plutonium into it. At first, Rip had worried about the two pieces of plutonium making a good
enough contact, but Kemp's skillful hand and precision eye removed that worry. The torchman finished
fitting the plutonium and carried the block to the tube opening. He tried it, removed a slight
irregularity with his torch, then said quietly, finished, sir. Rip took over. He slid the thorium
plutonium block into the tube, took a rockethead from Santos, and used it to push it to push.
the block in farther. When the rockethead was about four inches inside the tube, its wires trailing
out, Rip called Kemp. At his direction, the torchman sliced a thin slot up the face of the
crystal. Rip fitted the wires into it and held them in place with a small wedge of thorium.
Kemp cut a plug, fitted it into the hole, and welded the seams closed. The tube was sealed.
When electric current fired the rocket head, the thorium carrying the plutonium weight,
wedge would be driven forward to meet the wedge in the back, and unless Rip had miscalculated
the mass of the two pieces, they would have their nuclear blast. Rip surveyed the crystal with
some anxiety. It looked right. Domenico already had rigged the timer from the atomic bomb. He
connected the wires, then looked at Rip. "'Do I, uh, said it, sir?'
"' Load the communicator, the extra bomb parts, the rocket launcher and rockets, the cutting equipment,
My instruments and the tubes of fuel, Rip ordered.
Leave everything else in the cave.
The planetaires ran to obey.
Rip waited until the landing boat was nearly loaded,
then told Dominico to set the timer for five minutes.
He wondered how they would explode the second charge
since they had only the one timer left,
then forgot about it.
Time enough to worry when faced with the problem.
I'll take the snapper boat, he stated.
Santos and the gunners say,
seat. Coa, in charge in the landing boat. Doused pilot. Let's show an exhaust. He fitted himself into
the tight pilot seat of the snapper boat while Santos climbed in behind. Then, handling the controls
with the skill of long practice, he lifted the tiny fighting rocket above the asteroid and waited
for the landing boat. When it joined up, Rip led the way to safety. As he cut his exhaust to wait
for the explosion, he sighted past the snapper boat's nose to the asteroid.
He was moving, and the direction of his move told him the sun was already pulling.
Its pull was strong, too. He cut his jets back on just to hold position and saw
douse do the same. Another few miles toward the sun, and the landing boat wouldn't have
the power to get away from Saul's gravity. A few miles beyond that, even the powerful little
snapper boat would be caught. Below, the timer reached zero. A mighty fan of fire shot into space.
The asteroid shuddered from the blast, then swerved gradually, picking up speed as well as new direction.
RIP swallowed hard.
Now they were committed.
They would reach a new perihelian far beyond the limits of safety.
P for perihelian and P for peril.
In this case, they were the same thing.
End of Chapter 13.
Chapter 14 of Rip Foster Rides the Grey Planet.
by Harold Goodwin.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Rip Foster Rides the Gray Planet
Chapter 14 Between Two Fires
Back on the asteroid, the planetaires started laying the second atomic charge.
Ripp selected the spot, found a nearby crystal that would serve to house the bomb,
and Camp started cutting.
The planetaires knew what to do now, and the work went rapidly.
Ripp kept an eye on his chronometer.
According to the message from Terra Base,
he had about 15 minutes before the Consop's cruiser arrived.
"'We have one advantage we didn't have back in the asteroid belt,' he remarked to
Coa.
"'Back there, they could have landed anywhere on the rock.
Now they have to stick to the dark side.
Snapper boats could last on the sun's side,
but men in ordinary spacesuits couldn't.'
"'That's good,' Coa agreed.
We have only one side to defend.
Why don't we put the rocket launcher right in the middle of the dark side?
Go ahead, and have all men check their pistols and knives.
We don't know what's likely to happen when that Connie flames in.
Rip walked over to the communicator and plugged his suit into the circuit.
This is the asteroid calling Terra Base. Over.
This is Terra Base. Go ahead, Foster. How are you doing?
"'If you need anything cooked, send it to us,' Rip replied.
"'We have heat enough to cook anything, including tungsten alloy.'
He explained briefly what action they had taken.
A new voice came on the communicator.
"'Foster, this is Colonel Stevens.'
Rip responded swiftly.
"'Yes, sir.'
Stevens was the top planeteer, commanding officer of all the special order squadrons.
We piped this circuit into every channel in the system, the colonel said.
Every planeter in the squadrons is listening and rooting for you. Is there anything we can do?
Yes, sir, Rip replied. Do you know if Terra Base has plotted our course this far?
There was a brief silence. Then the Colonel answered.
Yes, Foster, we have a complete track from the time you started showing on the terrace screens,
about halfway between the orbits of Mars and Earth.
Did you just get our change of direction?
Yes, we're following you on the screens.
Then, sir, I'd appreciate it if you'd put the calculators to work
and make a time-distance plot for the next few hours.
The blast we're saving to push back to safety is about three kilotons.
Let us know the last moment when we can fire
and still get free of Saul's gravity.
You'll have it within 15.
minutes. Anything else, Foster? Nothing else I can think of, sir. Then good luck. We'll be standing by.
Yes, sir. Foster off. Rip disconnected and turned up his helmet communicator, repeating the
conversation to his men. Coa came and stood beside him. Lieutenant, how do we set off this next
charge? There was only one way. When the time came to blast, they would be too close to the sun to
take to the boats. The blast had to be set off from the asteroid.
"'We'll get underground as far away from the bomb as we can,' Rip said.
He surveyed the dark side, which was rapidly growing less dark.
"'I think the second crater will do. Kempkins squared off on the side toward the blast
to give us a vertical wall to hide behind.'
Koa looked doubtful.
"'Plenty of radiation left in those holes, sir.'
Rip grinned mirthlessly.
Radiation is the least of our problems.
I'd rather get an overdose of gamma than get blasted into space.
A yell rang in his helmet.
Here comes the Connie!
Rip looked up, startled.
The Consop's cruiser passed directly overhead, about ten miles away.
It was decelerating rapidly.
Rip wondered why they hadn't spotted it earlier
and realized that Connie had come from the direction of the hot side.
The enemy cruiser was probably the same one that had attacked them before.
He must have lain in wait for days, keeping between the sun and Terra.
That way, the screens wouldn't pick him up, since only a few observatories scanned the sun
regularly.
To the observatories, the cruiser would have been only a tiny speck, too small to be noticed.
Or if they had noticed it, the astronomers probably decided it was just a very tiny sunspot.
The planetaires worked with increased speed.
Kemp welded the final plug into place, then hurried to the crater from which they would set off the charge.
Domenico and Dousse connected the wires from the rocket head to a reel of wire and rolled it toward the crater.
Nunes got a hand-driven dynamo from the supplies and tested it for use in setting off the charge.
Santos stood by the rocket launcher, with Peterson ready to put another rack of rockets into the device when necessary.
Rip and Koa watched the Connie Cruiser. It decelerated to a stop for a brief second,
then started moving again with no jet showing.
"'That's the sun pulling,' Rip said exultantly. They'll have to keep blasting to maintain position.
The Konsop's commander didn't wait to trim ship against the sun's drag. His airlocks opened,
clearly visible to Rip and Koa, because that sight of the cruiser was brilliant with sunlight.
Ten snapper boats sped forth.
Rip was certain now that this was the enemy cruiser they had fought off back in the asteroid belt.
Two Connie snapper boats had been destroyed in that clash,
which explained why the commander was sending out only ten boats,
instead of the full quota of twelve.
The squadron instantly formed a V, like a strange space letter made up of globes.
The sun's gravity pulled at them, dragging them off course.
Rip watched as flames poured from their stern tubes.
They were firing full speed ahead, but the drag of the sun distorted their line of flight
into a great arc.
Ripp saw the strategy instantly.
The Connie Commander knew the situation exactly, and he was taken everything in one great gamble,
sending his snapper boats to land on the asteroid, to crash land if necessary.
The asteroid was so close to the sun that even the powerful fighting rockets could use most of
fuel in simply combating its gravity.
All hands stand by to repel Connie's,
Rip shouted and drew his pistol. He looked into the magazine,
saw that he had a full clip, and then charged the weapon.
Santos was crouched over the rocket launcher,
his space gloves working rapidly as he kept the rockets pointed
at the enemy.
Rip called,
Santos, fire at will!
The planetaires formed a skirmish line which pivoted on the launcher.
Only Kemp remained at work.
His torch flared, slicing through the thorium as he prepared their firing position.
The atomic charge was ready.
The wires had been laid up to the rim of the crater in which Kemp worked, and the dynamo was attached.
Ripp was everywhere, checking on the launcher, on Kemp, on the pistols of his men,
and Santos, hunched over his illuminated sight, watched the Connie's snapper boats draw near.
Here we go.
The Filipino corporal muttered. He pressed the trigger. The first rocket sped outward in a sweeping
curve, and for a moment Rip opened his mouth to yell at Santos. The sun's gravity affected
the attack rockets, too. Then he saw that the corporal had allowed for the sun's pull.
The rocket curved into the squadron of oncoming boats, and they all tried to dodge at once.
Two of them met in a sideways crash, then a third staggered as its stern globe flared and exploded.
Santos had scored a hit.
Rip called,
Good shooting!
The corporal's reply was rueful.
Sir, that wasn't the one I aimed at.
The sun's pull is worse than I figured.
The damaged snapper boat instantly blasted from its nose tubes, decelerated, and went into reverse,
flipping through space crab-wise, as it tried to regain the safety of the crew.
cruiser. The two boats that had crashed while trying to dodge were blasting in great spurts of
flame, following the example of their damaged companion. Seven left, Rip called, and another rocket
flashed on its way. He followed its trail as it curved away from the asteroid and into the squadron.
