"If it was a missile, or some hush-hush experimental job, then it was piloted. But they don"t test a job like that on any commercial airways. And they don"t fool around at five thousand feet where people will see the thing streaking by and call the newspapers.

"To power a hundred-foot wingless ship, especially at those speeds, would take enormous force. Not as much

{p. 114}

as a V-two rocket, but tremendous power. The fuel load would be terrific. Certainly, the pilot wouldn"t be circling around Georgia and Alabama for an hour, buzzing airliners. I"ll stake everything that we couldn"t duplicate that s.p.a.ce ship"s performance for less than fifty million dollars. It would take something brand-new in jets."

Redell paused. He looked at me grimly. "And the way I"d have to soup it up, it would be a d.a.m.ned dangerous ship to fly. No pilot would deliberately fly it that low. He"d stay up where he"d have a chance to bail out."

I told him what I had heard about the blueprints the Air Force was said to have rushed.

"Of course they were worried," said Redell. "And probably they still are. But I don"t think they need be; so far, there"s been nothing menacing about these s.p.a.ce ships."

When I got him back to the Gorman case, Redell drew a sketch on his pad, showing me his idea of the disk light. He estimated the transparent rim as not more than five feet in diameter.

"Possibly smaller," he said. "You recall that Gorman said the light was between six and eight inches in diameter. He also said it seemed to have depth--that was in the Air Force report."

"You think all the mechanism was hidden by the light?"

"Only possible answer," said Redell. "But just try to imagine crowding a motor, or jet controls for rim jets, along with remote controls and a television device, in that small s.p.a.ce. Plus your fuel supply. I don"t know any engineer who would even attempt it. To carry that much gear, it would take a fair-sized plane. You could make a disk large enough, but the mechanism and fuel section would be two or three feet across, at least. So Gorman"s light must have been powered and controlled by some unique means. The same principle applies to all the other light reports I"ve heard. No shape behind them, high speed, and intelligent maneuvers. That thing was guided from some interplanetary ship, hovering at a high alt.i.tude," Redell declared. "But I haven"t any idea what source of power it used."

{p. 115}

Until then, I had forgotten about Art Green"s letter. I told Redell what Art had said about the Geiger counter.

"I knew they went over Gorman"s fighter with a Geiger counter," Redell commented. "But they said the reaction was negative. If Green is right, it"s interesting. It would mean they have built incredibly small atomic engines. But with a race so many years ahead of us, it shouldn"t be surprising. Of course, they may also be using some other kind of power our scientists say is impossible."

I was about to ask him what he meant when his secretary came in.

"Mr. Carson is waiting," she told Redell. "He had a four-o"clock appointment."

As I started to leave, Redell looked at his calendar.

"I hate to break this up; it"s a fascinating business What about coming in Friday? I"d like to see the rest of those case reports."

"Fine," I said. "I"ve got a few more questions, too."

Going out, I made a mental note of the Friday date. Then the figure clicked; it was just three months since I"d started on this a.s.signment.

Three months ago. At that time I"d only been half sure that the saucers were real. If anyone had said I"d soon believe they were s.p.a.ce ships, I"d have told him he was crazy.

{p. 116}

CHAPTER XIII

BEFORE my date with Redell, I went over all the material I had, hoping to find some clue to the s.p.a.ce visitors" planet. It was possible, of course, that there was more than one planet involved.

Project "Saucer" had discussed the possibilities in it! report of April 27, 1949. I read over this section again:

Since flying saucers first hit the headlines almost two years ago, there has been wide speculation that the aerial phenomena might actually be some form of penetration from another planet.

Actually, astronomers are largely in agreement that only one member of the solar system beside Earth is capable of supporting life. That is Mars. Even Mars, however, appears to be relatively desolate and inhospitable, so that a Martian race would be more occupied with survival than we are on Earth.

On Mars, there exists an excessively slow loss of atmosphere, oxygen and water, against which intelligent beings, if they do exist there, may have protected themselves by scientific control of physical conditions. This might have been done, scientists speculate, by the construction of homes and cities underground where the atmospheric pressure would be greater and thus temperature extremes reduced. The other possibilities exist, of course, that evolution may have developed a being who can withstand the rigors of the Martian climate, or that the race--if it ever did exist--has perished.

