help quick.”
The closed-circuit intercom suddenly buzzed, and Novotny turned to see the project engineer’s face on the small viewer.
“Are all your men up and dressed, Joe?” he asked when Novotny had answered the call.
“EVERYBODY PIPE DOWN! Sorry, Suds. No—well, except for Beasley, they’re up. Beasley’s logging sack time.”
“The hell Beasley is!” complained Beasley from his bunk. “With you verbing nouns of a noun all yapping like —”
“Shut up, Bee; Go on, Suds.”
“We got contact with that ship. They’ve got reactor troubles. I tried to get Crater City on the line, but there’s an outage on the circuit somewhere. I need some men to take a tractor and backtrack toward Copernicus. Look for a break in the circuit.”
“Why call me?”
“The communication team is tied up, Joe.”
“Yeah, but I’m not a communic—”
“Hell!” Brodanovitch exploded. “It doesn’t take an electronics engineer to splice a broken wire, does it?”
“OK, Suds, we’ll go. Take it easy. What about that ship?”
The engineer paused to mop his face. He looked rather bleak suddenly. “I don’t know if it’s safe to tell you. But you’ll find out anyhow. Watch out for a riot.”
“Not a runaway reactor—”
“Worse, Joe. Women.”
“WOMEN!” It was a high piping scream from Beasley. “Did he say
“WOMEN!” They came crowding around the intercom screen.
“Back off!” Novotny barked. “Go on, Suds.”
“It’s a troupe of entertainers, Joe. Clearance out of Algiers. They say they’re scheduled for a performance in Crater City, come nightfall. That’s all I know, except they’re mostly women.”
“Algiers! Jeez! Belly dancers… The room was a confused babble.
“Wait a minute,” said Suds. His face slid off the screen as he talked to somebody in the boss tank. Moments later he was back. “Their ship just put down, Joe. Looks like a safe landing. The rescue team is out there. You’ll pass the ship on the way up the line. Get moving.”
“Sure, Suds.” Novotny switched off and looked around at the sudden scramble. “I’ll be damned if you do!” he yelled. “You can’t all go. Beasley, Henderson—”
“No, bigod you don’t, Joe!” somebody howled. “Draw straws!”
“OK. I can take three of you, no more.”
They drew. Chance favored Relke, Braxton, and Henderson. Minutes later they crowded into the electric runabout and headed southeast along the line of stately steel towers that filed back toward Copernicus. The ship was in sight. Taller than the towers, the nacelles of the downed bird rose into view beyond the broken crest of a distant lava butte. She was a freight shuttle, space-constructed and not built for landing on Earth. Relke eyed the emblem on the hull of her crew nacelle while the runabout nosed onto the strip of graded roadbed that paralleled the transmission line back to Crater City. The emblem was unfamiliar.
“That looks like the old
“Maybe. Now keep an eye on the telephone line.”
The pusher edged the runabout toward the trolley rods. The overhead power transmission line had been energized by sections during the construction of it, and the line was hot as far as the road had been extended. Transformer stations fed energy from the 200 kilovolt circuit into the 1,500 volt trolley bars that ran down the center of the roadbed. Novotny stopped the vehicle at the end of the finished construction and sidled it over until the feeler arms crackled against the electrified bus rods and locked in place. He switched the batteries to “charge” and drove on again.
“Relke, you’re supposed to be watching that talk circuit, not the ship.”
“OK, Joe, in a minute.”
“You horny bastard, you can’t see their bloomers through that titanium hull. Put the glasses down and watch the line.”
“OK, just a minute. I’m trying to find out who owns her. The emblem’s—”
“Now, dammit!”
“No marking on her except her serial number and a picture of a rooster—and something else that’s been painted over.”
“RELKE!”
“Sure, Joe, OK.”
“Girls!” marveled Lije Henderson. “Whenna lass time you touch a real girl, Brax?”
“Don’ ass me, Lije! I sweah, if I evum touch a lady’s li’l pink fingah right now, I could—”
“Hell, I could jus’ sittin’ heah lookin’ at that ship. Girls. God! Lemme have those glasses, Relke.”
Novotny braked the runabout to a halt. “All right, get your helmets on,” he snapped. “Pressure your suits. I’m going to pump air out.”
“Whatthehell!
“So you can get out of this heap. You’re walking back. I’ll go on and find the break myself.”
Braxton squealed like a stuck pig; a moment later all three of them were on him. “Please, Joe…. Fuh the love a heaven, Joe, have a haht…. Gawd,
“Get off my lap, you sonofabitch!” he barked at Braxton, who sat on top of him, grabbing at the controls. “Wait—I’ll tell you what. Put the damn binoculars down and watch the line. Don’t say another damn word about dames until we find the break and splice it. Swear to that, you bastards, and you can stay. I’ll stop at their ship on our way back, and then you can stare all you want to. OK?”
“Joe, I sweah on a stack of—”
“All right, then watch the line.”
They drove on in silence. The ship had fired down on a flat stretch of ground about four miles from the construction train, a few hundred yards from the trolley road. They stared at it as the runabout crawled past, and Novotny let the vehicle glide to a halt.
“The ramp’s out and the ladder’s down,” said Relke. “Somebody must have come out.”
“Unglue your eyes from that bird and look around,” Novotny grunted. “You’ll see why the ladder’s down.” He jerked his thumb toward a row of vehicles parked near the massive ship.
“The rescue team’s wagons. But wheah’s the rescue team?”
No crewmen were visible in the vicinity of the ship or the parked runabouts. Novotny switched on the radio, punched the channel selector, and tried a call, reading the call code off the side of the safety runabout.
They sat in silence. There was nothing but the hiss of solar interference from the radio and the sound of heavy breathing from the men.
“Those lucky ole bastands!” Braxton moaned. “You know wheah they gone, gennlemen? I know wheah they gone. They clambered right up the ladies’ ladduh. I taya, alright—”
“Knock it off. Let’s get moving. Tell us on the way back.”
“Those lucky ole—”
The runabout moved ahead across the glaring land. Relke: “Joe?”
“Yeah?”
“Joe, on our way back, can we go over and see if they’ll let us climb aboard?”
Novotny chuckled. “I thought you were off dames, Relke. I thought when Fran sent you the Dear John, you said dames were all a bunch of—”
“Damn, Joe! You could have talked all day without saying ‘Fran.’ “ The lineman’s throat worked a brief spasm, and he stared out across the broken moonscape with dismal eyes.
“Sorry I mentioned it,” Novotny grunted. “But sure, I guess one of us could walk over and ask if they mind a