Its proximity fuse detonated in the exhaust of a cony boat, blowing the tube out of position.
The boat yawned wildly, cut its stern tubes, and blasted to a stomach.
from the bow tube. Then it too started backward toward the cruiser. Six left. Flame blossomed
a few yards from Rip. He was picked up bodily and flung into space, whirling end over end.
Koa's voice rang in his helmet. "'Watch it! They're firing back!' Rip tugged frantically at an air-bottle
in his belt. He pulled it out and used it to whirl him upright again. Then its air-blast drove him back
to the surface of the asteroid.
sweat poured from his forehead, and the suit ventilator whined as it worked to pick up the extra
moisture.
Great Cosmos!
That was close.
Koa called.
All right, sir?
Fine.
Santos fired again, twice in rapid succession.
The Connie's snapper boats scattered as the proximity fuses produce flowers of fire among
them.
Two near misses, but they threw the enemy off course.
Rip watched tensely as the boats fought to regain.
their course. He knew asteroid, cruiser, and boats were speeding toward the sun at close to
50 miles a second, and the drag was getting terrific. The Connie's knew it too. There was an exultant
yell from the planetaires as two of the boats gave up and turned back, using full power to regain
the safety of the mothership. Four left, and they were getting close. Santos scored a direct hit
on the nose of the nearest one, but its momentum drove it within a few yards.
of the asteroid. Five space-suited figures erupted from it, holding hand propulsion units,
tubes of rocket fuel used for hand combat in empty space. The Connie's lit off their propulsion tubes
and drove feet first for the asteroid. The planetaires estimated where the enemy would land,
and were there waiting with pointed handguns. The Connie's had their hands over their heads,
holding the propulsion tubes. They took one look at the gleaming planeteer guns,
and their hands stayed upright.
The planetaires
lashed the Connie's hands behind them
with their own safety lines,
and, at Rip's orders,
dumped all but one of them
into the crater
where Kemp was just finishing.
Three snapper boats remained.
Rip watched,
holding tightly to the arm of the Connie
he had kept at his side.
The man wore the insignia of an officer.
The remaining snapper boats were going to make it.
Santos threw rockets among them
and scored hits,
but the boats kept coming.
The Connie's were too far away from the cruiser to return, and they knew it.
Getting to the asteroid was their only chance.
Rip called,
Santos, cease fire.
Set the launcher for ground level.
Let them land, but don't fire until I give the word.
He hoped his plan would work.
Experience back in the asteroid belt had taught him something about Connie's.
He put his helmet against the prisoners for direct communication.
"'You speak English?' the man shouted back.
"'Yes.'
"'Good. We're going to let your friends land. As soon as they do, I want you to yell to them.
Say we have assault rockets trained on them. Tell them to surrender, or they'll be killed in their tracks.
Got that?'
The Connie replied.
"'Suppose I refuse.'
Ripp put his space-knife against the man's stomach.
"'Then we'll get them with rockets.'
But you won't care, because you won't know it.
The truth was, Santos couldn't hope to get them all with his rockets.
They might overcome the Connie's in hand-to-hand fighting,
but there would be a cause to pay in planeteer casualties.
Rip hoped the Connie wouldn't call his bluff, because that's all it was.
He couldn't use a space knife on an unarmed prisoner.
The Connie didn't know that.
In Ripp's place, he would have no compunctions about using the knife,
So instead of calling Rip's bluff, he agreed.
The snapper boats blew their front tubes, decelerating, and squashed down to the asteroid in a
roar of exhaust flames, sending the planetaires running out of the way.
Rip thrust harder with his space knife and yelled,
Tell them!
The Connie officer nodded.
Turn up my communicator!
Rip turned it on full, and the Connie barked quick instructions.
The exhaust died, and five men filed out of each boat with hands.
hands held high. Rip blew a drop of perspiration from the tip of his nose.
Empty space. It was a good thing Connie Morale was bad. The enemy's willingness to surrender
had saved them a costly fight. The planetaires rounded up the prisoners and secured them
while Rip took an anxious look at the communicator. It was about time he heard from Terra Base.
The light was glowing, for all he knew, it might have been glowing for many minutes. He plugged into
the circuit. This is Foster on the asteroid. Terra base to Foster. Listen, you will reach
optimum position on the time distance curve at 2306. Repeat back. 2306. Got it. We will reach
optimum position at 2306. He looked at his chronometer and his pulse stopped. It was 2258.
They had just eight minutes before the sun caught them forever. A top.
atomic blast or no. And the Connie cruiser was still overhead, with no friendly cruisers in sight.
He looked up, white-faced. Not only was the Connie still there, but its main airlock was
sliding open to disclose a new danger. In the opening, ready to launch, an assault boat waited.
The assault boats were something only the Connie's used. They were about four times the size of a
snapper boat, less maneuverable, but more powerful. They carried twenty men.
and a pair of guided missiles with atomic warheads.
End of Chapter 14.
Chapter 15 of Rip Foster Rides the Gray Planet by Harold Goodwin.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Rip Foster Rides the Gray Planet.
Chapter 15. The Rocketeers
Rip ran for the snapper boat, feet moving as rapidly as lack of gravity would permit.
He called instructions.
Santos, turn the launcher over to Peterson and come with me.
Koa, take over.
Start throwing rockets at that boat and don't stop until you run out of ammunition.
He reached the snapper boat and squeezed in.
Santos closed behind him.
As he strapped himself into the seat, he called,
Koa, get this and get it straight.
At 2305, fire the bomb.
Fire it whether I'm back or not.
Got that?
Koa replied.
"'Got it, sir!'
That would give the planetaires a minute's leeway,
not much of a safety margin, especially
when he wasn't sure how much power the improvised atomic charge would produce.
He plugged into the snapper boat's communicator and called,
"'Ready, Santos?'
"'Ready, Lieutenant.'
He braced himself against acceleration and flipped the speed control to full power.
The fighting rocket rammed out from the asteroid,
snapping it back against the seat.
He made a quick check. Gun sight on. Fuel tanks, almost full. Propulsion tubes racked handy to his hand.
Space patches ready to be grabbed and slapped on in case an enemy shot hold helmet or suit.
They drove toward the enemy cruiser at top speed, swerving in a great arc as the sun pulled at them.
The enemy's big boat was out of the ship, its jets firing as it started for the asteroid.
Ripp leaned over his illuminated gunside.
The boat showed up clearly, the rings of the sight framing it.
He estimated distance and the pull of the sun, then squeezed the trigger on the speed control handle.
The cannon in the nose spat flame. He watched tensely and saw the charge explode on the
hall of the Connie cruiser. He had underestimated the sun's drag. He compensated and tried again.
He missed. Now that he was closer and the charge had less distance to travel, he had overestimated the
son's effect. He gritted his teeth. The next shot would be at close range. The fighting rocket
closed space, and the landing boat loomed large in the sight. He fired again, and the shot
blew metal loose from the top of the boat's hull. A hit, but not good enough. He leaned over
the site to fire again, but before he had sighted an explosion blew the landing boat completely
around. Koa and Peterson had scored a hit from the asteroid. The big boat fired its side, and
jets and spun around on course again. Flame blew from its side as Connie Gunners tried to get the
range on the snapper boat. Rip was within reach now. He fired at point-blank range and flashed over the
boat as its front end exploded. Santos, firing from the rear, hit it again as the snapper boat
passed. Rip threw the rocket into a turn that rammed him against the top of his harness. He
steadied on a line with the crippled Connie craft. It was hard hit. The bow jets flickered fitfully,
and the stern tubes were dead. He sighted, fired. A charge hit the boat aft and blew its stern tubes
off completely. And at the same moment, a Connie Gunner got a perfect bead on the snapper boat.
Space blew up in Rip's face. The snapper boat slewed wildly as the Connie's shot took effect.
Ripp worked his controls frantically, trying to stray.
the rocket out more by instinct than anything else.
His eyes recovered from the blinding flash, and he gulped as he saw the raw, twisted
metal where the boat's nose had been. He managed to correct the boat's twisting by
using the stern tubes, but he was no longer in full control. For a moment, panic gripped him.
Without full control, he couldn't get back to the asteroid. Then he forced himself to steady down.
He sized up the situation.
They were still underway, the stern-tubes pushing, but their trajectory would take them right under
the crippled Connie boat. The sun was blazing into the fighting rocket with such intensity
that he had trouble seeing. There was nothing he could do but pass close to the Connie.
The enemy gunners would fire, but he had to take his chances. He looked down at the asteroid and
saw an orange trail as COA launched another rocket. The shot from the asteroid ticked the bottom
of the Connie boat and exploded. The Connie rolled violently. Tubes flared as the pilot fought to correct
the roll. He slowed the spinning as Rip and Santos passed, just long enough for a Connie Gunner to get
in a final shot. The shell struck directly under Rip. He felt himself pushed violently upward,
and at the same moment he reacted, by hunch and not by reason. He rammed the controls full ahead,
and the dying rocket cut space, curving slowly as flaming fuel spurred it from the ruptured tanks.
Ripp yelled, "'Santos, you all right?'
"'I think so, Lieutenant. We're on fire. I know it. Get ready to abandon ship!'
When the main mass of fuel caught, the rocket would become an inferno.
Ripps smashed at the escape hatch above his head, grabbed propulsion tubes from the rack, and called,
"'Now!' He pulled the release on his harness, stood.
stood up on the seat and thrust with all his leg power. He catapulted out of the burning
snapper boat into space. Santos followed a second later, and the crippled rocket twisted
wildly under the two planetaires. "'Don't use the propulsion tubes,' Rip called. Slow down with
your air bottles!' He thrust the tubes into his belt, found his air bottles, and pointed two of them
in the direction they had been traveling. He wanted to come to a stop to let the wild snapper boat get
away from them. The compressed air bottles did the trick. He and Santos slowed down as the little
jets overcame the inertia that was taking them along with the burning boat. The boat was spiraling
now and burning freely. It moved away from them, its stern jets firing weakly as fuel burned in
the tank. Rip took a look toward the enemy cruiser. The assault boat was no longer showing and
exhaust. Instead, it was being dragged rapidly away from the Connie Cruiser by the pull of the sun.
