time.
“Thanks.” Garamond found the aerosol container and passed it back to Aileen. “Spray your clothes with this. Do Chris as well.”
“What’s it for?” Aileen was trying to sound unconcerned, but her voice was small and cold.
“It won’t do your clothes any harm, but it makes them react against the restraint field inside the ship when you move. It turns them into a kind of safety net and also stops you floating about when you’re in free fall.” Garamond had forgotten how little Aileen knew about spaceflight or air travel. She had never even been in an ordinary jetliner, he recalled. The great age of air tourism was long past — if a person was lucky enough to live in an acceptable part of the Earth he tended to stay put.
“You can use it first,” Aileen said.
“I don’t need it — all space fliers’ uniforms are metallized when they’re made.” Garamond smiled encouragingly.
“Don’t worry, son,” Garamond called. “This won’t last long. We’ll soon be…”
“North Field to shuttlecraft Sahara Tango 4299,” a voice crackled from the radio. “This is Fleet Commodore Keegan calling. Come in, please.”
“Don’t answer that,” Garamond ordered. The dock behind his eyes had come to an abrupt and sickening halt.
“But that was Keegan himself. Are you mixed up in something big, Captain?”
“Big enough.” Garamond hesitated as the radio repeated its message. “Tune that out and get me Commander Napier on my bridge.” He gave the pilot a microwave frequency which would by-pass the
“But…”
“Immediately.” He raised the pistol against multiple gravities. “This is a hair trigger and there’s a lot of G- force piling up on my finger.”
“I’m making the call now.” The pilot spun a small vernier on the armrest of his chair and in a few seconds had established contact.
“Commander Napier here.” Garamond felt a surge of relief as he recognized the cautious tones Napier always employed when he did not know who was on the other end of a channel.
“This is an urgent one, Cliff.” Garamond spoke steadily. “Have you had any communications about me from Starflight House?”
“Ah… no. Was I supposed to?”
“That doesn’t matter now. Here’s a special instruction which I’m asking you to obey immediately and without question. Do you understand?”
“Okay, Vance,” Napier sounded puzzled, but not suspicious or alarmed.
“I’m on the shuttle and will rendezvous with you in a few minutes, but right now I want you to throw the ultimate master switch on the external communications system.
There was a slight pause, during which Napier must have been considering the facts that what he had been asked to do was illegal and that under Starflight Regulations he was not obliged to obey such an order — then the channel went dead.
Garamond closed his eyes for a second. He knew that Napier had also thought about their years together on the
“We have some pretty severe course and speed corrections coming up,” the younger pilot said. “Do you want to advise your wife?”
Garamond nodded gratefully. The sky in the forward view panels had already turned from deep blue to black as the shuttle’s tubes hurled it clear of the atmosphere. In a maximum-energy ballistic-style sortie it was understood that there was no time for niceties — the computer which was controlling the flight profile would subject passengers to as much stress, within programmed limits, as they could stand. Garamond edged backwards until he could see Aileen and Chris. “Get ready for some rollercoaster stuff,” he told them. “Don’t try to fight the ship or you’ll be sick. Just go with it and the restraint field will hold you in place.” They both nodded silently, in unison, eyes fixed on his face, and he felt a crushing sense of responsibility and guilt. He had barely finished speaking when a series of lateral corrections twisted space out of its normal shape, pulling him to the left and then upwards away from the floor. The fierce pressure of the bulkhead against his back prevented him from being thrown around but he guessed that his wife and son must have been lifted out of their seats. An involuntary gasp from Aileen confirmed her distress.
“It won’t be long now,” he told her. Stars were shining in the blackness ahead of the shuttle, and superimposed on the random points of light was a strip of larger, brighter motes, most of which had visible irregularities of shape. Polar Band One glittered like a diamond bracelet, at the midpoint of which Sector Station 8 flared with a yellowish brilliance. The two distinct levels of luminosity, separating man-made objects from the background of distant suns, created a three-dimensional effect, an awareness of depth and cosmic scale which Garamond rarely experienced when far into a mission. He remained with the pilots, braced between their seats and the bulkhead, while the shuttle drew closer to the stream of orbiting spaceships and further corrections were applied to match speed and direction. By this time Starflight Admincom would have tried to contact the
“There’s your ship,” the senior pilot commented, and the note of satisfaction in his voice put Garamond on his guard. “It looks like you’re a little late. Captain — there’s another shuttle already drifting into its navel.”
Garamond, unused to orienting himself with the cluttered traffic of the Polar Band, had to search the sky for several seconds before he located the
“What do you want to do, Captain?” The blue-chinned senior pilot had begun to enjoy himself. “Would you like to hand over that gun now?”
Garamond shook his head. “The other shuttle’s making a normal docking approach. Get in there before him.”
“It’s too late.”
Garamond placed the muzzle of the pistol against the pilot’s neck. “Ram your nose into that dock, sonny.”
“You’re crazy, but I’ll try.” The pilot fixed his eyes on the expanding shape of the
“Override the computer,” Garamond snapped. “Kill those retros.”
“Do you want to commit suicide?”
“Do you?” Garamond pressed the pistol into the other man’s spine and watched as he tripped out the autocontrol circuits. The image of the competing shuttle and the docking target expanded in the forward screen with frightening speed. The pilot instinctively moved backwards in his seat. “We’re going to hit the other shuttle,