"I can try. Give me your hand." Jayjay took the captain"s free hand and gave it a tug. Then he released the chair he was holding, braced both feet against the panels of the computer housings, and gave a good pull. The captain didn"t budge, but he winced a little.
"That hurt?"
"Just my arm. The pressure has cut off my blood circulation; my legs are numb, and I can"t tell if they hurt or not."
Jayjay grabbed the chair again and surveyed the situation. "Where"s your First Officer?"
"Breckner? Down in the engine room."
Jayjay didn"t comment on that. If the hold was airless, it was likely that the engine room was, too, and there was no need to worry Al-Amin any more than necessary just now.
"Can you use a cutting torch?" the captain asked.
"Yes, but I don"t think it"ll be necessary," Jayjay said. "Hold on a minute." He went back up the stairs to the officers" washroom and, after a little search, got a container of liquid soap from the supplies. Then he went back down to the control room. He made the jump to the chair, holding on with one hand while he held the container of soap with the other.
"Can you hold me up with one hand? I"ll need both hands to work with."
"In this gravity? Easy. Give me your belt."
Captain Atef Al-Amin grabbed Jayjay"s belt and hung on, while Jayjay used both hands to squirt the liquid soap all over the captain from the waist down.
It would have made a great newspaper photo. Captain Al-Amin, wedged between two steel cabinets, hanging upside-down under a pull of one-fifteenth standard gee, holding up his rescuer by the belt. The rescuer, right-side-up, was squeezing a plastic container of liquid soap and directing the stream against the captain.
When Al-Amin was thoroughly wetted with the solution, Jayjay again braced his feet against the steel panels and pulled.
With a slick, slurping sound, the captain slid loose, and the two of them toppled head-over-heels across the room. Jayjay was prepared for that; he stopped them both by grasping an overhead desk-top as they went by. Then he let go, and the two men dropped slowly to what had been the ceiling.
"_Hoo!_" said the captain. "That"s a relief! Allah!"
Jayjay took a look at the man"s arm. "Radius might be broken; ulna seems O.K. We"ll splint it later. Your legs are going to tingle like crazy when the feeling comes back."
"I know. But we have other things to worry about, Mr. Kelvin.
Evidently you and I are the only ones awake so far, and I"m in no condition to go moving all over this spinning bucket just yet. Would you do some reconnoitering for me?"
"Sure," said Jayjay. "Just tell me what you want."
Within half an hour, the news was in.
There were five men alive in the ship: Jayjay, Captain Al-Amin, Jeffry Hull, Second Officer Vandenbosch, and Maintenance Officer Smith.
Vandenbosch had broken both legs and had to be strapped into a bunk and given a shot of narcolene.
Jayjay had put on a s.p.a.cesuit and taken a look outside. The whole rear end of the ship was gone, and with it had gone the First Officer, the Radio Officer, and the Engineering Officer. And, of course, the main power plant of the ship.
Most of the cargo hold was intact, but the walls had been breached, and the air was gone.
"Well, that"s that," said Captain Al-Amin. Jayjay, Smith, Hull, and the captain were in the control room, trying not to look glum. "I wish I knew what happened."
"Meteor," Jayjay said flatly. "The b.u.mper hull is fused at the edges of the break, and the direction of motion was inward."
"I don"t see how it could have got by the meteor detectors," said Smith, a lean, sad-looking man with a badly bruised face.
"I don"t either," the captain said, "but it must have. If the engines had blown, the damage would have been quite different."
Jeffry Hull nervously took a cigarette from his pocket pack. His nose had quit bleeding, but his eye was purpling rapidly and was almost swollen shut.
Captain Al-Amin leaned over and gently took the cigarette from Hull"s fingers. "No smoking, I"m afraid. We"ll have to conserve oxygen."
"You guys are so d.a.m.n _calm_!" Hull said. His voice betrayed a surface of anger covering a substratum of fear. "Here we are, heading away from the Solar System at eighteen million miles an hour, and you all act as if we were going on a picnic or something."
The observation was hardly accurate. Any group of men who went on a picnic in the frame of mind that Jayjay and the others were in would have produced the gloomiest outing since the Noah family took a trip in an excursion boat.
"There"s nothing to worry about," Captain Al-Amin said gently. "All we have to do is set the screamers going, and the Interplanetary Police will pick us up."
"Screamers?" Hull looked puzzled.
Instead of answering the implied question, the captain looked at Smith. "Have you checked them?" He knew that Smith had, but he was trying to quiet Hull"s fears.
Smith nodded. "They"re O.K." He looked at Hull. "A screamer is an emergency radio. There"s one in every compartment. You"ve seen them."
He pointed across the room, toward a red panel in the wall. "In there."
"But I thought it was impossible for a s.p.a.ceship in flight to contact a planet by radio," Hull objected.
"Normally, it is," Smith admitted. "It takes too much power and too tight a beam to get much intelligence over a distance that great from a moving ship. But the screamers are set up for emergency purposes.
They"re like flares, except that they operate on microwave frequencies instead of visible light.
"The big radio telescopes on Luna and on the Jovian satellites can pick them up if we beam them sunward, and the Plutonian station can pick us up if we beam in that direction."
Hull looked much calmer. "But where do you get the power if the engines are gone? Surely the emergency batteries won"t supply that kind of power."
"Of course not. Each screamer has its own power supply. It"s a hydrogen-oxygen fuel cell that generates a h.e.l.l of a burst of power for about thirty minutes before it burns out from the overload. It"s meant to be used only once, but it does the job."
"How do they know where to find us from a burst like that?" Hull asked.
"Well, suppose we only had one screamer. We"d beam it toward Pluto, since it would be easier for an IP ship to get to us from there. Since all screamers have the same frequency--don"t ask me what it is; I"m not a radio man--the velocity of our ship will be indicated by the Doppler Effect. That is, our motion toward or away from them can be calculated that way. Our angular velocity with respect to them can be checked while the screamer is going; they will know which direction we"re moving, if we"re moving at an angle.
"With that information, all they have to do is find out which ship is in that general area of the sky, which they can find out by checking the schedule, and they can estimate approximately where we"ll be. The IP ship will come out, and when they get in the general vicinity, they can find us with their meteor detectors. Nothing to it."
"And," Captain Al-Amin added, "since we have eight screamers still left with us, we have plenty of reserves to call upon. There"s nothing to worry about, Mr. Hull."
"But how can you aim a beam when we"re toppling end-over-end like this?" Hull asked.
"Well, if we couldn"t stop the rotation," said the captain, "we"d broadcast instead of beaming. Anywhere within the Solar System, a screamer can broadcast enough energy to overcome the background noise.
"The IP would have a harder time finding us, of course, but we"d be saved eventually."
"I see," said Hull "How do we go about stopping the rotation?"