At least they had hit it in time to prevent launching of the atomic-guided missiles,
or he thought perhaps the enemy had never intended using them.
The principal effect, besides killing the planetaires,
would have been to drive the asteroid into the sun at an even faster rate.
The enemy assault boat was no longer a menace.
Its occupants would be lucky if they succeeded in saving their own lives.
Ripp wondered what the Connie Cruiser commander would try now.
Only one thing remained, and that was to set the cruiser down on the asteroid.
If the Connie tried, he would arrive at just about the time set for releasing the nuclear charge,
and that would be the end of the cruiser, and probably of the planeteers as well.
Santos asked Cooley,
"'Lotennet, wouldn't you say we're in sort of a bad spot?'
Ripp had been so busy sizing up the situation that he hadn't thought about his own predicament.
Now he looked down and suddenly realized that he was floating free in space,
a considerable distance above the asteroid, and with only small propulsion tubes for power.
He gasped,
Great space! We're in a mess, Santos.
The Filipino corporal asked, still in a calm voice,
How long before we're dragged into the sun, sir?
Ripp stared.
Santos had used the same tone he might have used in asking for a piece of a Nusian
true. An officer couldn't be less calm, so Rip replied in a voice he hoped was casual.
I wouldn't worry, Santos. We won't know it. The heat will get through our suits long before then.
In fact, the heat should be overloading their ventilating systems right now. In a few minutes,
the cooling elements would break down, and that would be the end. He listened for the accelerated
wine as the ventilating system struggled under the increased heat load, and heard not
Funny? Had it overloaded and given out already? No, that was impossible. He would be feeling the heat
on his body, if that were the case. He looked for an explanation and realized for the first time
that they weren't in the sunlight at all. They were in darkness. His searching glance told him
they were in the cone of shadow stretching out from behind the asteroid. The thorium rock was between
them and the sun. His lips moved sound.
soundlessly. Major Joe Barris had been right. In a jam, trust your hunch. He had acted instinctively,
not even thinking what he was doing as he used the last full power of the stern tubes to throw them
into the shadow cone. And he knew in the same moment that it could save their lives. The sun's
pull would only accelerate their fall toward the asteroid. He said exultantly,
"'We're staying out of high vac, Santos. Light off a propulsion tube. Let's get back to the asteroid.'
He pulled a tube from his belt, held it above his head, and thumbed the striker mechanism.
The tube flared, pushing downward on his hand. He held steady and plummeted feet first toward the
rock. Santos was only a few seconds behind him. Ripp saw the corporal's tube flare and knew
that everything was all right, at least for the moment, even though the asteroid was
still a long way down. He looked upward at the Connie cruiser and saw that it was moving.
Its exhaust increased in length and deepened slightly in color, as Rip watched. His forehead
creased in a frown. What was the Connie up to? Then he saw side jets flare out from the
projecting control tubes and knew the ship was maneuvering. Rip realized suddenly that the
cruiser was going to pick up the crippled assault boat. He hadn't expected such a humane
move after his first meeting with the Connie Cruiser, when the commander had been willing to
sacrifice his own men. This time, however, there was a difference he saw. The commander would lose
nothing by picking up the assault boat, and he would save a few men. Rips supposed that manpower
met something, even to consop's. His propulsion tube reached branch loose, and for a few moments he watched,
checking his speed and direction. Then, before he lit off another tube, he checked his chronometer.
The illuminated dial registered 2301. They had just four minutes to get to the asteroid.
He spoke swiftly.
Waste no time in lighting off, Santos. That nuclear charge goes in four minutes.
The Filipino corporal said merely,
Yes, sir.
Ripp pulled a two from his belt, held it overhead, and triggered it.
His flight through space speeded up, but he wasn't at all sure they would make it.
He turned up his helmet communicator to full power and called,
"'Coa, can you hear me?'
The Sergeant Major's reply was faint in his helmet.
"'I hear you weakly. Do you hear me?'
"'Same way,' Rip replied.
"'Get this, Coa. Don't fail to explode that charge at 23.05. Can you see us?'
The reply was very slightly stronger.
"'I will explode the charge as order, Lieutenant. We can see a pair of rocket exhausts,
but no boats. Is that you?'
Yes, we're coming in on propulsion tubes."
Coa waited for a long moment then.
"'Sir, what if you're not with us by 2305?'
"'You know the answer,' Rip retorted crisply.
"'Of course, Coa knew. The nuclear blast would send Rip and Santos spinning into outer space,
perhaps crippled, burned, or completely irradiated.
But the lives of two men couldn't delay the blast that would save the lives of eight
others, not counting prisoners. Rip estimated his speed and course in the distance to the asteroid.
He was increasingly sure that they wouldn't make it, and the knowledge was like the cold of
space in his stomach. It would be close, but not close enough. A minute would make all the
difference. For a few heartbeats he almost called COA and told him to wait that extra minute,
to explode the nuclear charge at 2306, at the very last second. But,
even planeter chronometers could be off by a few seconds, and he couldn't risk it. His men had to be
given some leeway. The decision made, he put his mind to the problem. There must be some way out.
There must be. He surveyed the asteroid. The nuclear charge was on his left side, pretty close to the
sun line. At least he and Santos could angle to the right to get as far away from the blast as possible.
The edge of the asteroid's shadow was barely visible.
that it was visible at all was due to the minute particles of matter and gas that surrounded the
sun, even millions of miles out into space. He reduced helmet power and told Santos,
"'Angle to the right. Get as close to the edge of shadow as you can without being cooked.'
As an afterthought, he asked, "'How many tubes do you have?'
"'One after this, sir. I had three.'
Ripp also had one left. That was correct, because snapper boats can.
carried three in each man's position.
"'Save the one you have left,' he ordered.
He didn't know yet what use they would be,
but it was always a good idea to have some kind of reserve.
The Connie Cruiser was sliding up to the crippled assault boat.
Ripp took a quick look, then shifted his hands,
and angled toward the edge of shadow.
When he was within a few feet,
he reversed the direction of the tube to keep from shooting out into sunlight.
A second or two later, the tube burned out.
Santos was several yards away and slightly above him.
Ripp saw that the planeter was all right and turned his attention to the cruiser once more.
It was close enough to the assault boat to haul it in with grappling hooks.
The hooks emerged and engaged the torn metal of the boat, then drew it into the waiting port.
The massive air door slid closed.
The question was, would the Connie try to set his ship down on the asteroid?
Ripp grinned without mirth.
Now would be a fine time. His chronometer showed a minute and a half to blast time.
He took another look at his own situation. He and Santos were getting close to the asteroid,
but there was still over a half-mile Earth distance to go. They would cover perhaps
three-fourths of that distance before COA fired the charge. He had a daring idea.
How long could he and Santos last in direct sunlight? The effect of the sun in the open
was powerful enough to make lead run like water. Their suits could absorb some heat, and the
ventilating system would take care of quite a lot. They might last as much as three minutes with luck.
They had to take a risk with the full knowledge that the odds were against them. But if they
didn't take the risk, the blast would push them outward from the asteroid into full sunlight.
The end result would be the same.
"'We're not going to make it, Santos,' he began. "'I know it, sir,' Santa.
Ripp thought,
Anyone with that much coolness and sheer nerve rated some kind of special treatment, and the
Filipino corporal had shown his ability time and time again.
He said,
I should have known you knew, Sergeant Santos.
We still have a slight chance.
When I give the word, use an air bottle to push you into the sunlight.
When I give the word again, light off your remaining tube.
Yes, sir, Santos.
Ramos replied, "'Thank you for the promotion. I hope I live to collect the extra rating.'
"'Same here,' Ripp agreed fervently. His eyes were on his chronometer, and with his free hand
he took another air-bottle. When the chronometer registered exactly one minute before blast time,
he called, "'Now!' He triggered the bottle and moved from shadow into glaring sunlight. A slight
motion of the bottle turned him so his back was to the sun. Then he used the remaining compressed air
to push him downward along the edge of the shadow. The sun's gravity tugged at him.
He pulled the last two from his belt and held it ready while he watched his chronometer
creep around. With five seconds to go, he called to Santos and fired it. Acceleration pushed at
him. In the same moment, the nuclear charge exploded.
End of Chapter 15. Chapter 16 of Rip Foster Rides the Grey Planet.
Goodwin. This Libervox recording is in the public domain. Rip Foster Rides the Grey Planet
Chapter 16 Ride the Grey Planet
A mighty hand reached out and shoved Rip, sweeping him through space like a dust moat. He clutched his
propulsion tube with both hands and fought to hold it steady. He swiveled his head quickly,
searching for Santos, and saw the Filipino a dozen rods away, still
holding fast to his tube. From the far horizon of the asteroid, the incandescent fire of the
nuclear blast stretched into space, turning from silver to orange to red as it cooled. Rip knew
they had escaped the heat and blast of the explosion, but there was a question of how much
of the prompt radiation they had absorbed. During the first few seconds, a nuclear blast
vomited gamma radiation and neutrons in all directions. He and Santos, he and Santos,
certainly had gotten plenty. But how much? Putting their dosimeters into a measuring meter aboard a
cruiser would tell them. His low-level colorimeter had long since reached maximum red,
and his high-level dosimeter could be read only on a measuring device. Meanwhile, he had other
worries. Radiation had no immediate effect. At worst, it would be a few hours before he felt any
symptoms. As he sized up his position and that of the asteroid, he led out on a
yell of triumph. His gamble would succeed. He had estimated that, going into the direct gravity pull of
the sun at the proper moment, and lighting off their last tubes, would put them into a landing position.