In other words, the existence of intelligent life on Mars, where the rare atmosphere is nearly devoid of oxygen and water and where the nights are much colder than our Arctic winters, is not impossible but is completely unproven.

The possibility of intelligent life also existing on the planet Venus is not considered completely unreasonable

{p. 117}

by astronomers. The atmosphere of Venus apparently consists mostly of carbon dioxide with deep clouds of formaldehyde droplets, and there seems to be little or no water. Yet, scientists concede that living organisms might develop in chemical environments which are strange to us. Venus, however, has two handicaps. Her ma.s.s and gravity are nearly as large as the Earth (Mars is smaller) and her cloudy atmosphere would discourage astronomy, hence s.p.a.ce travel.

The last argument, I thought, did not have too much weight. We were planning to escape the earth"s gravity; Martians could do the same, with their planet. As for the cloudy atmosphere, they could have developed some system of radio or radar investigation of the universe.

The Navy research units, I knew, were probing the far-off Crab nebula in the Milky Way with special radio devices. This same method, or something far superior, could have been developed on Venus, or other planets surrounded by constant clouds.

After the discussion of solar-system planets, the Project "Saucer"

report went on to other star systems:

Outside the solar system other stars--22 in number--have satellite planets. Our sun has nine. One of these, the Earth, is ideal for existence of intelligent life. On two others there is a possibility of life.

Therefore, astronomers believe reasonable the thesis that there could be at least one ideally habitable planet for each of the 22 other eligible stars.

(After publication of our findings in True, several astronomers said that many planets may be inhabited. One of these was Dr. Carl F. von Weizacker, noted University of Chicago physicist. On January 10, 1950, Dr. von Weizacker stated: "Billions upon billions of stars found in the heavens may each have their own planets revolving about them. It is possible that these planets would have plant and animal life on them similar to the earth"s.")

{p. 118}

After narrowing the eligible stars down to twenty-two the Project "Saucer" report goes on:

The theory is also employed that man represents the average in advancement and development. Therefore, one-half the other habitable planets would be behind man in development, and the other half ahead. It is also a.s.sumed that any visiting race could be expected to be far in advance of man. Thus, the chance of s.p.a.ce travelers existing at planets attached to neighboring stars is very much greater than the chance of s.p.a.ce-traveling Martians. The one can be viewed as almost a certainty (if you accept the thesis that the number of inhabited planets is equal to those that are suitable for life and that intelligent life is not peculiar to the Earth) ."

The most likely star was Wolf 359--eight light-years away. I thought for a minute about traveling that vast distance. It was almost appalling, considered in terms of man"s life span. Of course, dwellers on other planets might live much longer.

If the speed of light was not an absolute limit, almost any s.p.a.ce journey would then be possible. Since there would be no resistance in outer s.p.a.ce, it would be simply a matter of using rocket power in the first stages to accelerate to the maximum speed desired. In the latter phase, the rocket"s drive would have to be reversed, to decelerate for the landing.

The night before my appointment with Redell, I was checking a case report when the phone rang. It was John Steele.

"Are you still working on the saucers?" he asked. "If you are, I have a suggestion--something that might be a real lead."

"I could use a lead right now," I told him.

"I can"t give you the source, but it"s one I consider reliable," said Steele. "This man says the disks are British developments."

This was a new one. I hadn"t considered the British. Steele talked for over half an hour, expanding the idea.

{p. 119}

The saucers, his informant said, were rotating disks with cambered surfaces--originally a n.a.z.i device. Near the end of the war, the British had seized all the models, along with the German technicians and scientists who had worked on the project.

The first British types had been developed secretly in England, according to this account. But the first tests showed a dangerous lack of control; the disks streaked up to high alt.i.tudes, hurtling without direction. Some had been seen over the Atlantic, some in Turkey, Spain, and other parts of Europe.

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