Soon Rip was sitting in the grass fifty feet from the wreck with his uncle seated beside him. As his head cleared, Rip stared at the smashed Dodge. Gray smoke and white steam wisped from the engine compartment. There was no fire.
'Blew the engine, I guess,' he said to his uncle. 'Seemed like the radiator blew. Before I could react the crankshaft froze.'
'Locked up tighter than the hubs of hell,' Egg said, nodding vigorously. 'You were at least ten feet in the air.'
'Sorry about your truck.'
'I'll take it out of your allowance,' Egg said, then laughed. When he laughed his belly quivered.
Rip joined in. He lay back in the grass and laughed and laughed.
'It's good to be alive, isn't it?' Egg said when they finally calmed down.
'Yeah, Unc. It really is.'
'So what are you going to do now?'
'Gonna put that system on the Extra. The airplane engine is designed to turn at high RPM all day. Won't blow it like I did the truck engine.'
'Need any help?'
'Well, sure. But let me lie here another five minutes. And I want to see that video.'
The moon was a giant orb hanging in the black sky when Charley turned the spaceplane and lined it up for the lunar orbit injection burn. When she had it perfectly aligned according to the computer display, she ran through the checklist again, studying the items, fingering switches, assuring herself for the tenth time that they were in the right position. It would have been comforting to have a second pair of knowledgeable eyes examine each switch, yet the eyes she was burdened with were Artois'. He sat beside her in the copilot's seat, watching everything, knowing nothing.
Both wore space suits complete with helmets, just in case Charley blew the landing and crashed on the moon, cracking the pressure hull. A sudden depressurization wouldn't kill them. Assuming they survived the crash.
five miles from the spaceplane. For the first time since they had left earth orbit, the presence of the world off the left wing gave her the sensation of motion.
The pilot checked the navigation display again, ensuring that the low point of the trajectory would be at precisely sixty miles, exactly at the point of the burn, which would occur on the back side of the moon, the side opposite the earth. All was as it should be.
She cracked her knuckles in anticipation, a gesture that startled Artois.
'Nothing to sweat,' she said. 'The program is working perfectly. There is nothing for us to do but sit and watch.'
'So anyone could fly these planes?' he said acidly.
'As long as all the computers work perfectly,' she replied carelessly. 'If they don't, then you hand-fly it.' Of course, Artois knew this already. He had been intimately involved in the design and engineering of the spaceplanes that made the lunar base possible. 'That's why you spent the money for the very best sticks you could find, isn't it?'
Artois didn't answer that rhetorical question.
'Fifteen seconds to loss of telemetry,' Bodard said from Mission Control. At ten seconds to go he began counting, and his voice faded at
Charley keyed the intercom and announced, 'Everyone in their seats, strap in and report,
All six of the people not in the cockpit reported within the next five minutes. Claudine Courbet reported for Lalouette, who had been strapped in for hours and sedated. All were ready. They would remain in their seats
The waiting was the hardest part, Charley Pine thought. She sat watching the display, her thoughts totally absorbed in the piloting problem.
Pierre Artois rubbernecked out the window at the moon. Since the spaceplane was hurling backward through space at the approaching burn point, the lunar surface slid by from rear to front. It was disconcerting, to say the least, to people used to viewing the earth from the window of an airplane.
The sun line appeared suddenly on the lunar surface, and reflected light filled the cockpit. Charley glanced at the lunar surface, adjusted the brightness of the displays and said nothing.
The seconds ticked down. The spaceplane dropped closer and closer to the lunar surface. Right on cue the rocket engines ignited, pressing Charley and Artois back into their seats. The Gs felt good after three days of weightlessness.
But the middle engine was not firing. Only the four smaller, outboard engines had ignited. Charley Pine instantly punched up a display that gave her a percentage of planned power. Only seventy percent. This meant that she would have to burn the engines thirty percent longer to get the required deceleration. She disconnected the autopilot, taking manual control of the ship and the burn. One of the engines was producingjust slightly less power than the other three, which was to be expected. No four engines would produce exactly the same amount of power. Without conscious thought she adjusted the controls to hold the ship in the proper attitude.
The seconds ticked down, and she stopped the burn as the clock read 0:00. She didn't even notice the absence of G, so intent was she on checking the orbit. It would be a few moments before she knew precisely how well the burn had gone, how close to the desired lunar orbit they actually were.
The sensors were still locked on their guide stars. The distance to the moon from the radar seemed correct. She had only to wait for the computers to calculate the trajectory, which took time. The numbers were sorting themselves out, the display was moving, stabilizing… yes. They appeared to be within half a percent of the desired orbit, which was presented as a maximum and minimum distance from the planet. Now the graphic display stabilized.
She checked to ensure the orbit would take them to the desired burn point to begin the descent to the lunar base.
'We're going to need another small burn,' she muttered, pointing at the display. 'There. At that point.' She looked at her watch. 'In eighteen minutes.'
'How long?' Artois asked, which was his first comment since before the orbit insertion burn.
'Two seconds.'
'That is very good. Congratulations.'
Charley didn't have time. She keyed the intercom. 'Flo-rentin,' she said, calling the flight engineer by name, 'the main engine refused to start. Please check it out.'
Artois tried to remain as calm as she was. 'What if it won't start for the descent burn?'
'We'll just burn for a longer period.'
'And the ascent from the moon's surface?'
Charley was stunned that he asked that question. 'The moon only has a sixth of earth's gravity,' she answered. 'We need all our power to get off the earth's surface, not the moon's.'
Rip Cantrell was asleep in the old control tower near Egg's hangar when he heard his uncle's heavy tread upon the stairs. 'You awake up there, Rip?'
'Yeah, Unc.' Rip rolled out and reached for his jeans.
The little room with windows on all sides was a nice private bedroom. It contained a narrow bed, one chair, a bookcase and a small desk. The restroom that Egg had installed years ago was on the ground level. When Egg topped the stairs he lowered himself heavily into the only chair and sighed. Rip was seated on the bed. The moon