The asteroid was swerving rapidly, moving into a new orbit that would intersect the course he
and Santos were on. He had planned on the asteroid's change of orbit. In a minute at most they would
be back on the rock. His propulsion tube flared out, and he released it. It would try to him. It would
travel along with him, but his hands would be free. He watched closely as the asteroid drew nearer
and estimated they would land with plenty of room to spare. Then he saw something else. The blast
had started the asteroid turning. He reacted instantly. Turning up his communicator, he yelled,
Koa, the rock is spinning. Cut the prisoners loose, grab the equipment, and run for it. You'll have
to keep running to stay in the shadow. If sunlight hits those fuel tanks,
or the tubes of rocket fuel, they'll explode.
Koa replied Tursley.
Got it.
We're moving.
The planetaires and the prisoners would have to move fast,
running to stay out of direct sunlight.
A moment or two in the sun wouldn't hurt the men,
but the chemical fuels in the cutting tanks and rocket tubes
would explode in a matter of seconds.
At least the Connie cruiser couldn't harm them now,
Rip thought grimly.
He looked for the cruiser and failed to fight it for several seconds.
It had moved. He finally saw its exhaust some distance away. He forgot his own predicament in a
grin. The Connie cruiser had moved, but not because its commander had wanted to. It had been
right in the path of the nuclear blast, although some distance from it. The Connie had been
literally shoved away. Then Rip forgot the cruiser. His suit ventilator was whining under the
terrific heat, and his whole body was bathed in perspiration.
Sun was getting them. It was only a short time until the ventilator overloaded and burned out.
They had to reach the asteroid before then. The trouble was, there was nothing further he could
do about it. He had only air bottles left, and their blast was so weak that the effect wouldn't
speed him up much. Nevertheless, he called to Santos and directed him to use his bottles. Then he did
the same. Santos spoke up, "'Sir, we're going to make it.'
In the same instant, Rip saw that they would land on the dark side.
The asteroid was turning over and over, and for a second he had the impression he was looking
at a turning globe of the Earth, the kind used in elementary school back home.
But this gray planet was scarcely bigger than the giant globe at the entrance of the
Space Council building on Terra.
The gray metal world suddenly leapt into sharp focus and seemed to rush toward him.
It was an optical illusion.
The ability of the eyes to perceive a little.
depth sharply, the faculty known as depth perception, didn't appear to operate normally until
the eyes were within a certain distance of an object. He knew he was going to hit hard. The way to keep
from being hurt was to turn the vertical energy of his arrival into motion in another direction.
As he swept down to the metal surface, he started running, his legs pumping wildly in space.
He hit with a bone-jarring thud, lost his footing, and fell sideways, both,
hands cradling his helmet. He got to his feet instantly and looked for Santos. A good thing his
equipment was shock-mounted, he thought, otherwise the communicator would be knocked for a line of
galaxies. "'Do you all right, sir?' Santos called anxiously. "'Yes, are you? I'm fine. I think the others are
over there,' he pointed. "'We'll find them,' Ripp said. His hip hurt like fury from smashing against
the unyielding metal, and the worst part was that he couldn't rub it. The blow had been strong
enough to hurt through the heavy fabric and air pressure, but his hand wasn't strong enough to compress
the suit. Just the same, he tried. And while he was trying, he found himself in direct
sunlight. He had forgotten to run. Standing still on the asteroid meant turning with it, from darkness
into sunlight and back again. He yelled at Santos and legged it out of there, moving and long.
gliding steps. He regained the shadow and kept going. The first order of business was to stop the rock
from turning. Otherwise, they couldn't live on it. Rip knew that they had only one means of stopping
the spin. That was to use the tubes of rocket fuel left over from correcting the course. They had
three tubes left, but he didn't know if that was enough to do the job. Moving rapidly, he and
Santos caught up to Coa and the planetaires. The Connie prisoners were pretty well bunched up,
gliding along like a herd of fantastic sheep. Their shepherds were Peterson, Nunes, and Doused.
The three planetaires had a pistol in each hand. The spares were probably those taken from
prisoners. The planetaires were loaded down with equipment. A few Connie prisoners carried equipment
too. Trudeau had the rocket launcher and the remaining rockets. Camp had his torch and two tanks. Camp had his
torch and two tanks of oxygen. Bradshaw had tied his safety line to the squat containers of
chemical fuel for the torch, and was towing them behind like strange balloons. The only trouble
with that system, Rip thought, was that Bradshaw could stop, but the containers would have a
tendency to keep going. Unless the English planeteer were skillful, his burdens would drag him
right off his feet. Dominico had a tube of rocket fuel under each arm. The Italian was small, and the tubes
were bulky. Each was about ten feet long and two feet in diameter. With any gravity or air resistance
at all, the Italian couldn't have carried even one. Rip smiled as Domenico glided along.
It looked as though the tubes were floating him over the asteroid instead of the other way
around. Santos took their radiation detection instruments and the case with the astrogation
equipment from COA. Rip greeted his men briefly, then took his computing board and began
and figuring. He knew the men were glad he and Santos had made it, but they kept their greeting
short. A spinning asteroid was no place for long and sentimental speeches. He remembered the
dimensions of the asteroid and its mass. He computed its inertia, then figured out what it would
take to overcome the inertia of the spin. The mathematics would have been simple under normal
conditions, but doing them on the run, trying to watch his step at the same time, made things a little
complicated. He had to hold the board under his arm, run alongside Santos, while the new sergeant held
the case open, select the book he wanted, open it, and try to read the tables by his beltlight,
and then transfer the data to the board. His ventilator had quieted down once he got into the
darkness, but now it started whining slightly again because he was sweating profusely.
Finally, he figured out the thrust needed to stop the spin. Now all he had to do was compute how much
fuel it would take. He had figures on the amount of thrust given by the kind of rocket-fueled
in the tubes. He also knew how much fuel each tube contained. But the figures were not in his head.
They were on reference sheets. He collected the data on the fly, slowing down now and then to
read something, until a yell from Santos or COA warned that the sun-line was creeping close.
When he had all the data noted on the board, he started his mathematics. He was right in the middle of a
a laborious equation when he stumbled over thorium crystal. He went headlong, shooting like a rocket
three feet above the ground. His board flew away at a tangent. His stylus sped out of his glove
like a miniature projectile, and the slide rule clanged against his bubble. It happened so fast,
neither Coa nor Santos had time to grab them. The action had given him extra speed, and he saw
with horror that he was going to crash into Trudeau. He yelled, "'Fringy!
Watch out! Then put both hands before him to protect his helmet. His hands caught the French
planeteer between the shoulders with a bone-jarring thud.
End of Chapter 16. Chapter 17 of Rip Foster Rides the Grey Planet by Harold Goodwin.
This Librevox recording is in the public domain.
Rip Foster Rides the Grey Planet.
Chapter 17. The Archer and the East
Eagle. Trudeau held tight to the launcher, but the rocket racks opened and spilled attack rockets
into space. They flew in a dozen different directions. Trudeau gave vent to his feelings
in colorful French. Coa and Santos laughed so hard they had trouble collecting the scattered
equipment. Rip, slowed by his crash with Trudeau, got his feet under him again. The asteroid
had turned into the sun before they collected everything but Rip Stilis and
and five attack rockets. The space pencil was the only thing that could write on the computing board.
It had to be found. "'Next time around!' Rip called to the others, and led the way full speed
ahead until they regained the safety of shadow. Rip suspected the stylus was somewhere above the
rock and probably wouldn't return to the surface for some minutes. While he was wondering what to
do, there was a chorus of yells. A rocket sped between the planeteers and shot off into space.
"'Our own rockets are after us,' Trudeau gasped.
There hadn't been time to collect them all after Rip's unwilling attack on the Frenchmen scattered
them. Now the sun was setting them off. Another flashed past, fortunately, over their heads.
The sun's heat was causing them to fire unevenly. Rip hoped they would all go off soon and
get it over with.
"'Three more to go,' Coa called.
"'Watch out!'
Only two went, and they were far enough away to offer no danger.
Santos had been fishing around in the instrument case.
He triumphantly produced another stylus.
"'It was under the sextant,' he explained.
"'I thought there was another one around somewhere.
If we get through this, I'll propose you for ten more stripes,' Rip vowed.
"'We'll make you the highest-ranking sergeant that ever made a private's life miserable.'
"'Working slowly, but more safely.'
Rip figured that slightly more than two and a half tubes would do the trick.
Now to fire them. That meant finding a thorium crystal properly placed and big enough.
There were plenty of crystals, so that was no problem. The next step was for Kemp to cut holes with
this torch, so that the thrust of the rocket fuel would be counter to the direction in which the asteroid
was spinning. Rip explained to all hands what had to be done. The burden would fall on Kemp, who would need a helper.
Rip took that job himself. He took one oxygen tank from Kemp. Koa took the other, leaving the
torchman with only his torch. Then Rip took a container of chemical fuel from Bradshaw.
Working while running, he lashed the two containers together with his safety line. Then he
improvised a rope sling so they could hang on his back. He wanted his hands free.
Kemp, meanwhile, assembled his torch and put the proper cutting nozzle in place. When he was ready,
he moved to rip side and connected the hoses of the torch to the tanks the lieutenant carried.
Kemp had the torch mechanism strapped to his own back. It was essentially a high-pressure pump
that drew oxygen and fuel from the tanks and forced them through the nozzle under terrific pressure.
When he had finished, he pressed the trigger that started the cutting torch going. The fuel ignited
about a half-inch in front of the nozzle. The nozzle had two holes in it, one for oxygen and the other for fuel.
The holes were placed and angled to keep the flame always a half-inch away, otherwise the nozzle
itself would melt.
"'How do we work this?' Kemp asked.
"'We'll get ahead of the others,' Ripp explained.
"'Keep up speed until we're running at the forward sunline.
Then, when the crystal we want comes around into the shadow, we can stop running and work
until it spins into the sunshine again.'
"'Got it,' Kemp agreed.
Rip estimated the axis on which the asteroid was spinning and selected a crystal in the right
position. He had to be careful. Otherwise, their counterblast might do nothing more than start the
gray planet wobbling. He and Kemp ran ahead of the others. The planetaires and the prisoners
were running at a speed that kept them right in the middle of the dark area. It was like running
on a treadmill. The planetaires were making good speed, but were actually staying in the same place
relative to the sun's position, keeping the turning asteroid between them and the sun.
Rip and Kemp ran forward until they were right at the sunline. Then they slowed down,
holding position, and waiting for the crystal they had chosen to reach them. As it came across the
sunline into darkness, they stopped running and rode the crystal through the shadow, until it reached
the sun again. Then the two planetaires ran back across the dark zone to meet the crystal as it came
around again. There was only a few minutes working time each revolution. Kemp worked fast and the
first hole deepened. Rip helped as best he could by pushing away the chunks of thorium that Kemp
cut free, but it was essentially a one-man job. As Kemp neared the bottom of the first hole,
Rip reviewed his plan and realized he had overlooked something. These weren't nuclear bombs.
They were simple tubes of chemical fuel. The tubes wouldn't destroy the hole, Kemp's
was cutting. He reached a quick decision and called COA to join them.
Koa appeared, as Kemp pulled his torch from the hole and started running again to
avoid the sun. Rip and Koa ran right along with him, crossing the dark zone to meet the
crystal as it came around again. There's no reason to drill three holes, Rip explained as they ran.
We'll use one hole for all three charges. They don't have to be fired all at once.
do we fire them? Coa asked. Electrically, who has the
exploters on the hand dynamo? Dost has the exploters. One of the Kani's is carrying the
dynamo. Speaking of the Kani's, Rip hadn't seen the Kansop's cruiser recently. He
looked up, searching for its exhaust, and finally found it, a faint line some distance away.
The Kani commander was stalemated for the time being. He couldn't land his cruiser on a
spinning asteroid, and he had no more boats. Rip thought he probably was just waiting around for
any opportunity that might present itself. The Federation cruiser should be arriving. He studied his
chronometer. No, the nearest one, the Sagittarius from Mercury, wasn't due for another ten minutes
or so. He turned up his helmet communicator and ordered all hands to watch for the exhaust of a
nuclear drive cruiser, then turned it down again and gave COA instructions.
Have Trudeau turn his load over to a Connie and collect the
Exploders and the dynamo.
We'll need wire, too.
Who has that?
Another Connie.
Get a reel.
Cut off a few hundred feet and connect the dynamo to one end and an
exploder to the other.
The crystal came around again, and Kemp got to work.
Ripp stood by, again reviewing all steps.
They couldn't afford to make a mistake.
He had no margin of error.
Kemp finished a hole in a few seconds,
before the crystal turned into the sunlight again.
Rip told him to keep the torch going.
There might be some last-minute cutting to do.
Then the lieutenant hurried off at an angle
to where Domenico was plodding along with the fuel tubes.
Cowa had turned the tube he carried over to Akani.
Rip got it and told Domenico to follow him.
Then he angled back across the asteroid
to where Kemp was holding position.
The asteroid turned twice before Koa arrived.
He had a coil of wire slung over his.
his arm, and he carried the dynamo in one hand and an
exploder in the other, the two connected by the wire.
Rip took the exploder.
Uncoil the wire, he directed.
Go to its full length at right angles to the hole.
We have to time this exactly right.
When the crystal comes around again, I'll shove the tubes into the
hole, then scurry for cover.
When I'm clear, I'll yell, and you pump the dynamo.
Domenico and Kemp stay with Koa.
Make sure no one is in the way of the blast.
Coa unreled the wire, moving away from Rip.
The lieutenant pushed the exploder into one end of the fuel tube
and crimped it tightly with his gloved hand.
Coa and the others were as far away as they could get now,
the wire stretching between them and Rip.
Kemp had made sure no one was running near the line of blast.
Rip watch for the crystal.
It would be coming around any second now.
He held the tube with the exploder projecting behind him,
ready for the hole to appear.
Coa's voice echoed in his helmet.
All set, Lieutenant.
So am I, Rip answered.
Stand by.
The crystal appeared across the sunline and moved toward him.
He met it, slowed his speed, and put the end of the tube into the hole and shoved.
Camp had allowed enough clearance.
The tube slid into place.
Rip turned and angled off as fast as he could glide.
When he was far enough away from the blast line, he called,
Fire!
Coas squeezed the dynamo handle. The machine whined and current shot through the wire. A column of
orange fire spurted from the crystal. Rip watched the stars instead of the exhaust. He kept running
as it burned soundlessly. In air, the noise would have deafened him. In airless space,
there was nothing to carry the sound. The apparent motion of the stars was definitely slowing.
The spinning wouldn't cease entirely, but it would slow down enough to give them more.
time to work. The tube reached branch-loose and Rip called orders. Same process. Get ready to repeat.
Domenico, bring one of your tubes. While Cole was connecting another exploder to the wire,
Ripp took a tube from Domenico. Take your space knife and saw through the tube you have left.
We'll need about three-fifths of it. Keep both pieces. Domenico pulled his knife,
pressed the release, and the gas capsule shot the blade out. He got to work.
Coa called that he was ready.
Ripp took the wired exploder from him and thrust it into the tube Domenico had given him.
As the crystal came around again, the process was repeated.
The hole was undamaged.
There was more time to get clear because of the asteroid's slower speed.
The second tube slowed the rock even more, so that they had to wait long minutes while the crystal came around again.
Ripp did some estimating.
He wanted to be sure the next charge would do nothing more than slow the asteroid.
to a stop. If the charge were too heavy, it would reverse the spin.
He didn't want to make a career of running on the asteroid. He was tired, and he knew his men were
getting weary, too. He could see it in their strides. They were less sure of foot.
He decided it would be best to use a little less fuel rather than a little more. If the asteroid
failed to stop its spin completely, they could always set off a small charge or two.
Hold it, he ordered. We'll use the star a small charge or two. Hold it, he ordered. We'll use the
small end of Domenico's tube and saved the big one. The fuel was a solid mass, so cutting the
tube in two sections caused no difficulty. Rip pushed the exploder into the small section,
seated it in the hole, and hurried to cover. As he watched the fuel burn, he wondered why the last
nuclear charge had started the spin. He had made a mistake somewhere. The earlier blasts had been
set so they wouldn't cause a spin. He made a mental note to look at the place where the charge had
exploded when things were more quiet. The rocket fuel slowed the asteroid down to a point where it
was barely turning, and Rip was glad he had been cautious. The heavier charge would have reversed
it a little. He directed the placing of a very small charge and was moving away from it so Koa could
set it off when Santos suddenly yelled, Sir, the Connie is coming. Rip called,
Fire the charge, Koa, then looked up. The Consop's cruiser was moving slowly toward them.
The Kenny Connie have been waiting for something to happen on the asteroid, Rip guessed.
When the spinning slowed and stopped, the Connie probably had decided that now was the time for a final try.
Where is the communicator? Rip asked Coa. One of the Connie says it. Get it. I'll notify
Terra Base of what happened. Coa found the Connie with the communicator, tested it to be sure the
prisoner hadn't sabotaged it, and brought it to Rip. This is Foster to Terra Base,
Over.
Come in, Foster.
Rip explained briefly what had happened and asked,
How is our orbit?
I haven't had time to take sightings.
You're free of the sun,
Tara Base answered.
Your orbit will have to be corrected sometime
within the next few hours.
The last blast pushed you off course.
That's a small matter,
Rip stated.
Unless we can think of something fast,
this will be a conny asteroid by then.
The Consop's cruiser is moving in on us. He's careful because he isn't sure of the situation.
But even at his present speed, he'll be here in ten minutes.
Stand by. Terra Base was silent for a few moments, then the voice replied,
I think we have an answer for you, Foster.
Terra Base off. Go ahead, McFife.
A Scottish berth thick enough to saw boards came out of the communicator.
"'Fauster, this is McFife,
"'commander of the Aquila.
"'You can't see me on account of I'm on your sunny side.
"'But, lad, I'm closer to you than the Connie.
"'We did it this way to keep the asteroid between us and him.
"'Also, lad, if you take a look up at Gemini,
"'you'll see something you like.
"'Look at Alhina in the twins' feet.
"'Then, lad, if you'll be patient a while,
"'you'll have a grandstand seat for a real big show.'
Rip tilted his bubble back and stared upward at the constellation of the twins.
He said softly,
"'By Gemini!'
For there, a half-degree south of the star Elhina,
was the clean line of a nuclear cruiser's exhaust.
The Sagittarius out of Mercury had arrived.
He cut the communicator off for a moment and spoke exultantly to his men.
"'Stand easy, you hairy planetaires!
Forget the Connie.
He doesn't know it, but he's caught.
He's caught between the archer and the eagle.
End of Chapter 17.
Chapter 18 of Rip Foster Rides the Grey Planet by Harold Goodwin.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Rip Foster Rides the Grey Planet.
Chapter 18.
Courtesy with Clause.
Sagittarius, Constellation of the Archer,
and Aquila, Constellation of the Eagle,
had given the two Federation Patrol cruisers their names.
The Eagle was commanded by a tough Scotsman,
and the Archer by a Frenchman.
Commander McFife spoke through the communicator.
Switch patterns to Univarra, lad.
Me and Galien are going to talk this Connie into a braw miss.
McFife off.
Ripp guessed that the two cruiser commanders
had been in communication while en route to the asteroid.
and had cooked up some kind of plan.
He turned the band switch to the universal frequency
with which all long-range communicators were equipped.
Each of the earth groups had its own frequency,
and so did the Martians and Jovians,
but all could meet and talk on the universal band.
Special scrambling devices prevented eavesdropping on regular frequencies,
so there was no danger that the Connie had overheard the plan.
Ripp wondered what it was.
He knew the cruisers had to be careful not do
across the thin line that might lead to war.
The Sagittarius loomed closer, decelerating with a tremendous exhaust.
The Connie couldn't have failed to see it, Rib New.
He was right.
The Kansop's cruiser suddenly blasted more heavily,
rushing in the direction away from the Federation ship.
The direction was toward the asteroid.
And at the same moment, the Aquila flashed above the horizon, also decelerating.
The Kani was caught squarely.
A suave voice spoke on the Universal Band.
This is Federation SCN. Sagittarius, calling the Consolidation Cruiser,
Neil the asteroid. Please reply.
Ripp waited anxiously.
Pekani would hear because every control room monitored the universal band.
A heavy, reluctant voice replied after a pause of over a minute.
This is Consolidation Cruiser 16.
You are breaking the law, Sagittarius.
"'Your missile parts are open, and they are pointing at me.
"'Close them at once, or I will report this.'
The suave voice with its hint of French accent replied,
"'Ah, my friend, do not be alarmed.
"'We have had a slight accident to our control circuit,
"'and the ports are jammed open.
"'We are trying to repair the situation.
"'But I assure you we have only the friendliest of intentions.'
"'Rip grinned.
"'This was about the same as a man holding a cock-pocket.
pistol at another man's head, and assuring him it was nothing but a nervous arm that kept the gun
so steady. The Connie demanded, "'What do you want?' The two friendly cruisers were within a few
miles of the Connie now, and their blasts were just strong enough to keep them edging closer,
while counteracting the sun's pull. The French spaceman spoke reassuringly,
"'My friend, we want only the courtesy of space to which the law entitles us. We have had an unfortunate
accident to our astrogation instruments, and we wish to come aboard to compare them with yours.'
Rip laughed outright. Every cruiser carried at least four full sets of instruments.
There was as much chance of all of them being knocked off scale at once as there was of his
biting a cruiser in half with bare teeth. McFife's voice came on the air.
Foster, switch to Federation frequency.
Ripp did so. This is Foster, Commander.
"'Lad, it's a pity for you to miss the show. I'm sending a boat for you.'
"'The sun will get it,' Rip exclaimed.
"'Never fear, lad. It won't get this one. Now switch back to Universal and listen in.'
Rip did so in time to catch the Connie Commander's voice.
"'And I refuse to believe such a story. Great Cosmos, do you think I am a fool?'
"'Of course not,' the Frenchman replied.
"'You are not such a fool as to refuse a simple request to check
our instruments?'
The Sagittarius commander was right.
Rip understood the strategy.
Equipments sometimes did go out of operation in space,
and Connie's had no hesitation in asking Federation cruisers for help,
or the other way around.
Such help was always given,
because no commander could be sure when he might need help himself.
"'I agree,' the Connie commander said with obvious reluctance.
"'You may send a boat.'
McFaise.
Scotch Burr broke in.
Federation S.C. and Equilla
to Consolidation 16.
Mr. My instruments are off-scale, too.
I'll just send them along to you,
and you can check them while you're checking the Sagittarius.
I object, the Connie bellowed.
Come no, McFife burred soothingly,
checking a few instruments won't hurt you.
A small rocket exhaust appeared,
leaving the Aquila.
The exhaust grew rapidly, more rapidly,
than that of any snapper boat. Rip watched it while keeping his ears tuned to the space
conversation. Coa tugged his arm. "'See that, sir?' Rip nodded.
"'Surely, sending boats is too much of a nuisance,' the French commander said,
winningly. "'We will come alongside.'
"'It's a trick,' the Connie growled. "'You want me to open my valves. Then your men will
board us and try to take over my ship.'
"'My friend, you have a suspicious mind,' Galleon replied smoothly.
"'If you wish, arm your men. Ours will have no weapons.
Train launch airs on the valves, so our men will be annihilated before they can board
if you see a single weapon.'
This was going a little far, Rip thought, but it was not his affair, and he didn't know
exactly what McFife and Galeen had in mind.
The Aquila's boat arrived with astonishing speed.
Rip saw it flash in the sunlight and knew he had never seen one like it before.
It was a perfect globe, about twenty feet in diameter. Blast holes covered the globe at intervals of six feet.
The boat settled to the asteroid and a new voice called over the helmet circuit.
"'Where's Foster? Show an exhaust. We're in a rush.'
Rip ordered. Take over, Koa. I'll be back.
"'Yes, sir.'
He hurried to the boat and stood there, bewildered. He didn't know how to get in.
in. "'Up here!' the voice called. He looked up and saw a hatch. He jumped and a space-clad
figure pulled him inside. The door shut and the boat blasted off. Acceleration shoved him
backward, but the spaceman snapped a line to his belt, then motioned him to a seat.
Rip pulled himself up the line and got into the seat, snapping the harness in place.
"'I'm Hawkins, senior space officer,' the spaceman said. "'Welcome, Foster. We've been losing
wait, wondering if we'd get here in time.
I was never so glad to see spacemen in my life, Ripp said truthfully.
What kind of craft is this, sir? Experimental, the space officer answered.
It has a number, but we call it the ball bat, because it's shaped like a ball, and goes like a
bat. We were about to take off for some test runs around the space platform when we got a
hurry call to come here. The Aquila has two of these. If they prove out, they'll replace
the snapper boats. More power, greater maneuverability, heavier weapons, and they carry more men.
There was only the officer and a pilot, but Ripp saw positions for several others.
He looked out through the port and saw the two Federation cruisers closing in on the Kani.
Apparently, the Kani commander had agreed to let the cruisers come alongside. The ball bat
blasted to the Aquila, paused at an open port, then slid inside. The valve was shut before Rip could
unbuckle his harness. Air flooded into the chamber, and the lights flicked on.
The space officer gave Rip a hand out of the harness, and the young planeteer went
through the hatch to the deck. The inner valve opened, and a lean, sandy-haired officer in
space blue with the insignia of a commander stepped through. Grinning, he hurried to Rip's
side, and twisted his bubble, lifting it off. "'Hurry, lad,' he greeted Rip.
"'I'm McFife. Get out of that suit quick, because you don't want to miss what's about
to happen. With his own hands, he unlocked the complicated belt with its gadgets and equipment,
disconnected the communicator and ventilator, and then unfastened the lock clips that held top and bottom
of the suit together. Rips slipped the upper part over his head and stepped out of the bottom.
Thanks, Commander. I'm one grateful planeteer, believe me. Come on, we'll hurry right across the ship to
the opposite valve. Lead, I have a son in the planetaires, and he's just about your own age. He's
on Genenemede. He and the others would be proud of what you've done." McFife was pulling himself
along rapidly by the convenient handholds. Rip followed, his breathing a little rapid in the
heavier air of the ship. He followed the Scottish commander through the maze of passages
that crossed the ship and stopped at a valve where spacemen were waiting. With them was an officer
who carried a big case. The instruments, McFive said, pointing,
We've tinker with them a bit, just to make it look real.
But why do you want to board the Connie, Rip asked curiously.
Beck Fife's eye closed in a wink.
Yeah, to see.
There was a slight bump as the cruiser touched the Connie.
The waiting group recovered balance and faced the valve.
Rip knew that spacemen in the inner lock were making fast to the Connie cruiser,
setting up the airtight seal.
It was long before a bell sounded and a spaceman opened the inner valve.
Two men in spacesuits were waiting, and beyond them the outer valve was joined by a tube to the outer valve of the Connie's ship.
Ripp stared at the Connie spacemen in their red tunics and gray trousers.
One, a scowling officer with two pistols in his belt, stepped forward.
Rip noted that the other connies were heavy with weapons, too.
None of his group had any.
"'I'm the commander,' the scowling Connie said.
"'Bring your instruments in quickly.
We will check them, then you get out."
"'You're no very friendly,' McFive said, his burr even more pronounced.
He led Rip and the officer with the instruments into the Connie ship.
A handsome Federation spaceman with a mustache, the first Rip had ever seen,
stepped into the room from a passageway on the opposite side.
The spaceman bowed with exquisite grace.
"'I have the honor of making myself known,' he proclaimed.
Commander Remy Gagliane of the Sagittarius.
The Connie commander grunted.
He was afraid, Rip realized.
The Connie suspected a trick, and he had no idea of what it might be.
Rip looked him over with interest.
This was the man who had been willing to burn his own spacemen back at the asteroid belt.
Galeen saw Ripp's black uniform and hurried to shake his hand.
So this is a young lieutenant who is responsible.
"'Lieutenant, today the spacemen honor the planetaires because of you.
Most days we fight each other, but today we fight together, eh?
I am glad to meet you.'
"'And I'm glad to meet you, sir,' Rip returned.
He liked the twinkle in the Frenchman's eye.
He would have given a lot to know what scheme Galeen and McFife had cooked up.
The conny had overheard Galeen's greeting.
He glared at Rip.
The Frenchman saw the look and smiled.
happily. Ah, you do not know each other. Commander, I have the honor to make known
Lieutenant Foster of the Federation Special O'Dar Squadrons. He is in command on the asteroid.
The Connie blurted, So, I send boats to help you, and you fire on them.
So that was to be the Consop's story. Rip thought quickly, then held up his hand in a shocked
gesture that would have done credit to the Frenchman.
Oh, no, Commander. You misunderstand. We had no way of communicating by radio, so I did the only
thing we could do. I fired rockets as a warning. We didn't want your boats to get caught in a
nuclear explosion. He shrugged. It was very unlucky for us that the sun threw my gunner's aim
off, and he hit your boats, quite by accident. But Fife coughed to cover up a chuckle.
Galeen hit a smile by stroking his mustache.
The Connie commander growled.
"'And I suppose it was accident that you took my men prisoner?'
"'Prisner!'
Rip looked bewildered.
"'We took no prisoners.
When your boats arrived, the men asked if they might not join us.
They claimed refuge, which we had to give them under interplanetary law.'
"'I will take them back,' the Connie stated.
"'You will not,' Gellian replied with equal positiveness.
"'The law is very clear, my friend.
"'Your men may return willingly, but you cannot force them.
"'When we reach terror, we will give them a choice.
"'Those who wish to return to the consolidation
"'will be given transportation to the nearest boulder.'
"'The Connie commander motioned to a heavily armed officer.
"'Take their instruments. Check them quickly.'
"'He put his lips together in a straight line
"'and stared at the Federation men.
"'They stared back with equal coldness.
Around them, Connie's spaceman with wooden, expressionless faces waited without moving.
The minutes ticked by.
Ripp wondered again what kind of plan McFife and Galeen had.
When would the excitement start?
Additional minutes passed and the officer returned with the cases.
Wordlessly, he handed them to Galeen and McFife.
The Connie commander snapped,
There, now get off my ship!
Gellian bowed.
"'You have been a most courteous and gracious host,' he said.
"'Your conversation has been stimulating, inspiring, and informative.
Our profound thanks!'
He shook hands with Rip and McFife, bowed to the kindy commander again,
and went out the way he had come.
There wasn't anything to say after the Frenchman's sarcastic farewell speech.
McFife, Rip, and the officer with the instruments went back through the valves into their own ship.
Once inside, McFive called,
"'Come with me, hurry!'
He led the way through the passages and up ladders to the very top of the ship,
to the hatch where the astrogators took their star sights.
The protective shield of nuclite had been rolled back
and they could see into space through the clear vision port.
Rip and McFife hurried to the side where they were connected to the Connie.
Rip looked down along the length of the ship.
The valve connection was in the middle of each ship,
at the point of greatest diameter.
From that point, each ship grew more slender.
McFife pointed to the Connie nose.
Projecting from it like great horns were the ship's steering tubes.
Unlike the Federation cruiser, which blasted steam through internal tubes that did not project,
the Connie used chemical fuel.
Watch, McFife said.
There were similar tubes on the Connie Stern, Rip knew.
He wondered what they had to do with the plan.
McFife walked to a wall communicator.
Follow instructions.
He turned to Rip.
Remember, lad, the Sagittarius is on the other side of the conny, about to do the same
thing.
Rip waited in silence, wondering.
Then the voice horn called,
Valve closed.
A second voice yelled, blast!
A tremor jarred its way through the entire ship, making the deck throb under Rip's
feet.
He saw that the ship's nose had swore.
swung away from the Connie. What in space? Blast! The nose swung into the Connie again with a jar
that sent rips sliding into the clear plastic of the Astrodome. His nose jammed into the plastic,
but he didn't even wince, because he saw the Connie steering tubes buckle under the Aquila's
sudden shove. And suddenly the picture was clear. The two Federation cruisers hadn't cared
about getting into the Connie ship. They had only wanted an excuse to tie up to it so they could
do what had just been done. They had sheared off the enemy steering tubes, first at the stern,
then at the bow, leaving him helpless, able to go only forward or back in the direction which
he happened to be pointing. McFife had a broad grin on his face. As Ripps started to speak,
he held up his hand and pointed at a wall speaker. The Connie commander came on the circuit,
He screamed,
You planned that!
You!
You!
He subsided into his own language.
Galian's voice spoke soothingly.
But, my dear commander,
how can I apologize enough?
Believe me,
the man responsible will be reward.
I mean,
the man responsible will be disciplined.
You may rest assured of it.
How unfortunate!
I am overcome with shame.
A terrible accident.
"'Terrible!'
McFife picked up a microphone.
"'Same here, Connie. A terrible accident.
"'A—the man who did it were here from me.'
"'It was no accident!' the Connie screamed.
"'Ah,' Gallean replied,
"'but you cannot prove otherwise.
"'Commander, do you realize what this means?
"'You are helpless.'
"'Interplanetary law says that a helpless spaceship must be salvaged
and taken in tow by the nearest cruise air, no matter what its nationality.
We will do this jointly, the Aquila and the Sagittarius.
We will take turns towing you, my friend.
We will haul you to terror like any other piece of space junk.
But five could remain quiet no longer.
Yes, Mr. And that's not the end of it.
We will collect the salvage fee.
One half the value of the salvage vessel.
Aye, my men will like that.
"'Since we share and share alike on salvage,
"'Now put out a cable from your nose-tube.
"'I'll take you in tow first.'
He cut the communicator off and met Rips' grin.
The two spacemen had figured out the one way
to repay the Connie for his attempts on the asteroid.
They couldn't fire on him,
but they could fake an accident
that would cripple him and cost Consop's millions of dollars
in salvage fees.
Nor would Consopps refuse to pay.
salvage law was clear.
Whoever performed the salvage was not required to turn the ship back to its owners
until the fee had been paid, in whatever currency he cared to specify.
And there was another angle.
The cruisers would tow the Connie into the Federation spaceport in New Mexico.
If past experience was any indication, the Connie would lose about half its crew, perhaps more.
They would claim sanctuary in the Federation.
Rip shook hands solemnly with the grinning Scotchman. It would be a long time before
Consops tried space piracy again. "'We'll be back at our family fight again tomorrow,' McFive said.
"'But today we celebrate together. Ah, lad, this is pure joy to me. I've had a score to settle
with young Connie's for years. Now I've done it.' He put an arm around Rip's shoulders.
"'Well, I'm in a given mood, which has not.
not the way of us Scots. Is there anything you'd like?"
Ripp could think of only one thing. A hot shower. For me and my men. And will you take the prisoners
off our hands? Yes, to both. Anything else?
We'll need some rocket fuel. Terror says we have to correct course. Also, we'll need a
nuclear charge to throw us into a breaking ellipse. And we need a new landing boat. The
sun baked the equipment out of ours." McFife nodded.
"'So be it. I'll send men to the asteroid to bring back the prisoners and your planeteers.'
He smiled. "'We'll let yon rock go by itself while hot showers and a good meal are had by
all. It's the least of what you've earned.' Ripp started to thank the Scot, but his stomach
suddenly turned over, and black dizziness flooded in on him. He heard McFive's sudden exclamation,
felt hands on him. White light blinded him. He shook his head and tried to keep his stomach from
acting up. A voice asked, "'Were you shielded from those nuclear blasts?'
"'No,' he said past a constricted throat. "'Not from the last. We got some prompt radiation.
I don't know how much.' "'When was that? The exact time?'
Rip tried to remember. He felt horrible. It was 2305.
Bad, the voice said.
He must have taken enough rentons of gamma and neutrons to reach or exceed the median lethal dose.
Ripp found his voice again.
Santos, he said urgently.
On the asteroid.
He got it, too.
The rest were shielded.
Get him, quick!
McFife snapped orders.
The ball bat would have Santos in the ship within minutes.
Being sick in a space suit was about the most unpleasant thing that could happen to anyone.
A hypo spray tingled against Rip's arm.
The drug penetrated, caught a quick lift to all parts of his body through his bloodstream.
Consciousness slid away.
End of Chapter 18.
Chapter 19 of Rip Foster Rides the Grey Planet by Harold Goodwin.
This Libervox recording is in the public domain.
Rip Foster Rides the Grey Planet
Chapter 19. Space Fall
Rip was never more eloquent. He argued. He begged, and he wheedled. The Aquila's chief physician
listened with polite interest, but he shook his head. "'Lutonet, you simply are not aware of the
close call you've had. Another two hours without treatment, and we might not have been able to save you.'
"'I appreciate that,' Rip assured him. "'But I'm fine now, sir.'
"'You are not fine. You are anything but fine.'
We've loaded you with antibiotics and blood cell regenerator, and we've given you a total transfusion.
You feel fine, but you are not.'
The doctor looked at Ripp's red hair.
"'That's a fine thatch of hair you have. In a week or two it will be gone, and you'll have no more hair than an egg.
A well person doesn't lose hair.'
The ship's radiation safety officer had put both Rips and Santos's dosimeters into his measuring equipment.
They had taken over a hundred rentkins of hard radiation above the tolerance limit.
This was the result of being caught unshielded when the last nuclear charge went off.
Sir, replied, you can load us with suppressives.
It's only a few days more before we reach Terra.
You can keep us going until then.
We'll both turn in for full treatment as soon as we get to the space platform.
But we have to finish the job.
Can't you see that, sir?
The doctor shook his head.
You're a fool, even for a planeteer. Before you get over this, you'll be sicker than you've ever been.
You have a month in bed waiting for you. If I let you go back to the asteroid, I'll only be
delaying the time when you start full treatment. But the delay won't hurt if you inject us
with suppressives, will it? Rip asked quickly. Don't they keep the sickness checked? Yes, for a maximum
of about ten days. Then they no longer have to be.
have sufficient effect, and you come down with it.
But it won't take ten days, Rip pointed out. It would only take a couple, and it won't hurt us.
McFife had arrived to hear the last exchange. He nodded sympathetically.
Doctor, I can appreciate how the lad feels. He started something, and he wants to finish it.
If he can let him safely, I think you should. The doctor shrugged.
I can let him. There's a nine-to-one chance it will do him no
harm, but the one chance is what I don't like.
I'll know it if the suppressive start to wear off, won't I?
Rip asked.
You certainly will. You'll get weaker rapidly.
How rapidly? Perhaps six hours, perhaps more?
Rip nodded. That's what I thought.
Doctor, we're less than six hours from Terra by ship.
If the stuff wears off, we can be in the hospital within a couple of hours.
Once we go into a breaking ellipse, we can reach a hospital in less than an hour by snapper boat.
Let him go, McFive said.
The doctor wasn't happy about it, but he had run out of arguments.
All right, Commander, if you'll assume responsibility for getting him off the asteroid
and Intuit Terra or Space Platform Hospital in time.
I had to do that, McPife assured him.
Now get your hypospraise and fill him full of that stuff you use.
The corporal, too.
Sergeant, Rip corrected.
His first action on getting back to the asteroid would be to recommend Santos's promotion to Terra Base.
He intended to recommend Kemp for Corporal, too.
He was sure the planetaires at Terra would make the promotions.
Two Federation cruisers were still holding course along with the asteroid, the Connie cruiser between them.
Within an hour, Rip and Santos, both in false good health, thanks to medical magic,
were on their way back to the asteroid in a ball,
ball bat boat. The remaining time passed quickly. The sun receded. The planeteer's corrected course.
Ripp sent in his recommendations for promotions and looked over the last nuclear creator to see
why the blast had started the asteroid spinning. The reason could only be guessed. The blast probably
had opened a fault in the crystal, allowing the explosion to escape partially in the wrong direction.
Once the course was corrected, Rip calculated the position for the final
nuclear charge. When the asteroid reached the correct position relative to Earth, the charge would not
only change its course, but slow its speed somewhat. The asteroid would go around the Earth in a series
of ever-tightening ellipses, using Terra's gravity plus rocket fuel to slow it down to the right
orbital speed. When it reached the proper position, tubes of rocket fuel would change the course again,
putting it into an orbit around the Earth close to the space platform. It wasn't practical to take the
rock in for landing. They would lose control, and the asteroid would flame to Earth like the
greatest meteor ever to hit the planet. Putting the asteroid into an orbit around Earth was actually
the most delicate part of the whole trip, but Rip wasn't worried. He had the facilities of
Terra Base within easy reach by communicator. He dictated his data and let them do the mathematics
on the giant electronic computers. He and his men rode the gray planet past the moon,
So close, they could almost see the planeter lunar base,
circled Terra in a series of ellipses,
and finally blasted the asteroid into its final orbit
within sight of the space platform.
Landing craft and snapper boats swarmed to meet them,
and within an hour after their arrival,
the planetaires were surrounded by spacemen,
cadets from the platform,
and officers and men wearing planeteer black.
A cadet approached Rip and looked at him with awe.
Sir, I don't know how,
you ever did it. And Rip, his eyes on the great curve of Earth, answered casually,
"'There's one thing every space-chick has to learn if he's going to be a planeteer. There's
always a way to do anything. To be a planeteer, you have to be able to figure out the way.'
A new voice said, "'Now, that's real wisdom.' Rip turned quickly and looked through a
helmet at the grinning face of Major Joe Barris.
Barris spoke as though to himself, but Rip turned red as his hair.
Funny how fast a man ages in space, the Planeteer Major remarked.
Take Foster. A few weeks ago, he was just a cadet, a raw recruit who had never met
Hivak. Now he's talking like the grandfather of all space. I don't know how the Special
Order squadrons ever got along before he became an officer.
Rip have been feeling a little too proud of himself.
It's good to get back, Rip said.
End of Chapter 19.
Chapter 20 of Rip Foster Rides the Grey Planet.
By Harold Goodwin.
This Libravox recording is in the public domain.
Rip Foster Rides the Gray Planet.
Chapter 20.
On the platform.
There were two things Rip could see from his hospital bed on the space.
platform. One was the great curve of Earth. He was anxious to get out of the hospital and back to
Terra. The second thing was the asteroid. Spacemen were at work on it, slowly cutting it to pieces.
The pieces were small enough to be carried back to Earth in supply rockets. It would be a long time
before the asteroid was completely cut up and transported to Terra Base.
Sergeant Major Coa came into the hospital ward and sat on Rips' bed. The plastic foam mattress compressed
under his weight.
How are you feeling, sir?
Pretty good, Rip replied.
The worst of the radiation sickness was over, and he was mending fast.
Here and there were little bloodstains just below the surface of his skin,
and he had no more hair than a plastic ball.
Otherwise, he looked normal.
The stains would go away, and his hair would grow back within a matter of weeks.
Santos, now officially a sergeant, was in the same condition.
The rest of Ripp's planetaires had resumed duties on the space platform.
He saw them frequently because they made a point of dropping in whenever they were near the hospital area.
Koa looked out at the asteroid.
I sort of hate to see that rock cut up.
There isn't much about a chunk of thorium to get sentimental over,
but after fighting for it the way we did, it doesn't seem right to cut it into blocks.
I know how you feel, Rip admitted.
But after all, that's what we brought up.
brought it back for." He studied Koa's brown face. The big Hawaiian had something on his mind.
"'Got vac worms chewing at you?' he asked.
"'Vac worms were a spaceman's equivalent of the blues.'
"'Not exactly, sir. I happen to overhear the doctor talking today. You're due for a leave in a
week.'
"'That's good news,' Rip exclaimed. "'You're not unhappy about it, are you?'
Coa shrugged.
"'We were all hoping we'd be together.
on our next assignment. The gang likes serving under you, but we're overdue for shipment to
somewhere, and if you take eight weeks leave, we'll be gone by the time you come back to the
platform. I like serving with all of you, too, Rip replied. I watched the way you all behaved
when the space flap was getting tough, and it made me proud to be a planeteer. Major Joe Barris
came in. He was carrying an envelope in his hand. "'Hello, Rip. How are you, COA? And,
Am I interrupting a private talk?
No Major, Kola replied.
We're just passing the time.
Want me to leave?
Stay here, Barra said.
This concerns you, too.
I've been reassigned.
My eight years on the platform are up,
and that's all an instructor gets.
Now I'm off for space on another job.
Rip knew that instructors were assigned for eight-year periods,
and he knew that the major's specialty
was the planetar science of exploration.
Barris' specialty required him to be an expert in biology, zoology, anthropology, navigation, and
astrogation, and in land-fighting. Not to mention a half-dozen other lesser things.
Only ten planetaires rated expert in exploration, and all were captains or majors.
"'Where are you going?' Ripp asked.
"'Off to explore something?'
"'That's it,' Major Barris smiled.
"'Remember once I said that when they gave me the job of cleaning up the goopies on
Ganymede I'd ask for you as a platoon leader?
Ripp stared.
Don't tell me that's your assignment.
Almost.
Tell me, would you recommend any more of your men for promotion?
I need a new sergeant and two more corporals.
Rip thought it over.
Coakon checked me on this.
I'd suggest making Peterson a sergeant and Doused and Domenico corporals.
Camp and Santos already have promotions.
That would be my choice, too, COA agreed.
Fine, Paris tap the envelope.
I'll correct the orders in here and recommend the promotions.
We'll get 16 new recruits from the graduating class at Luna,
and that will complete the platoon I'm supposed to organize.
Two full platoons are waiting,
and the new platoon will give me a full-strength squadron,
except for new officers.
How about Flip Via for a platoon commander Rip?
Rip knew the Mexican officer was among the best of his own graduating class.
"'I have to admit prejudice,' he warned.
"'Flip is a pal of mine. But I don't think you could do better.'
His curiosity got the best of him, and he asked,
"'Can you tell me what this is all about?'
Joe Barris reached over and rubbed Rip's bald head.
By the time fur grows back on that irradiated dome of yours,
I'll be on my way with Coa, Peterson, and the new recruits.
Santos and the rest of your crew will report to Terrabase.
Flip Via will join them there.
You'll be unearthly for eight weeks,
but it will take about that much time for Flip and the men
to assemble the supplies and equipment will need.
He pulled a sheaf of papers out of the envelope.
Coa, here are orders for you and your men.
They say you're to report to Special Order Squadron 7 on Ganymede.
SOS 7 is a new squadron, the first one organized exclusively for exploration duties, and I'm its
commanding officer.
COA, you'll be my senior non-commissioned officer.
I want you and Peterson with me because you can organize the new recruits en route.
They have a lot more to learn from you than they got in their two years of training.
You'll make real planetaires out of them.
He picked a paper from the sheaf and waved it at Rip.
This is for you, Lieutenant Foster, he read.
Foster, R-I-P-L lieutenant, S-O-S, serial 7943, authorized eight weeks
earth leave upon discharge from hospital.
Upon completion of leave, subject officer will report to Terra Base for transportation to SOS 7
on Ganymede.
Joe Barris handed Rip his new orders.
You'll be on the same ship with Flip Via and your men.
Flip will be another of my platoon leaders.
I'll be waiting for you on Ganymede.
The moons of Jupiter will be our home for quite a while, Rip.
Our first assignment is to explore Callisto from pole to pole.
Ripp didn't know what to say.
To serve under Barris, to have his own men in a regular squadron platoon,
to have Flip Via in the same outfit,
and to be assigned to exploration duty,
dirtiest but most exciting of all planeteer jobs,
it was just too much.
He couldn't say anything.
He could only grin.
Major Joe Barris looked at Rip's shiny head and chuckled.
From what I hear of Callisto, we're in for a rough time.
Your hair will probably grow back just in time to turn gray.
The end of Rip Foster Rides the Grey Planet.
By Harold Goodwin.
